Serving Central Oregon since1903 $1
THURSDAY April 23, 201 5
cure orcoor in ness?
COMINGTOMORROW
HEALTH• D5
bendbulletin.com
LOCAL• B1
TODAY'S READERBOARD
Lava Bearswin —Redmond aye st dwithBend through two innings, but the top-ranked team inClass5A cruises to an11-1 win over the Panthers.C1
esc u es
• Internal audit looks atdistrict attorney's ITsystem, performancemeasures,cashhandling
audit. About four months into his
By Claire Withycombe
in an internal audit that it
ommended in February
The Bulletin
may be time to reconsider
Four years after former Deschutes County District Attorney Patrick Flaherty switched to an independent
how the now separate IT
that the district attorney's office could work more with
computer system for his office, the county determined
Mono BasinSagegrouse
A video released bythe Islamic State shows off its miliary prowess — andexperts are alarmed. bentidulletin.cem/extras
By Tyler Leeds The Bulletin
A
new study shows that Central Oregonians understand
dimate change is affecting the planet, but residents are more aligned on what to do about it than what's driving
the change. The survey, which came out of Yale University's Project on Climate Change
By Michael Doyle
Communication, is intend-
McClatchy Washington Bureau
fornia raisin production
ed to provide the first-ever detailed look at climate change public opinion on the county level. The results are based on
might be in jeopardy following a heated Su-
from across the country
preme Court argument
and a model that predicts
Wednesday. With a blend of skeptical
opinions based on demographic characteristics.
questions and scornful
One of the academics involved in the study, Peter
WASHINGTON — A
decades-old program for managing surplus Cali-
asides, conservative justices in particular voiced doubts about the program,
which can require raisin handlers to set aside a portion of the crop for a
reserve. By keeping some raisins off the free market, the program is supposed to stabilize prices. "Central planning was thought to work very well in 1937," Justice Antonin Scalia said, "and Russia tried it for a long time." See Raisins /A4
13,000 survey responses
Howe, an assistant professor at Utah State University,
• Obama
was recently in Bend for a sustainabili-
talks
ty conference climate ho s ted simulchange,A2 taneously at OSU-Cascades and other universities
+«~~ Partly cloudy High 57, Low27
~
Pag e B6
INDEX Business C5-6 Health Df -6 Calendar B2 Horoscope 06 Classified Ef-6 Local/State Bf-6 Comics E3-4 Obituaries B5 Crosswords E4 Sports C1-4 Dear Abby 06 TV/Movles 06
"The main reason we wanted to do this project is because decisions about
howto respond to global warming are not just hap-
relevant information about
howthe public thinks about these issues," said Howe, who teaches in Utah State's
department of environment and society. As is the case nation-
ally, a majority of Central Oregonians believe global waHI11Ilg 1s occurrlQg and
support taking steps to reduce its impacts, including designating carbon dioxide as apollutant. However, as is also
An IndependentNewspaper
Vol. 113, No. 113,
communitybelieves it to
30pages, 5 sections
be so. "The students I have
Q l/l/e userecycled newsprint
'IIIIIIIIII o
88 267 02329
has proposed expanded performance measuresand evaluating the responsibilities of its information technology department. SeeDA transition/A5
ensure certain items are in
"good order" and to serve as oversight of outgoing elected officials, according to the
Elizabeth Marino, who runs
OSU-Cascades' socialscience program and coordinated the recent conference. SeeClimate change/A5
Use offood stampson the rise in somestates By Carla K. Johnson and David Mercer
Using data from a2008-14 nationwide survey,Yale's Climate ChangeCommunication project has measured how people viewclimate change. Herearethe percentages of people in Central Oregon's three counties (compared with state andU.S. averages) who believe in global warming, who areworried about it in some fashion andwho support certain policies to address it.
Barack Obama's health
QESgNIITES g iIOOK Y
Y
J E FFFIISON OREGON Y
Y
That GLOBAL WARMINGis happening 0 0
N ATIONALLY Y
The Associated Press
CHICAGO — President care law has had a sur-
prising side effect: In some states, it appears to be enticing more Americans to
apply for food stamps, even as the economy improves. New,
Related
0
0
streamlined • Some small application grocers sys t ems consider b u i l t for the dropping h e a lth care
0
SNAP,O1
... and that it isCAUSEDmostly by humanactivities
50/o 42/o 55% 51% 48/o
ove r haul are
makingit easier for people to enroll in government benefit programs, including insurance coverage and food stamps. In most affected states,
... and areWORRIEDabout it
54% 47/o 61/o 57% 52%
the enrollment increases were not huge, ranging from I percent to 6 percent over two years, according to an Associated Press
analysis. SeeFood stamps/A5
... and areworried it will harm FUTUREGENERATIONS
66/o 60/o 68/o 67/o 61/o ••l•
FundingRENE WABLEENERGY
79/o 75% 80/o 78/o 77/o Regula tingCO,asaPOLLUTANT
72% 22/o 80/o 28/o 24/o Setting strict CO,limits on existing COAL-FIREDPOWERPLANTS 0
0
0
0
Hos ital shield in event of outbreak By Melody Petersen Los Angeles Times
LOS ANGELES — The
cardiac surgeon had unknowingly spread a staph infection from the rash on
0
his hand to the hearts of at least five patients by the
time Los Angeles County health investigators learned of the outbreak.
Requiring utilities to produceat least 20%RENEWABLEPOWER
63/o 56/o 66/o 64/o 61/o
humans and if the scientific
taught reflect the data from the survey pretty well," said
HEALTH CARE SIDE EFFECT?
Gauging pudlic opinion
and we wanted to give local decision-makersmore
true nationally, locals are more divided over whether warming is caused by
The Bulletin
auditor, David Givans, rec-
around the world.
pening at the national level,
TODAY'S WEATHER
The county's internal
trict Attorney John Hummel
of county offices undergoing leadership transitions to
... but what would we do about it>
EDITOR'SCHOICE
skeptical of raisin rules
resources.
the county on information technology as well as consider implementing more measures to evaluate its performance.
term, Deschutes County Dis-
os in enra re on e wor is warmin
And a Webexclusive-
appear
departments of the DA's office and county could share
The county's audit committee reviews the operations
CLIMATE CHANGE
— The Obama administration won't list the bird that lives on the Nevada-California border as endangered.B3
Justices
I a nsi ion scl'u inize
Investigators didn't ultimately tie any deaths to the 2012 outbreak, but four
patients needed additional surgery because of the infection.
The only public mention
Enacting aCARBONTAXif revenueis refundedto every U.S.household
45% 48/o 45% 44/o44/o Source: Yale/George Mason Centerfor Climate Change Communication
David Wray/The Bulletin
Q» Weigh in: Take an excerpted version of the Yale survey at demlbulletin.cem/climate
of the case came a year later in a little-noticed
appendix to the health department's 350-page annual report. It referred only to "Hospital A." Even now, the name of the hospital
remains secret. SeeHospitals/A6
A2
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, APRIL 23, 2015
The Bulletin
NATION Ee ORLD
HOW to reaCh US
Senate aPPrOveS human traffiCking bill — TheSenateon Wednesday overwhelmingly approved astalled bill to fight human trafficking. The 99-0 vote movedthe chamber past legislation that had been delayedfor about six weeks, since Democrats withdrew their support for the bipartisan bill over ananti-abortion provision. Though not related, the fate of the trafficking bill becameentwined with the nomination of Loretta Lynch to be the next attorney general when Sen. Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the majority leader, said he would not schedule a confirmation vote until the Senate finished the trafficking bill. The Senate is scheduled to vote to moveforward on Lynch's nomination this morning.
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FrenCh terrOriSm SuSPeCt —A24-year-old Algerian computer science student suspected of planning an imminent terror attack was taken into custody in Paris over theweekend, Frenchauthorities said Wednesday. Police foundAK-47assault rifles, several handguns and ammunition in his homeand his car, along with notes on potential targets, 2,000 euros in cash, bulletproof vests and police armbands, according to the Paris prosecutor, Frangois Molins. Theauthorities said the student was suspected of involvement in the killing of a woman andwas thought to be planning to attack at least one church.
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RuSSian fOrCeS Oii the bOrder —In a sign that the tense crisis in Ukraine could soon escalate, Russia hascontinued to deploy air defense systems inside eastern Ukraine andhas built up its forces near the border, U.S.officials said on Wednesday.Western officials are not sure if the military moves arepreparations for a newRussian-backed offensive that would be intended to help the separatists to seize additional territory.
Stephen Crowley/The New York Times
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President Barack Obama delivers remarks on climate change during a visit to Everglades National Park in Florida on Wednesday. Obama commemorated the 45th Earth Day with a series of announcements on the visit.
amavisitsEver a es
to resscimatea en a By Michael D. Shear and Coral Davenport
Deewsre
New York Times News Service
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Oregon Lottery results As listed at www.oregonlottery.org and individual lottery websites
POWERBALL The numbers drawn Wednesday night are:
©
warning: "Climate change is threatening this treasure and
Standing i n f r ont o f a marsh at the entrance of the
Indian farmer'S PubliCSuiCide —Thepublic suicide ofa
rest of the world to confront
majority of voters.
farmer at a political rally on Wednesdayappeared to add momentum to the opposition to Prime Minister Narendra Modi's land policies. The farmer climbed a towering tree near the stage at the rally in Delhi, where politicians were speaking out against a newland bill, tied a noose out of a white scarf, placed it around his neckandstepped off a branch. TheAamAadmi Party organized the rally to oppose the central government's proposed legislation that would make it easier for the government and private companies to acquire land for certain industrial projects.
the effects of climate change.
Joseph Uscinski, a professor of political science at the
JaPaneSe drOne landS at Prime miniSter'S OffiCe — A
1.5-million-acre Everglades But his trip was also intended National Park, Obama com- to sharpen a political contrast memorated the 45th E arth with Republicans in ways that Day, designating a nation- he believes will help the Dema l historic landmark at t h e ocratic Party in the next presMiami home of the environidential contest, especially in mentalist Marjory Stoneman states like Florida, where the Douglas, who led efforts to impact of climate change is alrescue the vast area of grass- ready being felt. "Climate change can no es and forests. eYou can see what makes longer be denied,"Obama this unique landscape so said after seeing alligators magical," Obama told a small during a walking tour in the crowd of community leaders park. "It can't be edited out. It and Park Service employees can't be omitted from the conand guests. But he added a
small propeller-driven drone possibly tainted with radioactive cesium was discoveredWednesday on the roof of the prime minister's office, unsettling officials who said theywere reviewing anti-terrorism measures in response. Theofficials said they did not know who had flown the drone, which wasabout 2 feet wide with four propellers. The also said they did not know howlong the drone had beenonthe roof. No injuries or damagewas reported. The Japaneseprime minister, Shinzo Abe,was in Indonesia to attend anAsian-African summit meeting when the dronewas discovered.
M i a mi, said
he doubted that focusing on climate change would make much of a difference for any of the presidential candidates. "If you look at polls, what do you think the most im-
portant problem is?" Uscinski said. "The No. 1 answer is al-
ways the economy."
— From wire reports
Saudi defiancereflects limits of U.S.strategy By Eric Schmitt and Michael R. Gordon
BE 201 5 YOL YO
S60 Tj PREMIER
John Kerry and John Brennan, the director of the CIA-
New York Times News Service
the challenge has been advisWASHINGTON — S a udi ing a crucial Middle East ally Arabia's resumption of air- how to carry out a complex strikes against Houthi rebels military campaign whose rein Yemen onWednesday, only sults were starting to undercut hours after abruptly declaring larger political goals. a halt to most military operaFor now, the answer the tions, reflects the difficulty of Saudis have come up with is finding a political solution to to recast the air campaign by the crisis. It also showed the putting the onus on the Houthchallenges facing the Obama is for provoking any further administration as it increas- airstrikes and delaying any ingly relies on allies in the deal to end the fighting. "They're worried a b out Middle East. Senior Saudi officials made t heir own security. And o f clear on Wednesday that they course we've supported them had not formally declared an with their actions," Jen Psaki, end to bombing. Rather, the the White House communicaSaudi ambassador to the Unit- tions director, said Wednesed States, Adel al-Jubeir, said day on CNN, referring to the the campaign was shifting to Saudis. "But, again, we're trya new phase — one in which ing to redirect this to a politiSaudi airstrikes would be cal discussion here." more limited and come only T he a d ministration h a s in response to Houthi attacks, increasingly sought to work such as the assault against Ye- with and through allies — in meni troops in Taiz. counterterrorism operations "The decision to calm matters now rests with t hem," al-Jubeir told reporters at the
from West Africa to the Middle East — rather than put a
large number of U.S. troops Saudi Embassy here. He as- on the ground to quell crises. serted that Saudi Arabia was But the Saudi insistence on curtailing its nearly month- continuing to wield airstrikes long strategic air campaign as a cudgel, if necessary, to because it ha d o stensibly batter rebel Houthi leaders destroyed Houthi m i s siles, to the bargaining table, illusheavy weapons and aircraft trates the limitations of that that posed a threat to Saudi strategy. "Once your clients have a Arabia and the region. T he ambassador did n o t quasi-independent mi litary mention the intensifying inter- capacity, you lose some connational pressure, including trol over them," said F. Gregmedical and relief organiza- versity's Bush School of Govtions said were killing hun- ernment and Public Service. dreds of civilians. But U.S. It was unclear whether the officials and Middle Eastern Saudi stri kes represented a diplomats privately acknowl- resumption of the original opedged that was clearly a factor eration under a different name — the Saudis are now calling in the Saudi calculation. For an array of senior U.S. it "Renewal of Hope" — but it officials engaged with senior seemed clear on Wednesday Saudi officials in recent days that the fighting was not near — including Secretary of State an end.
The estimated jackpot is now $1.8 million.
U niversity o f
versation. And action can no
The estimated jackpot is now $50 million.
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Several Democratic strat-
egists said they intended to EVERGLADES N A TIONhighlight the issue of climate AL PARK, Fla. — President all of South Florida. And if we change as the 2016 campaign Barack Obama on Wednes- don't act, there may not be an progresses. The idea, the day made his first visit while Everglades as we know it." strategists said, would be to in office to the Florida EverThe message was an effort cast Republicans who avoid, glades, demanding action on to reinforce what the president question or deny the science climate change in a cr itical hopes will be a central part of of climate change as out of battleground in the 2016presi- his legacy: a sustained push to touch with both the consensus dential election. get the United States and the of experts and the views of a
from the Obama administration, to stop airstrikes that
The numbers drawn Wednesday night are:
longer be delayed."
the communities that depend on it, which includes almost
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MigiantS at Sea —On Tuesday,the International Chamberof Shipping and theEuropeanCommunity Shipowners'Associations said in a joint statement that the authorities must clamp downon people-smugglers and the root causes of the migrant flows from Africa, the Middle EastandAsia. Sea captains are obligated by international customs and laws of the sea tohelp those in distress, but they have sometimes found difficulties unloading their unwelcome human cargo, once rescued, in countries that are already coping with large numbers of illegal migrants. The statement comesjust days after a ship filled with migrants capsized, leaving hundreds dead ormissing.
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541-749-2156 20630 Grandview Drive, Bend, OR
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THURSDAY, APRIL 23, 2015 • T HE BULLETIN A 3
TART TODAY
• Discoveries, breakthroughs,trends, namesin the news— the things you needto know to start out your day
It's Thursday, April 23, the 113th day of 2015.There are 252 days left in the year.
ANNIVERSARY
HAPPENINGS
e:
Loretta LynCh —The Senate is expected to confirm Loretta Lynch today asthe next U.S. attorney general, the first female African American to hold the position.
HISTORY Highlight: In 2005, the recently created video-sharing website YouTubeuploaded its first clip. Titled "Me at the Zoo," the
video consisted of18 seconds of YouTubeco-founder Jawed Karim standing in front of an elephant enclosure at theSan Diego Zoo, commenting on the animals' "really, really, really long, uh, trunks." (Today,YouTube claims more than1 billion users and says that 300 hours of video are uploadedevery minute.) In1616, English poetand dramatist William Shakespeare, 52, died on what hasbeentraditionally regarded astheanniversary of his birth in1564. In1789, President-elect George Washington and his wife, Martha, moved into the first executive mansion, the Franklin House, in New York. In1791, the15th president of
the United States, JamesBuchanan, was born in Franklin County, Pennsylvania. In1910, former President Theodore Roosevelt delivered his famous "Man in theArena" speech at the Sorbonne in Paris. In1914, Chicago's Wrigley Field, then called Weeghman Park, hosted its first major leaguegame astheChicago Federals defeated the Kansas City Packers 9-1. In1940,about200peopledied in the Rhythm Night ClubFire in Natchez, Mississippi. In1954, Hank Aaron of the Milwaukee Braveshit the first of his 755 major-league home runs in a gameagainst the St. Louis Cardinals. (The Braves won, 7-5.) In1965, the FourTops' single "I Can't Help Myself (Sugar Pie, HoneyBunch)" was released by Motown. In 1985, the Coca-ColaCo. announced it was changing the secret flavor formula for Coke (negative public reaction forced the company to resume selling the original version). In1995, sportscaster Howard Cosell died in NewYork at age 77.
In 2007, Boris Yeltsin, the first freely elected Russian president, died in Moscowat age 76. Ten years agn: Leaders of China and Japanmet in Jakarta, Indonesia, to try to settle their
nations'worst dispute in three decades but failed to reachan agreement in the bitter feud over Tokyo's handling of its World War II atrocities. Silvio Berlusconi was sworn in as head of Italy's 60th postwar government. Five years agn: ArizonaGov. Jan Brewer signed thenation's toughest illegal immigration law, saying "decades of inaction and misguided policy" had created a"dangerous and unacceptable situation"; opponents said the lawwould encourage discrimination against Hispanics. TheCoast Guard suspended a three-day search for11 workers missing after an explosion rocked the Deepwater Horizon oil platform in the Gulf of Mexico. Oneyearagn:GeorgiaGov. Nathan Deal signed alaw allowing legally owned guns in bars without restriction and in some churches, schools and government buildings under certain circumstances.
BIRTHDAYS Actor Lee Majors is 76. Filmmaker-author Michael Moore is 61. Actress Valerie Bertinelli is 55. Actor-comedian-talk show host George Lopez is54. Rock musician Stan Frazier (Sugar Ray) is 47.Actor-writer John Lutz is 42. Actor-writer-comedian John Oliver is 38. Actor Kal Penn is 38. Popsinger Taio Cruz is 32. Actor Aaron Hill is 32. Actor Dev Patel is 25. — From wire reports
eaISaSOure einS aCe
Having made more than a million observations and many iconic images, the telescope has become, as NASA science mission chief John Grunsfeld puts it, "part of our culture."
A quarter-century in the sky The Hubble Spacetelescope has peered into the farthest reaches of the galaxy andscanned our own solar system, giving astronomers insight into the age and makeup of the universe. Some milestones along the way: April 24, 1990:
9
'92
2008: Makes the first visible-light image of a planet outside our solar system, an orb three times the size of Jupiter known as Fomalhaut b.
1995:
Launched into spaceaboard space shuttle Discovery. Within weeks, problems with the telescope's optics are apparent, yielding blurry images.
Snaps a now-iconic image of the Eagle Nebula, showing columns of cold gas incubating new stars.
' '
'
96 '
' '
December 1993: Receives corrective optics from spacewalking astronauts, allowing scientists to see sharper images.
'
'
0
:
02 '03 '0
<
1999: Gets new gyroscopes and other gear during a servicing mission to extend the telescope's life.
1998: Observes evidence that the universe is expanding at an increasing rate, possibly due to a force dubbed "dark energy."
'6
2009: Gets repairs and upgrades in one final service call before the shuttle fleet is retired.
r:
0
'1
r'
2011:
2005:
'14
12
:
2013:
Records its millionth Finds a14th moon observation. around Neptune.
Spiestwo previously- unseen moons around Pluto.
r
Sources: European Space Agency; NASA; photos from NASA
The Associated Press
By Marcia Dunn
turn should keep Hubble up un-
The Associated Press
twinkle when seen from space. ic Grunsfeld was the last per- an uncertainty of just 3percent, The telescope was named for son to lay hands on the orbiting according to the Mario Livio, CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. American astronomer Edwin observatory. He recalls giving an astrophysicist at the space — One of NASA's crowning Hubble, who in the 1920s de- Hubble sa little pat and a sa- telescope institute. glories, the Hubble Space Tele- termined that the universe is lute," and telling it, "Good travThanks to Hubble, he noted scope, marks its 25th anniver- expanding. els, Hubble." this week, astronomers now sary this week. Sky-high excitement turned know that cosmic expansion is With I million-plus observa- into bottomless agony when it Impressive stats accelera ting because ofmystetions, including those of some quickly became apparent that Hubble has traveled 3.4 bil- rious dark energy. of the farthest and oldest galax- the telescope's primary mirror lion miles, circling Earth nearly The space telescope has ies ever beheld by humanity, no had been botched during man- 137,000times and makingmore shown that the birth rate of man-made satellite has touched ufacturing, resulting in blurry than 1.2 million observations stars hit a peak in the universe as many minds or hearts as eyesight. Three years later, of more than 38,000 celestial about 10 billion years ago and Hubble. with NASA's reputation and objects, according to the Space has been deciining ever since, NASA is celebrating Friday's entire future on the line, a team Telescope Science Institute in Livio said. anniversary with ceremonies of astronauts managed to re- Baltimore. The most distant Astmnomers have published this week at the Smithsonian store Hubble's promised vision objects spotted by Hubble12,800 scientific papers based Institution and Newseum in with replacementparts. primitive galaxies — are some on data from Hubble. Some of Washington. 13 billion light-years away and the research on supernovas, or
til the 2030s.
"Hubble has become part of
Overhaulsandtuneups
date to within 400 million or so
Hubble rocketed into orbit on
administration, along with de-
the existence of super-mas-
docking adapter on the bot-
tom of the telescope. The plan was — and still is — to one day launch an unmanned rocket
to Hubble so a motor can be installed to guide the telescope toward a Pacific re-entry.
The 8-foot primary mirror is the main concern: It's expected to survive the atmospheric
plunge. That's why NASA does not want Hubble coming down,
uncontrolled, over populated areas.
exploding stars, contributed to
years of the universe's origin, a Nobel Prize in physics in 2011. NASA's science mission chief, Hubble five times, from 1993 known as the Big Bang. John Grunsfeld, a former astro- to 2009,to make improvements Hubble provides an average Future NASA's Grunsfeld said nautwho flew onthe finalthree and repairs to the 43-foot-long of 829 gigabytes of archival Hubble repair missions. observatory, about the size of data every month, according to "there's pretty high probabiliA look at Hubble's quar- a school bus. That last mission the institute. Altogether, Hub- ty" that Hubble will keep workter-century in orbit about 350 almost didn't happen: NASA ble has produced more than inguntil atleast2020. Gravityis miles above Earth: canceledit for safety reasons 100 terabytes of data. slowly lowering the telescope's in the wake of the 2003 shuttle approximately 350-mile-high Ablurrystart Columbia disaster. But public Discoveries orbit, but the good news is that A full decade in the making, uproar and changing NASA Early on, Hubble proved low solar activity is keeping the Shuttle astronauts visited
ourculture— very much,"said
On the last Hubble mission in 2009, Grunsfeld installed a
Visit Central Oregon's
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atmosphere thinner, which in
April 24, 1990, aboard space tailed crew-rescue plans just sive black holes — and found shuttle Discovery. in case, led to the flight's rein- they're located at the center of statement. By the time Atlantis
most galaxies. It also helped to
tory free of the atmosphere's blasted off on the last servicing distortion and, in some cas- mission, NASA put the investes, absorption of light. Stars, ment in Hubble at $10billion. for example, do not appear to Three-time Hubble mechan-
NASA wanted an observa-
pinpoint the age of the universe at 13.8 billion years old, by determining the current rate of
expansion of the universe with
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Are yearlyphysicalsreally necessary? By Karen Weintraub
out the annual physical, but to New York Times News Service versity of New York. improve it, Himmelstein said. "I think I take better care of He suggested making more Are yearly physicals re• ally necessary? people if I know who they are time for genuine interactionbeAn annual p hysical, and have some sense of con- tween doctor and patient and
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SRld.
offer little value and raise the
quired to stay healthy, but it is a good way to build a relationship with your physician. According to a 2012 study in BMJ Open, annual checkups don't help people avoid death, hospitalizations, worry or fu-
The solution is not to throw
4RS
•
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i •
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risk of overtreatment.
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ture appointments. In addition,
an annual physical can lead to unnecessary procedures that put a patient at risk for compli-
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•
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tions and whether their bene-
Jaenzzi.
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A4
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, APRIL 23, 2015
TODAY'S READ: END OF AN ERA
Pope Francis to visit New Orleansbarsissuelast call for smoking Cuba in September
By Campbell Robertson New York Times News Service
By Tracy Wilkinson
ington. In addition, he will meet with Obama and speak MEXICO CITY — Pope to a gathering of Catholic Francis on Wednesday con- families in Philadelphia. firmed he will travel to Cuba Both of Francis' previous Los Angeles Times
NEW ORLEANS — No one
goes to a bar here, particularly one that advertises its hours as "2 p.m. till," and expects precision about the time of day. But it was right on the stroke
before his trip to the United
two predecessors also traveled to Cuba. In the first such
States in September. His spokesman, Father
trip by a pontiff, John Paul
F ederico Lombardi, a n -
II went in 1998 for a ground-
of midnight that Frankie Maz-
zanti, 56, one of the owners of the low-ceilinged neighborhood joint called 45 Tchoup, went along the bar picking up ashtrays and tossing them in a plastic bag. "All right guys, put 'em out," he said. "Sorry, it's over."
breaking meeting with Fidel Castro that is largely credinvitations of Cuban gov- ited with the beginnings of ernment officials and the is- slightly more freedom for the land's Roman Catholic bish- island's Catholics. ops to visit. Benedict XVI followed in Francis' decision comes at 2012, when he saw Fidel's a time of a historic renewal successor, brother Raul Casof diplomatic ties between tro, and offered an important the United States and Cuba boost to Cardinal Jaime Orteafter more than half a cen- ga, who was also engaged in tury, a breakthrough for a form of rapprochement with which the pope has received the Communist government. much credit. Adding Cuba Benedict at the time reiterto the itinerary seals that ac- ated long-standing Vatican complishment, in which he positions - condemning served as a bridge between both Marxism and the U.S. the two erstwhile enemies. embargo against Cuba — but As the Los Angeles Times he recognized the beginreported inDecember after nings of change. "It must be said with joy Presidents Barack Obama and Raul Castro announced that in Cuba, steps have been nounced at the Vatican that Francis had accepted the
MAR>
Just after midnight, it be-
came illegal to smoke in bars in New Orleans. Last call for cigarettes went out across the
city: at the hazy Bud Rip's bar in the Bywater; among the ci-
gar-smoking crowd in the leopard print chairs at the French 75 bar in the French Quarter; at the Kingpin, where the bar-
William Widmer/The New York Times
tenders handed out Nicorette Customers at the Kingpin, a New Orleans bar that invited patrons to participate in smoking-related gum; and at 45 Tchoup, where contests before a ban went into effect late Tuesday night. Just after midnight, it became illegal to smoke had settled in so heavily smoke in bars in NewOrleans, prompting a mix of cheers, lamentations and resigned shrugs. that it began to form something like an Alpine cloud bank. "This is one of the smoki- ing smoking on Ash Wednes- principle in an attempt to derail shifts at 2 a.m. and head for the est bars in town," said Steve day this year. a policy meant to protect their local dive to drink, smoke and Zweibaum, 57, the owner of a But in l a t e f a ll , L aToya workers'? forget the day. "It's exploiting people who "Think about all the chefs jazz venue nearby who, while Cantrell, a City Council memsmoking a cigarette, spoke of ber, introduced a concrete pro- have the least access to health getting off work and going to how he had quit smoking long posal against smoking. After care," said Bethany Bultman, bars like the Chart Room," said ago. "I know a bunch of peo- multiple revisions, the coun- the president of the New Or- Chris Hannah, a bartender at plewho don'tcome in here be- cil unanimously approved a leans Musicians' Clinic and French 75 and a nonsmoker, cause of the smoke," he said, smoking ban ordinance sever- Assistance Foundation, which referring to a late-night bar in listing names. "Maybe they'll al months later, but not before provides health services to per- the French Quarter. "The Chart come back." heated discussion over public formers in the city. Room without smoking, that's New Orleans is late to ban- health and lost revenues, and The l et-the-market-decide pathetic." ning smoking in bars, but it is what all this meant for the iden- arguments falter, Bultman said, Still, while some are celenot the last U.S. holdout. tity of New Orleans. once you consider that this is a bratingthe ban and othersare Las Vegas, Philadelphia and Was this a case of regulat- town of musicians living from suing over it, most are taking it several other large cities have ing the joie de vivre out of a paycheck to paycheck, and with little more than a resigned not totally banned smoking in city where permissiveness is that they are not in a position to shrug. At 45 Tchoup, Mazzanti bars, according to a count kept a founding principle, turning turn down a job over a venue's spoke of finally giving the ceilby the American Nonsmokers' New Orleans into Orlando or smoking policy. ing a new paint job. Marcus "I never liked to play smoky Brown, a 32-year-old sculptor, Rights Foundation. But New Atlanta? Actually, neither OrOrleans, home of bars that lando nor Atlanta has a total clubs," said Raymond Wil- criticized the City Council for never dose and beers ordered ban on smoking in bars. liams, who plays trumpet for infringing on the city's freedom "It's that overall bohemian the Hot 8 Brass Band. "But but concluded that he would to go,was one ofthose places where people assumed a smok- kind of free spirit that we have when I was young, I never re- keep coming here anyway. ingban would never fly. in New Orleans that makes it so ally thought about the health As thenightended,MazzanStill, a gradual move away unique, and it's whypeople love impacts." ti gave the plastic bag full of from smoking had already be- it," said Shelly Waguespack, There are musicians like ashtrays to Willie Brown, 59, gun. Louisiana state law had the owner of Pat O'Briens, a Williams, as well as waiters a regular. He planned to send banned smoking in restau- French Quarter staple and one and bartenders and others, the ashtrays to a friend who rants, and quite a few bars and of a group ofbusinesses joining who have long looked forward owns a cafe in a little town in dubs here had voluntarily for- the city's sole casino, Harrah's, to the day when they would not Mississippi. "It's still legal out there," bidden smoking, including the in suing over the ban. have to spend their work hours well-known Maple Leaf Bar, Or were business interests inhaling smoke. But there are he said, as the haze began to which, fittingly, stopped allow- wielding some vague romantic also those who finish their dissipate.
the thaw in relations, Fran-
taken to enable the church to carry out her essential mis-
cis had worked behind the scenes, steering complex negotiations between representatives of the two govern-
sion of expressing her faith openly and publicly," Benedict said in Havana.
"Nonetheless, this must
ments and then overseeing the final talks in Rome in
continue forward, and I wish
October. "Today we are all happy because we have seen how two peoples, who were far apart for many years, yesterday took a step to get closer," Francissaid after the presi-
to encourage the country's government authorities to strengthen what has already
been achieved and advance along this path of genuine service to the true good of
Cuban society as a whole." Mario Paredes, an expert
dents' announcement.
The first pontiff f r om
on the church in Latin America with the American Bible
the Americas, Francis, an Argentine and a Jesuit, is
Society, said Francis' deci-
scheduled to begin a threecity tour of the United States on Sept. 23. His agenda includes speeches at the Unit-
sion to travel to Cuba was
ed Nations in New York and
role the Cuban Revolution played in the region.
in keeping with his commitment to helping Latin America come to terms with the
before Congress in Wash-
'
(
r
Raisins
industry development" and "it
r
Jr. and Justice Samuel Alito
likewise grimaced at the setaside program, which is part of the overall California rai-
wants the Agriculture Department to initiate the "rule-mak-
sin-marketing order. "Could the g overnment
ing" that could eventually result in eliminating the reserve
say to a manufacturer of cell-
program.
phones, 'You can sell cellphones. However, every fifth one you have to give to us'?'" Alito asked. "Or a manufacturerofcars,'You can sellcars
sibleness of a program is really not for us to decide," noted V
the United States?'" Deputy Solicitor G eneral
Edwin Kneedler called the circumstances "very different," but the overall tone of the
hourlong oral argument appeared most favorable to Kerman, California-based raisin
producer Marvin Horne and his fellow dissidents.
Tellingly, several justices confirmed that the raisin reserve program opposed by Horne and his allies hasn't been used in several years. A handful of other marketing orders,for crops that include almonds and walnuts, also authorize, but haven't recently
used, reserve programs. This disuse would appear to set the stage for justices to end one
old program with roots in the New Deal without disrupting an entire industry.
"This is a historical quirk that you have to defend," Roberts told
Tish Wells/Tribune News Service
California raisins are at the center of a Supreme Court case that pits raisin producer Marvin Horne against the Department of
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"The ridiculousness or sen-
in the United States, but every
third car you have to give to
• • • • •
is no longer needed to promote industry stability." Sun-Maid
i
r
I
I
Your Most Professional Landscaping Company
ington on April 6, Sun-Maid Growers declared that "volume regulation has inhibited
Continued fromA1 Chief Justice John Roberts
'
Justice Clarence Thomas, in keeping with his customary
Lis.
practice, was the only one of
• I '
— Justice Elena Kagan
by the Raisin Administrative Committee in Fresno, Califor-
nia. The set-aside raisins may be sold for purposes such as federal nutrition programs. Raisin handlers set aside 47 percent of their crop during the 2002-03 season and 30percentfor2003-04,butthey were paid for only part of what they surrendered. Horne, in protest, helped organize about 60 other growers
K n eedler, adding into the Raisin Valley Farms
that "we are not going to jeop- Marketing Association, which ardize the Agriculture De- took care of the packing. By partment's marketing order identifying themselves as proregime." ducers rather than handlers, Concentrated in C alifor- the group's members reania's sunny b u t c u r r ently soned, they were exempt from drought-stricken San J oa- the set-aside requirement. quin Valley, raisin production The Obama administration spanned more than 200,000 termed this a "scheme," and acres and reached a value the Agriculture Department of more than $725 million in subsequently ordered Horne 2012. and his coalition to pay more A federal marketing order than $650,000 in fees and penhas governed the raisin indus- alties. Horne, in t u rn, calls try since 1949. The order reg- the program a "taking" of his ulates handlers, who pack and property. process the raisins. Among The Raisin Administrative other provisions, the order Committee, "which is an agent says handlers may have to of the Department of Agriculwithhold part of their crop for ture, actually takes possesa "reserve tonnage" managed sion, ownership of the raisins,"
CEO E
Justice Elena Kagan.
the nine justices not to speak Agriculture, which requires raisin handlers to set aside a portion of or ask questions Wednesday. their crops for reserve. A decision is expected by the end of June.
"The ridiculousness or sensibleness of a program is really not for us to decide."
I R D
R A / (
S PkC
i
e •
r
'r
i
attorney Michael McConnell, a professor at Stanford Law School, told the justices. "It is
not any less of a taking, even if there is abenefit." Under the F i fth
j.G.WE
A m end-
ment, government must pay "just compensation" when private property is "taken for public use." One key question is whether a crop counts as property, like real estate. An-
other question is whether the forced surrendering of rai-
Get CASHNOWfor your structured settlement or annuity payments.'
sins counts as a taking even
though farmers might eventually be paid something for it. The a r gument
W e dnes-
day marked a return to the Supreme Court for the case Horne v. Department of Agri-
culture. Horne and his allies won an important procedural victory the first time around in
a unanimous 2013 ruling that allowed them to pursue their
I
pi, I I
l
legal challenge through federal court. Several
d o ze n fa r m ers
and family members joined the 70-year-old Horne; his wife, Laura; and Clovis, Cal-
ifornia-based attorney Brian Leighton in the courtroom Wednesday. U n derscoring the cautious optimism voiced by several of the farmers following the argument, Leighton noted that raisin industry
leader Sun-Maid Growers of California has itself now chal-
lenged theset-aside reserve program. In a lawsuit filed in Wash-
•
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•
•
•
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THURSDAY, APRIL 23, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
Food stamps
FoodStampenrollment
Continued fromA1
The Affordable Care Act seems to be making it easier for Americans to apply for food stamps in these11 states, despite significant improvement in the economy.
The sole exception was Ne-
vada, where enrollment shot up 14percent. The enrollment is climbing as Republicans try to cut the costs of the food program and at a time when food stamp us-
California
age would normally be expected to decline. Eligibility rules have not changed. West Virginia's food stamp enrollment increased 4 percent that was part of the health care changes. Enrollment jumped because people were "more M. Spencer Green /The Associated Press engaged with our systems and Mishaun Cannon, 48, unexpectedly lost a good-paying hospital more aware what they're eligi- job last year andwas surprised to learn she likely would qualify for ble for," said Jeremiah Samples food stamps. of the West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources.
recipient was paid $125.35 a cause more states are planning With the economy improv- month last year, according to to upgrade their application ing, national food stamp enroll- the U.S. Department of Ag- systems for social programs, ment dedined in 2013 and 2014. riculture, which administers using federal money offered But in 11 states, demand rose SNAP. by the administration through between January 2013 and the Based on that, the nearly 2018. end of 2014, the AP analysis 632,000 people added to foodUnder the new health care showed. stamp rolls in the 11 states law, 29 states, induding those Ten of those states expand- would cost SNAP nearly $79 governed by both Democrats ed their Medicaid programs million a month. and Republicans, have so "It wasn't clear to us whether far decided to expand their under the health law. Florida did not expand Medicaid but the Affordable Care Act was Medicaidprograms to cover led the nation in health law en- going to be something that more low-income people. Five rollment in private insurance would cause SNAP enrollment states are still discussing the plans. to go up or to go down," said expansion. Six of the states employed Dorothy Rosenbaum, a senior Sixteen states, most led by new easy sign-up systems that fellow at the Center on Budget Republican opponents of the helped people apply for both and Policy Priorities, a Wash- health program, are rejecting Medicaid and the Supplemen- ington group that advocates for the Medicaid expansion. In tal Nutrition Assistance Pro- low-income people. almost every state refusing to But advocates hoped state expand Medicaid, food stamp gram, better known as food stamps, at the same time. Some investments in technology and enrollmentshave been goused online calculators or dick- online tools would reach new ing down with the improving the-box features. people needing food benefits. economy.
Continued fromA1 When Flaherty took office
in 2011, he sought IT infrastructure to maintain a com-
to state.
in an email to Givans on Feb. 17. He stated the questions that the auditor raised were
"answered when county I.T. and county a d m inistration consented to the current I.T.
broad a swath of responsibili-
administrator and IT director
ties, including some that could be handled by the county,
agreed and were supportive."
such as security, infrastruc-
edged the unique needs of the justice system might make technological glitches more dire: "That's different if a dep-
fer the reader to the voluminous public record," he wrote
+5%
Florida
3,573,410
3,689,976
+3%
Hawaii
188,763
194,932
+3%
lllinois
2,027,281
2,076,871
+2%
Maryland
760,830
786,745
+3%
Nevada
358,457
410,201
+ 14%
N ew Jersey
867, 6 6 0
915,614
+6%
N ew Mexico
442 , 7 5 3
447,952
+1%
Pennsylvania
1 , 767,367
1,808,787
+2%
W est Virginia
352, 3 52
367,943
+4%
sign people up for Medicaid say the new systems make it easier for people who quali-
recipients and a cost of $32.9 billion in 2006 to 47.6 million
people and $79.9 billion in 2013 before contracting slightly last year. Streamlined sign-ups reflect what Robert Doar of the con-
servative American Enterprise Institute believes are changes in the program's mission, from short-term help to something more permanent. He was commissioner of the New York City H uman Resources A dm i n istration,
which determined food stamp eligibility in the city, until 2013. The federal emphasis was on program promotion and ease of enrollment, he said, "and has not been, 'help people get jobs.'" Last fall, the Obama administration extended federal
funding for merging state food stamps and Medicaid enrollment systems through the end
of 2018.
ident, is easier to use. In New Mexico, food stamp
nization for state human ser-
been easier.
enrollment has grown by about 22,000 people, a 5 percent increase in 14 months, since the
state launched a Web-based sign-up system. "We attribute the increase in SNAP to Medicaid expansion," said New Mexico Human Ser-
vicesDepartment Deputy Secretary Sean Pearson. "When folks go online now, they have the ability to apply for multiple programs in a single session." Enrollment counselors who
Losing the stigma With the three-year exten-
sion,more states are expected to take advantage of the fund-
ing, which can mean millions of dollars per state and allow technology improvements "at little to no cost," said Megan Lape of the American Public Human Services Association,
a nonprofit membership orga-
Illinois resident Mishaun vices officials. Cannon, 48, who unexpectedly Besides adding convenience lost a good-paying hospital job for low-income applicants, the last year and has been pursu- integrated sign-up systems ing a career-switch master's reduce the stigma associated degree, signed up for Medicaid with food benefits, said Larry in January. She was surprised Goolsby, director of strategic to learn she likely would quali- initiatives for APHSA. fy for food stamps, too. Some who were reluctant to " I wa s a m azed. I s a i d , sign up for food stamps have 'Where do I apply?' Every little "no reluctance at all signing bit helps," Cannon said. Sign- up for Medicaid," Goolsby ing up was abreeze, she said. said. "They don't see that in Republicans in March pro- the same category as what we posed a 34 percent cut over used to call welfare."
(Deschutes County internal auditor David)
DA'sproposedperformancemeasures
Givans stated that the current performance
• Total cases filed, broken down by felony, misdemeanor, juvenile delinquency, juvenile dependency, civil commitment • Total cases reviewed • Number of contacts with victims in active cases by Victims' Assistance Program staff • Partner with Deschutes County Sheriff's Office, Circuit Court, defense counsel andother community partners in initiative to reduce jail's pre-trial population • DUII trial conviction rate • DUII diversion program success rate • Average elapsed time to final disposition (in days) for misdemeanor cases • Results from customer service survey of people assisted by Victims' Assistance Program staff
measures "fail to consistently present efforts" of the DA's office. the only change coming to the sures." He said Givans had "approved" the performance district attorney's office. Hummel has drafted a set measures used during his adof eight performance mea- ministration a fter w o r k i ng sures for the coming fiscal with Chief Deputy District year, including measures that Attorney Mary Anderson to address quantity, output and
istered a unified IT system for
trict attorney's systems ana-
district attorneys and public
lyst, to Hummel.
safety departments, as Deschutes County did prior to
Examples of services that would likely stay in the realm
Flaherty's term.
of the DA's office included its
Although it m i ght t ake separate website and email: more time and money to "It would likely be more costly transferback to the county's
to transfer the current content
system entirely than is prudent, office employees and
and re-create the functionality on the county's system," Kilander wrote in summation
county information technol-
10 years in the food stamp program, which almost doubled in size after the recession. SNAP grew from 26.5 million
ment increased about 2 percent to 2.08 million between Janu- fy to overcome any hesitation ary 2013 and December 2014, about getting food benefits. In an increase of about 50,000 Illinois, an online calculator people in a period when the allows people to see how much state's unemployment rate fell they might get in food benefits from 9.1 percent to 6.2 percent. each month. "If it's over $100, they defiIllinois has long let people sign up for food stamps, Medicaid nitely say, 'Yeah, check the box and other benefits on a single for me,'" said Juanita Dorantes form, state officials said, but a of Chicago, who has helped new online application, nick- peoplesign up for benefits for named "ABE" for the 16th pres- 12 years and said it's never
Hummel said he acknowl-
and can address the needs of uty district attorney's in court public safety departments as presenting evidence in a child it currently collaborates and sex abuse case," Hummel said works with the Sheriff and in an interview Monday. "The 911," the audit states. judge is not going to wait three Flaherty disagreed with the or four hours." audit's findings — and the leIn 2011, The Bulletin reportgal authority for the internal audit in the first place. "I re-
446,146
In Illinois, food stamp enroll-
data matching and other tools,
structure." "Complying with Oregon quests, according to the audit. and federal law required havThe offi ce'sserverinfrastruc- ing exclusive control over and ture was moved in-house to access to district attorney re"address concerns about com- cords," Flaherty wrote in an pliance with state and federal email Wednesday. "Also, belaw." cause of (our) unique IT needs, However, the auditors found it was not only more cost-efthe two-person IT staff at the fective but necessary to have DA's office perhaps had too in house IT. Both the county
"Deschutes County IT is a support department that has
426, 5 1 9
Priorities.
Two out of 10 Americans who
plete email record for public records and l itigation re-
ture and backup services.
+6%
Greg Cross /The Bulletin
enrollment could be expenThe impact of the increased according to a report by the sive. The average food-stamp enrollment could grow be- Center on Budget and Policy
DA transition
4,407,217
Sources: U.S. Department of Agriculture, U.S. Department of Labor, AP analysis
are quali fied for food stamps Never been easier The food stamp increase have never signed up, RosenA mong th e s t ates w i t h was not envisioned by either baum said. growing food stamp use, many supporters or opponents of Washington provides the made efforts to improve Medthe new health care system. money for food stamps, but icaid and food stamp enrollWhile it's unclear exactly how the assi stance program isad- ment systems, using health much growth can be attribut- ministered by the states, with law funding for call centers, ed to the law and incentives it regulations varying from state document imaging, electronic offered to states, the increased
4 ,155 , 083
C onnecticut
after a M edicaid expansion
Unexpecteddevelopment
FOODSTAMP FOOD STAMP RECIPIENTS RECIPIENTS ENROLLMENT JAN. 2013 DE C. 2014
STATE
ogy staff agreed to "interface of County IT Director Joe proposed system was $62,000, ... where it makes sense," ac- Sadony's comments. and that similar-sized coun- cording to an April 14 email Increased collaboration beties in the state often admin- from Josh Kilander, the dis- tween IT staff might not be ed the estimated cost of the
outcome. The district attorney's office tracks a single performance measure — the total number of cases filed, broken down by classification — and showed the annual number of cases filed per deputy district
develop them.
Hummel does not plan to use the same annual survey Flaherty did, which Hummel
said was issued to community partners selected by the district attorney. "I think it had
no value because it was not scientific," Hummel said.
The expanded performance the current performance mea- measures constitute part of a sures "fail to consistently pres- broader self-studying effort; ent efforts" of the DA's office. Hummel has pitched a collabIn the email Wednesday, orative crime prevention proFlaherty wrote, "I have sev- gram called DeschutesSafe eral times expressed to the and is waiting on the results county my belief that the work of a foundation grant that of doing justice is qualitative might support the initiative's attorney. Givans stated that
by nature and therefore can-
not be accurately evaluated using only quantitative mea-
activities. — Reporter: 541-383-0376, cwithycombe@bendbulletin.com
"The million-dollar Climate change question is why the Continued fromA1
"I definitely have students
issue hasn't become
who think climate change is
more important. It's
not caused by human activity,
a long-term problem taking place all
and as a scientist myself, I tell them there isn't disagreement within the scientific communi-
ty," Marino said. "If you think science is a viable way to study the climate, then the evidence
is conclusive." Howe said the "wide disc onnect between what
the
public thinks scientists think and what scientists are actu-
ally thinking" is continually surprfs111g.
"Global warming hasn't yet risen to being a high-priority issue, even if we've found people support policies like funding renewable energy research," Howe said. "The million-dollar question is why
over the planet, but
sometimes ... (people) don't see it." — Peter Howe, an assistant professor at Utah State University who was involved in the study
"Opposition to a particular site could actually compromise our ability to have something we've beenworking three decades to achieve." Roger Lee Executive Director, Economic Development for Central Oregon
"We can't say for sure these resultscame about because of
Sandy, but this is something to look at," he said. Locally, Marino noted that
belief in climate change is higher in Jefferson County than Deschutes County, say-
ing, "It cautions us tobe careful important. It's a l ong-term about how we stereotype comproblem taking place all over munities in Central Oregon," the planet, but sometimes it referencing a perception that doesn't have a serious implica- rural communities might be tion where someone lives, or at less scientifically savvy. "A great research project least they don't see it." Howe suggestednew and ex- would be to talk with farmers the issue hasn't become more
treme weather patterns might
in Jefferson County, who are
be making the process more visible and pointed to a high level of concern about global warming in New Jersey, where in 2012 Hurricane Sandy lev-
often closer to the land, and
eled coastal communities.
h
•
•
• •
•
•
•
see if their experiences have an
impact on (the survey results)," Marino said. — Reporter: 541-633-2160, tleeds@bendbulletift.com
e •
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•I
A6
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, APRIL 23, 2015
Gay marriage opponents have few options
Hospitals Continued fromA1 L.A. County health officials
investigate and confirm an infection outbreak inside one of the county's hospitals once
or twice a month. The public rarely finds out which hospital is involved, how many patients
were stricken or whether any dled.
The secrecy surrounding hospital outbreaks runs counter to the push toward more pub-
same-sex marriage. And in many more states including E DEN, N . C. — J o hn California, where a vote in Kallam Jr., 67, carries a 2008 to ban it was later overworn black Bible and an- turned by the courts, such other copy on hi s i Pad, marriages have become and believes Scripture is routine. unequivocal. In perhaps a dozen states, "Sodom and Gomorrah, mainly in the South and that story alone tells you the Great Plains, majorities what God thinks of same- still think that gay and lessex marriage," he said. "God bian couples should not be said that homosexual be- allowed to m arry, studies By Erik Eckhoim
New York Times News Service
lic disclosure in health care. In
recent years, consumers have benefited from data comparing some health outcomes by hos-
pital, the fees hospitals charge for various procedures and the payments doctors receive from
druganddevicemanufacturer s.
Acommon practice
Allen J. Schaben/Los Angeles Times
Keeping outbreaks confi- Carole and Ty Moss hold a photo of their son, Nile Calvin Moss, who died at age15 after he went to an dential is a common practice of Orange County hospital for an MRI and got infected with a superbug. The Mosses helped pass a state federal, state and local health law that requires hospitals to report howmany oftheir patients get infections. investigators across the country. The rationale: It encourages hospitals to be open and quick- had listed invasive fungal in- public about outbreaks. passed a law pushed by patient ly reportsuspected surges of fection on the death certificates Both the CDC and the FDA advocates. The bill was named infections. of three children. Investigators say they did not warn the public for Nile Moss, a 15-year-old "We rely on them to call us," also found traces of aspergillus about the deadly Florida case who got an infection in 2006 said Dr. Laurene Mascola, chief in 10patient rooms. because investi gators found after going to Children's Hosof the county's acute communiIn the end, county officials that hospital staff had failed pital of Orange County for an cable disease control program, stopped short of calling the to properly dean the scopeMRI and other tests. Nile died though she a cknowledges case "a true aspergillosis out- a long-standing and repeat- two days later from a superbug that the hospitals don't always break." Instead they said "the ed problem that the agencies known as MRSA, or Methicilself-report. most likely hypothesis" was had already warned hospitals lin-resistant Staphylococcus In California, hospitals are that the patients "were exposed about. The agencies sent an ad- aureus. Nile's Law gave the public acrequired to report unusual to a source in the environment" ditional general warning about events such as outbreaks to and "the probable source" was sloppily cleaned scopes in late cess to limited data on the numstate health officials — but face aspergillosis. 2009. ber of patients infected during no financial penalty if they UCLA a n d C e d ars-Sinai specific surgeries or other Publicdisclosure don't. said they had followed the procedures at each hospital. Proponents of more openMascola, the county's dis- manufacturers' instructions for It required hospitals to report ness argue the secrecy can ease control chief, said officials deaning the scope — pointing to the state bloodstream infecprevent hospitals from learning would disclose an outbreak if to a problem with the device's tions caused by MRSA, three from one another's mistakes. they believed it would be in the design that made it almost im- other bacterial infections, as They say it also deprives pa- public's interest. County offi- possible to disinfect. well as a variety of surgery-site tients of information they could cials said they couldn't immePeter Mendel, who studies infections. use in choosing where to re- diately point to a case in which hospital-acquired infections for In 2011, the hospital associaceive care. thathappened. the RAND Corp. in Santa Mon- tion sued, arguing that the state Six years ago, a lethal bacIn the recent superbug out- ica, said that public disclosure was asking for more infection teria struck two hospitals in break at UCLA, the university of the2008 outbreak could have statistics than was mandated Florida, killing 15 patients. The confirmed the outbreak after helped regulators conclude by the legislation. That effort case was nearly identical to the questions from The Times. more quiddy that the scope de- was unsuccessful. recent outbreaks at UCLA and The same medical devicesignwas flawed."Peoplewould Carole Moss, Nile's mother, Cedars-Sinai medical centers. a duodenoscope — was found realize there was accountabili- now sits on a state committee In each case, a hard-to-dean to be the cause of the outbreak ty," he said. that advises officials on how to medical scope transferred the in the Florida hospitals that bereport and prevent hospital-aclegislation same superbug from patient to gan in late 2008. In both cases, Proposed quired infections. She said she patient. the reusablescope transferred A handful of bills have been is ~ at e d by the hospitals' Since that 2008 Florida out- a superbug known as CRE, or proposed over the years to re- control of the committee. The break, investigators have tied carbapenem-resistant Entero- quire more public reporting of panel, appointed by the state dithesame scopestoscoresofpa- bacteriaceae, among patients. dangerous infections. rector of public health, currenttient infections in other states. The germ kills as many as 50 In 2004, the California Leg- ly has 17members, induding 12 Most of the outbreaks were not percent of its victims. islature passed a bill requiring who work for hospitals. Only disdosed until months or years Floridaofficials saidtheydis- facilities to tell the public how Moss and two other members later, often only when doctors cussed the outbreak with feder- many patients get dangerous represent the public. "It's completely out of balwrote about them in medical al officials from the Centers for infections in their care. The journals. D isease Control and ~ v e n California Hospital Association ance," she said. "They vote on "When you keep it secret, tion and the Food and Drug Ad- lobbied a~ i t , arguing thatbehalf of their employers." o ther h ospitals a r e u n i n - ministration in June 2009. it would take resources away In 2013, Moss proposed addformed," said Lisa McGiffert, But there was no public dis- from nursing care, according ing the superbug CRE to the list a patient safety expert at Con- closure of the case until Flori- to a legislative analyst's report. of hospital infections that must sumers Union. "Public disdo- da doctors wrote about it four The bill was ultimately vetoed be reported. Only the two pubsure is absolutely essential." years later in amedical journal. by the governor. licmembers presentsupported The hospitals have not been The group objected to a sim- it. Self-reporbng "All of us want to know what named. ilar bill in 2005 because of the By keeping the outbreaks Melissa Brower, a CDC cost of compliance. That bill hospital is safe," Moss said. confidential, the county has spokeswoman, said it is up to was approved, but without the "These are preventable deaths. been more successful in en- state and local health officials reporting requirements. Every day goes by, and more couraging hospitals to report to decide whether to tell the In 2008, the state Legislature people die." incidents quickly, Mascola said. The county staff works with
havior is a sin and that mar-
indicate. Some conservative
riage is between a man and a woman." Like three-quarters of the voters in rural Rockingham County, he checked "yes" in the 2012 plebiscite when
leaderspromise to keep defending that view whatever
the Supreme Court decrees — and even if they have few practical options.
North Carolina joined some
"If the government wants to pretend to redefine mar-
30 other states in adopting
riage, I don't think that will
settle the issue," said Tami sex marriage. "I breathed a Fitzgerald, the executive disigh of relief," he recalled. "I rector of the North Carolina thought that was the end of Values Coalition. ll it Still, once the Supreme But last October, Kallam, Court speaks, in a decision like m any o t he r c o nser- widely expected to make vatives across North Car- same-sex marriage a naolina, was stunned when, tional right, the opponents' two years after "the people anger and energies are likespoke," as he put it, a federal ly to focus on a more limited judge overturned the ban. issue, what they call protecAn a ppointed county tions for conservative relimagistrate, Kallam was ob- gious officials or vendors ligated to perform civil mar- who want to avoid involveriages whether they were ment in same-sex weddings. same-sex or not. So he reIn North C a rolina, the signed, one of six in the state Senate president, Phil Bergwho stepped down to avoid er, a Republican from Rockviolating their faith. ingham County, is the chief As the Supreme Court sponsor of a bill that would prepares to hear arguments allow the county officials on same-sex marriage, the who issue marriage licensnation seems more ready to es as well as magistrates to accept it than many imag- decline to participate in marined even a year ago. But riages on religious grounds. divisions remain, and while The bill has passed the more than half of A m eri- Senate. cans now endorse the idea, It is strongly opposed by about one-third say they op- gay rights advocates who pose it, according to survey argue that "public officials can't pick and choose," in the data from 2014. In N o r theastern s t ates words of Chris Sgro, the exlike Vermont and New York, ecutive director of Equality large majorities support North Carolina. constitutional bans on same-
TOUCHMARK SINCE 1980
541-382-6223
Ja •3
•
•
JoHNsON BROTHERS A P P L I A N C E S
hospitals to improve their prac-
tices and lower the chance of another incident.
EXERCISE
are ou
The investigations are often
scientifically complex. And at times, hospitals have disagreed with the county's findings. For example, three years ago the county investigated what
GET SCREENEB SHORTNESS OFBREATH
is enin o
appeared to be an outbreak of
aggressive fungal infections caused by dust from hospital construction. Six children died.
In all, a dozen children in the bone marrow transplant unit tested positive for signs of the
JAW,THROAT 8 ABDOMINAL PAIN
NUMBIIESS IN LEGS
WEAKNESS
OUI'
infections. The youngest was 6 months old. The children were
DON'T SMOKE
CHEST
all sufferingfromleukemia and other serious illnesses. In three of the fatal cases,
doctors listed the fungal infection as a cause of death. The county's findings were published months later at the
end of the public health depart-
•
ment's annual report. The hospital was not identified, but the
g •
Los Angeles Times traced the case to Children's Hospital of
Los Angeles. Outbreaks from construction dust have happened re-
peatedly inside U.S. hospitals, although the riskis little known to the public.
The danger comes from a common type of mold called aspergillus. The fungus is mostly harmless to healthy people but can be lethal to those with compromised im-
mune systems, such as the children in the bone marrowtransplant unit. At the time, Children's Hos-
pital was building a pedestrian bridge over Sunset Boulevard.
Complete cardiovascular care: • •
• • • • •
Investigators found that visitors and staff walked by the construction to get to the main
entrance. In their report, county inves-
tigators said "there were significant reasons to suggest that an outbreak occurred."
They pointed to how doctors
•
Cardiovascular specialists Interventional cardiology Cardiothoracic surgery Cardiopulmonary rehab Cardiac ultrasound Cardiac device implant L management We are supporting Central Oregon with outpatient services in your community New patient appointments currently available within 48 hours *'this is reserved forsymptomafic paSentsto sseoneofourSt Charlescardiologisls.
St. Charles HEART R LUNG CENTER 541-388-4333 2500 NE NEFF RD. BEND,OR
SlCharlesHeaNhCare.orl DQ
Calendar, B3 Obituaries, B5 Weather, B6
© www.bendbulletin.com/local
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, APRIL 23, 2015
LEGISLATURE
BRIEFING
?
Deschutes limits dispensaries Deschutes County commissioners adopted an ordinanceWednesday regulating medical marijuana dispensaries throughout unincorporated areas. The ordinanceonly pertains to medical dispensaries established under the OregonMedical Marijuana Program and overseenbythe Oregon Health Authority. Marijuana will be legal to possess for recreational use onJuly 1, with established licensed shops beginning to operate early next year. The agreed-upon county ordinancepassed Wednesdaywould only allow dispensaries in certain rural commercial and industrial zonesthe likely locations being Tumalo, Sunriver and Terrebonne. The hours of operation for dispensaries will also be limited to10 a.m. to 7 p.m., anddispensaries will not beallowed in the exclusive farm-use zone, according to the ordinance. The board unanimously approvedthe ordinance with anemergencyadoption, which does not require an extended period before taking effect. A one-year moratorium on medical dispensaries will be lifted on May1. The local ordinance will also require aland use review andapproval for dispensaries that wish to sell recreational marijuana.
• Ifbackgroundcheckshowsuseofpot, prospective gunbuyer likely turned down
Senate Bill 941 would require a background check for virtually all gun sales if the House passes the bill and
Related • Committee hears gun control proposal,B3 • Insurance network adequacy bill expected to passinSenate,D1
Gov. Kate Brown signs it.
By Taylor W.Anderson The Bulletin
SALEM — People who
use marijuana recreationally after it becomes legal July 1 might face a choice if a gun backgroundcheckbillm oving through the Legislature
A federal statute and de-
that potentially allows felons
the ATF that asks prospective
cision from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives say marijuana users are not be allowed to purchase guns.
access to guns by buying them privately or online. Gun buyers at stores and gun shows are already re-
buyers: "Are you an unlawful
REDMOND — The Redmond City Council on
user of, or addicted to,mar-
Wednesdayunanimously
ijuana ... or any other controlled substance?" See Marijuana /B2
extended from May 26 to June 30 Butler Aircraft's
quired to fill out a form from
/eo tt' ~ '<~,
The action, at a special City Council meeting at the
SISTERS MIDDLE SCHOOL
airport, was taken after the council came out of execu-
c ass com ines , science an eou oors e iion
START
t fn f Greg Cross I The Bulletin
Butler and the city may be
dose to endingtheir dispute over the airport's updated minimum standards for
aviation-service providers, known as fixed-base operators in the aviation industry.
gIQLIP tQ
resubmit charter plan By Abby Spegman The Bulletin
REDMOND — The Redmond School Board is
asking for more information from a group looking to open a charter school
this fall catering to homeschooled students, including many from Bend. The board voted Wednesday to send organizers a letter detailing a Joe Kline l The Bulletin
Eighth-grader Leah Chapman practices getting on a surfboard in preparation for a weekend trip to the Oregon Coast. She is part of an
interdisciplinary expedition class that combines environmental science, outdoor recreation and the arts. The Bulletin
SISTERS — To withstand
the fires that swept through every five or 10 years, the ponderosa pines that surround Sisters developed thick bark and the ability to self-prune
"We kind of made abig
out a red-tailed hawk circling
mess of the forest putting out
overhead and the Idaho fescue
all the fires," Sisters Middle School science teacher Mi-
underfoot. Sisters Middle School began offering an expeditionary class this year to eighth-graders, combining environmental
chael Geisen told students in a
recent lesson on forestry. But it's what happened after the lesson that teachers in Sis-
low-hanging branches, so that fires took out smaller trees but
ters are so excited about: The
left the tall ones. Then came
pines up close. In the wooded area next to the school, stu-
small trees to grow up and act
, INI~ Rnte AIII':
concrete evidence that
Board asks
Smokey Bear and the war on forest fires, allowing for more +Jj
tive session. The move is the first
SeeAirport/B2
By Abby Spegman
ib
deadline to stop aviation services at the Redmond Airport.
Paraderoute
eol~
By Beau Eastes The Bulletin
2015 Earth Day
e
deadline
Supporters say the proposed law would close a loophole
Nore briefing, B2
+Oy
extends Butler's
becomes law: Consume pot or buy guns legally?
— Bulletin staffreport
Roadsclosedfor parade from10 a.m. tonoon Saturday.KansasAvenue closed from 7 a.m.to 4 p.m. Saturday.
Redmond
as ladders for fires that did come through to reach taller trees.
MARATHON CLOSURES
class went outside to see the dents measured out /te-acre plots, then measured the trees
in each plot. As Geisen sorted the students, Rob Jensen, another science teacher, pointed
science and outdoor activities with creative arts. It is called ECoS — for Earth, Communi-
door lessons and hands-on, outdoor activities. The middle
About two dozen
The courses for Sunday's marathon and half-marathon tour much
questions about enrollment
and staff projections and
art component.
resubmit.
eighth-graders spend two
of Bend, potentially causing traffic stoppages and congestion The BendMarathon is Sun- parking garagedowntown, from early morning until the races are over. Both start at 7:30 day, meaning drivers will see where parking will be freeall a.m., and the full race should take about six hours. delays around downtown and weekend, andnot on down) — I gV the Old Mill District. town streets. Thegarage's — Fu l l marathon course / The course for both the entrance is off NWLava Road 5' -Half-marathon course half- and full marathons starts north of Minnesota Avenue. downtown on OregonAveAt mile 5 onArchie Briggs o START: nuebetween WallandBond OREGON AVENUE ~4~ Road, the marathon course streets and runs through the turns back south andpasses • FINISH: / B middle of the city, including MIRRORPONDJ through downtown a second Drake Park, before heading PARKINGLOT time. Runners will go past the north along the Deschutes Old Mill District and through River. Both marathons will Farewell BendPark, where begin at 7:30 a.m.Raceorgathey'll then headout theCasnizers expect the last of the half-marathoners to finish cade LakesNational Scenic stt« Byway towards the turnctty't'tttets in no more thanabout three hours and full marathoners in around nearSeventh MounOLD no more thanabout six. tain Resort. The final stretch The organizers will provide takes marathoners through detour signs andtraffic conthe Tetherow neighborhood trol on the course, but drivers to the West BendTrail and shouldexpectdelaysatmany the finish on NWRiverside locations around town. BeBoulevard. cause most runners will be The half-marathon will take on the sidewalk, roads will i (p the same course, finishing remain openexcept for the )Bcg section of road wherethe race before the extension down Cascade LakesScenic Byway. Century Dc begins on OregonAvenuebeBoth the half- and full martween Wall andBond streets athons will finish at Mirror and the eastbound lane ofArchie Briggs Roadbetween OB Pond Lakeparking lot next to Drake Park, whereparticiRiley Roadand NWNorthcliff. Runners andspectators are pants will celebrate. Greg Cross I The Bulletin asked to park in theCentennial — Bulletin staff report
Superintendent Michael
McIntosh said the district's review committee also had
school program is thanks in large part to money from an anonymous donor, who committed $20,000 a year for five years through the Sisters School Foundation to pay for extra instruction, gear and
ty and Self — and is modeled after a similar course at Sisters High School offered to ju- travel costs. Laura Campbell, niors that combines language a local artist and Sisters High arts, scienceandtheoutdoors. alumna, was hired to lead the
Motorists:Don'tsaywedidn't warnyou...
)
hours a day in class with Geisen and Jensen, enough time most days for both in-
dozen concerns with the proposal, from curriculum and financial management to assessment and governance structure. Redmond
liabilities for Redmond as the sponsor district. "As a district I think it's fair for us to be cognizant
and concerned and fair about quality," said McIntosh, encouraging organizers to "add some flesh to the bones" of the plan and
SeeClass/B5
SeeCharter/B2
Warm Springsmill looking at layoffs By Beau Eastes
dustries executive director
The Bulletin
and Mike Collins, the tribes'
Warm Springs Forest Products Industries, the lumber
actingsecretary-treasurer, could not be reached for
mill owned and operated by
comment.
the Confederated Tribes of
According to the Spilyay, the mill began downsizing
Warm Springs, is close to a restructuring plan that would keep the mill open with probable layoffs and pay cuts. "Aplanis more or less in place," Stanley Speaks, Bureau of Indian Affairs Northwest regional director, confirmed Wednesday. "There will be some reductions, but that's up to the tribes." According to the Spilyay Tymoo, the tribes' bimonthly newspaper, the most recent downsizing plan would reduce the mill from 104
talks with the Warm Springs
Tribal Council in January after it fell behind on stumpage payments — the money logging operations pay to landowners — to the tribes. Tribal timber sales are counted on
to help support various tribal accounts, including the tribes' general fund, senior pensions and per capita payouts. As reported by the Spilyay, the mill is more than a year be-
hind on those payments. In February, the mill estimated
employees to 84, with the re-
it would lose about $320,000
maining workers taking a 10 percent decrease in salary. "We expect to have a (restructure plan) very soon," Speaks said.
this year under a plan that included layoffs but no pay
John Katchia Jr., Warm
Springs Forest Products In-
cuts. Doug Jacobson, controller at the time, estimated the mill would be back in the
black by 2016. SeeMill /B5
B2
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, APRIL 23, 2015
E VENT TODAY FOCUS ONFAMILIES:A FINE PHOTOGRAPHY AUCTION: Featuring framed photography, a live and silent auction to benefit Family Resource Center's parenting education programs; 5:30 p.m.; $65, $120 for two people; Franklin Crossing, 550 NW Franklin Ave., Bend; www.frconline.org or 541-389-5468. "AS YOULIKEIT": Summit High School presents a modern take on
Shakespeare's classic comedy; 7 p.m.; $8, $5 for students and seniors; Summit High School Auditorium, 2855 NW Clearwater Drive, Bend; www.bend.k12.or.us/
Marijuana Contlnued from B1 While marijuana will be legal at the state level after July 1, the substance is still illegal federally, and anyone who answers yes to that question on the federal form will be denied access to purchase a gun privately and in a gun store, Oregon State Police said Wednesday. "If you check yes to that box, you would be prohibited (to purchase a gun) under federal statute," Oregon State Police spokesman Lt. Josh Brooks said. Lying on the question is considered a felony under federal law. The federal law previously created a potential issue for medical marijuana users in
ENDA R
"THE SCHOOL FORSCANDAL": A play about gossips, hypocrites, liars, and lovers; 7:30 p.m.; $20, $16 for seniors, $13 for students; Cascades Theatre, 148 NWGreenwood Ave., Bend; www.cascadestheatrical.org or 541-389-0803. "THE BENDFOLLIES": Featuring prominent business, civic and entertainment leaders showing off their singing, dancing and joketelling skills; 7:30 p.m.; $33 plus
fees, $18plusfeesfor balcony,$48 for VIP plus fees; Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St., Bend; www. towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700. CITY THRIFT/CITY CARE FUNDRAISER:Featuring live music by Five Pint Mary, a release
Shakespeare's classic comedy;
FRIDAY
7 p.m.; $8, $5 for students and seniors; Summit High School Auditorium, 2855 NW Clearwater Drive, Bend; www.bend.k12.or.us/ shs or 541-355-4190.
ART ONTHERIVER: An art show and sale, featuring music, demonstrations and more, auctions
suffering from debilitating Bill in Salem —Senate Bill 941 would subject all gun buyers to a criminal background checkbefore the purchase could take place. Sponsors: Sens.FloydProzanski,D-Eugeneand Ginny Burdick, D-Portland; Reps. Jennifer Williamson, D-Portland and Val Hoyle, D-Eugene History:Oregon hastwice attempted to extend background checks to person-to-person andonline gun sales. Thebill has already passedtheSenateand hadahearing intheHouseon Wednesday. What's next:Worksessionscheduledfortoday. Online:Readthe bill online at https://olis.leg.state.or.us..
munition," Arthur Herbert, an assistant director with ATF, wrote in a letter to all federal
Senate Bill 941 passes, virtu-
voted to legalize recreational ally all transfers of guns will marijuana — sought to make require a background check clear the restriction. asking buyers to answer the "Any person who uses or question. is addicted to marijuana, reLeland Berger is an attorgardless of whether his or her ney who represented a medState has passed legislation ical marijuana user in an authorizing marijuana use for Oregon Supreme Court case medicinal purposes ... is pro- in which the court ruled cardhibited by Federal law from holders are allowed to obtain possessing firearms or am- a concealed-carry permit.
Charter
Ongoing listings must be updated monthly.Questions: communitylife@bendbulletin.com, 541-383-0351.
shs or 541-355-4190. and raffles will benefit the Redmond School art program and Boys & CRAIG MAYAND TAYLOR WARD: Girls Club of Redmond; 5 p.m.; Featuring the live comedians; 8 p.m.; $8 plus fees in advance, $10 at River Run Event Center, Eagle Crest Resort, 1730 Blue Heron Drive, the door; Summit Saloon, 125 NW Redmond; 541-550-0334. Oregon Ave., Bend. AUTHOR PRESENTATION:Phillip BLUE LOTUS:The rock band from Margolin will present his new novel, Eugene performs; 9:30 p.m.; $7 "Woman with a Gun"; 6:30 p.m.; plus fees in advance, $10atthe $5;PaulinaSprings Books,252 W. door; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 Hood St., Sisters; 541-549-0866. SW Century Drive, Bend; www. volcanictheatrepub.com or "AS YOULIKEIT": Summit High 541-323-1881. School presents a modern take on
firearms licensees. The ATF opinion says the federal form already precludes all marijuana users from purchasing guns; that other states. A letter the fed- wouldn't change even if Seneral agency issued in Septem- ate Bill 941 didn't pass. But if ber 2011 — before any state
To submit an event, visit bendbulletin.com/events and click 'Add Event" at least 10days before publication.
medical condition."
"Whether it's illegal for the person to possess it or not has not yet been determined
by a federal court in states that have either legal medical
or legal adult use marijuana laws," Berger said. Oregon will join Colorado, Washington and Alaska as states that have legalized recreational marijuana along with Washington, D.C. Senate Bill 941, which has passed the Senate and had an
hourslong public hearing in optednotto hearan appealon the House Rules committee the case in 2012. Wednesday, would require Berger said despite the people looking to purchase a weigh-in by the federal agen- gun privately to appear before cy and Oregon State Police, a licensed gun dealer, who the question of whether fed- would request a background eral law prevents gun owner- check from the Oregon State ship may ultimately fall to a Police. federal court to decide. The bill's opponents say "I think the answer is, it de- the proposed law would be pends on whether the person difficult for police to enforce who's purchasing the firearm without keeping track of all admits to use," Berger said. "If weapons through what they there was a legal challenge, call gun registration. it would depend on whether Supporters say the proa court would conclude that posed law would apply to onThe U.S. Supreme Court later
the ATF interpretation of the criminal statute is accurate in
able to purchase guns withstates like Oregon that ... has out a background check. legalized responsible adult — Reporter: 406-589-4347, and medical use by people tanderson@bendbulletin.com
Continued from Bf
A bill has been proposed in the Oregon Legislature that would allow excess medical marijuana to be sold to recreational users through dispensaries in July when pot becomes legal under Measure 91.
Portland manaccused in child sex adusecase A Portland manhas beenarrested on allegations that he abused a child under the age of 12, according to Deschutes County District Attorney John Hummel. Eben Keneshiro, 35, was lodged Sundayin the Deschutes County jail on suspicion of first-degree sexual abuse, first-degree sodomy and coercion, according to the jail. The alleged abuse was reported to law enforcement in Sisters, HummelsaidWednesday.
Bend Police arrest man after two pursuits Bend Police arrested a man allegedly involved in two pursuits with authorities early Wednesday, according to Bend Police Sgt. Adam Juhnke. At about midnight Tuesday, Bend Police observed a green Subaru Legacy reported stolen out of Eugene driving erratically and committing traffic violations on NE Third Street.
school day. It offers the so-
wrote in a news release Wednesday. At about 2:20 a.m., a Bend Police officer located the vehicle driving near NW Ninth St and Newport Avenue. The driver again fled after the officer tried to stop the vehicle, and officers requested assistance from the Deschutes County Sheriff's Office and Oregon State Police. Spike strips were successfully used on the vehicle on U.S. Highway 20 near the Deschutes County Sheriff's Office. The vehicle continued northbound toward Tumalo and the driver eventually lost control of it, colliding with a guardrail near the Deschutes River. The driver fled in the vehicle back toward Bend. An officer successfully used spike strips a second time. The Subaru spun out and finally came to rest in the northbound lanes near the sheriff's office. The driver, later identified as 36-yearold Ervin Darrell Osman, of Eugene, ran east through the Cascade Village Mall parking lot and was taken into custody in front of Food 4 Less. Osman was lodged at the Deschutes County jail on suspicion of reckless driving, attempting to elude a police officer and driving under the influence of intoxicants, among other charges. No onewas injured during the incident andOsman was the only occupant in the vehicle, according to police. The case is still under investigation, and anyone with information about it is urged to call the Bend Police Department at 541-693-
As officers attempted to stop the vehicle, the driver fled south at speeds estimated at least 90 mph. Officers decided to end the pursuit out of safety concerns, Juhnke 6911.
band from Ohio performs, featuring Slipmat Science, Lyfe, Defekt and Moonjuice; 10 p.m.; $3; The Astro Lounge, 939 NW Bond St., Bend; www.astroloungbend.com or 541-388-0116.
Airport
could see us operate for a day. We have fun, we get the job
Continued from B1
done, we do it safe, and we
"This buys us more time to put t ogether documents with Butler and K C A ero,"
have great people." In February, after Butler
Prineville mayorpicked for state council Prineville Mayor Betty Roppe hasbeen nominated by Gov.Kate Brown for a position on the state's Energy Facility Siting Council. If approved by the Oregon Senate, Roppe would serve a four-year term that begins July1. Created in 1975, the Energy Facility Siting Council has regulatory and siting control over large electric generating facilities.
Burns expected today throughFriday The Deschutes National Forest expects to start controlled burns today and continue through Friday across the forest. Friday, specialists will burn three areas near Sunriver. The first is a 61-acre section east of Sunriver along Forest Service Road 40, the second is a 40-acre section 1 mile northwest of Sugar Pine Butte along Forest Service Road 9720 and the final area is a12-acre section ~/~ mile southeast of the High
Desert Museum. If the burn is not completed Friday, it will becompleted Monday if conditions arebetter. Also on Friday, 186 acres will be burned about 1~/~miles northwest of Camp Sherman/Metolius between Forest Roads 12 and 1420. Smoke from the burn might be visible in Camp Sherman and to visitors at House onthe Metolius, a gated resort community. Today, burns covering 258 acres will be divided betweentwo distinct areas near the intersection of U.S. Highway 97and state Highway 58. These include 33 acres east of the Two Rivers North subdivision and 225 acres about 1 mile south of the subdivision. Smoke from the controlled burns may be seen from highways 58and97 aswell as County Road 61. The goal of each of the controlled burns is to reduce fuels for wildfires. The national forest does not anticipate any road closures, but drivers can expect flaggers on Road 40 into Sunriver when smokemay limit visibility.
"THE MET:CAVALLERIA RUSTICANA/PAGLIACCI": Featuring a double bill broadcast of Mascagni's Cavalleria Rusticana and Leoncavallo's Pagliacci; 9:30
a.m.; $24, $22for seniors, $18for children; Regal Old Mill Stadium16 and IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; www.fathomevents. com or 844-462-7342.
and KC Aero filed lawsuits
move toward the city. A red welcome mat greeted council-
an agreement with the city,
Manager Kurt Newton took
neys' fees in the dispute with
a notion strengthened by the ors and the media who were council's late-night action bused to Butler's headquar- item. ters from the airport's main To date, the city has spent terminal. B utler G eneral more than $140,000 in attora group of approximately 30 Butler and KC Aero. Redpeople on an hourlong tour of mond city councilors also his company's hangars and approved almost $350,000 officesaftera w elcome recep- for new gas storage tanks in tion in the Butler lobby. anticipation of having Butler "For City Council to s ee cease fueling services. what we do, it's huge," New— Reporter: 541-617-7829, ton said. "I just wish they beastes@bendbulletin.com
NEWS OF RECORD 21, in the 500 block of SECentennial Street. Theft —Atheft was reported at10:15 a.m. April 21, in the 21200 block of U.S. Highway 20.
POLICE LOG The Bulletin will update items in the Police Log whensuch a request is received. Anynewinformation, such asthe dismissal of charges or acquittal, must beverifiable. For more information, call 541-633-2117.
BEND FIRE RUNS 23 —Medical aid calls.
BEND POLICE DEPARTMEMT
Food, Home Sr Garden
Theft —A theft was reported at 9:10 p.m. April 20, in the 2500block of NW Lemhi PassDrive. DUII —Vasiliy Viktorvich Onofriychuk, 39, was arrested onsuspicion of driving under the influenceof intoxicants at10:53 p.m. April 20, in the 200 block of NE Third Street. Theft —Atheft was reported at 8:12 a.m. April 21, in the300 block of NE Revere Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at 8:21 a.m. April 21, in thearea of BearCreek Road. Unlawful entry — Avehicle was reported entered at9:13a.m. April
Com p l e m e n t s
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HWY 20E & Dean Swift Rd.
(1block West of Costco)
541.322.7337
541-323-3011• starks.com
w ww . c o m p l e m e n t s h o m e . c o m
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Th eBulletin
Free pipeinstallation estimates
H om e I n t er i or s
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— Bulletin staff reports •
~ CFPIO
SATURDAY
Redmond Mayor George En- against the city, the Redmond dicott said after the meeting. City Council gave Butler 90 KC Aero subleases fixed-base days to stop providing aviaoperator services to Butler. tion services, a deadline that Butler gave a tour of its would have ended May 26. facilities to the council and Since the two parties met last general public before the ex- week, though, Newton beecutive session in a goodwill lieves Butler may be nearing
line sales, where felons are
Organizers had applied per student with their sponsor cial piece and the structure for a three-year charter and district According to McInContinued from B1 of being in a classroom," said hoped to open the school this tosh, a portion also goes to the In Oregon, charter schools South Columbia M ncipal fall, but Redmond district pol- student's home district, meanare privately run, publidy Lori Bogen, who worked with icy requirescharter schools ing if the child lived in Bend funded schools that exist with- a committee to submit the ap- submit plans to the district at then some money would go to in a school district. Redmond plication for Central Oregon least 180 days before the target Bend-La Pinewhile Redmond has one charter school, Red- FamilySchool. start date. would be required to provide mond Proficiency Academy, South Columbia Family Bogen, who planned to services, including special edwith students in grades 6-12. School has three teachers and serve as part-time principal at ucation, to all students. The Central Oregon Family about 50 students in K-8. For the Redmond school, said she Leanna Long, a teacher who School would be modeled af- the Redmond school, Bogen considered submitting to the lives in Redmond and worked ter the South Columbia Fam- said she already has about Bend-La Pine district instead with Bogen on the plans, said ily School in Warren, a public 100 prospective students. Her but missed the deadline. Out of their group is committed to charter school on the north adult daughters live in Bend, the 100 prospective students, opening the school and will Oregon Coast where teachers and her original intention was she said about two-thirds are resubmit. "It sounds like a lot, (but) I developlessons for students to createa charter school for from Bend. to do at home, monitored by her grandchildren to attend, That was another issue for still think it's doable. It's just their parents. Students come but she said she has heard the Redmond district commit- going to take a lot of time," to school once a week for one- from many families who tee that reviewed the applica- Long said. on-one tutoring. home-school their c h ildren tion. Public charter schools — Reporter: 541-617-7837, "It looks like a very typical and are lookingfor support. share money from the state aspegman@bendbullet in.com
LOCAL BRIEFING
of a special edition beer, to benefit City Thrift/City Care; 7:30 p.m.; free; Silver Moon Brewing, 24 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; www.silvermoonbrewing.com or 541-388-8331. THE CUTMEN:The soul-jazz band performs, with Lucky Jack; 9 p.m.; $5; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881. YOU KNEW MEWHEN:The indie-folk band from Nashville performs; 9 p.m.; $5; The Astro Lounge, 939 NW Bond St., Bend; www.astroloungebend.com or 541-388-0116. SPANKALICIOUS: The psychedeli c
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I 0:00am: God's Purpose for Israel
A7I
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I I:00am: israei's rejection of Her Messiah and what .
it means for the world (FAEE LUNcHTo FDLLow)
6:00pm: israei's prophetic future
"Early Bird Special" Extra Discovnt on 2015 order s for Spring Delivery
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'' -222'SE A ted A4' i"'ket'Rcro~ 54i-:388-002R I.
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THURSDAY, APRIL 23, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
B3
REGON
ouse ommi ee a esu t'0 ose un con t"o
AROUND THE STATE MISSlhg Plahe —The OregonCivil Air Patrol said it will be increasing its efforts to find a single-engine planereported missing on aflight from Creswell to Vancouver, Washington. Civil Air Patrol Lt. Col. Thomas Traver said the pilot of the Piper PA-28Cherokee is believed to be the only person on board. Thepatrol said the plane left Creswell late Tuesdayafternoon. Threeaircraft and15 people were involved in the search onWednesday.
21 truSteeS reappOihted — Gov.KateBrownis reappointing By Sheila V Kumar
family members, induding domesticpartners.The dealer
The Associated Press
SALEM — Oregon House legislators held a rare marathon public hearing Wednesday on a bill expanding background checks to encompass nearly all private guntransfers. The proposal that has sped through the Legislature in the wake of an election that helped Democrats up their majorities in both chambers.
Gun control supporters have unsuccessfully pushed legislators for years to expand back-
ground checks to nearly all gun sales and transfers, but similar bills have narrowly failed twice before. Last year's election, partly funded by a gun-control group that poured money into key legislative races, helped Democmts gain two seats in the Senate, a key battleground.
The House Committee on Rules heard seveml hours of
testimony on a bill requiring all gun sales to take place in frontofa licensed gun dealer, exempting exchanges between
others prohibited from having firearms online without having a gun to get their hands on one. to go through a background would, for a fee, have to conKevin Starrett, executive check. 'While no single law or duct a background check be- director of the Oregon Firefore agun transfercould be arms Federation, said the back- change is going to prevent all completed. ground check system doesn't actsof gun violence,there are Aside from expanding the work and most of the people re- proven common-sense solubackground-check system, the fusedfirearms are denied them tions toprotect our families and proposal also allows courts in error. to makeour communitiessafer. "No matter what the public Frankly it's absurd that we're to determine whether or not a person ordered into outpatient is told about how many crimi- even debating this," said Jenmental health treatment should nals are prevented from getting na Yuille, whose mother, Cinhave possession of a firearm guns because of background dy, was killed during the mall during treatment. checks, the most cursory ex- shooting. The bill has already made amination of Oregon State Oregon law already surit through the Senate, where Police data proves beyond any passesfederal law aftervoters lawmakers passed it 17-13 on doubt that this is simply not passed an initiative in 2000 rea mostly party-line vote. Dem- true," Starrett said. quiring background checks at ocrat Sen. Betsy Johnson of Several sheriffs across the gun shows. Proponents of the Scappoose crossed party lines state, induding from Clatsop, m easure argue felons are able over to vote against it. Grant and Jackson counties, to find and buy guns online The House committee is have also come out in opposi- from unlicensed dealers. scheduled to vote on the mea- tion to the measure, with some If it passes, The Brady Camsure today. saying they won't enforce the paign to Prevent Gun Violence Opponents argued the mea- measure if it passes. says Oregon would be the sures infringes on their 2nd Among the bill's proponents eighth state to require backAmendment rights while dis- were family members of vic- ground checks on private gun proportionately b u r deningtims killed during the Clacka- sales and the fifth since the law-abiding citizens. Support- mas mall shooting in 2012 who 2012 shooting at Sandy Hook ers say the legislation would said the bill doses a loophole Elementary School in Newmake it harder for felons and that allows people to purchase town, Connecticut.
21 people to theyear-old governing boards of Oregon's three largest universities. Under theappointments announced Wednesday, Brown keeps in placeall board members except one. Oregon State University Trustee ElsonFloyd will be replaced byformer Portland Community College President Preston Pulliams. Aspokesman for Oregon State said Floyd, who is also president of Washington State University, found he wasn't able to devote asmuch time ashe'd hoped to the trustee position. Thefour-year appointments at Oregon State, University of OregonandPortland State University are subject to Senate confirmation. Bodlf fouhd —The Multnomah County Sheriff's Office said its river patrol deputies andthe Portland Fire Bureau haverecovered a body from the Willamette River. Lt. SteveAlexander said a boater reported seeing the bodyWednesday. Sheriff's detectives andthe county medical examiner havebegun adeath investigation. The personwas not immediately identified.
Protest at PortlandCity Council meeting —Opponents of a proposed propaneexport terminal havedisrupted the Portland City Council's Earth Daysession. Mayor Charlie Halesblurted, "This doesn't happenhere" asprotesters carrying cardboard cutouts of council members disrupted the meeting Wednesday. He then temporarily adjourned themeeting andwalked out. Thecouncil will vote soon on whether to amend zoning at the Port of Portland's Terminal 6 to allow the project. Thevote hasnot beenscheduled, but opponents have vowed avigorous campaign to derail the project, proposed by a Canadian company,PembinaPipeline. Business andlabor groups support the project, which would create a few dozen permanent jobs and a projected $92 million in tax revenuesover its first10 years of operation. Neighborhood andenvironmental groups areopposed.
Lane COuntySheriff named —TheLaneCounty commission-
Study: Little improvement in renter discrimination The Associated Press PORTLAND —
A new
study finds that Portland's tight housing market is even tighter for black and Latino renters. A study by t h e Portland
Housing Bureau finds that almost half of fair housing tests found
Oregonian reports years instead annually, ComAnnual fair housing audits missioner Dan S altzman, were promised four years who oversees the housing buago after the first report of its reau, said. kind showed discrimination The Fair Housing Counin 64 percent of test cases. cil of Oregon conducted the Lawmakers haven't kept up audit as part of a $70,000 with that promise, and prob- contract. It is disappointing
ably won't be in the future d i scriminatory either.
practices like asking renters While the most recent reof color to provide additional sults are troubling, audits will documents or deposits, The likely be conducted every two
l awmakers don't w a n t t o spend part of their multi-mil-
ers have named asheriff. Chief Deputy Byron Trappwill succeed Tom Turner. Turner is resigning to takeover asFlorence police chief. The commissioners interviewed bothTrappandthe former Florence chief, Maury Sanders,onWednesday.CommissionerssaidSanderswas qualified but choseTrappunanimously. He'll hold the position until a special election next year. He said he will be a candidate for the job.
tion's executive director, Peg-
ge McGuire. Most discrimination is not
as overt as it was in decades past, the study found. In 51 fair h ousing tests, Portland l a n d lords t r e a t-
ed 19 minorities differently than t h eir
w h i t e c o unter-
lion-dollar budget on rooting
parts. People with disabilities were also treated differently,
out housing discrimination,
though not to the same extent
said the nonprofit organiza-
as black or Latino renters.
NO ChargeS ih ShOOting —Twopolice officers won't be charged in the shooting death of 29-year-old ChelseaFresh. Eight rounds were fired at the suspect nearher Beaverton homeas shepointed a rifle, later determined to beunloaded, at the officers. Beaverton Police responded to a call from Fresh's boyfriend, whosaid shewasdrunk andsuicidal. A crisis negotiator tried to calmher, according to thedeputy district attorney, but Freshsaid shehadammunition and she'd fire at police. She eventually cameout of herhome, pointing a rifle at police. Officers Dan CoulsonandJamesBeanefired andhit her four times. A toxicology report showedFresh hada blood alcohol level of.19 percent, and an antidepressant, sleepaid andanti-seizure medication in her system. — From wire reports
WEST NEWS Q RE G Q N
No endangeredlisting for sagegrouse
C 0 M M U N IT Y ® C R E D IT U N I Q N
By Scott Sonner The Associated Press
RENO, Nev.— Interior Sec-
retary Sally Jewell reversed the government's proposed federal protection for a type of sage grouse specific to California and Nevada on 'Ittesday and
said it shows it's still possible to head off a bigger, looming listing decision for the greater sage grouse across 11western states. Jewell joined Nevada Gov. Brian Sandoval and others in
announcing she's withdrawing the government's 2013 proposal to dedare the bistate, Mono
Scott Sonner/TheAssociated press
Basin sage grouse a threatened species along the Califor-
U.S. Interior Secretary Sally Jewell, right, looks on as Nevada Gov. Brian Sandoval, left, answers questions from reporters in Reno,
nia-Nevada line.
Nevada, on Tuesday after she announced her reversal of proposed federal protection of the bistate sage grouse.
The bird found only along the Sierra'seastern front no longer faces the threat of extinction thanks to voluntary conservation efforts and range i mprovements i n i tiated b y
ranchers, local governments, private land owners and public landmanagers, she said. "What this has shown is that despite the stresses we feel on
the landscape here — particularly around drought and wildfire and other stresses that impact this part of the world-
we can still create and find habitat that supports sage grouse,"
Jewell said in a speech outside Nevada Department of Wildlife headquartersinReno.
"There's no reason you can't
have a healthy state with a
healthy economy and ahealthy ecosystem. By working together, you can have it all," she said. The bistate bird is a geneti-
cally distinct population of the greater sage grouse species, which is under consideration
for protection in Nevada, California and nine other states stretching from Oregon to the
Dakotas. "This is welcome news for all Nevadans," said Sandoval,
Jewell said the decision not to list the bistate grouse should be "real encouraging" for other 15years. "I think it is very possible western states pursuing similar not to list that species," Jewell voluntary measures to ward told reporters after her bistate off listing of the greater sage announcement. grouse. Conservationists who petiShe said Tuesday's decitioned to protect both popula- sion should "give the scientists tions accused Jewell of caving and the land managers and to pressurefrom Western con- the private land owners and servati veswho fearfederalpro- the ranchers and the state and tection would mean dramatic governorsallencouragement restrictions on livestock graz- that we need to stay the course ing, energyexplorationandoth- on the greater sage course and er development of public lands. we'llbe ableto achieve asimilar Michael Connor, Califor- outcome if we work together." nia director of the nonprofit Mary Grim, the U.S. Fishand Western Watersheds Project, Wildlife Service's regional sage said that as recently as last De- grouse coordinator,said the cember federaloffi cials had agency was concerned about assigned the bistate grouse the the rate of habitat loss when "maximum priority for listing" it proposed listing the bistate based on the magnitude of bird as threatened two years threats facing the isolated pop- ago. Since then, ranchers, conulationacrossmore than 7,000 servationists and government square miles, from Carson City agencies have committed more to near Yosemite National Park. than $45 million to restoration "Theservice' sbackpedalling efforts over the next 15 years, in claiming that unfinished making the listing unnecesmanagement plans and volun- sary, she said. "If you look at the science, tary,cooperative agreements
j
' .
,1j'i g ,I
30 in a legal battle with conservationists that spans more than
a Republican."Workingtogeth- willprotect the species isuntrue look at the commitments we er, I'm hopeful we can preclude and smacks of political expedi- have, clearly in comparison the need to list the greater sage ency," Connor said Tuesday. to 2010, the future looks very grouse just as we have done Randi Spivak, public lands bright for bistate sage grouse," with the bistate." director for the Center for Bio- Grim told The Associated The U.S. Fish and Wildlife logical Diversity, agreed. "Half Press. "There's no reason to Service is under a court order measures may delay extinc- think the subspecies is at risk to make a listing decision on tion, but it won't prevent it," Spi- now or in the future of going thegreatersage grouseby Sept. vaksaid. extinct"
Oregon Community Credit Union is proud to sponsor a complimentary seminar hosted by the Oregon Community Investment Services Team and * LPL Financial
(g
When
Q Where
Wednesday, April 29, 2015
The Riverhouse Convention Center 2850 Rippling River Court, Bend
Lunch Session: 12:00 p.m. 'I:30 p.m. Dinner Session: 5:45 p.m.- 7:15 p.m. -
Lunch and dinner will be provided
Know your benefits and understand your options. Get the most from Social Security and learn the strategies to maximize your benefit by joining us for an informational seminar where we'll discuss the following topics: o Key Social Security benefit decisions o Simple steps that can help maximize your benefit o Howto Oet started To reserve your seat: cALL541.382.1778 I E-MAILSeminars@OregoncommunityCU.org
1
•
•
•
'Securities and edvisory services offered through LPL Finsncial and Registered Investment Advisor, member FINRA/SIPC. Insurance products offered through LPL Financial orits licensed affiliates. Oregon Communily Credit Union and Oregon Community Investment Services are not registered broker-dealers and are not affilieted with LPL Financial.
Not NCUA Insuwd
Not C r e dlt Unlon Guarantsed
May lase Value
B4
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, APRIL 23, 2015
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he best thing to happen to the Mirror Pond debate could be Tumalo Irrigation District. The district is looking into taking over the operation of the dam. It w ould makerepairs,create passage for fish and boaters,continue to generate power and keep water levels about the same. If it can be done, it's a great solu- velopment authority. There are contion to the issue created because Pa- cerns about any new development cific Power wants to rid itself of the along the river. It's much simpler if dam. It keeps Mirror Pond as Mir- t h atcanbeavoided. ror Pond. Tumalo Irrigation District would The district taking over the dam also benefit. It would get a source of could also resolve a tricky water r evenue in the electricity generation right issue. The permit for the dam that would be used to pay off the reis issued to Pacific Power, in part p a irs to the dam and then could go becauseofhydroelectricpowerpro- t o canal piping and other district duction. The state may have autho- projects. rized a Permit for the dam without peo p l e who want the dam and hydro, but it's more Problematic. the pond to go wiii not be satis And what makes this solution all of course. But they may be pleased the sweeter is that it may be accom- that at least under the district's proplished without a complicated devel- posal, the district would remove its opment scheme to use waterfront Steidl Dam further downstream. Propertytopayforfixingthedam. We urge the city, the park disThat could work. It's very com- t r ict, the irrigation district and Paplicated. There are timing issues. It cific Power to work together to see if might require the creation of a de- it all adds up.
Veters sheuld renew Black Butte Ranchlevy t's hard to say which group benefits more from the 24/7 police coverageatBlack Butte Ranch, owners of the roughly 1,100 homes there that sit vacant much of the time, or owners of the 150 homes that are occupied year round. Both groups do benefit, clearly, and both have astake in seeing that the Black Butte Ranch Service District local option levy is renewed for another five years in the May 19 election. The district operates the resort's police department. It costs about $1 million per year to do so, and the district's tax base provides about two-thirds of that. The remaining amount, slightly more than $300,000, is raised with the local option levy. About 72 percent of the total is spent on personnel costs for the 7.5-member staff. The levy amount, 55 cents per $1,000 of taxable property value, would remain unchanged from the current levy, which expires June 30. Thus, the owner of a home with a taxable value of $450,000 pays $720 annually to support the district, and about $247 of that
t
amount would continue to come from the levy. In exchange the owner would continue to get that valuable 24/7 police coverage. The office handles more than 3,000 callsper year, about half of which come from within the ranch itself. The median age of ranch residents is over 67, or nearly twice the state average, and medical calls from residents and summer guests are an important part of the office workload. The balance generally are calls to assist Deschutes County Sheriff's deputies at accidents and the like. In addition, Black Butte Ranch officers frequently patrol U.S. Highway 20 in front of the ranch to slow traffic there. No community that grows from just over 300 residents during the winter to as many as 5,000 in the summer can m a nage w ithout good police coverage, and Black Butte Ranch is no exception. The local option levy on the May ballot will ensure that today's good coverage will remain in place for the next five years.
R
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uni er enot oo o tion or n ew cam us IN MY VIEW
By Allan Bruckner t was enlightening to read the
contribute greatly to sprawl. This is
counter to city and state policy and years since these restrictions were especially egregious when an alput in place. By comparison, the ternative site within the developed a nd misrepresentations by t h e OSU-Cascades budget to build out community is available. Mileage Truth In Site committee regarding the 10 acres, serving up to 900 stu- driven by OSU-Cascades faculty, the OSU-Cascades campus loca- dents, including the land cost and students and employees for daily tion. Debate is healthy but inten- academic building, is budgeted for commuting would be several times tionally presenting and, emphasiz- less than $30 million. Which is the that of a west-side location. The dising nontruths is not. better investment and better site'? tance from COCC would be much Truth In Site's emphasis on the A far cry from the Truth In Site's longer with a greater burden on possibility t h a t OS U - Cascades false and outrageous claim of $93 more local streets. Bicycling to and could get free land at Juniper Ridge million. After ballyhooing this num- from COCC and residential and is not only false but totally irrele- ber, it is no longer on its website. business neighborhoods would be vant. Apparently it was just an efBut wait, there's more. Juniper practically eliminated, forcing even fort to mislead the public. Regard- Ridge currently has three busi- more trips into automobiles. This less, the cost to develop Juniper nesses, which located there before heavy use on streets would likely Ridge, even if the land was free, is the major road improvements were cause congestion and major costly prohibitive for the university. required. Now there is almost no improvements, especially in northFor starters, it i s w ell k n own additional capacity for sewer. Just east Bend. Maybe a new NIMBY that the access to Juniper Ridge is adding the absolutely necessary group could spring up. off Cooley Road close to Highway northeast interceptor is estimated The above are just some of the 97. It is also well known that the to cost $15 million. Water service reasonsno business has located in statefor at least the past half doz- is estimated to add another million. Juniper Ridge in the past five or six en years has consistently said that How would this be a wise expendi- years. Why then would the fiasco major highway improvements will ture when water and sewer service of Juniper Ridge be a viable site for be required before substantial addi- to the west side campus is at the OSU-Cascades? tional development can occur in the site? The chosen site is the best posarea. The costs have been estimatBut wait, there's more. Truth In sible location for OSU-Cascades. It ed to exceed $50 million, of which Site claims traffic is a primary con- is also a much more desirable use $30 million are a local responsibil- cern. Considerhowever that Juni- of the site than many commercial ity. This cost alone is so great that per Ridge is on the very fringe of uses permitted there. no business has been attracted the community. Developing there, — Allan Bruckner is a former mayor of to Juniper Ridge in the five or six even if it were affordable, would Bend. He lives in Bend.
t
recent extensive article in The Bulletin pointing out the errors
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 brevlty, 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.
Please address your submission to either My Nickel's Worth or In My
View and send, fax or emall them to The Bulletin. Email submissions are preferred. Email: letters@bendbulletin.com Write: My Nickel's Worth/ In My View P.O. Box 6020
Bend, OR97708 Fax: 541-385-5804
Supreme Court is worried about excessive policing By Noah Feldman
2005 case called Illinois v. Caballes,
Bloomberg News
the court had held that police could
conduct a canine drug sniff of the racially charged police abus- exterior of your car when you were s from Ferguson to Staten stopped for speeding. In that case, Island to North Charleston affecting the drug sniff didn't extend the the Supreme Court? In a subtle way, length of the stop. The decision was the answer may well be yes. 7-2, with then-Justice John Paul SteIn the first evidence of an effect, vens, a leading liberal, writing the the Supreme Court held Tuesday opinion. Justices Ruth Bader Ginsthat a traffic stop can't be prolonged burg and David Souter dissented. beyond the time that the police need Ginsburg argued thatthe search to perform their basic functions. should have a reasonable relation to re thepast year's examples of
In a 6-3 opinion, the court said that the police can't perform a canine
the stop.
Lower courts interpreting the Sudrug-sniff after a ticket has been is- preme Court's precedent then split sued — even though, a decade ago, on the question that wasn't fully anit held that a drug sniff that occurs swered in the Caballes case: Could during a lawful stop is perfectly police extend an already legitimate constitutional. police stop to conduct a drug sniff, On the surface, the court's disabsent "reasonable suspicion" of tinction between the two scenarios drugs? depends on whether the dog sniff The court took the case Rodriguez extends the length of the traffic stop. v. United States to answer that quesUnderneath, however, it's possible tion and resolve the circuit split. to discern a subtly changing atti- This time, however, Ginsburg got tude on stop-and-frisk policing, the to write the majority opinion. She centerpiece of the broken-windows didn't overturn the 2005 Caballes approach. Where once the court saw case, in which she had dissentedthe practice as unproblematic, today doubtless she didn't have the votes the court seems more willing to po- to do so. Instead, she noted that Stelice the policing process — and make vens, writing in Caballes, had said sureitdoesn'tbecome abusive. that a traffic stop could become unLegally speaking, Tuesday's case lawful "if it is prolonged beyond the had nothing to do with race. In a time reasonably required to com-
IN MY VIEW
ly to flip, or at least to adopt a more restrictive stance regarding traffic
plete the mission of issuing a warn- stops? ing ticket." The most powerful answer is that Ginsburg was this time prepared the court is well aware of a more to concede that an officer could complex p ublic a t t itude t o w ard perform "certain unrelated checks" stop-and-frisk policing, the cornerduring a traffic stop. But, she said, stone of the broken-windows stratethe officer could not perform unre- gy that is generally given some porlated checks "in a way that prolongs tion of the credit for declining crime the stop." rates in urban spaces over past two In purely technical legal terms, decades. this was a clever move by Ginsburg. After all, the basic rationale for Unable to convince her colleagues having a dog sniff the car of a perthat searches conducted during a son stopped for an unrelated traffic stop must be reasonably related to violation is exactly the broken-winthe stop itself, she managed to con- dows rationale, namely that people vince them that searches extending the length of the time of the stop
ac-
the "Black Lives Matter" and "We
Can't Breathe" marches. Not long ago, Iasked Justice Stephen Breyer in a public interview whether he
who have committed a minor in-
fraction of one kind may be found
sonally subject to broken-windows
committing a more serious violation b e cause of another kind, one that would lead
they are not "part of the officer's traffic mission." In other words,
T he justices prefer not t o
knowledge that they are affected by national social movements such as
thought the justices might be affected by this movement. He gracefully dodged the question. But the justices follow the news, and are affected by changing social attitudes like anybody else. Today, a reasonable observer who isn't per-
must be justified by independent reasonable suspicion —
ed warrant for failing to pay child support — again, a classic instance of the broken-windows rationale in action.
to arrest. The drug sniff pursuant to
policing — someone like the justices, in other words — must be more conscious of the risks of excessive police
engagement in the lives of citizens, example of the policy — and a per- especially racial minorities. fect test case for changing attitudes. The justices can't change policed time. Now unrelated searches It can't have escaped the court's ing practices single-handedly, nor can only be performed if they won't a ttention that several of the k i l l - would they choose to if they could. extend the length of the stop. ings of black men by police came in But Tuesday's decision suggests that Ginsburg's doctrinal sleight of the wake of broken-windows-style the judicial pendulum may be beginhand underscores the idea that there stops. Most recently, Officer Mi- ning to move. The first movement is an important, even fundamental, chael Slager's fatal encounter with may seem small. But the pendulum difference between the pro-police Walter Scott in North Charleston, tends to have momentum. result in the 2005 case and the result South Carolina, began with a traffic — Noah Feldman, a Bloomberg reached Tuesday. What explains the stop. Scott's family says he proba- columnist, is a professor of constitutional other justices' willingness essential- bly fled because he had an unrelatand international law at Harvard she got some of what she wanted in 2005 by using the notion of extend-
a traffic stop is therefore a perfect
THURSDAY, APRIL 23, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
B5
BITUARIES FEATURED OBITUARY
DEATH NOTICES Harriet Joann Loyd, of Fossil Oct. 25, 1938 - April 20, 2015 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home of Bend is honored to serve the family. 541-382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A Private Family Gathering will take place at a later date. Contributionsmay be made
Joe Kline/The Bulletin
Sisters High School Athletic Director Tim Roth shows a group of
eighth-graders how tocarry a surfboard into the water in prepara-
to:
tion for a weekend trip to the Oregon Coast as part of an interdisci-
Jehovah's Witnesses,
plinary expedition class.
jwsurvey.org. Catharine Ward
'I" ».
'i,
Class
Grosness, of Redmond Jim Cole/The Associated Press file photo
Mar. 1, 1923 - April 20, 2015 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home of Bend is honored to serve the family. 541-382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com
In 2002, Mary Doyle Keefe poses at her home in Nashua, New Hampshire, with the May 29, 1943, cover of the Saturday Evening Post for which she had modeled as "Rosie the Riveter" in a Norman Rockwell painting. Keefe died Tuesday after a brief illness. She was 92.
She posed asRosiethe Riveter
Services: No services are planned. Contributions may be made
for painting byNormanRockwell
to:
Partners In Care 2075 NE Wyatt Court Bend, Oregon 97701 www.partnersbend.org
By Dave Collins The Associated Press
Clare Morine Doglio, of
HARTFORD, C onn.
Redmond
Mary Doyle Keefe, the model for Norman Rockwell's
Mar. 1, 1932 - April 17, 2015 Arrangements: Autumn FuneralsRedmond (541-504-9485) www.autumnfunerals.net Services: A private gathering of family and friends will take place at a later date.
iconic 1943 Rosie the Riveter
painting that symbolized the millions of American women who went to work on the
home front during World War II, has died. She was 92.
Keefe died Tuesday in Simsbury, Connecticut, after a brief illness, said her daughter, Mary Ellen Keefe. Keefe grew up in Arling-
Robert "Bob" Edward Olson, of La Pine June 25, 1932 - April 17, 2015 Arrangements: Baird Memorial Chapel of La Pine is honored to serve the family. 541-536-5104, www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: An Urn Committal Ceremony will be held on Sunday, April 26, 2015 at 1:00 p.m. at La Pine Cemetery, located at the end of Reed Rd. in La Pine. At 2:00 p.m. the same day, a Celebration of Life Ceremony followed by light refreshments will be held at Faith Lutheran Church, located at 52315 Huntington Rd. in La Pine. Contributions may be made
ton, Vermont, where she met
Rockwell — who lived in West Arlington — and posed for his painting when she was a 19-year-old telephone operator. The painting was on the cover of the Saturday
Evening Post on May 29, 1943. Although Keefe was petite, Rockwell's Rosie the R i v-
eter had large arms, hands and shoulders. The painting shows the red-haired Rosie in blue jean work overalls sitting down, with a sandwich in her left hand, her
right arm atop a lunchbox with the name "Rosie" on it,
ground is a waving American flag.
Keefe said people in Arlington didn't make too much Rockwell wanted Rosie to of a fuss about her being show strength and modeled in the Rosie painting, aside her body on Michelangelo's from teasing her a little about Isaiah, which is on the ceil- Rosie's big arms. "People didn't make a big ing of the Sistine Chapel. Keefe, who never riveted deal about things back then," herself, was paid $5 for each she told the AP. of two mornings she posed The painting is now part of for Rockwell and his photog- the permanent collection at rapher, Gene Pelham, whose the Crystal Bridges Museum pictures Rockwell used when of American Art in Bentonhe painted. ville, Arkansas. "You sit there and he takes Keefe spent the last eight all these pictures," Keefe years in a retirement comtold The Associated Press in munity in Simsbury, accord2002."They called me again ing to an obituary prepared to come back because he by her family. wanted me in a blue shirt and She graduated from Temasked if I could wear penny ple University with a degree loafers." in dental hygiene, and was Twenty-four years after working as a dental hygienshe posed, Rockwell sent her ist in Bennington, Vermont, a letter calling her the most beautiful woman he'd ever
when she met her husband
of 55 years, Robert Keefe, seen and apologizing for the who died in 2003. They had hefty body in the painting. four children and lived in "I did have to make you Whitman, M a s sachusetts, into a sort of a giant," he and later in N ashua, New wrote. Hampshire. The Rosie painting — not Keefe's family will receive to be confused with a poster f riends and take part in a by a Pittsburgh artist depict- memorial Mass on Friday ing a woman flexing her arm at McLean Village in Simsunder the words "We Can Do bury. A graveside service It" — would later be used in a is scheduled for Saturday
to:
a rivet gun on her lap and her feet resting on a copy of Ad-
La Pine Band of Brothers,
olf Hitler's manifesto "Mein
nationwide effort to sell war
at Park Lawn Cemetery in
Kampf." The entire back-
bonds.
Bennington.
lapinebandofbrothers©gmail.com
DEATHS ELSEWHERE
Obituary policy Death Notices are freeand will be run for oneday, but specific guidelines must be followed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeral homes. Theymay besubmitted by phone, mail, email or fax. The Bulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information on any of these services or about the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825.
Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and by4:30 p.m. Friday for Sundaypublication. Obituaries must be received by 5 p.m. Mondaythrough Thursday for publication on the second dayafter submission, by1 p.m. Fridayfor Sunday publication, and by 9 a.m. MondayforTuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; pleasecall for details.
Phone: 541-617-7825
Mail:Obituaries P.O. Box6020 Bend, OR97708
Email: obits@bendbulletin.com Fax: 541-322-7254
Deaths of notefrom around the world:
M.H. Abrams, 102:Esteemed
of criticism. Died 'Ibesday in Ithaca, New York. who left Austria as a boy as
er who was founding editor of the Norton Anthology of
his family fled from the Nazis and made a celebrated literary
English Literature and who wrote one of the 20th centu-
career in the United States.
Died MondayinVienna. — From wire reports
this SUHDAY
OSPICE
o f Re d m o n d I II
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Atrfrming Life •
Honoring Your Wishesfor Your
~
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IfffreWork Closely with Your Persona/ Doctor
~
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Care in the Comfort of Your Own Home
Chojge
Ofrerfng Yo~Cooffortandaupport
Scarlette in Black and White
PresentingYou and Your Family With Options
The star opens up about her mission to lead a normal life despite international movie fame.
541. 548.7483 WWW.hOSPiCeOfredmOnd.org Servlng Bend I Redmond I Sisters I PowellButte I Prlnevllle I Crooked Rlver Ranch I Terrebonne I Madras
model can be hard to squeeze
into packed classschedules with time enough for test prep, but Geisen said getting students to connect subjects betterprepares them forthe realworld. The class was also
to talk about land management, balancing wildlife and e conomic interests, and t o
compare forestdevelopment east and west of the Cascades. Once at the coast, students
learned about gravity and waves through surfing and did a raked-sand art project, using the shape of the Sisters moun-
designed to reflect the Sisters tains to show how tides relate identity, with an emphasis on to moon phases. At night, they arts, music and the natural cooked fish tacos and sang environment. "That theme songs around the campfire. "It really was just so enjoyof, 'What is this community? What are people known for? able. The kids were so grateful What are they into'? What do to be there and excited about they want to impart on the learning," Geisen said. kids'?'" said Sisters M iddle Next, the teachers plan to School Principal Marshall take students rock climbing Jackson. at Smith Rock State Park as Daily lessons culminate in part of a unit on geology, and overnight expeditions. Last backpacking in Eastern Oreweekend, the group traveled gon for a unit on biology and to Newport to study coastal evolution, how species adapt erosion and marine biology. to match their habitat. On the way, they stopped in — Reporter: 541-617-7837, an old-growth forest and met aspegman@bendbullet in.com
Mill
responsibility (statute) is to
Continued from B1 Without a plan in place that stumpage payments will be
its obligation," Speaks said. "Once we sign off (on a plan),
make sure the mill does meet the mill has to m ake their
stumpage payments." "If they don't make those," of Indian Affairs has refused to sign off on any new timber Speaks added, "we'll have to sales. take some other action." "Our responsibility, un— Reporter: 541-617-7829, made to the tribes, the Bureau
der the federal Indian trust
beastes@bendbulletin.com
The Honorable Robert F. Walberg May 11, 1934 — April 12, 2015
Frederic Morton, 90: Man
critic, teacher and tastemak-
ry's most acclaimed works
Continued from B1 This sort of interdisciplinary
with a ranger in Sweet Home
Robert "Bob" Walberg was bom in Garibaldi, Oregon, the only child of Bert and Aimee Walberg. He used to tell his daughters that he was bom on a fishing boat, but they never believed him. Bob spentmuch of his early childhood in Eugene, before moving to North Bend in 1946, where his father owned an RC Cola bottling plant. He attended North Bend High School and played football, basketball and baseball, before graduating in 1952. AAer graduating ITom the University of Oregon in 1956,where he w asa proud m ember ofthe Sigma Chi &atemity, he served our country as a lieutenant in the U.S. Navy from 1957-1962. Bob started Iaw school at USC in 1960 and graduated from Willamette Law School in 1962. After law school, hereturned to North Bend and went into private law practice. He proudly served as Coos County District Attomey from 1964-1968and Coos County Circuit Court Judge &om 1981until his retirement in 1997. In the 1970s, Bob discovered a passion for acting. As he himself noted, he was already acting in court every day, so making the transition to the stage was not diKcult. He was a gifted actor, playing in a Iong list of dramas,comedies and musicals in local theaters, particularly at Little Theatre on the Bay. For 22 summers, he was also a regular at the Sawdust Theatre in Coquille, starring either in the Olios or as the best melodramatic villain this side of the Mississippi. Oh, that evil laugh! In his earlier years, Bob liked sailing with his dad at the Coos Bay YachtClub atTenmile Lake. As a fatherand grandpa, he enjoyed spending time with his children and their kids, and especially liked to support them at their ball games and concerts. He tookpride in the fact that he taught his daughters how to jitterbug, bait a fishhook andcaddy on the golf course, and schooled his sons and grandsons in the art of being a gentleman. Bob's family and &iends could always rely on him for advice and support. He dislikedpeanut butter and travel almost as much as heliked chocolate and the Oregon Ducks. Upon retirement, Bob moved with Diane, his wife of 33 years, to Sunriver, where he spent many a happy day playing his favorite sport — golf. They wintered in Arizona and loved watching spring training baseball games. He could usually be found in a golf shirt and one of the hats from his extensive collection, often walking with his dogs or paddling down the Deschutes in a canoe with Diane. Bob was a class act, and he will bemissed by a great big blended family who loved him dearly: his beloved wife, Diane; his childrenGretchen WalbergKupin (Ivatt) of Jakarta, Indonesia; Sarah Walberg Hatfield (Brady) of Ellensburg, Washington; Michelle Briscoe of Seattle, Washington; Eric Walberg (Jodie) of Bend, Oregon; Donny Walberg (Allison) of Sherwood, Oregon; Maria Walberg of Bend, Oregon; his grandchildren — Jackson, Tyson, Jordan,Finn, Benjamin, Samantha, Ayden and Owen; his cousins - Connie Nitschke (Eldon) of NorthBend,Oregon;Jack Sm ith(Barbara)ofBanning,C alifornia;and Shari Cochran (Bill) of Langley, Washington. He will alsobe missed by Julie Griffey Schwab, Lori Griffey Clark, Suzie Newton, Patricia •I Borcher, and many other friends. To honorBob, aCelebration ofLife d am emoriaI P otf event will be held on July 11th and 12th, 2015, Sunriver. For,lrrtore details or .+a.post Btessages,and photos, please isit his memorild i page attt/ww. "foreve'rfitiss'ed.cottf/r'obeit-;tealberg 'ot fe8 &ec to coIrttact D~iati'"by . %f;phone or email. '
B6 T H E BULLETIN • THURSDAY, APRIL 23, 2015
W EAT H E R Forecasts andgraphics provided byAccuWeather, Inc. ©2015
i
1
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TODAY
rI
TONIGHT
FRIDAY
"'"
LOW Intervals of cloudsand sunshine
I
ALMANAC
A shower this evening; otherwise, cloudy
"'"
53' 31'
27' i I '
SATURDAY
SUNDAY
60'
51'
EAST: Amixture of clouds andsunshine Seasid today with a breezy 52/Rq afternoon. Arain or Cannon snow shower in spots 62/46 tonight. Tigamo
TEMPERATURE
/4
i
Yesterday
Today
Juneau Kansas City Lansing Lss Vegas Lexington Lincoln Little Rock Lus Angeles Louisville
Madison,Wr
Memphis Miami Milwaukee Minneapolis Nashville New Orleans New YorkCity Newark, NJ Norfolk, VA OklahomaCity Omaha Orlando Palm Springs Peoria Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh Portland, ME Providence Raleigh Rapid City Renu Richmond Rochester, HY Sacramento St. Louis Salt Lake City Ssn Antonio San Diego Sau Francisco San Joss
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UV INDEX TODAY
POLLEN COUNT
NATIONAL WEATHER
WATER REPORT
SKI REPORT In inches ss of 5 p.m.yesterday
Ski resort New snow Base 0 36-8 8 Mt. Bachelor M t. Hood Meadows 0 0-0 0-62 Timberline Lodge 0 Aspen / Snowmass, CO 0 0-0 0-0 Park City Mountain, UT 0 Source: OuTheSnuw.cum
64/44
* ** *
i
• Billings
Amsterdam Athens
52/37/0.00 57/41/pc 70/43/0.14 63/51/s Auckland 64/58/0.00 69/56/pc Baghdad 86/72/0.00 85/60/s v ol v 3/38 Bangkok 100/84/0.13 94nsn Beijing 78/54/0.00 83/50/s san Beirut 70/63/0.16 62/53/sh . Lourv 6 5/saxx x x x x v v v V d zen Berlin 55/43/0.04 64/44/pc Vtr/ 5 .+w v 'e . t Bogota 9 * * 64/48/0.01 67/51/1 v. v. * * * KansasCrty Budapest 66/37/0.00 69/43/pc • /ss BuenosAires 75/45/0.00 75/54/s • Cllsl I 4 V. X X rsa mrr Cj Csbo SsuLucss 86/66/0.00 86/65/pc 64/4 * "k ." * * 65/52 Cairo 79/60/0.00 73/51/s Phoeu im \ :„* „A n chorage Albuquerq e • Ai Calgary 72/39/0.00 61/35/pc • Sa/r rngh mo „* „ ~ „47/3 72/45 Csncun 86n9/0.00 gon5/s Juneau al Ps Dublin 59/32/0.00 61/39/pc * * 95 Edinburgh 61/39/0.00 64/42/pc 56/34 . +%%%%% % % 8' x xytr)ea x x Geneva 73/41/0.00 69/46/1 xv.v.v.'e 'ex Harsre 73/59/0.17 76/52/pc Srrere k k Hong Kong 79/69/0.00 81/72/pc Chihuahua ssnz <<<kk ' e'e <rr -< 0 v.v. Istanbul 52/41/0.07 55/45/pc sem 74/51 v. v. v. v. v, Illliamr Jerusalem 66/51/0.02 56/43/pc Monte y %v.v.'ex aeRIESS/73 Johannesburg 70/55/0.05 72/51/t Lima 76/68/0.00 77/66/pc Lisbon 66/55/0.00 71/55/pc Shown are today's noonpositions of weather systemsand precipitation. Temperature bandsare highs for the day. London 59/43/0.00 62/43/pc T-storms Rain S h owers S now F l urries Ice Warm Front Sta t ionary Front Madrid Cold Front 72/46/0.00 74/49/pc Manila 95/78/0.00 92/78/pc
National high: 98O at Death Valley,CA National low: 12 at Hettinger, ND Precipitation: 2.28" at Port Aransas,TX
Boa • 67/45
6 4/43
p 70/
O
77/51/Tr 69/57/0.00 61/46/0.03 46/32/0.03 76/51/0.00
s
65/52/1 74/66/1
68/57/pc 67/56/pc 62/38/s 66/52/s 54/28/s 57/35/s 63/53/1 71/64/1
ssn5/D.os 86/74/1 87n5/t
44/34/0.01 49/32/0.00 70/50/Tr 84/59/0.00 69/50/0.06 73/48/0.07 77/47/0.00 66/52/0.67 59/30/0.00 88/71/0.00 83/59/0.00 55/36/0.02 73/47/Tr 89/65/0.00 47/37/0.28 60/35/0.00 67/42/0.02 77/44/0.00 62/24/0.00 70/51/Tr 77/46/Tr 51/42/0.01 77/49/0.00 59/44/0.00 74/48/0.00 76/68/0.40 66/59/Tr 65/52/0.00 71/53/0.00 Santa re 71/43/Tr Savannah 82/56/0.00 Seattle 59/41/0.14 Sioux Falls 56/26/0.00 Spokane 61/41/0.00 Springfield, Mo 62/45/0.33 Tampa 86/71/0.00 Tucson 85/55/0.00 Tulsa 65/50/0.24 Washington,Dc 74/51/Tr Wichita 64/46/0.01 Yskims 69/42/0.00 Yuma 83/61/0.00
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Friday Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W HiRo/W 49/30/Tr 55/36/sh 53/37/c 58/33/0.00 63/46/s 65/52/1 38/34/0.01 45/24/c 52/31/pc 80/61/0.00 77/58/pc 77/57/pc 60/45/0.04 58/32/s 63/46/s 58/26/0.00 65/46/pc 61/50/sh
City
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Yesterday Today
Friday
City Abilene Akron Albany Albuquerque Anchorage
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48 contiguousstates); „
37'
TRAVEL WEATHER
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Wickiup 192677 98% Crescent Lake 7 5 2 53 87% Ochoco Reservoir 34613 787o Prineville 120644 81Vo River flow Sta t io n Cu. f t./sec. Deschutes R.below CranePrairie 258 Deschutes R.below Wickiup 1280 Deschutes R.below Bend 95 Deschutes R. atBenhamFalls 1730 Little Deschutes near LaPine 105 Crescent Ck. belowCrescent Lake 34 Crooked R.above Prineville Res. 44 Crooked R.below Prineville Res. 239 Crooked R. near Terrebonne 89 Ochoco Ck.below OchocoRes. 5
48/31/s 47/35/s 54/37/s 54/40/sh 64/41/s 66/56/c 83/72/1 83n5/t 53/39/pc 54/41/pc 54/36/pc 55/38/pc 65/45/s 64/46/s 68/59/1 85/55/1 64/46/s 60/48/sh 89/69/1 88/68/pc 80/60/pc 81/59/s 59/38/s 61/46/c
55/36/pc 55/38/pc 82/60/pc 80/62/pc 47/32/pc 54/33/pc 56/34/sh 54/35/sh
54/35/pc 55/37/pc 69/42/s 66/48/pc 70/42/1 65/41/sh 71/47/pc 64/43/c
65/39/s 65/41/s 43/31/c 46/30/pc
80/51/pc 74/52/pc 64/45/s 65/54/c 68/48/t 68/46/pc 85nzn 83/69/1 68/61/pc 67/60/pc
65/52/pc 63/54/pc 71/52/pc 65/52/pc 69/38/pc 64/35/c 85/57/c 76/60/pc 52/44/sh 52/42/sh 63/42/s 54/40/sh 56/37/pc 56/38/c 60/46/pc 65/58/1
85/72/1 87n4/pc
79/52/pc 79/52/s
62/52/1 76/63/1 60/41/s 62/42/pc 63/51/1 79/54/1
67/35/pc 64/37/pc 81/61/s 83/59/s
I
Mecca Mexico City
64/49/pc 65/55/pc 68/56/s 75/54/s
103/78/0.00 105/76/s 105/76/s 83/57/0.00 81/57/1 81/53/pc Montreal 48/41/0.08 48/34/sh 48/36/sn Moscow 48/30/0.10 51/34/r 50/35/pc Nairobi 81/63/0.12 80/61/1 81/61/1 Nassau 81/75/0.23 87n4/s 87/73/sh New Delhi 100/74/0.00 101/73/pc 102/73/pc Osaka 73/46/0.00 72/50/pc 72/50/s Oslo 61/36/0.00 55/41/pc 53/40/pc Ottawa 50/37/0.02 47/30/c 48/33/c Paris 70/48/0.00 69/44/pc 69/52/sh Rio de Janeiro 77/75/0.25 81/75/pc 82/73/t Rome 72/46/0.00 67/52/pc 67/50/pc Santiago 82/45/0.00 80/46/s 81/47/s Sau Paulo 72/66/0.58 72/65/sh 77/62/c Sapporu 60/41/0.00 64/45/s 61/43/sh Seoul 67/43/0.00 66/43/pc 69/43/s Shanghai 76/51/0.00 76/56/c 77/55/c Singapore 88/79/0.01 89/78/1 91/78/t Stockholm 59/36/0.00 54/35/pc 53/40/pc Sydney 66/59/0.97 71/58/sh 76/56/s Taipei 73/64/0.00 81/69/pc 80/67/r Tel Aviv 72/60/0.05 66/54/pc 67/54/s Tokyo 63/54/0.26 68/56/pc 68/54/s Toronto 45/36/0.06 43/27/c 48/28/pc Vancouver 56/44/0.13 51/40/sh 52/39/sh Vienna 64/50/0.00 65/47/1 67/45/1 Warsaw 63/37/0.00 64/43/pc 66/44/pc
92/78/t 82/54/s 64/53/s
68/49/pc 67/51/c 71/44/t 78/57/s 84/60/s 74/55/s 59/29/c 91/76/s 57/44/c 61/42/sh 70/53/pc 75/51/s
83/72/pc 59/49/s 59/44/s 71/52/t
76/66/pc 64/57/t 65/51/sh 74/51/pc
93/79/pc
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Hi/Lo/Prec. HiRo/W Hi/Lo/W 81/65/Tr 87/65/1 86/58/1 /40 High 57 58 84' in 2012 lington 64/39 Portland 45/38/0.12 45/29/c 51/32/pc Meac am Losti ne 30' 31' 14'in 1972 Low / 6 /41 60/37/0.16 48/31/c 49/33/pc • 1/3 60 35 dl N n • he Daa 75/48/0.00 72/45/pc 68/44/pc • 59 /34 • 62/ PRECIPITATION CENTRAL: Times of andy• 48/31/0.00 47/33/s 51/36/s 61/42 52/44 Mc innviff J«eph Aganra 79/51/0.00 72/50/c 72/62/pc 4/41 Gove nt • • He p pner Grande • 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.12" clouds andsunshine upi C«don 2/35 61 40 Atlantic City 67/44/0.11 50/36/pc 50/38/pc Cam • 61 Record 1.15" in1929 today with a breezy Lincoln Union Austin 79/66/Tr 86/69/1 82/67/t 51/ Month to date (normal) 0.2 2" (0.56") afternoon; ashower Sale 52/45 Baltimore 71/42/0.02 55/35/s 57/34/pc Grantteu • pray Year to date(normal) 1.76 " (3.91 ") possible late across 55/4 39 Billings 73/36/0.00 64/43/pc 67/41/c a 'Baker C Newpo 56/31 Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 30 . 0 0" the north. • 61/A Birmingham 81/48/0.00 67/51/1 73/64/c 5/41 Mitch il 51/43 61/33 Bismarck 56/17/0.00 60/38/s 61/38/pc Camp Sh man Red WEST: Partly to 61 /33 n R SUN ANDMOON Boise 70/44/0.00 67/45/pc 60/41/c 56/31 • John eu mostly cloudy today. Yach 57/40 Boston 53/37/pc 54/40/pc 51/43 • Prineville Day /34 Today Fri. tario Bridgeport, CT 67/43/0.00 Showers will move 65/41/0.11 54/36/pc 54/38/pc 60/30 • P a lina 6 0 / 3 7 Sunrise 6:09 a.m. 6 : 0 8 a.m. 44 Buffalo 46/41/0.08 40/29/c 45/29/pc into the north late this Floren e • Eugene ' Re d Brothers Sunset 7:58 p.m. 8: 0 0 p.m. morning; an afternoon 53/45 Valee Burlington, VT 55/40/0.42 50/35/c 48/36/sh Su iveru 57/27 28 Moonrise 10: 17 a.m. 11 :13 a.m. 69/45 Caribou, ME 58/33/0.00 47/34/sh 47/34/sh shower south. Nyssa • 56 / 6 Ham on C e Charleston, SC 81/55/0.00 80/54/pc 73/59/pc Moonset 12: 23 a.m. 1: 1 0 a.m. La pine Juntura Grove Oakridge Co Charlotte 77/43/0.00 71/42/pc 68/53/pc • Burns OREGON EXTREME First Fu ll Last New 67/38 56/41 /40 Chattanooga 79/45/Tr 68/43/pc 69/55/pc 54 3 • Fort Rock Riley 64/31 YESTERDAY Cresce t • 69/28 Cheyenne 67/31/0.00 63/39/1 60/40/1 u d 62/32 55/27 Chicago 46/34/Tr 54/33/s 54/39/s High: 72 Bandon Roseburg • Ch r i stmas alley Cincinnati 55/42/0.10 56/32/s 61/44/s Jordany gey Apr 25 May 3 M a y 11 M ay 17 at Ontario 54/45 Be«er Silver 62/29 Frenchglen 69/41 Cleveland 45/40/0.04 45/33/pc 48/33/pc Low: 25' 64/39 Marsh Lake 63/36 ColoradoSprings 61/37/0.00 66/40/1 63/39/1 Tonight's shy: Hercules climbs the eastern at Redmond 61/26 Gra • Burns Jun tion Columbia, Mo 57/38/0.00 63/46/s 64/53/sh • Paisley 4/ sky this evening. Lookfor a keystone pattern a Columbia, SC 82/44/0.00 78/50/1 73/58/pc 69/40 • Chiloquin Columbus,GA 81/48/0.00 77/55/c 77/63/pc Medfo d 'so/so of dim stars low in the NEby mid evening Gold ach 59 Rorne 0' Columbus,OH 49/39/0.24 50/29/s 57/39/s 54/ 70/40 u Klamath Concord, HH 66/30/0.02 52/30/pc 53/33/pc Source: JimTodd,OMSI • Ashl nd • Fage • Lakeview McDermi Corpus Christi 77n2/1.59 85/73/c 86/73/c Bro ings 64/ 56/ 69/31 64/29 66/39 Dallas 77/58/0.00 79/68/1 79/64/1 Dayton 47/40/0.20 52/31/s 59/42/s Denver 69/37/Tr 69/43/1 66/42/t 10 a.m. Noon 2 p .m. 4 p .m. Yesterday Today F rlday Yesterday Today F riday Yesterday Today Friday Des Moines 58/33/0.00 62/43/s 59/44/sh 3 1~5 ~ s l s 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 44/37/Tr 48/29/c 54/34/pc The highertheAccuWsalher.rxrm IIV Index number, Asturis 56/41/0.07 53/42/sh54/38/sh Ls Grande 59/43/0.00 61/40/pc 56/35/pc Portland 60/4 2/0.0054/44/sh 56/45/ sh Duluth 41/27/0.01 46/27/pc 43/31/pc the greatertheneedfor eyesudskin protscguu.0-2 Low, Baker City 59/43/0.01 61/33/pc 55/30/pc Ls Pine 56/35/0.00 56/28/pc 50/30/pc Prinevige 59/ 32/0.0060/30/pc50/32/ pc El Paso 82/62/0.00 79/58/pc 76/53/pc 3-5 Moderate;6-7 High;8-10 VeryHigh; 11+ Exlrems. Brookings 66/49/0.00 56/43/pc 53/45/pc M edford 67/4 8/0.00 65/42/pc 62/41/pc Redmond 60/ 25/0.0458/28/pc 55/31/pc Fairbanks 49/22/0.00 57/31/s 58/33/pc Bums 63/43/0.04 64/31/pc57/29/pc Newport 5 4 /37/Tr 51/43/c 51/43/shRoseburg 63 / 44/0.00 60/41/c 60/44/c Fargo 50/25/0.00 55/35/s 52/39/pc Eugene 60/33/0.00 56/39/c 56/42/c No r th Bend 57 / 43/0.00 54/43/c 55/44/c Salem 61/38/0.04 55/41/c 56/43/sh Flagstaff 59/31/0.00 56/26/1 52/30/pc Klsmsth Falls 65/38/Tr 60/31/pc 55/32/pc Ontario 72/53/0.00 68/44/s 63/39/pc Sisters 60/30/0.01 57/31/pc 55/32/c Grand Rapids 40/33/0.03 44/26/pc 53/34/s G rasses T r ee s Wee d s Lakeview 63/39/0.00 64/29/pc56/32/pc Pendleton 61/41/0.00 62/40/pc 59/39/pc The Dsges 6 6 /47/0.00 61/42/pc 62/42/pc Green 6ay 41/32/Tr 50/28/pc 52/31/s Greensboro 77/44/0.00 67/40/s 67/47/pc Weather(W):s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy,c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rsin, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow l-ice, Tr-trsce,Yesterdaydata ssof 5 p.m. yesterday v d t ~ Hi h • Ab t Harrisburg 66/43/0.08 52/33/pc 54/33/pc Source: OregonAgergyAssociatss 541-683-1577 Hsrffurd, CT 71/42/0.03 53/32/pc 54/34/pc Helena 73/40/0.00 65/40/s 57/34/c 85/71/0.19 86nz/c 85/72/pc ~ g s ~ t e s ~ 209 ~ sgs ~ 40s ~ 50s ~ ecs ~ 709 ~ ags ~ 90s ~fccs ~tf cs Honolulu ~ 106 ~gs Houston 84/67/0.00 88/72/t 84/71/t As ur 7 s.m.yesterday d d d d Huntsville 78/48/0.39 64/47/1 68/62/c * * * * * * * Indianapolis 50/40/0.10 55/34/s 60/45/s Reservoir Acr e feet Ca p acity NATIONAL Jackson, MS 81/54/0.00 77/60/1 76/67/1 EXTREMES C rane Prairie 529 3 9 96% Jacksonville 85/54/0.00 89/62/c 79/64/pc YESTERDAY (for the,",,"
Yesterday Normal Record
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OREGON WEATHER
Bend through 5 p.m.yesterday
MONDAY
•9
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IN THE BACK BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NEWS W Scoreboard, C2 P reps, C4 Sports in brief, C2 NBA, C4 NHL, C2 NFL, C4 MLB, C3
© www.bendbulletin.com/sports
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, APRIL 23, 2015
PPP
Packet pickup location changed The packet pickup location for the U.S. Bank Pole Pedal Paddle has changed from the former Orvis Building in Bend's Old Mill District to 1441 SWChandler Ave., Suite101, a site adjacentto Cascade Lakes Lodgein southwest Bend. The Mt. Bachelor Sports Education Foundation, which puts on the multisport race from Mount Bachelor to Bend, announced the change Wednesday. The 39th annual PPP is
set for Saturday, May 16.
Race packets will be available on May 14 from noon until 6 p.m., on May15 from 11 a.m. to 6:30 p.m., and on the day of the race from 6:30 to 7 a.m. Organizers noted that no late-evening Friday packet pickup will be available as it has been in previous years. For more information, call MBSEFat 541388-0002 or visit www. mbsef.org.
PREP TRACK AND FIELD
ou ars, orm caim
m e e wins
• Mountain View boys dominate 110 hurdles, 3,000 • Several Summiboys t and girls claim two individual to take a winover Ridgeview; MVgirls cruise to victory victories en route to a roadwin overBendHigh Bulletin staff report
Bulletin staff report
Summit.
wire, but after posting 1-2-3 finishes
jump. The Cougars also took the top three spots in the 3,000. Brent Yeakey won the shot put, discus
Three athletes won two eventstwo of them recording marks that
Sarah Curran tied for first in the
in two events and with eight different
and javelin for the Ravens, while Tanner
athletes claiming victories, the Mountain View boys edged Ridgeview 70-64
Stevens (400), Brennan Buddey-Noonan (800) and Brandon Keith (300 hurdles)
rank high in Class 5A — and the Summit girls went on the road to de-
high jump, each clearing 5-2 to tie for fourth in the 5A rankings. Alana
feat Bend High 79-57 in Intermoun-
Dickson's mark of 10-3 in the pole
in an Intermountain Conference track
each contributed with a win.
and field dual meet at Ridgeview High on Wednesday. Dantly Wilcox won the long jump and led a 1-2-3 showing in the 110-meter hurdles for Mountain View, finish-
The Mountain View girls completed the league sweep of Ridgeview, as the Cougars won 13 events on their way to an 84-47 win. Cassidy Huges was
tain Conference action. To go along with a 100-meter hur-
vault ranks second in 5A. For the boys, Mitchell Burton (110 hurdles, 300 hurdles) and Kyle Heimuller (shot put, discus) each won
first in the shot put, discus and javelin
and is fourth statewide. Myah Harter,
two events to lead Summit to an 8558win.
ing the hurdles in 14.85 seconds that ranks No. 1 in Class 5A and fifth in the state. Garrett Price took the 100 for the
for the Cougs, while Ridgeview's Hosanna Wilder won the high jump with
who also won the shot put, took the discus with the second-best mark in 5A (120-10). Emma Stevenson won the 100 and the long jump for
Caleb Hoffmann (400), Kailash Moore (3,000), Max Meade (high jump) and Joshua Zachem (pole vault) each had a win for Bend.
REDMOND — It came down to the
Cougars and placed second in the long
a clearance of 5 feet, 2.5 inches that ranks third in 5A.
dles victory, Camille Weaver won
the triple jump with a leap of 36 feet, 11.5 inches that tops the 5A rankings
For Bend, Cambree Scott and
PREP BASEBALL
BASEBALL
660 just
another number for Mays
— Bulletin staff report
SOCCER Nike unveils new uniforms for U.S. BEAVERTON — Nike
has unveiled black and white home uniforms for the U.S.Women's World Cup team. Wait, what? There's no prevalent red, white and blue in the home kits — save for a small blue patch surrounding 13 white stars on the inside back neckline. The jerseys are white with boxy black numbers and letters, to go with neon yellow socks that give way to electric blue cleats. Even U.S.Soccer's normally red, white and blue crest, along with the two stars signifying the team's two previous World Cup titles, is black and white. Photos of the jerseys leaked about a month ago, and already there was a commotion over the color scheme. Some compared them to Nike's kits for New Zealand, which arealso black and white. U.S. forward and Nike athlete Alex Morgan praised the uniforms, which the company released Wednesday. Nike previously releasedtheteam'saway uniforms, which include gradient blue jerseys with red touches. — The Associated Press
13
• Former star doesn't put a lot of stock in final home run in 1973 By David Waldstein New Yorh Times News Service
As New Yorkers filed into Shea Stadium that
mid-August night in 1973, there was much more for fans to think about than an
aging baseball star's home run total. It was
Aug. 17. On that day, the Soviet Union had successBend's Jordan Sunnitsch fires a throw to first base to try to turn a double play after forcing out Redmond's Derek Brown at second during
fully tested a nuclear
Wednesday's game at RedmondHigh School. The Lava Bears took an11-1 victory.
missile that
Photos by Joe Klime i The Bulletin
Mays
could split into multiple warheads. The daily dose of Watergate news was on
front pages again, the Vietnam War raged, and on a rooftop on the East Side of
M anhattan, an 8-year-old boy was murdered, adding to a growing sense of chaos and fear in the streets. Sports may be a diver-
• Bend rolls to an 11-1 win over Redmond Bulletin staff report REDMOND — The game was tied after two innings. Adam Randall could sense the excitement peaking in the
Mets were not doing their part to distract the trou-
•Bendboystennistakes6-2win over Mountain View,C4
bled populace. They were 12 games under.500, in last place in the National
Redmond High dugout. The Bend High coach could sense the Panthers' high hopes of knocking off the top-ranked
See additional photos on The Bulletin's website: bendbulletin.cem/sperts
team in Class 5A. The Lava Bears, however,
and another five in the fourth
were not folding. Instead, they struck back, scoring four runs
mountain Conference baseball victory. SeeBears/C4
in the top of the third inning
sion, but the New York
Inside
League East, and they lost
0
that night too, to the Cin-
cinnati Reds, in agonizing fashion. An article in The New York Times said that for the Mets, the game
"produced some of the bitterest memories of a mem-
on their way to an 11-1 InterRedmond catcher Hunter Smith tags Bend's Creighton Simmonds
orably bitter summer."
out at the plate during Wednesday's game.
SeeMays/C3
NBA PLAYOFFS
U.S. forward AlexMor-
GRIZZLIES 2, BLAZERS0
gan poses in the new
Blazers fall into early hole
home uniform for the
women's World Cup team Wednesday.
By Teresa M.Walker
NFL
The Associated Press
The Grizzlies took full advantage
of starting the playoffs at home for only the second time in their short postseason history. They had only won theirplayoffopeneroncebefore,and
scored 18 points, and the Grizzlies beat
Lee said. "We didn't want those guys
Game1: Grizzlies100, Blazers 86 Game 2: Grizzlies 97,Blazers 82 Saturday at Portland 7:30 p.m. Monday at Portland 7:30 p.m. x -April 29 at Memphis T B D x -May1 at Portland TBD x -May 3 at Memphis T B D
Portland 97-82 Wednesday night to grab the franchise's first 2-0 lead in a playoff series.
to come in here and get one and switch
x-if necessary
MEMPHIS, Tenn. — Known for
pounding opponents inside with Marc Gasoland Zach Randolph, theMemphis Grizzlies are showing they can be that was on the road in San Antonio
Approvalpasses for concussions A federal judge says NFL will provide "prompt and substantial benefits" for many former players suffering from concussion-related illnesses,C4
p~
Mark Humphrey/TheAssociated Press
Portland centers Joel Freeland, left, and Meyers Leonard sit on the bench in the final moments of
the second half of Game 2 ofWednesday night's Western Conference playoff gameagainst Memphis in Memphis, Tennessee. The Grizzlies won 97-82 and lead the series 2-0.
just as effective outside the paint.
Hey, they can even shoot 3-pointers. M ike Conley and Courtney Lee each
in2011.
"All we did is just take care of home court, which we were supposed to do," home-court advantage in their favor."
SeeBlazers/C4
C2
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, APRIL 23, 2015
ON THE AIR
COREBOARD
TODAY BASEBALL
MLB, NewYork Yankeesat Detroit MLB, St. Louis at Washington College, Georgia atAuburn College, TexasA&M at LSU MLB, KansasCity at Chicago White Sox
1 0 a.m. ML B 1 p.m. MLB 4 p.m. SEC 4:30 p.m. ESPNU 5 p.m. MLB
GOLF
PGA Tour,Zurich Classic of NewOrleans LPGATour, Swinging Skirts Classic EuropeanTour, ChinaOpen SOCCER Europa League, Zenit St. Petersburg (Russia) vs. Sevilla (Spain) Europa League, Napoli (Italy) vs. Wolfsburg (Germany)
noon Golf 3 p.m. Golf 11:30 p.m. Golf noon
FS1
noon
FS2
BASKETBALL
NBA playoffs, Cleveland at Boston NBA playoffs, Chicago at Milwaukee NBA playoffs, Golden State atNewOrleans
4 p.m. TNT 5 p.m. N BATV 6:30 p.m. T NT
HOCKEY
NHL playoffs, TampaBayat Detroit NHL playoffs, Chicago at Nashville LACROSSE Women's college, PennSt. at Maryland
4 p.m. NBCSN 6:30 p.m. NBCSN 4 p.m. B i g Ten
FOOTBALL
Australia, Richmondvs. Melbourne
2:30 a.m. (Fri.) FS2
FRIDAY AUTO RACIIIG
NASCAR,Sprint Cup, Richmond 400, practice Ba.m. FS1 NASCAR,XFINITY, Richmond250, qualifying 12:30 p.m. FS1 NASCAR,Sprint Cup, Richmond 400, qualifying 2 :30 p.m. F S 1 NASCAR, XFINITY, Richmond 250 4 :30 p.m. F S 1 GOLF
Champions Tour, Legends ofGolf PGA Tour,Zurich Classic of NewOrleans LPGATour, Swinging Skirts Classic
9 a.m. noon 3 p.m.
Golf Golf Golf
4 p.m. 4 p.m. 5:30 p.m.
MLB SEC
BASEBALL
MLB, NewYork Mets at NewYork Yankees College, Georgia atAuburn College, Southern Cal atOregonState
KICE 940-AM
College, UCLA at Stanford College, Washington atOregon MLB, Minnesota at Seattle
College, Utah at ArizonaState
5 p.m.
P a c-12
9 p.m.
Sp i k e
BOXING
Anthony Dirrell vs. BadouJack FOOTBALL
Australian, Essendonvs. Collingwood SOCCER Australian, Adelaide vs. Melbourne City England, Southampton vsTottenham Hotspur
9 :30 p.m. F S 2 2 :30 a.m. F S 2 4:45 a.m. NBCSN
Listings are themostaccurate available. TheBulletin is not responsible for latechanges madeby 7Vor radio stations.
SPORTS IN BRIEF FOOTBALL NFL SuSPendS Hardy 10 gameS —TheNFLsuspendeddefensive end GregHardy for10 games without pay Wednesday for conduct detrimental to the leagueafter concluding there was "credible evidence" he roughed uphis former girlfriend nearly a yearagowhen he was a member of theCarolina Panthers. Hardy, who joined the Dallas Cowboys as a free agent on aone-year, incentive-laden deal, was notified Wednesday of the decision in a letter from Commissioner Roger Goodell. Hardy plans to appeal.
BASKETBALL
STATISTICS ThroughApril 19 Charles SchwabCup 1, OlinBrowne,443Points. 2, BartBryant, 431. 3, MarkO'Meara, 391.4, MiguelAngel Jimenez, 349. 5, Marco Dawson,309.6,CohnMontgomerie,304.7,Paul Goydos ,292.8,BernhardLanger,276.9,RoccoMediate,
In the Bleachers © 2015 Steve Moore. Dist. by Universal Ucuck www.gocomics.com/inthebleachers
242.10,2tiedwilh240.
ScoringAverage(Actual)
1, BernhardLanger, 68.85.2, BartBryant, 69.12. 3, MiguelAngelJimenez, 69.38.4, TomPernice Jr., 69.59. 5,ColinMontgomerie,69.71.6,Tom Lehman,69.75.7, Olin Browne, 69.76. 8, Kevin Sutherland, 69.86. 9(tie), ScottDunlapandJoeDurant,69.88. Driving Distance 1, KennyPerry,299.5.2, FredCouples,295.8.3, John Huston,291.7.4, Jesper Parnevik, 288.4. 5,Grant Waite, 287.1. 6,WesShort, Jr., 284.3.7, JohnRiegger,282.4. 8,StephenAmes,280.5.9,FrankEsposito,279.6.10, MiguelAngelJimenez,279.5.
Driving Accuracy Percentage
c(,
BASEBALL
AmericanLeague
"What? We have batsand gloves, but no baseball? Are you sure we all ended up in the right place?"
BASEBALL
NBA Playoffs NATIONALBASKETBALL ASSOCIATION All TimesPDT
1-1
Today'sGames Cleveland at Boston,7 p.m., Clevelandleadsseries 2-0 Chicagoat Milwaukee,8 p.m., Chicagoleadsseries 2-0
Grizzlies 97, Blazers 82 PORTLAND (82) Batum5-150-011, Aldridge7-209-10 24, Lopez 5-6 0-010, Ligard5-167-818, Crabbe1-2 0-0 3, McCoff um3-130-06,Leonard4-50-010,Freeland 0-00-00, Blake 0-00-00. Totals30-7716-18 82. MEMPHIS (97) Allen 2-4 0-0 4, Randolph5-16 0-0 10, Gasol 4-15 7-715, Conley6-11 4-418, Lee8-110-1 18, Je.Green 4-130-09, Koufos2-40-04, udrih4-92-2 10, Carter3-6 0-09, Calathes0-00-0 0. Totals 38Bg 13-1497. Portland 21 18 21 22 — 82 Memphis 19 31 23 24 — 97 3-PointGoals—Portland6-20(Leonard2-2, Crabbe1-1, Aldridge1-2,Ligard1-5,Batum1-6,Mccollum 0-4),Mem phis 8-16(Carter3-5, Lee2-3, Conley 2-3, Je.Green1-3,Randolph0-1, udrih 0-1). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—Portland 53 (Aldridge 14), Memphis 48(Randolph 10). Assists—Portland 11 (Batum7), Mem phis 19(Conley 6). TotalFoulsPortland13,Mem phis19. Technicals—Portland defensivethreesecond.A—18,119 (18,119).
Hawks 96, Nets91 BROOK LYN(91) Johnson6-164-419,Young1-70-22, Lopez8-15 4-4 20, Wiliams1-7 0-0 2, Bogdanovic 3-9 0-0 8, Teletovic0-20-0 0,Anderson5-7 2-313, Jack9-13 3323,Plumlee22024.Totals36 78131891. ATLANTA (96) Carroll 1-8 0-0 2,Migsap7-111-219, Horford 6-15 2-214,Teague6-16 2-2 16, Korver5-94-517, Antic 2-63-5 8, Bazemore 1-51-2 3, Schroder5-11 1-1 12, Scott1-7 0-0 3, Mack1-2 0-02, Brand0-0 0-0 0.Totals36-BB14-19 96. 24 23 20 24 — 91 Brooklyn Atlanta 29 21 25 21 — 96
SPIlrs111, CliPPers107 (OT) SANANTO NIO(111) Duncan 14-23 0-128,Leonard9-16 3-423, Splitter0-1 2-42,Parkerg-61-21, Green3-60-09, Diaw 6-140-012,Ginobili 2-65-69, Mills 5-96-618, Beline fif3-82-39,Joseph0-00-00,Bonner0-20-00. Totals 42-9119-26111. L.A. CLIPPERS (1BT) Barnes1-10 1-4 4, Griffin 12-255-7 29, Jordan 71061720, Paul8152221,Redick4124516, Crawford 4132 211, Davis0 20 00, Rivers2 40 0 4, Turkoglu1-1 0-02, Jones0-00-00. Totals39-92 2B-37107. San Antonio 2 82 4 2617 17 —111 L.A. Clippers 2 4 23 27 20 13 — 1BT
DEALS Transactions
BASKETBALL
FIRSTROUND (Best-of-7; x-tf necessary) Wednesday'sGames Atlanta96,Brooklyn91,Atlantaleadsseries 2-0 Memphis97,Portland82, Memphis leadsseries2-0 San Antonio111,L.A. Clippers 107(OT)series tied
1, PeterSenior,86.61%.2, JeffHart, 83.04%.3, WayneLevi, 82.14%.4, BobGilder,81.12%.5, Fred Funk, 80.36%.6, Morris Hatalsky,79.37%.7, Mark Wiebe,78.57%.8 (tie), TomPurlzerandJoseCoceres, 77.55/ a10,BobbyWadkins,77.04%. All-Around Ranking 1, BemhardLanger, 58. 2, MichaelAllen, 109.3, MiguelAngelJimenez, 138.4, JoeDurant,147. 5, Bart Bryant,166.6,Colin Montgomerie,169. 7,JeffMaggert, 181. 8(tie), TommyArmour gland Fred Funk,182.10, RoccoMediate,183.
)s
Sunday Girls lacrosse:SouthEugeneat Bend, 11;30a.m.; SouthEugeneat Summit,1:30 p.m.
W ednesday' sSummaries
SOFTBALL
Champions Tour
Saturday Baseball:MadrasJVatCulver, noon Boys tennis: Sistersvs. NorthBendat Wiffamette, 9a.m. Girls tennis: Churchil atRidgeview,11a.m. Track and field: Bend,Mountain View,Redmond, Ridgeview,Summit, Sisters, La Pine, Culverat SummiInvi t tational, 10a.m.; Madras,Gilchrist at Lithia Track andField Invitational in KlamathFalls, 10:45a.m. Boys lacrosse:Mountain Viewat West Albany,3 p.m.; Ridgeview at McNary, 10a.mcRoseburgat Sisters, 1p.m. Girls lacrosse: Corvallis at Sisters, noon;West Albany atSisters, 2p.m.
4 p.m. E S PN 5 p.m. E SPN2 6:30 p.m. ESPN 4 p.m. C N BC 4:30 p.m. NBCSN 7 p.m. N BCSN
GOLF
IN THE BLEACHERS
Friday Baseball: MountainViewat Bend, 4;30p,mc Ridgeview at Redmond,4:30 p.mcLaPineat Coquile (DH),2 p.m.;CottageGroveat Sisters, 4:30p.m. SoflbalhMountainViewat Bend, 5 p.mcRidgeview at Redm ond,5p.m.; Sistersat CottageGrove,4:30 pm.; LaPineat Coquige(DH), 2pmcPilot Rockat Culver(DH),2p.m. Boys golf: Bend,Mountain View,Ridgeview, Crook County,Sisters,LaPineat MeadowLakes,11 a.m. Boys lacrosse:Summitvs. Central Catholic at HilsboroStadium,7:30p.m.; Mountain Viewat Cleveland,8p.m.;RidgeviewatSprague,6:30p.m. Boys tennis:SistersatWiffamete High, 4p.m.
GoldenStateat NewOrleans,9:30p.m., GoldenState leadsseries2-0 Friday's Games HoustonatDallas, 4 p.m. TorontoatWashington, 5p.m. L.A. ClippersatSanAntonio, 6:30p.m.
HOCKEY
NHL playoffs, Ottawa at Montreal NHL pla yoffs,TeamsTBA NHL pla yoffs,TeamsTBD
Today Baseball: Madras atCrookCounty,5 p.m. Soflbau: CrookCountyatMadras,4;30p.m. Boys tennis: Bendat Ridgeview, 4 p.m.; Madrasat Stayton, 4 p.m. Girls tennis:Ridgeviewat Bend,4 p.m.; Sisters, NorthBendatJunction City,noon;Staytonat Madras, 4p.m4SummitatRedmond,TBD Track andfield: CrookCounty, MadrasatTri-Vagey District Previewin Madras,TBD;La Pineat Creswell, TBD Girls lacrosse: BendatRoseburg, 5:30p.m.
7 p.m. P a c-12 7 p.m. Pac-12(Ore.) 7 p.m. Roo t
BASKETBALL
NBA playoffs, Houston at Dallas NBA playoffs, Toronto at Washington NBA playoffs, L.A. Clippers at SanAntonio
ON DECK
HOCKEY
College
NHL playoffs
Pac-12 Au TimesPDT
NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE All Times PDT
Conference Dverall W L P ct W L Pct 14 4 .778 29 8 .784 13 5 .722 26 11 .703
UCLA ArizonaSt. SouthernCal California OregonSt. Arizona Washington Oregon WashingtonSt
10 5 .667 29 10 .744 10 8 .556 23 14 .622 8 7 . 533 2512 .676 9 9 .500 24 14 .632 7 11 .389 22 16 .579 5 10 .333 23 18 .561 5 10 .333 21 18 .538 5 10 .333 13 23 .361 4 11 .167 17 21 .447
utah
Stanford
Wednesday'sGame
ArizonaSt.6, Arizona5 Friday's Games WashingtonSt.at Utah,11a.m. SouthernCalat OregonSt., 5.35p.m. Cahforma atArizona,6 p.m. Tenne sseeTechatArizonaSt.,6:30p.m. UCLA at Stanford, 7p.m. WashingtonatOregon, 7p.m.
FIRSTROUND (Best-of-7; x-if necessary) Wednesday'sGames Ottawa1,Montreal0, Montreal leadsseries3-1 N.Y.Rangers2, Pittsburgh1, N.Y.Rangers leadseries 3-1 St. Louis6,Minnesota1,6:30p.m.,seriestied 2-1 Anaheim 5,Winnipeg2, Anaheimwins series 4-0
Today'sGames Tampa Bayat Detroit,4 p.m.,Detroit leadsseries2-1 NY Islanders atWashington, 4p.m., seriestied2-2 Chicago atNashvile, 6:30p.m.,Chicagoleadsseries3-1 CalgaryatVancouver, 7p.m.,Calgary leadsseries 3-1 Friday's Games Ottawa atMontreal,4 p.m. PittsburghatN.Y.Rangers, 4p.m. MinnesotaatSt Louis 630pm
TENNIS WTA PerscheGrandPrix Wednesdayat Sfuttgarl, Germany First Round SaraErrani, Italy, def.AgnieszkaRadwanska (7), Poland,7-6(8), 6-4. Angelique Kerber,Germany,def. AlexaGlatch,united States, 6-2, 7-5. ZartnaDiyas,Kazakhstan, def.SabineLisicki, Ger-
Saturday'sGames SouthernCalat OregonSt., 1.35p.m. WashingtonSt,at Utah,3 p.m. Cahforma atArizona,6 p.m. Tennes seeTechatArizonaSt.,6:30p.m. UCLA at Stanford, 7p.m. WashingtonatOregon, 7:30p.m. Sunday'sGames CaliforniaatArizona, noon WashingtonSt,at Utah,noon Tennessee Tech at ArizonaSt., 12:30p.m. SouthernCalat OregonSt., 1:05p.m. UCLA at Stanford, 2p.m. WashingtonatOregon, 2p.m.
many,6-0, 6-0.
BelindaBencic, Switzerland,def. Julia Goerges, Germany, 3-6,6-3, 7-5. SecondRound
SimonaHalep(2), Romania, def. GarbineMuguru-
za, Spain3-6, , 6-1,6-3.
ATP
SOCCER
BarcelonaOpen Wednesday afBarcelona,Spain MLS SecondRound Rafael Nadal (2), Spain, def. NicolasAlmagro, MAJORLEAGUESDCCE Spain,6-3,6-1. All TimesPDT David Ferrer(3), Spain, def. Albert Montane s, Spain,6-2,6-3. EasternConference Victor Estreffa Burgos, Dom i n i c an Re pu b l i c , def. W L T Pts GF GA Marin Cilic(4),Croatia,6-4, 6-4. NewYork 3 0 2 11 9 4 FelicianoLopez(5), Spain, def. Marselghan,TurD.C. United 3 1 2 11 6 5 NewEngland 3 2 2 1 1 6 7 key,6-2,5-7, 7-6(5). PabloAndujar,Spain,def. Leonardo Mayer (11), Columbus 2 2 2 8 8 5 OrlandoCit y 2 3 2 8 6 8 Argentina,2-6,6-1,6-2. Chicago 2 3 0 6 5 7 Philipp Kohlschreiber(12), Germany, def. Andrey NewYorkCity FC 1 3 3 6 5 6 Kuznetsov, Russia, 7-6(1),6-3. Philadelphia 1 4 3 6 9 13 Martin Klizan(14), Slovakia,def. JuanMonaco, TorontoFC 1 4 0 3 8 1 1 Argentina,5-7,6-0,6-3. Montreal 0 2 2 2 2 6 SantiagoGiraldo(15), Colombia,def. JoaoSousa, WesternConference Portugal6-3, , 3-6, 6-1. W L T Pts GF GA EliasYmer,Sweden, def.Nick Kyrgios(16), AustraVancouver 5 2 1 16 10 7 lia, 2-6,7-5,7-6(7). FC Dallas 4 2 1 13 10 10 MarcelGranollers,Spain,def. Jo-WilfriedTsonga Los Angele s 3 2 2 1 1 8 7 (6), France, 6-4, 6-2. Seattle 3 2 1 10 9 5 BenoiPai t re,France,def. ErnestsGulbis(8), Latvia, SanJose 3 4 0 9 7 9 1-6, 6-2,6-3. Houston 2 2 3 9 6 4 FabioFognini(13),Italy,def.AndreyRublev, RusRealSaltLake 2 Portland
2
1 3 9 6 2 3 9 7
Sporting KansasCity 2 2 3 9 7 Colorado 1 2 3 6 5
Friday's Games
NewYorkCity FCat Chicago,5 p.m. FC DallasatColorado7p m
Saturday'sGames
RealSaltLakeat NewEngland,4:30p.m. PhiladelphiaatColumbus, 4:30p.m. SportingKansasCity atHouston,5:30 p.m. D.C.UmtedatVancouver, 7:30p.m.
5 7 8 5
CHICAGO WH ITESOX— AssignedRHPKyleDrabek outrighttoCharlotte (IL). LOS ANG ELES ANGELS — Claimed OFGary Brownoffwaivers fromSt. Louis andwil optionhim to Salt Lake(PCL). Transferred RHPCoryRasmusto the60-dayDL.Placed RHP MattShoemakeronthe bereavem ent list. RecalledRHPNick Tropeanofrom Salt Lake. NEWYORKYANKEES— ClaimedLHPMattTracy off waiversfromMiami andoptionedhimtoScranton/ Wilkes-Barre (IL). OAKLANDATHLETICS — Recalled RHP Arnold LeonfromNashvile(PCL). OptionedRHPR.J. Alvarez to Nashvile. SEATTLE MARINERS— SignedOFCarlosQuentin to a minorleaguecontract. TEXASRANGERS— VoidedtheMarch30option of RHP NickTepeschto Round Rock(PCL) and placed him onthe15-dayDL,retroactive to March30. National League COLORADOROCKIES — Reinstated RHP John Axfordfromthe family medical emergency list. Placed RHPLa TroyHawkinsonthe15-dayDL.RecalledRHP ScottObergfromAlbuquerque(PCL). Optioned C/1B Wilin Rosarioto Albuquerque. LOSANGELESDODGERS— RecalledOFChris HeiseyFromOklahoma City (PCL). OptionedLHP AdamLiberatore toOklahomaCity. WASHIN GTONNATIONALS—Traded LHPXavier Cedenoto theLA. Dodgers for cash.Recalled LHP MattGracefromSyracuse(IL). PlacedLHPFelipeRivero on the15-day DL,retroactive toApril18. BASKETB ALL National Basketball Association NBA —Announcedagroupheaded bybilionaire AntonyResslerhasagreedto purchasethe NBA's AtlantaHawks. Fined Houston GJasonTerry $5,000
for yiolating theanti-flopping rulesduringagameon April 20.
OKLAHOMACI TY THUNDER — Fire coachScott Brooks. FOOTBA LL National Football League NFL —Suspended Dallas DEGregHardy forthe first 10 gamesofthe 2015regularseason, withoutpay, for conductdetrimentalto theleague. CINCINN ATI BENGALS— SignedcoachMarvin Lewis to aone-yearcontract extensionthroughthe 2016season. MIAMIDOLPHINS—SignedOLsJef Linkenbach
andJacquesMcclendon. TENNE SSEETITANS—Agreed to termswith OT ByronBell. HOCKEY National HockeyLeague BUFFALOSABRES— SignedFEvanRodriguesto atwo-year,entry-level contract. NASHVILL EPREDATORS— Recalled GsMarek Mazanec and Magnus Heff berg,Ds Joe Piskula, AnthonyBitetto andJohanAlm, andFs Rich Clune, ColtonSissons,Viktor ArvidssonandAustin Watson fromMilwaukee(AHL). COLLEG E AUSTINPEAY— Named David Midlick wom en's basketballcoach. FLAGLER— NamedKyleCreganmen'sassistant basketballcoach. FORDHA M—Named RodneyCrawford men'sassistantbasketball coachandWilie Cruzassistant director ofbasketball operations/strengthtraining coach. MINNESOTA — AnnouncedsophomoreFReggie Lynch istransferringfromglinois State. NEWMEXICO— Named Chris Harrimanmen's associateheadbasketball coach.Releasedjunior F JordanGoodmanfromhis basketball scholarship.
FISH COUNT
upstreamdaily movement of adult chinook,jack chinook,steelheadandwild steelheadat selectedColumbia Riverdamslast updatedTuesday. sia, 3-6, 6-4,6-1. Chnk Jchnk Sflhd Wsuhd B onnevi lle 5,987 5 2 27 8 BRDNastaseTiriac Trophy T he Daffes 7,812 80 13 7 Wednesday atBucharesl,Romania JohnDay SecondRound 2,273 88 11 9 Ivo Karlovic(3), Croatia,def. BornaCoric, Croatia, McNary upstream year-to-date movement ofadult chinook, 3-6, 6-3, 6-4. j a ck chi n ook, st e el h ead an d w i l d st e el h ead at s el e ct e d LukasRosol(4), CzechRepublic, def. DusanLajo- ColumbiaRiverdamslast updatedWednesday. vic, Serbia4-6, , 6-4, 6-3. Chnk Jchnk Sflhd Wstlhd Guigermo Garcia-Lopez(5), Spain,def. Marcos Bonneville 60,400 368 3 ,874 2,120 BaghdatisCyprus,7-5,6-2. , T he Daffes 35,084 242 2 1 4 124 Jiri Vesely(7), CzechRepublic, def.MalekJaziri, John Day 14,418 8 6 323 234 Tunisia,6-3, 6-1. McNary 7,808 1 0 9 4 8 6 308
HaWkS, ROSSler agree On$850 milliOn Sale —Agroup headed by billionaire Antony Ressler hasagreed to purchasethe NBA's AtlantaHawks.Theteam announcedthedealW ednesdaynight during the first half of the Hawks' playoff gameagainst the Brooklyn Nets. The sale price wasnot released. But aperson familiar with the deal, speaking to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because the two sides did not reveal that information, said Ressler's group would pay$850 million. Former NBAstar Grant Hill and Spanx founder Sara Blakely are part of the group.
NHL PLAYOFFS ROUNDUP
Ducks advancequickly after sweep of Jets
Oklahama City fireS COaCh BraakS after 7 yearS — The Oklahoma City Thunder fired coach Scott Brooks. Theteam made theannouncement Wednesday. BrookscoachedtheThunderfor seven seasons. Starting in 2010-11, heledthe team to the Western Conference Finals three out of four years, and the Thunder reached the NBA Finals in 2012. TheThunder failed to makethe playoffs this past season, as injuries limited them to a45-37 finish. Brooks was 338-207(.620)withtheThunderand wasthe2009-10NBA Coach of the Year.
OLYMPICS SilVa COnfirmS heWill try to COmPete in Rio —Mixed martial arts fighter Anderson Silva will fight for a spot in the Brazilian taekwondo team at the2016 Olympics in Rio deJaneiro. The announcement was madeWednesday after a meeting with Brazilian taekwondo officials. Considered one of the best pound-for-pound fighters in the history of mixed martial arts, Silva said he is "trying to give backto the sport" in which hebeganhis career.
BASEBALL BOndS' OdStruCtion COnViCtiOn thrOWnOut — Barry Bonds' obstruction of justice conviction was reversedWednesday bythe 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, which ruled his meandering answer before a grand jury in 2003 wasnot material to the government's investigation into steroids distribution. Bonds, baseball's career home runs leader, was indicted in 2007 for his testimony four years earlier before the grand jury investigating the illegal distribution of performance-enhancing drugs by theBayArea Laboratory Co-0perative. — From wire reports
The Associated Press
"We didn't come here to win one se-
ries," Kesler said."We came here forthe heim Ducks wiped out the Winnipeg whole thing."
to show up and it's our job to follow them." Also on Wednesday: Rangers 2, Penguins 1: PITTSBURGH
Jets in front of another raucous whiteout
— Kevin Hayes scored at 3:14 of overtime
WINNIPEG, Manitoba — The Ana-
crowd. Ryan Kesler scored twice in the third period and Anaheim beat Winnipeg 5-2 on Wednesday night to sweep the Western Conference first-round series. "Obviously it's a building that I know, so it's nice to come back here and be successful, "said Kesler,whoplayed two sea-
Bryan Little and Mark Stuart scored
for Winnipeg. The Jets/Atlanta Thrashers franchise
to give the New York Rangers a victory over Pittsburgh in Game 4 of the Eastern
remains without a playoff victory through 15 seasons of its existence. The only previous playoff appearance was in 1999 in Atlanta, a sweep at the hands of the New York Rangers. "They scored key goals at key times sons in Winnipeg for the Manitoba Moose and madebigplayswhen they needed to, in Vancouver's farm system. and we couldn't get one to go," Jets cap"Amazing, especially when they're tain Andrew Ladd, said. "It's an empty heckling at you and they're booing you. feeling, you don't know what to do. No Obviously, I wanted to silence this crowd one said winning the Cup or playing in tonight, and that's what we did." the playoffs was easy." Andrew Cogliano, Emerson Etem and Amid more chants of "Katy Perry! Katy Sam Vatanen — into an empty net — also Perry!" from Jets fans, Ducks star Corey
Conference first-round series. In overtime, Martin St. Louis started a goal-
scored, and Frederik Andersen made 25 saves. The Ducks are the first team to ad-
Blues 6, Wild 1: ST. PAUL, Minn. Vladimir Tarasenko scored twice and
Perry had two more assists to reach six
points in the series. "We've got All-Stars, we've got allvance to the second round. "I never thought it would be 4-0 in my world players in our dressing room and wildest dreams," Ducks coach Bruce Bou- everyone just feeds off of it," Etem said. dreau said. "I thought it would be a six, or "We've got a great mix of older veterans seven-game series." and young guys and the younger guys Anaheim will face Calgary or Vancou- just feed off of Kes, and obviously Corey ver in the second round. Calgary leads and Ryan (Getzlaf). They set the tone each that series 3-1. and every game, you know they're going
mouth scramble when he threw the puck in front on a wraparound attempt. The
puck pinballed to Carl Hagelin and went across the crease for Hayes to flip it past fallen goalie Marc-Andre Fleury. Senators 1, Cafyadiens 0: OTTAWA,
Ontario — Mike Hoffman scored midway through the third period and Ottawa beat
Montreal to avoid elimination. Craig Andersonmade 28 savestohelp theSenators cut Montreal's lead to 3-1 in the Eastern
Conference first-round series. -
revived St. Louis sent Minnesota goalie Devan Dubnyk to an early exit and thoroughly dominated the Wild to even the
Western Conference quarterfinal series 2-2. Kevin Shattenkirk had three assists and Jake Allen made 17 saves to help the
Bluesend a nine-game postseason road losing streak.
THURSDAY, APRIL 23, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
C3
OR LEAGUE BASEBALL Standings
Boston NewYork Toronto Baltimore TampaBay Detroit
Kansas City Chicago Minnesota Cleveland Houston Oakland Los Angeles Seattle Texas
AMERICANLEAGUE East Division W L Pct GB 9 6 .600 8 7 .533 1 8 7 .533 1 7 8 .467 2 7 8 .467 2 Central Division W L Pct GB 11 4 .733 11 4 .733 6 8 .429 4'/z 6 9 .400 5 5 9 357 51/2 West Division W L Pct BB 8 7 .533 8 8 .500 '/z 6 6 6
9 9 9
.400 2 .400 2 .400 2
Wednesday'sGames
Chicago WhiteSox6, Cleveland0 Toronto4, Baltimore2 N.Y.Yankees13, Detroit 4 Tampa Bay7, Boston5 Minnesota 3, KansasCity 0 Arizona8,Texas5 Oakland 9, L.A.Angels 2 Seattle 3, Houston2
Today'sGames
NY Yankee s(Tanaka2-1)at Detroit(An Sanchez1-2), 10:08a.m. Oakland (Chavez0-0) at L.A. Angels (Tropeano0-0), 4:05 p.m. Baltimore(Tigman2-1) at Toronto (Hutchison 1-0), 4:07 p.m. Boston(Buchholz1-2) at TampaBay (Odorizzi 2-1), 4:10 p.m. KansasCity(Ventura2-1) atChicagoWhite Sox(Sale 2-0),5:10p.m.
Friday's Games Bostonat Baltimore,4:05p.m. N.Y. MetsatN.Y.Yankees,4:05p.m. ClevelandatDetroit, 4;08p.m. TorontoatTampaBay,4:10p.m. KansasCityatChicagoWhite Sox,5:10 p.m. Housto natOakland,7;05p.m. Texas at L.A.Angels, 7:05 p.m. Minnesota atSeatle, 7:10p.m. NATIONALLEAGUE East Oivision W L NewYork 12 3 Atlanta 8 6 Washington 7 8 Philadelphia 5 10 Miami 4 11
St. Louis
Chicago Cincinnati Pittsburgh Milwaukee
Central Division W L 9 8 8 7 2
4 6 7 8 13
W 9 10 8 8 6
L 5 6 7 7 10
West Division
Los Angeles SanDiego Arizona Colorado SanFrancisco
Rays 7, RedSox5
Twins 3, Royals 0
Reds 2, Brewers1
Marlins 6, Phillies1
Mariners 3, Astros 2
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla.— Jake
Elmore homered, BrandonGuyer had a two-run, pinch-hit single in afour-run sixth andTampa Bay rallied from a four-run deficit to beat Boston.
KANSAS CITY, Mo.— Mike Pelfrey pitched sevenscoreless innings to pick up his first victory since 2013 as Minnesota beatKansasCity.
MILWAUKEE — Billy Hamilton dashedhome on a two-out wild pitch in the ninth inning andCincinnati beat Milwaukee, the Brewers' seventh straight loss.
PHILADELPHIA — Adeiny
SEATTLE —J.A. Happearned his first win with the Mariners as the Seattle bullpenheld off Houston. Acquired from Toronto in an offseason trade, Happ(1-1) won in his third start. He gave up two runs and eight hits in 7/s innings, walking none andstriking out five.
American League
AN TimesPDT
Pct BB .800 .571 3'/2
.467 5 .333 7 .267 8
Pct BB .692 .571 1'/z .533 2 .467 3 .133 8 Pct GB .643 .625 .533 I'/2
.533 1'/r .375 4
Wednesday'sGames Pittsburgh 4, ChicagoCubs3 Miami 6,Philadelphia1 St. Louis7,Washington 5 N.Y.Mets3, Atlanta2 Cincinnati 2,Milwaukee1 Colorado 5, SanDiego4 Arizona8,Texas5 SanFrancisco3, LA. Dodgers2 Today'sGames ChicagoCubs(Hendricks 0-0) at Pittsburgh(Locke 2-0), 9:35 a.m. Miami(Phelps0-0)at Philadelphia(McGowan 1-0), 10:05a.m. Atlanta(Teheran 2-0) at N.Y.Mets(B.colon3-0), 10;10a.m. Cincinnati (Bailey0-1) at Milwaukee(Lohse0-3), 10:40a.m. SanDiegoP.Ross 1-0)at Colorado(Lyles1-1), 12;10 p.m. LA. Dodgers (Bolsinger0-0) atSanFrancisco (Undecided),12:45 p.m. St. Louis(Wacha 2-0) at Washington (Scherzer1-1), 1:05 p.m. Friday's Games Atlantaat Philadelphia,4:05p.m. N.Y.MetsatN.Y.Yankees, 4:05p.m. Chicago CubsatCincinnati,4:10 p.m. Washingtonat Miami,4:10p.m. St. LouisatMilwaukee,5:10p.m. SanFranciscoatColorado, 5:40p.m. PittsburghatArizona,6:40 p.m. LA. Dodgers atSanDiego, 7:10p.m.
Hechavarria had apair of hits and scored the go-ahead run and Miami took advantage of Philadelphia's sloppy play to end afivegame losing streak with a victory over Phillies.
Minnesota KansasCity ab r hbi ab r hbi Cincinnati Milwaukee DSantnss 5 0 2 0 AEscorss 4 0 2 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi Boston TampaBay TrHntrrf 5 I 2 0 Mostks3b 4 0 0 0 BHmltncf 2 2 I 0 Segurass 3 0 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi Mauer1b 3 I 2 0 Lcaincf 3 0 1 0 Miami Philadelphia V ottoIb 4 0 2 I EHerrr2b 3 I 0 0 Bettscf 4 1 1 1 DeJessdh 2 0 0 0 Dozier2b 4 I 2 1 HosmerIb 3 0 1 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi Frazier3b 3 0 0 0 Braunrf 3 0 0 0 Pedroia2b 5 1 2 2 TBckhph-dh 2 0 0 0 KVargsdh 4 0 1 1 KMorlsdh 4 0 0 0 D Gordn2b 5 1 1 0 OHerrrcf 4 0 I 0 P hillips2b 4 0 0 0 Lind1b 4 0 1 1 Ortizdh 4 1 1 1 SouzJrrf 4 1 2 1 Plouffe3b 3 0 1 0 AGordnlf 3 0 1 0 rucerf 3 0 0 0 KDavislf 4 0 0 0 P rado3b 5 0 2 1 Reverelf 4 0 I 0 Houston Seattle H Rmrzlf 4 1 1 0 BWilsnc 0 0 0 0 Arcialf 3 0 0 1 S.Perezc 4 0 0 0 B Byrdlf 3 0 0 0 ArRmr3b 4 0 1 0 S tantonrf 3 0 0 0 Utley2b 4 0 1 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi Napoli1b 3 0 2 1 Acarerss 4 2 2 0 SRonsnlf 0 0 0 0 Orlandrf 4 0 0 0 Penac 3 0 I 0 GParracf 3 0 1 0 M orse1b 4 0 0 0 Ruizc 3000 Altuve2b 5 0 2 1 S.Smithdh 3 0 0 0 Sandovl3b 4 0 0 0 Longori3b 4 1 2 0 KSuzukc 4 0 0 0 C.colon2b 2 0 1 0 Cozartss 3 0 0 0 JRogrs ph 1 0 0 0 O zunacf 4 1 2 0 Asche3b 3 1 I I Valuen3b 5 0 0 0 Weeksph-dh 1 0 0 0 Victorn rf I 0 0 0 DJnngslf-cf 4 1 2 0 JSchafrcf 4 0 0 0 Cuetop 2 0 0 0 Maldndc 3 0 1 0 Real m tc 5 0 2 0 HowardIb 3 000 S pringrrf 4 0 0 0 AJcksncf 4 1 I 0 Craigph-rf 2 0 0 0 Dykstr1b 3 0 1 1 Totals 3 5 3 103 Totals 3 1 0 6 0 1 0 0 0 Nelsonp 2 0 0 0 ISuzukilf 3 1 1 0 DeFrts p 0 0 0 0 G attisdh 4 0 0 0 Cano2b 4 0 I 0 Bogartsss 4 0 0 0 Elmorepr-If 1 2 1 1 M innesota 3 0 0 0 0 0 000 — 3 Schmkrph Hchvrrss 5 2 2 0 Diekmnp 0 0 00 1010 L owriess 3 0 3 0 N.cruzrf 4 0 I I Hanignc 4 1 1 0 Forsyth2b 2 0 1 1 K ansas City 0 0 0 0 0 0 000 — 0 Chpmnp 0 0 0 0 LSchfrph FRdrgzp 0 0 0 0 C osartp 2 0 0 0 Sizemrrf 3 0 I 0 Jcastroc 3 0 0 0 Seager3b 3 0 0 0 Kiermrcf 2 0 0 0 E—Guthrie (1). DP—Minnesota2, KansasCity1. otals 2 8 2 4 I Totals 3 1I 5 1 Solanoph 1 0 0 0Galvisss 3 0 0 0 Carter1b 4 1 2 1 MorrsnIb 2 1 0 0 Guyerph-rf 1 0 1 2 LOB —Minnesota12, KansasCity 8. 2B—D.Santana T C incinnati 100 0 0 0 001 — 2 ARamsp 0 0 0 0 Hamelsp 1 0 0 0 C IRsmslf 4 1 2 0 Ackleylf 3 0 I 0 Riverac-1b 4 0 0 0 (2), TorHunter (3). 38—Hosmer (1). SB—A.Escobar M ilwaukee 1 0 0 0 0 0 000 — 1 Bakerph 1 1 0 0 CHrndzph 1 0 0 0 Mrsnckcf 4 0 1 0 BMillerss 3 0 2 I Totals 35 5 8 5 Totals 3 3 7 126 (2), Lcain(5).CS—TorHunter(1). D P — M il w a ukee 3. LOB—Cincinnati 2, Milwaukee M orrisp 0 0 0 0 LGarcip 0 0 0 0 Zuninoc 3 1 1 1 Boston 0 03 011 000 — 5 IP H R E R BBSO 6. 28 — L .S c ha f e r (1). SB—B.Hamilton (9). S—Se- Cishekp 0 0 0 0Gilesp 0 0 0 0 Totals 36 2 102 Totals 3 0 3 7 3 Tampa Bay 1 0 0 0 0 4 20x— 7 Minnesota Ruf1b 1000 Houston 000 010 100 — 2 E—Longoria (I). DP—Boston 2, Tampa Bay 1. PelfreyW,I-O 7 5 0 0 2 4 gura. IP H R E R BBSO Totals 3 8 6 101 Totals 3 0 1 5 1 Seattle 101 100 Bgx — 3 LOB —Boston8, TampaBay6. 2B—Napoli (1), Han- FienH,3 1 1 0 0 0 0 Cincinnati Miami 010 000 140 — 6 DP — Houston1, Seatle1. LOB —Houston10, Se- igan (1),SouzaJr. (3). HR—Pedroia (4), Ortiz (3), PerkinsS,3-3 1 0 0 0 0 1 CuetoW,1-2 8 5 1 1 2 8 P hiladelphia 0 1 0 0 0 0 000 — 1 attle 4. 28 —Lowrie (2), Col.Rasmus(3). HR —Carter Souza Jr. (4), Elmore(1). SB—Victorino (2). CSKansasCity hapman S,4-4 1 0 0 0 0 2 E—Utley (3), Hamels (1), O.Herrera(2). DP—Mi(1), Zunino (2). SB—Springer(4), A.Jackson(1). Forsythe (1). GuthrieL,1-1 5 6 3 3 6 3 C Milwaukee ami 2, Philadelphia1.LOB —Miami11, Philadelphia IP H R E R BBSO IP H R E R BBSO Pino 3 3 0 0 0 4 Nelson 8 3 1 1 2 5 2. 28 — Prado (2). 38—Revere (2). HR —Asche (2). Houslon Boston F.Morales 1 1 0 0 0 1 F.RodriguezL,0-2 1 I 1 1 1 1 S B — H ec ha var ri a (1). CS — Ozuna(1). R.Hernandez L,0-2 7 6 3 3 1 2 J.Kegy 5 8 5 5 1 7 HBP —by Pelfrey (A.Gordon, L.cain), byGuthrie (Ar- WP—F.Rodriguez.Balk—Cueto2. IP H R E R BBSO 2-3 1 0 0 0 2 BreslowBS,1-1 2- 3 Thatcher 1 0 0 0 I cia). WP —Pelfrey. T—2:28.A—30,452 (41,900). Miami 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 MujicaL,1-1 W.Harris 1 3 2 2 1 1 T—2:47. A—24,721(37,903). C osart W, 1 -1 6 4 1 1 0 4 Seattle Varvaro 11-3 0 0 0 1 1 A.RamosH,2 I 0 0 0 0 3 71-3 8 2 2 0 5 TampaBay HappW,1-1 Mets 3, Braves 2 Morris I 1 0 0 0 0 2-3 0 0 0 3 I National League MedinaH,2 Karns 6 7 5 5 4 3 Cishek I 0 0 0 0 0 RodneyS,4-5 I 2 0 0 0 I Boxberger W,1-1 1 0 0 0 0 3 NEW YORK — Lucas Dud a hi t a Philadelphia T—2:34. A—I4,756(47,574). JepsenH,4 1 0 0 0 0 2 Giants 3, Dodgers 2 Hamel s 6 5 1 0 3 5 GeltzS,1-1 1 1 0 0 0 0 tiebreaking single in the eighth in- LGarciaL,1-1 I 2 1 1 I I J.Kegy pi t ched to 5 ba tt e rs i n the 6t h . SAN FRANCISCO — Joe Pani k ning thatsent the New York Mets Athletics 9, Angels 2 Giles 23 2 4 0 0 0 HBP—byJ.Kelly (DeJesus), by Karns(Victorino). De Fratus 1-3 1 0 0 0 1 hit a game-ending sacrifice fly to their10th consecutive victory, Diekman WP — Karns. I 0 0 0 I I ANAHEIM, Calif.— Sonny Gray T—3:10.A—12,733 (31,042). with the Dodgers in afive-man over Atlanta. Wilmer Flores hit a HBP —byDiekman (Morse). Balk—L.Garcia. outpitched JeredWeaver with infield, and SanFrancisco edged T—2:55. A—23,417(43,651). tying homer and anRBIsingle for
seven innings of two-hit ball, and Blue Jays 4, Orioles 2 Billy Butler homered during a five- TORONTO — Rookie DevonTravis run seventh inning that carried got three hits, including a goOakland to avictory over the Los home runthat sent Toronto Angeles Angels. Gray (2-Oj struck ahead over Baltimore. Justin Smoakalso outseven,escaped abases-loadconnected for the BlueJays, who ed jam in the third and retired his have 21 homers this season. The last 14 batters. Yankeesbegantheday leadingthe Oakland Los Angeles majors with 20.
LosAngeles.MadisonBumgarner and Clayton Kershawkept things close, dueling until it becamea battle of the bullpens.
the Mets (12-3), on their longest winning streak since taking 10 straight in July 2008. Atlanta
New york
Cardinals 7, Nationals 5 WASHINGTON — Kolten Wong homered anddrove in the tiebreaking run with a double in the eighth inning to lift St. Louis to a victory over Washington.
ab r hbi ab r hbi Los Angeles San Francisco YongJrcf 4 I I 0 Mayrryrf 3 0 1 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi Callasp3b 3 0 I I Grndrsph-rf 0 I 0 0 R oginsss 4 0 0 0 Aokilf 4011 JuTrnr1b 4 0 1 0 MDuffy2b-3b 4 0 1 1 Markksrf 4 0 1 0 Lagarscf 4 0 1 0 Fremn1b 3 0 0 0 Duda1b 4 0 2 1 AGnzlzph-1b1 0 0 0 Pagancf 4 0 0 0 Przyns c 3 1 3 0 Cuddyrlf 4 0 0 0 P uigrf 3 0 1 0 Poseyc 4 0 1 0 St. Louis Washington K Jhnsnlf 3 0 I 0 Familip 0 0 0 0 HKndrc2b 4 0 0 0 GBlancpr 0 1 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi ab r hbi ab r hbi JGomsph-If 1 0 0 0 Campg3b 3 I 1 0 VnSlyklf 4 0 1 0 Maxwllrf 3 0 0 0 M crpnt3b 3 1 1 1 Spancf 5 1I 0 Fuldcf 4 3 2 0 Calhonrf 3 0 0 0 Baltimore Toronto ASmnsss 4 0 I I P l a w c kc 3 0 0 0 H atchrp 0 0 0 0 Belt1b 3010 Heywrdrf 5 1 1 0 Dsmndss 4 1 I 0 C anhalf 4 1 1 0 Troutcf 3 0 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi Petersn2b 3 0 0 0 Floresss 4 1 2 2 Grandlc 0 0 0 0 Arias3b 2 1 1 0 H ogidylf 4 0 0 0 Werthlf 3 0 I I V ogtc 4 1 2 2 Pujols1b 4 1 I 0 DeAzarf 4 0 1 0 Reyesss 4 1 1 0 Stultsp 2 0 0 0 Tejada2b 3 0 0 0 Heiseycf 2 0 0 0 Panikph-2b 0 0 0 1 Adms1b 5 2 2 2 Harperrf 2 1 0 0 BButlerdh 5 1 2 4 Freese3b 4 1 2 0 Paredsdh 3 1 1 2 Travis2b 4 1 3 2 G osselnph 1 0 0 0 Geep 2 0 0 0 M Pedrsnph-cf I 0 0 0 Bcrwfrss 2 1 0 0 JhPerltss 4 0 1 0 Zmrmn1b 4 1 2 I I.Davis1b 5 1 3 1 Aybarss 3 0 0 I C.DavisIb 2 0 1 0 Dnldsn3b 4 0 0 0 CoMrtnp 0 0 0 0 DnMrpph 1 0 0 0 U ribe3b 4 0 1 0 Bmgrnp I 0 0 0 4 1 1 0 YEscor3b 4 0 I 3 Reddckrf 5 0 3 0 Fthrstnss 0 0 0 0 A.Jonescf 3 0 0 0 Encrncdh 3 1 0 0 snp 0 0 0 0 Glmrt np 0 0 0 0 Jaycf Egisc 4 1 1 0 Kontosp 0 0 0 0 JiJhn 5 1 2 0WRamsc 4 0 0 0 Lawrie3b 5 0 1 1 Joycedh 4 0 0 I Sniderlf 2 0 0 0 Smoak1b 4 1 1 2 Cunniff p 0 0 0 0 Carlylep 0 0 0 0 Molinac H owellp 0 0 0 0 Romop 0 0 0 0 Wong2b 4 1 3 3 Espinos2b 4 0 0 0 Sogard2b 5 1 2 0 Cowgiglf 4 0 0 0 CJhnsnph 1 0 0 0 Niwnhslf 0 0 0 0 Pearceph-If I 0 0 0 RuMrtnc 3 0 1 0 Kershwp 2 0 0 0 Susacph I 0 0 0 L ackeyp 2 0 0 0 Fisterp 2 1 I 0 Semienss 4 1 2 0 lannettc 3 0 0 0 Machd3b 3 0 2 0 Pompycf 3 0 2 0 Totals 3 2 2 8 2 Totals 3 1 3 7 3 Guerrrph I I 1 2 Casigap 0 0 0 0 Siegristp 0 0 0 0 TMooreph 1 0 1 0 G iavtll2b 3 0 I 0 Atlanta 010 010 000 — 2 F lahrly2b 3 0 0 0 Pillarrf 4 0 1 0 YGarcip 0 0 0 0 R ynldsph 1 0 0 0 Gracep 0 0 0 0 Totals 4 1 9 188 Totals 3 1 2 4 2 J osephc 3 1 0 0 Goinslf 3 0 0 0 PRdrgzp 0 0 0 0 New york 010 0 0 0 1 1x— 3 0 0 0 0 Treinenp 0 0 0 0 Oakland 100 000 530 — 9 Ecarerss 3 0 0 0 E—Peterson (1). DP—Atlanta 1, NewYork 2. Manessp E thierlf 1 0 1 0 Rosnthlp 0 0 0 0 RaMrtnp 0 0 0 0 Los Angeles 01 0 000 001 — 2 DYongph I 0 0 0 LOB — Atlanta 7, New York 7. 28 — Pie rz yn ski (1), 3 5 2 7 2 Totals 2 83 5 3 CRonsnph 1 0 0 0 DP— LosAngeles2.LOB— Oakland9,LosAnge- Totals 2 8 2 5 2 Totals 3 24 9 4 Totals ampbel(1). l 3B—YoungJr. (2), Mayberry (1). HRLosAngeles 000 000 200 — 2 C Totals 3 7 7 11 6 Totals 3 4 5 8 5 les 5. 2B —Reddick (2), Freese2 (4). HR—B.Butler B altimore Flores(3).SF—Callaspo. 002 0 0 0 000 — 2 San Francisco 002 000 001 — 3 St.Louis 1 22 000 011 — 7 3). SB —Fuld(2), Canha(2), Sogard(1), Semien(2). Toronto IP H R E R BBSO W ashington 000 220 Bgx — 4 Twooutswhenwinningrunscored. 0 0 6 0 0 0 000 — 6 Semien.SF—Vogt. E—Machado (2), Goins(3). DP—Baltimore1, ToAtlanta E—B.crawford (2). DP—LosAngeles 1. LOBE—Lackey2(2), Zimmerman(1). LOB—St. Louis IP H R E R BBSO ronto 3.LOB—Baltimore7, Toronto7. 28—Machado Los 6 4 1 1 0 5 9, Washington Angeles9, SanFrancisco 5. HR —Guerrero (3). Stults 5. 28—M.Adams (I), Wong(3), Werth Oakland Co.MartinBS,1-1 1 1 1 1 0 1 (2), Y.E (2), Pompe y(5). HR —Paredes(I), Travis(4), Smoak CS — A oki (2). S — B um ga rner . SF — P a nik. co sbar(3), T.Moore(I). HR—M.carpenter(3), GrayW,2-0 7 2 1 1 2 7 Ji.Johnson L,1-1 2-3 2 1 1 3 0 M.Adams (I). SB —Paredes (1), Travis (1), Pilar (2).CS—De IP H R E R BBSO (2), W ong(1). CS—Harper(1). S—Lackey. Scribner I 0 0 0 0 2 Aza(2),Ru.Martin (1). Cunniff 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 SF — Los Angeles Werth. A.Leon I 2 1 1 I I New york IP H R E R BBSO Kershaw 6 3 2 2 1 9 IP H R E R BBSO Los Angeles 7 8 2 2 1 3 St. Louis Baltimore 2-3 0 0 0 2 0 Gee YGarcia Weaver 6 8 1 1 0 3 U.JimenezL,1-1 5 2-3 0 0 0 2 0 Lackey 6 4 4 3 6 PRodriguez 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 Gilmartin 85 5 I 4 SalasL,0-1 2-3 1 2 2 I I arlyleW,1-0 1 - 3 0 0 0 0 0 SiegristW,1-0 I 52-3 Gausma n 2 2 0 0 0 3 HatcherL,0-2 11 - 3 I I 1 0 1 C 1-3 0 0 0 I I C.Ramos 0 1 1 1 0 0 O'Day 1 0 0 0 0 1 ManessH,4 1 1 0 0 0 0 Howell 1-3 I 0 0 0 0 FamiliaS,7-7 I 0 0 0 0 I Pestano 1-3 4 2 2 0 0 Toronto WP—Ji.Johnson. San Francisco RosenthalS,5-5 I 0 0 0 0 2 Morin 1 3 3 3 1 0 Aa.Sanchez W,1-2 5 1-3 2 2 2 7 4 Bumgarner 61-3 6 2 2 2 6 T—2:34.A—20,971 (41,922). Washington J.Smith I 1 0 0 0 I 12-3 2 0 0 0 I Osuna H,3 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 Kontos Fister 6 7 5 4 2 3 C.Ramos pitchedto1batter in the7th. 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 Romo Cecil H,3 1 0 0 0 0 2 Pirates 4, Cobs3 Grace I 0 0 0 I 0 WP—Gray, Pestano. M.castroS,3-4 1 1-3 1 0 0 1 1 CasigaW,1-0 1 I 0 0 1 1 TreinenL,0-2 I 2 1 1 2 2 T—2:58. A—30,034(45,957). WP—Aa.S anchez. HBP —byHatcher (Maxwell). Ra.Marti n 1 T—2:36.A—15,606 (49,282). PITTSBURGH —GregoryPolanco T—2:51. A—25,771(41,341). 2 1 1 0 3 T—3:I 6. AM2,259(41,915).
Yankees 13, Tigers 4
White Sox 6, lndians 0
DETROIT —The NewYork YanCHICAGO — Jeff Samardzija kees scored six runs off David Price in the first inning amid swirl- threw six shutout innings to outing snow flurries, and MarkTeixei- duel Cy YoungAward winner Corey Kluber andthe ChicagoWhite ra added athree-run homer in the Sox beat Cleveland. First baseman seventh to cap arout of Detroit. Jose Abreu's first-inning solo New york Detroit home run gaveSamardzija early ab r hbi ab r hbi run support. E llsurycf 4 1 2 1 Gosecf 4 1 0 0
Rockies 5, Padres 4 DENVER — Pinch-hitter Daniel Descalso delivered anRBIsingle in the ninth inning, helping Colorado snap afive-game skid with a win over SanDiego. San Diego Colorado ab r hbi ab r hbi Myerscf 4 1 1 1 Blckmncf 4 0 0 0
hit his first home run of the season and VanceWorley got through Interieague 5/s shaky innings for his second Diamondbacks 8, Rangers 6 straight win as Pittsburgh held off the Chicago Cubs. PHOENIX — Archie Bradley shook off a shaky start to pitch six effecChicago Pittsburgh ab r hbi ab r hbi tive innings, lifting Arizona to awin Fowlercf 1 0 I 0 JHrrsn3b 4 0 0 0 overTexas. Denorfiph-cf-If40 I 0 Polancrf-If 4 I 2 1 Solerrf 4 0 0 0 Mcctchcf 4 I 0 0 Rizzo1b 4 1 2 0 NWalkr2b 4 0 1 0 T Woodpr 0 0 0 0 Martelf 1 1 1 0 Bryant3b-cf 4 2 I 0 Lamboph-rf 2 0 0 0 S Castross 4 0 I I PAlvrz1b 3 I 1 1 MMntrc 4 0 I I SRdrgzpr-1b 0 0 0 0 Coghlnlf 3 0 I 0 Cervegic 4 0 1 1 D.Rossph 1 0 0 I Kangss 2 0 1 1 Rosscpp 0 0 0 0 Worleyp 2 0 0 0 Stropp 0 0 0 0 Scahigp 0 0 0 0 H ammlp 2 0 I 0 Hartph 1 0 0 0 Castilloph 1 0 0 0 Caminrp 0 0 0 0 Germnp 0 0 0 0 JHughsp 0 0 0 0 JHerrrph-3b 1 0 0 0 Watsonp 0 0 0 0 Russell2b 4 0 1 0 Totals 3 7 3 103 Totals 3 1 4 7 4 Chicago 0 00 100 020 — 3 Pittsburgh 0 2 1 0 1 0 Ogx— 4 E—S.castro (2), Russell (I), Polanco(2). LOBChicago10, Pittsburgh6. 2B—Denorfia (1), Bryant (4), Polanco (5), Cervelli (3). HR —Polanco (1). SBFowler(4).SF—PAlvarez,Kang.
Arizona ab r hbi ab r hbi L Martncf 4 0 1 1 Inciartlf 5 2 I 0 GJoneslf 1 0 0 0 Kinsler2b 4 0 0 0 Solarte2b 4 I 1 1 Dickrsnlf 3 2 2 2 Leaders Andrusss 4 0 0 0 Pollockcf 312 I CYounglf-cf 6 2 3 0 HPerez2b 0 0 0 0 Cleveland Chicago Kemprf 4 0 0 0 Tlwlzkss 4 0 1 0 ThroughWednesday'sgames A Rdrgzdh 4 1 1 0 MicarrIb 3 1 I 0 Fielder1b 3 1 0 0 GldschIb 3 1 0 I ab r hbi ab r hbi Uptonlf 4 0 0 0 Mornea1b 4 1 1 0 AMERICANLEAGUE Teixeir1b 4 2 1 3 JMccnc 0 0 0 0 B eltre3b 3 1 2 1 Trumorf 4 0 2 2 B ourncf 5 0 2 0 Eatoncf 5 2 2 0 Alonso1b 4 I 2 0 Arenad3b 4 1 2 1 PITCHING —Buehrle, Toronto, 3-0; Simon,De- JMrphyc 1 0 0 0 VMrtnzdh 2 1 0 0 C hoorf 2 1 0 0 Hig3b 3 1 0 0 Kipnis2b 5 0 1 0 Mecarrlf 4 1 2 1 DeNrrsc 4 1 1 1 CGnzlzrf 3 0 0 0 troit, 3-0;Greene,Detroit,3-0; McHugh,Houston, 3-0. BMccnc-1b 5 2 2 1 RDavisph-dh 1 0 I 0 Chirins c 3 1 1 1 Owings 2b 4 2 2 2 Brantlydh 3 0 0 0 Abreu1b 4 1 2 3 M dlrks3b 4 0 1 0 McKnrc 4 1 3 0 ERA —Greene, Detroit, 0.39; NMartinez, Texas, Beltranrf 5 2 2 1 JMrtnzrf 3 1 0 I Smlnsklf 4 0 0 1 Gswschc 4 0 0 0 CSantn1b 3 0 0 0 LaRochdh 3 0 2 0 Amarstss 2 0 0 0 LeMahi2b 3 0 1 1 0.45; Keuchel,Houston,0.90;Bauer,Cleveland,0.95; Headly3b 5 2 2 2 Cespdslf 3 0 2 1 O dor2b 3 0 1 1 Bradlyp 2 0 0 0 Mossrf 2 0 1 0 AGarcirf 4 1 1 0 S hieldsp 2 0 0 0 Kndrckp I 0 0 0 Archer,Tamp a Bay, 1.07; Kazmir, Oakland, 1.33; Si- G.Petit2b 2 1 1 3 Rominelf 1 0 0 0 Gallardp 2 0 1 0 Dornph 1 0 0 0 Raburnph-If I 0 0 0 Gigaspi3b 3 0 1 0 S pngnrph 1 0 1 1 Ynoaph I 0 0 0 mon,Detroit,1.74;Odorizzi,TampaBay,1.74. Mendezp 0 0 0 0 Delgadp 0 0 0 0 Gregrs ss 4 0 1 2 Cstllns 3b 4 0 0 I DvMrplf 3 0 2 0 GBckhpr-3b 1 0 0 0 Thayer p 0 0 0 0 Axford p 0 0 0 0 STRIKEOUT S—Kluber, Cleveland, 31; Archer, Morlnd ph 1 0 0 0 DPerlt ph 0 0 0 I Avilac-1b 4 0 I I Sandsph-rf I 0 1 0 AIRmrzss 4 0 2 0 Benoit p 0 0 0 0 Ottavin p 0 0 0 0 TampaBay,30;Bauer,Cleveland,26;Kazmir,Oakland, Verrettp 0 0 0 0 Chafinp 0 0 0 0 Jlglesis ss 3 0 1 0 C hsnhll3b 3 0 0 0 Sotoc 4 0 0 0 Kelley p 0 0 0 0 Descals ph I 0 1 1 23; FHernadez, n Seattle, 23;Price,Detroit, 22;GalarPimntlp 0 0 0 0Reedp 0 0 0 0 Totals 4 1 13 1513 Totals 32 4 6 4 Avil esph-3b I 0 0 0 MJhnsn2b 4 1 2 0 Totals 3 3 4 7 4 Totals 3 25 1I 5 do, Texas, 21. Rosales ph 1 1 1 0 Ahmedss 3 1 I 0 New york 620 2 0 0 300 — 13 RPerezc 3 0 0 0 S an Diego 1 0 0 0 0 1 200 — 4 SAVE~oria, Detroit, 5;AMiger,NewYork, 5; Detroit Totals 30 5 7 5 Totals 3 2 8 8 7 4 00 000 000 — 4 JRmrzss 4 0 1 0 C olorado 210 0 0 0 011 — 6 Rodney, Seatle, 4; Boxberger, Tampa Bay, 4; Britton, E—Gregorius (2), J.lglesias (2), Cespdees (2). Totals 3 4 0 8 0 Totals 3 66 144 Texas 1 00 000 004 — 6 Oneoutwhenwinningrunscored. Baltimore,4;Street,LosAngeles,4; GHogand, Kansas DP — NewYork2,Detroit1. LOB —NewYork9, Detroit E—Shields (2). DP—San Diego 2, Colorado1. Arizona 201 110 12x — 8 C leveland 000 0 0 0 000 — 0 City,4. 6. 28—C.Young (5), G.Petit (I), Gregorius(1). 38— 6 LOB — S an D ieg o 3, C ol o rado 6. 28 — D e.N orri s (8), E — B el t re (3), Fiel der 2 (4). DP—Arizona 4. Chicago 101 001 Sgx DP — Cleveland 1, Chicago1. LOB —Cleveland Spangenerg LOB —Texas6, Arizona5. 28—Chirinos (3), Ahmed Beltran(1), Headley(I). HR—Teixeira(5). S—G.Petit. b (2), Tulowitzki (9), Arenado(7), McKenry NATIONALLEAGUE IP H R E R BBSO 11, Chicago 7. 2B—Moss (3), Ea ton (3), Abreu(4), (1), LeMah ieu(1). HR —Myers (2), Solarte (2), DickIP H R E R BBSO (1). 3B —Owings (1). HR —Beltre (2), Owings(1). PITCHING —Benoit, SanDiego,3-0; Harvey,New New york SB — Pollock (2). SF—Pollock, D.Peralta. Gillaspie(5), AI.Ramirez (5). HR—Abreu(5). CS—M. erson 2(4). SB—McKenry(2). CS—LeMahieu(1). Chicago York,3-0;BColon,New York,3-0;22tiedat2. WarrenW,1-1 52 - 3 5 4 4 4 3 Johnson(2). IP H R E R BBSO HammelL,1-1 5 6 4 3 0 5 IP H R E R BBSO ERA —Scherzer, Was hington, 0.83; DeSclafani, J.Wilson 11-3 0 0 0 I 2 IP H R E R BBSO San Diego Germen 2 1 0 0 0 3 Texas Cincinnati, 0.86;Heston,SanFrancisco, 0.87; de- D.carpenter I 1 0 0 0 2 Cleveland Shields 6 6 3 3 3 5 Rosscup 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 GallardoL,2-2 5 6 5 3 I 6 Grom,Ne wYork,0.93; Wacha,St.Louis,1.35; Nelson, Shreve I 0 0 0 0 2 KluberL,0-2 6 13 6 6 1 6 ThayerH,3 1 I 0 0 0 0 Strop 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Mendez I 0 0 0 0 I I 2-3 23 2 I I Milwaukee,1.35;Bradley,Arizona, 1.45. Detroit Swarzak 2 1 0 0 0 3 BenoitBS,2-3 1 I I 1 0 2 Pittsburgh Verrett 21-3 10 8 8 3 2 Chicago 1-3 0 0 0 I 0 STRIKEO UTS—Kershaw, LosAngeles, 35; Cueto, PriceL,1-1 KelleyL,0-2 1-3 3 I 1 1 1 WorleyW,2-1 5 2 - 3 61 0 2 5 Pimentel I 2-3 2 2 1 0 I Cincinnati,32;Shields, SanDiego, 29;Scherzer,Wash- Nesbitt SamardzijaW,1-1 6 6 0 0 2 3 Colorado ScahigH,1 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Arizona ington,25; Mccarthy,LosAngeles,25; Harvey,NewYork, Krol 2 0 0 0 2 2 Da.JenningsH,3 1 0 0 0 0 1 K.Kendrick 7 7 4 4 1 3 CamineroH,3 1 0 0 0 0 2 BradleyW2-0 , 6 2 1 1 5 2 24; Ham els, Philadelphia,23; Liriano,Pittsburgh,23. Alburquerque 1 2 3 3 1 1 Duke 1 1 0 0 1 2 Axford 1 0 0 0 0 1 J.Hughes 0 3 2 2 1 0 Delgado 2 1 0 0 I I SAVES —Familia, NewYork, 7; Grilli, Atlanta, Chamberlain I 0 0 0 0 0 Petricka 1 1 0 0 I 0 OttavinoW,1-0 1 0 0 0 0 0 WatsonS,1-1 2 1 0 0 0 1 Chafin 2-3 3 4 4 I 0 6; KimbrelSan , Diego, 5; Casila, SanFrancisco, 5; Gorzelanny I 1 0 0 0 0 Kluberpitchedto4 batters inthe7th. WP — Shields. J.Hughes pitchedto 4batters in the8th. Reed 1-3 1 0 0 0 0 RosenthalSt. , Louis,5; Storen,Washington,4; Chap- HBP —byPrice (Egsbury), WP — Kluber2. T—2:39. A—22,705(50,398). HBP— byHammel(Mart e).WP— J.Hughes. HBP—byBradley (Choo). man,Cincinnati,4. T—3:35. A—27,389(41,574). T—2:56.A—14,429(40,615). T—3:04.A—I 5,101 (38,362). T—2:59. A—17,886(48,519).
Mays
full of fanfare, merchandising and extra cash. But the moment now
Continued from C1 seems destined to pass modestly, just But something remarkable hap- as it did for Mays, although for differpened in that game. It had occurred ent reasons. twice before in baseball, and it is Rodriguez, of course, was suspendabout to happen again. A player — in ed for all of last season for his role in this case, Willie Mays, 42 years old theBiogenesisperformance-enhancand in the final act of his career — hit ing drug scandal. The Yankees do his 660th career home run. not intend to pay him the $6 million The number held no significance at marketing bonus in his contract for the time. Babe Ruth and Hank Aar- reaching660 home runs (and later, on had reached that total, but both for reaching the landmarks of Ruth's men then zoomed passed it. Aaron 714, Aaron's 755, and so on). The Yanreached 660 in 1972 — also against kees are arguing that the milestone the Reds — but by the time Mays is no longer marketable because of reached it, Aaron had passed 700. Rodriguez's transgressions, and, for Ruth reached 660 in 1933 at age 38. the most part, they have studiously In 2004, Barry Bonds became the ignored it. fourthplayer toreach and pass660. Similarly, 660 was not a milestone Now Alex Rodriguez of the New when Mays reached it on that mild York Yankees is poised to join them. summer evening in 1973. It became
rying his hitting streak to 18 games. When news of the feat was post"We knew he had a lot of home runs, ed on the scoreboard at Shea that but that one didn't stand out." night, it drew polite clapping from The home run was described as a line drive to right-center field off Don
36,803 fans at Shea Stadium. The ap-
Texas
homer. The game was also notable because Mays, who was playing first base, was run over by Reds catcher Johnny Benchatthe bag. Both play-
plause they gave Mays upon his less ers went down hard but remained in Gullett, the ace of the Big Red Ma- glamorous home run was said to be the game. For Mays, that was a feat in chine, and it brought the struggling thunderous. itself because of all the wear and tear Mets their only rLI i n what turned The New York Post ran a small on his body. " He spent a lot o f t i m e i n t h e into a 2-1 loss in 10 innings. box on the back page with a photo of No one knew it would be Mays' Mays rounding the bases. trainer's room getting rubdowns," final home rkm, but it was possible The caption read, "Willie's Night," Kranepool recalled, although he, too, to guess as much. He was 42 and and described a tremendous ovation. could not remember the home rLI. beaten down by 22 years of hard- It was not treated as a milestone, but "His lower half was pretty much gone charging, theatrical baseball, mostly for the fans, it was something special, bythen." for the Giants. He finished the year a glimpse back to the greatness of a After Mays hit his 660th, he played batting .211 with six home runs in 66 departing superstar, perhaps the best in only 12 more regular-season games. who ever played. games and rapped out five more hits, "Willie was loved in New York," all singles. His ending was painfully Years earlier, some believed Mays would be the one to catch Ruth and said Ed Kranepool, Mays' teammate near, but the Mets recovered from his 714 home runs. But that mantle and close friend. "Aaron was a great their memorably bitter summer to fell to Aaron, a contemporary whose player, but he didn't have Willie's have a happy autumn. They won the career intertwined so closely with flair. And, of course, New York fans National League pennant. Rodriguez hit his 658th career home one only after his season, and his ca- Mays' for the 20 seasons they lit up remembered him from his days with Mays had three hits in 10 postrktn on Friday night and is two short reer, ended. the National League together. the Giants in New York. He was an season at-bats, including a single to "I'm sorry, I don't remember that of that gleaming 660 signpost that In fact, on the day that Mays hit icon coming back." drive in the go-ahead run in the 12th Mays planted beyond the Shea Stadi- home run, exactly," said Felix Mil- No. 660 at Shea, Aaron hit No. 703, The Mets held the lead Mays gave inning of Game 2 of the World Series um wall almost 42 years ago. lan, the Mets' second baseman, who against the Expos at Jarry Park in them through eight innings, but the against the Oakland Athletics, one of Passing Mays was supposed to be made a great diving catch to help pre- Montreal. A headline in The Times Reds tied it in the ninth and won in the three games the Mets won in that a landmark occasion for Rodriguez, vent Cincizmati's Pete Rose from car- read, "Aaron: ll H omers to Ruth." the 10th, after Hal King's pinch-hit series. It was Mays' final hit.
C4
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, APRIL 23, 2015
PREP ROUNDUP
NBA PLAYOFFS ROUNDUP
Bend takestop singles, doublesto beat MV
Spurs tie series with
Bulletin staff report
a Class 5A Special District I two hits, including a solo home Bend High took t hree of victory. Jesse Vezo logged a run in the third inning. Cody four singles matches and three 6-0, 6-0 victory at No. 2 sin- Anthony also recorded two of four in doubles play to notch gles for Bend, while the No. hits and drove in two runs for
three hits, including a dou-
the 6-2 Class 5A Special District 1 boys tennis victory at Mountain View. Zach Hite, Sean Hebert and
and 6-10 overall. Bend 22, Redmond 6: RED-
1 doubles team of Kyla Col-
Mountain View.
lier and Sydney Meeuwssen recorded a decisive 6-1, 6-0
Boys lacrosse
Mountain View 14, Nadzitsaga1: The Cougars improved to Baseball 2-3inHigh Desert Conference Summit 13, Mountain View play and 5-6 overall.
win.
Jaden Boehme were straightset winners in the top three singles slots for Bend. The Cougars' Brooks Lar- 5: The No. 2-ranked Storm renta and Derek Miller came poured on seven runs in the back from a 4-1 deficit in the
first set to score a 6-4, 6-3 win over Aaron Banquer-Glenn Conference win on the road. and Nick Campbell at No. 1
Cal Waterman led the Storm
doubles. Also on Wednesday:
(7-1 IMC, 15-1 overall) with two hits, including a double, and three RBIs. Alex B ai-
Girls tennis
ley and Noah Yunker each Bend 8, Mountain View 0: chipped in with two hits for
The host Lava Bears did not
Softball
top of the seventh inning to Mountain View 12, Sumcruise to a n I n t ermountain mit 2: The Cougars scored
Summit. Derek Ostrom led
drop a set as they cruised to the Cougars (1-5, 4-10) with
six runs in the bottom of
OT win overClippers
ble, and drove in three runs
for the Cougs. The Storm dropped to 1-7 in league play
The Associated Press
Blake Griffin had his first career playoff triple-double of 29 points, 12 rebounds and Kawhi Leonard added 23 and 11 assists, but a costly turnthe defending champion San over late in regulation. Antonio Spurs beat the Los DeAndre Jordan had 20 Angeles Clippers 111-107 in points and 15 rebounds for overtime Wednesday night, the Clippers. tying their Western ConferChris Paul's two f r ee ence playoff series at 1-1. throws gave the Clippers a The Spurs blew 10-point 94-92 lead with 50 seconds leads in the third and fourth left in regulation, but Griffin quarters, and got into over- lost the ball while dribbling time on a pair of free throws with a chance to put it away L OS ANGELES — Ti m Duncan scored 28 p oints,
MOND — Bend scored 10 runs in the sixth inning to seal an
Intermountain conference win against Redmond. Redmond (2-4 IMC, 4-11 overall) gave up 16 walks and committed 8 errors, negating the fact that they matched the Lava Bears on hits. Awbrie Ellie Kinkade
had four hits, including a three
the third on their way to a run home run, and 4 RBIs, five-inning Int e r mountain Brooke Berry hit a home run,
by Patty Mills with 8 seconds
conference win. Savannah
and Lacey Bunting was a
P hillips went 3 - for-3 w i t h four RBIs for Mountain View
home run short of a cycle, with
the extra session while play-
(3-3 IMC, 7-9 overall), hitting
three hits and 4 RBIs for Bend (4-2, 9-7). Redmond was led by
a solo home run in the second
M adison Edwards with tw o
ing with five fouls. er from the right side as regHis jumper snapped a 101- ulation expired. all tie, Mills followed with a Also on Wednesday: fast-break layup off LeonHawks 96, Nets 91: ATard's long pass, and Leonard LANTA P aul M i l l scored on a layup for a 107- sap scored 19 points and 101 lead with 56 seconds left. top-seeded Atlanta again M ills f i nished w it h 1 8 survived a tougher-than-expoints off the bench after pected test from Brooklyn, starting point guard Tony holding on for a victory and a Parker departed early with 2-0 lead in their Eastern Conan injury. Boris Diaw had 12. ferenceplayoffseries.SquanThe series, the only one of dering an early 12-point lead, the eight in the first round the Hawks fell behind before
inning. Samantha Smith had hits and an RBI.
PREP SCOREBOARD Baseball
Softball
Girls tennis
Boys tennis
Btandings IntermountainConference Team Conference Overall 7-1 Summit 15-1 5-1 Bend 12-4 2-4 6-9 Redmond 4-10 MountainVie w 1-5 1-5 4-12 Ridgeview
Btandings lntermountainConference Team Conference Overall 6-0 Ridgeview 12-1 4-2 9-7 Bend 7-9 M ountaiVine w 3-3 2-4 4-11 Redmond 1-7 Summit 6-10
ClassBA Special Oistrict1 Bendg,MountainView 0 At Bend Singles — SierraWinch, B,def. HannahSchifferman,MV,6-0, 6-3;JesseVezo, B,def. Olivia Webb, MV, 6-0,6-0; GracePerkins, B,def. KyleeReinwald, MV,6-0,6-4;Janea Schaumfoeff el,B,def.Kelsey Leighton,MV,6-0, 6-3. Ooubles — KylaCollier/ SydneyMeeuwssen, B, def. WhitneyWebber/Ange Vasquez,MV,6-1, 6-0; RubyLadkin/JessieJohnson, B, def. ChristineVejhuraf/AfexfOverland, MV, 6-2, 6-0; SusieGarcia/Marilu Morris, B,def.Jamie McCoof/FaithHolm,MV,6-2, 6-1; KatieReed/Alexis Benitez,B,def.JordanCoplin/Piyada Holngsoontora, MV, 6-2,6-1.
Class BA Special Oistrict1 Bend6,MountainView 2 At Mountain View Singles — ZachHite, B, def. Grant Miler, MV, 6-4, 6-2; Sean Hebert, B, def. TyeLeahy, MV,6-0, 6-0; JadenBoehme,B,def.BenWenndorf,MV,6-2, 6-3;KaedanWodke,MV,def.ColeIreland,B,6-0, 6-4. Ooubles — Brooks Larrenta/OerekMiler, MV, def. AaronBanquer-Glenn/Nick Cam pbell, B, 6-4, 6-3; MaxFarrens/Wil Ainsworth,B,def.Adi Wolfenden/AustinPfeifer,MV,6-4, 6-0; JasperLadkin/Wil Ainsworth, B,def.Wyatt Baldwin/SheaBooster, MV, 6-7, 4-1 (MountainViewretired); DamonGeorge/ ChristianGeorge, B,def. ZachHeiden/ConnorDavenport, MV, 6-4,5-7, 10-6.
Stanley each drove in two runs.
things just didn't go well for us. Balls they hit were just finding
Class 5A IntermountainConference (5 innings)
Bend Redmond
014 61 — 11 141
010 gg — 1 5 3
Summit 101 031 7 — 13 10 2 Mountain View 001 030 1 — 6 B 5
Bears
Class BA Intermountainconference (6 innings)
Summit 1 0010 — 2 3 3 Mountain View 216 gx — 12 12 2
Bend Redmond
(6 innings) 224 31I10) — 22 10 2 201 300
a nd Mills tied it w ith t w o
left in regulation. Duncan free throws. scored four straight points in Paul missed the potential
that is tied after two games, moves to San Antonio for
Game 3 on Friday night.
winning shot with a 19-foot-
halftime and spent the rest
of the game struggling to put away the No. 8 seed.
— 6 10 g
with two runs and two RBIs for
No. 1 Bend (5-1 IMC, 12-4 overFor the Panthers (2-4, 6-9), Continued from C1 all), and Cameron Himes was Cooger Smith and Colton "Our guys just have a real- 2-for-4 with two RBIs and two Slavey each went 2-for-2. Slavey ly steady approach," Randall runsscored.J.J.Spitlerlogged doubled for Redmond, which said. "Our guys were real- two hits and two runs for the dropped its sixth straightgame. "I felt we played better than ly disciplined and kept their Bears, Justin Parsons finished swings in the strike zone." withtwo hits and an RBI, while the score indicated," Panthers Austin Adye went 3-for-3 Jordan Sunitsch and Ryan coach Doug Taylor said. "But
gU.L
holes ... just little bleeders into the outfield. To Bend's credit,
they were putting the ball in play. And offensively, we were squaring balls up but they were just going right at guys.
+
' frI;Pi.
That's baseball."
FOOTBALL
Mariota
NFL concussion settlement honored receives federal judge's final OK
with food Mariota already is part of the lore of a famous stat-
cussion research and educa- years. Los Angeles Times "Despite the difficult health tion, provides baseline examThe long-running litiga- inations for problems related situations retired players face t ion between the NFL a n d to head injuries and compen- today and that many more its retired players concluded satesretired players who suf- will unfortunately face in the Wednesday with a f ederal fer from a variety of condi- future, they can take comfort judge's final approval of a set- tions, including Alzheimer's that this settlement's benefits tlement that the league said disease and a m yotrophic will be available soon, and would provide "prompt and lateral s clerosis. M onetary will last for decades to come," substantial benefits" to many awards will be determined by Christopher Seeger and Sol of those suffering from con- a grid that adjusts the amount Weiss said in a statement. cussion-related illnesses. based on a player's seasons in The NFL and retired playIn a 132-page opinion filed in the NFL, age at diagnosis and ers firstreached agreement
ue, having won the 2014
U.S. District Court in Philadel-
Heisman Trophy. Now he has something that might
phia, Judge Anita Brody called the wide-ranging deal "fair,
statue By Barry Wilner The Associated Press
HONOLULU — Marcus
not be so prestigious, but
is edible. After signing on with S ubway r e staurants a s t heir la t e s t "Famous Fan," Mariota unveiled a life-size f oo d s c u lpture
Wednesday in his homet own o f
H o n olulu. T h e
main ingredient of t he structure: guacamole. That made the Oregon quarterback and l i kely early pick in next week's draft laugh loudly. "It's really funny," Mariota said of the statue made by food sculptor Jim Victor. "The actual message is that Subway has come out with guacamo-
le, and I like guacamole, and so the statue is made of all the ingredients in guacamole. "When t hey fi r s t s howed it t o
us at the
house, my mom, she made sure I got a photo with it." Mariota j o in s
R o bert
Griffin III, Ndamukong Suh, Mark Ingram, Ant hony B ar r
and J arvis
Jones as NFL players who have been immortalized in meat, poultry and vegetables. He was a natural choice, the Subway folks
By Nathan Fenno
other criteria.
The maximum payout for a player with Alzheimer's, reasonable and adequate." for example, is $3.5 million. Experts for the NFL and re- But the average payout for tired players project that about Alzheimer's is expected to be 6,000 of the estimated 20,000 $190,000 when age and experiliving retirees - or nearly three ence are factored in. in 10 ex-players - would be eliThough there is no limit to gible for hundreds of millions what the NFL could pay out of dollars in compensation to the retired players, the inoverthe deal's 65-year term. dividual awards are capped at "Today's decision power- amounts that range from $1.5 fully underscores the fairness million for moderate dementia and propriety of this historic to $5 million for ALS. settlement," said Jeff Pash,
NFL executive vice president and general counsel. The litigation, which started with a lawsuit against the
NFL in Los Angeles Superior Court in July 2011, helped
raise awareness about the long-term effect of head injuries suffered by some players during their careers. The case grew to more than 300 lawsuits that were consolidated in
federal court. That coincided with a na-
tional debate about football's safety that included President Barack Obama's saying in 2013 that he would think
"long and hard" about letting a child of his play the game and a Bloomberg Politics poll last fall that showed 50 percent of respondents don't want their
sons participating in football.
a regular at their restau-
children involved in contact
rants; Mariota says he ate
sports," said Jason Luckase-
at Subway "nearly every day in college," along with
vic, the Pittsburgh lawyer who was part of the first lawsuit.
several teammates. "It really is cool to be
"For that, I know the players
had this done for them,"
tional attention."
he said.
The agreement funds con-
million limit on awards to retired players and make other
adjustments. The deal covers all retired players or their estates - other
than about 200 who opted out by last fall's deadline - regardless of whether they sued the
NFL. Current and future players aren't included. After the resolution of any
whether any will appeal Bro- the 200 - to register for the dy's decision. deal. If they miss the deadline, "We are pleased that the set- they'll be ineligible for paytlement was substantially imouts and are barred from ever proved as a result of objections suing the league over head that we made," said Steven F. injuries. "The settlement," Brody Molo, lead attorney for seven retired players who opposed wrote in her opinion, "allows partsof the deal."We are re- class members to choose cerviewing the court's detailed tainty in light of the risks of opinion to determine where litigation." things go next." Some, though, still don't The U.S. District Court of qualify. Appeal in Philadelphia rejectThe family of Pro Football ed an appeal last fall from the Hall of Famer Mike Webster, group. The court said that its who died in 2002 and became challenge needed to wait until the first NFL player diagnosed the settlement received final with CTE, isn't likely to reapproval. ceive a payout. The settlement The group's concerns in- cuts off compensation in most cluded the settlement's treat- cases for players who died be-
say, because Mariota is
are proud to have brought this public health epidemic to na-
insistence to remove a $675
About 140 retired players appeals, there will be a 180filed objections to t h e s et- day periodfor retired players tlement last fall. It's unclear and their families - other than
ment of chronic traumatic en"I believe this c ase h as cephalopathy. After April 22, s aved the brains o f m a n y the date of final approval, the
part of that group that has
on a settlement to the litigation in August 2013, then twice revised the deal at B rody's
fore 2006. Luckasevic, who represents
the Webster family, says he's families of retired players who happy for the final approval receive a postmortem diagno- but believes an opportunity sis of CTE won't be compen- was missed. "There was so much more satedforthedisease. An appeal would delay any that could and should have benefits until th e m atter is been done on behalf of the reresolved, a process that the tired players who suffer cogco-lead counsel for the plain- nitive and behavioral disabilitiffs said could take months or ties," he said.
Mark Humphrey/The Associated Press
Memphis center Marc Gasol shoots against Portland center Robin Lopez in the first half of Game 2 of a Western Conference
playoff seriesWednesday in Memphis,Tennessee.
Blazers Continued from C1 Gasol had 15 points, and Randolph and Beno Udrih added 10 apiece. LaMarcus Aldridge led
coach Terry Stotts.
"They're good shooters," Stotts said. "They don't look
for them a lot. We can't leave
them open either." Portland came into this
series with several players Portland with 24 points and banged-up, and the list got 14 rebounds, and he also had longer with center Chris Kafour blocks with two steals. man out after spraining his Damian Lillard added 18 left ankle Tuesday in pracpoints but the Trail Blazers tice. Stotts juggled his lineup, lost their first two playoff starting guard Allen Crabgames for the first time since 2011, when they fell in six
games to Dallas. Game 3 in this best-of-sev-
en series is Saturday night in Portland, and the Trail Blazers hope to draw on their
be for the first time in the postseason. The Blazers looked like
the team that won 51 games during the regular season early. Crabbe hit a 3 in the opening minutes to give the
fans the way the Grizzlies Blazers their first lead in this have. series, and they jumped out "We got to try to do some- to a 10-2 lead with Aldridge thing there," Lillard said. connecting on four of his Memphis is known for its
bruising inside game with Gasol and Randolph. That duo combined to shoot 9 of 31, not that it mattered with
first five shots. Yet even with the Grizzlies
shooting so poorly that they missed a handful of layups in the quarter, Portland led
Memphis shooting 50 per- only 21-19 at the end of the cent (8 of 16) outside the arc first. and 42.7 percent overall. Memphis took control in "If they are going to keep the second with a 15-2 run, giving us that, we're going turning Portland's four-point to keep taking them," Gasol edge to a 34-25 lead on a 3-pointer by Jeff Green. The said of the outside shots. Memphis was 22nd in the
Grizzlies outscored Portland
NBA shooting 3s this sea- 31-18 in the quarter and led son while Portland ranked 50-39 at halftime. eighth. But the Grizzlies shot The G r izzlies s imply 50.9 percent against the Trail clamped d ow n ti g hter Blazers sweeping all four and led 73-60 at the end of games in the season. So the the third after leading by Grizzlies' 3-point accura- as much as 18 late in the cy didn't surprise Portland quarter.
SUN FoREsT CoNSTRUCTION
DESIGN 1 BUILD 1 REMODEL PATNT
803 SW Industrial Way, Bend, OR
p
C5 THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, APRIL 23, 2015
+
NASDAQ
18,038.27
5,035.17
+
O» To look upindividual stocks, gc tcbendbugetin.com/business.Also seearecap in Sunday's Businesssection.
S&P 500
+
2q 07
TOdap In the red
2 060 .
Financial analysts predict that Amazon will report a loss for the first quarter. The e-commerce company, which is due to release its financial results today, has long focused on spending the money it makes toexpand it s business and enter new areas beyond online shopping. Last month it introduced a referral service dubbed Amazon Home Services to help people get chores and other projects done around the home.
300
'15
est.
EPS
I
1Q '14
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2,150 "
18,500"
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18,000"
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17,500"
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17,000 "
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1 900 ' Q
J
StocksRecap NYSE NASD
F
M
A
16500 0
N
F
HIGH LOW CLOSE CHG. 18056.02 17887.79 18038.27 +88.68 DOW Trans. 8878.14 8786.05 8863.07 +47.32 DOW Util. 588.89 583.75 587.50 +1.70 NYSE Comp. 11154.23 11067.27 11144.46 +44.08 NASDAQ 5040.65 4992.62 5035.17 +21.07 S&P 500 2109.98 2091.06 2107.96 +1 0.67 S&P 400 1533.15 1521.39 1532.74 +3.79 Wilshire 5000 22352.64 22164.41 22333.69 +101.55 Russell 2000 1266.56 1255.04 1265.48 +1.33
DOW
M
A
%CHG. WK MO QTR YTD t0.49% L L +1.21% -3.03% t0.54% L t0.29% L -4.95% +0.40% L L +2.82% +0.42% L L L +6.32% +0.51% L L L +2.38% +0.25% L L +5.53% +0.46% L L +3.06% +0.11% L L +5.05%
NAME
Source: FactSet
Beyond the beans Expanding its offerings of food and drinks beyond coffee has been paying off for Starbucks. The coffee chain has been introducing new and revamped baked goods, sandwiches and salads as it seeks to become more of a quick lunch destination. It also plans to offer beer and wine at some of its U.S. stores over the next five years. Investors will be listening for an update on Starbucks' changing offerings today when the company reports results for its second fiscal quarter.
WashingtonFedl WellsFargo & Co
Weyerhaeuser
Under scttttiny Google reports financial results
A VA 30.35 ~
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83.16 78.0 1 52.5 7 4 7. 8 9 71.15 67.4 1 9.17 6 .87 45.45 4 2. 3 1 275. 0 9 28 4.84
+. 4 0 +0 .5 L V -.36 -0.7 L L +. 6 9 +1 .0 L L +.44 $ .7.8 L L -.18 -0.4 L W + . 10 ... L W SCHN 1 5.06 o — 28.7 6 15 . 4 6 -.13 -0.8 V V SHW 195.61 ~ 292. 5 1 28 1.64 -.78 -0.3 V L SFG 57.77 ~ 71.80 69. 2 6 +.5 1 +0 .7 L L SBUX 34.57 ~ 49.60 4 8. 3 4 -.04 -0.1 L L UM P Q 14.70 ~ 1 8.6 1 17.24 +.04+ 0.2 L L L U SB 38.10 ~ 46.10 42. 8 3 +. 3 3 +0.8 L W WAF D 19.52 ~ 2 3.4 3 22 .28 +.02+0.1 L L L WF C 4 6.44 ~ 5 6.2 9 54.67 +.39+ 0.7 L L L W Y 2 7 .84 ~ 37.04 31.7 5 +. 1 4 +0 .4 L W
J
';:"',"." Boeing reports mixed results
Boeing (BA)
1 Q' 1 5
Wednesday's close: $151.19 T o tal return
$116
based on trailing 12-month results
Dividend: none
159
(B a sed on past 12-month results)
AP
3-yr*
5-yr*
Dtv yteld. 2 4o7o D l vldend $3 84 *annualized
AP Source: FactSet
1- y r
Price-earnings ratio: 20
52-WEEK RANGE
Price-earnings ratio: 27
AmdFocus ClearBridge Aggressive Growth's FAMILY manager has been at the helm since1983 and has compiled one AmericanFunds of best long-term track records in the large-cap growth category.
F M 52-week range
$45.05 ~
Source: FactSet
SelectedMutualFunds
PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1YR 3YR BYR 1 3 5 MarhetSummary AmBalA m 25 . 10 +.84+2.2 +9.5 +12.9+11.3 A A A Most Active CaplncBuA m 61.24 +.83 +3.7 +7.1 +10.5 +9.3 A A A CpWldGrlA m 48.73 +.85 +6.1 +7.7 +14.5+10.1 C 8 C NAME VOL (BOs) LAST CHG EurPacGrA m 51.55 +.12 +9.4 +5.6 +11.2 +7.4 8 8 C BkofAm 722807 15.74 +.24 FnlnvA m 53. 4 9 +.27+4.3 +12.9 +16.9+12.9 C C C S&P500ETF 715833 210.63 +1.03 GrthAmA m 45.38 +.19 +6.3 +15.1 +18.6+13.4 C A C Vale SA 571409 6.50 +.61 ClearBridge Aggressive Growth (SHRAX) IncAmerA m 21.99 +.83 +2.7 +7.7 +12.0+10.7 C A A CSVLgCrde 543011 3.15 -.06 InvCoAmA m 38.86 +.18 +3.8 +13.1 +17.8+12.9 C 8 C VALUE B L EN D GR OWTH Petrobras 464429 8.93 + .35 NewPerspA m39.10 +.17 +7.8 +11.0 +14.8+11.4 A 8 A GenElec 454986 26.91 +.29 oWAMutlnvA m41.50 +.12 +1.8 +10.7 +16.4+13.9 8 C A MktVGold 403439 19.31 -.66 02 Apple Inc s 364061 128.62 +1.71 CO Dodge &Cox Income 13.89 -.82 +1.5 + 4 .1 + 4.0 +4.9 D 8 8 e Q EMC Cp 345464 27.13 +.81 cc IntlStk 4 5.67 +.86 +8.5 + 4.5 +15.0 +8.8 8 A A Facebook 334653 84.63 +1.01 Stock 181.34 +.74 +1.5 + 9 .7 +20.2+13.9 C A A oFidelity Contra 102. 1 5 +.42+5.3 +15.5 +16.8+14.4 C C 8 Gainers 02 ContraK 102 . 10 +.42+5.3 +15.6 +16.9+14.5 C C 8 co NAME LAST CHG %CHG LowPriStk d 52.23 +.82 +3.9 +10.7 +16.7+13.6 C D 8 Fideli S artan 500l d xAdvtg 74.42 +.38 +3.0 +14.4 +17.6+14.1 8 8 A GtBasScin 4.98 +1.44 + 4 0.7 Gevo rs 2.79 +.78 + 3 8.6 FrankTemp-Frankli n IncomeC m 2.45 ... +2.3 +0.7 +9.5 +8.3 E A A CalAmp 20.87 +4.19 + 2 5.1 02 IncomeA m 2. 4 3 +.81+3.0 + 1.6 +10.2 +8.9 E A A ChiCache 14.86 +2.54 + 2 0.6 Oakmark Intl I 25.36 . . . + 8. 7 + 1 .5+15.7 +9.9 D A A ProceraN 11.42 +1.91 + 2 0.1 0O Oppenheimer RisDivA m 20 . 28 +.11+1.7 +11.9 +13.9+11.9 D E D CorbusPhm 3.25 +.48 + 1 7.3 MorningstarOwnershipZone™ RisDivB m 17 . 92 +.10+1.4 +11.0 +12.9+11.0 D E E AsdEstat 28.49 +4.01 + 1 6.4 RisDivC m 17 . 79 +.89+1.5 +11.0 +13.1+11.1 D E E TremorVid 3.01 +.42 + 1 6 .2 OeFund target represents weighted SmMidValA m50.57 +.23 +3.9 +11.6 +18.0+11.5 8 C D UraniumEn 2.12 +.29 + 1 5.8 average of stock holdings SmMidValBm 42.49 +.20 +3.7 +10.8+17.0+10.6 C D E Organovo 5.14 +.67 + 1 5.0 • Represents 75% of fund's stock holdings T Rowe Price Eqtylnc 32.95 + .13 +0.8 + 6 .2 +14.9+11.0 E D D Losers GrowStk 56.5 2 + .28 +8.8 +20.4 +18.8+15.9 A A A CATEGORY:LARGE GROWTH NAME L AST C H G %C H G HealthSci 79.5 4 - . 20+ 17.0 +49.3 +37.5+29.7 8 8 A Newlncome 9. 6 8 - .83+ 1.8 + 5 .0 + 3.0 +4.3 8 C C -2.95 -31.8 BIORNINGSTAR PowrREIT 6.33 NatResPtrs 5.54 -1.38 -19.9 BATING~****rr Vanguard 500Adml 194.55 +.99 +3.0 +14.4 +17.6+14.1 8 8 A -.63 -17.8 HeliosMAn 2.90 500lnv 194.53 +.99 +2.9 +14.3 +17.5+14.0 8 8 8 ASSETS$6,033 million Celladon 13.59 -2.77 -16.9 CapOp 55.90 +.21 +6.0 +20.6 +25.5+15.4 A A A EXPRA TIO 1.12% -.42 -14.4 ModSys 2.49 Eqlnc 31.66 +.13 +2.1 +10.3 +16.1+14.6 C C A MIB. INIT.INVEST. $1,000 IntlStkldxAdm 28.33 +.11 +9.3 +2.9 +9.2 NA C D PERCEN T L O A D 5.75 Foreign Markets StratgcEq 34.20 +.86 +6.3 +15.5 +21.9+16.9 A A A HISTORICALRETURNS TgtRe2020 29.56 +.84 +3.9 +8.8 +10.6 +9.1 A A A NAME LAST CHG %CHG TgtRe2035 18.68 +.86 +4.7 +9.9 +13.4+10.6 A A B Return/Rank Paris 5,211.09 +18.45 + . 36 Tgtet2025 17.21 +.83 +4.1 +9.2 +11.5 +9.6 A A B London 7,028.24 -34.69 -.49 YEAR-TO-DATE +6.0 TotBdAdml 10.95 -.84 +1.5 +5.0 +2.7 +4.2 8 D D -72.21 -.60 Frankfurt 11,867.37 1-YEAR +14.3/D Totlntl 16.94 +.86 +9.3 +2.8 +9.2 +5.7 C D D Hong Kong27,933.85 + 83.36 + . 30 3-YEAR +23.1/A -.14 TotStlAdm 53.25 +.24 +3.7 +14.1 +17.9+14.3 8 8 A Mexico 45,232.04 -64.87 5-YEAR +18.9/A Milan 23,315.40 +75.14 + . 32 TotStldx 53.23 +.24 +3.7 +14.0 +17.8+14.1 8 8 A Tokyo 20,133.90 +224.81 +1.13 3and5-yearretcnts aremnualized. USGro 31.89 +.19 +6.6 +19.3 +18.7+15.1 8 A A Stockholm 1,706.25 + 11.52 + . 68 Rank:Fund'sletter grade comparedwith others in Fund Footnotes: tt - Feecovering marketcosts is paid from fund assets. d - Deferredsales charge, cr redemption -31.20 -.53 the same group; an Aindicates fund performed in Sydney 5,81 2.80 fee. f - front load (salescharges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually amarketing fee2ndeither a sales cr Zurich 9,358.09 +58.66 + . 63 the top 20 percent; an E, in the bottom 20 percent. redemption fee.Source: Mcrningstar.
Harley-Davidson
HOG lose $56 23 The motorcycle maker reported better-than-expected first-quarter profit, but its revenue results fell short of expectations. $70 65
A $66 .15
Vol.:6.2m (2.5x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$14.75b
-5.2 +11.8 1 9 3 1 1 1 .32f -12.0 -2.7 72281 23 0 .20 V +53.3 - 23.7 111 d d 0 . 88 L + 16. 3 +2 2 .4 8 363 20 3 .64f L - 3.3 + 3 . 1 1 7 3 8 4 L +6.4 +12 . 1 25 5 1 9 0 . 64a W + 35. 8 +4 9 .2 1 5 3 3 1 0. 6 0 V +3.7 +34 . 8 1 381 29 1 .60f L +2.5 -6.3 22 85 V -5.8 -15.8 356 2 2 0 .44f L -16.5 +6 . 0 8 8 12 13 0. 6 4 L -9.9 t 2 3.7 19685 14 0 . 96 L +3.2 +5.9 1 0 152 14 0 . 2 6 v t9.6 +62 . 2 7 237 20 0 . 7 4 L -7.4 - 20.6 356 1 6 v -5.1 -0.8 1381 dd L -4.3 - 33.8 643 1 5 0 . 73 L + 13. 1 +1 6 .7 9 1 9 2 0 0 . 22f L -7.5 +9. 7 24045 17 1 . 2 4 V +4.2 +37 . 1 1 9 30 29 1 . 1 2 V -1.7 +30.4 7 8 7 2 1 1 . 48f V - 4.0 +12.1 89 22 1. 8 6 L -0.9 +4 . 1 3 6 34 1 6 0 .88a V - 27.5 +150.2 327 2 2 T -1.1 + 4 . 2 80 1 3 6 1. 7 6 W -15.0 - 20.6 774 1 6 0 . 12 V -31.5 - 41.2 298 d d 0 . 75 V +7.1 +44 . 0 52 6 3 1 2. 6 8 L -0.9 +12.3 2 2 7 1 4 1 . 30f L +17. 8 +4 2 .2 7 107 29 0 . 6 4 +1. 4 - 3.7 1477 2 1 0 . 60 V -4.7 + 7 . 7 5 476 1 4 0 . 98 +0. 6 +3 . 1 3 19 14 0.52f -0.3 +13.4 13183 13 1 .40 V - 11.5 +16.0 2319 2 4 1 . 16
for its first quarter today. Wall Street anticipates the Internet search giant's earnings improved versus the same quarter DividendFootnotes:a - Extra dividends werepaid, but arenct included. tt - Annualrate plus stock. c - Liquidating dividend. 5 -Amount declaredcr paid in last 12 months. f - Current annual rate, whichwasincreased bymost recentdividendannouncement. i —Sum of dividends paidafterstock split, ro regular rate. I —Sumcf dividends paidthis year.Most recent last year. Financial analysts will 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 in preceding 12months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, approximate cash be listening for anything Google value on ex-distrittuticn date.PEFootnotes: q —Stock is 5 clcsed-end fund - nc P/E ratio shown. cc —P/Eexceeds 99. dd - Loss in last12 months. has to say about a complaint filed this month against the company by European antitrust regulators. They claim that Google has been improperly favoring its own Boeing reported its latest Investment Research. A year shopping comparison service in quarterly earnings Wednesday. earlier, adjusted profit was $1.76 its search results. Although its profit topped Wall per share. Street expectations, its revenue Revenue rose 8 percent to GOOG $539.36 was below forecasts. $22.15 billion. That was short of $600 Boeing said that net income the $22.63 billion expected by rose to $1.34 billion, or $1.87 six analysts surveyed by Zacks. 540 per share. Excluding $113 The company reaffirmed its million in pension expenses, the company said forecast for full-year earnings in the range of $8.20 to '15 $528.62 adjusted profit was $1.97 per share, beating the $1.81 $8.40 per share and revenue between $94.5 billion and 480 per share forecast by analysts surveyed by Zacks $96 5 billion Operating
EURO +.0004 1.0739+
+.90 '
60
J
F M 52-week range
$54.22 ~
A $74.13
P E: 86.8 Vol.:7.5m (3.1x avg.) PE:14.5 Yield:... Mkt. Cap:$11.86b Yie l d: 2.2%
LRR Energy
BAC 14 . 37 ~ 18.21 15. 7 4 + . 2 4 +1.5 L L BBS I 1 8 .25 ~ 63.45 4 2. 0 1 -1.23 -2.8 V L BA 116.32 ~ 158. 8 3 16 1.19 -2.14 -1.4 L L C A C B4 .11 ~ 5.65 5.82 +. 0 1 +0.2 L L COL B 23.59— o 29.48 2 9 .38 + . 20 $-0.7 L L COLM 34.25 — o 62.19 60 .47 + . 2 1 +0.3 L L CO ST 111.61 ~ 1 56.8 5 146.98 -.36 -0.2 L W BR EW 10.07 ~ 17.89 13. 6 7 +. 0 8 + 0.6 L L F LIR 28.32 ~ H PQ 31. 00 ~ I NTC 25.74 ~ K EY 11.55 ~
38.34
UA
70
NorthwestStocks Alaska Air Group Avista Corp Bank of America Barrett Business Boeing Co Cascade Bancorp ColumbiaBnkg Columbia Sportswear Costco Wholesale Craft Brew Alliance FLIR Systems Hewlett Packard Intel Corp Keycorp Kroger Co Lattice Semi LA Pacific MDU Resources Mentor Graphics Microsoft Corp M Nike Inc B Nordstrom Inc Nwst Nat Gas PaccarInc Planar Systms Plum Creek Prec Castparts Schnitzer Steel Sherwin Wms StancorpFncl StarbucksCp Umpqua Holdi ngs US Bancorp
+
Close:$82.27 V-1.25 or -1.5% The fitness apparel and equipment maker reported positive first-quarter results, but its revenue outlook fell short of forecasts. $90 80
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 v +7.6 +41 . 7 1 273 15 0 .80f A LK 40.69 ~ 71.40 6 4. 3 1 -.62 -1.0 L w
Dividend: none
$56.16
Under Armour
4
based on past 12-month results
CRUDEOIL
Stocks closed higher on Wednesday, getting a lift from a slew of encouraging company earnings reports. Major stock indexes shuffled between slight gains and losses in morning trading before turning higher in the late afternoon. The gains were modest but shared widely: All 10 sectors of the Standard & Poor's 500 index rose, led by technology stocks. Investors got a dash of favorable data on housing. The National Association of Realtors said U.S. home sales jumped 6.1 percent in March to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 5.19 million.
"
2,000 "
1,950 "
-.21
StoryStocks
"
1 Q ' 15
1 Q '14
$15.79
Change: 88.68 (0.5%) "
"
Price-earnings ratio: lost money
EPS
SILVER+
Close: 18,038.27 17,720" ""' 10 DAYS "
2,100 " 2,050 "
1 6 00
Dow jones industrials
............ Close: 2,107.96 Change: 10.67 (0.5%)
Vol. (in mil.) 3,281 1,637 Pvs. Volume 3,154 1,662 Advanced 1777 1478 Declined 1284 1265 New Highs 98 114 New Lows 26 41
350
Operating
.
2,040' " ""'10 DAYS
$389.80
250
$118690 ~
S8$P 500
Thursday, April 23, 2015
AIIIIZN $330.87
GOLD ~
10 YR T NOTE 1.98% ~
10.67
2,107.96
LRE Close:$8.43%0.08 or 1.0% The energy company is being purchased by Vanguard National Resources for about $251 million in stock and $288 million of debt. $10
Packaging Corp. PKG Close:$70.68 %1.66 or 2.4% The packaging products company reported worse-than-expected first-quarter profit, but revenue met Wall Street expectations. $90 80 70
J
F
M
J
A
52-week range $5.61 ~
F
M
A
52-week range $20 .11
$57.06~
$ 54.66
Vol.:523.5k(1.7x avg.) P E: 4 . 3 Vcl.:5.1m (4.6x avg.) PE: 17 . 7 Mkt. Cap:$236.66m Yield: 23.6% Mkt. Cap:$6.95 b Yie l d : 3.1%
Brookfield Asset
BAM Close:$55.54L0.09 or 0.2% The asset manager plans to raise more than $1 billion through a stock sale and will use the proceeds partly for investments. $60
Teva Pharma.
TEVA Close:$63.01 V-1.15 or -1.8% The generic drug company off ered to buy rival Mylan for about $40.1 billion in a deal that would further consolidate the industry. $70 65
55
60 J
F
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J
52-week range $40.65~
F
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A
52-week range $56 .50
$47.$6~
$ 65.75
V ol.: 2.3m (3.2x avg.) PE: . . . Vol.:7.9m ( 1.4x avg.) P E:17 . 7 Mkt. Cap:$35.06b Yie l d: 0.9% Mkt.Cap:$53.68 b Yield: 2.2%
Rambus
RMBS Sanmina SANM Close: $14.40%0.22 or 1.6% Close:$21.09%0.40 or 1.9% The memory chip designer reported The electronics manufacturing serbetter-than-expected first-quarter vices company reported disappointprofit results and met Wall Street's ing fiscal second-quarter profit and revenue expectations. revenue. $16 $26 14
24
12
22 J
F M 52-week range
$$.57~ Vol.:1.5m (2.2x svg.) Mkt. Cap:$1.66 b
A
J
F M 52-week range
$14 .52 $16.57~ P E: 64.7 Vcl.:1.4m (2.2x avg.) Yield:... Mkt. Cap:$1.75 b
A $ 26.05
P E:9. 3 Yield: ...
SOURCE: Sungard
InterestRates
SU HS
The yield on the 10-year Treasury climbed to 1.98 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 2 .0 2 . 0 9 .09
52-wk T-bill
.21
...
L
.21
2-year T-note . 5 5 .52 + 0 .03 L 5-year T-note 1.40 1.33 +0.07 L 10-year T-note 1.98 1.91 +0.07 L 30-year T-bond 2.67 2.58 +0.09 L
BONDS
~
V T
L L
T T L L
L .39 L 1.74 L 2.71 L 3.50
NET 1YR YEST PVS CHG WK MOQTR AGO
Barclays LongT-Bdldx 2.51 2.45 +0.06 L L L Bond Buyer Muni Idx 4.27 4.25 +0.02 L L L Barclays USAggregate 2.04 2.03 +0.01 L W
PRIME FED Barclays US High Yield 5.90 5.91 -0.01 w RATE FUNDS
YEST3.25 .13 6 MO AGO3.25 .13 1 YRAGO3.25 .13
w Moodys AAA Corp Idx 3.51 3.50 +0.01 L L Barclays CompT-Bdldx 1.68 1.63 +0.05 L Barclays US Corp 2.88 2.87 +0.01 L W
Commodities
FUELS
The price of crude oil dropped. Investors continue to watch Yemen, as hours after Saudi Arabia announced the end of its campaign, new airstrikes on Wednesday hit two cities.
Crude Oil (bbl) Ethanol (gal) Heating Oil (gal) Natural Gas (mmbtu) UnleadedGas(gal)
Foreign Exchange The value of the dollar declined relative to the British pound and the euro. One euro is trading around $1.07, six months ago it was valued at $1.26.
h5Q HS
.02 .05 .09
V
METALS
Gold (oz) Silver (oz) Platinum (oz) Copper (Ib) Palladium (oz)
3.33 4.66 2.36
w L L W
5. 0 7 4.26 1.94 3. 0 5
CLOSE PVS. 56.16 55.26 1.61 1.64 1.87 1.85 2.61 2.58 1.92 1.89
%CH. %YTD - 0.81 + 5 .4 -0.9 -0.73 + 0.95 + 1 . 3 -9.8 +1.20 +1.93 +34.1
CLOSE PVS. 1186.90 1202.90 15.79 16.00 1129.70 1151.80 2.67 2.71 755.60 774.25
%CH. %YTD - 1.33 + 0 . 3 - 1.32 + 1 . 5 -1.92 -6.6 -1.31 -6.0 -2.41 -5.4
AGRICULTURE Cattle (Ib)
CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD -5.7 1.56 1.56 Coffee (Ib) 1.42 1.40 +1.50 -1 4.5 -6.2 Corn (bu) 3.73 3.73 -0.13 Cotton (Ib) 0.62 0.63 - 0.22 + 3 . 7 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 252.90 242.90 +4.12 -23.6 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.15 1.14 +1.58 -1 7.6 Soybeans (bu) 9.71 9.75 -0.49 -4.8 Wheat(bu) 4.99 5.01 -0.40 -15.4 1YR.
MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.5046 +.0121 +.80% 1.6822 Canadian Dollar 1.2 2 33 -.0056 -.46% 1.1029 USD per Euro 1.0739 +.0004 +.04% 1.3803 JapaneseYen 119.85 + . 1 5 + .13% 1 02.64 Mexican Peso 15. 4234 -.0420 -.27% 13.0537 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.9416 -.0074 -.19% 3.4860 Norwegian Krone 7 . 9011 +.0254 +.32% 5.9933 SouthAfrican Rand 12.2053 +.0676 +.55% 10.5382 Swedish Krona 8.7 1 18 + .0508 +.58% 6.5867 Swiss Franc .9696 +.0145 +1.50% . 8850 ASIA/PACIFIC Australian Dollar 1.2866 -.0108 -.84% 1.0680 Chinese Yuan 6.1923 -.0051 -.08% 6.2378 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7502 -.0005 -.01% 7.7528 Indian Rupee 62.942 +.042 +.07% 60.871 Singapore Dollar 1.3467 -.0047 -.35% 1.2561 South KoreanWon 1081.59 -1.40 -.13% 1037.95 -.02 -.06% 30.34 Taiwan Dollar 31.07
© www.bendbulletin.com/business
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, APRIL 23, 2015
BRIEFING Trek recalling faulty bicycles The U.S.Consumer Product Safety Commission announcedTuesday that the Wisconsin-based bicycle companyTrek would recall about1 million bikes in the United
States andCanadadueto an issue with thebikes' front disc brakesystem. According to theConsumer ProductSafety Commission's summary, the quick releaselever on the bike's front wheel can openmore than 180 degrees,meaningit could get caught inthe disc brake ofthe bike,as itdid for one riderwho becameparalyzedafter an accident. Therecall affects everyTrekbicycle with a quick releaselever that opensmorethan180 degrees built between 2000 and2015. Two Bendbike shops are licenseddistributors of Trek bicycles. Pine Mountain Sports specializes in Trek'smountain bikes, while Sunnyside Sports focusesonhybrid and road bikes,according to MikeSchindler, co-owner of Sunnyside Sports. Schindler saidthe store hasgotten afew callsabout the recall, and one customerhadalready returned his bike. Headded that Trekhadshipped replacementlevers for stores to install. "Trek's a bigcompany, and there's alot of bikes out there, sowe're going to be busy,"Schindler sald.
Madras getting loan office The Bank ofEastern Oregon is opening aloan production office inMadras, the Heppner-based bankannouncedTuesday. The office, to belocated in theHarriman building, 212 SW Fourth St., Suite 306, will bestaffed by Pete McCabe,who has 30 years in bankingin Central Oregon,said Jeff Bailey, presidentandCEO of the Bankof Eastern Oregon. BEOBancorp, the holding companyfor Bank of EasternOregon, operates 13branches and six loanproduction offices in oneeastern Washington and12 eastern Oregoncounties. The bankhasbranches in communities from Arlington to Burns. — Bulletin staff reports
PERMITS City of Bend • 1002 NW WalStreet l LLC, 1000 NWWall Street, Suite 478, $320,000 • W.D. Enterprises Inc., 838 NWNewport Ave., $218,180 • Cascade Property Development, 844 NW Newport Ave., $218,180 • Cascade Property Development, 850NW Newport Ave., $218,180 • Greg Welch Construction, 2894 NWLakemontDrive, $400,892 • Pacwest II LLC,20662 NE Liberty Lane,$336,700 • Quagliata Trust, 60820 Yellow LeafSt., $315,113 • Century Park LLC,320 SW Century Drive, $90,000 • PacWest II LLC, 61938 SE JanaleePlace, $178,399 DeschutesCounty • Grader Revocable Living Trust, 71000 Bracken Lane, Black Butte Ranch, $505,308.29 • David R. and Lisa W. Dehaas,13658 Bishops Cap, Black Butte Ranch, $470,934.11 • Earl and Katherine J. Liverman, 16131Old Juniper Road, Sisters, $173,179.70 • Cathie L. and Larry E. Raaf, 18141WanonaRoad, Sisters, $161,763.84 • Davis E. Traut,7678 NW HomesteadCourt,
By Joseph Ditzler
an amicable settlement," said attorney Edward Fitch, of Red-
The Bulletin
Mavericks at Sunriver is
mond, who represented the
closure action. "After the bank took the deed back, they asked us to list it," said Compass Com-
for sale again, the FlowRider
former Mavericks at Sunriver
perpetual-wave machine in-
general manager, Richard mercial principal broker Erich Hadley, and Hadley's property Schultz on Tuesday, "and here management company, Moun- we are." tain Resort Properties Inc. The property is also The bank in August sued scheduled for sale by the Hadley and three others Deschutes County Sheriff's with ownership shares in the Office on April 30. Schultz
cluded, at a reduced price of $1.975 million. The former owners, Sun-
river Vacations Recreation Association, on April 14 signed over the property to Bank of the Cascades. The deed transfer ends an eightmonth-long foreclosure action
facility — Larry W. Brown-
said Wednesday he could not
ing, Mark G. Halvorsen and Edward R. Willard, along with their respective property management companiesalleging they had failed to m ake loan payments and pay
comment on the sheriff's sale. The bank in November obtained a judgment against the association, but sheriff's sales in February and March were
in Deschutes County Circuit Court. The association no longer has any connection with the recreational facility that it built and operated since 2003, taxes due on the property. The in part with loans totaling $5.5 32,000-square-foot facility has million. Other terms of the been closed since Oct. 31. agreement ending the lawsuit Monday, Compass Com-
lawsuit brought sales activity to a halt. He said the firm has
been getting back in touch with those same prospects. The Compass Commercial pitch presents the facility
as a potential corporate retreat or church camp. The entire lot encompasses 10.17
acres. The building includes a 1,000-square-foot indoor
climbing wall, a basketball half-court, a four-lane indoor lap pool, saunas and other The FlowRider 1800 perpet-
aquatic recreation in Sunriver, but Schultz said the FlowRider is "a major selling point" for Mavericks. "It's the only one in Oregon and one of the few in the Pacific Northwest." Center has the only FlowRider in western Washington. But the Surf City Water Park &
negotiated a settlement. Compass Commercial
more than $500,000, Schultz said. The FlowRider provided
Lodge in Ellensburg, Wash-
priced the property to sell, "at
a venue for competitions that
under construction, plans to
drew professional bodyboard-
includea wave machine when
it opens next year, according to the Puget Sound Business
Schultz could not say whether
Journal. — Reporter: 541-617-7815,
both sides said.
the property at $1.975 million,
memo from Compass Com-
ers and flowriders to Sunriver from around the country.
or $625,000 less than the
mercial. Schultz said a handful of prospective buyers had
the bank would sell the ma-
expressedinterestbefore the
chine apart from the facility.
H 00
2012, presents competition in
ual-wave machine, installed at Mavericks in 2007, is worth
mercial Real Estate relisted
same brokers had listed it for sale before the August fore-
The Sunriver Homeowners
Aquatic 8 Recreation Center, or SHARC, which opened in
postponed while the parties
were confidential, lawyers for "Litigation between Mav-
to remove the machine.
The Snohomish Aquatic
facilities.
a fraction of the replacement cost," according to the offering
ericks (at Sunriver) and the bank has been resolvedby
"I'm not qualified to answer that," he said. "Based on what I see, it's somewhat difficult"
IU.C CIBZB B BS,
we sie e s
rois
By David Pierson Los Angeles Times
• I
When gourmet food trucks
(
•
I I
ington, north of Yakima, now
jditzler@bendbulletin.com
Leaderscall for new
order in economies
I
were at the peak of their popularity, traveling to distant
By Ting Shi, Yudith Ho and Rieka Rahadiana
locations and waiting hours in
Bloomberg News
line for a taste was part of the
Leaders ofsome ofthe largest developing nations
thrill. But with thousands of the
called for a new economic
mobile kitchens on the road today, the frenzy has faded, forcing many vendors to look for a new edge.
orderbased on their shared interests rather than "obsolete" financial institutions created after World War II.
The statements came
Now a website that's been
there since the beginning is helping fashion a second act. Ross Resnick launched Roaming Hunger in 2009 as a fledgling graduate of the University of Southern California, just as buzz was building for thenew dining phenomenon
at a summit of Asian and
African countries held in Jakarta on Wednesday to mark the anniversary of a
similar gathering 60years ago that helped established the Cold War's nonaligned movement. In his keynote speech, Indonesian Presi-
on wheels. The goal was to create an
dent Joko Widodo, known
online directory to follow the
Mel Melcon/LosAngelesTimes/TNS
new wave of mobile food ven-
Ross Resnick, founder of Roaming Hunger, a website and app that tracks the whereabouts of food
dors in real time. No one was too small. Resnick would go
trucks in dozens of cities, poses for a portrait in front of the tech company's headquarters April 3 in
so far as to track down and list
truck, in background, one of the company's primary vendors.
West Hollywood, California. He is holding a barbecue brisket sandwich from the Wise Barbecue food
someone who sold baklava out of a rolling suitcase. Roaming Hunger became more than 6,000 mobile food the go-to site and app for the vendors. budding scene. But Resnick The company — turned still had little idea how to down by venture capitalists make any money, except for worried food trucks were a few online ads. Then a busi- just a fad — says it's turning ness model fell in his lap. a profit by charging a fee for Friends and acquaintances each booking and rolling out began to ask for help findcorporatemarketing events. ing trucks to cater parties.
There are other food truck
Requests also poured in to rent trucks for marketing
none that focus so heavily on
campalgns.
"No one is lining up two hours for a sandwich. Those days are over," said Resnick, 30. "Now it's about getting a food truck to your daughter's
directories, including Yelp, but helping operators squeeze out more profit. Michael Mikhail is a fan. He launched his first gourmet truck in 2010, Hungry Nomad, which serves food styled after
bat mitzvah or a corporate event."
his family's successful Armenian-Lebanesebakery chain
Roaming Hunger is a clearinghouse for the industry, connecting customers across
in the L.A. area. He's since
the country with a directory of
Redmond, $187,047.36 • Valladao Family Trust,4802 NW Ice Ave.,Terrebonne, $306,611.77 • Cater Enterprises LLC, 154 E AdamsAve., Sisters, $363,470.57 • Kenneth E. Gertz,667 S. Cottonwood St., Sisters, $350,300.74 • Travis M. and Shawna L. Williams,5555 NW GreenwoodAve.,Redmond, $191,303.92 • Kinsey Family Trust, 485 Victoria Falls Drive, Redmond, $312,944.59 • Stone Bridge Homes NW LLC,680Wildwood Falls Court, Redmond, $226,361.83 • Pamela J. andJohn Leszar, 10076 Juniper GlenCircle, Redmond, $294,478.80 • Fred D. andKarenS. Littlejohn,11473Jubel Court, Redmond, $354,093.03 • Jacquelyn A. andBaxter C. Ekern,11358Highcrest Court, Redmond, $463,689.54
added two more trucks. When Mikhail started, he could park anywhere and
•DunlapFineHomesInc., 3070 NWCanyon Drive, Redmond, $286,320.13 •DunlapFineHomesInc., 3050 NWCanyon Drive, Redmond, $254,347 • Erik Berkey,f350 NW Canal Blvd., Redmond,$2,890,000 • Utility Trailer-Redmond LLC, 825 NEHemlock Ave., Redmond, $254,564 • Deschutes County,737 SW CascadeAve., Redmond, $350,200 •DunlapFineHomesInc., 2511 SWIndian Lane, Redmond, $180,1 89.27 • Hayden HomesLLC,4757 SW Umatilla Ave., Redmond, $262,802.10 • Jerald E. andPamala J. Boysen, 4153SW Salmon Place,Redmond, $379,918.78 • Janelle Walsh andKlaus Kreuzner, 2558 SW43rd Court, Redmond, $480,000 • Buggsi Inc., 2630 SW17th Place, Redmond,$300,000
as Jokowi, saidbeliefs that entities such as the World Bank and the International
Monetary Fund can solve global economic problems were"all obsolete ideas that
need to be changed." draw a crowd. Now, he said, food trucks are everywhere,
ger calls these marketing campaigns food truck takeovers.
"It is imperative that we build a new international
It's all about staking out and returningto the best locations
years ago marketing Honest
— not unlike the days when
it, which is why he takes particular interest in the
economic order that is open tonew emerging economic powers," Jokowi said at the meeting. "We call upon therefore for a new global
takeovers.
financial architecture in
day evening in winter, Mikhail might agree to cater an aver-
Food trucks, he said, are an unusually effective advertising tool because they encourage onlookers to participate with all five senses. Resnick declined to disdose company revenue but said it was equally split between booking fees for
order to avoid the domination of certain groups of countries." The summit convened in a world vastly changed since leaders of developing nations first gathered
age-sized event for as low as
catering and the takeovers.
Bandung in 1955. Attendees
and it's tough to make a buck.
foodtrucks were betterknown as roach coaches. That grind left him open to something new. So he was primed when Roaming Hunger called with catering requests. Prices vary. On a slow Mon-
$500. A Friday afternoon in the summer can command as much as $1,500. When he's not catering, Mikhail might have his truck wrapped in vinyl graphics for a special event. Roaming Hun-
• Gernhart Redmond LLC, 2747 SW Sixth St., Redmond, $180,000 • PL Redmond USA Limited Partnership,3140 SW28th St. Redmond, $258,237.36 • James S. andAlissa J. Cowan, 16800Ponderosa Cascade Drive, Bend, $190,780.13 • Duane R.Packer,65835 Waldron Trail, Bend, $1,200,000 • Luke Guynup, 21475 Gift Road, Bend,$483,858.70 • Sue Reid, 21433 Bradetich Loop, Bend, $347,235.48 • RKL LLC, 19100 Macalpine Loop, Bend, $1,289,056.19 • RKL LLC,f9100 Macalpine Loop, Bend, $237,888 •Benjaminand Meaghan Farver,61656Rowallan Court, Bend, $410,334A3 • Tetherow Rim LLC, 19295 Alianna Loop,Bend, $330,969.50 • Timberline Construction of Bend LLC,19450 Bainbridge
Court, Bend, $379,968.42 • Michael Hasenoehrl,61564 Hosmer LakeDrive, Bend, $372,271.87 • Herrick Trust, 19372 Seaton Loop, Bend, $484,663.70 • Kelly Development Corporation, 61518Skene Trail, Bend, $494,147.85 • Hank Elliott,19525 Apache Road, Bend,$315,310.17 • Shannon L. Houston, 19321 ApacheRoad,Bend, $239,223.70 • Hank Elliott, 19097 Baker Road, Bend,$267,598.39 • David W. andAnneM. Wagner, 24185Dodds Road, Bend, $195,747.84 • Robert T. Quinn II, 22393 Rickard Road,Bend, $290,626.47 • Bruce D. andLeeA. Hoisington,60678 Brasada Way, Bend, $303,186.69 • Sunriver Resort Limited Partnership, 17600Center Drive, Sunriver, $1,100,000
Resnick cut his teeth four Tea before Coca-Cola bought
Roaming Hunger averaged six to nine takeovers a month last year compared with two to three a month in 2013. Meanwhile, the site facilitated
485 catering jobs a month last year.
in the Indonesian city of China and India are now members of the Group of 20
major economies and are demandingmore ofasay in international institutions
and supporting new ones to speed the pace of change.
BEST OFTHEBIZ CALENDAR TODAY • Adbite — Experiential Marketing: Discuss theessentials of successful experiential marketing campaigns andprovide strategies, tactics and examples from small and large companies; 11:30a.m. St. Charles Hospital Conference Rooms, 2500 NENeff Road, Bend; http:I/adfedco.org; 541-385-1992. • Central Oregon Business Expo: Afull day of networking designed to growyour business lunch presentation, 11:45 a.m. to 1 p.m., $16 per person andRSVPrequired; after1 p.m., attendance is free; Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center, 3800 SW Airport Way, Redmond; www.cobusinessexpo. com or 541-923-5191. • U.S. Cellular Business Solutions Workshop: A freeworkshop demonstrating how businesses can take advantage of the latest cuttingedgemobiletechnology;8:30a.m. U.S. Cellular, 3197 N.U.S.Highway 97, Bend or 541-385-0853. • Business Startup: Cover the basics in this two-hour class and
decide if running a business is for you;6p.m. $29; registration required; Central Oregon Community College-Redmond Campus, Technology Education Center, 2324 SE College Loop, Redmond; www.cocc.edu/sbdc or 541-383-7290. • EDCO PubTalk: Featuring keynote speaker BradSteward andcompany pitches from BoskyEyewearand Slackline Technology;5 p.m. $20 for EDCOMembers; $30 nonmembers; McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 NWBondSt., Bend; www.edcoinfo.com/events/aprilpubtalkor 541-388-3236. TUESDAY • SCORE free business counseling: Business counselors conduct free 30-minute one-on-oneconferences with local entrepreneurs;checkin at the library desk onthe second floor; 5:30-7 p.m .;Downtown BendPublic Library, 601 NWWall St.; www. SCORECentral0regon.org. • For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday'sBulletin or visit bendbulletin.com/bizcal
IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Nutrition, D2 Fitness, D3 Money, D4 THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, APRIL 23, 2015
O www.bendbulletin.com/health
Small storesandproducestandslnCentral Oregonthat accept SNAP*
Researchers test treatment
Bend
to ha t acute eukemia
• • • • • • • • • •
Prineville
Bend Farmers Market C.E. Lovejoy's Brookswood Market Central Oregon Locavore Devore's Good Food Store Great Harvest Bread Co. Nature's General Store Newport Market Paradise Produce Stand Riverside Market The Vegetable Man Produce
Redmond • • • • • •
Cinder Butte Meat Co. Cornucopia Natural Foods Redmond Farmers Market Redmond Smokehouse Ryan's Produce Schoolhouse Produce
• • • • • •
Butcher Boys Juniper Grove Market (RV park mini-mart) Prineville Farmers Market (Opens July 22) Quimby's Independent Meat Market R&R Grocery and Sporting Goods Richi's Place Grill & Spirits (convenience
store) • The Outpost (convenience store)
Nadras • • • • •
The Outpost (convenience store) Busy Bee Market Great Earth Natural Foods WWR Smokehouse 8 Foods Madras Saturday Market (Opens June 6)
* Vendors that could not bereached to verify their participation in the programwere excludedfrom list Greg Cross /The Bulletin
Source: U.S. Department of Agriculture Food and Nutrition Service
By Delthia Ricks
ated with the leukemia and is
Newsday
on the hunt for others. Early clinical trials of
Acute myeloid leukemia is a conundrum among
molecular "on" switch of the
swamp the bone marrow, crowd out healthy
cancer — widely known as
cells and all too often
The Leukemia and Lymphoma Society of America, the nation's leading advocacy organization for patients, applauds Vakoc and his nationwide team of collaborators.
can have devastating consequences. But a medical investiga-
tor at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory in New York
working
MEDICINE witha team of
arol Williams has used a state-issued machine to ring up customers using government food benefits for healthy, local foods at her small natural foods store in Redmond
On Tuesday, Vakoc was recognized by the Ameri-
heel — a vulnerable
can Association for Cancer
"on" switch driving the cancer. And through
received the Outstanding
Christopher Vakoc, the physician-scientist leading the research, identified a potential therapy that flips
Achievement in Cancer Re-
the switch off. It's still far
bel Prize. "What makes AML
produce vendors who bring in m odest sales,somehavefound ithelpfulto take advantage of
known as food stamps, which
processingthe state offered.
the free machines and benefits A handful of store owners
providesfood assistanceto low-income
NUTRITION families.
in Central Oregon say the new charges are enoughto make
But alesser-known provision of the
them question whether they'll continue to accept SNAP at all.
More than 30 small natural
2014 Farm Bill made it so that
retailers must noweitherpurchase the state's machines or
foods stores, produce stands, farmers markets andmeat
pay a monthly rental fee to use them. Now Williams, the co-owner of Cornucopia Natural
Ryan Couch, owner ofThe Vegetable Man Produce in Bend,organizes a container of asparagus in his stand along SE Third Street
Foods 8 Deli, said she's not sure if the $25 per month fee
benefits following a lesser-known provision of the 2014 Farm Bill, which made it more expensive for him to process the cards.
Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin
on Frl day.Couch haschanged theway hisbusinessaccepts SNAP
shops in Central Oregon accept SNAP benefits, creating a
wealth of opportunity for families who rely on theprogram topurchaselocallygrown produce and other healthy foods
makes it worth accepting
that aren't always available at
SNAP benefits. Despite having loyal SNAP customers w ho've been coming in for years, she's consideringdropping the program altogether. "It definitelymakes a difference," she said of the new
large grocery stores and convenience stores. But that number could drop. Gary Boyd, the owner of
charges. "It makes us think,
'Youknow, are we goingto continue to support that?'"
Williams is among the minorityof retailers who
still use the state-issued food benefits machines. Most store owners run all of their cus-
tomers' cards — debit, credit and food benefits — through single machines and hire one processing company to track
them all. They say it's easier, more efficient and takes up less counter space. "It just gets complicated if
Great Earth Natural Foods in
you don't," said Debbie Sloan, Madras, is one of the people theowner ofNature'sGeneral mulling dropping SNAP, a Store in Bend. She stopped program he has accepted for using the state's machine at least 15 years. years ago. SeeSNAP/D2
by other researchers who have gone on to win the Nounique" among leukemias, Vakoc said, "is its acute prop-
erty. Someone can go from being totally healthy and
under study on the 120-
active to having their bone
acre Long Island campus where scientists are unmasking aberrant genes and exposing previously unsuspected protein path-
marrow overcome by leukemic cells.
ways linked to cancer.
disease is the acute aspect of
Vakoc has found other "small molecules" associ-
"There are other leukemias
that are chronic and smoldering, but the hallmark of this it," Vakoc said. See Leukemia/D5
How ongdoes it take to get outof shape? By Nora Krug
ditioning, says Jo Zimmerman,
The Washington Post
an instructor in the department
With five kids age 6 and under — including a set of twins — Karyn Ryan could
of kinesiology at the University of Maryland. If you are amore serious athlete, perhaps training for a marathon, you may feel this decline more acutely, but deconditioning happens in
a nine-month
pickedup thecostofprocessing the charges to the federal Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, formerly
search Award, an honor won
cancer, like other recalcitrant malignancies, is
let alone exBut for the tiniest stores and
Research during its annual meeting in Philadelphia. He
sheer happenstance, Dr.
FITNESS ercise. After Up until lastyear, the state
been a new therapeutic approachtothedisease in m ore than three decades.
barely find the time to sleep,
foratleasta dozen years.
The society says there hasn't
in on what he calls the malignancy's Achilles'
This tough-to-treat
ByTara Bannowe The Bulletin
AML — are underway.
researchers has zeroed
too early to say whether the approach works.
• Farm Bill makes it more expensivefor someto accept government food benefits
therapeutics that turn off the
cancers. Immature cells
hiatus from her fitness routine, Ryan was so overweight and out of shape that she got winded just goingup the stairs."Mentally, I needed to find myself again," she says. As her running shoes sat idly by the door of her Gaithersburg, Maryland, home, Ryan was taunted by a worry familiar to anyone whohas taken an extended workoutbreak, whether due
proportion to how much effort
youput into getting in shape in the first place. Regardless of your fitness level and goals, "detraining" (a fancy way of saying you've logged more hours on the couch than at the gym) affects different parts of your bodyyourcardiovascularsystem, your musdes, your waistlinein different ways.
Cardiovascularsystem The first thing to slide is your
to work or family obligations, illness or injury, or just plain fatigue: Am I losing
aerobic fitness. After 10 to 14
my fitness? How long does it
effecti vely consume and use
take to get out of shape'?
oxygen,sometimes referredto as VO2 max, begins to decline,
The short answer: It de-
pends. Generally speaking, though, it takes longer than you might think. For arecreational exercis-
days with little or no physical activity, the body's ability to
says Jessica Matthews, a senior
adviser for health and fitness education for the American Council on Exercise. Studies
er — someone who works
show"notable reductions in
out two to three times a
VO2 max within two to four
week and is"fit enough to keep up with a 3-year-old"
weeks of nontraining, mostly due to decreased cardiac out— it takes two to four weeks put and decreased blood volof inactivity for there tobe a ume," she says. notable change in your conSeeIn shape/D3
re on'Sne or a e ua rues a in • Bill expected to pass Senate, already won Houseapproval By Tara Bannow The Bulletin
Oregon's neighbors to the north and south have strict rules around the number, type
MONEY
been working to develop those buying the cheapest plans rules,called network adequapossible generally means havcy rules. A bill that outlines ing the least amount of choice the basics of network adequa- over which doctor they'll see. cy earned all but one "yes" In extremecases,some people vote in the Oregon House and found none of those listed by
and location of pr o viders insur- now awaits hearings in the
their insurance carrier were
ance carriers must include within their
approved. The regulations
accepting new patients, or they had to drive long distanc-
policies' networks. Here, such
would take effect Jan. 1, 2017.
es or wait weeks or months
rules are still in the works.
The issue of narrow provider networks has become especially visible since the Affordable Care Act's insurance mandate took effect at the beginning of 2014. Many Americans soon realized
for an appointment. Almost all insurance carri-
The Oregon Insurance Division, an agency within the state's Department of Con-
sumer & Business Services that regulates the insurance marketplace, has for years
Senate, where it's likely to be
ers list the providers they contract with one their websites,
but they often aren't updated when the providers aren't see-
ing new patients, said Gayle
Woods, a senior policy adviser large group plans, but it would with the Oregon Insurance apply to individual policies Division and a leader on the and small group policies that network adequacy work. cover fewer than 100 people. "This is a challenge for A large proportion of Oregon's carriers, too,because many of insured are covered under them place the responsibility large group plans, usually on the provider to update the through employers or associ-
convincing evidence that people who are enrolled in large group plans shouldn't have the same level of protection
system to indicate whether
compromise the ability to get the bill passed."
they're accepting new patients," she said. The new rules in Oregon, unless they're changed in the Senate, would requirecarriers
ations, but Woods said insur-
ance carriers and business groups had concerns about applying the regulations to large group plans because they're structured differently to submit annual reports to from small group and individthe state on their plans for enual plans. The division hopes suring network adequacy, and to develop rules for large their websites must feature group plans in the future, she lists of in-network providers. said. "We don't believewe have The law would not apply to
that this bill provides other-
wise for individual and small group members," she said. "But we really didn't want to
The law's most crucial
details, such as how many providers are covered, where they're located and whether
patients can see them, will be hashed out by the Oregon Insurance Division when it
clarifies specific rules after it's approved by the Legislature. SeeInsurance/D4
D2 THE BULLETIN• THURSDAY, APRIL 23, 2015
N
TjoN SNAP
For dieting restaurantfans,salt in thewound?
non-nutritious would be too costly and burdensome.
an edited excerpt. • any good resources for • I was recently put on a eating while pregnant? I am • low-sodium diet. I un- eight weeks along and, while I derstand that cooking and have been able to tolerate eateating at home is my best ing most of my usual diet (exchoice, but I can't (and don't cluding forbidden things like want to) avoid dining out en- sushi and whatnot), I'm gettirely. What's the best way to ting a little bored of the rota-
se, but it offers a lot of great I use a healthful, neutral oil. recipes and suggestions for I also use whole-grain pastry getting the nutrients you need. flour in my muffins. There is not one formula I can give • I am absolutely addict- you to make the substitutions • ed to muffins. I b ake because it depends on the them all the time, but I am recipe. starting to wonder about the amount of oils and butter I am • Any recipes or tips to using. Is there a sure-fire way • prevent bloating? to reduce the fat content in • One thing that is of-
Continued from 01 SNAP cannot be used to "It's actually costing me purchase alcohol,cigarettes, money to continue to ac- non-food items, pet food, vitacept, so I don't know how mins, foods that will be eaten much longer we're going to in stores and hot foods, accontinue to be doing that," cording to the USDA. he said. Bruce Barnhart, the presAfter an electricity surge ident of Cash Register Sysfried Cowboy Corner's tems in Bend, a company that state-issued card-process- sells and trains retailers to use ing machine three months card-processing equipment, ago, the state told the own- said the Farm Bill change, er of the Prineville conve- which took effect in Septemnience store he would have ber 2014, prompted several of to pay for his own replace- his customerswho were using
do this? Menus don't say how
muffins without losing their
ment. He decided not to,
By TheWashington Post Dietitian and healthful-eat-
the chef to use less. It seems nutritional info. I don't think
the fat while keeping them
like a reasonable request to
moist. And instead of butter,
ing columnist Ellie Krieger me. answered questions last week in a Post online chat. Here is
Q
Q
• Can y ou r e c ommend
tion. I went to the website of a
there is a sample menu in it per
Q
Q
• ten overlooked when it
much sodium is in each dish. well-known pregnancy fran- unique and satisfying taste'? Should I call restaurants be- chise, and a "sample preg• I often say that they inforehand and ask for sugges- nancy menu" for one day was • vented the word "muftions'? Ask waiters'? Can I ask 2,800 calories! That's nearly fin" so people didn't have them to tell the chef to make twice what I eat normally. to admit to eating cake for my order with less salt'?
A
• Y ou c e rtainly h a v e • more controlover what is in your food when you are cooking it yourself, but there is no need to forgo the pleasure of eating out once in a while. The first thing I would
A • your p regnancy! I t's great that you have been able • First of all, congrats on
to tolerate most foods! It is
tough with "sample menus" in general because everyone does have different calorie
And yes, I would explain to the waiter that you are sensi-
needs. You could follow the basic outlines of the plan you mentioned, adjusting the portions for your appetite. There is a new book out called "Full Belly: Good Eats for a Healthy Pregnancy" that I reviewed and loved. It is a beautiful
tive to salt and to please ask
cookbook with lots of great
suggest is to ask for sauces and dressings on the side. Those are usually big sources of salt, and this way you can control how much goes on.
comes to reducing bloating is the first step in digestion: chewing. Try to slow down when you are eating, avoid talking too much during your b reakfast. For m a n y r e c i- meal and chew your food pes, the butter and sugar very well. This not only helps amounts are about the same break down the food physias cake. But it is possible to cally, your saliva also helps have a great muffin that is break down the food chemalso healthful for breakfast. ically, leaving less work for By making them at home the rest of your digestive sysyou are on the right track, tem. Also, eating slowly could because home muffin tins help you eat more modest make sensible-size muffins,
portions. Sometimes bloating
whereas the ones you get in the store can be the size of a
comes from eating too much. There are many causes for bloating, however, so if it is consistently a problem, you
cauliflower with more than
500 calories each. Ioften use applesauce or yogurt in my muffins to sub out some of
should meet with a and/or dietitian.
the state machines to switch to
despite the fact that many one system forallcards. "It always makes sense to customers used SNAP, said Jerry Johnson, the store's integrate at the point of sale," assistant manager. he said. "It's faster." SNAP benefits can be Ryan Couch, the owner of used to buy breads, pro- The Vegetable Man, a produce, meats, fish, dairy duce marketacross the street products and seeds and from Fred Meyer in Bend, was plants to grow food. They among those who converted can also be used to buy after the new charges started soda, candy, cookies, cakes piling up. While making the and some energy drinks, switch, he contemplated dropaccording to the U.S. De- ping SNAP altogether. "We were happy to do that partment of Food & Agriculture, which administers for low-income people," he the program. said, "but when it becomes Congress has considered cost-prohibitive, you start to cutting junk food from the wonder whether this is worth program, but concluded it or not." that designating certain — Reporter: 541-383-0304, foods as luxury items or tbannow@bendbulletin.com
d o ctor
HEALTH EvENTs TODAY AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required, call for appointment; 8:30 a.m.; The Center: Orthopedic8 Neurosurgica! Care8 Research, 2200 NE Neff Road, Suite 200, Bend; www.redcrossb!ood.org or 800-RED-CROSS. AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required, call for appointment; 12:30 p.m.; Bend Blood Donation Center, 815 SW Bond St., Suite110, Bend; www.redcrossb!ood.org or 800-RED-CROSS.
FRIDAY AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required, call for appointment; 9 a.m.; Bend Blood Donation Center, 815 SW Bond St., Suite110, Bend; www.redcrossb!ood.org or 800-RED-CROSS. AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification requ!red, call for appointment;1 p.m.; First Baptist Church,450 SE Fa!rview Drive, Prineville; www.redcrossb!ood.org or 800-RED-CROSS.
SATURDAY EARTH DAYCOMMUNITY RIDE:
Join Bend Bikes for a family-friendly ride to unite with the Earth Day Parade, dress up asyour favorite
speciesanddecorateyour bike; 9a.m.; Juniper Swim8 Fitness Center, 800 NESixth St., Bend; www. bendbikes.org or 541-241-6077.
SUNDAY AYURVEDICNUTRITION: Learn how to use food as medicineto balance the physical, emotional, mental and spiritual parts of life through the ancient tradition of Ayurveda; 1:30 p.m.; $25 in advance;$30 atthe door; Bend Community Healing, 155 SW Century Drive, Suite113, Bend;
www.bendcommunityhea! Ing.com or 541-322-9642.
appointment; 1:30 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NWWall St., Bend; www.redcrossblood.org or 800-RED-CROSS. GET OUTOFYOURSLUMP: Learn secrets for how to minimize and prevent neck or back discomfort and do everyday tasks in ways that feel more comfortable, adjustyour ergonomics to prevent neck and back pain; 5:30 p.m.; Healing Bridge Physical Therapy, 404 NEPenn St., Bend; 541-318-7041.
TUESDAY COMMUNITYHEALTH WORKER CLASS:A Community Health Worker
(CHW) is anoutreach personwho coordinatesaccessand care;9
BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required, call for appointment; 9 a.m.; Warm Springs Health and Wellness Center, 1270 Kot-num Road, Warm Springs; 800-RED-CROSS.
AMERICANRED CROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required, call for appointment; 12:30 p.m.; BendBlood Donation Center, 815 SWBond St., Suite110, Bend; www.redcrossblood. org or 800-RED-CROSS. LIVING WELLWITH CHRONIC CONDITIONS:Learn how to better
AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required, call for appointment; 10 a.m.; Bend Blood Donation Center,
managetheday-to-daysymptoms thatare challenging with an ongoing health problem; 2:30 p.m.; $10; Deschutes County Health Dept., 2577 NE Courtney Dr., Bend;www. livingwe! Ico.org or 541-322-7430.
WEDMESDAY
541382-6447~2090NEWy ttC t ~ S 't 101 Bend OR 97701 ~ bendurology.com
AMERICAN REDCROSS
a.m.; $595, registration required; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NW CollegeWay,Bend; www. AMERICANRED CROSS BLOOD cocc.edu/continuinged/chw or DRIVE:Identification required, call 541-383-7270. for appointment; 10 a.m.; Central AMERICANRED CROSS BLOOD Oregon Community College, DRIVE:Identification required, 2030 SE College Loop, Redmond; call for appointment; 10 a.m.; www.redcrossblood.org or Central Oregon Community 800-RED-CROSS. College, 2600 NWCollege Way, AMERICANRED CROSS BLOOD Bend; www.redcrossblood.org or DRIVE:Identification required, call 800-RED-CROSS. for appointment; 1 p.m.; BendBlood AMERICANRED CROSS BLOOD Donation Center, 815 SW Bond St., DRIVE:Identification required, call for Suite110, Bend; www.redcrossb!ood. appointment;11 a.m.; Bureau of Land org or 800-RED-CROSS. Management, 3050 NE Th!rd St., AMERICANRED CROSS BLOOD Prinevil!e; www.redcrossblood.org or DRIVE:Identification required, call for 800-RED-CROSS.
MONDAY
815 SW Bond St., Suite110, Bend; www.redcrossblood.org or 800-RED-CROSS. AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required, call for appointment; 10 a.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2030 SE College Loop, Redmond; www.redcrossb!ood.org or 800-RED-CROSS.
SU r olo S~
cu t our ummer Bo 1 Safe, Gentle BzEffective Body Remodeling
FiTNEss EvENTs TODAY MOMS RUNNING GROUP:All moms welcome with or without strollers for a 3-4.5 mile run at 8-12 minute mile paces, meet at 9:15, rain or shine; 9:30 a.m.; FootZone, 842 NW Wall St., Bend; www.footzonebend.comor 541-317-3568. YOGA FIVE-WEEKRESTORATIVE COURSE:Restore your sense of well-being, soothe your nerves and feel deeply rested with th!s skillfully supported, restorative practice taughtby Robyn Castano;4 p.m.;
541-647-0876. OBSTACLECOURSE TRAINING CAMP:Six-week course for those planning to participate in a Spartan Race, Tough Mudder, Warrior Dash or any other obstacle course race/ mud run;10a.m.; $105 plus fees in
RUNNINGGROUP:Aninterval-based workout to help you get the most out of your running, distance and effort vary according to what works for you; 5:30 p.m.; FootZone, 842 NW Wall St., Bend; wwwdootzonebend. com or 541-317-3568.
advance,$20for drop-ins; Cascade
Middle School track, Bend; www. WEDMESDAY fitnesstrainingbysloane.b!ogspot. com or 541-848-8395. NOON TACO RUN: Order a Taco Stand burrito when you leave and UP THECROOKEDRIVER we'll have it when you return, meet DUATHLON: Fun runs and walks of at FootZone a few minutes before various lengths along the Crooked noon; 12 p.m.; FootZone, 842 NW River; 10 a.m.; $40 for individuals, Wall St., Bend; www.footzonebend. $65 per team; Crooked River Park, com or 541-317-3568. Prineville; www.normsxtremefitness. $65 for five weeks; lyengarYoga com or 541-416-0455. BROLATES:A challenging workout of Bend, 660 NE Third St., Bend; focused on improving strength, 541-318-1186. ARGENTINETANGO MILONGA: flexibility and power; 5:30 p.m.; Learn Milonga, traditional BEND MARATHONPOSTER$20; Bend Pi!ates, 155 SWCentury Argentinian Tango; 7:30 p.m.; $5; MAKING PARTY:Make a Drive, Suite104, Bend; www. Sons of Norway Hall, 549 NW personalized poster for your favorite c! Ients.mindbodyonline.com or Harmon Blvd., Bend. runner, meet other runner fans, and 541-647-0876. grab some noisemakers for the big WEDNESDAYGROUPRUN: SUNDAY day; 5:30 p.m.; free, registration Featuring a 3-5 mile group run; 6 required; FootZone, 842 NWWall p.m.; Fleet Feet Sports, 1320 NW St., Bend; www.footzonebend.com BEND MARATHONVIEWING Galveston Ave., Bend; f!eetfeetbend. PARTY:Join other fans and spend or 541-317-3568. com or 541-389-1601. the morning cheering for your favorite runner; 7 a.m.; registration SUMMER RACESTRAINING FRIDAY required; FootZone, 842 NW Wall St., GROUP:Group training for summer Bend; www.footzonebend.com or races, meets twice a week and PSALM YOGA:A unique Yoga includes road/trail runs, interval class that infuses spiritual strength 541-317-3568. training, nutrition and core strength; and focus, set to the timeless all abilities welcome; 6 p.m.; $40 for and powerful Psalms; 8:30a.m.; TUESDAY 8 sessions; Integrate Fitness, 62477 Victor School of Performing Arts TUESDAYPERFORMANCE Eagle Road,Bend;541-598-6401. International, 2700 NE Fourth St., Suite 210, Bend; www. victorperformingarts.com or 269-876-6439.
SATURDAY FOAM ROLLERCLASS: Learnto
help decreasemuscle soreness, improve flexibility and even build core strength, using a foam roller; 10 a.m.; $15; Bend Pi!ates, 155 SW Century Drive, Suite104, Bend; www.c! Ients.mindbodyonline.com or
How to submit
Events:Tosubmit an event, visit bendbulletin.com/events and click "Add Event" at least10 daysbefore publication. Ongoing listings must be updatedmonthly. Questions: health@bendbulletin.com, 541-383-0351.
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THURSDAY, APRIL 23, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
D3
FrrxEss
I eri t o se o exercise ora on, ea t i e By Gretchen Reynolds
moderate exercise a week to
New York Times News Service
build and maintain health and
Those who met the guide-
fitness. But whether that amount of
lines precisely, completing 150 minutes a week of moderate exercise, had greater longevity benefits and 31 percent less risk of dying during the 14-year period compared with those who never exercised.
Exercise has had a Goldilocks problem, with experts
debating just how much exercise is too little, too much or just the right amount to
improve health and longevity. Two new large-scale studies provide some clarity, suggesting that the ideal dose of exercise for a long life is a bit more
percent.
exercise represents the least amount that someone should do — the minimum recom-
mended dose — orthe ideal amount has not been certain.
Scientists also have not
The sweet spot for exer-
k nown whether there i s a safe upper limit on exercise,
beyond which its effects believe we should get, but less come potentially dangerous; than many of us might expect. and whether some intensities The studies also found that of exerciseare more effecprolonged or intense exercise tive than others at prolonging is unlikely to be harmful and lives. could add years to people's So the new studies, both lives. of which were published last No one doubts, of course, week in JAMA Internal Medthat any amount of exercise icine, helpfully tackle those is better than none. Like med- questions. than many of us currently be-
An Rong Xu/The New York Times
minutes a week, or a little more
cise for e long life is a bit more than many of us currently believe we should get, but less than many of us might expect.
than an hour a day. Those people were 39 percent less likely to die prematurely than people who never exercised.
661,000 adults, most of them middle-aged.
week or more). Then they compared 14 years' worth of death records
for the group. They found that, searchers stratified the adults unsurprisingly, the people who by their weekly exercise time, did not exercise at all were at But unlike medicine, exer- tute, Harvard University and from those who did not exer- the highest risk of early death. cise does not come with dos- other institutions gathered cise at all to those who worked But those who exercised ing instructions. The current and pooled data about peo- out for 10 times the current a little, not meeting the recbroad guidelines from gov- ple's exercise habits from recommendations or m ore o mmendations but d o i ng ernmental and health organi- six large, continuing health (meaning that they exercised something, lowered their risk zations call for 150 minutes of surveys, winding up with in- moderately for 25 hours a o f premature death b y 2 0 icine, exercise is known to re-
In the broader of the two
U sing this d ata, th e
re-
duce risks for many diseases studies, researchers with and premature death. the National Cancer I n sti-
In shape
endurance. During the f irst
— every beat can handle more
and eight weeks, that decline
When you detrain, the heart
will feel less firm; those six-
gradually loses its ability to pack abs might start to sag a handle extra blood flow, and bit. But this, too, is reversible. those new capillaries wither. It
sounds dire, but, Zimmerman Weight says, "it's safe and normal." The effect on your weight is It can also be reversed once
more straightforward. "It's a
you start exercising regularly again.
simple input-output problem," Zimmerman says. If you stop a daily workout that would
Muscles
have burned 300 to 400 calo-
Detraining has a less immediately dr amatic i m pact
on muscular strength and
The other new study of ex-
ercise and mortality reached a somewhat similar conclusion about intensity. While a few
recent studies have intimated that frequent, strenuous exercise might contribute to early
Australian adults, determin-
ing how muchtime each person spent exercising and how much of that exercise qualified as vigorous, such as running At that point, the benefits instead of walking, or playing plateaued, th e r e searchers competitive singles tennis verfound, but they never signifi- sus a sociable doubles game. cantly declined. Those few inThen, as w it h t h e o t her dividuals engaging in 10 times study, they checked death or morethe recommended ex- statistics. And as in the other ercisedose gained about the study, they found that meeting same reduction in mortality the exercise guidelines subrisk as people who simply met stantially reduced the risk of the guidelines. They did not early death, even if someone's gain significantly more health exercise was moderate, such bang for all of those additional as walking.
or such as a marathon. Get- start with your shortest disting back to that level requires tanceand then take a day off, even more patience, persever- Zimmerman suggests. If you ance and humility. Running work with weights and norguru Hal Higdon says he tells mally lift 150 pounds, cut back runners that for every one day to 100 and work your way turning fat to muscle," Zimrest and recovery are a vital of inactivity, it takes two days back up. In other words, she merman explains. Fat and part of any exercise regimen.) to return to their previous fit- says, "Let your brain and your muscle are two different types But there are a number of ness level. Runners who have body relearn each other." of tissue. If you stop working exercises you can do that are lost several weeks on a strict For 44-year-old K aryn out, your muscles will eventu- less taxing to your body and regimen like his want to know Ryan, ending her workout hially shrink back to where they schedule. If you can't run, you how they can regain what atus was not easy. Her initial started; if you eat more calo- might bike or swim or even they lost. "My advice to them runs were short and sluggish, ries than you burn, the extra just walk. Add stairs to your is not to try," he says, "Resign but slowly she built up her calories are stored as fat. But daily routine. Or if you are yourself to the fact that you mileage, shed all of her extra the fat and the muscle are not able, do squats or light weight- have taken a hit in your con- weight and regained her enerreplacing each other. "And it lifting, even using common ditioning, and maybe this half gy level. "I think I just felt good doesn't go in reverse, either," household products, such as marathon is not the race you because I was making my way Zimmerman says. "You don't cans of food. If that's too stren- want to peak for." back to the healthy body that turn muscle into fat." uous, try a chair workout. The climb out of that hole I craved," she says. Last week300 to 400 to match."
What's less simple is how few weeks off, the effects are Continued from 01 slight, Matthews says. After those extra calories might When you work o ut, exaboutfour weeks off,however, look on your body. Despite plains Zimmerman, "your muscle fibers begin to shrink, what many people think, heart gets big in a healthy way and sometime between then "when you get fit, you are not blood" and you produce more becomes measurable, Zimcapillaries in your muscles. merman says. Your muscles
also did not increase their risk of dying young.
cise benefits, however, came mortality, the new study found among those who tripled the the reverse. recommended level of exerAustralian res earchers cise, working out moderately, closely examined health surmostly by walking, for 450 vey dataformore than 200,000
Two new large-scale studies suggest that the ideal dose of exer-
formation about more than
hours spent sweating. But they
ries and you want to maintain
The answer is both harsh and
obvious: Try not to stop exercising in the first place. Of course, if you are seriously injured or very ill, by all means rest. (And remember, too, that
These exercises may seem
should be slow for marathon-
end, 6'/2 years after the birth of
your weight, "you are going to Defendyourfitness insufficient if you are training ers and mere humans alike. If her twins, she completed the need to reduce your intake by How do you stop the slide? for an intense athletic endeav- you're a cyclist, for example, Boston Marathon.
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D4 TH E BULLETIN • THURSDAY, APRIL 23, 2015
MoNEY
ourmone or our ie: ancer atients ace ainu c oices By Jim Landers The Dallas Morning News
DALLAS — Kim Harris approached the communion rail at Zion Lutheran Church with
a vial of pills in his hand. The thin, dying man and the Rev. Robert Preece were alone in the sanctuary. They had met many times this way — the 62-year-old cancer patient seeking a blessing for his therapy, and the Dallas pastor who regarded Harris as the "strongest witness of faith in crisis" he's ever
known. The two men prayed for the pills to be empowered with the spirit.
On that day, Harris had a two-week supply of pills. Their price: $18,000. New cancer drugs sellfor an average of $120,000 a year. Medicare, the federal health
insurance program, is barred by law from negotiating with the pharmaceutical industry over these prices. In most states, commercial i nsurers
are compelledto offer coverage. It's illegal to import them, even though the same drugs are far less expensive abroad. Oncologists get most of their money from reselling drugs to
some of these drugs," said Har- York shows Gleevec entered tion is complicated by the fact ris, whose insurance picked up the market in 2001 priced at that the insurer or employer the tab. "I mean, $18,000?" $3,401 a month. who pays for pharmaceuticals Harris was diagnosed with Pharmaceutical companies generally has little influence colorectal cancer in A u gust enjoy a monopoly on their for- over what is prescribed, the 2008 and survived years lon- mulas for up to 20 years under prescriber ordinarily does not ger than his oncologist ex- patent laws. With Gleevec's bear the costs of the pharmapected. He exhausted his drug patent expiring in July, Swiss ceuticals prescribed, and the options last year and entered pharmaceutical maker Novar- ultimate consumer, the patient, hospice care in February. He tis now has the drug priced at typically has little influence died March 12. $11,000 a month. on either the pharmaceuticals Kantarjian's i n d ignation prescribed or the prices he will A quick rise with these drugs is not about pay for them." Five years ago, cancer their value to patients. thecost? "I have nothing against W orth treatment accounted for just $157 billion of the nation's an- Gleevec. Gleevec is a great One example: Gilead Sciencnual $2.6 trillion health bill. drug," Kantarjian said. "But es makes Sovaldi, a drug that Propelled by new drugs and they know that patients with cures mostcases of hepatitis an aging population, howev- cancer are desperate. It's either C. When Sovaldi was introer, cancer spending is rising pay or die." duced lastyear, it was priced at quickly. A forecast from the Novartis recorded net in- $1,000 a pill. Government and National Cancer Institute said come of $10.3 billion last year private health insurers comspending could hit $207 billion on sales of $57.8 billion. plain the widespread incidence by the end of the decade. Gleevec, with sales of $4.7 of the disease and Sovaldi's About 1.6 million Ameri- billion, was the firm's best sell- $84,000 price for a full course cans will be diagnosed with er. The profit margin for the of treatment will drain the nacancer this year. Annual company's p h armaceutical spending for the average pa- sector was 26.6 percent. tient is already more than In Canada, Gleevec sells for $20,000 higher in the U.S. than about$3,170 amonth. Ageneric it is in Europe. rise 45 percent. By then, on-
cologists predict cancer will
Tarceva was introduced in 2005 after a trial showing it
... What does this give patients that the current option today
we perceive the value to be. cancer. A month's supply sold Part of it is the cost to bring the for $7,078 in 2012, according to drug to the market, but also the Sloan Kettering database. what they canbringtopatients. could add 10 days to the life doesn't'? We'll look to price acof a pancreatic cancer patient. cordingly," he said. "If society It was priced at $4,174 for a doesn't seethebenefitofa cermonth's supply of pills, ac- tain cost, that cost will change." cording to the Sloan Kettering Astellas expected profits to database.
eclipse heart disease as the
Absorbing the impact
Kim Harris and other patients
with insurer United Health-
Insurance
Public I nterest
ContInued from 01 The division will likely allow carriersto choose one of two methods to prove their
cy group, said the whole idea but Woods said the rules do
R esearch as primary care providers-
Group Foundation, a P o rt- a move many in the medical land-based consumer advoca- community disagreed withbehind the process was to pro-
not do that. The division can't
vide flexibility for rulemaking tell insurers who to contract while not creating burden- with, she said. There is a fedsome regulationsfor carriers. "The intent is for it to still
e • •
0 e
•
0
0
•
I
•
, $; lh sI+
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have some teeth, so it won't be totally flexible," he said,
offeredincollaborationwith:
could include distance to the providers and the time it takes to travel there.
The process is complicated by the fact that certain areas
of the state are vastly different from others. Consider a city like Portland, where dozens of
doctors could be located with-
"If we were to set prescriptive specific standards and require ratios of specialists in
membership, that could force some carriersout of certain
Partners In Care let me be a daughter again.
areas of the state because they
wouldn't be able to develop networks to comply," Woods said. "We don't want to create
impossible requirements." Moda Health, a prominent
insurerin Oregon, and the Oregon Business Association, both took issue with the four "factors," arguing they're too open-ended. But Jesse Ellis O'Brien, a health care advocate with the Oregon State
•
alzheimer's association
defined, but Woods said they
ly has fewer than a dozen doc-
~
arl education pvogram by the
four categories still need to be
tors.
e
eral nondiscrimination law,
however, that says insurers can't exclude certain types of providers so long as they're "but the intent is to provide a licensed in states, they just necessaril y needto cover because carriersare familiar different way for insurance don't with those formats, Woods companies to show that they them asprimary care providsaid. The other method would are delivering high-value care ers. Some insurers cover nabe using a "factor"-based ap- to people." turopathic physicians under proach using four sets of criNaturopathic p h ysicians "alternative" or "holistic" secteria: accessto care,consumer in Oregon hoped the network tions of their policies. satisfaction, quality and cost adequacy regulations would — Reporter: 541-383-0304, containment and transpar- compel insurers to cover them tbannow@bendbulletin.com ency. The specifics of those
in a few miles of one's home, and Prineville, a city that like-
rise 16 percent to $1.6 billion
Tarceva has since been ap- in the fiscal year that ended proved for some types of lung March 31.
in the U.S. until next year.
Many hospitals can get big do not cure. In rare instances, c are, said e v eryone w i t h discounts on cancer drugs they offer a way to stabilize a health insurance absorbs the under Medicare r ules. But cancer. More often, they offer cost of these cancer drugs they don't have to pass those a few additional years, months through higher premiums. "Right now, I don't have savings on to patients. So hos- or even a few days of life. To pitals, too, profit from high- Harris, that was priceless. the ability to say no" to these er-priced drugs. But Dr. Hagop Kantarjian, drugs, Newcomer said. "InPrescript ion drug pricesare the chair of the leukemia de- suranceregulations acrossthe rising much faster than other partment at Houston's M.D. country mandate that I pay for health care costs. There is little Anderson Cancer Center, ar- that drug, no matter how little competition or control to put gues the prices of these new or how much value that has. the brakes to the trend, insur- cancer drugs are "absolutely Dr. Clifford Hudis, former ers and some oncologists say. immoral." president of the American So"Sincethe 2006 Medicare ciety of Clinical Oncologists, In 2014, the cost of prescription drugs jumped 13.1percent, Reform Act (providing drug says the billions needed for according to Express Scripts, a i nsurance), Medicare h as research and development of pharmaceutical benefits com- been prevented from nego- these medications is an importpany. Specialty drugs, like tiating prices with the drug ant consideration. But he says cancer drugs and the hepatitis companies," he said. "That drug pricing isn't tied to cost. "We don't have a functionC treatments, increased 30.9 leftthe drug companies asthe percent in 2014. Their prices only (entities) setting prices. ing marketplace as regards to are expected to go up another They're like a child alone in a cancer and drugs. One result 44 percent this year. candy store." is everybody in this space is The cost of specialty drugs His most egregious exam- victimized," said Hudis, chief was $87 billion in 2012. Unit- ple: Gleevec. of the breast medicine service ed Healthcare estimates that A breakthrough treatment at Sloan Kettering. "The aucould reach $400 billion by for some types of leukemia, tomatic correcting effect of a 2020. Total prescription drug Gleevec keeps cancer at bay as marketplace isn't there." spending in 2014 was about long as the patient continues The U.S. Justice Depart$300 billion. to take the pills. It also shows ment, in a m emo filed last Cancer patients without ad- results in treating colorectal year with the Paris-based equate insurance have only the cancer. Organization for Economic starkest choice:yourmoney or A pricing database devel- Cooperation an d D e v elopyour life. oped at Memorial Sloan Ket- ment, explained the U.S. drug "I couldn't believe the cost of tering Cancer Center in New market this way: "Competi-
networks are adequate. One
our treatment based on what
version of the medication sells
nation's leading cause of death. Dr. Lee Newcomer, senior cost of the drug, the more monThe cancer drugs used by vicepresident for cancer care
would be using nationally recognized standards around proving network adequacy, likely those already used with Medicare Advantage plans,
months to the life of a patient with m etastasized prostate
By 2030, the number of can- there for about $735 a month. cer diagnosesis expected to The generic won't be available
their patients. The higher the ey for the doctor.
tion's budgets. cancer, where it can give a Sovaldi, however, cures. patient an extra five months. These cancer drugs buy much Prices today are in the range of less. $6,800 a month. Astellas, a Japanese firm Tyler Marciniak, director with annual sales of $11.7 bil- of Astellas' oncology commulion, sells two of these cancer nications and advocacy at the drugs. Xtandi, a drug for pros- company's U.S. headquarters tate cancer, was introduced in in Illinois, said these drugs are 2012. Clinical trials for Xtan- priced competitively. "We price our products and di showed it could add six
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THURSDAY, APRIL 23, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
D5
MEDICINE
Researc ersma ave oun cure orcoor in ess By JoNel Aleccia The Seattle Times
SEATTLE — For the more than 10 m i llion A m ericans with c olorblindness, there's never been a treatment, let alone a cure, for the condition
recalled Chandler, a t r affic-safety engineer. Colorblindness is often a genetic disorder. It affects mostly
helicopter pilot because of his deuteranopia, or red-green colorblindness. "I'd want to speak to ProfessorNeitz and learn
men, who can inherit a mutation on the X chromosome
aboutthe process more before
putting my eyes on the chopping block, so to speak. But
that impairs their perception of that leaves them unable to dis- red and green. A much smaller tinguish certain hues. fraction of cases are in wom-
I've always wondered what
it would look like to see color like everyone else."
Now, for the first time, two
en, who have two X chromoW a shington somes, which gives them a bet-
University of professors have teamed with a California biotech firm to
develop what they say may be Most people think of colora solution: a single shot in the blindness as an inconvenience eye that reveals the world in or mild disability, mainly causfull color. ing problems with unmatched Jay and Maureen Neitz, hus- shirts and socks. But the Neitzband-and-wife scientists who es saythe condition can have have studied the vision disor- profound impacts — limiting der for years, have arranged choicesfor education or caan exclusive license agreement reers, making driving dangerbetween UW and Avalanche ous, and forcing continual adB iotechnologies of M e n lo aptation to a world geared for Park. Together, they've found a color vision. "There are an awful lot of new way to deliver genes that can replace missing color-pro- people who feel like their life ducing proteins in certain is ruined because they don't cells, called cones, in the eyes. see color," said Jay Neitz, 61, "I don't think there's any the professor of ophthalmoloquestion that it will work," said gy who confirmed in 1989 that Maureen Neitz, 57, a UW pro- dogs are colorblind, too. fessor of ophthalmology. People may not qualify The new treatment — which
as commercial pilots, for in-
may be tested in humans with- stance, if they're colorblind. in two years — could be a boon Other careers that can be limfor the 1 in 12 men and 1 in
ited include those of chefs, dec-
230 women with color-vision orators, electricians and house deficiency. painters, all of which require The trouble occurs when detailed color vision. people are born without one The Neitzes have focused or more of the three types of on the disorder for years, first color-sensing proteins nor- proving in 2009 they could mally present in the cones of use gene therapy to correct the retina. The most common colorblindness in male squirtype is red-green colorblind- rel monkeys, which are born ness, followed by blue-yellow unable to distinguish between colorblindness. A very small red and green. proportion of the population is In the journal Nature, they completely colorblind, seeing reportedthe successofatechonly shades of gray. nique that inserted the human Because they can't perceive form of a gene that detects red certain colors, they see hues in color into a viral shell, and muted or different shades than then injected it behind the retpeople with normal vision. inas of two squirrel monkeys. Brian Chandler, 38, of SeatThe monkeys, named Sam tle, said he first noticed he was
colorblind in seventh grade, when he started getting C's and D's on drawings in science class. "I was coloring green stuff brown and brown stuff green,"
Leukemia Continued from 01 Acute myeloid leukemiachokes off the ability to generate a healthy blood supply. It is defiantly incurable in about 70 percent of patients, and more than 10,000 people die of AML
annually nationwide. Vakoc exposed the infinitesimal protein — BRD4 at the heart of AML in 2010. With BRD4 in hand, Vakoc had found what he calls "a
druggable target." "Using DNA-based techniques, we could show that
BRD4was an awesome target, representing an Achilles' heel in AML," Vakoc said.
" However, in t h e e a r ly days of these efforts, we didn't know if a drug would be available that actually targets and exploits the BRD4 vulnerability.
Brian Chandler, also color-
ter chance of avoiding effects of any genetic defect.
and Dalton — the latter after the British chemist John Dalton, who was the first to ana-
lyze and report on his own color-vision deficiency — hadbeen trained to recognize colors on a computer screen in exchange
blind, isn't so sure. He said he's learned to adapt to the world using cues other than color to
Ken Lambert/The Seattle Times
get along. "I have mixed feelings about 'curing' my color-vision deficiency," said Chandler. "On one hand, I'm nervous about the change, since I've seen like this my entire life. On the other, it would potentially be exciting to see things I had not seen before."
University of Washington researchers Jayand Maureen Neitz, seen holding test cards for color perception, have teamed up with a biotech company for a prospective gene-therapy cure for colorblindness.
For their part, the Neitzes
say they're eager to see a lifetime of work put into clinical practice. The technique to cor-
forareward ofgrapejuice.Be- candidates, AVA-322 and AVAfore the surgery, they couldn't 323, that carry pigment-prodetect certain hues, while after ducinggenes. the procedure they got them It takes only 30 percent of right nearly every time. the cells to be transduced, or
Dr. Paul Sternberg Jr., chairman of th e V anderbilt Eye Institute at Vanderbilt Univer-
sity in Nashville and a clinical spokesman for the American
Academy of Ophthalmology. whole new hue, Jay Neitz said. He called the Neitzes "worldEarly tests show the technique class scientists" and said the meets that mark in monkeys. wider field awaits potential huAfter preclinical trials are man trials of the technique. "The brain develops a cercomplete, Chalberg said he hopes to move to human trials tain way of seeing," he said. within one to two years, and "We don't know whether resaid Neitz. then seek federal Food and placing the visual pigment in Now, with the help of Av- Drug Administration approval a 25-year-old colorblind man alanche, the researchers say for the treatment. Eventually, will allow him to see in full they'vedeveloped a technique the treatment could be offered color." that does just that. It uses a during a single visit to an Already there appears to be safe vector, called an ade- opthalmologist's office. high interest in finding out. no-associated virus, to house While noting that many Since March 25, more than the pigment gene, which is tests that succeeded in animals 10,000 people have visited a injected directly into the vit- have later failed in humans, he new website associated with reous, the jellylike center of said he's cautiously optimistic the project, www.colorvisionthe eye. Once there, it targets that the trials will deliver as awareness.com, including cells on the back of the retina, promised. Plus, he said, it will many who hope to be the first said Thomas Chalberg Jr., the be important to learn whether cured of the condition. co-founder and chief executive the therapy not only adds the "I definitely would be interof the firm. color-sensing ability, but actu- ested," said David Curry, 33, of "It's a protein shell, kind of ally improves the lives of those Port Townsend, Washington, like a Trojan horse, that gets who are treated. who had to abandon a dream That's a thought echoed by of becoming a commercial you entry into the cell. Once But that technique is risky,
changed, to put the world in a
r equiring surgery, so t h e Neitzes were looking for another way to do the job. "For 10 years, we have been trying to figure out a way to get the genes to go to the back of the eye with a simple shot,"
rect colorblindness also might eventually be used for other cone-based disorders, includ-
ing retinitis pigmentosa, an inherited disorder that can lead to blindness.
Curing col o rblindness, though, could affect millions who would like to know what they're missing, the scientists stud. " There's nobody w i t h a b lack-and-white TV w ho, i f
you said, 'Would you like color TV?' wouldn't trade it," Jay Neitz said.
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you're there, the DNA gets to
set up shop and produce the photo pigment of interest," he said. Avalanche has two drug
safe. Study participants, Va- Vakoc as a bull's-eye to target koc said, found their leuke- in AML. " Traditionally, w e h a v e mic cells "were eliminated and normal blood production treated cancer by interfering resumed." with the mechanism of cell "These are promising ini- division," said Dr. George tial findings, but are in no Raptis, vice president of North way conclusive," he said. "In Shore's Cancer Institute in the coming years, we will see Lake Success, referring to these drugs rigorously evalu- chemotherapy. He describes ated in Phase II, and hopefully, chemo as indiscriminatePhase III clinical studies, per- killing cancer cells but often haps in combination with oth- scathing healthy ones in the er drugs." process. "Cancer cells divide quickly The research is being closely watched by the Leukemia and are more amenable to beand Lymphoma Societ y. ing destroyed by these drugs," "There have been almost he said of chemo. "But with no advances in the standard an increasingunderstanding of therapy for patients with of cancer on a molecular and AML in more than 30 years," genetic level, we are now able Andrea Greif, society spokes- to find not one but numerous woman, said. "So any new Achilles' heels." finding that brings us closer The hope, Raptis said, is to to understanding the under- gain more precision treating pinnings of the causes of AML cancers of all kinds through and developing new therapies translational medicine to target molecular aberra- bringing what is learned in the
"Serendipitously, a paper was published while we were tions in AML is certainly en- lab directly to patients. studying BRD4 that described couraging news for the paRaptis describes researchthe first drugs that interfere tients we serve," Greif said. ers at Cold Spring Harbor with it, developed by a chemVakoc's advances against Laboratory on parallel misist at Harvard. We immedi- the aggressive cancer are sions— searchingforspecific ately got in touch with him proceeding as Cold Spring vulnerabilities in cancer cells and discovered, quite to our Harbor Laboratory has com- while simultaneously huntamazement, that hi s d r ugs mitted to a historic agreement ing for medications to assault had robust effects in treating that will bring its ground- those sites. leukemia in mice." breaking research to the bedVakoc's investigations are For decades, cancers of all sides of patients in the North among numerous cancer kinds have been cured in mice, Shore-Long Island Jewish studies underway at the labobut when scientists scaled up Health System. ratory, situated on a hilly and the evolutionary tree to huThe pact is a $120 million deeply arbored campus overmans, their once-wondrous collaboration involving the looking the harbor. The lab is medications failed to effective- development of clinical trials celebrating its 125th anniverly quell the disease. There is a and treatment strategies for sary this year. hint of good news, however, in a variety of cancers based on Dr. David Tuveson is studythe human clinical research. the laboratory's most promis- ing cancer of the pancreas and Phase I c l i nical t r i als ing investigations. working on a possible diagare being overseen by four Neither institution has yet nosticforthe disease. Dr. R afpharmaceutical c o m panies: announced which trials will faella Sordella is delving into Oncoethix, Co n stellation, be among the first offered to the causes ofdrug-resistant Tensha Therapeutics and North Shore-LIJ patients. A lung cancer. GlaxoSmithKline. Trials be- clinical study of an aggresLast year, Dr. Mikala Egebgan in 2013 and 2014, Vakoc sive form o f b r east cancer lad won a highly coveted $2.5 sard. was underway before the million breast cancer research "These are first-in-human collaborative agreement was award from the Department of dose-escalation trials to eval- announced. Defense. Another breast canuate safety o f t h ese comCancer experts at both in- cer researcher, Dr. Nicholas pounds," he said. He estimates stitutions are riveted on the Tonks, is exploring drug resisabout 100 people with AML development of targeted ther- tance in an aggressive form of have receivedthe experimen- apies. These medications hone the disease. "What we're doing is worktal medications to date. in on specific molecular mechOncoethix has already re- anisms — weak spots — in ing on alternative strategies, ported its Phase I data and cancer cells, like the molecule some of the things that indusshown the approach to be dubbed BRD4, identified by try is not doing," Tonks said.
Sunday April 26th 1:30-3:30 pm
Where: Bend Community Healing 155 SWCentury Drive Suite113
Cost: $25in advance $30 at the door
To Register call: 541-322-9642 OR visit the web bendcommunityhealing.com
Ayurveda uses food to balance the physical, emotional, mental, and spiritual part of human life. When
proper foods are taken over a long period of time, balance is restored to the body and healing occurs. Learn: • The correct food for your constitution
Sally Champa is a Clinical Ayurvedic Specialist. She has a clinical practice
• How to eat with the seasons
in Bend and specializes in digestive issues including food intolerances,
• The three qualities of Ayurvedic nutrition
women's issues, respiratory diseas-
es, Ayurvedic Cleansing. She can be reached at541-316-8201 or
info@ayurvedainbend.cem
• How to use food as medicine to create harmony
(" ~ When dietis wrong, medicineis of no use. When dietis correct, medicineis of no need. Ayurvedic Proverb
C
tfyulueh'eIivbry Specializing in Holistic Healthcare
D6
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, APRIL 23, 2015
ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT
is 'cansometimes e unn -is TV SPOTLIGHT
YISll
"HAPPYish" 9:30p.m. Sundays, Showtime
+/
By David Wiegand The San Francisco Chronicle
San Francisco — Tragedy and comedy are duking it out in Showtime's new sitcom,
"HAPPYish," and tragedy is getting in most of the licks. T he s eries,
ef
/'j1 .i
IS
c r eated b y
Shalom Auslander and premiering Sunday, takes middle-age crisis to a very very dark place. The performances are good, the writing is often brainy, sharp and even funny, but is there is a surfeit of Andy Kropa/The Associated Press "ish" and not enough "happy" Showtime President David Nevins, from left, actors Steve Coogan, to keep viewers coming back Kathryn Hahn and Showtime CEO Matt Blank attend the Showtime week after week, if they ha- series premiere of "HAPPYish." ven't decided to just end it all after the first episode.
The too-cleverly named and Gustaf (Nils Lawton and Thom Payne (Steve Coogan) Tobias Segal). Gottfrid struts is celebrating his 44th birth- around in front of his staff day with his wife, Lee (a won- blathering about energizing derful Kathryn Hahn) and and modernizing the compatheir friends Bella and Barry ny, while Gustaf whispers in (Molly Price and Andre Royo) his ear. It's all very Penn and and their respective young Teller, without the magic, and sons. There's a whole post- gets tiresome after a while. "Big Chill" vibe to the scene as Thom's older colleague Jonthe conversation hovers over athan (Bradley Whitford) is middle age, mortality, who's an alcoholic who is all about getting their vagina tightened toadying up to his youngand making sure they hide the er bosses. He wears skinny joint before the kids see mom jeans and apes whatever BS and dad toking up. the Swedes are spouting. Thom is in the ad game, but
"Marketer, rebrand thyself,"
his company is now being run he advises Thom. Later on, he by a pair of nonsense-bab- will observe that "corporate bling Swedes named Gottfrid America is a German porno."
Thinking he needs to get
challenge for viewers, though,
a new job, he meets with his
is that
Hitler." This isn't entirely insufferablecleverness: Those
for Julius.
Whatever credible dimennames do find their way into sion the characters have is the dialogue, which only goes rooted in the performances. to show that this is a far cry Hahn is brilliant, Coogan is from the kind of dumb and almost Beckettian in his perdumbest writing you may be sonification of bleakness. Jonused to in shows like "Mike athan is one of the more credand Molly" and "Two Broke ible characters in the show Girls." because Whitford underplays In its way, "HAPPYish" is him. Barkin, of course, is The more Thom sees and ambitious to the point of being sharp-tongued, brittle, sexy hears, the more depressed courageous, but also maybe and appropriately over the top. and angry he becomes. He foolhardy. There are absoluteIt has to be noted that the makes some attempt to look ly hilarious moments in the show was originally created younger and hipper but he three episodes made avail- as a vehicle for Philip Seycan't contain his raging cyni- able to critics, including Thom mour Hoffman. cism about what's happening interacting with the Keebler Yes, it would have been inat the office. Elves and the Geico Gecko. teresting to see what Hoffman As Thom's mood at work The Swedes decide that would have done with the role, darkens, he inevitably brings cartoon elves don't really fit but there's little point in spechis troubles home with him Keebler's insistence on how ulating beyond that. Coogan at the end of the day. Hearing real its ingredients are. How is fine. He is appealing and their young son Julius (Saw- about casting little people funny. Auslander's writing is yer Shipman) cry in the night, as the elves and getting Rob both what elevates the show Lee gets out of bed and pads Reiner, who directed the great and holds it back. Watching toward her son's roon. mockumentary "Spinal Tap," it, you'll laugh a lot, but you'll "He's a fearful child," Thom to direct the commercial? The also find yourself wanting to say, "Lighten up, dude." observes. result is hilarious. "No," Lee answers. "You're " HAPPYish" i s "OK-ish," And that's not the only funfearful. He's six." ny segment of the show. The just not "greatish."
Son's amiyseemsresen u o ep
MOVIE TIMESTDDAY • There may be an additional fee for 3-D and IMAXmovies • Movie times are subject to change after press time. I
Dear Abby:My son, "Rick," and daughter-in-law, "Amy," seem to really dislike me. I try to be kind
m ay be why your daughter-in-law years, my husband has told me is resentful rather than grateful that I snore when we go to sleep at for your generosity in giving them night. and not pry, but they live with me a roof over their heads. He is a very light sleeper, and and it can make for a full house. That they would conceive a understandably, it wakes him and They have had job difficulties and second child under these circum- then he wakes me to make me stop. work injuries that brought them stances — without jobs and no This goes on all night long. Needback to my home. place of their own less to say, neither of us is happy in Her parents don't — tells me they are the morning. We have now started care for my son, so i mmature an d i r - sleeping in separate rooms. DEP,R ng er e a s no r esponsible. G i v e The issue I am having now is, ABBY an option. them a date to be out my husband will be retiring in Amy does not help — say one montha few months and he wants us at all with the houseand stick to it. If they to do a lot of traveling, mainly work. Rick does most of it. They want to know why, tell them the cruising. I'm not sure how this also have a wonderful 21-month- truth. You should not have to live will work with our new sleeping old boy. A second baby is on the in a house with a daughter-in-law arrangement. — Sleepyin Alabama way. They have lived with me for who treats you like the enemy befour years now. cause it is not healthy for any of Dear Sleepy: Have you disAbby, Amy shows no respect for you. cussed your snoring with your my home or for me. I mostly keep If you are afraid the only way p hysician'? Snoring can be a quiet so as to not push away my to have a relationship with your symptom of a medical problem only son. I want to be part of my grandchildren is to tolerate being that's fixable. When your husgrandson's life. Please advise me used, I think you are mistaken. band first told you about it, you on handling this matter. As long as you can provide mate- should have mentioned it to your — Undervalued Out West rial assistance to these two, they'll doctor. Ear plugs might help your Dear Undervalued:By allowing keep you around. husband, but if there is a medical your son and daughter-in-law to Dear Abby: My husband and I solution for your snoring, it would live with you for such an extended have been married for almost 31 make your problem moot. period of time, you have fostered years. We have had a good mar— Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com their dependence on you. That
riage, but for the last couple of
HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORTHURSDAY, APRIL 23, 2015:This year you will communicate more effectively. Your instincts and perspective take you to a different level from those around you. You will have to filter what you say to some friends and loved ones.
If you are single, you could meetan
exotic person in the second half of your birthday year. This person manifests the same type of vision you have, but his or her perspective is different. If you are attached, you Btarsshowthe ging could find Your of dsyyos 0 hsye slgnlflcant othei' ** * * * D ynamic becoming more ** * * p osltive distant than in the ** * Average pas t . Recognize that you might ** So-so need to learn to * Difficult speakto each other differently. CANCERcan change his or her mind quickly.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) ** * You understand an expenditure
surrounding your home and/or family. However, another person who is involved might not. Clearly, you are alone in this choice. Follow your intuition on how to proceed, and let go of your vision. Tonight: Awkwardness will
disappear. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) ** * * Your words have an impact; trust that others will react accordingly. A partner might seem distant, perhaps in response to what you are saying. Is getting your way more important than having an easy interaction? Find some middle ground. Tonight: A close friend cops an attitude.
GEMINI (May 21-June20) ** * Be aware of what is occurring betweenyou and someone else.W ords could belie what is happening. Share
or P.o. Box 69440, LosAngeles, CA90069
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
YOURHOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar
** * * * D etach, and you'll find the answers you're looking for. Follow your instincts. Others might respond in a way that delights you. Recognize the lack of
more of whatyou care about, and encourage others to be more authentic. Getting to that point might be interesting. Tonight: Buy a card on the way home.
factsbeingpresented bysomeone,and
CANCER (June21-July 22)
to seek youout. Remain open,and listen
** * * F riends support your drive to get what you want and/or to complete a project. Your biggest barrier could be your energy; it's not endless, though you act as if it is. Keep in mind the end results, but take needed breaks along the way. Tonight: Choose what is best
for you. LEO (July 23-Aug.22)
** * A parent or higher-up seems to be very sure of him- or herself. Use your instincts when dealing with this person, and you will know what to do. A key friend might help you create circumstances that are much more to your liking. Tonight:Take some much-needed personal time.
I
I
I
Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 &IMAX, 680 SWPowerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • CHILD 44(R)12:I0, 3:15, 6:40, 9:20 • CINDERELLA(PG) f 2:40, 3:20, 6:50, 9:35 • DANNY COLLINS(R) noon, 2:50, 6:f 5, 9:55 • THE DIVERGENTSERIES:INSURGENT(PG-l3) I I:50 a.m., 3:05, 6:25, 9:40 • FURIOUS 7(PG-13) I2:15, 3:45, 7:15, 10:20 • FURIOUS 7IMAX(PG-13) 11:45 a.m., 3, 6:30, 9:45 • GET HARD(R) 1, 3:50, 6:35, 10:30 • HOME(PG)11:40a.m., 2:05, 6:55 • HOME 3-0 (PG)2:35, 9:25 • KINGSMAN:THE SECRET SERVICE (R)7:35,10:35 • THE LONGEST RIDE(PG-13) 12:30,4:15, 7:20,10:25 • MCFARLAND,USA(PG)12:20, 3:35 • MONKEYKINGDOM(G) 11:30 a.m., f:45, 4:05, 6:45, 9 • PAULBLART: MALL COP 2(PG)11:35a.m.,2,4:40,7, 9:30 • TRUE STORY(R) 12:50, 3:30, 7:40, 10:f 0 • UNFRIENDED(R) 12:05, 4:45, 7:45, 10 • WHILEWE'RE YOUNG (R)12:45,3:25,8:20,9:55 • WOMAN INGOLD(PG-13) 11:55 a.m., 2:55, 6:10, 9:05 • Accessibility devices are available forsome movies. •
Tin Pan Theater, 869 NWTin PanAlley, 541-241-2271 • LEVIATHAN(R) 5:30 • WHAT WEDOIN THESHADOWS(no MPAArating) 8:30
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
• FURIOUS 7(PG-13) 4:30, 7:30 • GETHARD(R)7 • HOME (PG)4:30 • THE LONGEST RIDE(PG-I3) 4:15, 7: I5 • PAUL BLART:MALLCOP2(PG) 4:45, 7
S omeone close to you is likely
to your intuition — not your mental chatter. Recognize the role your inner dialogue plays in your life, especially if the facts are not confirmed. Relax and listen more. Tonight: Say "yes" to an invitation.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) ** * * Be aware of your ability to move people when you approach them with sensitivity. You could feel a little off, as you might be depressed or tired. Make time for a cat nap or whatever else you feel will heal you. Tonight: What you say could be confusing, yet it will be right-on.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
car accident, hegoesoninstinct in rushing over to treat victims. Ellen Pompeo, Justin Chambers, Chandra Wilson,JessicaCapshaw and Kevin McKidd also star.
8 p.m. on10, "Bones" —Some big personal news is in store for Brennan andBooth (played by
Emily Deschanelwho' , s pregnant again in real life — hint, hintand David Boreanaz) in thenew episode "TheEyein the Sky." It's tempered by their case, which involves the gruesomedeath of a gambler. For Booth, the investigation means guarding against falling back into his old habit of placing bets. Hodgins (TJThyne) becomes anentrepreneur. Jeremy
Ratchford ("ColdCase")guest
stars. 8 p.m. onCW,"TheVampire Diaries" — Damon (lan Somer-
halder) keeps akeypiece of infor-
mation from Elena(Nina Dobrev) as he ponders, along with her, what their future might hold in the
new episode"Because." Bonnie
(Kat Graham) isn't happythat Damon hasacted against her. Caroline's (CandiceAccola) ongoing rampage steers others awayfrom their own concerns. Enzo(Michael
Malarkey)finds outsurprising
information about his genesis asa vampire. PaulWesleyalso stars. 8:31 p.m. on 6, "TheOddCouple" — Justbecause heknows sports, does that necessarily make Oscar (Matthew Perry) better-suited to play themthan
Felix(ThomasLennon)?It doesn't
seem that way in the cleverly titlednewepisode"The Unger Games," as Felix's proficiency in both softball and basketball leaves Oscarstunned.Theroommates do battle in anamateur decathlon meant to gaugewhich one is more of an athlete. DaveFoleyand Geoff Stults guest star. Lindsay Sloane also stars. 10 p.m. onFX, "The Comedians" — In the newepisode "The Red Carpet," Billy and Josh (Billy Crystal, Josh Gad)windup both being nominated for the sameaward. In order to put the best public face possible on thesituation, the pair decide to walkthe red carpet together. Theywind up taking an unexpected detour, however. © Zap2it
716 SW11th St. Redmond 541.923.4732
•
•
• CHAPPIE(R) 9 • Younger than 2t may attend aiiscreeningsif accompanied byalegalguardian.
Redmond Cinemas, 1535 SW OdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777
** * *
8 p.m. on 2, 9, "Grey'sAnatomy" — Derek (Patrick Dempsey) has been largely off the radar for a while, but he's back in avery big way in the newepisode "Howto Save a Life," written by series creator and executive producer Shonda Rhimes. Uponseeing amajor
I
McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 NWBond St., 541-330-8562
let your imagination fill in the gaps. Tonight: Listen to a favorite type of music.
** * * Try to be more nurturing when ** * * You might want to imagine what dealing with those in your daily life. Your ability to empathize with others could be it is like to have the power to change instrumental. A friend will let you know what is going on around you. A key associate seems inspired by your thinking, that he or she doesn't agree with you. and he or she is likely to play a dominant Listen, but tune in to your inner voice. Tonight: Avoid a heated discussion. role. Sit back and see what happens. Tonight: Hang with your friends. PISCES (Feb. 19-March20) ** * * * M ake it OK to be on cruise LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) control, even if a boss or a parent criti** * * You might need to view a sitcizes your behavior. Dowhat is necesuation in a different light. Your sense sary to appeasethis person, and know of humor could be off-color, but it will that your intuition is working for you. If help many of those around you gain a perspective on their immediate dealings. you are single, an encounter with a new Pressure comesfrom your ownexpecta- person could be significant. Tonight: Let tions of yourself. Ease up some. Tonight: down your hair. Say little. © King Features Syndicate
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
" H A PPYish" never
headhunter, Dani (Ellen Bar- seems to take a breath. It's kin), who offers little hope. His intense from start to finish. real problem, she says, is that Every line is freighted with he has a very low "joy ceiling." c leverness, and many w i t h "That's why Jesus wept," highfalutin intellectual conshe says. "Low joy ceiling." tent and references. If Thom The premiere episode is ti- isn't cavorting with cartoon tled "Starring Samuel Beck- advertising icons, Lee is having "conversations" with her ett, Albert Camus and Alois Alzheimer." The second epi- overbearing mother who assode is titled, "Starring Marc sumes the form of a huge box Chagall, Abuela and Adolf from Amazon that's arrived
TV TODAY • More TV listingsinside Sports
Pure. &rrorl.6 t"o.
aj. B~ dc Bend Redmond
John Day Burns Lakeview
La Pine 541.382.6447
bendurology.com Sisters Movie House,720 DesperadoCourt, 541-549-8800 • FURIOUS 7(PG-13) 6:15 • THE LONGEST RIDE(PG-13) 6:15 • PAUL BLART:MALLCOP2(PG) 7 • WOMAN INGOLD(PG-13) 6 • THEWRECKING CREW (PG)5 Madras Cinema 5,1101SWU.S. Highway 97, 541-475-3505 • FURIOUS7(PG-13)4:10,710 • GET HARD(R) 7:20 • HOME (PG)4:40, 7 • LEGENDSFROMTHESKY(no MPAArating) 5:15 • THELONGEST RIDE(PG-l3)4,6:50 • PAUL BLART:MALLCOP2(PG) 5:05, 7:25 Pine Theater, 214 N.MainSt., 541- ff6-1014
WILSONSsf Redmond 541-548-2066 ~e<"'6 \ slrrcs
I58'TREss
G allery-Be n d 541-330-5084
ASSURANCE iswhatyou getwhen EVERGREEN manages your lovedone's medications
• THE LONGEST RIDE(Upstairs — PG-13) 6:f 5 • PAUL BLART:MALLCOP2(PG) 6:30 • Theupstairsscreening room has limitedaccessibility.
O
Find a week'sworth of movie times plus film reviews in Friday's 0 GO! Magazine
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In-Home Care Services 541-389-0006 www.evergreeninhome.com
E4
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, APR 23, 2015
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFED• 541-385-5809
DAILY BRIDGE CLUB Thursda y,April23,2015
NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD wjll sholtz
Looking for an entry
26 Comics character who once solved a sudoku "Dark Shadows" 27 Paperwork? 6 Move slowly 30 "Alice in 10Get stuck Wonderland" director, 2010 13Millennium starter 34Yusuf a . k .a. Cat Stevens 14Wardof "CSI: NY" 35 "Dragonwyck" author Seton 15Laundry detergent with 36What no two Oxi Booster people can do? 16Brand of colorful 38 Prefix with -graph footwear 39 n ov a 17Used up, with 41 Indian chief "out" called King Philip 18Showed cowardice, say 43 Drive crazy 45Yves's yesterday 19First word of 46West African many bumper capital stickers 20 Where to watch 47 Prohibited some boxing 51Train parts matches 53 Some convention 21 Deep red organizers: Abbr. 22Alternatively SSStickby the front door, say 24 Republic founded 56"Sothat's it!" in 1836 ACROSS 1ActorDavid of
By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency
The defenders invariably have fewer entries than declarer. When
doubles, and the next player bids two clubs. What do you say? ANSWER: You have 10 points you need an entry in your partner's hand, youmay have to look hard for with four useful honors; the K-Q of it. clubs opposite partner'sshortness In today's deal, dummy's ace of w ould be wasted, but the ace i s diamonds won, and declarer next working. Jump to t hree hearts to took the A-K of trumps. He threw a invite game. Partner will bid f our heart from dummy on the king of hearts with K J 3 2, A 8 5 3, A Q 8 2, diamonds and exited with a trump. 2, and ona good day you willmake West knew he needed two more game with anovernick. tricks besides his ace of clubs. He led South dealer a heart — not a success. South won Both sides vtdnerable with the queen, took the ace, ruffed NORTH his last heart in dummy and conceded 451086 3 two clubs. Making four.
9 1043 OA 4 J1096 2
ONE GOOD CARD West looked for his partner's entry in the wrong place. West needed East to have one good card, but if East held the ace of hearts, West could lead a heart later. Moreover, West could infer that if South needed heart discards, he would have started the clubs after he took the top trumps. (If S outhhadAK J5 2 , A J 5, K8, K 8 7 , four spades would be unbeatable.) At Trick Five, West must lead a low club. When East takes the king, a heart shift beats the contract.
DAILY QUESTION You hold: 49Q 9 4 9 K 9 6 2 0 J 10 9 4 A 5 3. The dealer, at your left, opens one club. Your partner
WEST 41Q94
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(C) 2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
Seeking a friendly duplicate bridge? Find five gamesweekly at www.bendbridge.org. BIZARRO
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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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27 Popular
28 Took charge of 29 Just fair 30 b ump 31 Phishing scam,
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ANSWER TO PREVIOUSPUZZLE: A L P A C A V D O O D A D I E G G D R O P S L E R O I E A S E N U T L I T I S T F L U I D K B O O K E M D I N E S D R E I D E L W I ND O W S H E S T E I L E E G E T C L T R A M O K S O S S O N S xwordedltor@aol.com 6
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A T M S R A S I R T EA T A L L E R G Y P A I N T E R O R E A D A N N O E T H I C D U E N A H O P A O N E OW A S R A C K I N G R H I N O S D E N A D A 04/23/15
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56 Appear 57 Puiveyor of many flat packs 58 Burst 59 *Real ordeal 62 Part of UCSD: Abbr. 63 Cheese that's sometimes stuffed 64 Begin gently 65 Cut
66 Smashes 67 They're often ruled
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By Julian Lim ©2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
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04/23/t 5
THE BULLETIN• THURSDAY APRIL 23 2015 E5
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
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RENTALS 603 - Rental Alternatives 604 - Storage Rentals 605- RoommateWanted 616- Want ToRent 627-Vacation Rentals& Exchanges 630- Rooms for Rent 631 - Condos &Townhomesfor Rent 632 - Apt./MultiplexGeneral 634 - Apt./Multiplex NEBend 636 - Apt./Multiplex NW Bend 638 - Apt./Multiplex SE Bend 640 - Apt./Multiplex SWBend 642 - Apt./Multiplex Redmond 646 - Apt./Multiplex Furnished 648- Houses for RentGeneral 650- Houses for Rent NE Bend 652- Houses for Rent NWBend 654- Houses for Rent SEBend 656- Houses for Rent SW Bend 658- Houses for Rent Redmond 659 - Houses for RentSunriver 660 - Houses for Rent LaPine 661 - Houses for Rent Prineville 662 - Houses for Rent Sisters 663- Houses for Rent Madras 664 - Houses for Rent Furnished 671 - Mobile/Mfd. for Rent 675 - RVParking 676 - Mobile/Mfd. Space
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Commerciai/investment Properties for Sale
Manufactured/ Mobile Homes
Watercraft
Motorhomes
Fifth Wheels
Aircraft, Parts & Service
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682- Farms, RanchesandAcreage 687- Commercial for Rent/Lease 693- Office/Retail Space for Rent REALESTATE 705 - Real Estate Services 713 - Real Estate Wanted 719 -Real Estate Trades 726- Timeshares for Sale 730 - NewListings 732- Commercial Properties for Sale 738 - MultiplexesforSale 740- Condos &Townhomes for Sale 744- Open Houses 745- Homes for Sale 746-Northwest Bend Homes 747 - Southwest BendHomes 748-Northeast Bend Homes 749- Southeast BendHomes 750- RedmondHomes 753 - Sisters Homes 755 - Sunriver/La Pine Homes 756- Jefferson County Homes 757- Crook CountyHomes 762- Homes with Acreage 763- Recreational HomesandProperty 764- Farms andRanches 771 - Lots 773 - Acreages 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes 780 - Mfd. /Mobile Homeswith Land
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476
Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
Purchasingl Receiving
TELEFUNDRAISING
HIGH PROFILE LOCATION IN DOWNTOWN REDMOND
List Your Home JandMHomes.com We Have Buyers Get Top Dollar Financing Available. 541-548-5511
Ads published in nWa
tercraft" include: Kay aks, rafts and motor Ized personal watercrafts. Fo "boats" please se Class 670. 541-385-5809
The Bulletin Serving Central Oregon since tgttt
This commercial building offers excellent exposure along desirable NW 6th Street. Currently housing The Redmond Spokesman newspaper offices, the 2,748 sq. ft. space is perfect for owner/ user. Two private offices and generous open spaces. Three parking places in back+ street parking.
880
Motorhomes
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Call Graham Dent
CO)VIPASS,~„„
II!otorcycles & Accessories
541-383-2444
Tioga 24' Class C Bought new in 2000, currently under 21K miles, exc. shape, new tires, professionally winterized Keystone Everest 5th every year, cut-off Wheel, 2004 switch to b a ttery Model 323P - 3 slides, plus new RV batrear island-kitchen, t eries. Oven, h o t fireplace, 2 TV's, water heater & air CD/DVR/VCR/Tuner cond., seldom used; w/surround sound,A/C, just add water and custom bed, ceiling fan, it's r eady to g o ! W/D ready, many extras. $22,000 obo. SenNew awning & tires. ous inquiries, only. Excellent condition. Stored in T erreb$19,750. More pics onne. 541-548-5174 available.541-923-6408
Snowmobiles
4-place enclosed Interstate snowmobile trailer w/ RockyMountain pkg, $8500. 541-379-3530
$259,000.
• ,• g t t ee
850
860
NavtgatlagVeltrerleaaaa
738
Multiplexes for Sale
$209,000 Harley Dyna Wide Glide Duplex Loans 8 Mortgages • Investment opportunity 2003 custom paint, extras, 13,000 orig •2 Bdrm, 1 bath & single LOCAL MONEY:Webuy garage miles, like new, health secured trust deeds & forces sale. Sacrifice rental history note,some hard money ••Excellent $10,000 obo. loans. Call Pat Kellev •Upgraded 541-633-7856. 541-382-3099 ext.13. Commercial potential Bea Leach, Broker 528
Tele-funding for •Meals On Wheels
Position
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732
541-788-2274
24' Mercedes Benz Prism, 2015 Model G, Mercedes Diesel engine, 18+ mpg, auto trans, fully loaded with double-expando, to makememories! and only 5200 miles. Ready Top-selling Winnebago Perfect condition 31J, origina! owners, nononiv $92K. smokers, garaged, only Call 541-526-1201 18,800 miles, auto-levelor see at: ing jacks, (2) slides, up3404 Dogwood Ave., graded queen bed, bunk in Redmond. beds, micro, (3) TVs, 3 Cu.ft. fridge for RV. sleeps 10! Lots of storNorcold, 110 V o l t, age, maintained, very propane or 12 Volt. clean!Only $67,995!Ex$250. 541-549-1736 tended warranty and/or financing avail to qualified or 541-647-0081 buyers!541-388-7179
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ALLEGRO 27' 2002 58k mi., 1 slide, vaca-
Winnebago Outlook 2007 Class "Cn 31', tion use only, Michclean, non- smoking elin all weather tires exc. cond. Must See! w/5000 mi., no acci- Lots of extra's, a very dents, non-smokers, good buy.$48,500 Workhorse e n g ine For more info call 261-A, Allison Trans., 541-447-9266
Laredo 31' 2006, 5th wheel, fully S/C one slide-out. Awning. Like new hardly used. Must sell $20,000
or take over payments. Call 541-410-5649
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1/5 share in v ery nice 150 HP Cessna 150; 1973 C e s sna 150 with Lycoming 0-320 150 hp engine c onversion, 400 0 hours. TT a irframe. Approx. 400 hours on 0-timed 0-320. Hangared in nice (electric door) city-owned hangar at the Bend Airport. One of very few C -1 50's t ha t ha s never been a trainer. $4500 wi ll c onsider trades for whatever. Call J i m Fr a z ee,
541-410-6007 HANGAR FOR SALE. 30x40 end unit T hanger in Prineville. Dry walled, insulated, and painted. $23,500. Tom, 541.788.5546
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Montana 34 ft. 2003, w /2 s l ides. N e w
tires, brakes a nd awning - Very clean and u nder cover. $18,500 obo. 541-536-5636 or 541-410-9299
Save money. Learn to fly or build hours with your own airc raft. 196 8 A e r o Commander, 4 seat, 150 HP, low time, full panel. $21,000 obo. Contact Paul at 541-447-5184.
RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do the Work, You Keep the Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins!
Windermere Seniors, students Central Oregon and all others welReal Estate come. No exp. backup cam e ra, Price ReducedHonda CB250 necessary, will heated mirrors, new Duplex $264,900. Superhawk N7745G 881 Nighthawk, 2008, very train. NE Bend Single Level good cond, $1 800. 3300 refrig. unit., exc. conOwners' Group LLC Travel Trailers PART TIME units; 3 Bdrm, 2 bath, miles. Call 541-610-3609 ditioned, well cared Cessna 172/180 hp, Mon-Thur. for. $35,500. Call and 2 bdrm, 2 bath. full IFR, new avionics, BIG COUNTRY RV 541-549-8737 Iv. msg. 4:30 p.m. - 8:30 GTN 750, touchFenced yard and 2 Bend: 541-330-2495 screen center stack, p.m. $9.25/hour. 632 car tandem garages. Redmond: exceptionally clean. Brown, Broker 541-548-5254 AptiMultiplex General Teresa experience u s ing Healthy engine 541-788-8661 Call 541-382-8672 Excel, W o r d a nd reserve fund. John L. Scott CHECK YOUR AD ERP, good in math, Hangared at KBDN. 885 Real Estate, Bend Heartland Pro w ler know how to pay Yamaha V-Star 250cc Oneshare johnlscottbend.com The Bulletin attention to details 2011, 3278 mi., exc. Allegro 32' 2007, like 2012, 29 PRKS, 33', Canopies & Camper available,$13,000. like new, 2 slides-livand the ability to cond. $4700 OBO. Call 541-706-1780 745 new, only 12,600 miles. i ng area & la r ge Adventurer2013 86 Dan 541-550-0171. trouble shoot and Homes for Sale Chev 8.1L with Allison 60 closet. Large enough solve pro b lems. chasing products or 9 925 Need help fixing stuff? transmission, dual ex- to live in, but easy to FB truck camper, Prior e x p erience services from out of • on the first day it runs Nice Family Neighbor- Call haust. Loaded! Auto-lev- tow! 15' power aw$18,800. 2205 dry Utility Trailers f the area. Sending A Service Professional driving a forklift and to make sure it is coreling system, 5kw gen, weight, 44 gallons hood. C l o s e to find the help you need. c ash, checks, o r ning, power hitch 8 cargo van is a must rect. eSpellcheckn and schools, easy to get to www.bendbulletin.com power mirrors w/defrost, stabilizers, full size f resh water. 3 1 0 F latbed t r ailer w i t h or the ability to learn f credit i n f ormation 2 slide-outs with awhuman errors do ocrooftop solar, 2 Hwy 126. Great boramps, 7000 lb. cabed , l a r ge watts this quickly. Position • may be subjected to cur. If this happens to nus room, new intenings, rear c a mera, queen deep cycle batteries, 865 shower, porcelain sink pacity, 26' long, 8'6 n r equires a val i d I FRAUD. trailer hitch, driyer door your ad, please conLED lights, full size rior paint, Don't Miss. For more informawide, ideal for hauling driver's license. You ATVs w/power window, cruise, 8 toilet. $2 6 ,500. us ASAP so that Sharon Abrams, Broker q ueen bed. n i c e hay, materials, cars, tion about an adver- ~ tact must be able to work exhaust brake, central 541-999-2571 corrections and any floorplan. Also avail541-280-9309 exc. cond. $2800. as a team member f tiser, you may call Dune Buggy vac, satellite sys. Asking adjustments can be able 201 0 Chevy John L. Scott 541-420-3788 the Oregon State and work with our 140 Corvair $3000. $67,500. 503-781-8812 made to your ad. RV Silverado HD, Real Estate, Bend internal and exter- I Attorney General's 541-548-5399 541-385-5809 Tow Dolly, new tires, 2 CONSIGNMENTS $15,000. Fan Travel Trailer 1984, Office C o n sumer s The Bulletin Classified johnlscottbend.com nal suppliers. Must sets of straps, exc. WANTED 360-774-2747 $200. Protection hotline at S 870 take and pass a We Do The Work ... c ond., capable o f NOTICE: No text messages! Call 541-420-1797 I 1-877-877-9392. pre-employment You Keep The Cash! p ulling a f u l l s i z e All real estate adver- Boats & Accessories drug test. W e are gThe Bulletin On-site credit pickup truck. If intertised here in is subHouses for Call The Bulletin At an equal opportu12/13' Gregor, 9.8 merested we will send approval team, ject to th e F ederal Rent General 541-385-5809 nity empl oyer. cury, under 4 hrs., web site presence. pictures. $1000 obo. F air Housing A c t , Starting wage DOE. equipped, with We Take Trade-Ins! Place Your Ad Or E-Mail 951-961-4590 which makes it illegal fully PUBLISHER'S r ack, $ 1 500. Apply in the PersonWildland Fire to advertise any pref- roof At: www.bendbulletin.com NOTICE 54'I -480-4008 932 nel Department at: BIG COUNTRY RV FightersAll real estate adver- erence, limitation or n 1989 Bayliner Fleetwood D i scovery Bend: 541-330-2495 Antique & discrimination based 15'10 Cooper Contracting tising in this newspaBright Wood Redmond: on race, color, reli- C apri, 50 H P o u t - 40' 2003, diesel, w/all Classic Autos is now hiring entry per is subject to the options 3 slide outs, 541-548-5254 Corp. ga l vanized satellite, 2 TV's, W/D, level fire f i ghters. F air H ousing A c t gion, sex, handicap, board, 335 Nyi/Hess St. $100. etc., 34,000 miles. (No exp. needed). which makes it illegal familial status or na- trailer. Madras, OR 97741 Must be least 18 yrs to a d vertise "any tional origin, or inten- 541-923-1575. to make any such 16' 1976 Checkmate ski Wintered in h e ated Looking for your of age. Starting pay preference, limitation tion shop. $78,995 obo. A RCTIC FO X 8 6 0 next employee? $ 10.10/hr., plu s or disc r imination preferences, l i mita- boat, 90HP Mercury 541-447-8664 2003, F S C , s l ide, Place a Bulletin help $4.02/hr. hazardous based on race, color, tions or discrimination. motor, restored; new rear awning. $10,000 wanted ad today and Resident Care pay on the first 40 religion, sex, handi- We will not knowingly seats, new c a rpet OBO. 541-420-2323. reach over 60,000 Buick Electra 225 Coordinator hrs. Cal l S h awn cap, familial status, accept any advertis- floor, new prop, with readers each week. (Bend) ing for r eal e state 1964 Classic cruiser 541-948-7010 to marital status or naI ~= trailer. Have receipts. Compensation: DOE Your classified ad with rare 401CI V8. schedule and intertional origin, or an in- which is in violation of $2500. 541-536-1395 Canopyfor short will also appear on RCC position. LPN Runs good, needs view or fo r m ore tention to make any this law. All persons box, lined interior, or multiple years' bendbulletin.com interior work, 168K info. such pre f erence, are hereby informed 16' Mad River Explorer green, good locking which currently ree xperience as a that all dwellings admiles. $5,995. c anoe, very g o od Freightliner 1994 limitation or discrimisystem. excellent med aid in an asceives over 1.5 milDonated to Equine nation." Familial sta- veriised are available condition, includes 3 shape. $995. Custom lion page views evsisted l i ving or Outreach. Call Gary 541-369-7234. Looking for your next tus includes children on an equal opportu- paddles and PaddleMotorhome memory care. Proery month at no 541-480-6130 nity basis. The Bulle- boy C anoe C a r t. under the age of 18 employee? Will haul small SUV extra cost. Bulletin vides direct supervitin Classified $725. 541-593-6536 Place a Bulletin help living with parents or sion of care giving or toys, and pull a Classifieds Get Re- Lance, like new, 2001 legal cus t odians, wanted ad today and 748 trailer! Powered by sults! Call 385-5809 b een stored for 5 within the commureach over 60,000 pregnant women, and nity. Ensures resi8.3 Cummins with 6 or place your ad years, 10', $ 9 300. Northeast Bend Homes readers each week. people securing cusspeed Allison auto on-line at 541-382-6996 dents are t reated Your classified ad tody of children under with respect, dignity trans, 2nd owner. bendbulletin.com 18. This newspaper W OW! 3 / 2 .5 , 12 6 9 will also appear on r ecognizing i n d iVery nice! $53,000. bendbulletin.com will not knowingly ac- s q.ft., s uper m t n Buick Reatta 1990, vidual needs and 541-350-4077 views, RV p a rking, 17.5' Seaswirl 2002 e which currently cept any advertising 882 original owner, origiencouraging indereceives over 1.5 for real estate which is big rear deck, large Wakeboard Boat nal paint, tan inteFifth Wheels a a pendence. Fosters a in violation of the law. covered front porch. I/O 4.3L Volvo Penta, million page views rior and clean. Only h ome-like a t moP rincipal Brok e r tons of extras, low hrs. every month at O ur r eaders a r e CHECKYOUR AD 78,860 miles, new sphere throughout $2 5 9 ,900. Full wakeboard tower, hereby informed that owned, no extra cost. tires, 3.6L, 6 cylinthe com m unity. 541-480-3393 Bulletin Classifieds all dwellings adverlight bars, Polk audio der engine, always Must have experitised in this newspa- 541-389-3354 speakers throughout, Get Results! araged in winter. ence with managcompletely wired for Call 385-5809 per are available on 750 5,000. ing staff, scheduling, amps/subwoofers, un- G rand Manor b y or place an equal opportunity 541-382-6353. experienced in care Redmond Homes deiwater lights, fish basis. To complain of 908 your ad on-line at Thor 1996, 35' very giving. Good written finder, 2 batteries cusd iscrimination cal l on the first day it runs bendbulletin.com Aircraft, Parts good condition, 454 and verbal commuto make sure it is corHUD t o l l-free a t 2300 sq. ft. 4 bdrm, 3 tom black paint job. gas engine, 50,050 n nication skills. Must & Service 1-800-877-0246. The bath home, on quiet $12,500 541-815-2523 rect. Spellcheck" and miles, 2 pop outs, be flexible and able 486 human errors do octoll free t e lephone neighborhood cul-denew tires, $18,999. to work all s hifts. Independent Positions number for the hear- sac, $289,900. c all cur. If this happens to Call 541-350-9916 Benefits after or your ad, please coni m paired is 541-639-3209 90days. For more Sales Help Wanted: ing 541-548-5302 for appt. 1-800-927-9275. tact us ASAP so that information, or any corrections and any E nergetic kios k PINNACLE 1990 CHEVELLE questions, p lease adjustments can be Looking for your next sales person needed 30' motorhome, ngoodbuy" NfALIBU 1971 Say call 541-385-4717 made to your ad. emp/oyee'? immediately for the clean. Rear 57K original miles, 19' Bayliner 1998, I/O, to that unused 541-385-5809 Place a Bulletin help 1/3interest in walk-around bed. C entral Ore g o n 350 c.i., auto, great shape, call for The Bulletin Classified wanted ad today and No smokers, no Columbia 400, area. Secured loca- item by placing it in stock, all original, info. $8500. In Bend reach over 60,000 Financing available. mildew, no leaks. tions, high commis- The Bulletin Classifieds readers each week. Resident Care Hi-Fi stereo 661-644-0384. TURN THE PAGE $8500. sions paid weekly! $125,000 Coordinator $20,000 Your classified ad 541-306-7268 For more informaFor More Ads (located © Bend) (Bend) will also appear on 541-288-3333 Compensation: DOE t ion, p lease c a l l 5 41-385-580 9 The Bulletin 541-279-1072 bendbulletin.com RCC position. LPN Howard at which currently reor multiple years' RV 541-279-0982. You ceives over e xperience as a CONSIGNMENTS c an a l s o em a i l Houses for Rent 1.5 million page med aid in an asWANTED tcoles©yourneighviews every month 19' Pioneer ski boat, YOUR AD WILLRECEIVECLOSEro 2,000,000 sisted l i ving or NW Bend We Do The Work ... borhoodpublications. at no extra cost. 1983, vm tandem ExposuREsFQRoNLYNso! memory care. ProYou Keep The Cash! com for more inforBulletin Classifieds trailer, V8. Fun & vides direct superviOn-site credit can, cl g&sd ~ t i l a t Vrt o~ N ee tt e n I s NW Crossing! Newly Get Results! mation. fast! $5350 obo. sion of care giving constructed 3 bdrm 2 approval team, Heek of April20, 2015 Call 385-5809 or 541-815-0936. within the commuweb site presence. bath 2032 sf, $2800 place your ad on-line nity. Ensures resi1st last dep. No pets We Take Trade-Ins! at dents are t reated 9EI(jj)(81 FUN & FISH! please. 503-894-4825 bendbuffeti n.com with respect, dignity BIG COUNTRY RV Serving Central Oregon since 1903 r ecognizing i n d iBend: 541-330-2495 541-385-5809 755 Redmond: vidual needs and 541-548-5254 encouraging indeSunriver/La Pine Homes pendence. Fosters a h ome-like a t moNear Old Mill 2 bed, 1 15760 Burgess Road, DIVORCE$155. Complete preparation. Includes children, custody, support, sphere throughout 2006 Smokercraft 712 sq. ft., • w~ bath 960 sq. ft., $1250 $139,900. the com m unity. 2 acres, newer septic. Sunchaser 820 property and bills division. No court appearances. Divorced in 1-5 weeks 1st last $500 dep. no Must have experi528 Lakes Realty & model pontoon boat, possible. 503-772-5295.www.paralegalalternatives.comlegalalt@msn.com s moking o r pet s High ence with managProperty M a n age75HP Mercury and Loans & Mortgages please. 541-647-0982 ing staff, scheduling, electric trolling moment 541-536-0117 i I experienced in care tor, full canvas and Monaco Monarch 31' WARNING 762 giving. Good written rnany extras. 2006, F ord V 10, MEDICAL BILLING TRAINEES NEEDED! Train at home to process The Bulletin recomand verbal commuBnnjj Stored inside Homes with Acreage 28,900 miles, mends you use cauMedical Billing & Insurance Claims! NO EXPERIENCE NEEDED! nication skills. Must $19,900 auto-level, 2 slides, tion when you proVce ©alh be flexible and able Online training at Bryan University! HS Diploma/GED & Computer/ 541-350-5425 2278 sq. ft. home with vide personal queen b ed & to work all shifts. work shops on 5.41 hide-a-bed sofa, 4k Internet needed! 1-877-259-3880 information to compaBenefits after acres. $24 9 , 900. Ads published in the nies offering loans or gen, convection mi90days. For more 151626 Hackamore, "Boats" classification credit, especially ] ] crowave, 2 TVs, tow information, or any La Pine. High Lakes those asking for adinclude: Speed, fish- package. questions, p lease Realty & P r o perty DISH TV Starting at $19.99/month (for 12 mos.) SAVE! Regular Price ing, drift, canoe, vance loan fees or PR/CE REDUCTION! call 541-385-471 7 Management companies from out of house and sail boats. $32.99. Call Today and Ask About FREE SAME DAY Installation! $59,000. 541-536-0117 For all other types of state. If you have 541-815-6319 CALL Now! 855-849-'l815 concerns or ques- Commercial/Investment watercraft, please go 773 to Class 875. tions, we suggest you • Properties for Sale Call a Pro ]I Roofers Wanted consult your attorney Acreages 541-385-5809 Call River Roofing, Whether you need a or call CONSUMER Central Oregon ComStruggling with DRUGS or ALCOHOL? Addicted to PILLS? Talk to 541-383-3569 HOTLINE, mercial Bui l ding.Hard-to-find 5-acre flat Servin Central are on since 1903 fencefixed,hedges or applyin person at someone who cares. Call the Addiction Hope & Help Line for a free 1-877-877-9392. buildable corner lot Owner wants to retire, trimmed or a house 697 SE Glenwood located in Lake Park Bayliner 185 2006 OWC. Has long term assessment. 855-978-9402 Drive, in Bend. built, you'll find BANK TURNED YOU tenant now. Owner is Estates with mature open bow. 2nd owner DOWN? Private party active Real E s tate l andscaping. M L S¹ — low engine hrs. professional help in — fuel injected V6 will loan on real es- Broker. 201406959 The Bulletin's "Call a Sales Person wanted tate equity. Credit, no Margie Jeffery, Broker $135,500. Call Pam — Radio & Tower. PROBLEMS with the IRS or State Taxes? Wall & Associates can Service Professional" for growing manufac- problem, good equity 541-350-8239 Lester, Principal Bro- Great family boat settle for a fraction of what you owe! Results may vary. Not a tured home dealer- is all you need. Call Priced to sell. John L. Scott ker, Century 21 Gold Directory ship. Call Oregon Land MortCountry Realty, Inc. $11,590. solicitation for legal services. 844-886-0875 Real Estate, Bend 541 -385-5809 541-548-5511 541-504-1338 541-548-0345. gage 541-388-4200. www.lohnlscottbend.com Bright Wood Corporation is looking to fill a pur chasing/receiving position at our h e a dquarters site in Madras. This position requires the following skills and experience. G o od computer, t y p ing and 10 key skills;
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