THURSDAY May21,2015
o our eenee a une-u?
RDDwo
HEALTH• D1
COMINGTOMORROW
bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD
newa a mensse or en
Health coverage — Insurers expect healthier customers next year — but they still want to raise prices.D1
STORY INBUSINESS• C6
More are seeking medical pot cards
Kidsand sugar — There are many reasons they should avoid it. For one, it behaves much like a drug.D1
By Joseph Ditzler
Plus: Exercise — vou
The Bulletin
know it's good for the body. But what about the brain?D3
By Dylan J. Darling
Rick Gilliland looked
The Bulletin
forward to three days of office hours at the Bend
branch of The Hemp and
SUTTLE LAKE-
Summer gaS — Fuelprices are down across most of the country — but not the West Coast.C6
Cannabis Foundation, a clinic on NE Third Street.
ons of rock, literal-
More than 150 people had signed up for con-
ly, should make for
GOP deba'teS — According
a smoother trail
to rules releasedWednesday, there will be nofewer than 10 candidates on stage.A5
around Suttle Lake west
sultations with a visiting
physician who, for a fee, would review their medical records and their applications for state medical marijuana cards. Close to
of Sisters.
half the appointments were
first-time applicants: some GeOrgia —Like Ukraine, the country feels the pull of both Russia and theWest. A6
EDITOR'SCHOICE
Corporate wellness programs may hurt, not help
new to marijuana as a
Netolius trail
reational marijuana when it becomes legal next year, Gilliland said last week..
A crew of trail builders is working on reinforcing and rebuilding the trail that circles the lake.
pot for pain relief after a near-fatal auto accident.
Sisters
See Pot/A5
WhychusCreek
~C)
Heavy maintenance will start in July on the Peter Skene Newber tionai a Ogden National Scenic Trail, Volcanic Monn nt Paulina LakeshoreTrail and Snowmobile Trail 4. Thework SnowmobileTrail EastLake will cover about 30 miles of trails in all. Toilet replacement Paulina Lake is set for Ten Mile Sno-park Peter Sken P ulina OgdenNational next year. keshore Scenic Trail Total cost: $60,000 I
Cultus Lake Crane Prairie Reservoir Wickiup Reservoir
LB Pnlo
Pete Smith / The Bulletin
Source: Deschutes NationalForest
cludes access to an on-site
gym, a team of health care professionals, and seminars in which employees can learn techniques for healthier living.
This project will involve building a1.1-mile gravel trail and overlook J that could be accessible by wheelchair. Construction should begin in September andtake a month. Total cost: $260,000
NewderryNationalVolcanicNonument
~Q)
attain that ideal, Scania offers an extensive work-
place wellness program to its 5,000 employees that in-
Exclusion zone set to expand By Tyler Leeds The Bulletin
The Bend City Council
voted Wednesday night to grant the police greater power to bar people accused of a wide variety of crimes from all of downtown.
The city already has
A primarily volunteer trail crew has for the past couple of weeks shuttled thousands of pounds of
what's termed a civil exclu-
hard rock across the lake and then built walls to stop erosion of the popular Suttle Lake Loop Trail,
sion zone applying to public parks, Brooks Alley and
said Chris Sabo, trails specialist for the Deschutes National Forest in Bend. The 3-mile loop encir-
"Scania cares for its
employeesboth on and off the job," a human resourc-
get them to come get their card," said Gilliland, 53, who said he uses medical
Lava Lakes
time. To help employees
think that's what it took to
Suttle lake
Elk Lake
DESCHUTES NATIONAL FOREST
"I get a little bit sad to
Photo by Andy Tullis/The Bulletin
Bend
Swedish trucking company Scania believes in the 24-hour employee. Scania
be their best selves all the
the state tax on sales of rec-
Sparks Lake
Bloomberg News
work, they're expected to
River":
Work will continue on restoring about 15 miles of trails. Work started this week and will continue next week on this multiyear project. Total cost: $500,000
By Rebecca Greenfield
workers aren't just expected to be their best selves at
medicine, others probably looking for a way to buy marijuana without paying
Metoliuy.~
cles Suttle Lake. Wednesday, the crew of
es manager in 2011 told a
the downtown parking lots
adjacent to Mirror Pond. If individuals are accused of committing a crime, in-
was spread out along the
Standing by the biggest
researcher of its approach
about a half-dozen, which
trail near the Link Creek
to workforce wellness. "We try to help them live health-
included national forest workers and volunteers with
boat ramp. Sabo and some of the workers took a break
ier. Our interest and care
California-based American
to explain what they have
wall contains about 8 tons
does not end when they
Conservation Experience,
been building.
of andesite rock. It took four
rock wall, he said it flanked about 20 feet of the trail. Six
tiers and about 4 feet tall, the
members of the trail crew
cluding assault, littering or drinking in public, police
between 50 to 60 hours to
can ban them from those
build the wall. "It's slow work," Sabo said. "It really is."
areas for 90 days. Excluded people have the right to appeal, during which time they are not barred. SeeZone/A4
SeeSuttle/A5
leave work." But according to researchers Andre Spicer
and Carl Cederstrom, Scania's efforts didn't always have the intended effect.
Over the last four years, the two have studied well-
ness programs at hundreds of companies, including Scania. In their new book, "The Wellness Syndrome," they describe how the company's extensive wellness efforts stressed some em-
ployees. Because employees had every opportunity to stay healthy, those who didn't meet extreme health
standards sometimes felt like failures. "We noticed that they
What we can learn from bin Laden'sreading list By David L. Ulin
to published works of non-
Los Angeles Times
fiction that reveal bin Laden to be a smart and educated
What does Osama bin Lad-
en's reading list have to tell us? Made public Wednesday morning by the office of the director of national intelli-
gence, it lists 103 documents, from U.S. government reports
about their level of exercis-
ing," Spicer said. SeeWellness/A4
adversary, as we have always
natic, which, of course, he was But that assessment also un-
understood. Since the 9/11 attacks, we as
derestimates his considerable talents, operational and oth-
a culture have resisted complex readings of bin Laden, choosing to deride him as a fa-
erwise, his understanding not
TODAY'S WEATHER
would begin to worry b
b
Rain or t'storms High 68, Low46 Page B6
ESSAY
only of how to enact terror, but also what that terror meant.
His reading list suggests just
icaland economic hegemony
how deep that understanding,
— the Pentagon and the World
that sense of inquiry, went. Trade Center (with a third, Sept. 11, after all, was so dis- possibly the White House, tarturbing, so effective because of geted by the flight that crashed its metaphoric value, as much in Pennsylvania) — destroyed as the death and devastation by turning our technology and that it caused. Think about it: mobility against us. two citadels of American politSeeReading/A4
INDEX Business Calendar Classified
D1-6 Obituaries B5 C5 - 6 C omics/Puzzles E3-4 Health C1-4 B2 Crosswords E 4 H o roscope D5 Sp orts Et - 6 D ear Abby D5 Lo cal/State B 1-6 TV/Movies 05
The Bulletin AnIndependent Newspaper
vol. 113, No. 141, 30 pages, 5 sections
/cled newsprint Q We use recI
': IIIIIIIIIIIIII o
8 8 267 02329
A2
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, MAY 21, 2015
The Bulletin
NATION Ee ORLD
HOW to reaCh US
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WeapOnS fOr Irap —The United States is rushing1,000 anti-tank rockets to the Iraqi military to help combat the suicide vehicle bombs that Islamic State militants used in capturing the provincial capital of Ramadi, a first step as theObamaadministration weighs a range of difficult options to help its beleaguered ally. Thedeployment of the weapons, expected to arrive in early June, comes as the defeated Iraqi security forces are regrouping outside the city. A senior State Department official said Wednesdaythat Iraqis were "licking their wounds a bit" as they worked with U.S.advisers to begin planning a counterattack.
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PreSCriptiOn CraCkduwll —Authorities raided medical clinics, pharmacies andother locations across theSouth onWednesday as part of a DrugEnforcement Administration attempt to thwart illegal prescription drug sales.Theraids in Arkansas, Alabama, Louisiana and Mississippi werethe latest stage of anoperation launched last summer by the DrugEnforcement Administration's drug diversion unit, which has now netted 280arrests over more than ayear, including 22 doctors andpharmacists."W ehavepeoplewhohavetakenanoathtodono harm who arethrowing that oath out the window," DEASpecial Agent in ChargeKeith Brown saidafter the early morning raids.
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Cleanup crews removeoil-laden sand onthe beach at Refugio State Beach, site of anoil spill, north of Goleta, California, on Wednesday. An oil spill from a ruptured onshore pipeline that fouled beachesand threatened wildlife along a scenic stretch of the California coast spreadacross 9 miles of ocean Wednesdayandofficials said up to105,000
gallons may haveleaked out. Up to afifth of that amount — 21,000 gallons — reachedthe sea, according to estimates. Federal regulators were investigating the leakas workers rakedand shoveled stinky black goo off the beaches, and boats towed boomsinto place to corral the two slicks off the Santa Barbara coast.
California water —A group of California farmers, in a surprising turnaround, is volunteering to give up afourth of its available water this year, sharing a resourceall but guaranteed to themfor more than a century. A senior water official said Wednesdaythat he would decide whether to accept the offer by Friday.Theconcession by farmers in the Sacramento andSanJoaquin river delta could be oneof the most important yet forced byCalifornia's record four-year drought. In exchange for taking 25 percent less river water for irrigation or leaving a quarter of their fields unplanted, the farmers want guarantees that the state won't restrict the remaining 75percent of the water they've had rights to for more than acentury, even if the drought deepens.
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militants swept into the des-
nue through illegal trafficking. any notion that the group had "The fighting is putting at suffered a game-changing risk one of the most signifi- blow. cant sites in the Middle East," R esidents said that b y Irina Bokova, director-general nightfall, the Islamic State
ert city of Palmyra in central
of UNESCO, said in a state-
Syria on Wednesday and by evening were in control of it,
ment Wednesday.
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By Anne Barnard and Hwaida Saad
Nedraska death penalty —TheNebraskaLegislature hasvot-
BEIRUT — I slamic State
residents and Syrian state me-
dia said, a victory that gives them another strategically important prize five days after
the group seized the Iraqi city of Ramadi.
Palmyra has special resonance, as home to some of the world's most magnificent r emnants o f
a n t i quity, a s
ed, 32-15, to abolish the death penalty, setting up a final showdown between a bipartisan coalition that supported the bill and the Republican governor, PeteRicketts, who has promised to veto it. Thirty votes are required to override. Thebill, which would replace lethal injection with life imprisonment, passed the unicameral Legislature on Wednesday, with conservative Republicans lining up in opposition to a group of Democrats and moderate Republicans whosaid they have come to oppose thedeath penalty for reasons that are moral, fiscal or religious. Nebraska hasnot executed aninmate since1997.
had seized most of the city
Chelsea Cliutou dook —Bil and Hilary RodhamClinton have
and was even distributing bread to some residents. Solbled, residents described pan- diersand police could be seen ickedscenes of soldiers and fleeing, they said, prompting the police fleeing, wounded ci- one cafe owner to exclaim vilians unable to reach hospi- over the phone, "Treason! It's tals and museum workers hur- treason." rying to pack up antiquities. Soon after government forcThe loss of Palmyra, just es left the city, airstrikes beas the United States is scram- gan, residents said. bling to come up with a response to the loss of Ramadi, the capital of Iraq's Anbar
made a cottage industry out of writing books. Nowtheir daughter will try her hand at it. OnWednesday, Penguin RandomHousesaid it would publish ChelseaClinton's first book, aimed at readers ages 10 to 14 andtitled "It's Your World: Get Informed, Get Inspired 8 Get Going," in September. In astatement, Clinton said she intended to use the book to "try to explain what I think are some ofthe biggest challenges facing our world today, particularly for young people," and to "explore some of the solutions to those challenges."
As the city's defenses crum-
— Fromwirereports
well as the grimmer modern landmark of Tadmur Prison, province, is sure t o r enew where Syrian dissidents have doubt aboutthe Obama adlanguished over the decades. ministration's plans to defeat But for the fighters on the
ground, the city of 50,000 people is significant because it sits among gas fields and astride a network of roads across the country's central desert.
the Islamic State.
The two successes, at opposite ends of a
b a t tlefield
Don't miss out on
sprawling across two countries, showed the I slamic
today's great
State's ability to shake off set-
Aside from the t hreat of destruction, Palmyra's vast
backs and advance on multiple fronts, less than two months
unexcavated antiquities could also provide significant reve-
after it was driven from the
Home Loan rates!
Iraqi city of Tikrit — erasing
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5global banks topay $5.7 billion in finesover currencymanipulation By Dean Starkman and Jim Puzzanghera
share, $925 million, was the department's largest against
Los Angeles Times
a single entity. The rest of the
W ASHINGTON —
As listed at www.oregonlottery.org and individual lottery websites
POWERBALL The numbers drawn Wednesday night are:
Q>QaQz sQ ssQ ee© The estimated jackpot is now $138 million.
MEGABUCKS The numbers drawn Wednesday night are:
4~ QsQuQz~Q aQ ssQ The estimated jackpot is now $4.2 million.
f
v'
,r
Th e y penalties were assessed by
called themselves the Cartel, and that turned out to be an appropriate name. Traders and sales agents used electronic chat rooms,
banking regulators. Citi, JPMorgan, Barclays and Royal Bank of Scotland Plc pleaded guilty to a felony
count of conspiring to violate the Sherman Antitrust Act. to manipulate prices in the $5 Switzerland's UBS AG, which trillion-a-day foreign currency was granted immunity in the markets. They secretly marked antitrust case, pleaded guilty to prosecutorssaid, to conspire
up transaction costs, telling customers they hadn't. "If you ain't cheating," said
manipulating the global benchmark lending rate known as Libor.
one trader at British bank Bar-
The settlement was greeted with a wave of scorn from fi-
clays Plc, "you ain't trying."
Oregon Lottery results
~ ~
The Justice Department, in a
high-profile investigation into the manipulation of currency markets, announced a $5.7 billion settlement that induded rare criminal charges against five global banks, induding New York giants Citigroup Inc. and JPMorgan Chase & Co. The banks' conduct was a "brazen display of collusion" that went on for years, Attor-
nancialreformers, academics
Whether you're buying a new home or looking to refinance, our friendly loan specialists are here
to help with all your home loan needs.
and other critics. They said that, as in past settlements, no
individuals were charged with a crime, that the banks could
continue operating in the markets they allegedly manipulated and that the penalties would
be paid by the banks' shareholders. In addition, they noted,
4 Quick 8 Easy Loan Process 4 Local Loan Servicing / Competitive Interest Rates 4 Caring Loan Experts
first community c r e d i t
much of the penalties would be tax-deductible.
"I think it's a facade of jusney General Loretta Lynch said. "The penalty all these tice," said Jimmy Gurule, a Unibanks will now pay is fitting, versity of Notre Dame law proconsidering the long-running fessorand former federalprosand egregious nature of their ecutor. "It's an attempt to make anticompetitive conduct," she it appear that the Department satd. of Justice is really doing someLynch said that the $2.5 bil- thing serious about the culture lion that her department levied of corruption in banks. But the against the four banks in the actual perpetrators, the archiantitrust case was the larg- tects of the criminal scheme, est set of such fines ever. Citi's are not held accountable."
u n i o n
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THURSDAY, MAY 21, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
A3
TART TODAY
• Discoveries, breakthroughs,trends, namesin the news— the things you needto know to start out your day
It's Thursday, May21, the 141st day of 2015. Thereare 224 days left in the year.
HAPPENINGS Capitol copter landing
— The manwho landed his gyrocopter on theCapitol lawn last month will be arraigned.
HISTORY Highlight:In1927, Charles Lindbergh landed his Spirit of St. Louis monoplanenear Paris, completing the first solo airplane flight across the Atlantic Ocean in 33/~hours. In1471, King Henry Vl of England died in theTower of London at age49. In1542, Spanish explorer Hernando deSoto died while searching for gold along the Mississippi River. In1881, Clara Barton founded the American RedCross. In1892, the opera"Pagliacci," by Ruggero Leoncavallo, premiered in Milan, Italy. In1924, in a casethat drew much notoriety, 14-year-old Bobby Frankswas murdered in a "thrill killing" carried out by University of Chicago students Nathan Leopold andRichard Loeb (Bobby's cousin). In1932, Amelia Earhart became the first woman to fly solo across the Atlantic Ocean as she landed in Northern Ireland, about15 hours after leaving Newfoundland. In1941,aGerman U-boatsank the American merchant steamship SS Robin Moor in the South Atlantic after the ship's
passengers and crewwere allowed to board lifeboats. In1945, actors Humphrey Bogart, 45, and LaurenBacall, 20, were married at Malabar Farm in Lucas, Ohio (it was his fourth marriage, her first, and would last until Bogart's death in1957). In1955, Chuck Berry recorded his first single, "Maybellene," for Chess Records in Chicago. In1972, Michelangelo's Pieta, on display at theVatican, was damaged by ahammer-wielding man whoshouted hewas Jesus Christ. In1982, during the Falklands War, British amphibious forces landed on the beach atSan Carlos Bay. In1990, CBSaired the final episode of the sitcom "Newhart" in which it was revealed in the closing scene that the entire series about aVermont innkeeper played byBobNewhart had been adream of Bob Hartley, the psychologist played by Newhart in his previous show, "The Bob Newhart Show." Ten years ngo: Afleet Alex regained his footing and his drive after being cut off by Scrappy T in a frightening collision and breezedhome to win the Preakness Stakes; Kentucky Derby winner Giacomo finished third. Five years ngo:President Barack Obama directed the government to set the first-ever mileage andpollution limits for big trucks and to tighten rules for future cars andSUVs. One year ngo: With outrage mounting over veterans' health care, President BarackObama declared that misconduct alleged at VAhospitals would not be tolerated. China signed a $400 billion gas deal with Russia, binding Moscow more closely to Beijing amid international sanctions for Russian actions in Ukraine.
CUTTING EDGE
o r ine,wi ou e o Genetically modified yeast will soon likely be able to produce the raw ingredient necessary to make
Rhythm-and-blues singer Ron Isley (The Isley Brothers) is 74. Rock musician Hilton Valentine (The Animals) is 72. Actor Richard Hatch is 70. Musician Bill Champlin is 68. Singer Leo Sayer is 67. Actress Carol Potter is 67. Sen. Al Franken, D-Minn., is 64. Actor Mr. T is 63. Music producer Stan Lynch is 60. Actor Judge Reinhold is 58. Actor-director Nick Cassavetes is 56. Actor Brent Briscoe is 54. Actress Lisa Edelstein is 49. Actress Fairuza Balk is 41. Rock singer-musician Mikel Jollett (Airborne Toxic Event) is 41. Rapper Havoc (Mobb Deep) is 41. Actress Ashlie Brillault is 28. Actor Scott
Leavenworth is 25. Actress Sarah Ramos is 24. — From wire reports
parasites? By C. Claiborne Rny
the painkiller — as well as heroin.
New York Times News Service
d e ep-freezQ •• Does ing fish kill harmful By Donald G. McNeil Jr.
bribes and so on.
New York Times News Service
One frightening prospect Oye raised was how viciously drug cartels might react if Americans with bioengineer-
A ll over
t h e w o r ld, t h e
heavy heads of opium poppies are nodding gracefully in the wind — long stalks dressed in orange or white petals topped by a fright wig of stamens. They fill millions of acres in Afghanistan, Myanmar, Laos and elsewhere. Their payload — the milky opium juice carefullyscraped offtheseed pods — yields morphine, an excellent painkiller easily refined But very soon, perhaps within a year, the poppy will no longer be the only way to produce heroin's raw ingredient. It will be possible for drug companies, or drug traffickers,
Adam Dean/ New York Times NewsService file photo
parasites? • It can if t h e f ood • gets cold e n ough and stays that way long enough, according to guide-
ing know-how started competing with them. Gunmen from
lines for the food industry
Mexican drug gangs have
Administration.
taken control of many secret
For dis ease-causing parasites like tapeworms, roundworms and flukes,
marijuana fields in American forests. His commentary suggested several possible steps to prevent misuse of the technology. The yeasts could be locked in secure laboratories, worked on by screened employees. Shar-
into heroin.
from the Food and Drug
which may infest raw or
undercooked fish, freezing can be the answer, but its effectiveness varies.
In general, killing parasitesrequires freezing and
A farm worker harvests opium from poppies last year in Myanmar — e step in the heroin manufacturing process that may soon become unnecessary.
ing them with other scientists
storing fish at a surround-
without government permission could be outlawed.
to brew it in yeast genetical-
special skill." Implications of
a watch list,as sequences for anthrax and smallpox are, so
ing temperature of minus4 degrees F or colder for seven days; or freezing at a surrounding temperature of minus 31 degrees or cold-
ly modified to turn sugar into morphine.
research like hers should be
any attempt to buy them from
er until the fish is solid and
DNA supply houses would raise flags. Chemically silent
storingat the sametempera-
DNA "watermarks" could be
at a surrounding temperature of minus 31 degrees
Their DNA could be put on
calmly discussed by experts, Almost all the essential steps she said, and Oye's commenhad been worked out in the last tary "was getting people to reseven years; a final missing act in a very freaked-out way." one was published this week Robert Carlson, the author in the journal Nature Chemical of "Biology Is Technology," Biology. said restrictions were doomed " All the elements are i n to fail just as Prohibition failed place, but the whole pathway to stop the home brewing of needs tobe integrated before alcohol. "DNA synthesis is already a a one-pot glucose-to-morphine stream is ready to roll," said democratic, low-cost technolKenneth Oye, aprofessor of en- ogy," he said. "If you restrict gineering and political science access, you create a black
clout just as American corn farmers do. Also, pharmaceutical com-
paniescan already synthesize opiates in their labs. Fentanyl,
inserted so stolen yeasts could erful as morphine, is synthetic, be traced. Or the strains could as is loperamide (Imodium), an be made'wimpier and harder antidiarrheal opiate. to grow," Oye said, perhaps by Heroin sellers, by contrast, making them require nutrients must smuggle raw materials that were kept secret. out of lawless Afghanistan, You, the FBI agent, said he Laos,Myanmar and Mexico. did not want to comment on ons, but was Their supply lines are dis- Oye's suggesti rupted when any local pow- glad a threat had been idener — from the Taliban to the tified by scientists before it at MIT. market." U.S. Army — cracks down. was a reality, adding, "If this This rapid progress in synWhat is considered one of Brewing near their customers occurred across the board, it thetic biology has set off a de- the last i m portant m issing would save them many costs: would make the FBI's life a bate about how — and wheth- steps, a way to efficiently grow farmers, guards, guns, planes, heck of a lot easier." er — to regulate it. Oye and a morphine precursor, (S)-reother experts said this week in
ticuline, in brewer's yeast, Sac-
a commentary in the journal Nature that drug-regulatory
charomyces cerevisiae, was published in Nature Chemical Biology this week by scientists from the University of California, Berkeley, and Canada's Concordia University. The leader of the Berkeley
authorities were i ll-prepared
to control a process that would benefit the heroin trade much more than th e
p r escription
a painkiller 100 times as pow-
the fermentation process so
argues it is the latter.
delicate that it is not dose to producing salable quantities of
Companies are always seeking painkillers that create less
heroin. Restricting DNA stifles
addictive euphorias or do not
That chain will be hard to
cause no modified yeast strain is commonly available yet. If that happens, he said, DEA laboratories would be able to iden-
disrupt. Since the 1960s, when
tify heroin made from it.
for biotech students and com-
panies. "We want the people in the field to be the sentinels, to recognize when someone is
trying to abuse or exploit their work and call the FBI." No scientific team has yet ad-
mitted having one strain capable of the entire sugar-to-morphinepathway,butseveralare trying, and the Stanford lab of Christina Smolke is a leader. She said she expected one to be
stat, butuse a good freezer thermometer. The FDA also
warns these techniques may not be suitable for particularly large fish, like those thicker than 6inches.
St. FFIRds School I Bcmd,is a school with acadcmllcstandards for Sctcncc,Tcchnololy, Rcading, Enginccring, Art, and Math. Otlr dediCated teachers inSPilre Students to high levels Of achievement. Im Reading and. Math, 92% of our stijdcnts, imcl~ t h ose on mdividijlaumirg yhng, rneet Or eXCeed the OregOn Statestandardtg. Respect for others, InoraIs„and virtues are aB yracticcl at St. Francis School. Stildcnts of all faiths are safe, welcorncdI, and honored. IIt otjr
key to crack down on heroin,
coHlHlUIllty, axldl Praycr is cncoUragcd~
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matory" because fermenting manipulated yeasts "is a really
do not rely on the thermo-
an CxPCCtatiOn Of cxoellenCC. With rigOrOus
the I nternational N a rcotics Control Board has set quotas.
COVERINGS
make heroin were "inflam-
Not all home freezers
get cold enough. To be sure that your freezer will work for controlling parasites,
sj
it was created to convince Tur-
published by next year. No one in the field thought she said, but suggestions that home brewers would soon
storing at minus 4 degrees or below for 24 hours.
A
An FBI agent who has been Thousands of small farmers, following the yeast strains their bankers and equipment since 2009 said he was glad that suppliers depend on the sales, the debate was beginning be- and they have local political forethe technology was ready and before lawmakers moved Visit Central Oregon's to restrict it. down approach doesn't work," said Supervisory S pecial Agent Edward You, who said he coined the "Brewing Bad" term and had held workshops
until the fish is solid and
ee
all research, they argue, and is paralyze breathing musdes, destined to fail just as restric- and havinga predictable protionson precursor chemicals cessthey could tweak would be have fai led to curb America's useful, but they already have a crystal meth epidemic. cheap, steady supply of opium A spokesman for the Drug from India, 'Itirkey and AustraEnforcement A d ministration lia, where poppies are grown said his agency "does not per- legallyby licensed farmers. ceive an imminent threat" be-
turefor 15 hours;orfreezing
IctmorelhanIIEI fIIIyoml-osehosl.
painkiller industry. The world should take steps to head that team, John Dueber, said it was off, they argue,by locking up not trying to make morphine the bioengineered yeast strains but 2,500 other alkaloids for and restricting access to the which reticuline is a precursor, DNA that would let drug car- some of which might become tels reproduce them. antibiotics or cancer drugs. Other biotech experts countNonetheless, he said, since er that raisingthe specter of fer- he realized his research has menting heroin like beer, jok- implications for the making of ingly known among insiders as morphine, he sent his draft pa"Brewing Bad," is alarmist and per to Oye, suggesting the dethat Oye's proposed solutions batebecome more public. are overkill. Although making One crucial question is small amounts of morphine whether the technology is of will soon be feasible, they say, more use to thepharmaceutical the yeastsare so fragile and industryor drug cartels.Oye
"We've learned that the top-
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TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, MAY 21, 2015
Zone Continued fromA1 On Wednesday night, the City Council approved an expansion of the zone to include
V.
Drake Park'
g,
r"
the city's downtown commer-
cial heart, stretching south from Greenwood Avenue to Idaho Avenue, and west from
the existingzone to Lava Road and Harriman Street. The vote
was a first reading, and a second one, scheduled for June 3, will have to occur before the
eN
Boundaries ofexpanded exclusionzone
Councilors Barb Campbell council's discussion, Campbell handed out miniature versions of the U.S. Constitution and
asked whether this rule created "unequalprotection under the law."
"I don't understand how we
can do this downtown, but not in NorthWest Crossing or
in the Mill Quarter," she said. "I'm not sure how we hope this
Continued from A1
the city's director of right of way operations and the main-
If a jetliner can become
a weapon, and an office tower a killing ground, how can anyone be safe? This is why "The 9/II
tenance department, noted there is about $80 million in deferred maintenance. During a presentation, Ab-
Commission Report" became a national bestseller
bas saidthe costs of repairs
increase exponentially as the quality of roads deteriorates. "We're at that
upon its release in 2004 — because in the wake of the disaster, we needed a
b r eaking
point," he said, arguing if the city doesn't act, the cost of repairs will skyrocket.
sense ofcontext to reas-
a strong stance in favor of the The City Council is considzone, saying, "There's 84,000 ering a 5-cent-per-gallon fuel people who want to go down- tax as one way to find new town and not be accosted or revenue for streets. During the sexually a s saulted," R oats meeting, the council directed said. city staff to conduct a scienDuring the public com- tifically valid survey to gauge ment section, Sue Bastian, what measures the commuwho works to document the nity would support to f u nd stories of homeless people, streets, including a tax, which questioned the intent of the would eventually have to be rule, asking the City Coun- approved by voters. cil to focus more on the root The council also took up causes of poverty than pun- the issue of the legalization of ishing crimes associated with recreational marijuana and homelessness. existing medical marijuana Bend Police Chief Jim Por- stores. While no action was ter said his department uses taken, the council expressed the zone sparingly. interest in regulating marijua-
world were still in place. The product of a bipartisan federal commission, the report began with a
Source: Bend Police Department Pete Smith / The Bulletin
rule becomes law. and Nathan Boddie were the lone dissenters. During t he
Reading
of the city's streets and ideas for finding more money for maintenance. David Abbas,
is going to decrease crime, and not just move it across the city." Supporters of the expansion also questioned whether "This isn't about panhanit could possibly disperse instead ofreduce crime. Coun- dling, this isn't about mental cilor Doug Knight noted a illness, it's about criminal bepedestrian path in a residen- havior downtown," he said. tial area off of NW Broadway Over the past three years, Street in the Old Bend neigh- the rule has been applied borhood is known for attract- against 34 people, most coming criminal activity. Knight, monly for drug offenses, Porwho lives near the path, sug- ter said. He also noted that gested the police expand their someone who has been exdowntown foot patrols to cov- cluded will not be kept from er such areas along the zone's going to work or visiting famfringes. ily downtown. Excluded in"It's like a balloon, if you dividuals also will be able to push on one side, it goes out drive through downtown. the other," he said. In other b usiness, the Councilor Casey Roats took council discussed the state
sure us that the pillars by which we understand the
minute-by-minute re-creation of the catastrophe,
before moving into a se-
Warrick Page / New York Times News Service file photo
Residents walk in 2011past an entrance to the compound where Oseme BinLaden was killed in an operation by U.S.Navy SEALs, in Abbottabed, Pakistan. A list of the books end papers found in-
side the compoundwas declassified Wednesday, providing e look et the inner workings of e terrorist's mind.
ries of extended consid-
erations: of the rise of bin Laden, the development of American counterter-
Al-Qaida application form — Tojoin al-Qaida in Osamabin
r orism efforts and t he escalation of the conflict between al-Qaida and the
Laden's day, prospective recruits had to take anarduous and risky journey to the network's haven in themountains of northwestern PakIstan, the heartland of global Isiamist militancy. Then they had to fill in an application. The three pages of questions show howal-Qaida, in its vision of itself as a disciplined network of committed militants, blended the bureaucratic with the frighteningly absurd. Among thequeries: "Do you wish to execute asuicide operation?" and "Who should we contact In caseyou become amartyr?" The last line provided spacefor the address and phonenumber of next of kin. The application, which wasamongnearly 80 documents and other materials, including books andpress clippings, seized from binLaden'scompound duringtheraidbyNavySEALsinMay 2011, was declassified Wednesday bythe Obamaadministration. The material offers the deepest look yet into bin Laden's final years — much of which heappears to have spent sending missives to his subordinates, seeking to direct a terror network that appeared to havegrown far beyond his control, and working his way through a pile of books that ranged from sober works of history and current affairs to wild conspiracy theories. Apart from reading materials, most of the documents are ietters between bin Ladenand his lieutenants and writings by other loyalists and operatives. Thedocuments do contain snippets of previously unknown information about al-Qaida, such asthat its Taiiban benefactors objected to the Sept. 11attacks and the bombing of the USS Cole in Yemenin 2000, U.S. officials said. Wednesday's releasecame after years of pressure for the Obama administration to declassify material seized from the compound. Last year, Congress directed the Office of the Director of the National Intelligence to look over the material. The review, which began inMay2014, is expected to continue through the summerandInto the fall, said Jeffrey Anchukaitis, a spokesman for the intelligence office. But the White Houseasked that office and theCIAto begin releasing material immediately because of "the increasing public demand to review those documents," he said.
United States.
"The 9/II Commission
Report" isone of the doc-
uments discovered on bin Laden's bookshelf — no
na outlets. "I think we should look at
surprise there. What bet-
ter way t o u nderstand one's enemy than to un-
location, when they can be open, and things like that,"
derstand th e
n a r r atives
riously think we should look
we hold dear? S omething
at clustering them together
might be said about the
rather than spacing them apart, but we need to insist
dozens of other federal reports in his possession, w hich range from t h e practical (applications for
said Mayor Jim Clinton. "I se-
on as much local control as
possible." Councilors Roats, Boddie and Victor Chudowsky agreed to study the issue in more
both new
simi l a r
a n d r e i ssued
passports, instructions on how to register the birth of a U.S. citizen abroad) to the analytical (a 2009 Senate assessment of "the Evolving Al-Qaeda Threat
detail. — Reporter: 541-633-2160, tleeds@bendbulletin.com
to the Homeland,"a 2005
National Security Council "Strategy for Victory in Iraq"). It makes sense that bin Laden would find such m aterials useful, for t h e
insights they offer into our way of thinking, of strategizing, if nothing else. And yet, I find myself compelled — and in a perverse way, cheered — by another aspect ofthese holdings, which is what
— New YorkTimesNews Service
a bout As far as the rest of bin figure of such single-minded American transparency. Laden's reading list, it, too, is purpose, who in these titles is This has been an essen- as we might imagine. We find revealed? tial, and ongoing, source the work of government critIndeed, Looking through of debate since the Patriot ics such as Greg Palast ("The the list is a reminder, finalAct first asked us to sac- Best Democracy Money Can ly, of his humanity, dangerrifice freedom for secu- Buy") and Noam Chomsky ous and misguided though S u r vival: he was. This is something rity, a discussion kicked ("Hegemony or into overdrive by Edward America's Quest for Global we don't like to think about, Snowden's 2013 r evela- Dominance"), as well as pop- that we share with our adtions about the National ular histories like Paul Ken- versaries a common human Security Agency. Still, the nedy's "The Rise and Fall of core. But for me, what resofact that bin Laden, of all the Great Superpowers" and nates about this list is how people, could have such Bob Woodward's "Obama's mundane parts of it are, how information on his bookWars." recognizable — not specialshelf suggests the degree Monomania? Yes, and a bit ized but common, titles we of transparency that is of self-absorption. But what might discover on our own still in place. else would we expect from a shelves. they have to say
Erik Abel / Bloomberg News file photo
Swedish trucking company Scenie offers en extensive workplace wellness program to its 5,000 employees — e well-meaning attempt that stressed some employees end made them feei like failures.
Wellness keep his job: "In these times when people are laid off due to the global financial crisis, you need to stay fit, and the health profile helps you do so." More broadly, Spicer and Cederstrom found that more
An employer might care less about triggering anxiety it's not clear that they work. than stamping out more conCorporate wellness is an $8 crete risk factors. Still, having billion industry; as of 2013, anxious employees misses employers spent $2 billion a major aspect of wellness. "Many people have bought on wellness initiatives, as Bloomberg reported in 2013. into the argument that the fit While on e H a r vard s t udy employee orthe happy emfrom 2010 found more than ployee is the most productive $3 in savings for every dollar employee," he said. "(But) spent, more recent research wellness is happiness and by RAND estimated that fig- health."
extreme corporate wellness
ure at $1.50. The same RAND
Continued fromA1 One employee interviewed by the book's authors said that he felt the need to stay fit to
Despite the growing popularity of wellness programs,
programs such as those at study found much higher savScania lead to increased anx- ings for disease management iety and stress. "In the Scania programs, as did this study case, they said, 'I have to exer- of a successful Pepsi wellness cise or else I'm not going to be program that, in part, targetseen as an attractive employ- ed participants with ailments ee. I'm not going to just be a that include asthma, coronary bad person, but an unemploy- artery disease, atrial fibrillaable person,'" said Spicer, who tion, and diabetes. studies organizational behavMore extensiveprograms ior, psychology, and sociology that include preventive meaof work at the Cass Business sures, however, can actually School in London. have u nhealthy o u tcomes, As health care costs grow, largely by triggering feelings many companies in the U.S. of anxiety, Spicer and Cederhave invested in some kind strom found. "This increasing of wellness initiative, hoping pressure ... is not just formal for a healthier (and therefore in terms of the wellness procheaper) workforce. A 2013 grams, but informal in terms analysis by the RAND Cor- of social pressure to work out poration found that half of all a nd be extremely fit in t h e organizations with 50 or more workplace," Spicer said. "That employees offered wellness then can have some psychoprograms. The thinking goes logical effects. There is this that getting at-risk workers to implication that you don't just change bad habits will save need to have a work ethic, but a company on medical costs a workout ethic." down the road. The programs Most companies aren't as differ, but often include such overbearing as Scania, but elements as smoking cessation Spicer says that wellness proassistance, biometric screen- grams have become more ings, and fitness challenges. aggressive. In some Danish According to a Kaiser Family municipalities, for example, Foundation survey from last employees can participate in fall, 36percentoflargecompa- sessions with consultants to nies offer employees health in- learn better eating habits. In surance discounts for weight their book, Spicer and Cederloss and smoking cessation. strom refer to such programs Health risk assessments are as "fat therapy." Such initiaeven more popular, the study tives might lead to weight found, with more than half loss, but they publicly sinof large companies provid- gle out some workers, and, ing a financial incentive for the two say, imply a lack of self-controL participation.
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THURSDAY, MAY 21, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
Suttle
between undergraduate eco- around the lake to support nomics studies at the Uni- parts of the traiL The logs versity of South Florida and have since deteriorated. Sabo law school at Florida State said holes opened up along
Continued from A1 The Suttle Lake trail work
is just one of a host of projects University, where he starts in around the national forest de- the fall. He said it was good to signed to improve trails this spend time outdoors. "I was working in a law ofhiking season, with some already underway. Others fice before this and I love doinclude trail restoration along ing this (trail work)," he said. the Metolius River and in the The crew camps near the Newberry National Volcanic projectsites. Monument.
Paul Sancya /The Associated Press file photo
Last cycle's Republican presidential candidates stand onstage before a Republican presidential debate at Oakland University in Auburn Hills, Michigan, in 2011. Expect the stage to be even more crowded this year — 10 or more are expected to debate.
10's a crowd?GOPprepares for double digits ondebate stage By Steve Peoples The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The first Republican presidential debate will feature no fewer than 10
candidates. That's according to guidelinesreleased Wednesday by debate hosts Fox News and Facebook, which offer the first
clues as to how the GOP will handle its largest presidential class in recent memory. Par-
ty officials have been working privately in recent weeks to prevent its first debate in
August from becoming a nationally televised circus, while lesser-known candidates have
been lobbying for access. Only announced candidates will be allowed to participate,
according to the new guidelines. Participation will be limited to those who "place in the
top 10 of an average of the five most recent national polls, as
recognized by Fox News." More than 10 candidates would be allowed on the de-
bate stage in the event of a tie. At least 15 high-profile contenders are expected to com-
pete for a spot, a group likely to include eight current or former governors, four senators,
Pot Continued fromA1 "Now that it's legal, I think
there's a big push on the medical swing. My new patient rate has gone way up, that's an amazing factor." Not that obtaining a medical
two accomplished business executives and a renowned neurosurgeon. There will be winners and losers under the new system.
lobbied Republican officials in recent weeks to consider creative options, including deThe winners could include bate "heats" featuring seven or the likes of Donald Trump, a eight candidates at a time on businessman and reality tele- consecutive nights. vision star who has already CNN, which plans to hold a launched a presidential explor- GOP debate in September, said atory committee. While some Wednesday it will divide its party officials were reluctant event into two parts: one feato grant him a spot on stage turing the 10 highest-polling should he run, he has placed candidates, the other including within the top 10 in most re- "candidates who meet the mincent polls. imum threshold of 1percent in The losers could include public polling but are ranked statewide office holders who outside the top 10." have struggled to gain nationRepublican National Comal traction. Those on the bub- mittee Chairman Reince Prieble include former Texas Gov. bus said, "We support and Rick Perry, Louisiana Gov. respect the decision CNN has Bobby Jindal, 2012 presiden- made." tial candidate Rick Santorum, For its August debate, Fox Ohio Gov.John Kasich, and News also promised to proformer technology executive vide "additional coverage and Carly Fiorina, the only woman air time ... to those candidates in the Republican field. who do not place in the top 10," Their roads to the White according to Michael ClemHouse would be even steep- ente, the network's executive er without the opportunity to vice president of news editorial. stand out in a nationally tele-
There will be 12 GOP pres-
vised debate. "I'll look forward to making
idential d ebates b etween
the cut and making my case to
GOP voters on Aug. 6," Fiorina
Medicalpotin DeschutesCounty 13 dispensaries 3,600-plus patients 1 dispensary per300 patients
marijuana card through the THCF clinic is a sure thing, he said. State law requires appli- Galveston Avenue, said she cants show they suffer from a recognizes the value of medqualifying condition, and cards ical marijuana, but opposes must be renewed annually. her neighbor's plan to lease his "That fence is tall, buddy," building for a medical marijuahe said. "And you're not get- na dispensary. The site is too ting over unless you dearly get closeto localbars,a day care over it." Later, he said about 135 and an elementaryschool,she people qualified for a card. The sald. "I'm not against the use of clinicpre-screens applicants, so Gilliland expected most would marijuana for recreation or qualify for a card. Paperwork medicinal marijuana, absoluteerrorsare usually to blame for ly not. It's an herb and I specialthose who don't, he said. ize in natural medicine," Brust M ore and more people in said Friday. "But, like alcohol, Oregon are clearing that fence. just because it's legal doesn't That, in turn, is contributing to a change in public attitude to-
ward the drug, which becomes legalfor personal possession in the state July 1 and for recreational sale in 2016. A survey
by the Pew Research Center in April showed a continuing rise in the number of people nationwide who support legalized marijuana, now at 53 percent.
In 2006, by contrast,32percent of those surveyed supported legalization, while 60 percent opposed. "There is a phase shift," said Seth Crawford, a sociology instructor at Oregon State University whose first two classes on marijuana policy in Corvallis this year were fully enrolled. He cited the Pew survey, which found that those in favor of le-
that sell marijuana to other
creating a hazard where someonecouldtwistorbreak an ankle.
The rock w al l s hould provide sturdy footing for d ecades. Rather than
use
cement, the rocks are held together by their own weight, said Ryan Kuehn, 25, of Long Beach, California, the American Conservation Experience crew leader. The indi-
vidual rocks weigh 50 to 400 pounds. Piecing them t ogether looked like a real-life game of Tetris. Instead of a video game controller the trail crew
used hammers, chisels and a forest had cut from Santiam prybar. "We want the rock to sit on or to share opportunities. Pass for trail projects years "We like t o s p read the ago, across Suttle Lake. The there and not wiggle at all," wealth and use a variety of crew used a pontoon boat Kuehn said. organizations," Sabo said. with a 50-horsepower motor Passers-by, including a trio American C o n servation to push an old dock loaded of mountain bikers, a cluster Experience draws people with the rock, about 2 tons at of school kids from Prineville from around the country, a time. Sabo said he has two and a g r oup o f h i k ers, as evidenced by the team retired docks at Suttle Lake, stopped Wednesday to thank at Suttle Lake. Its members originally from Cultus Lake, Sabo and the trail crew for come from as far away as that he uses for such mis- their rock-wall work. "They appreciate a good, Alabama, Florida, Iowa and sions. He calls them "dorges," Washington, D.C. a combination of docks and solid trail under their feet," For John Barr, 23, of Tam- barges. Sabo said. pa, Florida, volunteering to About 15 to 20 years ago — Reporter: 541-617-7812, build trails is filling his gap another trail crew put in logs ddarling@bendbulletin.com done by the American Conservation Experience crew,
the rock, which the national
Where Buyers And Sellers Meet s ss • •
-
•
Classifieds
A~tR iE=Y )O Q ~U g ~'jRfEAQ ID ~Y.
N ~EA'f0j<Rl< A~ L~D g >A')Y / WjEEK(EN)N
first scheduled for Aug. 6 in Cleveland.
parallel system that governs medical marijuana. Authorities have been concerned that
growers of medical marijuana, largely unregulated, are supplying a black market for the drug, although how much t hey provide is determine.
d i fficult t o
Nonetheless, the legislative Joint Committee on
I m ple-
menting Measure 91 came to an impasse last week on the question of local control over
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medical marijuana dispensaries.Afterward, Senate President Peter Courtney, D-Salem,
createdaseparate Senatecommittee, which moved first to consider a bill aimed at crack-
ing down on medical marijuana growers diverting their product to the black market.
Meanwhile, the Oregon Li-
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holders for free just so they can
grow more pot to sell to dispensaries, which accounts for
i
some of the unaccounted-for
product, he said. "That black market scenario has changed drastically in the last year," Hughes said, "just becauseout-of-state prices ar-
potential marijuana carries
en't what they were and, hey, ...
for abuse, said Evelyn Brust,
even if I'm getting less for my cannabis at the dispensary, the
cardholders. Measure 91, passedbyvoters a naturopathic medicine prac- in November, legalizes pertitioner and a cupuncturist sonal possession and eventual in Bend. Brust, who runs the retail sales of marijuana, but Westside Family Clinic on left untouched the separate but
When the workers at Sut-
For some projects the na- tle Lake finish up in about tional forest hires trail crews two weeks, Sabo said he exfrom Central Oregon, such pects to have a dozen out of as the Bend-based Heart of 20 trail improvement projects Oregon Corps, but Sabo said done around the lake. Fixsometimes it looks out of state ing up the lake's trail started as well. The reason could be around 2010 and will likely that a particular crew may take a couplemore years to possess specific skills, such complete. as the rock-wall building It took creativity to move
the trail because of erosion,
August and March, with the
drafting regulations on the sale of recreational marijuana. The mean that any 16-year-old can continuing rule-making and go into a bar and drink. Be- legislative maneuvering has cause it's legal you can't drink prospective retail marijuana and drive. It's legal, but society entrepreneurs, some of them has made rules because when already in the medical mariit's abused society pays a really juana business, in limbo. "Everybody is waiting to see high price." The Oregon Health Au- what happens," said Bend atthority lists 13 medical mar- torney Michael Hughes, who ijuana dispensaries in Bend, representsa handful of Bend about one for every 300 med- dispensaries. Hughes said he ical marijuana patients in De- uses medicalmarijuana for a schutes County. In April, the leg injury; he said he also has agency counted more than long experience growing hemp 3,600 medical marijuana pa- and cannabis. tients in the county, 120 more Illegal growers still exist, but than it counted in January, ac- the incentive for a black marcording to the agency's quar- ket is declining, he said. terlyreports.In January 2006, Estimates that as much as it reported 289 cardholders in two-thirds of marijuana grown the county. formedical purposes ends up Statewide, the number of on the black market are too applicants for medical mar- high, Hughes said. With recijuana cards, both new and reational marijuana available renewals, peaked at nearly legally in Colorado and Wash70,000in summer 2014, nearly ington, black market marijua1,400 more than the previous na doesn't bring the prices it summer. In January 2006, just used to. Some growers are sim11,853 medical marijuana pa- ply giving marijuana to card-
galizing marijuana "are far more likely than opponents" to say they had changed their mind on the issue. Across all age groups, the percentage in favor of legalizing marijuana has increased steadily since tients held cards in Oregon. 1990, according to the survey. Meanwhile, the coming of "They attribute that to peo- legal recreational marijuana is ple being exposed to medical focusing attention on medical marijuana programs," Craw- marijuana growers, who are ford said last week, "and the largely unregulated and who sky did not fall." supply both approved cardPolicymakers and the pub- holders and the dispensaries lic alike should remember the
wrote on Twitter. Several candidates h ave
A5
risk isn't there." — Reporter: 541-617-7815, jditzler@bendbulletin.com
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A6 T H E BULLETIN • THURSDAY, MAY 21, 2015
TODAY'S READ: A FORMER SOVIET REPUBLIC
Indonesia, Malaysia agree to care for stranded migrants
eor ia torn etweenRussiaan West By DanIella Cheslow
gian war brought out the p ro-Russian strain of t h e Georgian Orthodox Church, said Giorgi Maisuradze, a philosophy professor at Ilia State University in Tbilisi.
McClatchy Foreign Staff
TBILISI, Georgia — I t might seem like a golden moment of opportunity for the citizens of the small Black Sea
By Joe Cochrane
inthe Andaman Seanear Thai-
New York Times News Service
JAKARTA,
"After the 2008 war," he
Ind o nesia
land and Malaysia today. An estimated 7,000 to 8,000
nation of Georgia: The European Union will decide later
said, "some Georgianclerics
— Indonesia and Malaysia migrants are still at sea, many agreed Wednesday to take of them abandoned by traf-
this week during a summit of
claimed God summoned Rus-
in thousands of migrants
its leaders whether to allow Georgians to travel to Europe
sian troops to punish Georgians for trying to join NATO
visa-free.
and the EU."
But it finds people in this former Soviet republic walking a thin tightrope between the lure of business oppor-
The unclear orientation of Georgia's foreign policy has tic culture wars between liberals and conservatives. Last year, Georgia's Parliament ignored the protests of the Orthodox clergy and ac-
stranded at sea until they down by Thailand on human can be sent home or reset- smuggling. An additional 3,500 tled in a third country, in the migrants — mainly Banglafirst official actionby South- deshis seeking jobs and ethnic east Asian nations to try to Rohingya fleeing persecution resolve a crisis well into its in Myanmar — havelanded second week in Indonesia, Malaysia and Responding to interna- Thailand, orbeen rescued offtional pressure to save the shore, since May 10. Many of migrants, many of whom them are women and young have been adrift in rickety children.
ceded to European demands
boats for weeks with little
to o u tlaw d i scrimination against gays, one of several requirements for attaining visa liberalization. The measure passed a year after a mob of thousands, led by Orthodox priests in black robes,
food or water, the agreement by Indonesia, Malaysia and Thailand was a potential lifesaver even as experts said it offered only a temporary fix to deeper problems.
Wednesday, Indonesia and Malaysia said they would "provide
It reverses the previous
ment and repatriation process
position of those governments, whose navies had been pushing boatloads of desperate migrants from Bangladesh and Myanmar
will be done in one year by the international community."
translated into proxy domesPhotos by Daniella Cheslow/Tribune News Service
tunities in the West and the A Georgian flag flies next to the bell tower of Sameba Cathedral, threats from R u ssia, their built in 2004 In TbilisI as Georgia experienced a revival of the Orthoneighbor to the north, which dox Church. Georgia's overtures to the West are checked by deep in 2008 helped two Georgian religious and cultural tIes shared with Russia. Below, wine bottles provinces break away into the In the shape of Josef Stalin show that USSR nostalgia runs high.
Russian orbit and has warned Georgia not to cozy up to the West.
and it shows in the rhetoric of
Russian Foreign M inistry spokesman Alexander Lukashevich has warned of a "tough and principled" response to any tightening of
Russian leaders — we have to be vigilant." This struggle is easy to see in the landmarks of the country's capital. The statue of
what he called an "anti-Rus-
Lenin thatonce commanded
attacked a demonstration of
sian" partnership between the the central square of Tbilisi EU and former Soviet repub- has been replaced by a gilded lics, including Georgia. sculpture of Georgia's patron, Tbilisi, Georgia's capital, St. George, slaying a dragon, has long struggled to balance reflecting the nation's plucky its relationships with Moscow resolve to remain free of and its European trading part- Russia. ners across the Black Sea. ToNearby are symbols of day, these two poles are pull- the West: a sprawling, graying apart, as Europe and the bricked Courtyard by Mar- can sanctions did little to deter United States enforce sanc- r iott hotel and a p in k a n d Russia from annexing Crimea tions on Russia for its annex- orange Dunkin' Donuts store- or from supporting pro-Rusation of Crimea from Ukraine front. All around the capital, sian separatists who continue last year. The EU's overtures blue European Union flags to carve up Ukraine. "I think Georgians have to Georgia are an attempt to fly on federal buildings, a tesdraw the country away from tament to Georgia's hopes of been made a lot of promises Russia's influence, and polls full EU membership. The road about how the West will come find that an overwhelming to Tbilisi's airport has been save them," said Thomas de number of Georgians would renamed George W. Bush Waal, an expert on the Caulike to join the EU. Highway, and although older casus at the Carnegie EndowBut a growing minority of Georgians learned Russian in ment for International Peace. Georgians think their coun- school, young citizens speak " The pro-Russian mood i s try should tilt back toward English as a foreign language proportionate to the lack of Russia. A poll conducted last and aspire to jobs in Europe or tangible benefits on the EU August by the National Democratic Institute, an advocacy
the United States. But these Western symbols
srde.
organization based in Wash- are underscored by a harsh ington, and funded by Swe- realpolitik. In 2008, two years den found that 20 percent of
after the heroic St. George
Economic aid Beyond questions of territory, Georgia is also in des-
Georgians thought their coun- statue was erected in the cap- perate need of an economic try should join a Eurasian ital's central square, Russian lifeline that the West hasn't union established by the Rus- troops swept Georgian sol- delivered. The national cursian Federation as a counter- diers out of the breakaway rency, the lari, has dropped weight to the EU. regions Abkhazia and South to a 16-year low against the Ossetia. Many G eorgians dollar. Georgia sells more Pulledin two directions hope membership in the Euro- than half its exports to forSuch is the fate of a nation pean Union could be a defense mer Soviet republics, which that's straddled the East-West strategy against possible Rus- are struggling with the ripple divide since it broke away sian occupation — but they effects ofWestern sanctions from the Soviet Union in 1991. know it's a shaky bulwark. on Russia. A free-trade agree"When the Russian Empire In the 2008 Russian-Geor- ment signed last year between existed, Georgia was an inte- gian war, the EU and NATO Georgia and the EU has been gral part of it," said Anna Do- didn't i ntervene t o p r otect only a minor counterweight lidze, a Tbilisi-born observer Georgian sovereignty or pre- because the EU buys less than of Georgian law and politics vent the expulsion of some aquarterofGeorgian exports, at the University of W e st- 40,000 Georgians from the according to the national staern Ontario. "As long as this breakaway provinces. Last tistics office. dream or ambition existsyear, European and AmeriThe 2008 R ussian-Geor-
several dozen gay-rights activists in Freedom Square. Activist Natia Gvianishvi-
li fled the protest in a police bus under a hail of stones. She said if Georgia leaned more toward Russia, "it will mean a lot of progress we have achieved will all disappear." Russia's threats, and the EU's imperfect alliance, seem to be leading Georgians back to their age-old tactics of balancing between great powers.
fickers aftera recent crack-
In the agreement announced humanitarian assistance to
those 7,000 irregular migrants still at sea." They also agreed "to offer them temporary shelter provided that the resettle-
The statement called on the i nternational community t o
"share the burden" by provid-
away from t h eir s h ores ing financial support. in what international aid While the details have not
groups characterized as a dangerous game of human pingpong. "It's extremely welcome
been worked out, Lowry called on regional governments and commercial shipping companies to help pinpoint the loca-
news," said Joe Lowry, a
tions of migrant boats and pro-
vide them directions to landing points in Malaysia and Indone-
route between the Caspian and Black seas, Georgia sold
spokesman for the International Organization for Migration in Bangkok. "It's the right thing to do. They should get the helicop-
wine to ancient Greece, was
ters and planes and boats
agreement "an important ini-
invaded by Persia and sought
out there to look for these tial step" and "vital" for saving people." lives, but said further action
Located on a
v i tal t r ade
Russian annexation in 1801 as protection against the Otto-
man Empire. Today it remains a modern-day bridge between powers: a conduit for gas from Azerbaijan to Turkey runs through it. Looking forward, some Georgia observers say the
But in a sign of the un-
was required to address the
derlying problems that remained, the migrants' home countries, Bangladesh and Myanmar, did not participate in the talks in Malaysia on Wednesday. And Thailand, which has been a way
rootcauses ofcrisis. Tens of thousands of Rohingya, a stateless Muslim ethnic group that lives primar-
Russia. "Neither the U.S. nor the EU could protect Georgia in 2008," said Dolidze, of the Uni-
sian island of Sumatra rescued at least 370 migrants
versity of Western Ontario.
from sinking ships and
"Some people think it could be
brought them ashore. Those
inevitable that Russia would influence Georgia, so why not
migrants included passengers from a boat that was
make the most of it?"
spotted by journalists adrift
e •
e
•
View our presentation at Tompkinswealthpresents.com charles Tompkins,GFPI 541.204.0667
Securities & Advisory Servicesofferedthrough KMS Financial Services,Inc.MemberFINRA/SIPC
ily in Rakhine State in western Myanmar, have fled the
station for the migrants and until recently a haven for
er fully severing its links to
•
The U.N. High Commissionerfor Refugees called the
country during the last several years, most going to Malaysia or Bangladesh. The Myanmar traffickers, did not agree to government does not recogtake in any migrants. nize the Rohingya as citizens The agreement came as and has refused to accept any fishermen on the Indone- back.
country wil l t r y t o b e nefit from both worlds, cultivating ties with the West while nev-
•
sia, or rescue them if necessary.
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B2
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, MAY 21, 2015
E VENT
ENDA R
McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St., Bend; www. mcmenamins.comor541-382-5174. TRAVEL OREGON'SBACK ROADS "ANTONYANDCLEOPATRA: AND HIDDENGEMS: Kim Cooper Findling, editor of Cascade Journal, STRATFORDFESTIVAL HD": A showing of the Shakespeare play the author of "Day Trips From about the ancient affair of Antony Portland" and a Travel Oregon and Cleopatra; 7 p.m.; $18; Regal ambassador, will speak about Old Mill Stadium 16 and IMAX, Oregon's popular destinations and 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, hidden gems; noon; free; Sunriver Bend; www.fathomevents.com or Area Public Library, 56855 Venture 844-462-7342. Lane, Sunriver; 541-312-1034. "HOT SPOT INPOMPEII": An Italian HISTORY LECTURE:THE comedy set in Pompeii A.D. 79 right CHEMAWA INDIANSCHOOL: as Mt. Vesuvius blows; 7:30 p.m.; Learn about the history of Native American boarding schools, with a $19, $16 for students and seniors; 2nd Street Theater, 220 NELafayette special focus on Chemawa Indian Ave., Bend; www.2ndstreettheater. School in Salem; discover the lives of the students through the school's com or 541-312-9626. extensive photographs;6 p.m.;$3 "TRUE WEST":A tragicomedy that for members, $5 for nonmembers; involves two estranged brothers High Desert Museum, 59800 S. reconnecting in their mother's U.S. Highway97, Bend; www. home after years of separation; highdesertmuseum.org/rsvp or 7:30 p.m.; $15; Volcanic Theatre 541-382-4754. Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or PREVIEW NIGHTOF "PRE'S 541-323-1881. PEOPLE":A preview of the documentary of distance runner 2BLESSEDTOUR2015: A reggae Steve Prefontaine, also featuring and hip-hop night featuring J Ras, "Fire on the Track," to benefit the IrieFuse, Burnell Washburn, Marko "Pre'sPeople"documentary;6 p.m.; and more; 8 p.m.; $10 plus fees in $10; Fleet Feet Sports, 1320 NW advance, $12 at the door, $8 with Galveston Ave., Bend; 541-389-1601. college ID; Domino Room, 51 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; www. AUTHORPRESENTATION:Bob bendticket.com. Welch, author of "CascadeSummer," will present a talk and slide show SCOOTHERRINGANDCAITLIN about his 2014 adventure on WEIERHAUSER:The two California's John Muir Trail; 6:30 p.m.; comediansperform; 8p.m.; $8 $5;PaulinaSpringsBooks,422 SW plus fees in advance, $10 at the Sixth St., Redmond; 541-526-1491. door; The Summit Saloon & Stage, 125 NWOregon Ave., Bend; www. LINCOLN ANDTHE OREGON bendcomedy.com or 541-419-0111. COUNTRY:Richard Etulain, professor emeritus of history at the "FOR THOUSANDS OFMILES": University of New Mexico, presents A movieaboutone man'sbike Lincoln and the Oregon Country; journey across America; 9 p.m.; $5; 6:30 p.m.; free; A.R. Bowman McMenamins Old St. Francis School, Memorial Museum, 246 N. Main St, 700 NW Bond St., Bend; www. Prineville; www.bowmanmuseum. mcmenamins.comor541-382-5174. org or 541-447-3715. CASEY NEILL &THE NORWAY FRIDAY RATS:The Portland modern rock band performs; 7 p.m.; free; CENTRAL OREGON BEERWEEK
To submit an event, visit bendbulletin.comlevents and click 'Add Event" at least 10 days before publication.
Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Questions: communitylife@bendbulletin.com,541-383-0351.
TODAY
SATURDAY
Submitted photo
Portland indle folk-rock band The Decemberists will play a show at 6 p.m. Friday at the Les Schwab Amphitheater. KICKOFFPARTY: Sample beers from Central Oregon beers, with live music by Voodoo Highway;1 p.m.; $25; McMenamins Old St. Francis School,700 NW Bond St., Bend; www.mcmenamins.com or 541-382-5174. CENTRAL OREGON BEERWEEK: Featuring tastings from 5-7 p.m. and music from 7-9 p.m.every day through Thursday; 5 p.m.; free; Broken Top Bottle Shop,1740 NW Pence Lane, Suite1, Bend; www. btbsbend.com or 541-728-0703. THE DECEMBERISTS:The Portland indie folk-rock band performs, with Spoon and The Districts; 6 p.m.; $42 plus fees; Les Schwab Amphitheater, 520 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; www.bendconcerts.
com.
AUTHOR PRESENTATION: Bob Welch, author of "Cascade
The Bulletin will update items in the Police Logwhensuch arequest is received.Any newinformation, such asthe dismissal of chargesor acquittal, must beverifiable. For more information, call 541-633-2117.
BEND POLICE DEPARTMENT Unlawful entry — Avehicle was
Beer hike Contlnued from B1 Ledby OregonNatural Desert Association's Central Oregon wilderness coordinator
Gena Go odman-Campbell, O'Connor and a motley crew of journalists, beer geeks and outdoor enthusiasts trekked
into the Deschutes River Canyon where the Deschutes and
Northwest — will be unveiled
ale?" O'Connor said after the
hike. "Maybe a farmhouse brown wi th ro se h ips a n d
elderberry? Beers Made by Walking founder Eric Steen first start-
ed taking hikes with his local homebrewers club in Colorado Springs in 2010. Thetrips were so well-received that the following year he invited a handful of established brew-
Election
BEND ELKSMEMORIAL DAY BASEBALLTOURNAMENT: Threeday youth baseball tournament operated by the Bend Elks Club in cooperation with Bend-area high school baseball programs and the Bend Metro Parkand Recreation District; 8 a.m.; baseball facilities throughout Bend; www. triplecrownsports.com.
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Colors of Summer ... let the Fun begin!
Nore beerhikes June12, 9 a.m. to 2p.m.: Oregon Badlands Wilderness hike with Worthy Brewing Company; www.badlandsbmbw.eventbrite.com July 24,Ba.m.to5 p.nL:SuttonMountain'sBlackCanyonhike with Deschutes Brewing; www.blackcanyonbmbw.eventbrite.com For more general information on BeersMade byWalking, go to www.beersmadebywalking.com For more information about the OregonNatural Desert Association, go to www.onda.org
the McKenzie River Trust and the Portland beers will raise
ceedsfrom the finished beers.
The Eugene-areahikes benefit
year. "It is really hard (to serve Contlnued from B1 on a board). That's probably Janelle Wilcox, who spent the main thing — people's three years on the Bend-La lives are so busy," Wilcox Pine board, said she was sad said, noting many meetings to hear there wereno contest- happened during the day and ed races for that board this were difficult on members
Colorit Hot
Cozy warmth of a Fire Pit
Aq-
money for the Forest Park Conservancy. In Bend, the partnershipis with the Oregon Natural DesertAssociation. "When working with the nonprofits, we schedule the
hikesaccording to their educational needs,"Steen said. "(Oregon Natural Desert AssociaBrewing's Walk on the Wild tion)isinterested inwilderness SideBadlands Indigenous Ale protection, so they're taking brewedwith juniper tips, juni- peopleto wilderness proposper berries, Indian ricegrass al areas or places that are aland desert sage; and a Flan- ready protected. In Portland, ders-style brew by Hopworks working with the Forest Park that incorporated salmonber- Conservancy, the hikes take ry andvanilla leaf. place in Forest Park." "My desire when I created Local beer blogger Mark this was simply to get people Linderwasone of the 10hikers outside and to seethe world who "oohed" and"ahhed" their differently," said Steen, who way th rough Wednesday's now coordinateswalks in beer Scout Camp walk. After parhubs suchasEugene, Portland ticipating in one BeersMade and Seattle, and even Belling- by Walking event last year, ham, Washington, and differ- Linder hopesto make all three ent parts of North Carolina. Central Oregon events this "And I like to tie and attach spring andsummer.
eriesto take part in the hikes, and Beers Made by Walking was off and walking. that to beer." "It just snowballed," Steen InOregon and Washington, said by phone Tuesday. He is all Beers Made by Walking now the communications spe- trips are associated with a locialist for Hopworks Urban cal nonprofit that receives proBrewery in Portland. "The initial events were a success, and
•
reported enteredat10:21 a.m. May17, 10:31 a.m.May15, in the200blockof inthe500blockofNEEmersonAvenue. SW15th Street. Theft —Atheft was reported at Theft —Atheft was reported at10:27 4:24 p.m. May17, inthe areaof NW a.m. May19, in the500 blockof NE15th BroadwayStreet andNWDelaware Street. Avenue. Theft —Atheft was reported and an PRINEVILLE POLICE arrest madeat 6:23 p.m. May18, in the DEPARTMENT 900 block of NWBondStreet. Theft —Atheft was reported at 4:47 Unlawful entry — Avehicle was p.m. May19, in the61400 block of S. reported entered anditems stolen at U.S. Highway97. 5:04 a.m. May19, in the area ofNW Burglary — Aburglary was reported at Teal Loop.
WhychusCreek meet. O'Connor found the hike awe-inspiring and was excited to get we ended up with some very to the drawing board for his unusual and strange beers. BeersMadeby Walking brew. And the more walks we did, "A lot of the wild herbs and thebetter the beers got." plants (on the trail), we can Highlighting some of his find a lot of those commer- favorite past Beers Made by cially," said O'Connor, whose Walking concoctions, Steen beer, alongwith the two other mentioned the Kr iekenstein, Central OregonBeers Made by a sour beer made with chokeWalking brews —and possibly cherries by Pikes Peak Co., othersfrom around the Pacific in Colorado Springs; Worthy in the fall at atasting party. "With the daybeing kind of dark and gray,maybe a brown
SUNDAY
PRP~INE
NEWS OF RECORD POLICE LOG
Summer," will present a talk and slide show about his 2014 adventure on California's John Muir Trail; 6:30 p.m.; $5; Paulina Springs Books, 252 W. Hood St., Sisters; 541-549-0866. "HOT SPOT INPOMPEII": An Italian comedy set in Pompeii A.D. 79 right as Mt. Vesuvius blows; 7:30 p.m.; $19, $16 for students and seniors; 2nd Street Theater, 220 NE Lafayette Ave., Bend; www.2ndstreettheater.com or 541-312-9626. "TRUE WEST":A tragicomedy that involves two estranged brothers reconnecting in their mother's home afteryears of separation; 7:30 p.m.; $15; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.
BEND ELKSMEMORIAL DAY BASEBALLTOURNAMENT:Threeday youth baseball tournament operated by the Bend Elks Club in cooperation with Bend-area high school baseball programs and the Bend Metro Parkand Recreation District; 8 a.m.; baseball facilities throughout Bend; www. triplecrownsports.com. JAPANESEFESTIVAL AND SILENT AUCTION:Enjoy traditional Japanesearts and crafts, food vendors and local stores and watch Hokue'a Polynesian dancers; noon; free; Summit High School, 2855 NW Clearwater Drive, Bend; 541-355-4053. YOUTH CHOIROF CENTRAL OREGON CONCERT: Featuringa range of traditional, jazz, gospel and Broadway classics in honor of the choir's 25th anniversary; 7 p.m., doors open at 6:30 p.m.; $10; Bend High School, 230 NESixth St., Bend; www.ycco.org or 541-385-0470. RYAN ADAMS: The singersongwriter performs, with Jenny Lewis; 7:30 p.m.;$42 plusfees; Les Schwab Amphitheater, 520 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; www. bendconcerts.com. "HOT SPOT INPOMPEII": An Italian comedy set in Pompeii A.D. 79 right as Mt. Vesuvius blows; 7:30 p.m.; $19, $16for students and seniors; 2nd Street Theater, 220 NELafayette Ave., Bend; www.2ndstreettheater. com or 541-312-9626. "TRUE WEST":A tragicomedy that involves two estranged brothers reconnecting in their mother's home after years of separation; 7:30 p.m.; $15; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881. DENNIS MCGREGOR BENEFIT CONCERT: Dennis McGregor will perform, in celebration of Dennis
Jakab, a musician and friend, and to assist his wife, Ellen; 7:30 p.m., doors open at 7 p.m.; $15-$20 suggested donation; Harmony House, 17505 Kent Road, Sisters; dab317©yahoo. com or 541-419-5858. SNEAKY PETEANDTHESECRET WEAPONS:The funk band from Jackson Hole, Wyoming, performs; 9 p.m.; free; Silver Moon Brewing, 24 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-388-8331. MATT WAX:The electronic artist performs, with Royal Louis, Welterweightand DJ Lonely $tacks; 10 p.m.; $5; The Astro Lounge, 939 NW Bond St., Bend; www.astroloungebend.com or 541-388-0116.
Colorit Mellow
Relax with your Family
("( h, hli<:...
'
'
-
•
c /F
Colorit Fun
"I like the environment and I like the beer all these folks
make," Linder said. "And you get to meetother people and go on a beautiful hike. Why not?"
— Reporter: 541-617-7829, beastes@bendbulletin.com.
who worked. "It's just playing that game of splitting up your time and your priorities.I honestly don't know how peoplewho work full time do it." — Reporter: 541-617-7837, aspegman@bendbulleti n.com
Entertain your Friends
Patio World 222 SE Reed Market Road - Bend 541-388-0022 PatioWorldBend.com
Mon-Sat 9:30-5:30 Sun 10-5
THURSDAY, MAY 21, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
B3
REGON
u e'sor er arsen orcement i n is uteat a ice o
m i ne
By Jeff Barnard
Meanwhile, the group posted on its website that it would be marching and passing out pocket editions of the U.S. Constitution on Saturday in
The Associated Press
GRANTS PASS — The fed-
eral government and southern Oregon gold miners have each takena step back from tensions over a mining claim
gon senators and representatives are pushing for funding to clean up and reduce toxins in theColumbia River Basin. Thebill, introduced on Wednesday, seeks toauthorize $50 million per year for five years for a grant program. Tribes, farmers, foresters, conservation districts, nonprofit groups and local andstate governments could apply for the funds. Toxins in the river range from pesticides to flame retardants to pharmaceuticals.
ManCOnViCtedin dnudle murder — A JosephineCounty jury has convicted a man inthe 2011 ambush killings of his brother and sister-in-law. Jurors took only hours to comeback with a decision Tuesday in the trial of 62-year-old GaryGoins of El Dorado County, California. Goins wasconvicted of four counts of aggravated murder and one count of first-degree robbery in the death of his older brother, retired Silicon Valley software executive Dennis Goins, and his sister-in-law, SusanGoins. Thesamejury will now determine whether Goins should face thedeath penalty. Prosecutors say Goins killed the couple after they cut him off financially.
Pass, a local festival celebrating powerboat races on the Rogue River. The group has maintained a camp on private land north
ist group has posted armed guards. The U.S. Bureau of Land
Management is holding off enforcement action. The miners
of Grants Pass and armed
have agreed not to work the
leel
No criminal charges for Salemteacher —AsalemHigh
guardsdressed in camouflage at the Sugar Pine Mine on
UR f fi l C GFf%
claim until their appeal of the agency's decision against their
School teacherwon't face criminal charges after his science experiment seemed to leaveburns onseveral students. Samuel Dufner,37,wasarrested on May5 andcharged with two counts of criminal mistreatment. He has beenplaced onadministrative leave bythe school district.
BLM land outside the histori-
cal gold mining community of Galice.
operation is resolved.
The deal was affirmed Wednesday in a decision from
mine. The judge noted the miners were not going to try to mine, and BLM did not oppose ly lives." the stay. BLM noted in a statement that the stay included provi-
sions that the miners would refrain from "taking any action inconsistent with existing
— From wire reports
In Nevada last year, mem-
Jeff Barnard/The Associated Pressfile photo
People stand ready to check in volunteers at a staging area an Interior Board of Land Ap- outside Grants Pass, where the local chapter of the constitutionpeals administrative law judge al activist group the Oath Keepers was supporting volunteers forbidding the BLM to enforce serving as armed guards for a gold mine on federal land where the an order halting work at the claimholders are in a dispute with a federal agency.
mining claim owners, says this could de-escalate tensions by removing the need for the Oath Keepers to guard the claim to assure the miners get
Bill aimS tO reduCe COlumdia BaSintOXinS —Several Ore-
the Boatnik Parade in Grants
where a constitutional activ-
R ick Barclay, one of t h e
AROUND THE STATE
bers of the Oath Keepers joined hundreds of armed supporters of Cliven Bundy in a faceoff against BLM to stop
No water to mmbat
a roundup of cattle from public land where the rancher al-
lowed hisstock to graze near that holders of the six claims
Bunkerville.
dating to the Gold Rush never
Federal officials accused Bundy of failing to pay more than $1 million in grazing fees over more than 20 years. Bundy says the federal gov-
gave up surface rights to BLM, which contends it holds surface rights giving it authority over mining on the claim. Mary Emerick, spokes-
salmon-killing parasite By Jeff Bamard The Associated Press
BLM regulations." ernment has no authority over Barclay and his partner, woman fo r t h e J o sephine the land. their day in court. George Backes, had called in County chapter of Oath KeepBureau officials backed off, "If this is indeed everything theOathKeepers afterbecom- ers, said the stay was one con- and Bundy and his supporters the attorney asked for, this ing concerned that BLM might d ition for w i t hdrawing t h e declaredvictory. But Bureau will de-escalate the situation seize their mining equipment armed guards, but the group of Land Management officials for the time being," Barclay and destroy a cabin before was holding off a decision un- say they are still pursuing an said. "It many mean my guests their appeal was heard. Bar- til after they talked to the local administrative and legal resowill be going back to their dai- clay and B a ckes m aintain sheriff. lution of the dispute.
GRANTS PASS
chinook in the Klamath Riv-
SALEM — Oregon legislators are moving to adopt gen-
"There are a lot of things that people run into involving everyone from funeral directors to
The Klamath Fish Healthy
ruling by a f ederal judge striking down the state's ban on same-sex marriage. But
H o u s e D e m o cratic
leaders acceded to the demands of the chamber's top
also many same-sex couples married in other states or countries whose unions are
legally recognized in Oregon. McLane, in a May 6 hearing on the measure, said he didn't have any problem 'husband and wife.'" going ahead with most of — Mark Johnson Roberts, Portland family law attorney the changes, which he said "seemed to be innocuous." But he objected to redefinsaid the group has received ly affect the year-old ruling ing marriage in the Oregon calls from t h e s ame-sex by U.S. District Judge Mi- statutes at this point. "We're voting against the spouses of people who have chael McShane that struck
Republican — House Minori-
ty LeaderMike McLane — to not change the statute that died but haven't been recogdirectly defines marriage as nized as the next of kin by a beingbetween a male and a funeral director. female. Or they've f aced i ssues McLane, of Powell Butte,
said legislators should wait until the U.S. Supreme Court rules next month on whether
with real estate transactions, they said. Sometimes, Frazz-
ini said, same-sex couples aren't happy about having to
gays and lesbians have a con- cross out "husband and wife" stitutional right to marry. in a real estate document and While avoiding what would replace it with "spouse." "Their rights need to be rebe a largely symbolic debate over gay marriage, legisla- spected, and their existence tive leaders are instead pro- needs to be recognized," said ceeding with a measure that Frazzini, noting that putting supporters say will help ease g ender-neutral terms in t h e some legal issues that same- statutes will help change the sex married couples continue bureaucratic procedures that to face in Oregon. affect people's lives. "There are a lot of things Barry Pack, deputy chief that people run into involv- operating officer at the Deing everyone from funeral partment of A d m i nistrative directors to title officers who Services,said references to don't really understand the marriage "permeate throughlaw, and they look up the stat-
out the statute books." His
utes and it says, 'husband and agency originally proposed wife,'" said Mark Johnson House Bill 2478, which reRoberts, a Portland family places many references to law attorney who frequently "husband and wife" w ith works with Basic Rights Or- "spouses in a legally recogegon, the state's major gay nized marriage." rights group. No matter how th e U . S. Roberts and Jeanna Frazzini, Basic Rights co-director,
down the 2004 constitutional
constitution of the state of Or-
amendment approvedby vot- egon that we swore an oath to ers that limited marriage to uphold," said McLane, asking one man and one woman. what the rush was to do this State Attorney General El- before the Supreme Court len Rosenblum agreed with acts. gay couples who sued the Tim Nashif, a founder and state that they had a consti- board member of Oregon tutional right to marry, and Family Council who helped no one was granted the legal organize the campaign for standing to appeal McShane's the 2004 ballot measure bandecision. The U.S. Supreme ning gay marriage, said he Court rejected attempts by a doesn't see any reason for the conservative group, the Na- Legislature to go ahead with tional Organization for Mar- the bill now at all. "Why not wait a month'?" riage, to intervene in the case. As a result, many legal he said. "They could take a analysts say they expect comprehensive look at it after McShane's ruling to stand no the Supreme Court rules.... It matter how the court rules. makes the whole thing seem Even if gays and lesbians very suspicious." were no longer allowed to House Majority Leader Val marry in Oregon, it would Hoyle, D-Eugene and chair of not negate the marriages that the House Rules Committee, have already occurred, and said she didn't mind acceptsupporters say the statutes ing McLane's request to wait should reflect this. on the Supreme Court before More than 2,100 same-sex
Supreme Court r u les next
marriages were held in Oregon in the first nine months after McShane's ruling, according to preliminary statistics from the Oregon Public
month, it's unlikely to direct-
Health Division. There are
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amending the definition of
marriage. But she said it was import-
ta, occurs naturally in t he
Advisory Team, made up of Klamath, but the worm that state and federal agencies serves as a host thrives when and Indian tribes, warns a water gets warm and flows major fish kill is likely, and are reduced, which is the the Yurok Tribe and NOAA case during drought, said Fisheries Service have asked Jerri Bartholomew, profesfor extra water releases to sor of microbiology at Orflush out worms that car- egon State University. She ry the parasite, known as C said sampling shows nearly shasta. 100 percent of juvenile chiBut the U.S. Bureau of Rec- nook are infected, though lamationsays afterfouryears not all of them will die. Coho of drought, it has no water to salmon, which are infected spare for chinook salmon. by a different strain of the Bureau spo k eswoman parasite, have so far been Erin Curtis said Wednesday spared. "This is turning out to be the water stored in Klamath Basin reservoirs is already as bad as the worstyear since committed to endangered we have been monitoring, sucker fish and threatened which is 2004," Bartholomew coho salmon, and releasing said. "The only year parasite water now means less for levels approached what we any crisis that erupts this are seeing this year was 2008, summer. and that year they didn't get Water for farmers on a this high until June." federal irrigation project has Water samples show C also been cut to less than half Shastaspores reached lethal of full deliveries as mountain levels in April and since then snowpacks that supply reser- have gotten worse, she said. voirs have dwindled to zero. The C Shasta outbreak has "We made the decision only aff ected young chinook after consulting fish health and has not affected young experts and reviewing re- coho, which are infected cords that releasing a pulse by a different strain, Barflow at this time was not an tholomew added. advisable use of a very limitMeanwhile, the Iron Gate ed water supply," Curtis said. fish hatchery is waiting to re"We are having to take the lease some 6 million juvenile long view. We know we have chinook in hopes conditions got to get through the whole may improve, said NOAA spring and summer. There Fisheries Service spokesman are going to be a lot of deci- Michael Milstein.
title officers who don't really understand the in recognition of last year's law, and they look up the statutes and it says, der-neutral marriage statutes
tion from a different disease
er in Northern California as that rots their gills. they prepare to migrate to the The parasite, whose full ocean. name is Ceratomyxa shas-
State legislators are looking to adopt marriage statutes that are gender neutral The Oregonian
A
deadly salmon parasite is increase again when adult thriving in the drought, in- salmon return to spawn in fecting nearly all the juvenile late summer and face infec-
IN SALEM
By Jeff Mapes
—
sions to make, and this is one of them." D emand for w ater w i l l
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www.shadeondemand.com •
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ant to go ahead with changes that reflect "current practices" regarding married couples in Oregon.
Locally Owned Since 1978
•
judge hears arguments on ban on GMOcrops The Associated Press
week. U.S. Magistrate Judge Mark al judge who listened to two Clarke is being asked to dehours of arguments in a law- cide whether Jackson CounM EDFORD —
A fed e r -
suit that challenges a southern
ty's ordinance can take effect
Oregon county's ban on ge- June 6. netically modified crops says County voters approved it he might rule as early as next overwhelmingly last May.
Get ATaste For Food. Home 5 Garden •
•
'
•
TheBulletin
"right to farm" law. Tom Buchele represents filed by GMO alfalfa farmers supporters of the GMOban. is resolved. He said that the judge In Wednesday's arguments, seemed to understand that it is a lawyerforthe alfalfa farm- designed to protect local farm-
V 5 4 I tJ't fl
Live - Love - laugh - Ggelee • Voue Fvienctlg local N vseeg'
The county agreed not to
enforce the ban until a lawsuit
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ban is prohibited by Oregon's genetically modified crops.
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TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, MAY 21, 2015
EDj To
The Bulletin
s
ue er's oncon race ion s ou e asse he great, hulking, faulty Oregon Legislature may actually still get something right this session about State Rep. Knute Buehler's proposal on contraception. Buehler, a R epublican from Bend, wants to give pharmacists the power to prescribe oral contraceptives for preventive purposes and not just in case of emergencies. It's a change backed by the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists in 2012 and again in 2014. There is additional supportive research from the National Institute of Health. The rate ofunintended pregnancy in the United States is about 50 percent, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Safe and aff ordable contraception can cut down on those pregnancies and that, in turn, helps to reduce a variety of societal ills. One way to improve access is to allow over-thecounter oral contraceptives. It also helps that insurers are required by law to cover the cost of the prescription with no copay. But when confronted with a bill
good enough that it should pass, the Legislature sent it off into a work group wasteland for more study. It looked like the bill wouldn't be back until 2016. Could it be that Democrats didn't want a freshman Republican to get credit for a smart bill? Buehler didn't give up. He made some changes tothe bill. It's back as House Bill2879. He stripped out a p r ovision granting pharmacists an exemption for ethical, moral or religious reasons. He loosened the age restriction slightly to allow patients under 18 to receive a prescription, but that is only if a first prescription and conversation with a doctor has already taken place. He added hormonal patches to the list of contraceptives. Buehler says he is now getting bipartisan support for the bill. It should pass.
Give the Legislature impeachment power L ast f a l l , whe n Joh n Kitzhaber's fourth term as governor was i m ploding, leaders of the Oregon Legislature were pretty much powerless to bring the drama to an end. That would change if lawmakers and, ultimately, Oregon voters, approve a constitutional amendment that would give the Legislature impeachment powers. House Joint Resolution 31 proposes an amendment to dojust that. It was approved by the state House of Representatives on Tuesday and now awaits action in the Senate. Assuming it is approved there, the measure would be on the next general election ballot, in November 2016. The state House of Representatives would gain the power to impeach anyexecutivebranch officeholder elected statewide. That list is short, including, in addition to the governor, only the secretary of state, treasurer, attorney general and labor commissioner. Impeachment wouldrequire a three-fifths vote in the House, and if it were approved, a trial would be held in the Senate. There, it would take a two-thirds majority
to remove someone from office. Though Oregonians never have given their lawmakers impeachment powers, the idea is far from a radical one. In fact, all 49 other statesdo have a method for removing top executives from office. It was clear in the days shortly before Kitzhaber announced he would resign that he had lost the support of key legislators. Both Speaker of the House Tina Kotek, D-Portland, and Senate President Peter Courtney, D-Salem, had called on the governor to resign, but they could not force him to do so. Had he been so inclined, the governor could have dragged his term out for months, doing the citizens of this state no good in the process. Impeachment should be used onlyrarelyand under the most extreme circumstances. Nationwide, fewer than 20 governors have been impeached,and fewer than 10 of those actually convicted. We don't see Oregon lawmake rs becoming drunk w it h i m peachment power anytime soon. At the same time, being able to forcethe rare miscreant out of office is a tool worth having.
WLFAVIN6,
SUT ~PNNAN VKIo'LWE ON-
i APF)IN co% ~ 4%l ~'
RoolooQlloooos
95 -- = M 1Vickel's Worth ACA is good for many couldn't help but respond. When I hear people slamming the Afford-
ed support of SB 164, exempting ty Code Chapter 8.35 and ORS schools from the 5 percent biodiesel 569.350 to 569.495, whose powers component for buses operating east include (are you ready'?) "the right of the Cascades. The exemption to enter upon land or premises and won't solve the problem of buses destroy noxious weeds or control gelling up in very cold tempera-
able Care Act because they might
them in such manner as will de-
tures because all diesel will gel at
have to change their doctor, or their doctorchose to retire after38years
stroy ..." and authorization to place liens upon real property to recoup the expenses (including wages of the weed inspector) necessarily incurred."
verylow temperatures. Winterized fuel, proper mainte-
debate about the Trans-Pacific Partnership, the free trade
do not have the excellent forest and
agricultural resources that we possess
After reading Al Phillips' re-
to avoid new regulations, it seems
like a small price to pay for a society that has limited health care to the wealthy or connected.
— the traditional driver of Oregon's
It also says "no weed declared
As a self-employed person, I noxious (there are approximately know how difficult getting private 200 on their list) shall be permitted insurance can be. I w a s t u rned to produce seed and/or spread by down several times for insignifi- the owner" ... or else what? cant past health issues. I think of Did Deschutes County residents all the people who couldn't get in- get to vote on this? Isn't there somesurance,had cancer or lifelong de- thing in th e Fourth Amendment bilitations, and this legislation lev- regarding private property'? What els the playing field for accessing if owners are too old or disabled health care insurance. and/or they can't afford this? Will Don't we want a society that plac- they now get a lien on their already es high value on health no matter underwater property or a properyour income or misfortune? Why ty that is barely worth more than should people go bankrupt because what they originally paid for it? they can't access adequate insurWill there be a good samariance yet they need medical treat- tan law, or does this pit neighbor ment? Health care can't be about against neighbor, turning each othmoney, and yet it is in the United er in or the weed inspector showing States. It has to be a societal value up in your neighborhood for a surfor all ... not just "me, mine and I."
prise visit?
nance and, most of all, anticipation
of a cold snap will keep the buses rolling. For the past seven winters I have been operating a small fleet of diesel trucks, often at higher biodiesel blends than the Oregon 5 percent.
By following the simple steps above, I operate on the coldest days of the year. And it doesn't require
the thousands of dollars of upgrades that The Bulletin suggests to winterize my vehicles.
Rather than believe the speculation of the oil companies, whose
monopoliesare threatened by renewable fuels, The Bulletin might actually consider the evidence of school districts, first responders
and fleets operating effectively in colder climates than Eastern Ore-
gon with higher biodiesel blends. If The Bulletin was sincere in its concern for the health and welfare
I hope there comes a day when And yet the potholes and bumpy of kids riding school buses, it would we aren't a nation of people who roads remain. advocate for much higher biodiesel only make policy decisions based Way to go, Board of County blends. on what's good for "me." Commissioners fo r D e schutes Schools in Las Vegas did just that Shera Felde County. to protect school kids from asthma Bend Carol Orr and other respiratory conditions Crooked River Ranch associated with breathing petroleum diesel exhaust. I would think A weed inspector, really?
Supporthigher biodiesel blends
Well congratulations, Deschutes
County! You now have an official "weed inspector" on the payroll.
we care for our kids as much as
they do in Vegas. Jeff Rola
I'm disappointed but not surprised at The Bulletin's misguid-
This from the Public Notices sec-
74malo
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.
IN MY VIEW
Forty-five percent of the $18.6 billion in goods that Oregon exported in 2013
agreement that the United States is in Oregon. That's why the list of what negotiating with 11 other Pacific Rim we produce in rural Oregon looks a nations, and Trade Promotion Author- lot like the list of Oregon's top exports, went to TPP countries, and ity, which gives the president authori- including wheat, fruits and vegetables, zation to negotiate the TPP and bring processed foods, dairy, beef and wood much ofitwas food and forest products.Small and it to Congress for an up or down vote. products. One thing is for sure: TPA and TPP Forty-five percent of the $18.6 billion medium-sizedbusiness are good for rural Oregon. in goods that Oregon exported in 2013 Businesses grow and hire people went to TPP countries, and much of it make up 80 percent of when they sell more of their product. was food and forest products. Small those that export. One of the biggest opportunities to sell and medium-sized business make up more Oregon-made products is to ex- 80percent of those that export. port them to Pacific Rim countries. Exports also helped keep my inWhile much attention was paid to Today there are 525 million mid- dustry, forest products, afloat during the controversial topic of exporting dle-dassconsumers in Asia.By 2030, the recession. U.S. housing starts raw logs, the little-known fact is that there are expected to be 2.7 billion. That's more than six times what the
tion of May 8, 2015, under Coun-
cent post, "ACA was bad for me," I
Tra e authority will e goo By Bruce Daucsavage homes. ecently there has been much Most of the TPP countries simply
45L~L
exports of manufactured wood prod-
forest products industry — came to a ucts to Asia grew rapidly during this U.S. market will be at that point. And screeching halt after the housing and period. It is hard to imagine, but the rethese consumers are demanding ex- financial crisis that began in 2007. At cession would have been much worse actlywhat rural Oregon produces: the same time, housing starts in China for rural Oregon without access to great food, quality building materi- and other Asian countriesweregrow- these markets. als and renewable fuel to heat their ing rapidly. During the recession, my company
Please address your submission to either My Nickel's Worth or In My View and send, fax or email them to The Bulletin. Email submissions are preferred. Email: leiters©bendbulletin.com Write: My Nickel's Worth / In MyView P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708 Fax: 541-385-5804
o r rural Oregon began producing high-quality wood exporting in the first place. More marpellets from forest biomass. These pel- kets, more products,morecompanies. lets are used to heat homes, hospital Perhaps even more important is that boilers and schools all over the world. unless the U.S. leads the global trade They replace fossil fuels, improve air conversation, China will. That scenarquality and help restore our forests io looks much worse for Oregon. by providing a use for small-diameter United States leadership on the TPP trees that are contributing to devastat- is leading to a trade agreement with ing forestfiresin ouroverstocked fed- the strictest and most enforceable laeral forests.
bor and environmental standards of
Growing more markets for these productsnotonlyhelpsuskeep dozens of people employed at our mill in John Day, but it accelerates the much-needed thinning and restoration of our
any trade agreement in history, helping Oregon and U.S. businesses which already have to comply with these standards here at home. Many members of Oregon's congressional delegation have been leaders on this issue, including Sen. Ron Wyden andRep.Greg Walden. They deserve our support. Whatever concerns that people
east-side federal forests. The TPP and TPA are needed to
grow Oregon's export economy because they will open additional mar-
kets for Oregon products where little or no trade is currently occurring, lift
have about TPA and TPP, there should
be little doubt that they are good for on particular products even in mar- rural Oregon. kets where some trade is already tak— Bruce Daucsavage is president ing place, and make it easier for more of OchocoLumber Company. companies to get into the business of He lives in Bend. trade barriers like tariffs and red tape
THURSDAY, MAY 21, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
BITUARIES FEATURED OBITUARY
DEATH 1VOTICES Kimdel Monroe Owen, of Redmond Jan. 12, 1958- May16, 2015 Arrangements: Autumn FuneralsRedmond (541-504-9485) www.autumnfunerals.net
Services: A Memorial Service will be held Saturday, June 20, 2015 (Time to be determined) at Redmond Seventh-Day Adventist Church, located at 945 SW Glacier Avenue in Redmond, OR.
Joan Linda (Boyer) Lee, of La Pine Dec. 26, 1947 - May 19, 2015 Arrangements: Baird Memorial Chapel of La Pine is honored to serve the family. 541-536-5104 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services:
As per Joan's request, no services will be held. Contributionsmay be made to:
Partners In Care Hospice, 2075 NE Wyatt Ct., Bend, OR 97701, 541-382-5882, www.partnersbend.org
Douglas Richard Anderson,of Redmond Jan. 5, 1944- May17, 2015 Arrangements: Autumn FuneralsRedmond (541-504-9485) www.autumnfunerals.net Services: A Celebration of a Life lived will take place at a later date.
Kenneth "Ken" Earl Leech, of La Pine Oct. 15, 1941 - May 16, 2015 Arrangements: Baird Memorial Chapel of La Pine is honored to serve the family. 541-536-5104 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: Ken's family will have a private memorial athering at a later date. ontributions may be made to:
American Cancer Society, ATTN: Relay For Life of La Pine-Sunriver, 2350 Oakmont Way Ste. 200, Eugene, OR 97401-6108, www.relayforlife.org
Connie Mae (Culpepper) Stolsig, of La Pine June 26, 1949- May17, 2015 Arrangements: Baird Memorial Chapel of La Pine is honored to serve the family. 541-536-5104 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A private family gathering will take place at a later date. Contributions may be made to:
Partners In Care Hospice, 2075 NE Wyatt Ct., Bend, OR 97701, 541-382-5882, www.partnersbend.org
Maxine A. (Greiner) Boyd, of La Pine Nov. 23, 1933 - May 17, 2015 Arrangements: Baird Memorial Chapel of La Pine is honored to serve the family. 541-536-5104 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A Celebration of Life will be held on Saturday, June 27, 2015 at 1:OOPM, at Hometown Buffet located in the Gateway Mall in Springfield, OR. Contributions may be made to:
Partners In Care Hospice, 2075 NE Wyatt Ct., Bend, OR 97701, 541-382-5882, www.partnersbend.org
Kenneth Lee McVay K enneth L ee M cV a y , long-time H i ne s r e sident,
passed away p eacefully,
s urrounded by hi s f a m i ly , on Saturday, May 16, 2015. He was 73 years old. There will be a Celebration of Life for K en on
>t(i sa~urday, May
By David Henry
Rockefel ler was elected four
Bloomberg News
times as New York governor,
Margaretta "Happy" Rockefeller, the former U.S. second lady whose marriage to Nelson Rockefeller triggered a public outrage that hampered his bid for the presidency during the 1960s, has died. She was 88. She died Tuesday at her
and for 10 years Happy Rockefellerwas New York State's first lady. He resigned in 1973 and became vicepresident in Gerald Ford's administration the
home in Tarrytown, New York,
adelphia. Her father was an
23 ,
20 1 5, from
next year.
Margaretta Large Fitler was born on June 9, 1926, in Phil-
following abrief illness, accord- alcoholic who had inherited ing to the New York Times, $8 million from the family's which cited a family statement. rope-making business, and Tall, winsome and almost her mother was "socially am18 years her husband's junior, bitious" and rarely had time Happy Rockefeller wrestled for her children, according to with her image as a femme fa- a 1974 profile in People magtale who had caused the break- azine. Her parents split when up of two families when she Happy was 10. tied the knot in 1963 with the Happy Fitler attended the exgrandson of the Standard Oil dusive Shipley School in Bryn Co. founder. A longtime friend Mawr, Pennsylvania, graduatand confidanteto one of Ameri- ing in 1944. She then worked in ca's wealthiest families, she en- a hospital for the Women's Volraged middle-class society by unteerService and met James giving up custody over her four Slater Murphy, better known children tosecure a divorce as Robin, a captain in the Army a month before marrying the Medical Corps and a graduate man who later became the 41st of Princeton University. At age vice president. 22, she married Murphy, who Happy Rockefeller, who was six yearsolder and later gainedher nickname forher worked as a virologist at the cheery disposition as a child, Rockefeller Institute. earned a reputation for being The couple moved to New guarded and media-shy. She York andbecame partof the preferred to let her husband
February 3, 1942- May16, 2015
>' f .
'Happy' Rockefellerwas former U.S.second lady
Rockefeller social circle, facili-
do the talking while privately tated by Robin Murphy's childencouraging him in later years hood friendship with David to leave politics so they could Rockefeller, Nelson's younger spend more time on their estate brother. John D. Rockefeller in Pocantico Hills, New York, Jr., Nelson'sfather,developed a about 25 miles north of mid- dose relationship with Happy town Manhattan. Her efforts M urphy, who became a confiwere in vain for a man who had dante to the aging widower. wanted to be president since he In 1958, Happy Murphy was aboy. worked on Nelson Rockefeller's "After all, when you think campaign for the New York what I had, what else was there governorship and became his to aspire to'?" he famously said. secretaryafter he won office Hoping to dispel the image in Albany. He separated from of wealth during confirma- his first wife, the former Mary tion hearings before the Sen- Todhunter Clark, with whom ate Rules Committee in 1974, he had five children, in 1961.
11:00 AM Kenneth Lee to 2 PP PM Rockefeller listed his total holdMcVay at the City ings at$218million and saidthe o f H i n e s family empire was a"myth." P avilion. F a m i l y f ri e n d s The Times cited figures in Eric and Tara Woodworth 2007showing his grandfather, a nd D e r ri n a n d Ra c h e l John D. Rockefeller, was the Robinson have g r aciously o ffered t o p r o v i d e f o o d richest American ever. It said s ervices. Ke n w a s b o r n his $1.4 billion fortune at the February 3, 1942 in Hines, time of death would have been Feb.19, 1924- May16, 2016 Oregon to Bert and Verna worth $192billion in 2007when McVay. His f ather passed Kenneth Albert W i l l i ammeasured as a percentage of s en, b or n F e b r u ar y 1 9 , away when h e w a s e i ght the economy. ears o l d . He an d hi s 1924, in York, NE, passed The marriage to Nelson from this life on Saturday, br other, L o n n y M cV a y , Rockefeller, who d i vorced M ay 16, 2015, to b e w i t h were raised by t h eir stephis wife to be with Happy h is b e- father, Elvin Pederson. On Murphy, as she was formerly July 15, 1972, Ken married loved known, was seen as a mathe love of his l i fe, Sandy wife, jor reason for him failing to B etty. H e ( Smith) McVay. They h ad a n amazing 4 2 y e ar s t o - win the Republican primary passed t'rom g ether. D u r in g t h i s t i m e , nomination for president in they r a i sed f i v e c h i l d r en 1964. Rockefeller, who h ad complicawho blessed them with fiftions from already missed out on getting t een g r a n d children a n d his name on the ticket in 1960, Parkinson's, o ne great-grandchild. H i s children are Todd (Dee) needed P r esident L y n d on however Kenneth l ived l i f e M cVay o f Pon t e V e d r a Johnson, a Democrat who encouraged him to run in 1968, Williamsen Fl o r i d a , Tor y well for 91 B each, years. ( Yvonne) M c Va y o f M i l - to convince Happy that a third Or e g o n , L i sa bid was a good idea. K en joined th e N av y a t w aukie, 17. By age 19, he had met ( John) H i n d man o f R e d He lost the nomination to O r e gon, C a s ey Richard Nixon in 1968. While and m a r r i e d Be t t y , t o mond, whom he was married for (Amber) Gaines o f R o s e- unsuccessful i n se c uring b urg, Oregon an d S a m a p r esidential n o m ination, 65 years, until her passing in June 2010. (Missy) McVay of T e r rebK en served in t h e N a v y onne, Oregon. He was prea s a Radio Airman. A f t e r c eded in death b y h i s i n son , Ch r i s t o p her his service in the Navy, he fant McVay, h is son - i n - l aw, worked as a p r ison guard M ike R o b inson, a n d h i s at Folsom Prison and later Death Notices are freeand opened A&A A u t o U p h ol- parents. willbe runfor one day,but K en w a s a n a v i d o u t stery. Ken's career at heart specific guidelines must be w as to be a r a n cher . H e doorsman. He loved huntf i s h ing, c a m p ing, followed. Local obituaries are m oved hi s w i f e a n d t w o ing, paid advertisements submitted children to Bend, Oregon, s ports and spending t i m e by families or funeral homes. i n 1 9 59 , a n d b o u g h t a w ith f r i e nd s a n d f a m i l y . Theymay besubmitted by r anch. H e l a t e r o p e n e d He was well known for hts Williamsen Up h o l s t ery . sense of hum or, storytellphone, mail, email or fax. The U pon s e l l in g h t s u p h o l - i ng, compassion an d b i g Bulletin reserves the right to heart. stery shop, Ken worked at edit all submissions. Please Memorial co n t r i b utions Healey's Furniture, Sears include contact information in i n Ken's memory ma y b e and was owner operator of all correspondence. made to the K W T r u c k i ng , a l l w h i l e For information on any of these Woodfin-Robinson M emostill running the ranch. services orabout the obituary K en i s s u r v ived b y h i s r ial F u n d o r Jay W in n Memorial Fund. sister, Mary; daughter, Jeri policy, contact 541-617-7825. A utumn Fu n e r a l s of (Don) Bradetich of Bend; s on, Steve ( B o n ita) W i l - Redmond w a s e n t r u sted l iamsen o f B e n d ; g r a n d - with t he ar r a n g ements, Phone: 541-617-7825 c hildren, T a u ny a Sco t t ) ( 541) 504-9485. Vi sit o u r Email: obits@bendbulletin.com online r e g i ster b o o k at W achter of B eav e r t o n , Tami ( B r e nt ) Bl a c k o f www.autumnfunerals.net. Fax: 541-322-7254
Kenneth Albert Williamsen
I,
She married Rockefeller on
May 4, 1963, in Pocantico Hills. The pastor who performed the service was censured as a "dis-
Vitolins both say there's a
$600,000 per year, with the
need for more bed space, though just how they're going to get it is a point of continuing discussion. "We need every single one
a dditional n in e b ed s a c counting for about $215,000
reduce the stigma of the dis-
ease.Rockefeller had become vigilant after Ford's public statements about her mastec-
tomy and detected lumps in her breast herself. Happy Rockefeller had six children. With her first hus-
band, she had James, Margaretta, Carol and Malinda. With
Nelson Rockefeller, she had Nelson Jr. and Mark.
Deatllines:Death Notices are accepted until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and by4:30 p.m. Friday for Sundaypublication. Obituaries must be received by 5 p.m. Mondaythrough Thursday for publication on the second dayafter submission, by1 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication, and by 9 a.m. Monday for Tuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; pleasecall for details. Mail:Obituaries P.O. Box 6020
Bend, OR 97708
posed increase to 25 beds, that would come to about
in additional costs to the county.
According to the sheriff's office, that doesn't include during the meeting. Seven expenses for transporting beds would be devoted to inmates between Crook and people sentenced by the cir- Jefferson County, a distance cuit court, while two would of about 20,000 miles per be set aside for parolees and year. probationers. Vitolins added Meanwhile, plans for a that judges consider wheth- n ew facility, while on t h e er there's room in the jail horizon, remain m u rky. when sentencing defendants. Hensley said after the meet"Adding those seven beds ing Wednesday that a citiwould allow us to have addi- zens' committee to discuss tional resources when we go the findings of a recent feasito court." bility study and the possibiliHensley said he intends ty of a new jail was in "infanto bring together stakehold- cy stages." ers in the matter, including Alternatives to i ncarcerhis office, Vitolins and local ation haven't gained much judges, for a meeting June traction, either. Bond said 29, two days before the coun- W ednesday that o n e o f ty's proposed fiscal year fender was slowly chipping budget goes into effect. away at a 30-day sentence by Hensley also said he want- spending a few hours every ed to consider paying for the day at the jail, but that few beds on an as-neededbasis or have showed up to complete get financial credit for when sentences in a similar way. the beds weren't occupied, the He and Hensley say several former of which Vitolins said offenders have failed to apshe does not support because pear five or six times. The it doesn't solve the problem of county doesn't have a work inadequate sentences. crew. "I'm not saying we're not "It is important that we going to use 25 beds," Hens- keep our community safe," ley said, adding he wanted McCabe said in a n i n terflexibility based on fluctu- view Monday. "It's maybe ating arrests and c r imes. not quite enough, but it's The current intergovern- what we can afford. Those mental agreement between nine beds are gonna make a the countiesdoesn't address difference." that. "We pay for 16 beds if — Reporter: 541-383-0376, we use them or not."
cwithycombe@bendbulletin.corn
Electric Continued from B1 Recently, the Forest Ser-
vice advised the company it would be required to do an archaeological survey, he said, at a cost of $87,000. On nonfederal l and, Markham said the same
cable replacement project would take about a month. Markham said it's un-
derstandable if f e deral agencies want to scrutinize
risk of forest fires when
er.Their ordeals helped raise awareness of breast cancer and
rises with the consumer price index, according to Crook County Court Judge Mike McCabe. With the pro-
of those beds," said Vitolins
take care of it."
Sheri (John) Berdahl of
Viewing will be available at Autumn Funerals, 61555 Parrell Rd . o n T h u r s day, M ay 21, 2 0 15, f ro m 1 : 0 0 p.m. - 5:00 p.m. A g r a v eside service will be held on Friday, Ma y 2 2 , 2 0 15, at 1 2:00 p.m., at P i lo t B u t t e Cemetery, in Bend.
per night, an amount that
surgery came 19 days after first lady Betty Ford had the operation, and the second procedure
C o u n ci l B l f s , I A ,
23 great-grandchildren.
Continued from B1 This coming fiscal year, as the Crook County jail continues to release lower-level offenders early — a juggling act referred to as matrixing — Hensley and
mastectomies in 1974. The first
Bend, Shaloni (Cory) Val-
Las Vegas, NV, and Shawn W illiamsen of Eu ge n e , J eremy (Becky) M i l le r o f A uburn, C A , a n d A d a m (Katie) Miller of Bend; and
Next year's arrangement would cost $65.98 per bed
new power lines or other
Obituary policy
l ey o f
Crook County
turber of the peace and unity of the church" by the Hudson River presbytery, according to Rick Perlstein's book "Before the Storm" (2001). The couple was also widely condemned in themedia asdestroyersoffam ily values. Happy Rockefeller had two
was done almost six weeks lat-
development on f ederal land, but maintenance of existing lines should be made easier. "We're talking about infrastructure that's been in
place for 40, 50, 60 years," he said. "We just want to Tree trimming and the
Bill in CongressH.R. 2358 would amend the Federal Land Policy and Management Act of1976 to make it easier for electric utilities to accessand maintain lines built across federal land. Sponsors:Reps. Kurt Schraeder, D-Ore., Ryan Zinke, R-Mont. History:Billintroduced by Rep. Zinke onMay15. What's next:No further hearings currently scheduled. Online:Follow the bill at www.ceugress.gev/ bill/114th-cungress/ house-bill/2358
supports the general aims of the proposed legislation but
trees touch power lines was has some concerns about how another subject of concern much time agencies would for utility r epresentatives have to respond to a utility's testifying Wed nesday. request to cut or trim trees. Markham told the subcomThe bill would give utilities mittee it can be difficult to the right to remove trees in imget the needed approval to minent danger of contacting trim or remove trees along transmission lines if the agenor adjacent to rights of way cy fails to grant permission on federal land, even when within three business days the trees are in danger of and give agencies 30 days to falling on the lines. review and approve more conMarkham said a f ew ventional vegetation manageyears ago, Midstate Elec- ment plans. tric Cooperative in La Pine No additional hearings have asked the Forest Service for yet been scheduled for H.R. permission to remove trees 2358. along a power line right — Reporter: 541-383-0387, of way. The request was sharnmers@bendbulletin.com denied, he said, and when a tree fell and sparked a wildfire, Midstate was held
liable and had to pay more than $300,000 in firefighting costs.
TOUCHMARK SlNCE 1980
Karen Mouritsen with
the BLM said her agency
716 SW11th St. Redmond . 541.923.4732
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MEMORIAI.
DAY+":+*+
IOlS Memorial Day Deadlines
Find It All Online bendbulletin.com
For Tuesday, May 26, 2015 S8V8Onall Outdoor Furniture, Firepits, & Grills - pLUS Bll pools,
spas, chemicals &Accessories
StllcB 1955
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B5
PAID OBITUARIES DEADLINE Tuesday, 5/26 .....................Friday, 5/22, Noon DEATH NOTICES DEADLINE Tuesday, 5/26...................Friday, 5/22, 1 p.m.
The Bulletin
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B6
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, MAY 21, 2015
W EAT H E R Forecasts and graphics provided byACCHWeather, lnc. ©2015
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TONIGHT
HIGH
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ALMANAC
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SUNDAY
37'
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Overcast with a shower and t-storm around
Mostly cloudy with a shower or t-storm
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SATURDAY
Mostly cloudy with a shower or t-storm
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Sun and clouds
TEMPERATURE
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Yesterday
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UV INDEX TODAY
POLLEN COUNT
NATIONAL WEATHER
WATER REPORT
Wickiup 181393 81% Crescent Lake 7 4 9 79 85% Ochoco Reservoir 30522 89Vo Prineville 107089 72Vo River flow Sta t io n Cu. f t./sec. Deschutes R.below CranePrairie 332 Deschutes R.below Wickiup 1180 128 Deschutes R.below Bend Deschutes R. atBenhamFalls 1550 Little Deschutes near LaPine 140 Crescent Ck. belowCrescent Lake 28 Crooked R.above Prineville Res. 41 Crooked R.below Prineville Res. 273 Crooked R. near Terrebonne 157 Ochoco Ck.below OchocoRes. 11
FIRE INDEX
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Bed/v Rd
Ls Pi ISI h ie
Source: USDA Forest Service
Bismarck
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Today
Friday
HiRo/W 64/58/1 62/44/c 69/47/pc 68/50/1 61/45/s 79/57/pc 59/48/r 77/65/c 56/47/r 67/45/pc 76/53/pc 73/40/s 75/53/1 66/50/pc 65/51/c 63/46/pc 70/44/pc 64/44/pc 92/65/c 84/54/c 72/53/c 52/40/t 67/46/pc 62/43/pc 62/47/pc 53/44/1 64/45/pc 90/61/pc 86/59/pc 61/44/c 73/40/s 86/76/c 68/61/1 61/46/pc 60/47/1 71/48/pc 66/46/pc 65/38/s 82/59/c 79/51/pc 70/41/s 60/32/c 64/42/pc 71/40/pc 77/52/t 57/47/c 70/47/s 72/45/pc 83/69/pc 82/70/pc 69/49/pc 61/46/pc 77/60/pc 93/66/1
Hi/Lo/W 79/66/1 64/37/pc 67/35/c 75/48/s 65/47/s 79/61/s 72/45/pc 80/68/1 77/46/s 69/46/pc 78/57/s 73/45/s 72/51/t 69/47/c 73/47/pc 58/36/pc 61/39/c 60/28/pc 80/61/pc 78/54/s 77/55/s 50/41/r 62/44/s 72/47/s 61/40/pc 64/43/pc 69/52/pc 80/57/s 85/61/s 68/41/s 71/37/c
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Juneau Kansas City Lansing Lss Vegas Lexington Lincoln Little Rock Lus Angeles Louisville Madison, Wt Memphis Miami
Milwaukee Minneapolis Nashville New Orleans New YorkCity Newark, NJ Norfolk, VA OklahomaCity
Omaha Orlando Palm Spdngs Peoria Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh Portland, ME
Providence Raleigh
Rapid City Renu Richmond Rochester, NY
84nsn
74/65/1 70/46/s 62/44/c 74/55/pc 64/40/pc 66/45/s 88/62/s 81/53/pc 75/47/pc 54/27/pc 63/38/s 66/41/s 76/54/s 72/45/pc 74/43/pc 71/48/c 83/69/pc 82/72/t 76/55/s 72/49/s 79/64/pc 87/67/s
Sacramento St. Louis Salt Lake City Ssn Antonio San Diego Sau Francisco San Joss Santa re Savannah Seattle Sioux Falls Spokane Springfield, Mo Tampa Tucson Tulsa
65/52/pc 80/66/pc 59/50/sh 111/76/pc 92/78/t
89/62/pc 76/69/pc 65/47/c 66/48/r 68/55/1
78/58/pc 92/68/s 89/69/s 73/45/pc
Sgn5/s
61/44/c 60/38/sh 62/48/c 76/48/s 83/79/t 76/63/s 80/56/s 75/47/pc 77/64/pc 79/61/s 68/52/t 73/47/s 94/81/1
Friday Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W HiRo/W 69/46/0.00 71/45/s 76/47/s 54/48/1.01 66/46/pc 67/51/1 59/34/0.00 64/40/pc 63/36/s 84/65/0.00 78/59/pc 73/58/c 70/46/0.00 63/42/pc 72/50/s 53/46/0.11 68/43/pc 65/51/1 83/66/1.52 72/57/0.00 68/50/0.01 52/40/0.00 78/66/0.70 91/74/0.00 50/37/0.01 62/41/0.00 82/55/0.02 90/73/0.15 63/57/0.00 64/56/0.00 73/70/0.01 61/53/0.13 52/47/0.07 95/71/0.16 89/63/0.00 50/48/0.11 68/61/0.00 93/67/0.00 56/48/0.00 67/55/0.00
67/55/Tr 88/62/0.00
70/57/pc 68/57/pc 65/47/pc 75/56/s 70/40/s 69/45/s 69/52/pc 74/61/pc 91/76/1 91 n7/t 67/44/s 56/42/s 71/47/s 73/52/s 68/46/pc 76/53/s 88/74/c 85n3/t 64/53/r 75/48/pc 65/51/r 75/47/pc 71/56/r 76/59/pc 68/53/c 64/57/r 70/46/pc 69/52/1 93/74/t 93n3/t 81/61/s 78/61/pc 68/48/pc 74/54/s 60/51/r 75/49/pc 89/66/pc 82/63/s 61/45/sh 66/38/pc 68/48/s 67/42/c 69/47/pc 73/44/s 75/54/1 76/53/s 63/44/s 58/43/sh 66/51/c 64/51/1 63/50/r 78/51/s 68/45/pc 59/37/pc
57/35/0.21 66/49/0.00 79/64/0.00 59/42/0.00 74/52/0.00 72/55/pc 72/54/c 54/53/0.24 65/50/pc 74/57/pc
68/50/Tr
70/52/c 63/50/c
68/61/0.00 62/55/0.00 67/55/0.00 72/40/0.00 91/68/0.14 72/51/0.00
67/60/pc 66/56/pc 66/56/pc 61/43/1 93/65/c 76/54/pc 72/40/s 79/55/pc 64/46/pc 90/76/pc 87/58/s 68/52/pc 60/53/r 66/50/pc 85/57/pc 85/61/s
sgn5/0.00 80/69/c 82n1/t
60/45/Tr
77/52/0.00 63/57/0.55
ssn5/0.00
92/58/0.00 69/58/rr Washington, DC 74/62/0.00 Wichita 58/50/0.55 Yskims 86/53/0.00 Yuma 90/63/0.00 S
70/53/pc 71/59/c
67/60/c 64/55/c 65/55/c 67/40/s 82/63/s 65/51/c 73/49/pc 80/53/1 66/51/1
93n5/pc 83/56/s 63/55/r
77/53/s 60/53/r 81/53/1 81/60/s
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Mecca Mexico City
113/82/0.20 112/87/s 111/85/s 81/56/0.08 79/56/1 76/56/1 Montreal 59/45/0.00 68/43/pc 57/35/c Moscow 68/41/0.00 72/56/c 77/57/1 Nairobi 77/61/0.13 78/59/1 78/59/t Nassau 84/75/0.37 86/75/pc 87/75/s New Delhi 109/72/0.00 106/79/pc 107/79/pc Osaka 81/59/0.19 76/55/s 79/59/pc Oslo 55/41/0.24 56/46/sh 55/44/pc Ottawa 59/41/0.00 69/41/pc 55/32/c Paris 59/41/0.04 63/45/c 66/49/c Rio de Janeiro 77/68/0.01 78/68/s 79/66/s Rome 75/61/0.02 71/51/pc 70/56/sh Santiago 63/50/0.01 69/43/s 66/39/s Sau Paulo 73/59/0.00 74/61/pc 75/59/pc Sapporu 61/48/0.32 63/55/c 70/54/pc Seoul 70/46/0.00 75/52/pc 76/52/s Shanghai 79/66/0.00 76/60/s 77/65/s Singapore 90/79/0.11 89/80/1 89/80/1 Stockholm 59/41/0.00 61/43/sh 61/47/pc Sydney 77/59/0.03 68/56/sh 63/55/r Taipei 78n4/1.'69 74/72/r 85/75/r Tel Aviv 87/67/0.00 80/66/pc 80/66/pc Tokyo 77/66/0.39 75/63/pc 79/63/pc Toronto 63/37/0.00 66/40/s 56/34/pc Vancouver 66/51/0.00 72/55/s 65/54/pc Vienna 72/54/0.32 61/53/r 62/53/sh Warsaw 73/57/0.23 61/48/c 67/49/pc
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Yesterday Today
City
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Amsterdam Athens
57/43/0.18 60/50/c Boston 82/64/0.01 82/66/pc uku /60 MMto Auckland 61/50/0.04 64/55/sh e/ w York Baghdad 109/76/0.00 110/80/s s /52 Bangkok 95/82/0.05 93/80/1 gadelphis Beijing 84/52/0.00 87/59/pc C icsg Col m b /51 Beirut 80n1/0.00 77/68/s Ity 6 /4 6 6 Berlin 63/49/0.05 63/44/c ilytton u nu Bogota 68/52/0.07 67/49/1 es/47 78/5 Su Loui Budapest 84/59/0.27 70/55/1 es/so BuenosAires 79/68/0.00 80/65/pc 4/54 i 46 v Los Au lss Csbo SsuLucss 84/69/0.00 90/68/s Albuqu rque a , O/57 Cairo 95no/0'.00 86/65/s v es/50 9/ chorsuu klahoma Ci • 7 63 Calgary 66/39/0.00 72/42/s • 89/ee e v. Csncun 86n3/0.00 gon5/s Bir in uhs 6 /60 • ualls ~+ Juneau Dublin 57/39/0.02 60/50/pc X'ev.v.v.<kv.aeTs X'e% g~76/ 3 Edinburgh 61/42/0.02 57/51/c 71/45 'e X % % % v.v,v,X X X% 'e% xxx'ehxxvv~~' Geneva 55/48/0.13 57/45/sh 9'cv. x x • rtshdo Harsre 79/46/0.00 78/47/s r w Orleans 9 4 Hong Kong 85/80/2.31 86/77/t OIIMOII Hrhrbtbth o~ Chihushus ssn4 o ~.t Istanbul 72/64/0.01 73/63/c 82/70 87/56 Mismi Jerusalem 91/66/0.00 82/55/s Monte y 91/Ta 95/75 Johannesburg 76/51/0.00 75/50/s Lima 73/67/0.01 77/65/pc Lisbon 70/54/0.00 79/61/s Shown are today's noonpositions of weather systemsand precipitation. Temperature bandsare highs for the day. London 59/41/0.00 66/47/pc T-storms Rain S h owers S now F l urries Ice Warm Front Sta t ionary Front Madrid Cold Front 70/43/0.00 72/44/s Manila 93/78/0.00 94/81/1
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48 Cnnt igunua Statea) . v v v vv .~ vv v ~ 73/4O %%v. v,X:O' v. 4 X % W Billings National high: 97O ey/45 at Presidio, TX 53/ 71 7 National low:21 v ol at Brimson, MN Cbu . Sslt Ls etg 71/48 Precipitation: 2.84" 52/4 I 70/52 Omaha at Fort Smith, AR an u civco 70/46 Dss de/se d/46 eo/4 Lav V ss
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Cloudy to partly sunnyand comfortable
TRAVEL WEATHER
City Hi/Lo/Prec. Abilene 74/57/0.03 High 81 88 88' in 2008 Akron 56/44/0.00 45' 37' 22'in 1918 Low Albany 58/48/Tr Albuquerque 78/48/0.00 PRECIPITATION Anchorage 59/37/0.00 Aganta 87/68/0.00 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday Trace Atlantic City 69/62/0.00 Record 1.02"in 1998 Austin 88no/Tr Month to date (normat) 0.7 3" (0.53") Baltimore 70/57/0.00 Year to date(normal) 2.49 " (4.66") Billings 61/37/0.00 Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 29 . 9 2" Birmingham 87/66/0.00 Bismarck 70/33/0.00 SUN ANDMOON Boise 70/54/0.27 Boston 66/56/Tr Today Fri. Bridgeport, CT 65/53/0.00 Sunrise 5:33 a.m. 5: 3 2 a.m. Buffalo 52/40/0.00 Sunset 8:31 p.m. 8: 3 2 p.m. Burlington, VT 60/49/0.00 Moonrise 8 :59 a.m. 9:57 a.m. Caribou, ME 57/46/0.01 Nyssa • 67/ Ham on Charleston, SC 91no/0.40 Moonset 11: 47 p.m. none • La pine 76/53 Juntura Grove Oakridge Co Charlotte 91/61/0.00 • Burns OREGON EXTREMES First Fu ll Last New 71/47 7D/53 52 Chattanooga 88/62/0.06 51 4 • Fort Rock Riley 55/44 YESTERDAY Cresce t • 67/46 Cheyenne 41/30/0.03 e d ee/45 64/46 Chicago 48/39/0.04 High: 85' Bandon Rosehurg • Chr i stmas alley Cincinnati 62/44/0.01 Jordan V Hey M ay 25 Jun 2 Ju n 9 Ju n 1 e at The Dalles 61/54 Beaver Silver' 66/45 Frenchglen 72/56 Cleveland 51/42/0.00 Low: 38' 57/43 Marsh Lake 67/44 ColoradoSprings 48/39/0.09 Toulght's utty:Low abovethewestem 64/46 at Sisters ee/44 Gra • Burns Jun tion Columbia, MO 53/50/0.51 • Paisley GD/ horizon at sunset, brilliant Venusabovethe Columbia, SC 93/69/0.04 • 68/44 Chiloquin Columbus,GA 90/67/0.00 young crescentmoon. Goid ach • 51 MedfO d '67/46 Rorne 0' Columbus,OH 60/43/0.00 ,74/5 59/ 68/47 Klamath Concord, NH 61/54/Tr Source: JimTodd,OMSI • Asm nd • Lakeview McDermi Corpus Christi 86n8/0.00 Bre ingS 7D/5 64/45 60/51 62/44 67/41 Dallas 86/66/Tr Dayton 58/41/0.02 Denver 44/35/Tr 10 a.m. Noon 2 p .m. 4 p .m. Yesterday Today F rlday Yesterday Today F riday Yesterday Today Friday Des Moines 51/47/0.16 3 I~ 5 ~ 6 • 3 City H i/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W C i t y Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Detroit 60/41/0.00 The highertheAccuWealher.rurm IIV Index number, Asturis 63/52/Tr 6 2/52/c 61/51/c Ls Grande 70/ 54/0.00 72/50/t 7 1/47/t Portland 74/5 5/Tr 76/56/c 71/53/c Duluth 65/32/0.00 the greatertheneedfor eyesudskin protecguu.0-2 Low, Baker City 65/52/0.25 69/46/t 67/44/t Ls Pine 61/42/0.05 65/46/c 64/37/t Prinevige 61/ 45/0.0269/47/1 64/38/t El Paso 88/55/0.00 35 Moderate; 6-7High;8-10 VeryHigh; 11+ Exlreme. Brookings 55/51/0.02 60/51/c 61/49/pc M edford 72/5 7/Tr 74 / 57/t 7 5 /48/pc Redmond 62 / 42/Tr 71/48/t 66/37/t Fairbanks 77/42/0.00 Bums 61/48/0.30 65/44/t 6 5/40/t New por t 55/5 2 /0.00 57/51/c 57/49/c Roseburg 70 / 58/Tr 72/56/c 72/50/pc Fargo 71/36/0.00 Eugene 73/54/0.00 70/52/c 70/46/pc NorthBend 61/54/0.00 61/54/c 60/52/c Salem 69/56/Tr 75/53/c 72/49/c Flagstaff 63/27/0.00 Klsmsth Falls 61/49/0.05 64/45/t 63/35/pc O ntario 72/56/0.46 75/53/t 77/54/t Sisters 61/38/0.01 72/49/c 69/37/pc Grand Rapids 60/35/0.02 G rasses T r ee s Wee d s Lakeview 63/46/0.01 62/44/t 61/37/t Pe n dleton 73/ 5 4/Tr 7 9 /54/t 7 5 /49/t The Dsges 8 5 / 55/0.00 81/59/c 76/56/t Green Bay 59/33/0.00 Greensboro 87/62/0.00 Weather(W):s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy,c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-tbunderstorms, r-rsin, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow l-ice, Tr-trsce,Yesterdaydata ssof 5 p.m. yesterday Hig~h M o derate Ab sent Harrisburg 64/53/0.00 Source: OregonAgergyAssociatss 541-683-1577 Hsrffurd, CT 62/52/0.49 Helena 69/40/0.00 Honolulu 83/69/0.00 ~ gs ~ t es ~ 209 ~ 30 s ~ 4 0 s ~ 5 0 s ~ e e s ~ 7 0 8 ~ a g s ~ g g s ~ T OOs ~110s Houston ~ 108 ~ g s 89n3/0.31 As ui 7 s.m. yesterday Huntsville 87/65/0.16 v Indianapolis 52/43/Tr Reservoir Acr e feet Ca p acity NATIONAL 3 72/42 • i n ipe Tgnder Bay Jackson, MS 87/68/0.00 EXTREMES u C rane Prairie 471 0 9 v c 85% Jacksonville 92/67/0.03 YESTERDAY(for the Portland
Yesterday Normal Record
4 1'
Timesofcloudsandsun
OREGON WEATHER Shown is today's weather.Temperatures are today's highs andtonight's lows. EAST: Cloudy to partly ria 5 sunny andcooltoday umatiaa Hood 83/57 with a few showers RiVer Rufus • ermiston and thunderstorms, Cannon /51 lington 82/58 Portland Meac am Losti ne most numerous this 57/52 75/5 60 • W co 68/48 Enterprise afternoon. dleten 57/4 he Daa 8 • 57/47 79/ 4 CENTRAL:Partly to andy• Mc innvie • 81/59 JosePh 4/54 Govee • HeP Pner Grande • mostly cloudy today; nt • u pi Condon 6/52 Cam • 77 7 50 a few showersand union l.incoln 70/ thunderstorms, Sale 59/51 pray Granttee especially during the H 75/5 • 6/54 a 'Baker C Newpo 62/4D afternoon. • ~49 3/52 57/51 • Mitch II eg/46 Camp Sh man Red WEST: Cloudy to partly 70/48 n R eu BS/49 • John sunny today; a shower 59/51 73/52 • Prineville Day 7/43 tario orthunderstorm in eg/47 • P a lina 6 8/ 4 8 7 53 a few spots, mainly Floren e • Eugene ' Re d erothers Vatee 59/52 across the south. Su iVere 68/46 • 47 76/52
Bend through 5 p.m.yesterday
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IN THE BACK BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NEWS W Scoreboard, C2 M LB, C3 Sports in brief, C2 NHL, C4 NBA, C2 THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, MAY 21, 2015
PREP LACROSSE
Bend, Summit to host playoffs Coming off byes in the first round of the Oregon High School Lacrosse Association state playoffs, both Bend High and Summit begin play in the round of16 with home gamesFriday evening. No. 6 seedBend (150), champion of the High Desert League, faces No. 11 Sherwood (13-6) at 6 p.m. at15th Street Field. Sherwood, champion of the Northwest League, beat No. 22Wilsonville in a first-round contestTuesday. Also at 6 p.m. Friday, No.8seedSummit (13-4), the High Desert League runner-up, hosts No. 9 OregonEpiscopal (12-5). OES,runner-up in the Columbia League, defeated Sprague17-1 Tuesday in the first round of the 24-team playoff. Friday's winners advance to the quarterfinal round on May29. The state semifinals are setfor June3,andthe championship final is scheduled for June6. Admission to Friday's games, as set by the OHSLA, is $8 for adults, $5 for students.
O www.bendbulletin.com/sports
MAjOR LEAGUE BASEBALL
NHL PLAYOFFS
s ea wasawa s a o e ar ain or an ees S Ll
Inside
By Billy Witz New York Times News Service
When the New York Yan-
kees signed Jacoby Ellsbury to a seven-year, $153 million contractbefore lastseason, they were paying to steal away dynamic leadoff man who helped them win two World
Part of the bargain, though, was paying for the other Ellsbury, the one who has a hard time staying healthy. This season, the Yankees have gotten both versions of
Series and nearly won a Most
the Madras native who will
Valuable Player Award.
turn 32 years old in September.
from the Boston Red Sox the
Ellsbury and
• Elias shines as Mariners beat Orioles 4-2. MLB,C3
Brett Gardner
have been catalysts for the Yankees' offense.
Ellsbury
Ell s bury has a .412 on-base percentage, 14 stolen bases and 29 runs scored — placing him in the top three in the American
League in each category — for an offense that has scored the
most first-inning runs in
baseball. But on Tuesday night, Ellsbury injured his right knee while swinging a bat. He left the game soon after and headedtothe 15-day disabled list with what the team has called a sprained
right knee. SeeEllsbury/C4
Jae C. Hong /The Associated Press
Chicago's AndrewShaw,above andinset,head-butts the puck into the goal during overt i me Tuesday. The goal was disallowed because it
was purposefully directed into the net by something other than a stick.
PREP TENNIS
A header in hockey? Impressive, bLjt illegal By Naila-Jean Meyers and Andrew Das New York Times News Service
— Bulletin staff report
If Andrew Shaw were a
soccer player, his headed goal Tuesday night would
CYCLING
not have been unusual. It
also would have counted. But, alas, Shaw is a hockey player for the Chicago Blackhawks, and hockey players are not allowed to
CCC seekshost housing for teams Organizers of the 2015 RegenceBlueCross BlueShield Cascade Cycling Classic stage race are looking for host families to provide lodging for riders. This year's race is scheduled for July 22-26. CCC riders usually arrive a day or two before the race andleaveon the last day of racing or the day after. Numbers of riders who will need accommodati onsvary from teams of eight to just one or two. As the week of the race draws near, riders are matched upwith housing appropriate to their team size. Anyone interested in hosting riders for the 36th annual CCC can send anemail to ccchousing@ bendbroadband.com. The CCC is the longest-running road cycling stage race in North America. The race draws some ofthe country's best cyclists to Central Oregoneach summer. For more information, visit www.cascadeclassic.org. — Bulletin staff/epo/t
NBA PLAYOFFS
use their heads — or any
other part of their body, at least not intentionally — to knock pucks into the net.
Still, Shaw created one of the most memorable moments in these NHL play-
offs so far. The Blackhawks were on the power play 8:47 into the second overtime
in Game 2 of the Western Conference finals against the Anaheim Ducks when
Shawleapt for ahigh-floatingpuck and knocked it into the goal with his head. Shaw started a raucous celebration on the ice,
thinking Chicago hadtied the series at 1-1. But several on the Blackhawks'bench,
includinghis coach, Joel Quenneville, knewthe rule book better.
The officials waved off the goal a fewminutes later, with the NHL explaining that Shawhad violated Rule Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin
Bend High's Sierra Winch, from left, Jesse Vezo, Ruby Ladkin, Lauren Handley, Kyla Collier and Sydney Meeuwsen all qualified to compete at the Class 5A girls tennis state championship this week.
points Wednesday.
be disallowed when the
puckhas been directed, batted or throwninto the net
• Bend High sends three doublesteamsto state as LavaBearsseek ateam title Inside
By Mark Modcal The Bulletin
The math is simple: Two is greater than one. And the
Bend High girls tennis squad is out to prove it — by stacking its lineup with champion-
ship-caliber doubles teams. Coach Kevin Collier has tried many different lineups throughouttheseason,and for the Class 5A Special Dis-
LeBron James led Cleveland with 31
78.5: "Apparent goals shall
fi,»n ullX ! 8 I 'm =
I
r
Racquet and Fitness Club
Vezo, who are the No. 2 seed
in Portland and the Tuala-
because we put our top two players into doubles, trying to
in today's first round. Bend's two other state-qualifying doubles teams are Kyla Collier and Sydney Meeuwsen, and Ruby Ladkin and Lauren Handley. Kevin Collier says his dis-
make a stronger state team,"
trict-champion team has been
which is set for today through
Collier explains. Those top players are ju-
Saturday at the West Hills
niorsSierra Winch and Jesse
flexible amid all the lineup changes this year. SeeTennis/C4
• Complete list of Central Oregon competitors at the tennis state championships,C4 trict 1 tournament last week, he entered three doubles
teams. All of those teams qualified for the state tournament,
tin Hills Tennis Center in Beaverton. "We went for the district title, and gambled a little bit
by an attackingplayer other thanwith a stick."
Shaw was sheepish about the play after the game. "Overtime goals are huge, so I tried to sell it as much as I could," he said.
"It was just exciting, the
reaction at the net. I was just
out there using my head, I guess." SeeHeader /C4
Inside • Lightning beat Rangers 6-5 in overtime,C4
BOXING
,, The night Ali and Listoncame to Maine
Cavaliers open series with win
By Harvey Araton
company, will notice the
New York Times News Service
visitors from his office as
couple of times each month,
they look up uncertainly at the property's most modern
knocked out Sonny Liston
LeBron Jamesscores 31 points and J.R.Smith makes eight 3-pointers and scores 28 points to lead Cleveland past top-seeded Atlanta 97-89 in Game1 of the Eastern Conference finals,C2
with the rate accelerating
feature, a two-tone gray brick
during summer, a car will pull into the parking lot of a small, quaint multipurpose
facade built 10 years ago,
championship rematch with his so-called phantom punch
with their cameras or smart-
in 1965. And until the city of
phones poised. Ifhe is not toobusy, Cain will go outside, say hello.
Lewiston gave the distressed building a face-lift and paved its dirt parking lot before selling it to private owners about seven years ago, time had
LEWISTON, Maine — A
Tristan Spinskt/New YorkTimes News Service
Joe Gamache Sr., of Lewiston, Maine and operator of a boxing club for 37 years in the basement of the
arena on Birch Street in this
Lewiston ArmoryMemorial, says hetried to sneak
the banks of the Androscog-
"From all over the world,
into the heavyweight championship bout between Muhammad Ali and Sonny Liston, but by the time he arrived at the venue, the fight was over.
gin River. Mike Cain, who manages the building for his father's
people come," he said. "They say, 'Is this where the fight really happened?'"
once-thriving mill city along
Yes, he will tell them, this is where Muhammad Ali in the first round of their
virtually stood still. SeeFight /C4
photos showing how Lewiston, Maine, has changed since the Ali-Liston fight 50 years ago on The Bulletin's website: bendbulletin. com/sports
C2
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, MAY 21, 2015
ON THE AIR
COREBOARD
TODAY MOTOR SPORTS
Formula One,MonacoGrand Prix, practice NASCARSprint Cup, Coca-Cola 600, practice NASCAR Xfinity, Charlotte, practice NASCAR,Xfinity, Charlotte, final practice NASCAR Sprint Cup, Coca-Cola 600, qualifying
Time 5 a.m.
T V/Radio N B CSN
11:30 a.m.
FS1 FS1
1 p.m. 2 :30 p.m. 4 p.m.
FS1 FS1
BASEBALL
College, SEC tourney, Missouri vs. Alabama
7 :30 a.m.
MLB, Seattle at Baltimore
9:30a.m. Root, MLB
SEC
College, SEC tourney, Auburn vs. TBD 11 a.m. SEC MLB, L.A. Dodgers at SanFrancisco 12:30 p.m. MLB College, SEC tourney, Vanderbilt vs. Texas A8M 2 :30 p.m. SEC College, Big Ten tourney, Michigan vs. Iowa 3 p.m. B i g Ten MLB,ChicagoCubsatSanDiego 6 p.m. MLB College, SEC tourney, LSU vs. TBD 6 p.m. SEC B i g Ten College, Big Ten tourney, lllinois vs. Maryland 7 p.m. College, Long BeachSt. at CalState Fullerton 8 p.m. E S PNU GOLF
Senior PGAChampionship PGA Tour,CrownePlaza Invitational EuropeanTour,PGA Championship
10 a.m. Golf 1 p.m. Golf 2 a.m. (Fri.j Golf
SOFTBALL
NCAA tournament, Florida St. vs. Tennessee 4 p.m. NCAA tournament, Georgia vs. Michigan 6 p.m.
ES P N2 ES P N2
HOCKEY
NHL playoffs, Anaheim atChicago
5 p.m.
N B CSN
6 p.m.
ESPN
BASKETBALL
NBA playoffs, Houston at GoldenState
ON DECK Today Boystennis:5Astate championship at WestHils Racquet andFitnessClubin Portland, noon Girls tennis:5Astate championship at WestHils RacquetandFitnessClubin Portland, 2p.m. Trackandfield: 3A,2A,1Astate championships at Hayward Field inEugene,10a.m.
College NCAA tournameat All Times PDT
In the Bleachers O 2015 Steve Moore. Dist. by Universal Ucrick www.gocomics.comfinthebreachers
cy/zr
Friday Baseball: 5A play-in, LaSalle atBend, 4;30 p.m.;5A play-in, Redm ond at Putnam, 5 p.mq4Aplay-in, Philomathat CrookCounty, 4:30 p.m.; Summit at Sisters, 5p.m. Softball:5A play-in, Hiffsboroat Bend,4 p.m.5A play-in, MountaiVi newatLaSalle, 5p.m. Beys tennis:5Astate championship at WestHils Racquetand Fitness Club in Portland, 9 a.m.; 4A/3A/2A/1A statechampionship at OregonState, 6a.m. Girls tennis:5Astate championship at WestHils RacquetandFitnessClub in Portland,9:30a.m.; 4A/3A/2A/1A statechampionship at OregonState, 6a.m. Track and field: 5A, 4Astate championshipsat Hayward Field in Eugene,9 a.mq3A,2A,1A state championships atHaywardField in Eugene,2:30p.m. Beyslacrosse:OHSLAplayoff s,secondround,SherwoodatBend,6p.m.;OregonEpiscopalSchoolat Summit, 6 p.m.
Transactions BASEBAL L AmericanLeague BOSTONREDSOX— OptionedRHPJohnCornely to Pawtucket (IL). CLEVELANDINDIANS— OptionedINF/OFZach WalterstoColumbus(IL). Selectedthecontract ofRHP ShaunMarcumfromColumbus.SentLHPTJ.House to Columbus forarehabassignment. DETROITIGERS— Plaml DHVictor Martinezon the15-dav DLRecalledOFTyler CollinsfromToledo(IL). HOUSTONASTROS — TradedLHPChrisLeeto Baltimore for otherconsiderations. NEWYORKYANKEES— PlacedOFJacobyEllsbury onthe15-dayDL Selectedthecontract of OF Slade Heathcott from Scranton/Wilkes-Barre(IL). TransferredRHPChaseWhitley tothe 60-dav DL. OAKLANDATHLETICS — Placed LHP Drew Pomeranzon the15-dayDL.Recalled RHPArnold Leon fromNashville (PCL).Sent2B BenZobrist to Stockton(Cal)andLHPSeanDoolittle toMidland(TL)
"Dodgeball court is now in session. Counsel for the plaintiff, you may proceed ..."
MLS MAJORLEAGUE BOCCE All TimesPDT
MOTOR SPORTS
IndyCar, Indianapolis 500, carb day IndyCar, Indy Lights, Freedom100 IndyCar, Indianapolis 500, carb day
8 a.m. N B CSN 9 a.m. N B CSN 10 a.m. N BCSN
GOLF
10 a.m. Golf 1 p.m. Golf 4:30a.m. (Sat.j Golf
Senior PGAChampionship PGA Tour,CrownePlaza Invitational EuropeanTour,PGA Championship SOFTBALL
NCAA tournament, La.-Lafayette vs. Auburn NCAA tournament, Tennesseevs. Florida St. NCAAtournament, Michiganvs. Georgia NCAA tournament, Florida St. vs. Tennessee NCAA tournament, Oklahomavs. Alabama NCAA tournament, Georgia vs. Michigan NCAA tournament, N.C.State vs. Oregon
11 a.m. E SPNU 1 p.m. E S PNU 3 p.m. E S PNU 4 p.m. ESP N 4 p.m. ES P N2 6 p.m. ESP N 6 p.m. E S PNU
BASEBALL
College, SEC tourney, teams TBD College, Big Ten tourney, teams TBD MLB, Regional Coverage College, UCLA at Oregon MLB, Seattle at Toronto College, SEC tourney, teams TBD College, Big Ten tourney, teams TBD College, California at OregonSt. College, Arizona St. at Southern Cal College, Long BeachSt. at CalState Fullerton HOCKEY NHL pla yoffs,N.Y.RangersatTampaBay
1 p.m. SEC 1:30 p.m. Big Ten 4 p.m. MLB 4 p.m. Pac-12 4 p.m. Root 4:30 p.m. SEC 5:30 p.m. Big Ten 7p.m. KICE940-AM Pac-12 7 p.m. 8 p.m. ESPNU 5 p.m.
N B CSN
BASKETBALL
NBA playoffs, Cleveland atAtlanta
5 :30 p.m.
TNT
BOXING
Eric Hunter vs. Antonio Escalante
7 p.m. ESPN2, FS1
FOOTBALL
Australia, St. Kilda vs. WestCoast Australia, Gold Coast vs. Collingwood
8 :30 p.m. FS2 1 1:30 p.m. F S 2
Listingsarethe mostaccurate available. TheBulletin is not responsible for latechangesmadeby 7)/or radio stations.
EasternConference W L T Pls GF GA D.c. United 6 2 3 21 13 9 NewEngland 5 3 4 19 17 15 NewYork 4 1 5 17 14 9 Columbus 4 4 2 14 15 12 OrlandoCit y 3 5 3 12 13 14 TorontoFC 3 5 1 10 13 14 Chicago 3 5 1 10 9 12 Philadelphia 2 7 3 9 11 21 NewYorkCity FC 1 6 4 7 9 14 Montreal 1 3 2 5 7 9 WesternConference W L T Pls GF GA Fc Dallas 6 2 3 21 17 13 Vancouver 6 4 2 20 14 11 Seattle 6 3 1 19 17 9 SanJose 5 4 2 17 12 11 Sporting KansasCity 4 2 17 17 15 Houston 4 4 4 16 16 15 Los Angele s 3 4 5 14 11 15 RealSalt Lake 3 3 5 14 10 15 Portland 3 4 4 13 10 12 Colorado 1 2 7 10 9 9 Wednesday'sGame Sport ingKansasCity4,NewEngland2 Friday's Games Chicag oatColumbus,5p.m. Housto natLosAngeles,7:30p.m. Saturday'sGames PortlandatToronto FC,2p.m. D.c. UnitedatNewEngland,4:30p.m. Fc Dallasat Montreal, 5p.m. VancouveratColorado,6 p.m. NewYorkCity FCat Real Salt Lake,7 p.m. SportingKansasCity atSeattle, 7p.m. Bunday'sGames Philadelphiaat NewYork, 2p.m. Orlando CityatSanJose,4p.m.
ATP GenevaOpen Wednesday af Geneva, Switzerland SecondRound Joao Sousa(6), Portugal, def. Jurgen Melzer,
Austria,6-4, 6-4. Federico Delbonis, Argentina, def. Andrey
Kuznetsov, Russia,6-3, 6-4. PabloAndujar(3), Spain,def.AdrianMannarino, France,3-6,7-6(2)r6-2. ThomazBeffucci, Brazil, def. DenisIstomin,Uzbekistan,6-4, 6-4. StanWa wrinka (1), Switzerland,def. LukasRosol, CzechRepublic, 6-4,3-6, 6-3. AlbertRamos-Vinolas, Spain, def.Benjamin Becker (4), Germ any,7-6 (2),6-2. Open deNiceCoted'Azur Wednesday at Nice, France SecondRound LeonardoMayer (4), Argentina,def. LucasPouile, France,6-4,6-0. DusanLajovic, Serbia,def. PabloCarrenoBusta, Spain,6-3,4-6,7-5. DominicThiem,Austria, def. NickKyrgios(6), Australia, 4-3,retired. ErnestsGulbis (3), Latvia,def.AlexanderDolgopolov, Ukraine,7-5,4-6, 6-1. BornaCoric,Croatia,def. GianniMina,France,7-6
(4), 6-3. JamesDuckworth, Australia, def.QuentinHalys, France,7-6(0), 7-6(5).
BASKETBALL NBA playoffs NATIONALBASKETBALLASSOCIATION AN TimesPDT CONFERE NCEFINALS
TENNIS WTA Internationaux de Strasbourg Wednesday at Strasbourg, France SecondRound MadisonKeys(1), UnitedStates, def. MirjanaLucic-BaroniCroa , tia,4-6, 7-6(3), 7-6 (0). Elena Vesnina,Russia, def. Alize Cornet (4), France, 3-6,6-0,6-3. Kristina Mladenovic, France,def. Alison Riske, UnitedStates,7-6(4), 6-2. Virginie Razz ano, France, def. FrancescaSchiavone,Italy,6-2, 6-3.
NuernbergerVersicherungscup Wednesdayat Nuremberg, Germany SecondRound CarinaWitthoeft (6), Germany, def. Evgeniya Rodina, Russia6-1, , 6-2. LaraArruabarrena,Spain, def. Sabine Lisicki (3), Germany, 6-2,6-7(3), 7-6(3). Yulia Putintseva,Kazakhstan, def. Kiki Bertens, Netherlands,6-4,5-7, 7-5.
SUPERREGIONALS (Besf-of-3;x-if necessary) Friday's Game N.c. Stateat Oregon, 6p.m. Saturday'sGames N.c. State vs.Oregon,noon x-N.C. Statevs.Oregon,3p.m.
DEALS
Saturday Boys tennis: 5A statechampionshipat Tualatin Hils TennisCenterin Beaverton, 9 a.m.; 4A/3A/2A/1A statechampionship atOregonState, 6a.m. Girls tennis: 5Astate championshipat Tualatin Hils TennisCenterin Beaverton, 9 a.m.; 4A/3A/2A/1A statechampionship atOregonState, 6a.m. Trackandfield: 5A,4Astatechampionships at HaywardFieldin Eugene,9:30a.m.
SOCCER
FRIDAY
SOFTBALL
IN THE BLEACHERS
(Best-of-7)
Wednesday'sGame Cleveland 97,Atlanta 69, Clevelandleadsseries1-0
Today'sGame Houstonat GoldenState, 6p.m., GoldenStateleads series1-0 Friday's Game Cleveland atAtlanta, 5:30 p.m. Tuesday'sSummary
Cavaliers 97, Hawks89 CLEVEULN D(97) James12-267-6 31, Thompson5-7 4-7 14, Mozgov5-90-010, Irving4-100-1 10,Shumpert 1-t 2-44, Jones0-30-00, Smith10-160-026,Dellavedova0-60 00. Totals37-6413-20 97. ATLANTA (BB) Carroll 2-7 0-0 5,Milsap3-117-1013, Horford 6120116, Teague11-244427, Korver3 51-19, Antic 0-10-0 0,Schroder2-102-2 6, Bazemore 4-5 2-310, Muscala1-20-02.Totals34-7717-23Bg. Cleveland 20 31 23 23 — 97 Atlanta 26 26 1B 22 — BB
BASEBALL College AN TimesPDT Pac-12 Conference Overall WL T Pcf WL TPcf
UCLA 21 6 0 .77641 12 0 .774 OregonSt. 1 7 9 1 .646 36 15 1 .702 California 1 7 1 0 0 .630 33 17 0.660 ArizonaSt. 17 10 0 .630 3319 0.635 Southerncal 1611 0 .593 3516 0.660 Oregon 14 1 30 .519 3522 0.614 Washington 11 16 0 .40726 25 0 .510 Arizona 1 21 6 0 .400 28 23 0.549 Washington St. 10 fr 0 .370 26 25 0 .526 Utah 7 19 1 .276 16 33 1.330 Stanford 7 20 0 . 259 22 31 0 .415
Today'sGame AbileneChristianatArizona,6 p.m.
Friday's Games UCLAatOregon,4 p.m. Stanfordat WashingtonSt., 4p.m. AbileneChristianatArizona6 pm Californiaat OregonSt., 7p.m. Utah atWashington, 7 p.m. ArizonaSt.atSouthernCal, 7p.m. Saturday'sGames Stanfordat WashingtonSt. 1p.m. Californiaat OregonSt.,4 p.m. ArizonaSt.atSouthern Cal, 4 p.m. Hawaii atArizona,6p.m. Utah atWashington, 7 p.m. UCLAatOregon,7 p.m. Sunday'sGames HawaiiatArizona,noon UCLAatOregon,noon Stanford at WashingtonSt., noon Californiaat OregonSt., 3p.m. Utah atWashington, 3 p.m. ArlzonaSt.atSouthern Cal, 3 p.m.
HOCKEY NHL playoffs
for rehab assignments. SEATTLE MARINERS— OptionedCJesusSucre to Tacoma (PCL). TEXAS RANGERS—RecalledRHPPhil Kleinfrom RoundRock(PCL). DesignatedOFCarlos Peguerofor assignment.AssignedRHPStolmy Pimentel outright to Round Rock(PCL). National League ATLANTA BRAVES—TradedTIHPJohnCornelyto Bostonforcashconsiderations. CHICAGO CUBS— Selected the contract of OF MikeBaxterfromlowa(PCL). Recaled OFJunior Lake from lowa. COLORADOROCKIE S — Optioned OF Drew Stubbs toAlbuquerque(PCL). Recalled OFBrandon BarnesfromAlbuaueraue. MILWAU KEEBREWERS— Agreedto termswith RHPMannyBarredaonaminor leaguecontract. PHILADE LPHIA PHILLIES—Recalled RH PSeverino Gonzalefrom z Lehigh Valey (IL). OptionedRHP HectorNeristo LehiahVaffev. BABKET BALL National Basketball Association NBA — FinedGoldenState G StephenCurry $5,000byviolating anti-floppingrules. Women'sNational Basketball Association NEWYORKLIBERTY— WaivedGLaurinMincy. FOOTBALL
National Football League CINCINN ATI BENGALS—SiqnedOTJakeFisher. CLEVELANDBROWNS — Signed DB Ibraheim Campbell. DALLASCOWBOYS—SignedDERandyGreaory. OAKLANDRAIDERS— SianedCB ChimdiChekwa. HOCKE Y National HockeyLeague BOSTON BRUINS— Promoted assistant general manager DonSweeneytogeneralmanager. 01aTAW A SENATORS —SignedGAndrewHammondto athree-year contract. SANJOS ESHARKS—Signed FJoonas Donskoi to anentry-levelcontract. TORONTOMAPLELEAFS— NamedMikeBabcockcoach. SOCCER North AmericanSoccer League NASL —Awarded a franchise to Miami to be knownasMiamiFcwhichwil beginplayin2016and be owned byRiccardoSilvaandPaolo Maldini. COLLEGE FURMAN — Promoted women's assistant soccer coach April Raymerto associate headcoach. HOFSTR A—AnnouncedsophomoreFHunter Sabetv hasioinedthemen'sbasketball team. ILLIN OIS-CHICAGO — Named Ron Coleman men'sassistantbasketball coach. KENTUCKY — Signedmen' sbasketballcoachJohn Calipari toaone-yearcontract extensionthrough2022. MIAMI —Name d AdamFisher men's assistant basketballcoach. UC DAVIS — Named Marcelo Antonelli wom en's assistantsoccercoach. WAKEFOREST— ReinstatedGMadisonJonesto the men'ba ssketball team.
AN TimesPDT
FISH COUNT
CONFERN ECEFINALS
Upstreamdaily movement of adult chinook,jack chinook,steelheadandwild steelheadat selectedColumbia Riverdamslast updatedTuesday. Cbnk Jchnk Sflbd Wsehd Bonneville 2,316 52 2 52 17 TheDaffes 1,962 426 5 1 John Day 1,757 37 9 10 1 McNary 1,434 293 2 0 Upstream year-to-date movement ofadult chinook, jack chinook,steelheadand wild steelheadat selected ColumbiaRiverdamslast updatedTuesday. Cbnk Jchnk Bflhd Wstlhd
(Besf-of-7) Wednesday'sGame TampaBay6,N.Y.Rangers5,OT,Tampa Bayleads series2-1 Today'sGame Anaheim at Chicago, 5p.m.,series tied1-1 Friday's Game N.Y.RangersatTampaBay,5 p.m. Saturday'sGame Anahei matChicago,5p.m. Sunday'sGame Tampa Bayat N.Y.Rangers5 p.m. Monday'sGame Chicag oatAnaheim,6p.m.
Bonneville 191,644 6,979 4,661 2,391 The Daffes 166,626 7,234 361 17 0 John Day 140,299 6,501 533 322
M cNary 126,755 4,572 661
41 3
NBA PLAYOFFS
James, Smith lead Cavs to Game1 win By Paul Newberry
will undergo an MRI today to The Associated Press determine the seriousness. ATLANTA — J.R. Smith Besides being the main knocked down a t o u gh defender on James, Carroll 3-pointer, then another. Itzm- had been the Hawks' leading toward the fans, their ing scorer in the playoffs. He h eckling t r a nsformed t o was averaging more than 17 groans, he blew off his right points coming into Atlanta's index finger and motioned first conference final. "DeMarre is a complete toward his side, like he was holstering his pistoL player," Hawks coach Mike
SPORTS IN BRIEF BASKETBALL
HOCKEY
PGlr of CllppGrs IGGd All-DBfGRslvo flrst toGm — LosAn-
MaPle LeafS hire COaCh BadCOCkfrom RedWingS — Mike
geles Clippers center DeAndre Jordan andpoint guard Chris Paul were named to the NBA'sAll-Defensive first team, the leagueannounced Wednesday. It is Jordan's first time receiving the honor, and Paul's fourth consecutive time and fifth overall in his career. Also making the first team wereSanAntonio forward Kawhi Leonard, Golden State forward Draymond Greenand Memphis guard TonyAllen. The second team is NewOrleans forward Anthony Davis, Chicago guard Jimmy Butler, Warriors center Andrew Bogut, Washington guard JohnWall and Spurs forward Tim Duncan.
CYCLING
Babcock movedfrom one Original Six franchise to another Wednesday, agreeing to aneight-year, $50 million deal to coach theToronto Maple Leafs. TheMaple Leafsannouncedthe hiring to put to an endmonths of speculation about Babcock's future with the Detroit RedWings, where he spent thepast10seasonsandwonaStanleyCupin2008.Thedeal makes Babcock theNHL'shighest-paid coach. Hewill reportedly receive a large signing bonusand makebetween $5 million and $6 million a season. Toronto missed theplayoffs last season for the ninth time in10 years. TheMapleLeafshavenotwonaStanleyCupsince1967,aseason before the NHL expanded from its original six franchises. The 52-year-old BabcockalsocoachedCanadatoOlympicgold medalsin2010and'14.
HORSE RACING
Yes, Smith was that hot. While LeBron James ied Cleveland with 31 points, it
Buderkholzer said. "He has a
Zakarin WinS11thStage, Contador keePSGiro lead-
big impact at both ends of the
was Smith who ignited the
Jeff Teague led A tlanta with 27 points. But Atlanta didn't produce its usual bai-
Russian cyclist llnur Zakarin wonthe rainy11th stage of theGiro d'Italia on Wednesday,andAlberto Contador retained theleader's pink jersey. Zakarin, who recently wontheTour deRomandie, got in anearly breakaway then launched asolo attack with15 miles to go. Zakarin finished in less thanfour hours over thehilly 95-mile legfrom Forli to Imola. Contador remainedthree seconds aheadof Italian rider Fabio Aru inthe overall standings.
Cavaliers in Game 1 of the
COUTt.
Eastern Conference finals. He made eight 3-pointers and anced scoring, as two startscored 28 points irk a 97-89 ers — Kyle Korver and Carvictory over the top-seeded roll — failed to reach double Atlanta Hawks on Wednes- figures. day night. With Smith doing most of "When he gets hot," Cleve- the damage, Cleveland outland coach David Blatt mar-
scored the Hawks 22-4 over
veled, "he gets smoking hot." the final five minutes of the Intent on bringing Cleve- third quarter and the first land its first NBA title, James
two minutes of the fourth.
sealed the victory with a soaring dunk in the final
During that span, he made
minute. F or the H awks, i t
jumper from just inside the arc, as well as throwing up
was
the second straight series
five 3-pointers and another a lob that Tristan Thompson
dunked. "Once I start shooting," S mith s a i d , "everybody for Atlanta, DeMarre Car- keeps telling me to keep roll went down with a knee shooting." injury driving to the basket The Cavaliers finished with 4 minutes, 59 seconds with a 49-37 rebounding remaining. He was helped to edge, exposing Atlanta's mathe locker room, not putting jor weakness during the regany weight oyk his left leg, and uiar season. iykwhich they have lost the
openinggame athome. Making matters worse
FOOTBALL Germany, MeXiCO POSSihle fOr gameS —Afuture regular-sea-
Breeding rightS fOrAmeriCan Pharoah Sold —Theowner of Triple Crown hopeful American Pharoahsold the breeding rights to his Kentucky Derby andPreakness winner to Coolmore Ashford Stud in Kentucky. OwnerAhmed ZayatsaidW ednesdaythedealwasreached in the past day or two but would not disclose the value.Evenbefore the announcement, Zayat's son, Justin, said the family had beeninundated with offers, many for more than$20 million. Since American Pharoah is still racing, stud fees haveyet to be determined. The colt's sire, Pioneerof the Nile, is at WinStar Farm in Kentucky andstands at $60,000 per live foal. The breeding rights to the last Triple Crown winner, Affirmed, sold for $14.4 million in1979. Based on that figure and adjusting for inflation, American Pharoah's value could be around $40 million.
sonNFLgame inMexico orGermanywasdiscussed byNFLowners Wednesday. Commissioner RogerGoodell said both countries have reached out about hosting games, andthere is "renewed interest" among the owners. The league is intent on expanding its international series, and it will have three games in London this season for the second straight MOTOR SPORTS year. Arizona hosted SanFrancisco in Mexico City in 2005, drawing a record crowd of103,467 for a regular-season game.There havebeenfive Bruton Smith, TerryLadonte headNASCARHall ClaSSpreseason gamesplayed in Germany, but none since1994. Goodell also Speedway Motorsports Executive Chairman Bruton Smith and two-time said Rio deJaneiro has shown interest in staging a Pro Bowl. Sprint Cup championTerry Labonte headlined the newest group of five headed to the NASCAR Hall of Fame. NASCARdrivers Curtis Turner and Timetadle for LA. decision could be movedup—The Bobby Isaacand modified series champion Jerry Cook completed the hall's seventh class Wednesday.Smith's company ownseight tracks that NFL could approve ateam move to LosAngeles bythe end of theyear, with a club playing in the area bythe 2016 season. NFLvice president host NASCAR events. Labonte, known as "Texas Terry," won 22 races Eric Grubman, the league's leadman on apossible return to L.A., said and top-series titles in1984 and 1996.Turner ran in NASCAR'sfirst Wednesday the window for such applications that now begins Jan. 1 strictly stock race in1949 andhad17 wins. Hewas 46 when hedied in could be movedato very late in the (upcomingj regular season." The a plane crash in 1970. Isaaccompeted from 1961-76 with 37 victories. 32 team owners could vote on ateam's relocation "some weeks after His19 poles in1969 stands as a season record. Isaac died in1977 at 45. that." The teamwould play in an existing stadium until a new one is built. Cook won six NASCAR modified championships including four straight Grubman said there wereseveral options, though hedeclined to list them from 1974-77. Heremains with NASCARas competition administrator. — From wire reports beyondtheRoseBowlandtheL.A.Coliseum.
C4
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, MAY 21, 2015
Fight
Tennis
Continued from C1
Continued from C1 "I think they're a very unselfish group that is very team oriented," he says. "I've tried many lineups, and we just kind of put them all together at the end and figured
The old place — back then alternately called St. D om-
inic's Arena or the Central Maine Youth Center — still
looked like a cross between an airplane hangar and an
t i m eless atmo-
spheric quality remains. Walk through its shadowed center, where a boxing ring was once hastily installed in the middle of a hockey rink, and it could be 50 years ago May 25, when a heavyweightchampionship circus descended on unsuspecting Lewiston, when
his best team ever.
a brash 23-year-old champier than Cassius Clay — stood over a fallen Liston, shouting,
"Get up and fight, sucker!"
Thristan Spinski / New York Times News Service
The Androscoggin Bank Colisee in shown in downtown Lewiston, Maine. Alternately called St. Dominic's Arena or the Central Maine Youth Center in 1965, its appearance has changed little since the building was the venue for the heavyweight championship boxing rematch between Muhammad Aii and Sonny Liston, which Aii won with a first-round knockout.
gaged with Ali, Walcott made
hood and originally built by a parish in 1958 for prep hockey games, the golden anniversary of what many would consider the most controver-
the bizarre decision to leave t hem to c o nsult w it h M c -
Donough and Nat Fleischer, the editor of Ring Magazine. Seated behind McDonough, Fleischer was waving his arms and frantically shouting
sial, and craziest, title fight
in history will be celebrated Monday night with a premiere showing of a 27-minute documentary, "Raising Ali."
that the count had reached 12.
The fight should be over.
Walcott returned to Ali and Liston to wave them off. The
Charlie Hewitt, a n a r t ist who splits his time between New Y or k a n d P o r t l and,
official time was initially announced as one minute but a
Maine, but spent his early life
tape showed Liston falling at I:44, rising at 1:56, and Walcott officially stopping the
in Lewiston, is the film's ex-
ecutive producer. He undertook the project not so much
The Associated Press file photo
Muhammad Aii stands over fallen challenger Sonny Liston,
to cast it as a metaphor for the shouting and gesturing shortly after dropping Liston with a short city's continuing plight. hard right to the jaw on May 25, 1965, in Lewiston, Maine. The bout "It's a sentimental portrait
lasted only one minute into the first round.
of a struggling old factochampionship fight w ould Cleveland." be held for the first time anyHe was soon on the phone where in his sparsely populatw ith I n t ercontinental P r o - ed state, as did George Russo, motions, which was based in the head of the Maine Box-
Cleveland and had the rights
along with a $3.5 million closed-circuit television deal. where fight night posters from The Cleveland people told across the decades adorn the Michael that the plug had walls. Here, Joe Gamache Sr. been pulled on the fight's has for 37 years operated a original site, Boston Garden, club that produced the state's because Massachusetts law only native world champi- enforcement feared a setup to on — his son, Joey — in the force a rubber match. There World Boxing A ssociation's also were rumors of threats superfeatherweight and light- a gainst Al i — wh o , a f t er weight divisions in the early winning the title in 1964, had 1990s. joined the Nation of Islam and But nothing, Gamache said, changed his name to Cassius compared to the night when X, and then Ali — in retalithe greatest names in boxing ation for the February 1965 — from James J. Braddock assassination of the Muslim to Joe Louis to Ali himselfminister and human rights acFrank Sinatra and Elizabeth Taylor, among the rich and famous.
"I mean, we're going to have a heavyweight title fight in Lewiston?" Gamache said.
"Everybody was amazed, couldn't believe it. Sam Mic hael negotiated that, a n d
peoplearound heremade him out to be a legend."
Michael was a local fight promoter, a pawnshop owner and the city's economic
development c o mmissioner. On May 6, 1965, he was speaking to the Chamber of Commerce in Norway, Maine, about 20 miles away, when he
of both fighters for an investigation that did not amount to
much. Beyond the mementos and
memories, the storytelling ing Commission, which was and the inevitable tall tales,
to the Ali-Liston rematch of based in Portland. That left t heir 1964 bout i n M i a m i , final approval of Lewiston to
brated and continued more than in the armory basement,
streamed into town, trailed by
quite sure what they saw. The result was so suspiCommission seized the gloves
greatness," said the 68-year- was handed a message: "Call ing over him resonates today. Lewiston is still trying to get up and fight." Nowhere has the city's pugilistic history been cele-
Fifty years later, most of those in attendance are not cious that the Maine Boxing
ry town that was visited by old Hewitt. " And what A l i told Liston as he was stand-
fight at 2:12.
what was the essence of Lew-
iston's legacy event, its single Larry Raymond Jr., a young round of fame, or infamy? county district attorney.
Still practicing law in Lewiston, Raymond recalled telling Michael, "If Liston hasn't
Was it something greater than
what Russo described: "Kind of a black eye, but one that put us on the map"?
Perhaps its lasting impact broken any law in Androscoggin County, I have no problem can be divined from the fight's with him."
Reed announced the fight on May 7.
30th anniversary i n 1 9 9 5, when Ali revisited Lewiston
and took one startled look at
then-Mayor John Jenkins and L ewiston cracked, " How the hell did
Sam Michael, his Cleveland
benefactors and had 19 days to prepare for the you get here?" Jenkins, who g raduated match and the invasion of the fight crowd, including a news from Bates College in Lewismedia armada numbering in ton in 1974, became the town's first African-American mayor the hundreds. The fight began at a little in 1993. Jenkins came to believe tivist Malcolm X. after 10:40p.m. on May 25. Liston's troubles with the Near the I-minute-40-second that th e s econd A l i -Liston law did not help. He had re- mark, Liston threw a lazy left fight could be viewed symcently been charged with jab. Ali, appearing to back up, bolically as a moment when speeding, careless and reck- countered with a short, chop- Lewiston, homogeneous and less driving, and carrying a ping right. Liston went down. insular, had opened itself to the gathering forces of Amerconcealed weapon. The scene devolved into a John Michael, Sam's son, chaotic series of communi- ican social change, embodied said the Cleveland promoters cation failures between the by Ali. "Here came Ali, at the dawn would have held the fight in a referee— Jersey Joe Walcott, cornfield,so desperate were a former heavyweight cham- of the civil rights era, a differthey not to lose the closed-cir- pion — and the knockdown ent kind of black man, who cuit money, the sport's newest timekeeper, a retired printer wouldn't let others define him revenue producer. named Francis McDonough. and who was threatening to a "My father told them, 'Put It did not help that Ali initial- whole lot of white folks," Jenit in Lewiston,'" said John Mi- ly refused to go to a neutral kins said. "And it was Lewiston that gave him a chance to chael, who still lives in Maine. corner. John H. Reed, Maine's Often forgotten in accounts defend his title and go from governor at the time, loved of the fight is that after Liston there to become the most fathe idea that a heavyweight was back on his feet, re-en- mous person in the world."
with No. 1 seed Lara Ra-
He says the goal for Winch kocevic of Catlin Gabel, who and Vezo is to win a state ti- beat Harris in the state chamtle, but he believes his other pionship final last year. two doubles teams can make At the 5A boys championdeep runs at the state tourna- ships today through Saturday ment as well.
In this no-frills arena, set in a modest residential neighbor-
to commemorate the fight as
pectations once we get there. That's why this is our best
opportunity to win a state championship." came together as a team and The Lava Bears girls will they're playing at a pretty hardly be the only players high level." representing Central Oregon The Bears are sending in the state championships six players to the state tour- this week. nament, which accounts for In the Class 4A/3A/2A/IA half of the 12 players who girls championships at the can qualify for state out of the Oregon State University tenseven-school Special District nis complex in Corvallis on 1. Collier says it is the most Friday and Saturday, Crook players he has sent to state in County's Elsa Harris is the his 18years at Bend High. No. 2 seed in singles. Harris, And, he adds, this might be a senior, is seeking a rematch
cade, it still does. Inside what is now called the Androscoggin Bank Colisee, the original salmon-color seats have been repainted
on — introduced for the first time as Muhammad Ali, rath-
do it," Collier says. "We have six girls who can all play at a high level and have high ex-
out what our best bet was and went with it. They really
oversizebarn. Behind the fa-
blue, but a
"It's been a long time since Bend has won a state championship, and I think this is the team that has the potential to
in Portland and Beaverton,
"If you put two strong Summit is once again the faplayers together that form a vorite, as the Storm seek their pretty good doubles team, fourth state team title in the that's going to definitely give past fiveyears. you more opportunity at the Early in the season, longstate level," Collier says. "A time Summit coach Josh Corlot of schools just have one dell said that this team might good player, and they just put be the best Summit has ever the players in the single draw had. Cordell's hunch seems and do what they can do. But to be coming to fruition, as if you have two good players, the Storm last weekend won you put them together and the Special District I team you've got a team that can go championship and q ualideeper in the tournamentfied six entries into the state and we've got three of them." tournament. The Lava Bears have not
S ummit boasts the t w o
tennis championship was
top-seeded singles players in No. 1 Carter Quigley and No. 2 Chandler Oliveira, which could make for an all-Storm singles final. The Storm also have two doubles teams seeded in the top four: No. 2 Logan Hausler and Daniel Pino, and No. 4 Hudson Mickel and Thomas Wimberly.
when they claimed back-tobacktitles in 1984 and 1985.
— Reporter: 541-383-0318, mmorical@bendbulletin.com
been taking it easy this week, according to Collier. The three doublesteams have been playing against each other, making for some competitive practices as they seek Bend High's first girls tennis state team title in 30years. The last time the L ava Bear girls won a team state
Tennisstatechampionships Today through Saturday, various sites
CLASS 5AGIRLS Singles:Siena Ginsburg, Summit; Autumn Layden, Summit; Riley Hanks, Ridgeview. Doubles: KylaCollier/SydneyMeeuwsen,Bend;Ruby Ladkin/ Lauren Hand!ey,Bend;Sierra Winch/Jesse Vezo (2), Bend; Sierra Cassaro/Cait! InCarr, Ridgeview.
CLASS 5ABOYS Singles:Carter Quigley (1), Summit; Cole Younger (2), Summit; Chandler 0!Iveira, Summit; Brett B!Undell, Ridgeview. Doubles:Zach Hite/Aaron Banquer-Glenn, Bend; Hudson Mickei/Thomas Wimberly (4), Summit; Josh Maitre/Peter Rutherford, Summit; Logan Hausier/Daniei Pino (2), Summit.
CLASS4A/3A/2A/1A GIRLS Singles:Eisa Harris (2), Crook County. Doubles:BrennaWeems/Jesse Farr-Baenziger, Sisters; Laura Fraser/Gwyneth Ptomey,Crook County.
CLASS4A/3A/2A/1A BOYS Singles:Colin Rinert, Sisters; Jack Stubblefield, Crook County. Doubles:Obie Eriza/Jered Pichette, Madras.
Ellsbury Continued from C1 The severity of the injury will not be known until Ells-
bury, who played 149 games last season, is examined by a team physician on Friday.
j
Still, the Yankees know that for at least two weeks, their offense — which has
l
been wheezing for most of
Header Continued from C1 Some NHL p layers on T witter said t he y d i d n o t
know the play was illegal, but Shaw knew. He was in-
volved in another memorable headed goal as a junior. In a 2011 Memorial Cup playoff game in the Ontario Hockey League, Devante Smith-Pelly of Mississauga St. Michael's had a headed goal disallowed against Shaw's Owen Sound team.
Shaw, who is among the many NHL players who play soccer in the tunnels before games, said he understood the rule but thought he should
the last week — will have to carry on without Ellsbury,
lightningwinin OT,take series lead TAMPA, Fla.— Nikita Kucherov scored 3 minutes, 33 seconds into overtime to give theTampaBay Lightning a 6-5 victory over the New YorkRangers onWednesday night in Game3 of the Eastern Conference finals. Ondrej Palat had two goals and anassist, and Tyler Johnson, Steven Stamkos andAlex Kiliorn each hadone goal and anassist for the Lightning. They took a2-1 lead inthe best-of-seven series. The winner cameabout a minute after Rangers goalie Henrik Lundqvist madeastoponJ.T.Brown'sbreakaway. New York tied it at 5 on Dan Boy!e's rebound with1:56 left in
regulation. Jesper Fast scored twice, and theRangers also got power-play goals from Derick Brassard andRyanMcDonagh. Johnson, who pacedTampa Bay's6-2roadvictoryinGame2 with a hat trick, scored his playoff-leading 12th goal after Tampa Bay overcame an early 2-0 deficit. The Rangers also cameback after trailing 4-2, with Fast scoring his second goal late in the secondperiod and McDonagh converting a power-play opportunity early in the third. — The Associated Press
still get some credit. "I think if anyone can ever pull that off it should still be a
goal," he said. "I mean, at that mark of 113:50 set on April 9, point you react in the moment and try to get it in."
1931.
Before Tuesday night, the But the goal did not count, NHL player most famous for and the game went into a heading pucks was New York third overtime, where ChiRangers goalie Henrik Lundcago won anyway, 3-2, on a qvist, who frequently stops goal by Marcus Kruger. Shaw pucks with his helmet. was on the ice at the time and Hockey players have pucks was among the first to con- go in the net off their bodies gratulate Kruger. It was the
all the time. Dominic Moore's
longest game in Blackhawks winning goal for the Ranghistory, at 116 minutes 12 sec- ers in Game 1 of the Eastern onds, surpassing the previous Conference finals Saturday
deflected off his leg. S haw has scored an i m -
portant goal in the playoffs off his body before. In the third overtime of Game I of
the 2013 Stanley Cup finals against the Boston Bruins,
lowed, as are those knocked
in by a swinging arm or glove. Shaw had the presence of mind not to swing at the
floating puck with his high stick. If he had scored that way, it also would have been
disallowed — since he would
who wore a brace on his knee Wednesday.
have made contact with his stick above the height of the
2012 because of a shoulder
crossbar. Soccer players, on the other hand, are adept at scoring with whatever body part is available. Headed goals like
weeks in September 2013 af-
Shaw's, of course, are common. But American striker
Clint Dempsey scored with his belly in a match against Portugal at last summer's World Cup. That move was
perfectly permissible under the Laws of the Game, which are intentionally vague on many points and only mention handling the ball as a punishable offense when it is done deliberately. But soccer players also know there is l i ttle reason to resort t o s u r reptitiously
the winning goal went in off handling the ball when there Shaw's shin. are so many other options: a T he key words i n t h e knee, a shoulder, even a rear rule are "directed, batted or end. thrown into the net." Goals Anything, that is, except s cored w it h a "deliberate their hands. Or a h ockey kicking motion" are disal- stick.
Alex Brandon /The Associated Press
New York's Jacoby Ellsbury Based on his history, this stands on second baseas seemed inevitable when the Yankees manager Joe Girardi Yankees signed him. comes out to talk Tuesday Ellsbury played only 18 night in Washington. Ellsbury games in 2010 because of a injured his knee Tuesday rib injury and 74 games in while swinging. injury. He also missed three MVP.
ter fouling a ball off his right The latest injury was a foot. But he returned to have freak accident: Ellsbury's an e xcellent p o stseason, spikes were caught in the hitting .344 with six stolen dirt as he strode into a pitch, bases and 14 runs scored as and his knee twisted. the Red Sox won the World
"I've never seen it done,"
Series. The injuries appear to be mostly the result of playing
manager Joe Girardi said. "Sometimes a guy's spike gets caught, but I've never hard and some misfortune. seen it happen like that." His ribs were injured when Ellsbury s ai d d u r i ng he collided with teammate s pring training that h e Adrian Beltre as they were would more aggressively chasing a foul ball. His protect his body, trying to shoulder injury came when maintain his health. "It is disappointing, withhe tried to break up a double play by Tampa Bay short- out a doubt," Ellsbury said. "Hopefully it's something stop Reid Brignac. Those mostly lost seasons quick; I get back to playin Boston were sandwiched ing and help the team win. around his career year in Hopefully there will be a lot 2011, when Ellsbury batted of timebefore the season's .321 with 32 home runs, 105 RBIs and 39 stolen bases,
over, obviously. But u n t il
they give me a timeline, I rewinning a Gold Glove in ally don't know. But I'm trycenter field and finishing ing to stay optimistic, stay as runner-up for the league positive."
C5 THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, MAY 21, 2015
O» To look upindividual stocks, goto bendbugotin.com/business. Also sooarecap in Sunday's Businesssection.
S&P 500
NASDAQ ~ 5,071.74
+
q gQ
2,125.85
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10-YRT-NOTE 2.25%
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i)5
Sstp 500
Thursday, May 21, 2015
Economic indicator
2 1 00.
The April index of leading indicators is expected to be unchanged from the previous month. The index, derived from data that for the most part have already been reported individually, is designed to anticipate economic conditions three to six months out. A string of small increases this year may be signaling a period of more moderate economic activity. The Conference Board delivers its latest index of leading indicators today.
.
Change: -1.98 (-0.1%)
2,040' " ""'10 DAYS
18,000"
2,050 "
17,600"
2,000 ":
17,200" J
StocksRecap NYSE NASD
Vol. (in mil.) 2,976 1,748 Pvs. Volume 3,208 1,693 Advanced 1597 1358 Declined 1490 1386 New Highs 1 25 1 1 1 New Lows 29 50
0.5% 0.4
0.3
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2,100 " '
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HIGH LOW CLOSE C H G. 18350.13 18272.56 18285.40 -26.99 DOW Trans. 8673.80 8502.14 8503.96 -170.14 DOW Util. 593.34 587.48 589.28 + 0 .79 -2.90 NYSE Comp. 11246.70 11196.54 11210.24 NASDAQ 5097.52 5050.21 5071.74 + 1 .71 S&P 500 2134.72 2122.59 2125.85 -1.98 S&P 400 1545.79 1537.97 1541.38 + 0 .41 Wilshire 5000 22536.78 22411.00 22451.19 -1 5.77 Russell 2000 1260.83 1252.36 1257.74 + 2 .08
DOW
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%CHG. WK MO QTR YTD -0.15% L L L +2.59% -1.96% -6.96% $.0.13% L -4.66% -0.03% L L L +3.42% $.0.03% L L L +7.09% -0.09% L L L +3.25% $.0.03% L L L +6.12% -0.07% L L L +3.61% $.0.17% L +4.40%
Alaska Air Group A LK 40.69 ~ Avicta Corp A VA 30.35 ~ BAC 14 . 38 ~ Source: FactSet Bank of America Barrett Business BB S I 1 8 .25 ~ Boeing Co BA 116.32 ~ Eye on Best Buy Cascade Baacorp C A C B4 .11 ~ Best Buy reports financial results ColumbiaBokg COL B 23.63— o for its fiscal first quarter today. Columbia Sportswear COLM 34.25 ~ Financial analysts anticipate Costco Wholesale CO ST 113.51 ~ 1 that the electronics retailer's Craft BrowAlliance B R EW 9.89 ~ earnings and revenue declined in FLIR Systems F LIR 28.32 ~ HewlettP acKard H PQ 31. 00 ~ the February-April period versus Intel Corp I NTC 25.75 ~ the same quarter a year earlier. Koycorp KEY 11.55 — 0 Best Buy's sales have been KrogorCo K R 4 6 .27 ~ growing in the U.S., but sliding LSCC 5.87 o — overseas. The retailer is grappling Lattice Semi LA Pacific L PX 12.46 ~ with increased competition from MDU Resources MDU 19 . 88 o — online stores, notably — o Mentor Graphics M E NT 18.25 Amazon.com, and discounters like Microsoft Corp MSFT 39.46 ~ Wal-Mart. Nike Ioc B NKE 73.11 ~ BBY $33.78 Nordctrom Inc J WN 64.92 ~ $50 Nwst Nat Gas NWN 41.81 ~ $26.12 PaccarInc PCAR 55.34 ~ 40 Planar Systms PLNR 2.12 ~ Plum Creek P CL 38.70 ~ 30 '15 Proc Castparts PCP 186.17 ~ 20 Schoitzor Stool S CHN 1 5.06 ~ Sherwin Wms SHW 199.31 ~ Operating I I StancorpFncl SFG 57.87 — o EPS 1 Q '14 1 Q' 15 Starbocks Cp SBUX 34.92 ~ UmpquaHoldings UMPQ 14.70 ~ Price-earnings ratio: 10 US Bancorp U SB 38.10 ~ based on past 12-month results WashingtonFodl WA F D 19.52 ~ 2 WellsFargo & Co WFC 46.44 — o Dividend: $0.92 Div. yield:2.7% Woyorhaoucor W Y 2 9 .76 ~
71.40 63. 9 6 - 3 .03 - 4.5 T T 38.34 32.2 1 +. 0 4 +0 .1 L T 18.21 1 6. 7 4 -.03 -0.2 L L 63.45 36 . 8 4 +1.34 +3.8 T T 158. 8 3 14 6.42 -.63 -0.4 T T 5.65 4.95 -.04 -0.8 L T 30.70 30 .64 + . 14 +0.5 L L 64. 92 56.90 -.15 -0.3 T T 56.8 5 143.49 -1.25 -0.9 T T 17.89 10. 8 1 +. 4 0 + 3.8 L T 36.36 31.8 0 +. 0 5 $ .0.2 L L 41.10 3 3.6 7 -.33 -1.0 T T 37.90 33.3 7 +. 2 2 +0 .7 L L 15.11 14 .97 -.14 -0.9 L L 77.74 73. 7 6 +. 2 9 +0.4 L L T 8.50 6.06 -.08 -1.3 T 18.43 1 6. 0 6 -.16 -1.0 L L 35.4 1 21. 04 + . 3 3 +1.6 L T 25.43 25 .49 + . 35 +1.4 L L 50.05 47. 5 8 ... ... T L 105. 5 0 16 4.61 -.03 . . . T L 83.16 74.7 1 +. 2 4 +0 .3 T T 52.5 7 4 4. 9 5 -.06 -0.2 T T 71.1 5 6 5. 3 9 -.15 -0.2 T T 9.17 4.21 -.11 -2.5 T T 45.45 4 2. 6 5 -.25 -0.6 T T 275. 0 9 21 9.07 -1.15 -0.5 L L 28.44 19. 1 9 +. 2 9 +1.5 L L 294. 3 5 28 7.67 -4.77 -1.6 T L 74.85 74 .83 + . 1 4 +0.2 L L 52.0 9 5 1. 0 3 -.39 -0.8 L L L 18. 39 17.63 - .13 -0.7 L 46.10 4 4. 0 9 -.60 -1.3 L L 3.4 3 22.00 -.17 -0.8 L T 56.70 56 .08 -.32 -0.6 L L 37.04 32.6 7 +. 0 1 ... L L
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+7.0 +39 . 7 2 1 38 1 3 0 . 8 0 - 8.9 + 6 . 0 2 8 4 1 0 1 . 3 2 -6.4 +15.4 66563 25 0 .20 +34.5 - 19.3 150 d d 0 . 88 +12. 6 +1 4 .4 2 077 18 3 . 6 4 - 4.6 +15.2 1 3 9 5 5 +11. 0 +2 9 .9 2 3 5 2 0 0 . 72f + 27 . 8 +3 6 .3 1 6 7 2 8 0. 6 0 +1.2 +29 . 9 1 6 10 28 1 .60f -19.0 -5.6 55 98 -1.6 - 4.6 59 7 2 1 0 . 44 -17.6 + 2 .9 11928 13 0 . 64 -8.0 +30.9 21185 14 0 .96 +7.7 +15. 6 6 0 95 1 4 0 . 30f +14. 9 +5 8 .5 3 344 21 0 . 7 4 -12.0 -24.5 1550 dd +9.1 +26 . 5 2 2 70 d d -10.5 - 36.0 1177 1 5 0 . 73 + 16. 3 +2 2 .3 1 088 20 0 .22f
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T T L T L L
+2.4
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+22. 7 2 3467 20 1 . 2 4
+8.8 +41. 9 2 3 50 3 0 1 . 1 2 - 5.9 +10.8 1108 2 0 1 . 48 - 9.9 + 6 . 3 1 0 1 2 1 1 . 8 6 -3.9 +8 . 5 76 6 1 6 0 . 88a - 49.7 +98.2 2 3 6 1 2 -1.7 + 2 . 6 53 7 3 3 1. 7 6 -9.1 - 9.7 95 3 1 7 0 . 12 -14.9 - 25.7 243 d d 0 . 75 t 9.4 +47. 9 60 2 3 2 2. 6 8 +7.1 +30. 0 75 14 1.3 0 f +24. 4 +4 6 .5 5 590 30 0 . 6 4 +3.6 +11 . 4 940 21 0 .60 -1.9 +10.4 6367 14 0 . 98 -0.7 +9. 7 36 1 14 0. 5 2f +2.3 +16 . 8 13148 14 1 .50f -9.0 + 1 1.0 2 995 26 1. 1 6
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Source: FactSet
75
':,;"" Etsyshares plunge on loss Etsy shares plummeted 18 percent Wednesday as investors sold off following disappointing quarterly results. In its first earnings report as a publicly traded company, Etsy showed a hefty quarterly loss due to costs related to restructuring and a tax provision. The online retailer on Tuesday reported a loss of $36.6 million, or 84 cents per share. However, its revenue for the quarter jumped 44 percent to $58.5 million, edging ahead of market expectations. Etsy went public in April, with shares nearly doubling to close at $30 on their first day of trading. But the stock has since declined over concerns about counterfeit goods being sold on the site and other issues. Wednesday's close: $17.20 The company did not give specific guidance for the second ...... y. quarter but said if the dollar remains strong that could hurt PRICE RANGE SINCE IPD 1 - M DNTH ~ a4 buyer behavior outside the U.S. $16 ~ 36 86614c88 ~ •
Source: FactSet
AP
AmdFocus Fidelity Equity-Income focuses FAMILY on dividend-paying stocks, but also devotes up to 5 percent of its American Funds assets to convertible bonds and preferred stocks, according to Morningstar.
+
1.1118
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PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1YR 3YR BYR 1 3 5 Marhetsummary AmBalA m 25 . 22 +2.7 +9.9 +14.7+13.0 A A A Most Active CaplncBuA m 61.61 +.65 +4.3 +6.5 +12.0+11.2 8 8 A CpWldGrlA m 49.11 +.62 +6.9 +7.7 +17.6+13.3 D 8 C NAME VOL (BOc) LAST CHG EurPacGrA m 52.29 +.10 +10.9 +7.1 +15.4+10.8 C 8 C PrimaBio h 889848 5.91 +4.31 FnlnvA m 54. 1 6 - .61 +5.6 +14.4 +20.2+16.1 C C C S&P500ETF 699034 212.88 -.15 GrthAmA m 45.61 -.63 +6.9 +16.4 +21.6+16.3 D A C BkofAm 665631 16.74 -.03 Fidelity Equity-Income (FEQIX) IncAmerA m 22.69 +.61 +3.2 +7.3 +13.5+12.5 D 8 A AmAirlines 510611 43.06 -4.79 InvCoAmA m 38.27 +.65 +4.4 +12.8 +20.3+15.5 D 8 C VALUE B L EN D GR OWTH Yahoo 485034 42.79 +1.81 NewPerspA m39.56 -.10 +9.0 +12.9 +18.3+14.6 A 8 8 IsoRay 466845 3.12 +1.51 oWAMutlnvA m 41.75 -.64 +2.4 +11.3 +18.6+16.3 C C A CSVLgCrdo 416217 3.33 +.08 $3 GenElec 399405 27.64 +.29 Dodge &Cox Income 13.76 .. . +0 .7 + 2 . 1 + 3.7 +4.7 C A B Do ishJapan 394179 13.26 DC Intlstk 46.60 +.11 +9.2 + 4 .1 +19.4+12.4 C A A DeltaAir 374427 43.62 -2.59 Stock 164.44 +.16 +3.2 +12.3 +24.0+17.3 B A A oFidelity Contra 103. 6 7 - .18 +6.2 +18.1 +19.6+17.2 C C B Gainers DD ContraK 103 . 63 -.18+6.3 +18.2 +19.7+17.4 C C 8 CD NAME LAST CHG %CHG LowPriStk d 53.35 -.69 +6.2 +14.4 +20.8+16.9 B C 8 Fidoli S artao 500 l dxAdvtg 75.20 -.67 +4.1 +15.8 +20.4+17.1 B 8 A PrimaBio h 5.91 +4.31 +269.4 IsoRay 3.12 +1.51 + 93.8 FraakTomp-Frankli o IncomeC m 2.45 ... +2.7 +0.7 +10.5 +9.7 E A A CodeReb n 25.50 +9.65 + 6 0.9 DD IncomeA m 2. 4 2 ... +3 .0 + 1 .2 +11.0+10.3 E A A SareptaTh 26.24 +9.86 + 6 0.2 Oakmarb Intl I 25.82 +.67 +10.6 +3.1 +20.4+13.2 D A A CymaBayn 4.45 +1.07 + 3 1.7 Do Opponhoimor RisDivA m 20 . 46 -.62+2.7 +14.1 +17.1+14.7 C E D GtBasscin 3.43 +.71 + 2 6.1 MorningatarOwnershipZone™ RisDivB m 16 . 69 -.61+2.4 +13.2 +16.1+13.7 D E E Dycom 56.58 +10.51 + 2 2.8 RisDivC m 17 . 96 -.61+2.4 +13.2 +16.2+13.8 D E E eHiCarSv n 14.30 +2.33 + 1 9.5 OeFund target represents weighted SmMidValAm 50.76 +.62 +4.3 +13.9+21.8+14.6 B B D CblvsnNY 24.69 +3.77 + 18.0 average of stock holdings SmMidValB m42.64 +.61 +4.0 +13.1 +20.8+13.7 C C E iDreamS n 10.39 +1.50 + 16.9 • Represents 75% of fund's stock holdings T Rowo Price Eqtylnc 33.36 + .63 +2.1 + 8 .0 +17.7+14.1 E D D Losers GrowStk 56.4 4 - . 20 +8.6 +22.4 +21.7+19.1 A A A CATEGORY:LARGE VALUE NAME L AST C H G %C H G HealthSci 60.3 0 +.26+18.1 +50.9 +40.0+32.9 B A A Newlncome 9. 5 5 ... +0 .6 + 2 .4 + 2.5 +3.8 B C D -1.98 -35.2 BIORNINGSTAR EvineLive 3.65 CNinsure 8.62 -2.37 -21.6 BATING~ **<<< Vanguard 500Adml 196.61 -.16 +4.1 +15.8 +20.5+17.1 8 8 A -3.80 -18.1 Etsy n 17.20 500lnv 196.56 -.16 +4.0 +15.7 +20.3+17.0 8 8 8 ASSETS $6,946 million GigaTr h 2.30 -.44 -16.1 CapOp 55.79 -.32 +5.8 +22.8 +27.9+18.5 A A A EXPRATIO .63% -1.63 -15.3 Achillion 9.05 Eqlnc 32.13 +.64 +3.6 +11.7 +18.6+17.2 C C A MIB.INIT.INVES T. $2,500 IntlstkldxAdm 26.72 +.62 +10.8 +4.0 +13.7 NA C D PERCEN T L O A D N/L Foreign Markets StratgcEq 34.49 +.64 +7.2 +18.7 +26.0+20.4 A A A HISTORICALRETURNS TgtRe2020 29.56 +3.9 +8.6 +12.3+10.9 A A A NAME LAST CHG %CHG TgtRe2035 16.76 +5.3 +10.7 +16.1+13.3 8 8 8 Return/Rank Paris 5,133.30 +16.00 + . 31 Tgtet2025 17.25 +.61 +4.4 +9.3 +13.6+11.7 A 8 8 London 7,007.26 +12.16 + . 17 YEAR-TO-DATE +4.0 TotBdAdml 10.79 +.61 +0.2 +2.4 +2.0 +3.6 B D D -4.86 -.04 Frankfurt 11,848.47 1-YEAR +10.2/D Totlntl 17.17 +.61 +10.7 +3.9 +13.6 +9.5 C D D Hong Kong27,585.05 -1 08.49 -.39 3-YEAR +18.1/D -.06 TotStlAdm 53.66 -.63 +4.5 +15.9 +20.8+17.3 8 8 A Mexico 45,283.47 -28.28 5-YEAR +13.8/D Milan 23,772.61 + 59.35 + . 25 TotStldx 53.64 -.63 +4.5 +15.8 +20.6+17.1 8 8 A Tokyo 20,196.56 +1 70.1 8 +.85 3and5-yearretattts areannualized. USGro 32.67 -.63 +7.2 +21.6 +22.4+18.4 A A A Stockholm 1,637.49 + 4.23 + . 26 Rank: Fund's letter gradecomparedwith others in Fund Footnotes: t$Fee - covering marketcosts is paid from fund assets. d - Deferredsales charge, cr redemption -5.40 -.10 the same group; an Aindicates fund performed in Sydney 5,61 4.00 fee. f - front load (salescharges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually amarketing feeDedeither a sales or Zurich 9,319.90 +24.28 + . 26 the top 20 percent; an E, in the bottom 20 percent. redemption fee.Source: Morningstar.
American Eagle
AEO
Close: $16.61L0.87 or 5.5% The teen clothing retailer reported better-than-expected fiscal first-quarter profit and revenue.
$18 16
70
F
M A 52-week range
$44.31 ~
M $7 6.28
F
M A 52-week range
$1D.12~
M $ 18. 12
Vol.:16.0m (3.1x avg.) PE: 25.1 Vol.:17.6m (3.5x avg.) PE: 3 6 .1 Mkt. Cap:$65.19b Yie l d: 1.3% Mkt.Cap:$3.24 b Yield: 3.0% PBY Close: $10.75%1.50or 16.2% The auto parts and services company is a buyout target by several private equity firms, according to the Wall Street Journal. $11
Dycom Industries DY Close:$56.58 %10.51 or 22.8% The provider of contracting services reported better-than-expected fiscal third-quarter financial results and a positive outlook. $60 50 40
10
F
M
A
M
F
52-week range $8.DD ~
M
A
M
52-week range $11.66
Vol.:2.0m ( 5.1x avg.) P Mkt. Cap:$578.15 m
E: . . Yield : ..
Yahoo
YHOO Close:$42.79L1.81 or 4.4% The Internet company is going ahead with plans to spin off its stake in Alibaba following comments by the IRS. $46 44
$24.64 Vol.:2.0m (5.8x avg.) Mkt. Cap: $1.92 b
$57.12
PE:3 6 . 3 Yield: ...
Staples
SPLS Close:$16.15 T-0.26 or -1.6% The office supplies retailer reported a drop in first-quarter profit, meeting expectations, but revenue fell short of forecasts. $18 17
42
F
M
A
M
F
52-week range $$2.63~
M
A
M
52-week range $82.62
Vol.:54.4m (3.8x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$40.16 b
$1D.78 ~
$16.48
P E: 5.8 Vol.:8.1m (1.1x avg.) P E: 76.9 Yield: ... Mkt. Cap:$10.35b Yie l d: 3.0%
Sarepta Thera.
SRPT Close:$26.24%9.86 or 60.2% The company will begin the process of applying for FDA approval of its potential treatment for Duchenne muscular dystrophy. $30
Prima Biomed PBMD Close:$5.91 X4.31 or 269.4% The medical biotechnology products company said a potential cancer treatment showed positive results in a midstage study. $6 4
20 M A 52-week range
$11.33~ DividendFootnotes:a - Extra dividends werepaid, ttut are not included. tt - Annualrate plus stock. c - Liquidating dividend. 8 -Amount declaredor paid in last12 months. f - Current annual rate, whichwasincreased bymost recentdividendannouncement. i —Sum of dividends paidafter stock split, co regular rate. I —Sumof dividends paidthis year.Most recent dividend wasomitted cr deferred. k - Declared or paidthis year, acumulative issue with dividends in arrears. m — Current annualrate, which wasdecreasedbymost recentdividend announcement. p — Initial dividend, annual rate nct known, yield nct shown. r —Declared or paid ic preceding 12months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, approximate cash value on ex-distrittuticn date.PEFootnotes: q —Stock is a closed-end fund - no P/E ratio shown. cc —P/Eexceeds 99. dd - Loss ic last 12 months.
-
AP
LOW
Close:$68.50 V-3.33 or -4.6% The home improvement retailer reported worse-than-expected first-quarter profit and revenue results and maintained its outlook. $80
F
Homes sales perking up? New data on sales of previously occupiedhomes shouldprovide insight into how the spring homebuyingseason is coming along. The National Association of Realtors' reports its home sales figures for April today. Sales jumped 6.1 percent in March to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 5.19 million. At the same time, the inventory of homes for sale fell to a 4.6-month supply, indicating rising demand and limited availability of homes.
EURO
) '72
Stocks were little changed Wednesday after a quiet trading session. The major indexes flitted between tiny gains and losses in the morning. Stocks then rallied after the minutes of the Federal Reserve's April meeting were released, but faded at the close. The minutes of the Fed's meeting from April showed that policymakers at the central bank generally thought June was too early to raise interest rates. The Standard and Poor's 500 index ended lower, but barely. It was the fourth day in a row that the index moved less than one-half of one percentage point. The index still remains close to its record close. Industrial stocks logged the biggest declines.
Pep Boys
52-WK RANGE o CLOSE Y TD 1YR V O L TICKER LO Hl C LOSE CHG%CHG WK MO QTR %CHG %RTN (Thous)P/E DIV
A
+
StoryStocks
Lowe's '
NorthwestStocks
0.1
$58.98
.
est.
0.2
CRUDEOIL
Q4
$17.09
Dow jones industrials
................. Close: 2, 1 25.85
.
SILVER
$1,208.90
M $3 6.48
Vol.:20.0m (16.7x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$1.09 b
P E : .. Yield: ..
F
M A 52-week range
$D.42 ~
M $ 6.48
Vol.:91.0m (60.7x avg.)
PE: . ..
Mkt. Cap:$270.78 m
Yield : ...
SOURCE: Sungard
SU HIS
The yield on the 10-year Treasury fell to 2.25 percent Wednesday. Yields affect rates on mortgages and other consumer loans.
AP
NET 1YR TREASURIES YEST PVS CHG WK MO QTR AGO
3-month T-bill 6 -month T-bill
. 0 1 .01 ... . 0 7 .0 8 -0.01 T
52-wk T-bill
.19
.20
2-year T-note . 5 9 .6 2 5-year T-note 1.55 1.61 10-year T-note 2.25 2.30 30-year T-bond 3.05 3.08
BONDS
T
-0.01 T
L T
-0.03 L -0.06 T -0.05 T -0.03 T
L L L L
T .34 L 1.51 L 2.51 L 3.38
NET 1YR YEST PVS CHG WK MOQTR AGO
Barclays LongT-Bdldx 2.91 2.89 +0.02 L L L Bond Buyer Muni Idx 4.46 4.46 . . . L L L
3.17 4.50
Barclays USAggregate 2.28 2.24+0.04
2.23 5.03 4.15 1.76 2.90
YEST3.25 .13 6 MO AGO3.25 .13 1 YRAGO3.25 .13
L L L T Moodys AAA Corp Idx 4.07 4.05 +0.02 L L L Barclays CompT-Bdldx 1.91 1.91 .. . T L L Barclays US Corp 3.16 3.12 +0.04 L L
Commodities
FUELS
The price of crude oil rose by nearly $1 per barrel, its first gain in six days. Natural gas fell for a third straight day, while gold rose for the sixth time in seven days.
Crude Oil (bbl) Ethanol (gal) Heating Oil (gal) Natural Gas (mmbtu) UnleadedGas(gal)
PRIME FED Barclays US High Yield 6.00 5.99 +0.01 T RATE FUNDS
Foreign Exchange The dollar was mixed against other currencies. It rose against the euro,
Japanese yen and Australian dollar. But it fell
against the British pound and Canadian dollar.
h5Q HS
.03 .05 .07
T T
CLOSE PVS. 58.98 57.26 1.60 1.65 1.95 1.93 2.92 2.95 2.04 2.00
%CH. %YTD +1.73 +1 0.7 -1.5 +0.24 + 0.87 + 5 . 4 - 1.12 + 0 .9
CLOSE PVS. Gold (oz) 1208.90 1206.90 Silver (oz) 17.09 17.05 Platinum (oz) 1156.90 1150.90 Copper (Ib) 2.85 2.86 Palladium (oz) 776.85 775.15 AGRICULTURE CLOSE PVS. Cattle (Ib) 1.51 1.52 Coffee (Ib) 1.36 1.40 Corn (bu) 3.60 3.62 Cotton (Ib) 0.64 0.64 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 272.00 262.50 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.15 1.13 Soybeans (bu) 9.41 9.46 Wheat(bu) 5.13 5.10
%CH. %YTD + 0.17 + 2 . 1 + 0.25 + 9 .8 -4.3 +0.52 - 0.35 + 0 . 5 +0.22 -2.7
METALS
+2.31 +42.2
%CH. %YTD -0.41 -8.7 -2.75 -18.4 -0.55 -9.3 - 0.31 + 6 . 4 +3.62 -1 7.9 +1.50 -1 7.9 -0.53 -7.7 +0.54 -13.0 1YR.
MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.5548 +.0051 +.33% 1.6840 Canadian Dollar 1.2 1 88 -.0033 -.27% 1.0894 USD per Euro 1.1118 -.0035 -.31% 1.3699 JapaneseYen 121.16 + . 4 5 + .37% 1 01.28 Mexican Peso 15. 1717 -.0151 -.10% 12.9171 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.8684 +.0014 +.04% 3.4801 Norwegian Krone 7 . 5469 +.0179 +.24% 5.9517 South African Rand 11.8253 -.0681 -.58% 10.4536 Swedish Krona 8.3 2 97 -.0086 -.10% 6.5856 Swiss Franc .9353 -.0017 -.18% . 8 922 ASIA/PACIFIC Australian Dollar 1.2657 +.0024 +.19% 1.0804 Chinese Yuan 6.2037 -.0043 -.07% 6.2380 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7523 +.0005 +.01% 7.7529 Indian Rupee 63.600 -.149 -. 23% 58. 630 Singapore Dollar 1.3355 +.0003 +.02% 1.2526 -.55 .05% 1025.37 South KoreanWon 1094.74 Taiwan Dollar 3 0.52 + . 0 1 +.03% 30.17
© www.bendbulletin.com/business
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, MAY 21, 2015
BRIEFING Cuslnm dikemaker moves to Bend Central Oregonhas attracted another custom bicycle-maker, asGreg White, founder of Magic Cycle Werks,announced Wednesdaythat the business hascompletedits move to Bend. White said thecompany, which wasformerly based in LosAngeles, opened at 52 SEFifth St. near Schnitzer Steel about a week ago. He saidhemovedthecompany to Bendprimarily as a cost-saving measure, but addedthat the quality of life in Bendwasa big factor in the move. White said his specialty is building handcrafted cyclocross bikes, but he also builds custom road bikes, andthecompany began offering mountain bikes in 2015. Magic CycleWerks first opened inL.A. in 2011. Sincethen, White said, the companyhas exhibited at a variety of trade shows, including the North American HandmadeBicycle Show.
Bend townhomes to de unveiled A local developer is unveiling today thefirst two of eight planned townhomes insouthwest Bend, about ahalf-mile from the Old Mill District.
Listing prices of the first four units on Woodriver Drive near McClellan Roadrun from $749,000 to $789,000, said John Shaw, apartner with RyanDuble, of R.D. Building 8 Development LLC,Bend,the developer andgeneral contractor. Plans for WoodRiver Ridge call for four duplexes, with individual units ranging from 2,189 square feet to 4,680 square feet. Thefirst four are 2,509 squarefeet, Shaw said. Thelargest unit will be listed above $1 million, hesaid. The units come with hardwood floors, two fireplaces, awater feature, a wetbar and contemporary finishes, along with views of the CascadeMountains,said Shaw's wife, Mary Ellen Shaw. Shesaid brokers will be inspecting the units from 4-8 p.m. today.
Blockbuster on east side to close The Blockbuster video store at theForum Shopping Center onBend's east side will beclosing its doors for good inJuly, according to ownerKen Tisher. The location near NE 27th Street and
U.S. Highway 20 isone of three Blockbusters remaining inCentral Oregon, and oneof 34 left in the country. Tisher,who owns both of theremaining stores in theregion, said the larger Bend location, on NERevere Avenue, will continue to operate, aswill the store in Redmond. Tisher cited lackof demand asthe primary reason for the closure, saying that thestore downsized atthe endof 2013, aroundthesame time that Blockbuster closed all of its corporate stores. Tisher said thestore had around10 employees, though onlytwo worked full time. He added that all of theemployees wouldhavethe option to transfer to the other Blockbuster stores. Tisher said hehadno plans to open anew location in Central Oregon, though heleft the possibility open if hecould find a good enoughlocation. — Bulletin staff reports
a ain- Eugene builder exce tont e est oast plans to develop asisLin er
Bend apartments
• But experts say the 153-unit complex won't ease the city's housing crunch
I
r
I
By Joseph Ditzler The Bulletin
New apartments
A Eugene developer expects to break ground in Au-
effWtf:
gust on a 153-unit apartment
complex on NE Bellevue Drive, next to Worthy Brew-
ing Co., in Bend. "We're hoping to have occupancy by June 2016," said Dan Neal, of Paradigm Properties, whose projects include student apartment
NE Bellevue Drive apartments
complexesnear the Univer-
sity of Oregon. The Bellevue Drive Apartments will be the
company's first foray into Bend, although Neal said he has ties to Bend, including a Monica Almeida/The New York Times file photo
Jiuian Clark refuels her car in Ventura, California. Gasoline prices have dropped across the country
to under $3 a gallon, except on the West Coast. Drivers in Los Angeles are paying more than $4 per gallon, making it the most expensive place to gas up in the country.
home here.
"We're excited about this project," he said Tuesday. "We know the city of Bend
is in serious need of new By Lynn Doan Bloomberg News
SAN FRANCISCOMight want to skip that road trip to Disneyland this
summer. Gasolineisbelow$3 a gallon in all U.S. regions but one:
Florida combined, saw the
biggest surge. Los Angeles drivers are paying over $4 a gallon, making it the most expensive place in the country to buy fuel.
Carli Krueger The Bulletin
Bend, depending on the size of the apartment complex, ranges from $791 to $847 per month, according to the rental
owners' survey. Average rent for a three-bedroom home is $1,354, the survey found. "In 2012, rents took a steep
"The Los Angeles area is ground zero for rising gas prices. They're rising much faster than anywhereelse in the country, and they look like they're going to remain where they
seem the timing of this project would be beneficial to the A survey of rental properties released by the Central
tify new construction, and
are until late summer."
Oregon Rental Owners Association in April showed
construction." That's changing. The Bel-
a 1.5 percent vacancy rate
levue Drive Apartments is
across Central Oregon and
among three apartment proj-
for apartment buildings in Bend between 1.4 percent and
ects either under construction or recently filed for review in
— Michael Green, spokesman for AAA
the West Coast. While oil's
recent rebound boosted pump prices everywhere, California, which consumes more gasoline than New York and
housing stock, so it would
Source: City of Bend
for repairs and Phillips 66 is doing work at its Los Angeles plant. In Tacoma, Washington,a
complex owned by the TrailStone Group remains shut
California's cars that tankers come from thousands of miles away in Asia and Europe to
deliver the specialized fuel. "Asia is the closest global source of additional Califor-
nia-specification gasoline,"
community."
upward rise and continue to do that," Ross said. "They're still at a rate that doesn't justhat's why we don't see new
1.6 percent. The survey found
Bend. Neal said designing an
a 2.4 percent vacancy rate forhomes availableforlease,
apartment complex that creates a decent environment for
and 0.8 percent for duplexes in Bend.
tenants in Bend while making
Real estate broker Ron
a return on investment is
"Prices jumped up a dollar in February, and quite frankly
T. Mason Hamilton, an EIA economist, said in a report
spread around. An Exxon Mobil Corp. refinery explosion near Los Angeles in February and a fire at a plant
I've lost my point of reference
posted on the agency's web-
cial Real Estate Services, in Bend, has tracked rental
since then," Tom Robinson, president of the Robinson Oil
site May 12. "It takes several
vacancy rates and rents over
weeks for resupply to reach the West Coast."
several years. The 1.5 percent rate this year is statistically
challenging. "We arehoping tomake careful decisions involving value and engineering so that we can control our costs as much as possible while still creating a first-class living
in Washington state reduced
Robbie stations in California, said by phone May 15. "You
no different than the 1.04
environment for our tenants,"
percent vacancy rate from the 2014 survey, he said.
he said.
There's plenty of blame to
supply at the same time two other California sites make repairs. Refiners sent five car-
goes in one week to Mexico. Since there are no pipelines to bring in gasoline from elsewhere in the U.S., tankers are delivering fuel from Asia
after a May 6 fire.
Corp., which owns Rotten just hope as a retailer that
other people raise prices too. because we can't really afford to absorb them."
The surge in pump prices is the latest blow for a state
The volatility in West
Coast prices is so notorious that the Energy Department is studying how sudden fuel price surges in the region affect the U.S. economy and whether the government
Ross, of Compass Commer-
"I don't read much into
Plans filed with the city
However, rent for a two-bedroom apartment in
show four three-story apartment buildings and a clubhouse. Neal said the complex of one- and two-bedroom
that," he said Wednesday.
shouldcreateafuelreserve that it could tap during supply
Bend, a number Ross said
apartments will also have bas-
that's suffering from a histor-
he's tracked for 25 years, has
and Europe. Add the strictest
ic drought. It doesn't help that
disruptions.
dean-air policies in the nation and you get the most expensive gas in the country. "The Los Angeles area is ground zero for rising gas
the West Coast is cut off from
The average price in the U.S. has risen 22 percent since the beginning of the year, AAA says. While the averagewillrangefrom $2.55 to $2.75 a gallon through the summer, it'll probably never surpass $3 this year.
increased by 10 percent since last year. Over 25 years, how-
ketball courts. The complex will have more parking than required by city code, he said. The builder is CS Construction
pipeline supplies in other parts of the U.S. Kinder Morgan Inc. runs a network of lines that send fuel out of the
state to Arizona and Nevada, spokesman for the motoring but it doesn't bring supplies club AAA, said by email. in. So the only way refiners "They're rising much faster can deliver fuel to California than anywhere else in the is by tanker. "California is essentially an country, and they look like they're going to remain where island," Green said. "It can't they are until late summer." rely on gasoline from other The average pump price parts of the U.S., so anyprobin the U.S. rose 1.5 cents to lems in the region lead to a $2.722 a gallon Tuesday, acsurge in prices." That's meant drivers on cording to AAA. Exxon hasn't said when the East Coast, hooked up by its Torrance refinery willbe pipelines to a bounty of supback to normal. Repairs will ply from Texas and Louisiana continue through June, two refineries, are paying a record people familiar with the plans 88 cents a gallon less than said May 15. their western counterparts, Less than 10miles up the weekly Energy Information road from Torrance, ChevAdministration data show. ron Corp. shut units at the El So few refineries produce Segundo refinery this month gasoline that canbe used in prices," Michael Green, a
PERMITS City of Bend • Allen Contracting, 1844NW Hartford Ave.,Bend,$169,550 • Peter CaineTrust, 61364 Kobe St.,Bend,$201,529 • Res-or TwoLLC,20391 SonataWay,Bend,$192,981 • J2 Mill ViewLLC,849SW TheaterDrive,Bend,$423,107 • Pahlisch HomesInc., 61108 SE AmbassadorDrive, Bend, $293,754 • Westerly II BendLLC,20232 NW BrumbyLane,Bend, $248,498 • Westerly II Bend,20224 NW BrumbyLane,Bend,$323,914 • Spring RiverBuilders, 61557 SE ChiefJosephLane, Bend, $213,114 •Pahl ischHomesInc.,2535 NWMajestic RidgeDrive, Bend, $243,152
Meanwhile, California
is already there, averaging $3.809 a gallon on Tuesday, and so are its neighbors Neva-
age annual rate of increase in rent for that same apartment at 2.17 percent. "What my rent chart showed was that rents were
LLC, of Bend; the architect is BLRB architects, also of Bend.
"I would say that's very, very welcome in this community," Ross said. "It's what we
very modest for 23 years, very modest," he said, "among the
need. It won't solve all (the rental shortage), but it's very
lowest in the state." The average rent now for
welcome."
a two-bedroom apartment in
— Reporter: 541-617-7815, jditzler@bendbulletin.com
da,Oregon and Washington, as well as Hawaii and Alaska.
"You need Disney to spin some straw into gasoline because the problem is there
just isn't enough of it," Patrick
DeHaan,aseniorpetroleum analyst at GasBuddy Organization, said by phone May 18. The Walt Disney Co. said in
Gold risesasFedminutes boost bets rateswon't rise
a presentation on May 13 that
fuelprices have "nobearing" on park attendance. — With assistance from Jake Rudnitsfzy in Moscow.
BEST OF THE BIZ CALENDAR TODAY • Board Fair: Visit with more than 25 nonprofit organizations; discover opportunities to serve on a nonprofit board and find a meaningful way to get involved; 3:30 p.m. Bend's Community Center, 1036 NEFifth St., Bend; http:I/bit Jy/1 IzL1n1 or 541-385-8977. TUESDAY • SCORE free business counseling: Business counselors conduct free 30-minute one-on-one conferences with local entrepreneurs; check in at the library desk on the second floor; 5:30-7p.iftr; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NWWall St.; www.
ever, Ross measured the aver-
SCORECentral0regon.org THURSDAY • Launch Your Business: Learn about starting or being in the early stages of running a business;6 p.m.; $199; registration required; COCCRedmond Campus Technology Education Center, 2324 SECollege Loop, Redmond; www. cocc.edu/sbdc or 541-383-7290. MAY 29 • Contractors CCB Test Prep course: Two-day live class to prepare for the state-mandated test to become a licensed contractor in Oregon. 8:30 a.m.; $299 or $359 with required
manual; registration required; Central Oregon Community College Redmond CampusTechnology Education Center, 2324 SECollege Loop, Redmond; www.cocc.edu/ccb or 541-383-7290. JUNE1 • Career In Real Estate Workshop: Jim Mazziotti, Exit Realty Bend principal managing broker, to discuss careers in real estate;6 p.m.; Exit Realty, 354 NE Greenwood Ave., Suite109, Bend or 541-480-8835. • For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday'sBulletin or visit bendbtflletin.com/bizcal
By Debarati Roy
year-to-date gains and losses
Bloomberg News
more than 10 times in 2015,
advanced after minutes from
gyrating as traders tried to gauge the timing of U.S. in-
the Federal Reserve's last
terest-rateincreases.
meeting showed that officials last month didn't expect to
vestors to favor assets that
NEW YORK — Gold prices
raise rates at their next gath-
ering in June. Many policymakers thought economic data
available in June wouldn't be robust enough to warrant tightening, according to the minutesreleased Wednesday of the April 28-29 session. "People are interpreting these minutes as being more dovish than hawkish, and that is supporting gold," Chris Gaffney, the president at EverBank World Markets in St. Louis, said in a
telephone interview. "Some people are relieved that the rate hike has been pushed back. Also, the Fed has
made it clear it will continue to remain data-dependent,
so gold will continue to be data-sensitive." The metal swung between
Higher rates drive inpay interest, including new bonds, curbing the appeal of gold, which generally offers returns only through price gains. Gold for immediate delivery rose 0.2 percent
to $1,210.26 an ounce in New York, according to Bloomberg generic prices. The precious metal climbed in the past two
weeks, partly on speculation that a faltering economic recovery would spur the Fed to keep borrowing costs near a record low. The central bank's benchmark rate has
been near zero percent since 2008. Gold futures for June de-
livery added 0.2 percent to settle at $1,208.70 an ounce on the Comex. Silver also
gained.
IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Nutrition, D2 Fitness, D3
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, MAY 21, 2015
O www.bendbulletin.com/health
Howto teac i s
a out sugar intake
sl-,'„
By Casey Seidenberg Special to The Washington Post
This article is dedicated to all of the kids out there who
you to want and need more, and making it hard to give Up.
ies they eat after lunch, the candy they trade at school
Sugar was brought to Europe in the 1100s as a precious drug, known for its "tremendous addictive potential," and was called
and the Gatorade they chug
"crack" during that time in
think the orange juice they drink at breakfast, the cook-
after practice are no big deal. In other words, all kids
France, says psychotherapist Julia Ross in her book "Mood Cure." Quickly reacross America. And also to their parents who believe moving refined sugar from the same thing: that a diet can cause daily intake of sug- N UTR ITION w i thdrawal sympar is harmless and toms like those with just a function of childhood. a drug: fatigue, depression, This is also for my chilheadaches and achy limbs. dren, who know from my Studies have also shown endless preaching that sugar that overconsumption of is not good for them, yet nev- sugar can alter your taste er seem to remember any of buds so you begin craving Photos by Tess Freeman /The Bulletin
Stephanie Howe, left, and David McKay practice two variations of a single leg balance cone touch during a strengthening session at
the reasons why.
sweeter and sweeter foods,
What is sugar?
leaving the more natural sweetness of fruits or whole
Sugar is a sweet substance foods less flavorful.
Focus Physical Therapy at Recharge in Bend on Thursday afternoon. The single leg balance is an exercise that can help strengthen
that comes from plants,
your feet to prevent other physical ailments.
mostly sugar cane and sugar beets. It is one big carbohy-
What actually happens to
dratecalled sucrose made
When you consume sugar, it enters your blood rapidly because there aren't any
up of two smaller carbohydrates called fructose and glucose. Sugar has absolutely no nutritional value — no protein, vitamins, minerals or fiber.
Why do I like it so much? Sugar has been shown to
have an effect similar to an addictive drug, triggering
c;o e w e
ee
my bo+ when I eat sugar? nutrients or fiber to slow it
down. This causes the sugar or glucose levels in your blood rise. Your body then hustles to process this sugar because it knows you could be in grave danger from too much blood sugar. See Sugar /D2
Drug trialsgivenewhope for cysticfibrosispatients
By Tara Bannowe The Bulletin By JoNel Aleccia The Seattle Times
hen cars act funny, mechanics typically don't
SEATTLE — When Paige
blame their owners for driving too much. They
Ellens was diagnosed with
fibrosis — and reduce the
cystic fibrosis as a newborn
leading cause of death from the disease by 40 percent.
in 1998, Seattle doctors were quick to reassure her par-
look for some internal issue that's out of whack
ents that there was hope for patients with the life-threat-
— say, the alignment or the timing belt. The same is true for people, says Barrett Ford, the owner of Step 8 Spine Physical Therapy, which has locations in Sisters, Redmond and, soon, Bend. "A lot of times we think it's an overuse issue, but there is usually a mechanical issue of why that's happening," he said.
tn
Mario Mendoza, a professional runner for Nike Trail, practices some toe flexibility exercises
during a training session at Focus Physical Therapy at Recharge last week.
One of the first culprits because feet form the base for Morton's neuroma, a painful physical therapists investigate the body's forward motion, nerve condition in the ball they're crucial in determining of the foot; Achilles tendonwhen dients come in with a range of ailments — lowback which musdes will be emitis , swelling and pain in the or knee pain, shin splints, to phasizedasthebody tendon that connects name a few — is their founda- moves. If they're weak, FITNESS the legto theheel; hip tion: the feet. a person's balance bursitis, inflammation Weak feet or ankles that can be completely off — a big of the fluid-filled sacs in the lack stability can cause a problem for older individuals. hip joint; andplantar fascinumber of issues up north, Weak feet and instabilitis, swelling and pain in the although people tend to ity can also contribute to tendon that runs along the overlookthese areas. But ailments such as bunions; bott o m of the foot.
"You know the adage, 'When the foot hits the
ground, everything changes?' It's so literally true," Ford said. "It's oftentimes the keyto
treating the knee, treating the hip, treating the back, because
if you can change things below, where everything starts, you can really change what's going on above." See Feet/D3
drug may successfully treat the problem protein in nearly half of people with cystic
ening genetic disorder. Even then, 17 years ago, there were inklings that research might one day pro-
"It is a breakthrough," said Dr. Bonnie Ramsey, a
professor of pediatrics at the University of Washington School of Medicine and the Center for Clinical and Translational Research at
Seattle Children's. "This is the beginning of target the underlying cause, not just the sympeffective therapy t oms of the disease M E DICINE for cystic fibrosis that cause thick, associated with the sticky mucus to build up in most common mutant form the lungs, making it hard to of CFTR," wrote Dr. Pamela breathe. Davis, dean of the school of duce a treatment that could
"It was devastating, but I just remember that I was go-
medicine at Case Western
sured us that we would find a cure in her lifetime."
by mutations in the gene that
University, in an editorial ing to get to watch her grow that accompanies the study up to be big," recalled Paige's published Sunday in the New mom, Sharla Ellens, 47, of England Journal of MediLynden. "Our surgeon ascine. The disease is caused No one's calling it a cure,
encodestheproblem protein — the cystic fibrosis trans-
but results of two large clin-
membrane conductance reg-
ical trials co-led by a Seattle researcher find that a new
ulator, or CFTR.
See Drug trials/D4 Paid Advertisement
Insurers expect healthier customers MM e n~m in 2016, but still want to raise prices /bt&8!
Wantto look 10 years younger?
• High claims drove multimillion-dollar losses in 2014 By Tara Bannow The Bulletin
general population. After all, now they could finally enroll in policies that wouldn't charge
2014premiums. Almost across
Source Health Plans, which
also reported a net loss in 2014 of nearly $17 million. It wants to raise individual policypremiums bynearly 43percent.
before they're finalized — offer telling insight into the health
sicker people being the ones at the front door, first in line, try-
the board, insurance carriers, in documents explaining their proposed rate hikes, say they spent far more paying for their members'medical care than they made on premiums. In some cases, the difference was staggering, and contribut-
ing to get into the system that
ed to multimillion-dollar losses
of those who braved the state's
they couldn'tget intobefore," said Sarah Lueck, seniorpolicy analyst with the progressive
changes by April30. Between now and July 1, the division will pore through the carriers' documents justifying their proposed changes — allbut
The premium hikes insurers areproposingforOregonians next year — although likely to bepared down
MON Ey significantly
more or keep them out alto-
gether because of pre-existing conditions. "You would have expected
"It was a new day, and they
had to do thebest they could to try to predict things," Lueck said.
The Oregon Insurance Division required insurers to submit their proposed 2016 rate
The expectation beforehand,
Washington, D.C. thinktank
for a handful of companies. Health Republic Insurance Company, for example, paid more than double in claims
both nationally and in Oregon, was that those who signed
Center on Budget and Policy
than what it took in from
two want to raise rates, seven
premiums. It's requesting a whopping 38percent average
first year of the Affordable Care Act's insurance man-
Priorities. That turned out to be true. In fact, it turned out to be even more true than insurers ac-
date would be sicker than the
counted for whenthey set their
of them in the double digits. If last year is any indication, the division will ultimately approve more modest increases. See Insurance/D4
bungled exchange to signup for coverage in 2014.
up for health insurance in the
premium increase for its in-
dividual policies in 2016. The same happened with Pacific-
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D2 THE BULLETIN• THURSDAY, MAY 21, 2015
N
TjoN Sugar
HEALTH EVENTS
TODAY HEALTHYBACKCLASS:Aweekly class that will introduce aselftreatment system to eliminate and prevent chronic pain anderasethe signs of aging; 7:30 a.m.; $30 per month, $9 for drop-in; Hawthorn Healing Arts Center, 39 NWLouisiana Ave., Bend; www.hawthorncenter. com or 541-330-0334. LIVING WELLWITH DIABETES WORKSHOP:Joinusforaworkshop, held weekly for six weeks; 10a.m.; $10; Deschutes County Health Services Building, 2577 NECourtney Drive, Bend; 541-322-7446. LIVING WELL WITH DIABETES:Join us for a workshop, held weekly for six weeks; 2:30 p.m.; $10; Redmond Senior Center,325 NWDogwood Ave., Redmond; 541-322-7446. LIVING WITHALZHEIMER'S: For Caregivers — Middle Stage: A three-part class series to learn helpful strategies to provide safe, effective and comfortable care in the middle stage of Alzheimer's; 6 p.m.; free, registration required; St. Charles Medical Center, Heart Center Conference Room, 2500 NE Neff Road, Bend; www.alz.org/oregon or 800-272-3900.
FRIDAY AMERICANRED CROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required, call for appointment; 9 a.m.; BendBlood Donation Center, 815 SWBond St., Suite110, Bend; www.redcrossblood. org or 800-RED-CROSS.
MONDAY AMERICANRED CROSS BLOOD
DRIVE:Identification required, call for appointment; 10 a.m.; Pine Mountain Sports, 255 SWCentury Drive,
Bend; www.redcrossblood.orgor
800-RED-CROSS. AMERICANRED CROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required, call for appointment; 1 p.m.; BendBlood Donation Center, 815 SW Bond St., Suite110, Bend; www.redcrossblood. org or 800-RED-CROSS.
TUESDAY AMERICANRED CROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required, call for appointment; 10 a.m.; Gilchrist High School, 201 Mt. View Drive, Crescent; www.redcrossblood.org or 800-RED-CROSS. AMERICANRED CROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required, call for appointment; noon; Cascade CustomPharmacy,19550SW Amber Meadow Drive, Bend; www.redcrossblood.org or 800-RED-CROSS. ST. CHARLESHEALTHSYSTEM STROKEAWARENESSEVENT: Learn about risk and prevention for strokes and osteoporosis; noon; Redmond Senior Center, 325 NW DogwoodAve., Redmond; www.stcharleshealthcare.org or 541-706-5989. AMERICANRED CROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required, call for appointment;12:30 p.m.; BendBlood Donation Center, 815 SW Bond St., Suite110, Bend; www.redcrossblood. org or 800-RED-CROSS. LIVING WELLWITH CHRONIC CONDITIONS:Learn how to better managethe day-to-day symptoms that are challenging with an ongoing
health problem; 2:30 p.m.; $10; Deschutes County Health Dept., 2577 NECourtney Drive, Bend; www. livingwellco.org or 541-322-7430. EYESIGHTa INSIGHT IMPROVEMENT WORKSHOP:A workshop to help you seebetter, reduce eyestrain and learn how to take care of your eyes holistically; 6:30 p.m.; free, registration required; Synergy Health 8 Wellness, 244 NE Franklin Ave., Suite 3, Bend; 910-859-1232.
WEDNESDAY NATIONALSENIOR HEALTH & FITNESSDAY:Featuring a health resource fair with screenings, food samples, information and
more; 9a.m.;BendSenior Center, 1600 SE ReedMarket Road, Bend; www.bendparksandrec.org or 541-388-1133. AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required, call for appointment; 10 a.m.; Bend Blood Donation Center, 815 SW Bond St., Suite110, Bend; www.redcrossblood.org or 800-RED-CROSS. STROKEAWARENESSEVENT: Learn about risk and prevention for strokes and osteoporosis at this Stroke and Osteoporosis Month event; 10 a.m.; Prineville Senior Center, 180 NE Belknap St., Prineville; www.stcharleshealthcare.org or 541-706-5989. CRANIAL INJURIES a CRIMINALS: Rebecca Walker-Sands explores brain anatomy and physiology and how damage to the brain contributes to maladaptive behavior; 6 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St., Bend; 541-312-1034.
Continued from 01 To process the sugar, your pancreas releases a
The American Heart Association recommends no more than 3 teaspoons (12 grams) of added sugar per day for kids, yet get
hormone called insulin. In-
according to the National Health and Nutrition
sulin allows the glucose to leave your blood and enter your cells, providing a rush of energy. As the cells absorb the glucose from your blood, your blood sugar levels drop. If you eat a lot of sugar, the insulin works overtime
Examination Survey, the average consumption is 23 teaspoons for boys and 18 for girls. The recommended daily allowance can be easily exceeded with just one bowl of cereal! A child
who drinks a 20-ounce original Gatorade will have consumed three times his or her sugar allowance for the day.
to force the glucose out and your blood sugar down, dropping it too low, which makes the brain react. This • Arthritis reaction causes you to feel tired and grumpy or agitat- Howdoessugar makeme ed and anxious, and leaves fat? you craving more sugar. If you eat more sugar than your body can use in a day, it
What short-termhealth effects doesithave?
Sugar provides a burst of energy that might be fun for a minute but usually doesn't last too long. This
burst of energy can make you feel hyper and unable to focus.
When the insulin does its job and lowers the blood sugar levels, you might be left feeling cranky, irritable and moody, and less able
stores the sugar it doesn't need in the liver or converts it to fat.
the taste. Brightly colored foods with dyes usually have added sugar. Read your labels.
Doesn't fruit have sugar? Unless you have diabetes, it is difficult to absorb too much
sugar from eating whole fruit When you do this regularly, because whole fruit has fiber. you damage your liver and Fiber slows down the digestive build up fat. process by releasing sugar into
Will a little sugar hurt me? No. Make it a sometimes food. (Unless you have diabetes or an issue with your blood sugar in which case see a doctor.) The American Heart Asso-
the bloodstream at a slow and
steady rate. Unlike whole fruit, fruit juice lacks fiber, quickly releasing sugar into the bloodstream causing a burst of energy followed by a sugar crash. One cup of apple juice has 24 grams of sugar.Some juicehas almost as much sugar as soda.
ciationrecommends no more to concentrate and learn. than 3 teaspoons (12 grams) of Sugar can even give you a added sugar per day for kids, Does sugar really cause headache or make you feel yet get according to the Nation- cavities? sick. al Health and Nutrition ExamYes. Tooth decay begins Sugar has also been ination Survey, the average with bacteria that naturally shown to suppress our consumption is 23 teaspoons live in the mouth. These bacimmune system by lower- for boys and 18 for girls. The teria burn sugar in order to ing the ability of our white recommended daily allowance thrive, and during this process blood cells to engulf bac- can be easily exceeded with convert sugar into acid. The teria, which can lead to
just one bowl of cereal! A child
acid then eats away at a tooth's
more colds, flus and other
FITNESS EVENTS
TODAY HEALTHYBACKCLASS:Aweekly class that will introduce aselftreatment system to eliminate and prevent chronic pain anderasethe signs of aging; 7:30 a.m.; $30 per month, $9 for drop-in; Hawthorn Healing Arts Center, 39 NWLouisiana Ave., Bend; www.hawthorncenter. com or 541-330-0334. MOMS RUNNING GROUP:All moms welcome with or without strollers, 3- to 4.5-mile run at 8to12-minute mile paces, meet at FootZoneat 9:15 a.m., rain or shine; 9:30 a.m.; FootZone, 842 NWWall St., Bend; www.footzonebend. com/eventsor 541-317-3568. PILATESFOR GOLF:A six-week series of classes designed specifically for golfers who want to improve their game through increased strength, power and flexibility; 4:30 p.m.; $229 for the series, $20 per class; Bend Pilates, 155 SWCentury Drive, Suite 104, Bend; 541-647-0876. THE JUNGLE RljN: 4-mile trail run or a 2-mile trail run/walk; race course includes single-track trails, mud bogs, several steepascents/descentsand
victorperformingarts.com or 269-876-6439. COMMUNITY HEALING FLOW YOGACLASS:Agentleyoga class that anyone canfollow and enjoy, to benefit a local charity; 4 p.m.; Bend Community Healing,155 SW Century Drive, Suite113, Bend; www. bendcommunityhealing.com or 541-322-9642.
SATURDAY FOAM ROLLERCLASS:Learntohelp
for golfers who want to improve their game through increased strength, power and flexibility; 4:30 p.m.; $229 for the series, $20 per class; Bend Pilates, 155 SWCentury Drive, Suite 104, Bend; 541-647-0876. TUESDAYPERFORMANCE RUNNINGGROUP:Aninterval-based workout to help you get the most out of your running, distance andeffort vary according to what works for you; 5:30p.m.;FootZone,842 NW Wall St., Bend; www.footzonebend.com or 541-317-3568.
decreasemusclesoreness, improve
flexibility and even build core strength WEDNESDAY using a foam roller; 10 a.m.; $15; Bend Pilates, 155 SWCentury Drive, NATIONALSENIOR HEALTH 8( FITNESSDAY:Featuring a health Suite104, Bend; 541-647-0876. resource fair with screenings, OBSTACLECOURSE TRAINING food samples, information and CAMP:Six-week course for those more; 9 a.m.; BendSenior Center, planning to participate in aSpartan 1600 SE ReedMarket Road, Bend; Race, Tough Mudder, Warrior Dash www.bendparksandrec.org or or any other obstacle course race/ 541-388-1133. mud run; 10 a.m.; $105 plus fees in NOONTACORljN: Meet at FootZone advance,$20for drop-ins; Cascade a few minutes before noon; noon; Middle School Track, Bend; www. Wall St., fitnesstrainingbysloane.blogspot.com FootZone, 842 NW Bend; www.footzonebend.com or or541-848-8395. 541-317-3568. ARGENTINETANGO MILONGA: A challenging workout Learn Milonga, traditional Argentinian BROLATES: Tango; 7:30 p.m.; $5; Sons of Norway focused on improving strength, numerouslogcrossings; 5 p.m.; flexibility and power; 5:30 p.m.; $20; Hall,549 NW Harmon Blvd., Bend. free for COCC & OSU-Cascades Bend Pilates,155 SWCentury Drive, students & staff, $5 for others; COCC Suite104, Bend; 541-647-0876. Track, 2600NW CollegeW ay,Bend; SUNDAY WEDNESDAY GROUPRljN: 541-383-7794. Featuring a 3- to 5-mile group run; BARK FOR LIFE5K: A5K pokerfun RUNNINGPERFORMANCE AND run/walk with your dog on the trails of 6 p.m.; Fleet FeetSports, 1320 BIOMECHANICSCLASS:Featuring NW Galveston Ave., Bend; www. drills, lifts, and stations to makeyou a Sunriver; 10 a.m.; $15for one dog and fleetfeetbend.com or 541-389-1601. person, $20 for one dog and family; stronger, faster, more efficient runner, for runners of every ability; 5:30 p.m.; Sunriver Village, 57100 Beaver Drive, SUMMER RACESTRAINING Sunriver; www.lapinebarkforlife.com GROUP:Group training for summer $96, $64 for high school students; or 541-536-7619. races, meets twice aweekand Rebound Physical Therapy and includes road/trail runs, interval Biomechanics Lab —Westside, 1160 training, nutrition and core strength; TUESDAY SW SimpsonAve.,Suite200,Bend; all abilities welcome; 6 p.m.; $40 for 541-419-8208. PILATESFOR GOLF: A six-week 8 sessions; Integrate Fitness, 62477 PREVIEWNIGHT OF "PRE'S series of classes designed specifically Eagle Road,Bend;541-598-6401. PEOPLE":A previewof the documentary of distance runner Steve Prefontaine, also featuring "Fire on the Track," to benefit the Pre's People documentary; 6 p.m.; $10; Fleet Feet Sports,1320 NWGalveston Ave., Bend; 541-389-1601.
OSPICE o f Re d m o n d
FRIDAY PSALM YOGA: A unique Yoga class that infuses spiritual strength and focus, set to the timeless and powerful Psalms; 8:30a.m.; Victor School of Performing Arts International, 2700 NEFourth St., Suite 210, Bend;www.
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who drinks a 20-ounce orig- enamel, which causes cavities. sicknesses. inal Gatorade will have con- Sticky foods like Skittles and You will feel far better sumed three times his or her Starburst and l ong-lasting and have more consistent sugar allowance for the day. candies such as lollipops and "Added sugar" refers to the Jolly Ranchers are the worst energy without an overload of sugar in your diet. sugar and high-fructose corn for teeth because they allow syrup added to foods during the sugar to dawdle in the What long-term effects processing. The sugar in fruits, mouth for a prolonged period. does it have? vegetables and other whole Iknow this,w hat Eating too much sug- foods are not added sugars; Now that can I do? ar can make you feel full they are natural sugars. so you don't eat enough I recommend that parents healthful foods. Then your What foods havesugar? and their kids (age 10 and oldbody ends up missing imAdded sugar is in 74 percent er) watch the film "Fed Up" p ortant n u t r ients s u c h of packaged foods, according together and join the filmas protein, vitamins and to a study published in 2012 makers' challenge to give up minerals. by the Academy of Nutrition sugar for 10 days and see how R efined s ugar ha s and Dietetics. Those include they feel. My 10- and 12-yearbeen linked to the follow- foods that many of us think of olds found it fascinating. And ing diseases and health as healthful: yogurt, energy if you want to have a sizable complications: bars, pasta sauce, breads, sal- impact on your lifelong health, • Obesity and 7ype 2 ad dressing and ketchup. reduce your sugar consumpdiabetes The FDA maintains a list of tion all year long! • Heart disease and high more than 3,000 food additives blood pressure that are put into our processed • Cancer foods. Sugar isthesecond-most • Depression common behind salt, which Small Engine • Allergies means it is in a lot of the things Snowmobile, Repair 8 More • ADD/ADHD we eat. Low-fat foods often
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THURSDAY, MAY 21, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
D3
FrmEss
Exercisee st e o , By Julle Deardorff
u t t e rainmaeneitt emost
to get to the gym. But scores of studies suggest that what's Exercise tones the legs, good for the body also is nurbuilds bigger biceps and turingthe old noodle. Exercise, strengthens the heart. But of it turns out, can help improve all the body parts that bene- cognition in ways that differ fit from a good workout, the from mental brain-training brain may be the big winner. games. "We've found exercise has Physical fitness directly affects our mind and plays a cru- broad benefits on cognition, cial role in the way the brain particularly executive funcdevelops and functions. More- tioning, including improve-
Exercise helps integrate the store young levels of BDNF in new neurons into the brain's the aging brain. circuitry to h elp i m prove "In a sense, BDNF is like a learning,Meeusen said. brain fertilizer," said Cotman, Research also suggests that a professor of neurology and exercise improves blood flow neurobiology and behavior to the brain and, as a result, and founding director of the enhances cognitive abilities. Institute for Memory Impair- "The blood carries oxygen and ments and Neurological Disor- feeds neural tissues, so you're ders (UCI Mind). "BDNF pro- getting the benefits that come
over, exercise is linked to brain
facilitates learning and synapThe brain loves it when we tic plasticity." move and will reward us handOver the last two decades, somely if we do, researchers researchers have learned that say. Here's a look at how physexercise acts on multiple levels ical activity can be beneficial in the brain. The brain's wiring during three key stages of life. depends on the integrity of the Infancy: Mobile children brain cells or neurons, as well hit their cognitive milestones as the connections between faster, said Eliot, an associate the neurons, or the synapses. professor ofneuroscience at As we age, the synapses are Rosalind Franklin University's lost or break down. Cotman's Chicago Medical School. work has shown that in older When infants are awake, rodents, exercise increases the they're in near-constant monumber of synapses and also tion, which is critical for develstimulates the brain to devel- opment, Eliot said. This moveop more neurons in the hip- ment "strengthens their muspocampus, which he called "a cles and hones their neural critical region in learning and circuits for smooth, purposeful memory formation and a tar- motor skills." get of massive decline in AlzThe p rocess continues heimer's disease." throughout life but is obviousStill, for those newly created ly most intense in infancy and brain cells, or neurons, to work toddlerhood, when children — tohelp uslearn and rememare m a stering b r a nd-new ber new things — they need skills like sitting, standing, to be plugged into the existing walking, running and jumpneural network, said Romain ing, Eliot said. Meeusen, chair of the departShe worries that babies ment of human physiology at in the U.S. are spending too the University of Brussels. much time strapped in devices.
Chicago Tribune
ments in attention, working changes throughout all stages memory and the ability to mulof life, beginning in infancy titask," said researcher Charles
and lasting through old age. Hillman, a professor of kinesiBabies, for example, need ology and community health regular movement tocarve at the University of Illinois at out critical pathways and form Urbana-Champaign. In fact, connections in the brain. In an active lifestyle during childchildren, research suggests hood may confer protective efexercise improves attention, fects on brain health across the focus and academic perfor- life span, Hillman said. mance. And in the elderly, exercise has been shown to help
How does exercise stave off memory loss asso- help the brain? ciated with some forms of dementia, including Alzheimer's
In the mid-1990s, Carl Cotman's team at the University of California, Irvine, first showed
disease. "Physical activity is crucial that exercise triggers the proto mind and body alike," said duction of a p r otein called neuroscientist Lise Eliot, who brain-deri ved neurotrophic writes about the benefits of factor, which helps support the movement on the brain in her growth of existing brain cells book "Pink Brain, Blue Brain." and the development of new "The brain benefits as much ones. as the heart and other musdes With age, BDNF levels fall; from physical activity." this decline is one reasonbrain Scientists used to believe the function deteriorates in the mind-body connection was elderly, according to Cotman. a one-way street: The brain Certain types of exercise, helped build a better physique namely aerobic, are thought — or else it sabotaged attempts to counteract these age-relat-
Feet
ed drops in BDNF and can re-
tects neurons from injury and
lems for people with forefoot
Jay Dicharry, director of the said. For those ages 40 to 49, REP Lab in Bend, which helps it's 40 seconds. Ages 50 to 59: athletes improve their perfor37 seconds. Ages 60 to 69: 27 mance. When you run, 80 to seconds. 85 percent of your stability Once that is mastered, you comes from your big toe, so can make it more difficult by ideally, you'll see that you're closing your eyes, which are using your big toe, he said. crucial to balance. Once that Many people, by contrast, is done, all age categories will learn that they roll to the plummet to less than 10 sec- outside of their feet and wobonds, Pietrowski said. ble there, Dicharry said. "If that's your control stratAfter that, try moving your arms and free leg, lowering egy, and then you start rundown to pick up an object, ning — which places two and perhaps, or forming a star a half times your body weight shape by stretching your onto that wobbly foot and anarms and legs in opposite kle every single step — good directions. In addition, Ford luck with that," he said. suggests looking up, down Another good test is to try and side to side while balanc- to pick up a towel or small obing on one leg. That will take jects like marbles using only away the inner ear's control your toes. If you can't do that,
issues, Ford said.
o ver the balance and w i l l
Continued from 01
ls ityour shoes? The kind of shoes a person wears can make the problem worse. Different foot issues
call for different kinds of shoes. People with flat feet should
wear motion-control shoes, which provide arch support, Ford said. But if people who don't have flat feet use motion-control shoes, it can cause their foot to strike the ground
in a way that can cause injuries, he said. Some running shoes have slight heels, but putting weight on that area would cause even more probPhysical therapists tend to lose the most sleep over shoes
that don't offer any arch support, such as flip flops, slip-ons or older shoes that are wearing down, said Tom Pietrowski, a physical therapist who owns Compass Physical Therapy in Bend. Most running and walking shoes are built with at least a small amount of
arch support, he said. High-heeled shoes, men's dress shoes and cowboy boots are also suspect because they tend to narrow at the front
and push the toes together, Ford said. Toes are important
age of43 seconds, Pietrowski
with that," Hillman said.
trolling the muscles inside
Like adults trying to master a
new sport, "young children need to practice to speed their
ing to impaired memory and increasedrisk fordementia. But research suggests aer-
neural pathways and select the obic exercise can increase the optimal circuits to hone each size of the hippocampus and milestone," Eliot said. increase levels of a protein that Pre-adolescence: In a new aids the growth of new brain twist in the debate over phys- cells, potentially holding off ical education in s chools, changes in the brain and imresearchers are asking an proving memory function. "Atrophy of the hippocamintriguing question: What if exercise improves academic pus in later life is generally success?
considered inevitable," said
Some research suggests Kirk Erickson, professor of it can. Hillman's team at the psychology at the University of University of Illinois' Neuro-
Pittsburgh. "But we've shown
cognitive Kinesiology Laboratory found that children aged 7 through 9 who participated in a 60-minute after-school exerciseprogram had betterfocus,
that even moderate exercise for one year can increase the size of t hat
s tructure. The
brain at that stage remains modifiable."
processed information more
In another study, research-
quickly and performed better on cognitive tests than chil-
ers from the University of Wis-
dren who didn't exercise.
consinSchool of Medicine and Public Health found that peo-
The researchers also found
ple who said they exercised for
a dose effect: The more days the children attended the ex-
30 minutes five times a week in
changes in their brain function
accumulation of the beta am-
late-middle age did better on ercise program, the greater the cognitive tests and showed less
or cognition, according to the yloid plaque, the protein that nine-month randomized trial, builds up in the brains of peopublished in the journal Pedi- ple with Alzheimer's disease. atrics m 2014. At all ages, active people did "We didn't take low-fit kids better on immediate memory and make them highly fit," and visual spatial tests and Hillman said. "We took low- had less amyloid plaque, better fit kids and made them a little brain glucose metabolism and less low fit. These aren't mas- higher hippocampus volume sive changes." compared with inactive peoLate adulthood: S adly, ple,according to the research, the hippocampus naturally published in 2014 the journal shrinks in late adulthood, lead- Neurology.
talks to running classes, he has them stand on one leg as
said most of the feet he sees in
his practice are already thoroughlybeat up; some fresh out "If you work on this stuff for of surgery. He urges people to a week, people can do things pay attention to their feet and that blow their minds," he said. wear quality shoes.
your feet, and that derives a
better foundation for everything up the chain," he said.
they listen.
Getting stronger When it comes to developing foot strength and stability, the test — standing on one leg — doubles as the exercise.
"Foot coordination happens
"It's not good when your feet
pretty quickly, and people will be surprised by thegainsthey
go bad," he said. "You really want to take care of them."
can make."
— Reporter: 541-383-0304, tbannow@bendbulletin.com
"Go for a minute. Go for 30
People who are more sedseconds. Do whatever you entary or concerned about can," Ford said. balance should try backing For another exercise, try into a corner before standing slowly and repeatedly touch- on one leg, Selbst said. That ing the ground in front and to way, they can use both walls each side of you, which will for stability. strengthen your feet, calves, Unfortunately, P ietrowski upper leg, butt and hips, Ford said. Dicharry said he knows a lot of people will want to skip
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it could illustrate foot weak- running, but he encourages exercisethe other sources of ness or inflexibility in the taking time for foot strength balance: vision and balance toes, Pietrowski said. and stability. Often when he r eceptors in t h e s k i n a n d Dicharry, a physical therajoints, he said. pist who works with everyone (Side note: Much of yoga from novice to Olympic athinvolves balancing on one leg letes, also recommends what while moving the body into a he calls "toe yoga" to test your number of different postures. control over the muscles in It's great for improving foot your feet. Standing normally, strength and ankle stability, you should be able to lift your as areclasses such as taichi, big toe without moving the zumba and pilates, Pietrows- rest of your toes. You should ki said.) also be able to lift your other Before doing the single-leg four toes while keeping your stand with your eyes closed, big toe planted. "We're talking about being place your cellphone in front of you and take a video, said able to do a better job con-
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for strength and balance, and
compressing them hampers both. "If you put them in good, supportive shoes and work on foot strength and other exercises, knee pain just kind of goes away," said Burke Selbst, who founded Focus Physical Therapy in Bend with his wife in 2005.
Memol'iaL
~' a~
Do youhave weak feet? A simple way to determine
what kind of shoes you need is to wet your foot, step on concrete and notice what your
footprint looks like, Ford said. If you see only a heel and toes, it probably means your feet are tight and inflexible, he said. If you see one, unbroken print, it means you've got flat
feet that may be too flexible, an issue in itself, he said. If you're not sure what all
this means for you, you're in luck. The tests local physical therapists say they use to
gauge foot strength and ankle stability happen to be ones you could just as easily do in your living room. The main test is simply standing on one leg with the other bent at a 90-degree angle. You'll feel your feet wobbling and adjusting as they struggle to keep you upright. The younger you are, the longer you should be able to keep standing. People ages 18 to 39 can do this for an aver-
Wewill be closed Nonday, Nay 25, 2015 RETAIL 8 CLASSIFIED DISPLAY ADVERTISING DEADLINES DAY Monday, 5/25...................... Tuesday — At Home, 5/26 ... Tuesday, 5/26 ..................... Wednesday, 5/27................
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Thc Bullctin b end b u l l e t i n . c o m
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D4 TH E BULLETIN • THURSDAY, MAY 21, 2015
Is sleep apnea arisk factor for depression? Sleep problems are often a symptom of depression, but a new study raises the possibility that they could cause depression as well. In a sample of nearly 2,000 Australian men between the ages of 35 and 83, those with excessive daytime sleepiness were10 percent more likely to be depressed than those without, according to researchers from the University of Adelaide and the Adelaide Institute for Sleep Health. The relationship held up evenafter taking other risk factors into account. None of the menhadbeendiagnosedwith severe obstructive sleep apneawhen they entered the study, but 857 of them were assessed for the condition after joining. Those who were found to have it were 2.1 times more likely to be depressed than those who didn't have the sleep disorder. Some of the menhad bothseveresleepapnea andexcessivedaytimesleepiness.Theywere 4.2 times more likely to be depressed compared with men who had no sleep issues, the researchers found. Those with both conditions were also 3.5 times more likely to be depressed than men with only one of them. All of the men in the study were evaluated for depression twice, with the second test occurring
Insurance Continued from D1
Healthier in 2016 By 2016, insurers and policy experts alike think the ranks of the insured will look quite different. That's when all the
healthier, younger people who didn't rush to get insurance
in 2014 will have joined the ranks of the insured, possibly to avoid the ballooning tax
penalty for not being insured. Most carriers wrote in their documents they expect their
membership will be healthier overall next year. Why, then, do they still want huge rate increases in 2016? Partly because they can-
that is, they hope they can, said Len N i chols, d irector of the Center for Health Pol-
icy Research & Ethics and a health policy professor at George Mason University in Virginia. In 2014, m any
about five years after the first. That allowed the researchers to see whether sleep problems could be linked to a recent diagnosis of depression. And indeed, themenwhohadseveresleep apnea that was discovered during the study were 2.9 times more likely to become depressed durIng those five years. The study design did not allow researchers to determine whether sleep problems boosted the men's risk of depression. It's possible that the reverse is true, or that a third factor makes people more likely to be both depressed and to have trouble sleeping. Though the nature of the link between sleep and depression is still hazy, the results do provide actionable information for doctors, the study authors concluded. After patients are diagnosed with depression, they should be screened for obstructive sleep apnea, even if they don't seem to be sleepy, they wrote. Their results were presented this week at the American Thoracic Society's 2015 International Conference in Denver. — Karen Kaplan, Los Angeles Times
In year two, they raised rates
slightly — an average of 5.9 percent statewide, according
to a March report by the Urban Institute. "In year three, they're try-
ing to see what they can do," Nichols said. "It's kind of like, 'Can I get away with a premium increase of this much?'" It could also be insurers are now recognizing they didn't raise rates enough for 2015 policies. That could be especially true for the ones
that proposed higher increases than the Insurance Division allowed. PacificSource,
Continued from D1 Ramsey is one of four lead authors of two Phase
3 clinical trials that confirmed that O r kambi, a
Oregonhealth insurance premiumsvs. claims Insurance carriers report having spent far more than they expected to on members' medical bills in 2014. In fact, they all report having spent more on claims than they took in from members' monthly premiums.
Amount spent on medical claims for every dollar of premium received, 2014" Atrio Health Plans.........................................................$2.24 BridgeSpanHealth Company........................................$1.16 HealthNet Health Plan of Oregon.................................. $1.12 Health Republic Insurance Company............................$2.16 Kaiser Foundation Health Plan of the Northwest..........$1.16 LifeWise Health Plan of Oregon....................................$1.62 Moda Healt hPlan .........................................................$1.40 Oregon's Health CO-OP................................................$1.78 Pacificsource Health Plans .......................................... $1.63 Providence Health Plan ................................................ $1.14 Regence BlueCross BlueShield of Oregon....................$1.03 TimeInsuranceCompany.............................................$1.60 Trillium Community Health Plan ...................................... N/A * Individual market only Source: Oregon Insurance Division
Greg Cross / The Bulletin
though premiums may have increased for some healthier an average of $216, compared people, the general population with a nationwide average of has access to much cheaper $264, according to the Urban insurance when factoring in Institute report. tax subsidies for low-income Between 2014 and 2015, the individuals. state's average premium inAlso, the population of peocreasefor silver plans — 5.9 ple covered under commercial percent — exceeded the na- policies today is completely tionalaverage: 2.9 percent,ac- different from that which was cording to the report. covered beforethe Affordable Another potential reason Care Act, when policies could for the proposed hikes is a lag legally keep out sick people, in a federal program that will he said. "You can't compare beeventually provide additional funding to insurers with high fore toafter,because you're claims costs. Indeed, many of talking about serving everythe carriers' documents men- body versus serving a limited tioned anticipated funding set of pretty healthy people," from the federal program. Holahan said. That's especially true for
Drug Administration. In a 12-1 vote, the panel agreed
that the drug was safe and effective enough to u se. The FDA's decision is ex-
pected July 5. The trials — which studied more than 1,100 cys-
tic fibrosis patients from six c o u ntries b e t ween April 2013 and April 2014
— showed that Orkambi helped achieve a 3 percent improvement in lung function over placebo.
pened, there wasn't a dra-
matic bump-up, but it was absolutely rock solid for 48 weeks," Ramsey said. In addition, the drug reduced pulmonary exacerbations by 40 percent,
dramatically cutting those sudden and life-threatening declines in lung function. Paige was hospitalized four or five times in the past three years with
new drug could cost between
Ronald Hsu, an analyst at the $250,000 and $300,000 a year, firm Sanford C. B ernstein, according to Geoff Porgc o u l d es, an analyst at Sanford C.
to let myself think of that," she said. "We have a lot of
people who pray for us. We believe that God has a special plan for Paige and maybe this is it."
(NemorialDay toLobor Duy)
.rg
r&h,$
•w I4 !
Budget and Policy Priorities, points to a
I('
'
,
-
(rg,
2 014 Common-
wealth Fund study that found that between 2008 and 2010
— beforethe passage of the Affordable Care Act — premiums increased by an average of 10 percent each year na-
tionally. Increases post-ACA have been less dramatic, she said. "We've created a much more sensible and transparent structure for people to
understand what it costs to buy health insurance," she said, "but that doesn't mean thatthere aren't reasons for
Patio World quality, instead of disposable stuff destined for a landfill af tera few years, lets you enjoy summer instead of shopping for new stuff.
Pat/o 8'orld
h ealth costs to g o up . W e didn't change that piece of the
puzzle." — Reporter: 541-383-0304, tbannow@bendbulletin.com
222 SE Reed Mar ket Road 541-388-0022 PatioWorldBend.com Mon-Sat 9:30-5:30 Sun 10-5
•
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Partners In Care put us at ease. They helped us understand and navigate a stressful time. Their support let us focus on our family and make the most of our time together.
very many for $100,000 a pop sard.
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Officials with t h e C y stic Fibrosis Foundation said they
drug undergoes FDA review. But if it's approved, the
two copies of the defective sard. gene. Initially, though, the The trial tested changes in drug would be used only the amount of air a patient in the 8,500 people who can blow from his or her
en by specialty drugs, such
to raise a premium," Nichols
frequent hospitalizations. "She doesn't cough like she used to cough," Sharla Ellens said. "For the last three years, her lung f u nctions have been as good as a normal 17-year-old's."
from Vertex for free as the
"Her name was the f i rst one drawn," Sharla Ellens
have annual medication costs
"'Ibrns out, it doesn't take
dozens of medications and
Together, though, the two
the 14,000 cystic fibrosis patients in the U.S. with
Nearly 600,000 A m ericans
about $84,000 for a 12-week regimen.
For Paige and others, the
drug offershope after a lifetime of daily lung treatments,
generate $2.2 billion in sales Bernstein. t hat requires n ine p i l l s by 2018, increasing total VerThe medication should every day, that's gotten tex revenue to $5 billion that be covered by the family's much better. year. health insurance. Paige is "This is the healthiest Paige is one of about 25 covered under Washington I've ever been in my life," Washington s t ate p a tients state's Apple H ealth p l a n, said Paige, a junior at Lyn- who participated in the trials. through Sharla Ellens' teachden Christian School who There was so much interest ing job and father Eric Ellens' managed its soccer team in the treatment that doctors work as a general contractor. last fall and sings in cam- told Sharla Ellens they resort- But, Sharla Ellens said, what pus musicals. ed to pulling names out of a if it's not'? "I'm just literally not going Orkambi is intended for hat.
The high cost of drugs, by contrast, came up frequently in c arriers' documents.
as the H epatitis C b l o ckbuster, Sovaldi, which costs
life-threatening pulmonary exacerbations by 40 percent.
drugs could become a primary treatment — and a big
e stimated O r k ambi
medical costs are not increasing anywhere near 15 percent annually. "I'd be skeptical of that," he
least $100,000 worth of prescription drugs tripled in 2014, accordingto study released this month by the drug benefits manager Express Scripts.
percent overall, but it also cut
have supported the drug's development. Despite improveby the FDA. ments in care, 90 percent of T ogether, the tw o m e d i- deaths in people with the discations work to correct the ease are caused by declining genetic defect by allowing lung function. In 2013, the the protein within the cell to median age of death from fold correctly and rise to the cystic fibrosis was 27.5, the surface — and work properly group told the FDA. "We are encouraged by the to move sodium in and out of the cell, Ramsey said. FDA advisory c o mmittee's "It's a very complicated recommendation to approve process to make this protein," Orkambi," said Laurie Fink, she said. "It has to fold up in a spokeswoman for the Cysa certain way and, as it folds, tic Fibrosis Foundation. "We it has little sugars on the out- know that our mission is as side to stabilize it and then it urgent as ever — ensuring has to get moved to the sur- that all people with CF have face, where it works." access to the therapies and Separately, the two drugs the support they need to stay don't have a very strong ef- healthy and lead fulfilling fect on most cysticfibrosis lives." patients, research has shown. T here's a w o rr y o n t h e Kalydeco alone showed a 10 horizon, however, for patients percent gain of function, but such as Paige: the potential only in the select group of pa- cost of the drug. She will tients, Ramsey noted. continue to receive Orkambi
these debilitating e pisodes. But with the drug
with the Urban Institute, said
above $50,000, and the number of U.S. patients taking at
was
only a 3 percent change, once that change hap-
lungs in one second. Orkambi increased that volume by 3
Lueck, of th e C enter on
for example, wanted to raise the smaller carriers, which rates by an average of 16 per- depend the most on that fundcent last year. The division ing, Nichols said. Time Insurknocked that to 4 percent. ance Company, which has "I'm guessing what you're fewer than 600 individual polseeing is the first salvo in a icyholders in Oregon, is probattle with the state insurance posing the highest rate hike of commissioner about raising any carrier: 52 percent. rates," Nichols said. Once the p r oposed rate BridgeSpan, which is re- hikes became public May questing an average of 15 per- 1, opponents of the Affordcent higher premiums next able Care Act held them up year, wrote that the increase as proof the law would only is necessary partly "due to serveto increase the cost of the increasing cost of medi- health insurance. cal care." Few carriers placed The original idea was that such emphasis on the cost of creating the exchanges and care. Health care spending displaying policies side-byin the U.S. grew at the slow- side would increase competiest rate on record in 2013: 3.6 tionamong insurers,thereby percent, according to federal driving prices down. data, although it was expected Holahan said that has "abto rise again in 2014 with all solutely" proven to be true. Althe newly insured. John Holahan, a f ellow
sard.
are older than 12. Tests are being conducted in children as young as 6, Ramsey said, and the eventual hope is that Orkambi may be used in infants with cystic fibrosis soon afterdiagnosis. It's only the second drug in
new drug from Vertex Pharmaceuticals, can help the world that targets the unpeople age 12 and old- derlyingcause ofthe disease. er with two copies of the Vertex also makes the first most common mutation, such drug, called Kalydeco, known as F508del. Vertex but it's only applicable to helped fund the trials. about 4 percent of the 30,000 The trial results were cystic fibrosis patients in part of the evidence that the U.S.Orkambi combines led a federal advisory Kalydeco, known generically c ommittee last week t o as ivacaftor, with an experrecommend approval of imental drug called LumaOrkambi bythe Food and caftor, which is not approved
" Even though i t
i n s urers than in other states. In 2015, priced low to try to scoop up the cheapest silver plans cost
as much of the market as they could — like Moda, he said.
Drug trials
p a r t nersbend.org
Hospice I Home Health I Hospice House I Transitions I Palliative Care
THURSDAY, MAY 21, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
D5
ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT
Britis tra itionins ires au s oracause
TV TODAY • More TV listingsinside Sports 6 p.m. on NGC, "Life Below
TV SPOTLIGHT "Red Nose Day" 8 p.m. today,NBC ByFrazier Moore The Associated Press
N EW Y OR K
— Thi r t y
years ago, Richard Curtis suspected two things: People like to laugh and they like to do good. Red Nose Day has annually proved him right in the United Kingdom, where more than $1 billion has been raised to fight childhood poverty. Now Curtis is bringing Red Nose Day to the United States with a s t a r-studded three-
hour TV event airing tonight on NBC. He promises it will
be funny and entertaining while giving viewers the opportunity to pitch in to help
kids in the U.S. and around the globe. When he's not organizing Red Nose Day in the U.K. or prepping its American invasion, Curtis is a c elebrated writer-director. His films in-
clude "Four Weddings and a Funeral," "Notting Hill" and
"Bridget Jones's Diary."
"I have two careers, at the
same time," he says during a chat Monday morning at Manhattan's
H a m m erstein
Ballroom, where the live portion of Thursday's telecast will originate. This show will be "very, very, very different" from the typical fundraising telethon,
Urban, John Mellencamp, zation dedicated to bringing One Direction and " V oice" clean and safe drinking water coaches Adam Levine, Blake to people in developing naShelton, Christina Aguilera tions) and OxFam America (a and Pharrell Williams. global organization that fights The hope, of course, is that poverty and hunger). Red Nose Day will become Supplementing tod a y's an annual event for NBC and broadcastare several ancilfor U.S. viewers, just as it has lary fundraising efforts. Five long been a tradition for the million Red Noses have been BBC and Brits. purchased by customers of NBC's embrace of Red Nose participating retailers. "Today Day is largely explained by Show" host Matt Lauer set off the presenceof Paul Telegdy, on a 230-mile bike ride from NBC's president of alterna- Boston to New York to spur .k s tive and late night program- donations. ming. Telegdy, who previously A nd en t e rtainer Ni c k worked at the BBC, was well Cannon (host of "America's aware ofthe reach and impact Got Talent") will attempt to of Red Nose Day. dance nonstop for 24 hours In his current position, he as a warm up to Thursday's Charles Sykes/The Associated Press believed NBCUniversal was broadcast. His day of dance at Nick Cannon will attempt to dance nonstop for 24 hours as a warm a natural home for producing Manhattan's NBC Experience up to tonight's broadcast of "Red Nose Day." and promoting Red Nose Day Store streamed live on NBC. onU.S.shores. com starting Wednesday at 5 "We thought, wouldn't it be p.m. "I don't think I've ever done he says. members. great if we could harness our Roughly one-half will be Other pre-recorded bits workforce and it s r elation- anything for 24 hours straight pre-recorded sketches and include such names as Julia ships with advertising clients except breathe," said Cannon, other comedy pieces, allow- Roberts, Liam Neeson, Rich- and talent," he said recently who will get just a five-minute — "and not in a way that re- break every couple of hours ing for slick production tech- ard Gere and Jodie Foster. niques and involvement by There will also be live com- spondsto any specific cry for and plans to power his endura wider range of stars than edy and music in front of an help, but for raising children ance contest with the help of would be possible on show audience at the Hammerstein. out of poverty. And do it on an Skittles. night. Those scheduled to appear annual basis." Back at the Hammerstein, C urtis mentions one i n - in one fashion or another inThe money raised this first Curtis, who describes himself triguing spoof: a mockumen- clude Reese Witherspoon, year will go to the Red Nose as "quite a cheerful human," tary of the rock group Cold- Benedict Cumberbatch, Emily Day Fund for distribution radiates optimism as he tackplay as it creates a musical Blunt, Martin Short, Ian McK- to charity partners includ- l es countless details of t h e version of "Game of Thrones," ellen, Paul Rudd, Neil Patrick ing the Boys tie Girls Clubs of broadcast only days away. "The challenge," he says, "is with original songs by Cold- Harris, Hugh Bonneville, Will America, the National Urban play frontman Chris Mar- Ferrell, Elizabeth Banks, Jack League, Save the Children to get people to watch. I think tin performed by the group Black, Helen Mirren, Nick and United Way, as well as if people watch the show, and participation by a doz- Offerman, Sean "P. Diddy" other agencies such as chari- they'll enjoy it — and they'll en "Game of Thrones" cast Combs, John Legend, Keith ty: water (a nonprofit organi- give some money."
istenwe inoI erto e eaI
MOVIE TIMESTOQAY • There may bean additional fee for3-Oand IMAXmovies • Movie times are subject to change after press time. f
Dear Abby:I am responding to "Tired of Talking to Myself" (Feb. 13), whose husband's ears slam shut when she begins to speak. This is not a problem that's exclusive to men. Women do it as well. As a retired PA (physician's assistant), when talking with patients, I would
refer to it as selective hearing loss. Tired needs to
DFP,R
A~~~
look at her own be-
havior because I have never seen one partner be the only guilty one. My wife can hear the ticking of the turn signal that wasn't turned off, but she
gave me an "earful": Dear Abby:Focus is a strength for many men like me. I am a little hard of hearing and need to focus on what I am listening to. If you want open ears, hold my hands and make sure I am looking at your face. You will now have my attention. Tell me w h at
you want from me. I want you to be happy and will do what I can for you. — A Little Hard of Hearing
patient and use the abridged ver-
sion, maybe communication will get easier with fewer repeats. — Heidi in Florida Dear Abby: I wonder what kind
of things she's saying to him. There's a saying I have found to be true: "Men marry women and hope they never change. Women marrymen and hope they will change." I have been married for 35 years and recently my wife has started
pointing out every little thing I do that she thinks I should do differ-
(Chucfz) ently. I have reached the point that Dear Abby: Some researchers when she starts one of her obsersay women speak about 13,000 vations, I say, "Could you add it to
doesn't always hear my questions more words a day than men do. your list and put it somewhere?" or statements. There's a joke that explains it's be- and that's the end of the conversaThere are many reasons why it cause we have to say everything tion. Nit-picking does not make for happens, but the way to resolve it twice! a great marriage. is to listen when your partner talks — Jenny fn North Carolina — Tim in Arizona to you. If you do, you will find that Dear Abby: Men have no paDear Abby: There are three he/she returns the courtesy. Per-
haps if "Tired" gives a closer look to her own behavior, she'll stop re-
ferring to it as a male problem. — Frank in Portland, Texas
Dear Frank:Thanks for your letter. When I asked readers for input,
they heard me loud and clear and
HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORTHURSDAY, MAY 21, 2015:This year your
tience. They only want to hear a brief, straight-to-the-point version.
Women tend to tell the story from beginning to end with every detail explained so nothing is misunderstood. When men hear us talk, they will say all they hear is blah, blah, blah. "Tired," if you try to be
YOURHOROSCOPE
sensibilities seem to soar. You also view By Jacqueline Bigar situations from many different perspectives. Emotionally, you often will find for someone special. Tonight: Just be yourself on a roller-coaster ride. Incoryourself. porating all the information you receive could be challenging at times. If you are CANGER (June21-July 22) single, you might already have encoun** * * L i sten to news more openly tered an important person to your life's than you have as of late. Even though history earlier this year. If not, remain you might not like what you hear, you open-minded.lf could discover that someone reveals Btsrs shpwthe klutl you are attached, useful information. Avoid a conpf dsyypu g hstrs remember that trolling person; don't get tangled up ** * * * D ynamic your relationship is in his or her web. Tonight: Take some ** * * p ositive at w o-way street. much-needed private time. ** * Average CAN CER can cause LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) ** So-so financial swings if ** * * * Z ero in on what is important * Difficult you go along with to you. You will need to play it low-key his or her ideas. and have an important discussion that ARIES (March 21-April 19) you have been avoiding. A power play ** * * H ang in there, and you will be could complicate a decision. Detach a able to clear up a problem that involves bit before thinking this matter through. your domestic life. Your ability to get to Tonight: Catch some zzz's. the bottom of a problem will emerge. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) You'll make peace at the end of it all. ** * * I f you don't want to accept A close friend appreciates you and more responsibility, say "no." Don't lets you know. Tonight: You are full of worry so much about others' reactions; surprises. you need to feel comfortable. Intensity TAURUS (April 20-May 20) surrounds a child or new friend. Be ** * * * Y our ability to draw someone careful before diving in and affecting out will be enhanced. You will want to this person's decision. Tonight: Make weigh the pros and cons of a financial weekend plans. matter before making a decision. A LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) discussion could be divisive. As a result, you are likely to encounter a major ** * You might be more emotional about a personal matter than you reroadblock. Tonight: In the moment. alize. You could have difficulty sorting GEMINI (May 21-June20) through your feelings and your options. ** * * * Y ou see the importance of You are in a period of uncertainty. You harnessing a vision. A partner might should consider breaking out of a rigid see the matter differently. Friends mindset. Tonight: Out till the wee hours. add an unpredictable element to your SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) day. Speak your mind, and listen to a suggestion. Don't forget to buy a card ** * * R ead between the lines with
words men always respond to: sex,
food and money — not always in thatorder.Use one ofthose words when talking to them and you'll always get a response. — Beth fn the South — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com or P.O. Box 69440, LosAngeles, CA90069
a situation that affects a loved one. A power play will backfire if you refuse to play. Go with the moment, even if it makes hash out of your schedule.
Express your caring on adeeper level. Tonight: Relax to a great piece of music.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) ** * * You could regret a decision you make today. If possible, sit on it a little longer and decide what is possible. Others will be testy, and they suddenly might balk at what they previously had thought was OK. Use care with your finances; a mistake could be costly. Tonight: Say "yes."
I
I
I
Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • THE AGE OFADALINE (PG-13) 11:50 a.m., 2:50, 9:45 • ANTONYANDCLEOPATRA (no MPAArating) 7 • AVENGERS: AGEOFULTRON(PG-13l 11:35 a.m.,12:45, 3:15, 4:30, 7:15, 9:25, IO:30 • AVENGERS: AGEOFULTRONIMAX3-D (PG-13) 11:45 a.m., 3:30 • EX MACHINA(Ri 11:55 a.m., 2:40, 6:20, 10:50 • FURIOUS 7(PG-13) 12:15, 3:35, 6:50, 10:05 • HOME(PGi 1,3:40 • HOT PURSUIT(PG-13) 12:25, 2:55, 7:10,10:35 • THE LONGEST RIDE(PG-13) 12:20, 3:55, 10:10 • MAD MAX:FURY ROAD (Rl11:40 a.m.,2:30,7:30,10:30 • MADMAX:FURYROAD3-D(R)noon,12:30,3,3:45,5, 6:50, 7, 10:15, 10:45 • PAULBLART: MALL COP 2(PGl12:05,2:35 • PITCH PERFECT2(PG-13) 11:30 a.m., 12:30, 2:15, 3:15, 6:30, 7:45, 9:30, 10:25 • POLTERGEIST(PG-13) 8:30, IO • POLTERGEIST3-D(PG-13) 8, 10:30, 10:45 • TOMORROWLAND IMAX (PG) 7, 10:15 • THE WATER DIVINER (R) 6:25, 7:40 • WOMAN INGOLD(PG-13) 12:40, 3:25, 6:35 • Accessibility devices are available forsome movies.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) ** * Dive into a project that might prevent you from getting into weekend mode. This project might require a financial and emotional investment in order to be completed. Ask for feedback from a friend who understands what is occurring. Tonight: Out late.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March20) ** * * Y our creativity will come out when dealing with various situations, and it will allow you to communicate your caring. A financial issue could arise that might need more than a little imagination to be handled effectively. Tonight: Tap into your inner child. © King Features Syndicate
in Eagle, Andy maintains the
snow-covered trails and cares for the dogs on his own. After an onslaught of storms around Kavik, Sue struggles to restore
her generator, while in Noorvik, the Hailstones build a new teepee to provide shelter for
upcoming hunts. Meanwhile, in Wiseman, Erik takes Martha hunting for animal hides, hoping to supplement their
income, in the newepisode
"Alone in the Dark."
7 p.m. on WE, "Cutting It: In the ATL" —Four headstrong salon owners in Atlanta grow their own businesses while
competing against one another for clients in this new unscripted series. Among the key
players, Maja, who achieved quick success via her chain of quick and affordable weave salons, teams up with Mushi-
ya, a hair diva who specializes in natural hairstyling. Beautii, a veteran player in the Atlanta
hair scene, doesn't hesitate
to bend the rules, while Dedra
works hard to sabotage Maja's strategy of building a coalition
among all the salon owners. 8:31 p.m. on 6, "TheOdd Couple" — The classic Neil Simon story of relative slob Oscar and neatnik Felix-
college roommates boarding together again after their respective marriages endgets another series workout with this update, with Matthew
Perry (also anexecutive producer of the show) and "Reno 911!" alum Thomas Lennon in the respective parts. Wendell Pierce, Lindsay Sloane and Yvette Nicole Brown co-star.
Leslie Bibb begins a recurring role in the "Pilot."
9 p.m. on10, "Wayward Pines" —Part of Ethan's
(Matt Dillon) quest ends tragically when he finds the body of one of the Secret Service
agentshecame toWayward Pines to locate in the new
episode "Don't Discuss Your Life Before." Beverly (Juliette
Lewis) helps him seek clues to the death, and to the fate
of the other missing agent. Theresa and Ben(Shannyn Sossamon, Charlie Tahan) head for Idaho to track down Ethan. Terrence Howard, Carla
Gugino, MelissaLeoandToby Jones also star. © Zap2it
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803 SW Industrial Way, Bend, OR
• AVENGERS: AGE OFULTRON (PG-13l5:15,8:15 • HOT PURSUIT(PG-13) 5:30, 7:30, 9:30 • MAD MAX:FURY ROAD (Rl4:30,7,9:30 • PITCH PERFECT 2 (PG-13) 4:15, 6:45, 9:15
WILSONSsf Redmond
GAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) ** * * You could be in a position where you must take a stand with a loved one who seems to be driving a hard bargain. You are able to see the big picture, while others cannot. Think carefully before taking a stand. Tonight: You are on top of a problem, even if you don't realize it.
Zero" — Now living alone
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Madras Cinema 5,1101SWU.S. Highway 97, 541-475-3505 • THE AGE OFADALINE(PG-13) 5:10, 7:30 • AVENGERS: AGE OFULTRON (PG-13l3:20,6:30 • MAD MAX:FURY ROAD (Rl3:50,7:10 • MAD MAX:FURYROAD3-D (R) 4:30 • PITCH PERFECT 2 (PG-13) 4:25, 6:30, 7 Pine Theater, 214 N.MainSt., 541-416-1014 • MAD MAX:FURY ROAD (Rl6:30 • Theupstairsscreening room has limitedaccessibility.
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J0HNsoN B R0THERs A P P L I A H C E S
D6
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, MAY 21, 2015
ASK A CENTRAL OREGON HEALTH PROFESSIONAL
8
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n
n
QugsrtoNI After 7 years of suffering, I have been diagnosed with pelvic pain and my doctor wants me to go to physical therapy. What can physical therapy do for me?
ANswER:Physical therapy can help improve your quality of life and aid in restoring function by addressing any musculoskeletal JoyceSteeie is s ues that are contributing to your pelvic pain. Based on your history, exam findings BCB-PMD, PRPC and goals, a physical therapist will develop an evidence-based treatment plan that is unique to you and treats the underlying problem. Treatment may include manual therapy, trigger point release, Thiele's massage, biofeedback, modalities, posture education, bowel/bladder training and a home program for stretching/core strengthening. Pelvic pain is a common problem affecting women across their lifespan; and is one of the most common diagnoses treated by physical therapists working in women's health. At Healing Bridge Physical Therapy our pelvic physical therapist is trained in both internal and external evaluation and treatment techniques for women with pelvic pain and dysfunction. Our I:I hour long sessions provide compassionate, professional, and individualized attention i n tr e ating y o ur symptoms. Our goal is to work with you every step of the way I ®c gt[jg~Qp.t'ggc getting you back to the activities you enjoy!
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ANSWER: There are two main issues with Iow t h y roid function that typically require more attendon. First, "normal lab tests" can mean a Iot of things, and Joshua phiuips I commonly find that patients have not had a "T3 value or thyroid antibodies run on their laboratory Naturopathtz workup. These tests can be very helpful and in some Physician cases are guiding for a more effective treatment plan. Synthroid is the "T4" type of thyroid hormone which relies on the body's capacity to convert T4 to T3 (the more bio-active hormone). Many people are not good natural "converters" and would do better on a thyroid hormone product that is a blend of T4 and T3.
. pv.
.
'I n~i
The second issue is that over 90% of hypothyroidism is an auto-immune mediated condition known as "Hashimoto's". Simply put, the body produces antibodies that darnage the thyroid gland, rendering it unable to produce enough hormone. Taking thyroid hormone alone as treatment for hypothyroidism ignores this important underlying cause, and allows for continued damage to the thyroid gland over time. This usually means the need to continually increase the dose of Synthroid. A naturopathic/holistic medical approach offers rnany tools to not only correct hormone levels, but
also to address this underlying auto-immune process.
ANswER: Non-surgical treatments are
' MD" '"
be c oming more widely available for
Board Certified neCk COnCernS. UnfOrtunately, if yOur Plastic Surgeon
neck has progressed with extremely lax skin and muscle separation causing your neck to sag, surgical intervention would probably be the best option. However, if you only have moderately lose skin and adipose (fat) tissue a less invasive procedure such as a laser neck lift would restore a more youthful facial aesthetic contour. Not all lasers are as effective so a consultation with a board certified plastic surgeon will help determine which procedures will provide the best results for you.
HAWTHORN J oshua P h i l l i ps , N D Hawthorn Healing Arts Center
39 NWLouisiana Ave, Bend, OR 541-330-0334 www.HawthornCenter.com
A dam P. A n g e l e s , M . D . M edica l D i r e c t o r , B end Pl a s t i c & R e c o n s t r u c t i v e S u r g e r y
2400 NE Neff Rd., Suite B • Bend, OR97701 541-749-2282 www.bendprs.com • infoObendprs.com
•
QUKsTION:You always talk about toxicingredients, whatingredients shouldI look outfor and avoid?
Propylparaben, Methylparaben...anything ending in "paraben" Fragrance BHA (butylated hydroxyanisole) Jodopropynyl Butylcarbamate Diazolidinyl Urea Triclosan Mineral Oil Sodium Hydroxymethlglycinate
•
•
A
QUEsrioN: I found a lump in my breast? What do Ido?
M.D., FACS
ANSWER:If you find a lump in your breast contact your primary care physician or OB/GYN, who will order tests such as a mammogram, an ultrasound or a biopsy. When the results are received the course of treatment is discussed and you may be referred to a surgeon.
You should choose a physician specializing in breast care, who can educate you on the many options and treatments available to you. If you have breast cancer you have a choice in the specialists you see. The treatment of breast cancer is advancing and changing continuously so choose physicians who are well educated, interested in breast cancer and compassionate to your individual situation. Ideally your surgeon will develop a treatment plan in conjunction with the St. Charles Breast Cancer Center and you. You should thoroughly understand your options before proceeding with definitive treatment. YOUR HEALTH • YOUR CHOICE • OUR EXPERTJSE Jana M VanAmburg MD, FACS Member oftheA merican Society ofBreastSurgeons
J ana M . V a n A m b u r g , M D , F A C S •
V anAm b ur g S u r g e r y C a r e
2275 NE DoctorsDr., Bend, OR97701 S urger y C a r e a t
// Pinkerton
Answer: Implants provide better denture stability a n d re t ention particularly in the lower (mandible) jaw. Patients subjective perceptions regarding an i m p lant s u pported
ucensedoentnrist denture are a positive one and report
to having a more "natural feeling." This may translate into better occlusal awareness and biting force. There are also several studies that have proven patients with implant supported dentures will experience less bone loss. To see if you are a good candidate for an implant supported denture we offer free consultations and can go over the pros and cons involved in being a denture wearer.
F aith P i n k e r t o n , L . D .
541-410-2697 www.reviveskinservices.com
Jana
™
•
QussrtoN: What areas can be treated with
CoolSculpting? Answer:CoolSculpting is FDA approved in the United States to treat the abdomen, hips and love handles, muffin top region, and thighs. Upper arms are also treated. DualSculpting, treating two areas simultaneously with CoolSculpting is now available at The Leffel Center. Dr. Leffel is successfully using DualSculpting to freeze twice Dr. I inda J. t h e fat in half the time. Please join us at our next Leffel Cool N i ght out for complimentary consultations with Board Certified Plastic Surgeon Dr. Linda Leffel. DualSculpting successfully treats twice the fat, in half the time. The procedure is FDA cleared, safe and effective with permanent results. CoolSculpting uses controlled cooling and freezing to permanently destroy unwanted fat cells without surgery or downtime. Over I million CoolSculpting treatments have been safely performed worldwide. If you are considering CoolSculpting, please be evaluated by a Board Certified Plastic Surgeon or surgeon who has completed a residency in cosmetic surgery and body contouring. Before any office procedure you should have a consultation and exam by the treating physician, to thoroughly assess your general health and if you are a candidate for the procedure. CoolSculpting is a medical treatment and should be performed in a doctor's office. Don't settle for anyone but a plastic surgeon for CoolSculpting for the best results. For more information or q uestions please call our o ffice 541-388-3006 or visit www.LeffelCenter.com.
ConlN!ght Out May 21, 2015 at 5:30 pm
Revive Skin Services, llc 2100 NE Neff Rd ¹B • Bend
n
QUEsTIDN: What are the benefits of having implants placed for denture support?
wr
Methenamine
BEND P LASTI C SURGERY
In most cases, addressing thyroid hormone conversion issues as well as the underlying auto-immune process means that not only will Iab results look good, but you will feei better as well.
REAAAN RARTEEENTER
ANswER: The FDA is quite relaxed on the US regulations on skin care and beauty ingredients. I check all of my lotions, shampoos, make-up and other beauty and body products that I use daily at: www.EWD.org/skindeep. Most of the time you can just type in the product name and it's toxicity Shelly Hopple, LE will come up and the scientific studies that back up that information. If your product is not in their database, you can look up each ingredient. By toxic, I mean that it can interrupt the reproductive system, immune system, cause cancer or other harmful things. For a few ingredients that can be toxic to the human body, please seebelow. Also, not all organic products are created equal; some natural ingredients are still harmful or too strong for sensitive skin, Rosacea, allergy prone skin and other skin conditions. If you are unsure what your skin needs, please call to schedule your skin assessment and product analysis at 541-410-2697. It's $35 and takes 15 - 25 minutes. It's very important if you are going through cancer treatment, have allergies or an autiimmune conditions, hormonal conditions or have Rosacea or sensitive skin that you use the right products for your skin and body. Ingredients to avoid:
A
QUEsTIQN: Can you help me? My son says that I have a 'turkey neck' and the worst thing is that my husband subtly agrees. Now that heisin the dog house, I'd like to ask you if there is any non surgical treatment that may help me?
QUESTION: I have hypothyroidism and have been on Synthroid for years. I'm told that my lab results look ftne, but I still continue to struggle with weight, energy levels, and depression. Is there anytliing elseI can do?
Joyce Steele, PT, CEEAA, BCB-PMD, PRPC 404 NE PennAve, Bend, OR 541-318-7041 www.Healing Bridge.com
•
541-323-2790 Offices in Bend a Redmond www.vanamburgsur gery.com
v ise DESERT Hig h D e s e r t M o b i l e D e n t u r e s
tncgyjle
dentureS
STSSS S. NssrSr, Ssits R, Rssd, OR 541-408-4025 www.hdmdentures.com
L EFF E L C EN T E R
Dr. Linda J. Leffel, MD 1715 SWChandler Ave. ¹100 Bend, OR97702
G O S M E T I C , BR E A S T A ND L A S E R S U R GE R Y
541-388-3006 www.leffelcenter.com
Ask one of oul Hea lth Professionals on the following
categories
Dentistry • Urology • Eye Care • Plastic Surgery • General and Specialty Surgery Dermatology, Holistic Medicine • PhysicalTherapy • Pain Management Chiropractic • Health & Beauty Send your questions to: Ask A Health Pro fessional The Bulletin By fax: 541-385-5802 • Email: kclark@bendbulletin.com
Mail:P.O. Box 6020, Bend, Oregon 97708 My question is:
ON PAGES 3&4: COMICS & PUZZLES M The Bulletin
Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.com THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, MAY 21, 2015 •
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Ads starting as low as $10/week rivate art onl
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Call for package rates
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Packages starting at $140for28da s
Call for prices
Prices starting at $17.08 erda
Run it until it sells for $99 oru to12months
:'hours:
contact us: Place an ad: 541-385-5809
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Furniture & Appliances Furniture & Appliances
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Crafts & Hobbies
Golf Equipment
Guns, Hunting & Fishing
Computers
Misc. Items
Misc. Items
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SPRING ' CLEANING SPECIAL
shots. 541-771-0717
text 541-233-9837.
Take advantage of our specialmerchandise pricing starting at
Tiny Malti-Poos, born 3/17. Taking deposit call/text 541-467-2674 Furniture 8 Appliances
5000 series Maytag dryer, like new, 4000 series Maytag dryer, will hold 2 queen size quilts. $850. Brand new, still under warranty, Whirlpool convection 5 burner glass top stove with warming station. Has Aquolist technology. $700. 1 909 $ 2 .5 0 go l d piece, $400. 2 viles of gold nuggets, a little over a gram ea. $45. ea. Sterling silver, 24 diamond earrings, still in box, $200. 2 (set) cubic zirconia sterling silver e n g agement rings, sizes 7 and 8, $50 e a . Mi c hael 541-589-3092
Electric r ange, w /black door, cond., 541-382-6966
w h ite g ood $100
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"Ad runsuntilSOLD or up to 8 weeks (whlchever comesfirst!)
ItemPriced af: our To lAdCos on . • Under $500.....................................................................$39 • $500 to $999..... ....$49 • $1000 fo $2499.................. ..........................................$59 Over $2500.....................................................................$69 Includes: 2" in length, with border, full color photo, bold headline and price.
The Bulletin Serving Central Oregon since 1903
541-385-5809
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St. Bernard puppies, 6 wks., $500 ea. Call or
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Two V i king s e wingALL C LUBS R I GHT /quilting m a c hines H AND F R FL E X , with extras. Very good GRAPHITE. 2015 HOH'IISTHIS T i caution when purcondition. $700 each m int T / M spe e d chasing products or I Call 541 - 706-0448 blades, 6-SW, 7 pcs., services from out of I eves or weekends. $440. Call a way DO YOU HAVE FUTON (dbl bed) and ~ the area. Sending ~ Driver, x2hot, 12-15, SOMETHING TO chair (twin bed) origi- ' cash, checks, o r ' 241 202 a djustable-h.c p l us SELL nally purchased from i credit i n f ormation tool, $140. Callaway FOR $500 OR Bicycles & Want to Buy or Rent may be subjected to Rising Star. $600 for Titanium five wood, LESS? Accessories i FRAUD. For more both. 541-815-0395 $100. Mizuno J PX Non-commercial WANTEDwood dressinformation about an ~ wedges 54-60, $80 advertisers may ers; dead washers 8 G ENERATE SOM E advertiser, you may I ea. All c l ubs o bo. place an ad dryers. 541-420-5640 EXCITEMENT in your I call t h e Ore g onI 951-454-2561 with our neighborhood! Plan a ' State Atto r ney ' "QUICK CASH 208 garage sale and don't i General's O f fi ce CHECK yOURAD SPECIAL" Pets & Supplies forget to advertise in Consumer Protec- • 1 week3lines 12 classified! tion h o t line a t i RANS Wave recumor 541-385-5809. i 1-877-877-9392. The Bulletin recom~e e eke 2 N bent. 60" WB, older Ad must mends extra caution Hide-a-bed couch, blue, t TheBulletin > model some wear on include price of when purc has- queen sz., good cond. Seo iott Central Oregon sincefaea frame. W e l l mainel e ke oi keee ing products or seron the first day it runs ~ $125/obo. tained. New: c hain or less, or multiple vices from out of the sure it ise cor541-419-9422 r ings, t i res, s e a t to make e 212 items whose total area. Sending cash, cushion. Cateye Velo rect. Spellcheck and does not exceed checks, or credit inhuman errors do ocAntiques & 7 computer/odometer. $500. f ormation may be cur. If this happens to $350 541-504-5224 Collectibles subjected to fraud. your ad, please conCall Classifieds at For more i nformatact us ASAP so that The Bulletin reserves 541-385-5809 tion about an advercorrections and any the right to publish all www.bendbulletin.com tiser, you may call adjustments can be ads from The Bulletin King bedroom set the O regon State made to your ad. newspaper onto The 6 piece solid cherry; 541-385-5809 Attorney General's Remington 11-87, 12 Bulletin Internet webheadboard footOffice C o n sumer The Bulletin Classified ga. 3" semi auto, 20" site. board, side rails, 27" ROCKY M O U NTS Protection hotline at barrel, $650. PTR 91, TV armoire, bed side R4 bike 246 1-877-877-9392. semi auto 308, $900. The Bulletin telescoping chest w/drawers, rack. Carries single, Sesvttttt Ceotral Oregonstoce Sata 541-550-7189 Guns, Hunting king mattress/box tandem or recumbent The Bulletin & Fishing Serving Central Oregonsince tats springs, top quality bikes up to 78" WB. Check out the 215 Lexington brand Pivoting, push-button classifieds online • C oins & Stamps REDUCED $1600 CASH!! axle; easy load/unCitikitty cat toilet www.bendbulletirbcom For Guns, Ammo & obo. Call or text load. Fits Thule and training kit. $20. Private collector buying Updated daily 435-770-8079 Reloading Supplies. Yakima crossbars. 54'I -388-1533 postagestamp albums & 541-408-6900. Sunriver Used twice. $250. TZ-75 series 88 semi collections, world-wide Deposit c a n s/bottles 541-504-5224. Compound Bow w ith auto dbl action pistol. and U.S. 573-286-4343 needed for local all 15 round clip, like (local, cell phone). case, practice and volunteer, non-profit 242 hunting arrows, like n ew, 20 b oxes o f cat rescue. Donate at Exercise Equipment ammo, $550. 240 new, $240. Jake's Diner, Hwy 20 541-279-0458 541-233-6520 • Crafts & Hobbies E , Bend; Petco i n Pre-core EFX 5.17 elWANTED: Collector R edmond; Smi t h liptical fitness cross DEER RIFLE 2 5 -06 seeks high quality fishCOMPLETE POT- trainer. Sign, 1515 NE 2nd, R emington Mo d e l Excellent conPATIO TABLE TERY SET UP - Initems & upscale fly Bend; CRAFT in Tu700, very good condi- ing dition. $899. 54" Tropitone table cludes Skutt kiln, two malo. Can pick up Ig. tion, $ 7 75 . ELK rods. 541-678-5753, or 4 chairs, tilt wheels, clays, glazes, 360-921-4408 503-351-2746 amounts. 389-8420. R IFLE, 300 W S M awning, $350. small library shelves, P reCor Model 9 . 3 3 Nosler custom rifle, www.craftcats.org 541-382-6664 scales, heat e rs, T readmill, $25 0 0 . matching l o o phold QueenslandHeelers tables, booth and too Model s cope, l i k e ne w , Standard & Mini, $150 Washer/dryer Combo much to list. $2,500 or Vectra VFT-100 Multi-station $ 3750. Located i n & up. 541-280-1537 best offer. C ontact for RV or small weight mach i ne, Redmond. www.rightwayranch.wor unit Rodney at $2000. Very little use. 503-550-0100. Please a partment. $50 0 . 541-728-0604 dpress.com 541-382-6664 541-460-1853 leave message. Scoop free litter box, $75 OBO. 541-388-1533
Scottie puppies ready now, mom and dad on site, AKC p a pers,
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The Bulletin recommends extra '
Find exactly what you are looking for in the CLASSIFIEDS
• B e gd ~ o
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your ad will also appear in: The Bvlletin, Central Oregon Marketplace
• The Central Oregon Nickel Ads • bendbulletinccom
Some restrictions app/y
'Pdvate party merchandise only - excludes pets & livestock, autos, R vs, mororcycles, boats, airplanes, and garage sale categories.
T HE B U LLETIN
r e - How to avoid scam quires computer adand fraud attempts vertisers with multiple YBe aware of internaad schedules or those tional fraud. Deal loselling multiple syscally whenever postems/ software, to disclose the name of the Y sible. Watch for buyers TRAEGER TEXAS business or the term who ELITE GRILL offer more than "dealer" in their ads. asking price and Like new, 646 sq. Private party advertis- your inch grilling area, who ask to have ers are defined as money wired or bronze color, comthose who sell one handed back to them. piete with c o ver, computer. Fake cashier checks digital t h e rmostat and cookbook. 257 and money orders are common. $695! Musical Instruments PNever give out per541-480-7837 sonal financial inforThe Drum & Guitar mation. Shop nowopen! Wanted- paying cash v'Trustyour instincts 63830 NE Clausen for Hi-fi audio & stuand be wary of Rd., Suite 103, Bend dio equip. Mclntosh, someone using an 541-382-2884 JBL, Marantz, Dyescrow service or Heathkit, Sanagent to pick up your naco, Need to get an sui, Carver, NAD, etc. merchandise. ad in ASAP? Call 541-261-1808 You can place it The Bulletin WHEN YOU SEE THIS Serving Ceotcat Oreitoosince ieea online at: www.bendbulletin.com Infrared Sauna, 220-V hook-up, no building, orePixatBendbjletin.cojn $3000 value, asking M On a classified ad 541 e385-5809 $1000. 541-536-7790 go to 260 Rainbow play structure www.bendbulletin.com to view additional Misc. Items - super sized castle, photos of the item. $4000 new, needs Buying Diamonds some care, you haul, Call The Bulletin At /Gold for Cash $800. 541-815-2505. 541-385-5809 Saxon's Fine Jewelers Place Your Ad Or E-Mail 541-389-6655 BULLETINCLASSIFIEOS At: www.bendbulletin.com Search the area's most BUYING Lionel/American Flyer comprehensive listing of classified advertising... trains, accessories. 541-408-2191. real estate to automotive, merchandise to sporting BUYING & SE LLING astsi estat Bulletin Classifieds All gold jewelry, silver goods. appear every day in the and gold coins, bars, print or on line. Winegard Carryout auto rounds, wedding sets, portable satellite anCall 541-385-5809 class rings, sterling silver, coin collect, vin- www.bendbulletin.com tenna with a t tachment $ 4 0 0 obo tage watches, dental 5 41-588-0068 cel l Bulletin gold. Bill Fl e ming, The SereagCcafcel Oregonsince teea 541-549-4834 home 541-382-9419.
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Estate Sales
Estate Sales
Fundraiser Sales
Sales Northeast Bend
ESTATE SALE - 60 yrs. MOVING SALE. Moved 4th Annual S isters Moving Sale, someof assorted furniture, out of state. 107 NW Kiwanis An t i que thing for e veryone. dishes, clothing, etc. DRAKE RD. Beauti- Collectible & Bling Fri. 8 S a t . 9 -4:30. F ri. 9-4, S at . 9 - 2 . f ul q u ality, n a m e Sale Sat. only, May 1350 NE Noe (turn off 1239 NE 8th St., Bend brand furn i ture, 23, 8-3. Sisters Fire B utler M a rket o n framed art, ornate mir- Hall, 301 So. Elm. Sandy) ESTATE SALE — Sat. & ror, large area rug 8 1920s armoire, large 292 runners. Men & custom-built l i ghted Sun. (23rd 8 24th) + d e s igner dollhouse, spectacu- Sales Other Areas 40yrs accumulation, women's electric recliner/lifting clothing & shoes in- lar! Victorola, Eyerly chair, full size electric cluding Nike & Dak- prints, garden col- Huge Sale - Sat. & Sun, Vin t age, 9-4, 26324 Metolius adjustable Bed — both ine sports c lothing lectibles. cyc l ing). fine, costume & eth- Meadow, Camp Shin g r ea t sh a p e. (lots o f e q u ipment, nic jewelry O dealer erman. Ca m ping, Newer Kenm o re Sports W asher & Dry e r , backpacks, E l ectra prices! Call Karen at fishing, RV, h iking, 541-480-1412. tools, skis, c ollectsmall chest freezer, bike, new ski bag, golf ables, quilts, etc. misc. furniture, large travel bag. Many exceptional c h ildren's selection of old books, USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! Support Robotics in books 8 toys. Quality collectables, dishes/ Sisters! Adult/ kid pans, art work, some baby items i nclude Door-to-door selling with books, toys, furniture, tools. Go to Terreb- changing tables, high fast results! It's the easiest etc. 66510 Pondeonne and turn East on chair, car seat, diaper rosa Lp, off Gist Rd. oCe Street & f o l low genie, clothing. Some way in the world to sell. 541-420-2886. 5/23 signs.9am —5pm both Play Station equip7-2. ment, classic DVD The Bulletin Classified days. CASH ONLY. sets. Kitchen items & 541-385-5809 Thank God we're movappliances, two miing Sale! F ri.-Sun., MOVING SALE crowaves, one 8am-7pm. Lots of Bob & Maryann 282 dorm/RV sized, cryshorse tack, furniture, Barnett tal, C uisinart w i ne Sales Northwest Bend antiques, household, given by Farmhouse cooler & new food huge sale. 15291 SW Estate Sa/es processor. Some an- 19147 NW Park ComHwy 97, Culver Friday - Saturday, 9-4, tiques & collectibles, m ons D r . Mi s c . 301 NW Helmholtz Roseville, Hull, etc. house/tools/garden/ NOTICE Redmond, OR Tools for bike 8 work fishing items. Fri. & Remember to remove bench. Much, much Sat. 8-12 Entire content of home your Garage Sale signs a nd s h op , w o o d more. Thursday, May (nails, staples, etc.) workers dream sale. 21 through Saturday Family garage sale, after your Sale event Numerous wood May 23 — 8:30 to??. household items, exis over! THANKS! eq u ipment, From The Bulletin working power tools, Saturday 9:00 — 1:00 ercise Parking is l i m ited, chicken coop, l o ts household items, furand your local utility niture an d c o l lect- please obey posted more. Sat 10-3. 2356 companies. street signs and be NW Great Pl. ables. To much to list. courteous to n eighThe Bulletin See pix and descrip- bors. No earlybirds Sesviott Central Oregonsloce tatta 284 tions at www.farmplease!! houseestatesales. com Sales Southwest Bend www.bendbulletin.com Just bought a new boat? MOVING SALE Fri. & Sell your old one in the M It'-f m'I sale- G eat PeopleLookforlnfo™ation About Products and Sat 5/22, 5/23 8 a.m. classifieds! Ask about our condltlon '& e clecitc 60903 Zircon Drive. Super Seller rates! items, 19915 Porcu- ServicesEveryoaythroUgh Household, truck tires. The Bvlletin Classiffeds 541-385-5809 pine Dr. Fri.-Sat. 9-2.
E2 THURSDAY, MAY 21, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
541-385-5809 or go to www.bendbulletin.com
AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES Monday • • • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri • Tuesday.••• • • • .Noon Mon. Wednesday •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Tues. Thursday • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Wed. Friday. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate.. . . . . . . . . . 1 1 :00 am Fri.
Saturday • • • Sunday. • • • •
• . 3:00pm Fri. • • 5:00 pm Fri • Place a photo inyourprivate party ad foronly$15.00par week.
PRIVATE PARTY RATES Starting at 3 lines
*UNDER '500in total merchandise
OVER '500 in total merchandise
7 days.................................................. $10.00 14 days................................................ $16.00
Garage Sale Special
4 days.................................................. $18.50 7 days.................................................. $24.00 14 days .................................................$33.50 28 days .................................................$61.50
4 lines for 4 days ................................. $20.00
lcall for commercial line ad rates)
*llllust state prices in ad
A Payment Drop Box is available at CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN (*) REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin The Bulletin bendbulletin.com reserves the right to reject any ad at any time. ls located at: 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, Oregon 97702
MX
PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Classified ads running 7 or moredays will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday. 261
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Gardening Supplies • Horses & Equipment & Equipment
Medical Equipment
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+ Peat Mixes + Juniper Ties Tempur-pedic twin + Paver Discounts electric bed & remote. + Sand + Gravel Top mattress has a + Bark water-proof mattress Inatantlandscaping.com l cover. $500. Hoyer Classic Lift with sling. Will lift up to 400 lbs. Weed blocker, $125. 4 wheel 12' x 50' roll, $20. Scooter. New batter541-388-1533 ies purchased April 2 015, charger i n 270 cluded. SOLD! Lost & Found 541-317-1188
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Deluxe showman 3-horse trailer Silverado 2001 29'x8' 5th wheel with semi living quarters, lots of extras. Beautiful condition. $21,900 OBO 541-420-3277
Call a Pro
Whether you need a fencefixed,hedges 266 Border Collie lost eastside Bend on May 6, trimmed or a house Building Illaterials her name is Sunny, built, you'll find chipped, wearing red REDMOND Habitat collar. We want her professional help in RESTORE Building Supply Resale back so bad! Please The Bulletin's "Call a help. 541-948-4785. Quality at LOW PRICES FOUND: Pocket knife in Service Professional" 1242 S. Hwy 97 Directory DRW, describe it to 541-548-1406 claim it. 541-389-0185 541.385.5809 Open to the public. Lost 2 dogs on May 11th, West of Lake Heating & Stoves Billy Chinook. 1st dog, white, 50 Ibs, long tail, NOTICE TO spotty ears; 2nd dog, ADVERTISER German Short Hair Since September 29, Pointer, 72 Ibs, very 1991, advertising for shy. Reward, Call Bob used woodstoves has 541-420-0154. been limited to models which have been certified by the Oregon Department of REllllEMBER:If you Environmental Qualhave lost an animal, ity (DEQ) and the feddon't forget to check eral E n v ironmental The Humane Society Protection A g ency Bend (EPA) as having met 541-382-3537 smoke emission stanRedmond dards. A cer t ified 541-923-0882 woodstove may be Madras identified by its certifi541-475-6889 cation label, which is Prineville permanently attached 541-447-7178 to the stove. The Bulor Craft Cats letin will not k now541-389-8420. ingly accept advertising for the sale of uncertified woodstoves. 266
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Fuel & Wood
WHEN BUYING FIREWOOD... To avoid fraud, The Bulletin recommends payment for Firewood only upon delivery and inspection. • A cord is 128 cu. ft. 4' x 4' x 8' • Receipts should include name, phone, price and kind of wood purchased. • Firewood ads MUST include
species & cost per
cord to better serve our customers.
The Bulletin All year Dependable Firewood: Seasoned; Lodgepole, split, del, B end, 1 f o r $ 1 9 5 or 2 cords for $365. Illlulti-cord discounts! 541-420-3484.
C.O. mixed wood, semi-dry, split, delivered in Bend. 2 for $270. Cash, check, Visa/MC accepted.
CAUTION: Ads published in "Employment O p portunities" 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 out-of-state. We suggest you call the State of Oregon Consumer Hotline at 1-503-378-4320
For Equal Opportunity Laws contact Oregon Bureau of Labor & I n dustry, Civil Rights Division, 971-673- 0764.
The BuIletin 541-385-5809 421
Schools & Training HTR Truck School REDMOND CAMPUS Our Grads Get Jobs! 1-888-438-2235 WWW.11TR.EDU
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Duck Delivery ProWlldland D evelopment D i Looking for your next duce has immediate Flreflghters rector in local nonemployee? openings for e ner- To fight forest fires must profit. Responsible Place a Bulletin help getic and motivated be 18yrs old & Drug for all resource deLocal C and B class free! Apply 9am-3pm wanted ad today and velopment and rereach over 60,000 Delivery Drivers! (ExMon-Thurs. Bring two readers each week. lated marketing; inperience Required) forms of ID fill out dividual, corporate/ We offer competitive Your classified ad Federal 1-9 form. workplace, sponsorwill also appear on c ompensation a n d No ID = No Application ships, grants and bendbulletin.com benefits inc l uding which currently planned giving. Remedical/dental. quires B a chelor's C ompensation: $ 1 3 receives over 1.5 degree and experimillion page views per hour C Class / ence in n on-profit $15 per hour B Class every month at fund raising, mar- Qualifications: 2 yrs. no extra cost. PatRick Corp. keting or communiBulletin Classifieds or 50,000 miles verifi1199 NE Hemlock, cations, or s a les. able experience drivGet Results! Redmond Ability to work with Call 385-5809 ing a box truck. Sat541-923-0703 EOE and inspire others or place isfactory background and meet multiple your ad on-line at check. Negative drug deadlines. Benefits. bendbulletin.com test. Ability to lift 50 Just too many Add your web address EEO. S u bmit repounds, walk for exto your ad and readcollectibles? sume & cover letter t ended periods o f ers on The Bulletin's by 5/29/15, to PO t ime, and must b e web site, www.bendThe Bulletin is your Box 5969, Bend, OR Sell them in able t o dr i v e a bulletin.com, will be 97708, i n fo@des- manual/stick-shift. The Bulletin Classifieds Employment able to click through chutesunitedway.org APPLY TODAY! Once automatically to your Marketplace you have completed 541-385-5809 website. the questionnaire, we DisbursementAgent Call C onstruction Ris k will contact you to set Get your Management firm lo- up an interview. Graphic Designer - The cated in Sunriver is Reference JOB CODE: Central O r e gonian5 41-3 8 5 - 5 8 0 9 business seeking highly moti- 2245. newspaper in Prinevvated individual to as- www.tsjobs.net/ducki lle i s s e eking a to advertise. a ROW I N G sist with construction delivery Graphic D e s igner. *Duck Delivery P rofunds disbursements. Ideal candidate will be www.bendbulletin.com Position is Full-Time. duce is an equal *op- a ble to work as a with an ad in portunity employer. Individual should have team to i m plement The Bulletin's a minimum of t wo high-quality design for "Call A Service year experience in various publications, Serving Central Oregon sincetgta Good classifiedadstell construction adminiswith a focus on adverProfessional" tration or commercial the essential facts inan tising. Must work acDirectory lending. Construction interestingManner.Write curately, Iuggle mul• e I terminology and ac- from thereadersview- not J t iple projects, a nd Hydrologist counting experience the seller's. Convertthe meet deadlines. De$49,541-$77,184 needed. Must be prosired skills but n ot Full Benefits ficient in Microsoft Ex- facts into benefits. Show mandatory, are: Professional Mgmt cel. Excellent com- the readerhowthe itemwil knowledge of Adobe Regular, Full time munication, w r i ting help them insomeway. Creative Suite, as well This position is located and or g anizational as Quark and Access This in Chiloquin. skills required. ComData Base Systems. advertising tip For more information petitive salary DOE & Must be comfortable brought to you by contact: benefit pkg. Firm is learning various softThe fOamath Tribes an EOE. e-mail to: ware programs. Good PO Box436 ali.schaal@tetra Sening Central Cregoe sincefgig w riting/verbal c o m Chiloquin, OR97624 tech.com munication ski l l s. jobs © klamathtribes.com F ull-time j ob , bu t 541-783-2219 x 113 could be p a rt-time. Looking for someHome Delivery Advisor E OE, D r u g Fr e e one who knew my The Bulletin Circulation Department is seeking Workplace, s a l ary mom (then) Ruby K, S UBA R U . a Home Delivery Advisor. This is a full-time based on experience. fall of 1967 in RedAuto -Sales position and consists of managing an adult Send cover letter, remond. I think she carrier force to ensure our customers receive Sales professional to s ume t o Ter e s a worked at Peden's. Join Central superior service. Must be able to create and Tooley, ttooley@cenShe was fun and Oregon's l a r gest perform strategic plans to meet department traloregonian.com. No sassy. Very important. new ca r de a ler objectives such as increasing market share calls please. Contact Cheri Subaru of B e nd. and penetration. Ideal candidate will be a 303-204-0332 Offering 401k, profit self-starter who can work both in the office sharing, m e d ical and in their assigned territory with minimal supervision. Early a.m. hours are necessary plan, split shifts and with company vehicle provided. Strong paid vacation. Experience or will train. customer service skills and management skills are necessary. Computer experience is 90 day $2000 guara ntee. Dress f o r required. You must pass a drug screening success. P l e ase and be able to be insured by company to drive Call 54 i -385-580 9 apply at 2060 NE vehicles. This is an entry-level position, but we to r o m ot e o u r service b elieve i n p r o moting f ro m w i thin, s o Hwy 20, Bend. See Bob or Devon. advancement within company is available to the right person. If you enjoy dealing with Building/Contracting Landscaping/Yard Care from diverse backgrounds and you are Bend Treatment Center people energetic, have great organizational skills and NOTICE: Oregon state is currently seeking a interpersonal communication skills, please law requires anyone part-time RN or LPN send your resume to: who con t racts for for e arly m o rning construction work to The Bulletin hours (5:00AM to Serving Central be licensed with the c/o Kurt Muller M-F, 10:00AM, Oregon Since 2003 Construction ContracPO Box 6020 6:00-9:00 AM SaturResidental/Commercial tors Board (CCB). An Bend, OR 97708-6020 days) with the possiactive license or e-mail resume to: Sprinkler bility of the role growmeans the contractor Activation/Repair kmuller@bendbulletin.com i ng into m o re . I f is bonded & insured. No phone calls, please. interested in learning Verify the contractor's Back Flow Testing The Bulletinis a drug-free workp/ace. EOE more about the role CCB l i c ense at Maintenance Pre-employment drug screen required. please contact us at www.hirealicensedeThatch & Aerate dlopez@bendrecovcontractor.com Spring Clean up ery.com and visit us or call 503-378-4621. •eWeekly Mowing on t h e web at The Bulletin recom- & Edging www.bendrecovery. mends checking with •Bi-Monthly & Monthly the CCB prior to concom Maintenance tracting with anyone. •Bark, Rock, Etc. Some other t rades Caregivers also req u ire addiLandsca in ~ w anted t o j o i n iVantage Top 100 Critical Access tional licenses and •Landscape certifications. our caring Construction Hospital 2011 & 2015 m emory c a r e •Water Feature Handyman Installation/Maint. c ommunity. A l l WALLOWA MEMORIAL HOSPITAL •Pavers shifts a vailable. I DO THAT! •Renovations Home/Rental repairs Must be reliable. LOCATED IN ENTERPRISE, OR Small jobs to remodels •Irrigations Installation Also needed part Honest, guaranteed •Synthetic Turf MED SURG RN FULL TIME t ime c hef. F o r work. CCB¹151573 Senior Discounts more inf o r maDennis 541-317-9768 Bonded & Insured tlon, or any 541-815-4458 Variable Shifts — Shift differential applies FIND YOUR FUTURE
The Bulletin
The Bulletin
325
Hay, Grain & Feed Wheat Straw for Sale. Also, weaner pigs. 541-546-6171
•
questions,
please call 541-385-4717
to nights and weekends CPR Certification Required
tt$$$HWI!g
Requirements include Associates degree in Accounting or comparable job experience (5+ years), 3-5 years direct bookkeeping experience, strong mathematical and problem solving skills, strong communication skills, proficiency in Microsoft Word and Excel and excellent customer service skills. Qualified candidates must be able to work independently, prioritize, maintain strict confidentiality and establish and maintain cooperative and professional work relationships. Les Schwab has a reputation of excellent customer service, with over 450 stores and 7,000 employees in the western United States. We offer competitive pay, excellent benefits, retirement and cash bonus. Please go to www.lesschwab.com to apply. No phone calls. Les Schwab isproud to be an ettuafopportunity employer.
•
HOME INTHE BULLETIN Yourfutureisjust apageaway. Whetheryou'relookingfor ahat or aplacetohangit, TheBulletin Classisied isyourbest source.
Zd pe4 Qua//eI
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Struggling with DRUGS or ALCOHOL?Addicted to PILLS? Talk to someonewho cares. Calthe l Addiction Hope&Help Linefor afree assessment. 855-978-9402 PROBLEMS with the IRS or State Taxes? Wall & Associates can settle for a fraction of whatyouowe! Results mayvary. Not asolicitation for legal services. 844-886-0875 I I I Want A Career Operating Heavy Equipment? Bulldozers, Backhoes, Excavators. Hands OnTraining! Certifications Offered. National Average
18-22hr. Lifetime Job Placement. VA Benefits Eli ible! 1-866-362-6497
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NOTICE: Oregon Landscape Contractors Law (ORS 671) requires all businesses that advertise t o pe r form Landscape ConstrucEverydaythousandsof buyersand tion which includes: sellers oigoodsandservicesdo p lanting, deck s , fences, arbors, business inthesepages.They water-features, and inknowyottcan't beatTheBuletin stallation, repair of irClassifiedSectionfor selection rigation systems to be and convenience - everyitemis l icensed w it h th e Landscape Contracjust aphonecall away. tors Board. This 4-digit TheClassifiedSectionis easy number is to be into ttse.Everyitemis categorized cluded in all advertisements which indiandeverycategoryis indexedon cate the business has the ssction'front s page. a bond, insurance and Whetheryouarelookingfor ahome workers compensaor needaservice,yourfutureis in tion for their employees. For your protecthe pages ofTheBulletin Classled. tion call 503-378-5909 or use our website: The Bulletin www.lcblstate.or.us to check license status LandscapingNard Care before contracting with the business. Persons doing land scape maintenance do not r equire an LC B l i -
The Bulletin
Serving Central Oregon since 1903
Accountant i Responsibilities include preparing checks, maintaining check r e gisters, r econciling account balances with vendors, processing payroll, performing b an k r e conciliation, maintaining loan a mortization schedules, updating S Corp distribution and partnership draw reports, coordinating property tax statements and preparing/distributing 1099s. Other duties include assisting with fixed asset transactions an d m a i ntaining e l ectronic records system and physical vault records.
' •
®
Heek of/Irlay 18,2015
II
Employment Opportunities
Whispering Winds Retirement is seeking a f ull time activity d ir ector. Must b e enthusiastic and e nergetic. M u s t enjoy working with seniors. Apply in p erson at 2 9 2 0 NE Conners Ave., Bend., P r e -emp loyment d ru g test required.
o~ e4
yard care, it's all here in The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory
Employment Opportunities
ActivityDirector
ACLS Required within 6 mos. We are seeking experienced operators, feed- Cascade Cleaners hiring full time (32-40 ers, graders and stackers in both our FingerTNCC, PALS Certification Preferred hours per week) dejoint and Lamination plants. If you have a good livery driver. $9.25 per work history and attendance record please Prior OB & ER Experience Preferred hour during 2 week come apply with us. training, $10.75 reguExcellent Benefit Package lar wage after training. Starting pay is commensurate with experience Must have s t rong beginning at $10.00 to $15.00 or more. We Equal Opportunity Employer customer ser v ice offer medical, dental, vision and life insurance skills, must be relithe first of the month following 60 days of emable and have an exployment. We have a profit sharing plan and cellent driving record. Visitovrweesiteat~wchcd.or orcontact vacation time is available after 6 months. Able to lift up to 40 306 LindaChilders S ~sat 426 5313 lbs. Experience preWe are a family owned wood remanufacturer Farm Equipment ferred, but will train in business for over 50 years. Learn more & Machinery the right person. Apaboutour company and the products we make ply in person at 133 at www.brightwood.com. Please respond to 60" Landpride weed this ad or if you in Central Oregon please apSW Century Dr. ¹200. cutter, 3ptto, u s ed ply in person at our main office located in the Look at: once. $1100. CRR, Madras Industrial Park. 503-936-1778 Bendhomes.com for Complete Listings of Bright Wood Corp. CASE 530 diesel trac335 Nyy Hess St Area Real Estate for Sale tor with backhoe atNfadras, OR97741 tachment, $4500. 541-389-7669. Must pass a pre-employment OII drug screen. YOUR AD WILLRECEIVECLOSETo 2,000,000 Where can you find a EXPOSURESFORONLY $1SO! helping hand? Me IfItSI+I 0 s cl fd A d v « t a n i f ra 0 o N n r p v l I a Accounting From contractors to
Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin 541-312-8746 help wanted ad 269 today and Gardening Supplies reach over 60,000 readers & Equipment each week. Your classified ad For newspaper will also delivery, call the appear on Circulation Dept. at bendbulletin.com 541-385-5800 which currently To place an ad, call receives over 541-385-5809 1.5 million page or email classifisd@bendculletin.ccm views every month at no The Bulletin extra cost. Sewing Central Oregon sincetgta Bulletin Classifieds Outdoor black mesh for Get Results! covering fruit. $20 Call 541-385-5809 obo. 541-388-1533 or place your ad S elf p ropelled l a wn on-line at mower, barely used. bendbulletin.com $40. 541-317-2890
Employment Opportunities
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Maintenance Full or Partial Service •Mowing eEdging •Pruning eWeeding Water Management
cense. CPR Property Maintenance Landscaping & Painting
CCB¹204254
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• Aeration/de-thatching • Lawn repairs • Weekly maintenance • Bark mulch Call 978-413-2487
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All About Painting Exterior, interior, deck seal, light maint. Free Estimates. CCB ¹148373 541-420-6729
10% Off exterior or interior job booked.
E4
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, MAY 21, 2015
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFED• 541-385-5809
ursilay, May 21,2015 DAILY BRIDGE CLUB Th
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Dr. Ed's day off
sa How the Across ss One of several answers appear at a toll plaza in the bottom sz Search hard BPro half of this puzzle ss Phillips-Van io Pale ss To be, to Heusen 34Podiatrist's Brutus subsidiary concerns 36 DI; so Work is N.E.A. part: sz Lead-in to girl sz Material for Abbr. work? ssHow the Across is Quarrel answers appear sz Discord on the iz Like the in the top half far left and far mynah, by of this puzzle origin right? vis-e-vis the zsLess filling bottom ss Place to brood EBStamina, 62 Something figuratively you might put s4 Mideast land drinks on zoWith 49-Across, pal!" comment upon DOWN parting 66 Like some 2Open-house 23 Some mergers, deals ol'g. for short 4s Onemight have z "Settle down Z4Transitioned to colored pencils, now" assorted paints n Begin and a brush s Cream, for wholeheartedly instance BsIt's an honor soThree Stooges 6 Biblical twin missile 4s Supplication sz Office linkup 49 See 20-Across sCertain lock sTrust zz Dress size 54 VU T "I'm outta ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE here!" L E F T J A B J O L I E T s Need for some dancers A L L YA L L MA D EMA D G IO R G I 0 O N EO F U S BSharp S AG A G I R D U P zo Big name in N B A T A J MA HA L insurance B UT T E R F L Y R A R E zi "I'm outta A MO GA E L MA D M E N here!" S OT H E B Y B A D S PO T S K E E T S H E R D E L I zz Response of empathy E AR L B I L A T E RA L S YM M E T R Y T OA zs Gridiron stat: Abbr. S T A Y A T R A G E C HA L U P A I L L W I L L az Stage award D IN E D I N D OS I DO S since 1956 S PA Y E R E N D G A M E zz TV's "This
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By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency Dr. Ed Fitch, the ophthalmologist spade, he bids two diamonds and you w ho presides over my c l ub, w a s return to two hearts. Partner then bids playing in the day's penny game. two spades. What do you say? "On his birthday, a man can take a ANSWER: Partner has a strong day off," Ed announced. hand and is trying for game despite "He's entitled," said Cy the Cynic. your weak preference. If you had an "When a woman has a birthday, she eight-point hand such as Q 7 6 4 3, takes a year off." Q 5, A 10 , 7 6 5 2 , y o u w o uld "Is that so?" growled Wendy, our cooperate. As it is, your king of clubs feminist. "Any woman could count a is probably wasted opposite partner's hand better than you just did." singleton. Pass. T he Cynic had g one d ow n a t North dealer today's six hearts. He took the ace of Both sides vtdnerable clubs, ruffed a club, drew trumps with the A-K and lost a diamond NORTH finesse to East's king. Cy won the 4k K108 d iamond return, took th e ace o f 9AQ72 spades and let the jack ride. Down OAQ one. 4AJ43 DIAMOND RUFF Cy succeeds by counting the EastWest hands. He leads a trump to dummy at Trick Three, ruffs a club and draws trumps. He finesses in diamonds, wins the diamond return, ruffs a club and ruffs a diamond. Cy then knows — if he counts to 13 — that East had two diamonds, four clubs and two trumps, hence five spades. The odds f avor a s p ade finesse against East. DAILY QUESTION
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Online subscriptions: Today's puzzle and more than 7,000 past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). Readaboutand comment on each puzzle:nytimes.com/wordplay. Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/studentcrosswords.
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the starred clues
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23
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By peter A. Collins ©2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
59 63
05/21/15
THE BULLETIN• THURSDAY, MAY 21 2015 E5
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
r
General
I*** * * * * * * * * * * * * * I I
* I * Great Supplemental Income!!
I I
IThe Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our Satur- I • day night shift and other shifts as needed. We• I currently have openings all nights of the week. I Everyone must work Saturday night. Shifts start between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and I end between 2:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m .Allpositions we are hiring for, work Saturday nights.• Starting pay is $9.25 per hour, and we pay aI g minimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shiftsg I are short (11:30 - 1:30). The work consists of I loading inserting machines or stitcher, stacking product onto pallets, bundling, cleanup and I other tasks.
I / I
I
I I
IFor qualifying employees we offer benefitsI I including life insurance, short-term & long-termI disability, 401(k), paid vacation and sick time.
II Please submit a completed application . I .
.
attention Kevin E! dred. Applications are available at The Bulletin front desk (1777 S.W. Chandler Blvd.), or an electronic application may be obtained upon request by contacting Kevin Eldred via email (keldred © bendbulletin.com).
I
I
I
No pho ne calls please. * No resumes will be accepted
.
*
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Drug test is required prior to employment. .
I
EOE.
I
The Bulletin
I
Serrrng Central oregon since fgga
I
I
L +**** * * * * * * * * * * + g Human Resources Manager The Human ResourcesManager supports the overall HR functions of Western Communications. Primary responsibilities include employee relations, benefits, payroll, safety, recruiting, tr a i ning and perf o rmance management. If you have a passion for improving the workplace and want to take Western Communications to the next level as an employer of choice, come join our team. Minimum requirements: • 5-7 years HR experience with thorough knowledge of HR functions • Experience in employment law and regulatory compliance • Bachelor's Degree in Human Resources or Business preferred • Background in employment, compensation, benefits, employee relations and training / development • Well organized and detailed-oriented with strong communication skills • Work with management to determine recruitment needs and staffing objectives • Develop recruitment programs to attract applicants, identify a n d s o u rce q u alified candidates • Recruit for key positions through interviews and sourcing • Help resolve concerns and issues between
managementand employees
• Identify, develop and implement training pro-
grams • Recommend improvements to HR policies, benefits and training programs, etc. • Local candidates strongly preferred • Experience with California laws and regulations a plus We offer benefits including paid vacation and sick time, 401(k), life insurance and limited medical, dental, vision benefits. EOE/Drug Free Workplace
If interested please submit your resume and cover letter to: Heidi Wright, CFO/HR Officer, Western Communications, Inc., PO Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708 or e-mail hwright@wescomnewspapers.com.No phone calls,please.
MAINTENANCE ELECTRICIAN
Bright Wood Corporation, a 50+ year old wood remanufacturer located in Madras, Oregon is looking fo r a mai n tenance E lectrician reporting to the Maintenance Supervisor. The shift Electrician is a key member of the Maintenance team which is responsible for repairs and maintenance for all machinery and equipment such as conveyor systems, hydraulic components, machine control, and much more. May be required to work any shifts including swing, grave, and/or weekend coverage as needed. RESPONSIBILITIES to include repair, maintain, and troubleshoot electrical and mechanical equipment such as AC motors, DC motors and servo motors, servo controllers, variable frequency drives, AC and DC control circuits, PLC communications networks, pneumatic components,hydraulic components, conveyor systems, and other interrelated process equipment. • Shall perform a variety of electrical/mechanical tests to determine exact cause of issue; • Performs unscheduled maintenance to the equipment and machinery to repair or replace defective parts; • Perform adjustments and calibration procedures on various forms of process equipment; • Perform scheduled maintenance as instructed on all equipment/machinery/facility; • Shall track labor, parts, and machine history in plant CMMS; • Make necessary temporary or permanent electrical installations, repairs, or modifications in line with plant policies; • Works with each department providing necessary support to ensure day-to-day maintenance issues are resolved. • Maintain a written log of any highlights occurring during shift coverage in conjunction with proper CMMS entries.
The position responsibilities outlined above are in no way to be construed as all encompassing. Other duties, responsibilities, and qualifications may be required and/or assigned as necessary. EDUCATION/EXPERIENCE AS SHOWN BELOW IS REQUIRED:
• Must have Oregon Electrician license, General Journeyman or Limited Manufacturing Plant Journeyman; • At least 3 years Industrial Electrical experience or equivalent combination of education and experience; • Allen-Bradley PLC and automation experience a plus; • Proven experience and ability in mechanical, electrical and electronic troubleshooting and maintenance techniques; • Must have the ability to demonstrate working knowledge of mech a nical/electrical principles/concepts; • Have the ability to read and comprehend instructions given via OEM or third party operation and/or technical/installation literature. We offer a competitive compensation plan that includes medical, dental and vision benefits; profit sharing plan; Paid vacation and holidays; Life insurance; Disability Income Protection; Flexible Spending A ccounts; E mployee Assistance Program.
Please send your resume or apply in the Personnel Department, Bright Wood Corporation, 335 NW Hess St., Madras OR 97741. Wage is DOE. Pre-employment drug testing.
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Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
Homes for Sale
HOUSEKEEPERS!
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Acreages
Boats & Accessories
Moto r homes
Hard-to-find 5-acre flat NOTICE All real estate adver- buildable corner lot tised here in is sub- located in Lake Park McMenamins ject to the Federal Estates with mature caution when purF air Housing A c t , landscaping. M L S¹ Old St. Francis chasing products or t which makes it illegal 201406959 NO!/r HIRING 17.5' Seaswirl 2002 services from out of I to advertise any pref- $135,500. Call Pam ALLEGRO 27' 2002 Wakeboard Boat Lester, Principal BroQualified app l icantsf the area. Sending 632 erence, limitation or 58k mi., 1 slide, vacaI/O 4.3L Volvo Penta, c ash, checks, o r ker, Century 21 Gold must have an open & tion use only, MichApt./Multiplex General discrimination based Country Realty, Inc. tons of extras, low hrs. flexible schedule in- / credit i n formation on race, color, reli- 541-504-1338 elin all weather tires Full wakeboard tower, cluding, days, eve- ~ may be subjected to ~ CHECK YOUR AD ion, sex, handicap, w/5000 mi., no accilight bars, Polk audio nings, weekends and FRAUD. amilial status or nadents, non-smokers, speakers throughout, holidays. W e ar e For more informa- I tional origin, or intenWorkhorse e n g i ne completely wired for looking for applicants tion about an adver- • Manufactured/ 261-A, Allison Trans., tion to make any such amps/subwoofers, unwho have previous or / tiser, you may call preferences, l i mitabackup cam e r a, Mobile Homes derwater lights, fish exp. related exp. and the Oregon State tions or discrimination. finder, 2 batteries cusheated mirrors, new I Attorney General's enjoy working in a We will not knowingly refrig. unit., exc. conList Your Home tom black paint job. busy customer ser- g Office C o n s umer g on the first day it runs accept any advertis- JandMHomes.com ditioned, well cared $12,500 541-815-2523 to make sure it is corv ice-oriented e n v i-I Protection hotline atI ing for real estate We Have Buyers for. $3 4 ,000. obo! rect. nSpellcheckn and ronment. We are also I 1-877-877-9392. is in violation of Get Top Dollar 18' Bayliner 175 Capri, 541-549-8737 Iv. msg. human errors do oc- which willing to train! We this law. All persons Available. like new, 135hp I/O, cur. If this happens to are hereby informed Financing offer opportunities for LThe Bulleting 541-548-5511 low time, Bimini top, your ad, please con- that all dwellings adadvancement and exmany extras, Karatact us ASAP so that cellent benefits for eli- Tire Tech vertised are available van trailer with swing corrections and any gible employees, in- Nelson Tire Factory is on an equal opportuneck, current registraadjustments can be cluding vision, seeking experienced :g. nity basis. The Bulletions. $8000. made to your ad. medical, chiropractic, tire techs. TIA certitin Classified 541-350-2336 Allegro 32' 2007, like 541 -385-5809 dental and so much fied a plus. Contact only 12,600 miles. The Bulletin Classified Premiere Sisters area more! Please apply Dan Elms 389-4110 1968 Cuddy 21 foot, new, Chev 8.1L with Allison 60 ranch. 228 +/- acres, online 24 / 7 at new outdrive rebuilt dual ex648 61 acres in irrigation www.mcmenamins.co W ANTED: motor, many e xtra transmission haust. Loaded! Auto-levrights, 4 legal lots of m or pick up a paper k eeper/cleaner,hous6e Houses for parts. Excellent con- eling system, 5kw gen, record. Storybook log a pplication at a n y hours a day, 2 days a d ition. $5,75 0 . power mirrors w/defrost, Rent General home, 4249 sq. ft., 3 McMenamins location. week, in a home that 541-480-1616 2 slide-outs with aw850 b edroom, 2 ba t h . Mail to 430 N. Killing- has a business. Must PUBLISHER'S nings, rear c amera, Barn, o u t buildings, sworth, Portland OR, Snowmobiles NOTICE traifer hitch, driyer door speak English to an97217 or fax: swer business phone All real estate adver- paddocks with underw/power window, cruise, 5 03-221-8749. C a l l Loving dog is essen- tising in this newspa- ground irrigation and exhaust brake, central s helters. One of a 503-952-0598 for info tial, call 541-389-2886 per is subject to the vac, satellite sys. Asking kind working ranch. o n other w ays t o $67,500. 503-781-8812 F air H o using A c t $ 2,850,000. CAL L a pply. Please n o which makes it illegal KRIS WARNER AT 19' Bayliner 1998, I/O, B ounder, 1999, 3 4 ' , 486 phone calls or emails to a d vertise "any shape, call for one slide, low mileto individual locations! Independent Positions preference, limitation 541-480-5365. MLS: 4-place enclosed Inter- great info. $8500. In Bend age, very clean, lots 201503392 Duke E.O.E. or disc r imination state snowmobile trailer 661-644-0384. of storage, $28,500. based on race, color, Warner Realty Sales Help w/ RockyMountain pkg, 541-639-9411 Landscaping religion, sex, handiRemarkable G o l den Wanted: En e r$8500. 541-379-3530 Sisters Landscaping getic kiosk sales cap, familial status, Butte home. ContemCompany has openstatus or na- porary h o m e is 860 ne e d ed marital ings in all phases of person tional origin, or an in- perched on one of the Motorcycles & Accessories immediately for the landscaping. Willing to tention to make any best lots in B end's O r e gon such train, experience wel- Central pre f erence, Westside, with a pri19' Pioneer ski boat, come. Call for appt. area. Secured lolimitation or discrimi- vate setting and 180 1983, vm tandem 541-549-3001. sisters cations, high comnation." Familial sta- degree Cas c a de Fleetwood D i scovery trailer, V8. Fun & missions paid landscape@gmail. com tus includes children Mountain View. 40' 2003, diesel, w/all fast! $5350 obo. weekly! For more under the age of 18 $599,000. CALL options - 3 slide outs, 541-815-0936. Sales Person wanted information, please living with parents or TERRY S KJERSAA satellite, 2 TV's, W/D, J for growing manufac- c all Howard a t legal cus t odians, AT 541 - 383-1426. H arley Road K i ng etc., 34,000 m iles. tured home dealer- 541-279-0982. You pregnant women, and MLS: 201 5 03641 Classic 2003, 100th FUN & FISH! Wintered in h e ated ship. Call can a ls o e m a il people securing cus- Duke Warner Realty shop. $78,995 obo. Anniversary Edition, 541-548-5511 tody of children under Stunning single level. 16,360 mi. $ 12,499 541-447-8664 tcoles©yourneigh18. This newspaper New construction in Bruce 541-647-7078 borhoodpublicawill not knowingly acfor more NW Crossing with deGarage Sales tions.com cept any advertising signer Honda Magna 750cc information. for real estate which is t hroughout. 2finishes b e d - motorcycle. 1 2 ,000 Garage Sales in violation of the law. room, 2 bath, plus miles, $3250. 2006 Smokercraft O ur r e aders a r e den/office with a pri- 541-548-3379 Sunchaser 820 Garage Sales hereby informed that vate model pontoon boat, HhK6ICC) courtyard. all dwellings adverFreightliner 1994 75HP Mercury and Find them CALL Need help fixing stuff? I l3z~axe tised in this newspa- $599,000. Custom electric trolling moSKJERSAA Call A Service Professional in per are available on TERRY tor, full canvas and Motorhome AT 541 - 383-1426. find the help you need. an equal opportunity rnany extras. Will haul small SUV The Bulletin 201 5 00992 www.bendbulletin.com basis. To complain of MLS: Stored inside or toys, and pull a Classifieds d iscrimination ca l l Duke Warner Realty $19,900 trailer! Powered by H UD t o l l-free a t Village W iestoria 541-350-5425 8.3 Cummins with 6 541-385-5809 1-800-877-0246. The Bend. C onveniently speed Allison auto toll f ree t e lephone located 2007 home, 3 trans, 2nd owner. Ads published in the 528 number for the hear- bedrooms, 4 baths, "Boats" classification Very nice! $53,000. ing i m paired is Loans & Illlortgages 2780 +/- sq. ft., must SHIPPING DEPT 541-350-4077 include: Speed, fish1-800-927-9275. Honda Shadow Sasee. $449 , 500. -LOADER ing, drift, canoe, WARNING www.johnlscott.com/5 bre, 2002, 1 100cc, house and sail boats. The Bulletin 658 The Bulletin recom1003. Pa t B a x ter, excellent condition w/ Bright Wood CorpoFor all other types of To Subscribe call mends you use cauHouses for Rent Broker 541-551-5729 extras, 13k orig. mi. ration in Madras Orwatercraft, please go 541-385-5800 or go to tion when you proJohn L Scott Realty, New battery and new egon is seeking an Redmond to Class 875. vide personal Bend front tire. $3100 obo. www.bendbulletin.com experienced forklift 541-385-5809 information to compa- Near Redmond hospi703-244-3251 driver/loader to help 747 nies offering loans or tal, remodeled single r in our growing deev . credit, especially mand. A valid driver family, 3 bdrm., 2 ba., Southwest Bend Homes those asking for adlicense is required. fenced bac k yard, Bayliner 185 2006 vance loan fees or Good a t t endance non-smoking, no pets, Sunrise Village - 2575 open bow. 2nd owner companies from out of sq. ft. home for sale and a safe driving $975. 541-389-3657 — low engine hrs. state. If you have by orig. owners, 3 record are a must. — fuel injected V6 concerns or quesbdrm/3 bath, 3 -car Starting wage DOE. Radio 8 Tower. G rand Manor b y tions, we suggest you arage, great room, Moto Guzzi B reva — Please apply in the Thor 1996, 35' very Eml &RaRs 6 89,000. To m o r 1 100 2 0 07 , onl y Great family boat consult your attorney Personnel DepartPriced to sell. good condition, 454 11,600 miles. $5,950. or call CONSUMER Sandy,541-385-7932 ment at the address FKP Ms gas engine, 50,050 206-679-4745 $11,590. HOTLINE, below. Ava i lable 541-548-0345. miles, 2 pop outs, 1-877-877-9392. benefits inc l ude new tires, $18,999. Redmond Homes 875 medical/dental/life Call 541-350-9916 BANK TURNED YOU insurance, v i s ion DOWN? Private party Watercraft and Aflac. Vacation Looking for your next loan on real esafter 6 mon t hs.. will emp/oyee? ds published in nWatate equity. Credit, no EOE. Must pass on Place a Bulletin help tercraft" include: Kay732 problem, good equity Two Twin Yamaha aks, rafts and motorsite pr e -employ- is all you need. Call ad today and Commercial/Investment wanted TW200 sto c k w i th Ized ment drug test. reach over 60,000 personal Oregon Land MortProperties for Sale fatty tires 2007 with watercrafts. readers each week. For gage 541-388-4200. 1155 miles, 2007 with "boats" please see Bright Wood Your classified ad Jayco M e lbourne 1069 miles. $3600 for Class 870. Corp. will also appear on LOCAL MONEY:Webuy 2010 29D Class C, 3 HIGH PROFILE one or $7000 for two 541-385-5809 bendbulletin.com 335 NM/Hess St. secured trustdeeds & LOCATION IN slide outs, 1 2 ,500 obo. 5 4 1 -588-0068 which currently reMadras, OR 97741 note,some hard money miles on Ford 450 DOWNTOWN cell, 541-549-4834 hm ceives over 541-475-7799 loans. Call Pat Kellev REDMOND chassis, Immaculate Serrrng Central Oregon since 7903 541-382-3099 ext.13. 1.5 million page cond., loaded, f u ll views every month body paint, c herry 880 at no extra cost. cabinets, s t a inless Truck Drf vers Motorhomes Bulletin Classifieds appliances, very Roush Industries has an immediate need for Get Results! home-like in t e rior. Class A CDL Truck Drivers in Madras, Oregon. Call 385-5809 or AutoSeek dish, two Test drive prototype trucks and give feedback place your ad on-line Yamaha V-Star 250cc This commercial TVs, Nav., CD/DVD, to the development team!! Home every day! at 2011, 3278 mi., exc. back up a n d s i de building offers exRetirees and Veterans welcome! bendbulletin.com cond. $ 4700 OBO. cameras, 500 0 l b. cellent exposure Must have valid CDL-A license. Part-time posiDan 541-550-0171. trailer hitch. $74,500. along desirable NW tions, 4 - 6 hour shifts. Driving positions are lo762 6th Street. cal to the Madras, Oregon, area. 401K benAlfa See Ya 2006 36' 541-312-8974 870 Currently housing efits offered to all employees. Homes with Acreage Excellent condition, 1 The Redmond Boats & Accessories owner, 350 Cat diesel, To apply, please send an email with resume PINNACLE 1990 Spokesman news- 2278 sq. ft. home with attached to careers©roush.com Please refer 52,000 miles, 4-dr frig, 30' motorhome, paper offices, the to nCDL Driver Madras" in your email Interwork shops on 5.41 16' 1976 Checkmate ski icemaker, gas stove, clean. Rear 2,748 sq. ft. space is views will be scheduled in Madras or If you acres. $24 9 , 900. boat, 90HP Mercury oven, wa s her/dryer, walk-around bed. perfect for owner/ meet all requirements listed above you may 151628 Hackamore, motor, restored; new non-smoker, 3 slides, No smokers, no user. Two private also apply in person at 3449 N. Anchor, PortLa Pine. High Lakes seats, new c a rpetgenerator, inv e rtor, mildew, no leaks. offices and generfloor, new prop, with land, Oregon 97217. Realty & Pr o perty leather interior, satellite, $8500. ous open spaces. trailer. Have receipts. 7'4 n ceiling. C lean! Management 541-306-7268 Three parking 541-536-0117 $2500. 541-536-1395 $72,000. 541-233-6520 Medical places in back+ 771 street parking. iVantage Top 100 Critical Access Hospital Lots $259,000. 2011 & 2015 Call Graham Dent 541-383-2444 $118,000 Wallowa Memorial Hospital Located in Golf Course Lot Enterprise, OR • Build you dream home COMPASS,~ „.„, NeelgeclllgYeergoooeaa on Greens at RedMed Surg RN Full-Time mond •Golfing community 740 •Variable Shifts - Shift differential applies to •14th fairway, 0.21 acre nights and weekends. Condo/Townhomes lot, great neighbor•CPR Certification required hood for Sale •ACLS required within 6 months. Dee Baker, Broker oTNCC, PALS Certification preferred. 541-977-7756 $170,000 Great •Prior OB 8 ER Experience. Preferred. Windermere Westside Condo •Excellent Benefits Package. •One south f a c i ng Central Oregon Real Estate condo available Equal Opportunity Employer •Completely renovated $132,000 Visit our website at wchcd.org or contact e2 Bdrm, 1 bath, 600 Eagle Crest Linda Childers © 541-426-5313 sq.ft. •0.54 acres on the 13th •P rofessionally m a n fairway at Eagle Crest aged and maintained •Tucked in between 2 Circulation Jake & Loretta The Bulletin Circulation department is lookhomes. Moorhead, ing for a District Representative to join our •Behind the gates, build Brokers 541-480-6790 Single Copy team. This is a full time, 40-hour your dream 541-480-2245 per week position. Overall focus is the repreBea Leach, Broker Windermere sentation, sales and presentation of The Bulle541-788-2274 Central Oregon tin newspaper. These apply to news rack locaWindermere Real Estate tions, hotels, special events and news dealer Central Oregon outlets. Daily responsibilities include driving a Real Estate 745 company vehicle to service a defined district, DEADLINE 173 Highland Meadow DAY Homes for Sale ensuring newspaper locations are serviced Loop, Eagle Crest. Monday, 5/25...................... ... Wed. 5i20 4 p.m. and supplied, managing newspaper counts for MLS¹ the district, building relationships with our cur- Beautifully u p graded! $99,500. Tuesday — At Home, 5126 ... ... Wed. 5/20 4 p.m. Four bedrooms, 2.5 201408782 rent news dealer locations and growing those Lynn Johns, bathrooms, 1688 sq. locations with new outlets. Position requires Tuesday, 5/26 ..................... ..... Thur. 5/21 Noon Principal Broker, ft. This home has total ownership of and accountability of all 541-408-2944 been tastefully upsingle copy elements within that district. Work Wednesday, 5/27................ ........ Fri. 5/22 Noon Central Oregon raded t h roughout. schedule will be Thursda throu h Monda Resort Realty 263,000. CALL SAM to 4:30PM with Tuesda and WednesJ AYNE BECK A T da off. Requires good communication skills, a ~ 541-480-0988 OR strong attention to detail, the ability to lift 45 Acreages PETE VAN DEUSEN pounds, flexibility of motion and the ability to AT 541 - 480-3538. multi task. Essential: Positive attitude, strong MLS: 201 5 02099Build your dream home service/team orientation, sales and problem Tuesday 5i26 .................................. Fri. 5/22 Noon here. Large corner lot Duke Warner Realty solving skills. Must be insurable to drive comin NWX. Lot sale inpany vehicle. House (structure only) cludes A R C apSend resume to: mewing@bendbulletin.com for sale in historic dis- proved plans for a 3 Applications are available at the front desk. trict, $1. 1 Bdrm, 1 bedroom, 2.5 b a th 1777 SW Chandler, Bend, OR 97702 bath. House must be home complete with No phone inquiries please. r emoved from l o t . den and family room. Buyer responsible for $199,500. CALL Serving Central Oregon since1903 all moving costs. 536 TERRY S KJERSAA NW Colorado Ave. Do AT 541 - 383-1426. Pre-employment drug testing required. not disturb t enant. MLS: 201 4 0 4816 b end b u l l e t i n . c o m EOE/Drug Free Workplace ksmccord@live.com Duke Warner Realty
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RETAIL 8 CLASSIFIED DISPLAY ADVERTISING DEADLINES
CLASSIFIED PRIVATE PARTY DEADLINES C lassIfIeds • 541-385-580 9
The Bulletin
Thc Bullctin
E6 THURSDAY, MAY 21, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
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Motorhomes
Travel Trailers
Antique & Classic Autos
Pickups
Sport Utility Vehicles
Automobiles
Automobiles
Automobiles
RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work ...
RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work ...
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You Keep The Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins!
You Keep The Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins!
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Subaru GTLegacy 2006,
BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495
BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495
Subaru Outback XT 2006, (exp. 5/24/15) VIN ¹313068 Stock ¹44631A
541-548-5254
541-548-5254
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Redmond:
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Aircraft, Parts 8 Service
Redmond:
Advertise your car! Add A Picture!
Reach thousands of readers!
Call 541 -385-5809 SELL ITI The Bulletin Classifieds The Bulletin ClassiBeds
Ford Fusion SEL2012, FordEscape 2014, 2.0L 1-4 cyl (exp. 5/24/1 5) Vin ¹117015 VIN ¹A46674.$24,888. Stock ¹44382A (exP. 5/24/15) DLR ¹366 ( e xP. 5/24/15) DLR ¹366 $15,979 or $199/mo., Ford F-1502007,
CHEI/ELLE lylALIBU 1971 57K original miles, 350 c.i., auto, stock, all original, Hi-Fi stereo $15,000 541-279-1072
Super Crewcab VIN ¹C09983. $24,888.
541-548-1448
smolichmotors.com
1/3 interest in
Columbia 400,
Financing available. 541-288-3333
Ford F-1502010,
Super crewcab, Mustang VIN ¹D80957. $27,777. Springdale 2006 26' Hard top 1985, (exp. 5/24/1 5) DLR ¹366 Illlonaco Monarch 31 ' bunkhouse, exc. 6-cylinder, auto trans, 2006, F ord V 10 , cond, 12 / p o p-out, power brakes, power miles, stored in RV garage. 28,900 steering, garaged, auto-level, 2 slides, Well cared for. Many 1/5 share in v e ry well maintained, extras. $13,500 obo. engine runs strong. queen bed 8 nice 150 HP Cessna 5 41-588-0068, c e l l , 74K mi., great condihide-a-bed sofa, 4k 150; 1973 C e s sna 541-548-1448 tion. $12,500. gen, convection mi- 541-549-4834 home 150 with L ycoming Must see! smolichmotors.com crowave, 2 TVs, tow 0-320 150 hp engine 541-598-7940 Looking for your package. c onversion, 400 0 next employee? PRICE REDUCTION! hours. TT a irframe. Place a Bulletin help $59,000. Approx. 400 hours on F ord p ickup 1 9 5 1 wanted ad today and 541-815-6319 0-timed 0-320. Han- c ustom, oak b o x . reach over 60,000 gared in nice (electric AM/FM cassette, new readers each week. door) city-owned han- brakes, 289 V-8, '67 Ram 2500SLT 2014, Your classified ad gar at the Bend Air- Mustang engine in this. will also appear on Crewcab, 12K mi. Safari 1998 motorport. One of very few Edelbrock intake and VIN bendbulletin.com ¹318372.$42,888. C-150's t h a t ha s carb CFM. 10,461 mi. home 30', low milewhich currently re(exp. 5/24/1 5) DLR ¹366 never been a trainer. on engine. $12,500. age, 300 HP Magceives over 1.5 mil$4500 wi ll consider 541-610-2406. num Cat motor with lion page views evturbo, always inside, trades for whatever. ery month at no Call J i m Fr a zee, white leather inteextra cost. Bulletin 541-410-6007 rior, like new, has Classifieds Get Rem any extr a s . sults! Call 385-5809 541-548-1448 $55,000. S e rious or place your ad smolichmotors.com callers only. on-line at 541-548-8415 bendbulletin.com Mercedes 380SL 1982 Take care of Roadster, black on black, soft 8 hard top, your investments 882 Washer/dryer Combo F35 Bonanza. Aircraft exc.cond., always gaunit for RV or small with the help from Fifth Wheels is in exc. cond., w/ raged. 155K miles, a partment. $50 0 . The Bulletin's good paint & newer $11,500. 54'I -549-6407 541-460-1853 CHECK YOUR AD interior. Full IFR. Auto "Call A Service pilot, yaw d amper, Professional" Directory engine monitor. 6485TT, 1815SMOH, 692STOH. Hangered 935 in Bend. $32,000 or Sport Utility Vehicles $16,000 for ~/~ share. on the first day it runs V W CONV. 1 9 78 Call Bob Carroll Ready to make memories! to make sure it is cor$8999 -1600cc, fuel Top-selling Winnebago 541-550-7382 rect. "Spellcheck" and classic 1978 31J, original owners, nonarcarroll9©gmail.com injected, human errors do ocVolkswagen Convertsmokers, garaged, only cur. If this happens to HANGAR FOR SALE. ible. Cobalt blue with 18,800 miles, auto-levelyour ad, please cona black convertible 30x40 end unit T ing jacks, (2) slides, uptact us ASAP so that top, cream colored hanger in Prineville. graded queen bed, bunk corrections and any interior & black dash. BMW X3 35i 2010 Dry walled, insulated, beds, micro, (3) TVs, adjustments can be Exc cond., 65K and painted. $23,500. This little beauty runs sleeps 10! Lots of stormade to your ad. and looks great and miles w/100K mile age, maintained, very Tom, 541.788.5546 541-385-5809 turns heads wherever transferable warclean!Only $67,995! Exit goes. Mi: 131,902. ranty. Very clean; tended warranty and/or fi- The Bulletin Classified Have an item to Phone 541-382-0023 loaded - cold nancing avail to qualified FOUR WINDS 2003 5th sell quick? weather pkg, prebuyers! 541-388-7179 wheel 26L, A/C, CD, mium pkg & techmicro, awning slide If it's under nology pkg. Keyless Winnebago Journey o ut, m u c h mo r e '500 you can place it in 2001 36' 2nd owner access, sunroof, $9000. 541-876-5073. navigation, satellite 300 Cat Turbo diesel, The Bulletin Allison 5-speed, 80k radio, extra snow 4.1; ' Classifieds for: tires. (Car top carmiles. Driver side VW SunBug 1 974 slide, gas stove, oven, rier not included.) '10 - 3 lines, 7 days exc. cond. Total inte2 flat screen TVs, re$22,500. rior refurbish, engine 541-915-9170 fer, generator, in'16 - 3 lines, 14 days OH, new floor pan, verter, King Dome, Freightliner custom (Private Party ads only) plus lots more! Suntow bar. Non-smoker, 5th wheel puller, r oof. C l ea n ti t l e. no pets. Clean, well sleeper cab, rebuilt $9500. 541-504-5224 maintained, $54,000 engine with 20k miles, 541-390-1472. 6.5 generator, 120 cu. 933 ft. storage boxes - one Pickups 8' long. Gets 10.9 BMM/ X3 SI 2007, mpg. All in good Low Miles - 68,500, shape. See to appre- Save money. Learn AWD, leather Inteciate (in Terrebonne to fly or build hours rior, sunroof, bluearea). $24,000 some with your own airtooth, voice comWinnebago Outlook trades considered. c raft. 1968 A e ro mand system, and 503-949-4229 2007 Class "C"31', Commander, 4 seat, too much more to list 150 HP, low time, clean, non- smoking Chevrolet Silverado here. $15, 9 00. exc. cond. Must See! full panel. $21,000 2009 1500 Crew Cab, Please call Dan at Lots of extra's, a very obo. Contact Paul at 4x4, 5.3 Itr, 6 speed 541-815-6611 541-447-5184. good buy.$47,900 auto, HD t r ailering For more info call pkg, black int, remote 541-447-9268 s tart, 68k, 24 m p g Keystone Everest 5th hwy. $25,900. Winnebago Superchief Wheel, 2004 541-382-6511 1990 27' clean, 454 Model 323P - 3 slides, C hevy, runs v e r y rear island-kitchen, CAL LW ood. good t i res, fire lace, 2 TV's, Chevy Tahoe 1995, 4 8500. 541-279-9458. CD/DI/R/VCR/Tuner Superhawk N7745G TODAY 5 dr. 4x4, auto, tow pkg, w/surround sound, A/C, Owners' Group LLC ChevyPickup 1978, leather, a/c, like new 881 custom bed, ceiling fan, Cessna 172/1 80 hp, long bed, 4x4, frame tires. reg. to 1 0/16. W/D ready, many extras. full IFR, new avionics, up restoration. 500 Travel Trailers great, very good New awning & tires. GTN 750, touchCadillac eng i ne, Runs cond., $4800 . Exc. cond. Tow vehicle screen center stack, fresh R4 transmis541-385-4790 also avail.$17,900 obo. exceptionally clean. sion w/overdrive, low Healthy engine mi., no rust, custom ,a~ ):= ~' Sk Moreplcs. 541-923-6408 reserve fund. interior and carpet, Hangared at KBDN. n ew wheels a n d Tick, Tock One share tires, You must see available, $13,000. it! $25,000 invested. Heartland Pr o wler Tick, Tock... Call 541-815-2144 2012, 29 PRKS, 33', $12,000 OBO. ...don't let time get Chevy Tahoe 2007, 541-536-3889 or like new, 2 slides-liv541-420-6215. 5.3L V-8 cyl i ng area & la r ge 925 away. Hire a closet. Large enough Utility Trailers professional out to live in, but easy to tow! 15' power awof The Bulletin's Find It in Tow Dolly, new tires, 2 ning, power hitch & sets of straps, exc. The Bulletin Clsssifieds! "Call A Service stabilizers, full s ize c ond., capable o f 541-385-5809 Professional" queen bed , l a r ge p ulling a f u l l s i z e shower, porcelain sink Directory today! pickup truck. If inter& toilet. $2 6 ,500. 541-548-1448 ested we will send 541-999-2571 smolichmotors.com pictures. $1000 obo. Laredo 31' 2006, 951-961-4590 5th wheel, fully S/C Dodge Journey Crew Keystone Spring2012, V-6, 12k mi., 1 one slide-out. 931 dale 2010 , 2 1 ' , owner Sr., $19,800. Awning. Like new, Automotive Parts, (Photo for illustration only) sleeps 6, DVD & CD 541-388-2026 hardly used. Dodge Dakota 2002, player, 60 g a llon Service & Accessories Must sell $20,000 Sport edition, 96K mi. freshwater, porceor take over paylain throne, 7 cu.ft. 1963-64 Cadillac hub- VIN ¹591986. $10,998. ments. Call fridge. Leveling hitch caps, set of 4. $199. (exp. 5/24/1 5) DLR ¹366 541-410-5649 & j acks, a wning, 541-233-3156 spare tire, lots of Thule Summit hard side storage. New cond., car top carrier. $199 only 3,000 m iles. o 408-656-1910 g $10,900. Call Rick f or m o r e inf o . 541-548-1448 932 541-633-7017 smolichmotors.com Antique & Nomad Lite, 2001, 17',
fully loaded, $7000 obo. Leave message at 541-548-4582. FIND YOUR FUTURE HOME INTHE BULLETIN
Your future is just apage away. Whetheryou're looking for a hat or aplace tohangit, The Bulletin Classified is your best source. Every daythousandsof buyers andsellers ofgoods and services dobusinessin these pages.Theyknow you can't beatThe Bulletin Classified Section for selection andconvenience - every item isjust a phone call away. The Classified Section is easy to use. Evefy item is categorizedandevery cartegofy is indexed on the section's front page. Whether youarelookingfor a home orneeda service, your future is Inthe pagesof The Bulletin Classified.
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tires, brakes a nd awning - Very clean and u nder cover. $16,900 obo. 541-536-5638 or 541-410-9299 RV CONSIGNIIIIENTS WANTED We Do the Work, You Keep the Cash! On-site credit
approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins!
Classic Autos
Estate Sale Olds Cutlass Calais 1981. 14,500 orig. miles, new transmission w/warranty new tires, battery and fluids. Factory bucket seats, console shift, Beautiful condition. Drives like new! $7900. 541-419-7449
BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond: 541-548-5254
Canopies & Campers
Canopyfor short box, lined interior, green, good locking system. excellent shape. $995. 541-389-7234.
Dodge Ram 1500 2009 4 dr., crew cab VIN ¹711891. $28,998.
(exp. 5/24/1 5) DLR ¹366
541-548-1448
smolichmotors.com
(Photo forillustration only)
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Buick Electra 225 1964Classic cruiser with rare 401CI V8. Runs good, needs interior work, 168K miles. $5,995. Donated to Equine Outreach. Call Gary 541-480-6130
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2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Dlr ¹0354 877-266-3821 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354 Dlr ¹0354 Honda Civic EX 2010, 112K miles, new tires Jeep Grand Chero- and brakes, sunroof, kee Overland 2012, $8750. 541-382-0324 4x4 V-6, all options, running boards, front Want to impress the guard, nav., air and relatives? Remodel heated leather, cusSubaru Impreza2013, Toyota Corolla 2013, tom wheels and new your home with the (exp. 5/24/1 5) (exp. 5/24/1 5) tires, only 41K miles, help of a professional Vin ¹027174 Vin ¹053527 $31,995 Stock ¹83205 from The Bulletin's Stock ¹83072 541-408-7908 $20,358 or $249/mo., $15,979 "Call A Service or $199 mo., $2600 down, 84 mo., Jeep Grand Cherokee Professional" Directory 4 .49% APR o n a p - $2000 down, 84 mo., 4 .49% APR on a pOverland Trail Rated proved credit. License proved credit. License 2014 MSRP $47,585+ Lexus RX 350 2012, and title included in title included in $1,400 options = list payment, plus dealer and Black, 47K miles. payment, plus dealer inof $48,985 4500 mi., installed options. VIN:125152. $32,995 stalled options. asking $42,000 firm. AAA Auto Source s u a aau © s U s ARu Dr. Roy: Corner of West Empire © 541-419-8184 & Hwy97 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 541-598-3750 877-266-3821 877-266-3821 aaaoregonautosource. Dlr ¹0354 Dlr ¹0354 com. DLR¹ 0225 What are you Need to get an ad looking for? in ASAP? You'll find it in Lexus 400H 2006, premium pkg., sunThe Bulletin Classifieds Fax jt te 541 322 7253 roof, hitch, heated Mercedes Benz CL leather, DVD, no ac2001, cidents, kids, smoke The Bulletin Classifieds 541 385 5809 (exp. 5/24/1 5) or pets. K eyless, Vin ¹016584 NAV, 28/31 Hybrid Stock ¹83285 M PG, exc. cond.,all TOYOTA PRIUS 2009, 4 dr, p erfect cond., records, Ca r f ax, $8,979 or $169/mo., $1800 down, 48 mo., 41,500 mi. $11,000. garaged, new tires, 4 .49% APR o n a p 541-610-6748 Reduced to$14,500. proved credit. License 541-410-1452 and title included in Toyota Venza Wagon SubaruLegacy payment, plus dealer in2009, AWD, 35K mi. LL Bean 2006, stalled options. VIN:004628 $18,995 (exp. 5/24/1 5) AAA Auto Source S UBA Ru Vin ¹203053 eusaauovrmm coM Corner of West Empire Stock ¹82770 & Hwy97 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. $16,977 or $199/mo., 541-598-3750 877-266-3821 $2600 down 84 mo at Dlr ¹0354 4 .49% APR o n a p - aaaoregonautosource. Toyota FJ Cruiser com. DLR¹ 0225 proved credit. License 2012, 64K miles. all and title included in hwy, original owner, WHEN YOU SEE THIS payment, plus dealer never been off road installed options. or accidents, tow pkg, brand new tires, S UBA Ru SUMRUOHIRND ODM very clean. $26,000. On a classified ad Mercedes Benz E 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Call or text Jeff at Class 2005, 877-266-3821 go to 541-729-4552 Dlr¹0354 www.bendbulletin.com (exp. 5/24/1 5) Vin ¹688743 to view additional Toyota Venza LE photos of the item. Stock ¹82316 Wagon 2013, Gray $11,979 or $155/mo., VIN:036682 $23,595 $ 2500 down 7 2 m o Looking for your AAA Auto Source 4 .49% APR o n ap next employee? Corner of West Empire proved credit. License Place a Bulletin help & Hwy97 and title i ncluded in (Photo for illustration only) wanted ad today and 541-598-3750 payment, plus dealer in- Subaru Outback 2014, reach over 60,000 aaaoregonautosource. stalled options. 2.5i Limited, 16K mi. readers each week. com. DLR¹ 0225 VIN ¹303724. $30,888S UBA R u Your classified ad (exp. 5/24/1 5) DLR ¹366 will also appear on 940 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. ~OMQ4 bendbulletin.com Vans 877-266-3821 which currently reDlr ¹0354 ceives over 1 5 million page views Oe Say"goodbuy" every month at 541-548-1448 no extra cost. Bulleto that unused smolichmotors.com tin Classifieds item by placing it in Get Results! Call People Lookfor Information fphoto for illustration only) The Bulletin Classifieds 385-5809 or place About Products and Dodge Grand your ad on-line at Services Every Day through Caravan 2007, bendbulletin.com The Iffflletiff Class/T/eds 5 41-385-580 9 auto, 133K mi. VIN ¹192261. $6,888. (exp. 5/24/15) DLR ¹366 Mustang 2013 candy red coupe, exc. cond., V-6, automatic, leather, 19,600 miles, $20,000. By owner. 541-390-5294 541-548-1448 smolichmotors.com
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Ford F-1502007, Super crewcab, 74K mi. VIN ¹C52685. $21,998.
(exp. 5/24/1 5) DLR ¹366
Just bought a new boat? Sell your old one in the classifieds! Ask about our Super Seller rates! 541-385-5809 975
Automobiles
ChevyNialibu 2012, (exp. 5/24/1 5) Vin ¹299392 Stock ¹44256A
Mustang Conv. 2011, 6 speed auto, pony pkg 1 500 0 mi $20,000. 541-330-2342
Scion TCcoupe 2007, (exp. 5/24/1 5)
Vin ¹198120 Stock ¹44193B
$15,979 or $189/mo., $10,379 or $149/mo., $2500 down 84 mo.
$2800 down, 60 mo., 4 .49% APR o n a p - 4 .49% APR o n a p proved credit. License proved credit. License and title included in and title i ncluded in payment, plus dealer in- payment, plus dealer installed options. stalled options.
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Show your stuff, sell your stuff. Add a PhOtO tD yOur Bulletin ClaSSified ad fOr juSt
$15 per week.
Visit www.bendbulletin.com, click on "PLACE AN AD" and follow the easy steps. All ads appear in both print and online. Please allow 24 hours for photo processing before your ad appears in print and online.
BSSl 1C S www.bendbulletin.com
TO PlaCeyOur PhOtOad, ViSit USOnline at
vnvw.bendbulletln.com or call with questions, 541-548-1448
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$ 2400 down 84 m o $14,972 or $179/mo., or $149/mo., 4 .49% APR o n ap - $2500 down, 84 mo., $11,999 $2800 down, 72 mo., proved credit. License 4 .49% APR o n a p - 4 .49% APR o n a p and title included in proved credit. License proved credit. License payment, plus dealer in- and title i ncluded in and title included in stalled options. payment, plus dealer in- payment, plus dealer stalled options. installed options.
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$125,000
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Legal Notices
Legal Notices
LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF BUDGET COMMITTEE MEETING
may be forfeited even if you are not convicted of any crime. To claim an interest, you must file a written Council of claim with the forleiGovernments ture counsel named below, The w r itten A public meeting of claim must be signed the Budget Comby you, sworn to unmittee of the Cender penalty of perjury tral Oregon Interbefore a notary public, overnmental and state: (a) Your ouncil, Deschutes true name; (b) The County, State of Oraddress at which you egon to discuss the will a c cept f u ture budget for the fiscal m ailings f ro m t h e year July 1, 2015 to court and forfeiture June 30, 2016 and counsel; and (3) A Supplemental Buds tatement that y o u get for 2014~]2015 have an interest in the will be held in the seized property. Your Public Works deadline for filing the Training Room, 243 claim document with E Antler Ave., Redforfeiture cou n s el mond, Oregon. The named below is 21 meeting will t a ke days from the last day place on the 4th day of publication of this of June 2015 at 3:30 notice. Where to file a p.m. The purpose of claim and for more this meeting is to i nformation: D a i na receive a n d to Vitolins, Crook County evaluate the budget District Attorney Ofdocument. fice, 300 N E T hird Street, Prineville, OR This is a pu b l ic 97754. meeting where del iberation o f th e Notice of reasons for Forfeiture: The propBudget Committee erty described below will take place. Any was seized for forfeiperson may appear ture because it: (1) at the meeting and Constitutes the prod iscuss the p r o posed p r o grams ceeds of the violation of, solicitation to viowith t h e Bu d get late, attempt to vioCommittee. A copy late, or conspiracy to of the budget may violates, the criminal be inspected or oblaws of the State of tained on or after Oregon regarding the June 11, 2015 at manufacture, distribuour A dministrative tion, or possession of O ffice located a t controlled substances 334 NE Hawthorne (ORS C hapter475); Ave, Bend Oregon and/or (2) Was used during regular busior intended for use in ness hours. committing or faciliLEGAL NOTICE tating the violation of, NOTICE OF SEIZURE solicitation to violate, FOR CIVIL attempt to violate, or FORFEITURE TO ALL conspiracy to violate POTENTIAL the criminal laws of CLAIMANTS AND TO the State of Oregon ALL UNKNOWN regarding the manuPERSONS READ THIS facture, distribution or CAREFULLY possession of c o ntrolled s u b stances If you have any inter- (ORS Chapter 475). est i n t h e s e i zed property d e s cribed IN THE MATTER OF: below, you must claim that interest or you will (1) $1,897.00 in US automatically lose that Currency, Case No interest. If you do not 15-92065 seized April file a claim for the 6, 2015 from Jennifer property, the property Christie.