Bulletin Daily Paper 7-26-13

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Serving Central Oregon since1903 75 $

FRIDAY July 26,2013

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TODAY'S READERBOARD Oldest fort —Ruins found in inland North Carolina are

Spanish and believed to date to the 16th century.A3

ChemO CapS —This cold headwear could keepcancer patients from losing hair.A3

'Chance' update —Sheriff's Office says dog jumped from car, wasn't dragged.B1

Subwayowneraskspatrons to help getbeeronthe menu

Bend Subway franchisee Mark Moore wants to serve local brews, but the corporate office has turned him down. He hopes if customers

VALUED CUSTOMERS

By Rachael Rees

Sl/BWA<

The Bulletin

Subway Corporate Has denied our request to

Mark Moore wants to serve pints of local beer at his Subway restaurant on Southwest Simpson Avenue in Bend, and he wants customers who agree to call the chain's corporate headquarters in support. "Craft beer is part of the Bend experience," he said. "I love Subway, but I started thinking, why can't people have some of that same experience at a fast-food restaurant?"

be the first traditnmal Subway in the USA to serve Bcer If you dtsagree with this decision please contact the Subway comment linc

support the idea, he will get

At

I-800-888-4848 And voice your oPinion!

approval. Andy Tullis The Bulletin

Moore would like to offer four local brews on tap on a rotating basis, as well as 22-ounce bottles. He applied for a liquor license, which requires Moore to get corporate approval and a revised franchise agreement, said Christie Scott, public affairs specialist for the Oregon Liquor Control Commission. But Subway headquarters told him absolutely not, he said. Then, however, he was askeda series offollow-up questions. SeeSubway/A4

Struggle

BDDmer literature —A

over voting rights continues

new genre is driving book-buying and library visits.D1

Disconnected —More than half of seniors lack access to the lnternet.D2

Plus: Cute as aduttun

— Ohio centenarian is an inspiration to her club of button collectors.D3

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SC 00 SemI'I

By Sari Horwitz The Washington Post

Train derailment —Driver investigated; 80 dead.A2

By Branden Andersen The Bulletin

And a Wed exclusiveYoung, black NRA supporter

defies stereotypes — andwins over plenty of fans. bendbulletin.com/extras

EDITOR'SCHOICE

'FratPAC'

lobbies against hazing bill

Wayne Tolosa, CEO of the California-based security technology company Future Concepts, felt he had an obligation to make an impact after the Sandy Hook shooting in Newtown, Conn. "Schools became our focus because schools are important," Tolosa said. "We need to protect our kids." Future Concepts came to the Bend Police Department on W ednesday to discuss the possibility of installing its security systems in Bend area schools. "We're not endorsing this, but rather it caught the police department's inter-

est," said police Chief Jeff Sale. "Now, we wanted to present it to the public for feedback, questions and concerns." The system, called Nexar SOS, uses emergency buttons located in each classroom to remotely lock and secure classrooms. When an emergency button is pushed, cameras turn on to show local authorities the situation in the school. Police are given access to the overheadspeaker system tospeak to the potential shooter. Lights inside and out of the classrooms indicate the status of the students inside or the situation outside — green means the coast is clear, red means that it is not, and blue means a medical emergency. See Security/A6

®

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• •

Submitted photos

ABOVE: An emergency button located in classrooms alerts police in the case of a gunman in the school or other emergency. BELOW: Officers can monitor the situation in the school through security cameras, as well as take control of the announcement system.

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Harrison Kowiak was 19 years old when he died after schoolmates pummeled him on a pitch-black field in Hickory, N.C. It was part of a fraternity hazing. Determined to protect other students, Kowiak's mother Lianne devoted herself to fighting hazing. She thought she had a powerful ally in U.S. Representative Frederica Wilson, who calls herself the "Haze Buster" and backed Florida's tough anti-hazing law as a member of the state Legislature in 2005. Standing beside Wilson at a Capitol Hill news conferencein September, Kowiak helped display a 10-foot-long banner that read "Hazing Kills" and depicted a cemetery. As Wilson vowed to deny financial aid to students who engage in hazing, Kowiak applauded.What Kowiak didn't know was that, behind the scenes, the fraternity industry's political arm, known as "FratPAC," had been pressing Wilson to back off. As of Thursday, 19 months after Wilson first promised an anti-hazing bill, she hasn't filed one. The industry's lobbying is "disgusting," Kowiak said in an interview. "What are the priorities here'?" They "should be to stop hazing so none of our youth have to go through it." See FratPAC /A5

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WASHINGTON — The Justice Department is preparing to take fresh legal action in a string of voting rights cases across the nation, U.S. officials said, part of a new attempt to blunt the impact of a Supreme Court ruling that the Obama administration has warned will imperil minority representation. The decision to challenge state officials marks an aggressive effort to continue policing voting issues and will likely spark a new round of politically contentious litigation that could return consideration of the 1965 Voting Rights Act to the highest court. Attorney General Eric Holder's decision to intervene in a Texas redistricting case Thursday follows a ruling by the court last month that invalidated a critical section of the historic legislation. The justices threw out the part of the Voting Rights Act that determined which states with a history of discrimination had to be granted Justice Department or court approval before making voting

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law changes. Holder's action was praised by civil rights groups but harshly criticized by Republicans on Capitol Hill and in Texas, where Gov. Rick Perry said it demonstrated the Obama administration's "utter contempt" for the U.S. Constitution. SeeVoting/A4

Scientists plant false memory in mousebrain in study By James Gorman New York Times News Service

The vagaries of human memory are notorious. You distinctly remember that a friend was at your wedding,

TODAY'S WEATHER Mostly sunny High 93, Low 55

Page B6

until she reminds you that you didn't invite her. Or, more seriously, an eyewitness misidentifies the perpetrator of a terrible crime. Not only are false, or mis-

taken, memories common in normal li fe,butresearchers have found it relatively easy to generate false memories of words and images in human subjects. But exactly what

goes on in the brain when mistaken memories are formed has remained mysterious. Now scientists at the RikenMIT Center for Neural Circuit Genetics at the Massachusetts

INDEX C1-4 Busines s/Stocks C5-6 Comics/Puzzles E3-4 Horoscope 0 6 Sports Calendar I n GO! Crosswords E4 Lo cal/State B 1 - 6 I V/Movies 06, GO!

Institute of Technology say they have created a false memory in a mouse, providing clues to how such memories may form in human brains. SeeMemory/A6

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A2 T H E BULLETIN • FRIDAY, JULY 26, 2013

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DEPARTMENT HEADS

NATIoN 4% ORLD CISVSIIllld kldllBPPillgs —A hearing will be held today for Ariel Castro amid reports that lawyers for the former Cleveland bus

anis rain river invesi ae; By Silvia Taules

driver have reached a plea deal in the case involving the kidnapping and rape of three women. The hearing will be held before Cuyahoga

County Judge Michael Russo, according to an official at the courthouse who asked not to be identified. Castro, 53, is accused of imprisoning and brutalizing the three women in his home for about

a decade. Hehas pleaded not guilty to 977 charges, including 512 counts of kidnapping and 446 counts of rape. He is also charged with

aggravated murder in awoman's miscarriage, a charge that could carry the death penalty.

in connection with the crash. On the day of the wreck, he substituted for another driver at the controls just 60 miles beforethe crash, according to Spanish news reports. Garzon's Facebook page, deleted late Thursday morning, included a p hotograph and exchanges that portrayed a taste for speed, and perhaps even recklessness. One photo posted in March 2012 showed a speedometerneedle stuck at 200 kilometers per hour (124

been 190kilometers per hour, more than double the limit New York Times News Service in the stretch where the train SANTIAGO DE COMPOSderailed. TELA, Spain — The grainy Most high-speed lines that video lasts little more than are part of the European Rail 10 seconds, but long enough Traffic system are covered by to show the blazing speed of a sophisticated GPS-based a Spanish passenger train surveillance system that conbound for Santiago de Comstantly monitors trains' speed postela that bounced against a and that automatically brakes curved wall and thundered off them at speed limits. the track like a twisted toy. Slower trains and t r ains Emergency workers were crossing urban areas in Spain still picking through mangled and other European countries debris Thursday, hours after mph) and his giddy remark: use a less intrusive system 80 people were killed in one of "I'm at the limit and I can't go that warns the driver with Europe's worst rail accidents any faster or they will give me sound and lights at excessive in recent years. With the foot- a fine." speeds, but does not automatiage from a securitycamera, After one of h i s f r i end's cally brake the train, accordinvestigators were exploring made a joking reference to ing to Maria Carmen Palao, clues, focusing on the train's speeding, Garzon replied, in a spokeswoman with Spain's speed and a middle-aged driv- capital letters: "Imagine what ADIF r a i l i nfr a structure er who relished high velocity a rush it would be traveling company. and boasted about breaking alongside the C ivi l G u ard, The accident, she said, took speed records on his Facebook and passing them so that their place roughly two t o t h r ee page. speed trapsgo off.Hehe, that miles outside the station at The driver, Francisco Jose would be quite a fine for Renfe, Santiago de Compostela, in Garzon Amo, with more than hehe," referring to the Spanish the "transition zone" between three decades of experience, rail operator. the two systems. The wreck is now under investigation by On Thursday, Spanish news occurred on the Galicia line, a judge who has ordered the media reported that the driver run bythe railoperator Renfe collection of a l l r e cordings had said the train's speed had and opened in 2011.

and Doreen Carvajal

Oil Spill —Halliburton Energy Services has agreedto plead guilty to destroying evidence in connection with the 2010 Gulf oil spill, the Department of Justice said Thursday. Federal officials said in a news release that a filing in federal court in Louisiana charged Halliburton with one count of destruction of evidence. Halliburton has agreed to pay the maximum fine, be on probation for three years and continue to cooperate with the government's criminal investigation, according to the news release, which did not list the amount of the fine. FSWSI' Pl'iSOIISFS —The prison population in the United States dropped in 2012 for the third consecutive year, according to federal statistics released Thursday, signaling a shift away from an almost four-decade policy of mass imprisonment. The number of inmates in state and federal prisons fell by1.7 percent to an estimated1,571,013 in 2012, according to figures released by the Bureau of Justice Statistics, an arm of the Justice Department. Although the percentage decline appeared small, the fact that it followed decreases in 2011 and 2010 offers persuasive evidence of what some criminal justice experts

say is a "seachange" in the U.S. approach to criminal punishment. Manning trial —A military prosecutor portrayed Pfc. Bradley M anning on Thursday as an "anarchist"who,seeking to "make a splash," betrayed the United States' trust when he leaked vast archives

of secret documents to WikiLeaks, lifting a veil on U.S.diplomatic and military activities. As closing arguments began in the court-martial trial in Fort Meade, Md., the prosecutor, Maj. Ashden Fein, focused

squarely on themost contentious charge that Manning is facing: that by giving the information to WikiLeaks for publication on a website that the world could see, he is guilty of "aiding the enemy."

TuniSia aSSaSSinatian —Tunisia, birthplace of the Arab Spring revolutionary movement, was plunged into a newpolitical crisis Thursday whenassassins shot an opposition party leader outside his home. It was the second political assassination in Tunisia since February, and incited protests blaming Ennahda, the moderate Islamist

party that leads the government. TAP,Tunisia's official news agency,

PONTIFF SHAKES THINGS UP IN LATIN AMERICA

said the victim was Mohamed Brahmi, 58, leader of the Arab nationalist People's Party.

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Kerry at U.N.— Secretary of State John Kerry made his first official visit to the United Nations on Thursday to discuss three

of the world's most intractable crises: turmoil in Africa's Great Lakes region, the Syrian War and what he called "the granddaddy of them all," the Israel-Palestinian conflict. Appearing briefly at a

Traci Donaca ......................

welcoming ceremony with Secretary General BanKi-moon that was

TALK TO AN EDITOR

streamed on the United Nations website, Kerry thanked Ban for his organization's work, particularly in dealing with the Syrian refugee

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crisis. Kerry's main preoccupation recently has been to broker a resumption of Mideast peace talks, which could start next week in

Washington. LOdStermalI baCk hOme —A Long Island lobsterman who spent12 hours floating in the Atlantic Ocean after falling off his boat joked Thursday that he may have the two rubber boots that kept him afloat bronzed. John Aldridge was rescued a day earlier when the Coast Guard found him floating in the ocean off of Montauk Point, about 40 miles from where he tumbled off the 44-foot lobster boat Anna Mary at about 3 in the morning. — From wire reports

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Heartlaqd Paiqtiqg

Victor R. Caivano/The Associated Press

Pope Francis gives athumbs upThursday to residents of the Varginha slum in Rio deJaneiro, Brazil.

ties that persist in the world!" Francis told a crowd

Francis visited one of Rio de Janeiro's shantytowns,

muddy soccer field to welcome him. "No amount of peace-building will be able to last, nor will harmony

and happiness beattained in a society that ignores,

Francis showed his rebel side in other ways Thurs-

pushes to the margins or excludes a part of itself."

day, urging youngCatholics to shake upthe church and make a"mess" in their dioceses by going out into

It was a messageaimed at reversing the decline in the numbers of Catholics in most of Latin America,

the streets to spread the faith.

with many poor worshippers leaving the church for

"No one can remain insensitive to the inequali-

New York Times News Service MIAMI — A juror who said she initially wanted to convict George Zimmerman told ABC News on Thursday that he "got awaywith murder" inthe shooting death of Trayvon Martin, an unarmed black teenager. But faced with Florida's selfdefense laws, the juror, the second one on the six-member panel to speak out, said she felt compelled to acquit Zimmerman, 29, a volunteer neighborhood watch coordinator. "George Zimmerman got away with murder," said the juror, who allowed ABC to show her faceand use her firstname, Maddy. "Butyou can'tgetaway from God. And, at the end of the day, he's going to have a lot of questions and answers he has to deal with. The law couldn't prove it but, you know, you know, the world goes in circles." Freeing Zimmerman had been heartbreaking for her, she said, adding that she owed the Martin family an apology. "It's hard for me to sleep, it's hard for me to eat, because I feel I was forcibly included in Trayvon Martin's death," the juror said.

Painting in Central Oregon for over 18 years

of thousands who braved acold rain and stood in a

or favelas, a placethat sawsuch rough violence in the past that it's known by locals as theGazaStrip.

Juror says Zimmerman 'got away with murder'

"Quality Painting Inside and Out"

4

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•I

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FRIDAY, JULY 26, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

MART TODAY

A3

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

It's Friday, July 26, the 207th day of 2013. There are158 days left in the year.

DISCOVERY

RESEARCH

HAPPENINGS

Capstestedto prevent hair lossduring chemo

Cleveland kidnappings — Suspect Ariel Castro will appear in court, reportedly to accept a pleadeal. A2

By Lauran Neergaard

HISTORY Highlight:In1953, Fidel Castro began his revolt against Fulgencio Batista with an un-

successful attack on anarmy barracks in eastern Cuba.Castro ousted Batista in1959. In 1775, Benjamin Franklin

became America's first postmaster-general. In1788,New York became the 11th state to ratify the U.S. Constitution. In1863, Sam Houston, former president of the Republic of

Texas, died in Huntsville at age 70. In1882, the Richard Wagner

opera"Parsifal" premiered in Bayreuth, Germany.

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In1908, Attorney General

Charles J. Bonaparte ordered creation of a force of special agents that was aforerunner of the Federal Bureau of Investigation. In1912, the Edison Studios

production "What Happened to Mary," one of the first, if not very first, movie serials, was released with Mary Fuller in the title role. In1947, President Harry S. Truman signed the National Security Act, establishing the National Military Establishment, which later was renamed the Department of

~ j::"'r; '-„ Exploring Joara Project via The New YorkTimes

An archaeologist works near Morganton, N.C., in a section of the defensive moat of the earliest fort built by Europeans. The discovery of remains of the 16th century fort serves as a reminder of Spain's expeditions before Britain's explorations.

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Defense. In1952, Argentina's first lady,

Eva Peron, died in Buenos Aires at age 33. King Farouk I of Egypt abdicated in the wake

of a coup led byGamal Abdel Nasser. In1956, the Italian liner Andrea Doria sank off New

England, some11 hours after colliding with the Swedish liner Stockholm; at least 51 people died. Egyptian President Gamal Abdel Nasser nationalized the Suez Canal. In1971,Apollo15 was

launched from CapeKennedy on America's fourth manned mission to the moon. In1986, kidnappers in Lebanon released the Rev. Law-

rence Martin Jenco, anAmerican hostage held for nearly19 months. In 1990, President George H.W. Bush signed the Americans with Disabilities Act.

Ten years ago:Backers of a drive to oust California Governor Gray Davis held a boisterous celebration at the state Capitol in Sacramento, more than two months before the

In the Appalachian foothills of western North Carolina, archaeologists have discovered remains of a 16th century fort, the earliest one built by Europeans. The discovery is a reminder of a period in colonial history when Spain's expansive ambitions were yet unmatched by England. By John Noble Wilford New York Times News Service

If the Spanish had succeeded, Robin Beck Jr., a University of Michigan archaeologist on the discoveryteam, suggested, "Everything south of the Mason-Dixon line might have become part of Latin America." But they failed. R esearchers ha d k n o w n from S p a nish d o c uments about the two expeditions led by Juan Pardo from the Atlantic coast from 1566 to 1568. A vast interiorseemed open for the taking. This was almost 20 years before the failure of the English at Sir Walter Raleigh's "lost colony" near the North Carolina coast or their later successes in Virginia at Jamestown in 1607 and at Plymouth Rock in Massachusetts in 1620

October 7 recall election. Cuba

— the "beginnings" empha-

celebrated the 50th anniversary of the start of Fidel Castro's

sized in the standard Colonial history taught in U.S. schools. O ne of Pardo's first acts of possession, in early 1567, was building Fort San Juan in an Indian town almost 300 miles in the interior, near what is known today as th e G reat Smoky Mountains. It was the first and largest of six forts the expedition erected on a trail blazed through North and South Carolina and across the mountains into eastern Tennessee. At times, Pardo was following in the footsteps of Hernando de Soto in the 1540s. Pardo's orders were to establish an overland road to the silver mines in Mexico, on the mistaken assumption that the Appalachians were the same mountain chain that ran through central Mexico. No one then had a sure handle on the near and far of New World geography. Even the written records of the de Soto expedition beyond the Mississippi River did not seem to clarify matters; they did not come with maps. After years of searching, archaeologists led by B eck, Christopher Rodning of Tulane University i n N e w O r l eans and David Moore of Warren Wilson College in Asheville, N.C., came upon what they described in interviews as clear evidence of the fort's defensive moat and other telling remains of Fort San Juan. The discovery in late June was made five miles north o f M o r ganton, N.C., at a site long assumed to be the location of an Indian settlement known as Joara, where

revolution against Fulgencio Batista.

Five years ago: At least 22 small bombs exploded in Ahmadabad in the lndian state of

Gujarat, killing 58 people. Oneyearago:TheW hite House said President Barack

Obama would not push for stricter gun laws, oneday after his impassioned remarks

about the need to keepassault weapons off the streets. With the Olympic Gamesas a backdrop, Republican presidential

candidate Mitt Romneyheld a day of meetings with Britain's

most powerful people; however, Romney rankled his hosts by calling London's problems with Olympic Gamespreparation "disconcerting."

BIRTHDAYS Rock star Mick Jagger is 70. Actress Helen Mirren is 68.

Actress SusanGeorge is 63. Olympic gold medal figure skater Dorothy Hamill is 57.

Actor Kevin Spacey is 54. Actress Sandra Bullock is 49. Actor Jason Statham is 46. TV host Chris Harrison ("The

Bachelor"; "The Bachelorette") is 42. Actress Kate Beckinsale

is 40. Gospel/Contemporary Christian singer RebeccaSt. James is 36. Actress Francia Raisa is 25. Christian rock mu-

sician Jamie Sharpe (Rushof Fools) is 24. — From wire reports

Scalp cooling is an idea that's been around for deW ASHINGTON — H a i r cades, but it never caught on lossisone of chemotherapy's here in part because of a conmost despised side effects, not cern: Could the cold prevent because of vanity but because chemotherapy from reachit fuels stigma — revealing to ing any stray cancer cells the world an illness that many lurking in the scalp? would rather keep private. To Dr. Hope Rugo of the Now U.S. researchers are University of California, San about to put an experimental Francisco, the impact of hair hair-preserving t r e atment loss has been overlooked, to a rigorous test: To see if even belittled, by health prostrapping on a cap so cold it viders. She's had patients denumbs the scalp during che- lay crucial treatment to avoid motherapy really works well it, and others whose busienough to be used widely in nesses suffered when clients this country, as it is in Eu- saw they were sick and shied rope and Canada. away. The first time Miriam LipWith more people survivton had breast cancer, her ing cancer, "we need to make thick locks fell out two weeks this experience as tolerable after starting chemotherapy. as possible, so there's the But when the disease struck least baggage at the end," again, she used a cold cap Rugo said. "Quite frankly, it's the first during treatment and kept much of her hair, making her or second question out of fight for survival seem a bit most patients' mouths when easier. I tell them I recommend che"I didn't necessarily want motherapy. It's not, 'Is this to walk around the grocery going to cure me? It's, 'Am I store answering questions going to lose my hair?'" adds about my cancer," recalled Dr. Susan Melin of N orth Lipton, 45, of San Francisco. Carolina's Wake Forest Bap"If you look OK on the out- tist Medical Center. side, it can help you feel, 'OK, Later this summer, Rugo this is manageable, I can get and Melin, along with r ethrough this.'" searchers at a f e w o t h er Near-freezing tempera- hospitals in New York and tures are supposed to reduce California, will begin enrollblood flow in the scalp, mak- ing 110 early-stage breast ing it harder for cancer-fight- cancer patients in a study of ing drugs to reach and harm the DigniCap brand of scalp hair follicles. But while sev- cooling. Participants' hair eral types of cold caps are will be photographed for exsold around the world, the perts to assess, and they'll Food and Drug Administra- be compared with a small tion hasn't approved their group of similarly ill patients use in the U.S. who get chemo alone. The Associated Press

military artifacts and burned remains of Spanish-built huts were also found. While excavating a ceremonial Indian mound at the site, the archaeologists encountered different colored soil beneath the surface. Part of the fort's defensive moat had been cut through the southern side of the mound. Beck said further excavations and magnetometer subsurfacereadings showed that the moat appeared to extend more than 70 to 100 feet and measured nearly 12 feet wide and 6 feet deep, in a configuration"typical of European moats going back to the Romans." Other remote sensing surveys showed subsurface anomalies suggesting burned timbers of the palisades and an irregularity that may well be ruins of the "strong house" inside, where tools, weapons and lead shot were stored. Investigating these artifacts is on the agenda fornext summer's excavations, Beck said. Chester DePratter, an archaeologist at the University of South Carolina who is an authority on Spanish exploration in the southeastern United States, happened to be at the Joara site as an independent observer when the discovery was made. "I am certain that they have found the long lost Fort San J uan," DePratter said l a st week. "The coming years, as the moat and blockhouse inside are excavated, will be quite exciting." The discovery was significant, he added, because it emphasized the Spanish advance deep into the interior by 1566, long before "the English built a fort as far inland as Fort San Juan, much less as far west as the French Broad River near Knoxville" — which was "well into the 17th century." Although the soldiers prospected for gold around Fort San Juan, they never found any. Yet Beck noted that much later settlers scooped up nuggets near local rivers, setting off a gold rush before the 49ers of California. Had the people of Joara given Pardo's soldiers time to discover gold, Beck speculated, Spain would probably have flooded the area with settlers "and everything changes and nearly everybody in the southeastern part of the country might b e s peaking Spanish today."

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A4 T H E BULLETIN • FRIDAY, JULY 26, 2013

"Beer is so predominant here, and people not only enjoy it, it's almost like they expect it." — Mark Moore, Subway franchise owner

Subway Continued from A1 They included: How would it be marketed? What would be served and what would it be served in'? What would the response of the community be'? Subway representatives did not respond to multiple requests from The Bulletin for comment, but the chain has allowed some restaurants to serve alcohol, according to a 2010 story by The Associated Press. A spokesman said some franchisesin arenas and airports serve alcohol as part of their lease agreements, according to the AP story. But it's not served at stores with street access. To answer corporate's foll ow-up q u e stions, M o o r e and another Central Oregon Subway franchisee created a proposal that he sent to corporate in February. It included a customer survey that showed nearly all questioned said they either wanted beer or that offering beer wouldn't change their views of Subway. It also showed sales would increase by more than $4,000 a week, he said. Two weeks ago, he said, Subway responded and said the chain did not want to move in that direction. So Moore put a sign on the register directing customers who would like to have local brews to call and tell Subway they disagree with the decision. "I'm still h oping," Moore said. "I don't know exactly where I'm at w ith it . But I think it's a great opportunity for the Subway brand to be more diversified, and give it more exposure." If Moore gets approval, he believes he would be the first traditional — f r e e-standing — Subway in the U.S. to serve beer. Wendi Day, owner of Bend Brewing Co., said she's in favor of Moore beingable to serve Bend Brewing Co.'s beer. "Mark operates a great Subway, and it would be fantastic if he was the first to be able to offerlocally brewed beer,"she wrote in an email. Moore said he is trying to be as competitive as possible, and his competition has beer on their menus. Being surrounded by restaurants that offerbeer puts him ata disadvantage, especially in the evenings, he said. "Beer is so predominant here, and people not only enjoy it, it's almost like they expect it," he said. Carolyn Eagan, business advocate for the city of Bend, agreed there's a culture in Bend "that you should ... be able to find a local beer wherever you go." However, she said,she wasn't sure if people

Voting Continued from A1 "This end-run a r ound the Supreme Court undermines the will of the people of Texas, and casts unfair aspersions on our state's c ommon-sense efforts t o preserve the integrity of our elections process," Perry said in a statement. The Justice Department's intervention in Texas will now focus attention on those sections of the Voting Rights Act that were untouched by the Supreme Court's ruling last month in Shelby County v. Holder, a case out of Alabama, according to electionlaw experts. "This is a big deal," said Richard Hasen, a professor of law and political science at the University of California at Irvine. "It shows that the Department of Justice is going to use whatever tools it has remaining in its arsenal to protect minority voting rights. But the issue could well end up back beforethe Supreme Court, perhaps even this coming term." In the c oming weeks, Holder is expected to use Sections 2 and 3 of the Voting Rights Act to take legal action to prevent states from implementing certain laws, including requirements to p resent certain k i nds of i dentification in o r der t o vote. As with Texas, the department is also expected to tryto force certain states to get approval, or "preclearance," before they can change their election laws. "Even as Congress considers updates to the Voting Rights Act in light of the Court's ruling, we plan, in the meantime, to fully utilize the law's remaining sections to ensure the voting rights of all American citizens are protected," Holder said in a speech Thursday to the National Urban League conference in Philadelphia. "My colleagues and I are determined to use every tool at our disposalto stand against discrimination wherever it is found." Holder announced that, in a first step, the department will support a lawsuit

The SupremeCourt in June struck down aportion of the Voting Rights Act that

required someplaces, or preclearance,before changing their voting procedures. Sincethen, several ofthose places have movedaheadwith MISSISSIPPI A ballot initiative

types of photo identification

requiring photo

Lawmakerspassed a photo identifica-

for voting had been denied

identification was approved in 2011 and

tion requirement in forward on a photo 2010 that was set to identification bill that had

put into legislation in

go into effect in

2012, butit had been waiting on federal

2014, pending

preclearance byafederal court, but shortly after the Supreme Court struck down the Voting Rights Act

NORTH CAROLINA Republicans in the state

have saidthey will move been pendingbeforethe SupremeCourt decision. Somelawmakershavealso proposedcutting backon

or federal judges for approval.

In the Texas redistricting case, a t h r ee-judge federal panel in Washington last year decision, officials in the putinto place. the number of early voting blocked the plan under Section the law. state have moved to days in the state. 5 of the Voting Rights Act, sayenforce thelaw. ing the maps undermined the LAWS ACROSS THE COUNTRY political clout of minorities who are responsible for the state's 33 states (including Texas, Mississippi and Alabama) have passed voter identification laws. Not all population growth. have gone into effect, and some are facing legal challenges. Another lawsuit on the same maps was filed in U.S. District States with no voter ID laws Court in San Antonio. In that case,several groups, including 18 of those states require a photo of the voter the Mexican American Legislative Caucus and the Texas LaSources: Justice Department (covered places); National Conference of State Legislatures (state laws) tino Redistricting Task Force, sued Texas and Perry. New York Times News Service Thursday's filing i n vokes in Texas that was brought by which were signed by seven Re- carry out redistricting changes Section 3 of the Voting Rights a coalition of Democratic leg- publican governors and one in- that had been mired in court Act and asks a federal judge to islators and civil rights groups dependent, said that requiring battles. require Texas to submit all votagainst the state's redistricting voters to show specific photo Holder said that is exactly ing law changes to the attorney plan. Holder is also asking the IDs would prevent voter fraud. why the Justice Department is general or a court for approvaL "The fact that intervention court to require Texas to submit But critics of the laws said they moving forward with its new all voting law changes to the could hurt turnout among mi- voting rights strategy. in Texas is the Department of "Last month, th e U n ited Justice's first action to protect Justice Department for approv- nority voters and others. al for a 10-year period because Because of Texas's history States Supreme Court issued v oting rights f ollowing t h e of its history of discrimination. of discrimination, the voter-ID a deeply disappointing — and Shelby County decision speaks The Justice Department may law had to be cleared by the flawed — decision that struck volumes aboutthe seriousness also soon sue Texas over its Justice Department. The de- down a key part of the Vot- of Texas's actions," said Texas voter ID law, as well as North partment blocked the law, say- ing Rights Act of 1965, the State Rep. Trey Martinez FischCarolina, if that state passes a ing it would endanger minority cornerstone of modern civil er, the chairman of MALC. new voter ID law. voting rights. Texas sued the r ights law," Holder said i n "Texans should not — and Justice Department, leading to Philadelphia. will not — stand for the contin- a weeklong trial last summer. The court di d no t s t rike ued bullying of our state by the Last August, the U.S. District down the law itself or the proviObama administration," Sen. Court in Washington blocked sion that calls for special scruJohn Cornyn, R-Texas, said in a the law from going into effect, tiny of states with a history of statement. ruling that the legislation would discrimination. But it said that The Obama administration impose "strict, unforgiving burhad opposed the Texas voter- dens" on poor, minority voters. ID law signed in 2011 by Gov. Hours after last month's SuPerry, saying it endangered mi- preme Court ruling on voting Klevation Capital Strategies nority voting rights. Texas was rights, Texas Attorney GenEVERGREEN 775 Sw Bonnet way Suite 120 Bend one of eight states that passed eral Greg Abbott said the state In-Home Care Servlces Main: 541-728-0321 voter-ID laws in 2011. would move forward with its Care for loved ones. Comfort for all. 541-389-0006 www.elevationcapital.biz Supportersof the measures, voter-ID law and would also www.evergreeninhome.com

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who go to Subway are hoping to grab a beer. Owners of franchise businesses know they must follow the corporaterules, franchise expert Blair Nicol previously told The Bulletin for an unrelated story. They give up some freedom to be part of the brand and obtain a proven business model. Moore believes Subway rejected his plan because serving beer wouldn't be profitable for the whole chain, he said. But he argues that serving beer in Bend, and in other markets with strong ties to the craft-brewing industry, would help drive traffic into Subways, increasing the restaurants' profitability and market share. "It may not benefit every Subway, but what if it is beneficial to 1,000?" he said. "I was really looking forward to getting beer here. I love Bend because we have great beer in this town. I love (beer), and I think a lot of our customers would love it."

Congress has to come up with a new formula based on current data to determine which states should be subject to the requirements. Texas is the largest state that w as covered by Section 5 ofthe Voting Rights Act, which re-

Efforts to change hW aa~ Areas previously voting laws

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FRIDAY, JULY 26, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

FratPAC ContInued from A1 Even as deaths and injuries proliferate at their local chapters, traditional college fraternities resist a federal role in punishing hazing, contending that Wilson's proposal would infringe on student rights and that existing state criminal laws are sufficient. "Their opposition is very influential," said Diane Watson, a former Democratic member of Congress from California, who sponsored an unsuccessful 2003 bill that would have denied federal financial aid for oneyear to students sanctioned for hazing. Even though FratPAC hadn't yet been established, individual fraternities, schools and education groups "were ableto stop the progress of the bill," she said.

to sympathetic lawmakers: the Fraternity and Sorority Political Action Committee, nicknamed "FratPAC" on its Twitter

page.

FratPAC raised $506,852 for the 2011-2012 election cycle. Among its donors were executives from companies that fraternities and sororities hire to raise money for them; brokers from insurers that sell liability policies to Greek institutions; and lawyers who defend the groups i n n e g ligence and wrongful-death lawsuits. Kelley B ergstrom, p r esident of Bergstrom Investment Management, a K e nilworth, IIL-based firm t h a t i n vests family assets, gave $10,000 to FratPAC. Bergstrom is a l so chairman of t h e U n iversity of Florida's fundraising arm. Since fraternities and universities have strong anti-hazing policies, federal legislation isn't Surging membership needed, Bergstrom said. Harrison Kowiak was one At his national fraternity, Pi of 59 students who died in in- Kappa Phi, hazing "is a basis cidents involving fraternities for dismissing a chapter," he since 2005, about half of them sa>d. alcohol-related, according to Kevin O'Neill, Patton Boggs' data compiled by Bloomberg. deputy chairman o f p u blic Six others were paralyzed. Ten policy, helped start FratPAC in students died in 2012, the most 2005 andbecame itspresident. fatalities in at least a decade. He was a Lambda Chi Alpha At the same time, fraternity brother and the Orangeman membership and revenue are mascot at Syracuse University. surging. The 101 fraternities A Republican from Virginia, and sororities in the industry's O'Neill ran unsuccessfully for trade groups had 630,052 mem- Congress in 2007. bersin2012,up 25 percentfrom In 2011, in an effort to raise 503,875 in 2007. National frater- their W a s hington p r o f ile, nities and their charitable foun- FratPAC and t w o i n dustry dations generated $170 million groups — NIC and the National in revenue in 2010, mostly from Panhellenic Conference, which student dues, up from about represents sororities — com$150 million in 2005. Fraternity bined to form the Fraternal foundations collectively held Government Relations Coali$534 million in 2010. tion. FratPAC today calls itself One of FratPAC's top priori- the largest political action comties is a tax break for fraterni- mittee focused solely on college ties. Representative W i lson students and higher education. became a co-sponsor of the FratPAC's activity isn't limindustry's tax bill in April 2012, ited to Congress. It has also around the same time FratPAC lobbied against U.S. Education was lobbying against her haz- Department guidelines for ining proposal. vestigating sexual assaults on The roots of the tax legisla- campus. tion, and of fraternities' growIn 2011, when the Educaing W a shington i n fl uence, tion Department told colleges trace back to a 1996 fraternity- to require less evidence before house fire at the University of responding to allegations of North Carolina that killed five sexual assault, fraternity leadstudents. Afterwards, fraternity ers were among those who met leaders decided that they need- with department officials to ed a federal law that would let complain that the new policy them use funds in their chari- threatened student rights, actable foundations to outfit chap- cording to an industry memo ter houses with fire sprinklers. reviewed by Bloomberg News. In 2001, the industry engaged The guidelines remain in place, Patton Boggs, a Washington department spokesman Jim law and lobbying firm whose Bradshaw said. clients have included Goldman FratPAC also fought the atSachs. tempt at federal anti-hazing leg"Before that, I don't think we islation backed by Lianne Kowever had a Washington pres- iak and, as Kowiak thought, ence," said Carlton Bennett, a Wilson, a Florida Democrat. lawyer then on the board of the North-American I n t erfrater- One hazing victim nity Conference, an industry Harrison Kowiak, a New Jertrade group. sey native whose family moved In 2005, Patton Boggs cre- to Florida in his teens, aspired ated a vehicle to advance frater- to a career that would mix businities' agenda and contribute ness with his favorite sport,

70-year-old Wilson belongs to standard needed for criminal the Alpha Kappa Alpha soror- prosecution," he wrote. Uni verity and used to be a regional sity tribunals weighing hazing or sororities in college. On April 24, more than a dozen of these director. allegations might not provide grateful alumni extolled Greek life at an annual $500-a-plate dinThe self-proclaimed haze students with a lawyer or other ner in a Washington hotel ballroom for "FratPAC," the industry's buster stated in a 2012 press legal protections. political arm. One by one, they took the podium and praised frareleasethat she "played a key Hazing cases belong "at the role" in winning passage of state level," he added. ternities for teaching them loyalty, leadership, and practical skills. "We learned to tap akeg," declared Representative Steven PalaFlorida's tough anti-hazing law Six states lack anti-hazing zzo, a Mississippi Republican and Sigma Chi brother, who then in 2005. However, Adam Has- laws, and at least seven others yelled a cheer ashundreds of FratPACdonors applauded. Many ner, the sponsor of the law and have statutes that don't make of the legislators also pledged support for FratPAC'spet legislaformer majority leader of Flor- it a crime in the absence of inida'sHouse of Representatives, juries, said Cindy Tesch, a Unition: a multi-million-dollar tax break to let fraternities and sororities use charitable donations to renovate and help build chapter said in an interviewthat Wilson versity of Maine researcher. "was not a participant" in push- There's no uniform definition houses. "This time, we think we can get it done," said Ohio Republican ing the bill to near-unanimous of hazing among states or naSteve Stivers, a Delta Upsilon alumnus, adding, "We need more passage. Hasner, a Republican, tional database of incidents. Greeks in Congress." said that Wilson's advocacy of The U.S. Education Depart— Bloomberg News a federal law may have been ment has no position on the intended to capitalize on public- need for a federal hazing law, ity about Champion's death in spokeswoman Jane Glickman Florida. Wilson didn't respond said. golf. A college sophomore, he ences at Cornell University and to a request for comment. Leaders from FratPAC and was attending Lenoir-Rhyne elsewhere. A month after Champion's the other national groups ex"I'm not going to let my son death, Wilson declared that pressed their concerns to WilUniversity in Hickory on a golf she'd introduce federal legisla- son andher staffin M arch 2012, and academic scholarship. His die in vain," she said. trophies still line the shelves of She and her husband wanted tion in January 2012. When she Stellhorn, FratPAC's president, his Tampa, Fla., home. His golf a federal law that would impose missed that deadline, she reiter- said in telephone interviews. glove rests on a cherry-wood stern penalties for hazing and ated her pledge the following Most of the conversation fotable by the front door. require disclosure of incidents. May and September. cused on hazing, said Stellhorn, "There are no p ublic reIn November 2008, members Besides denyingfinancial aid who attended the meeting. of the Theta Chi fraternity at cords," Brian Kowiak, a mate- to students convicted in court Afterward, O'Neill m a inLenoir-Rhyne, a liberal arts rial sciences engineer, said in or punished by their school for tained "significant" c ontact college affiliated with the Evan- an interview. "It's unbelievable hazing, Wilson proposed creat- with Wilson's office, Stellhorn gelical Lutheran Church, took that not more is being done, ing a federal anti-hazing advi- said. He put other critics, inHarrison to a field at night and and there's so much resistance. sory committee. cluding college administrators, told him to traverse a gauntlet You hear every month, someAt t h e c o n gresswoman's in contact with Wilson. "We have been aggressively of brothers in pursuit of their one lost their life, someone is i nvitation, Kowiak an d h e r "sacred" rock, said L i anne taken to the hospital, someone daughter, Emma, now 15, joined working with the congressioKowiak, 53, a former account is burned." Wilson at the Capitol Hill news nal leader to develop a more director for a Johnson & Johnconferencein September. favorable approach," FratPAC Anti-hazing legislation "When did it become a tradi- and the other groups told their son subsidiary. As he ran, Harrison, weighOne fraternityleader agrees tion to beat each other and tor- members in a 2012 memo. "For ing 165 pounds, was beaten by with the Kowiaks. A federal ture each other for the purpose the moment, we believe that fraternity brothers, some 100 law would send a message that of fitting into an institution?" efforthas been successful and pounds heavier, who were lurk- hazing will be punished, said Wilson asked at the news con- federal hazing legislation is not ing in the darkness, she said. Juan Guardia, former chair of ference. "The time for Congress likely to be introduced in 2012." He diedofa brain hemorrhage. the National Association of La- to address it is now." As recently as May, fraterniAt first, fraternity members tino Fraternal Organizations, Kowiak wasn't aware that ties reiterated their opposition told Kowiak t hat H a r rison which comprises 20 fraternities FratPAC had been working to to a federal hazing law in an died from injuries in a football and sororities. "There's been dissuade the congresswoman internal document reviewed by game. A Theta Chi official said too many hazing cases." against filing the bill. Eight Bloomberg News. "This legislation would reit was from "a team-building One of the most prominent months earlier, FratPAC execuenterprise," said her husband, h azing deaths was that o f tive director O'Neill dispatched sult in more problems than it Brian Kowiak, 55. Only later, Robert Champion, 26, a drum a confidential memorandum to solves," FratPAC and its two as part of a lawsuit filed in 2009 major in the marching band colleagues saying he would try companion groups wrote. a gainst L e noir-Rhyne a n d of Florida A& M U n iversity, to "make changes" to her plan. O'Neill explained in his Jan. Theta Chi, did they learn that a historically black college in the gauntlet-running r i tual, Tallahassee. According to his 19, 2012, memo that Wilson known as "bulldogging," had parents' lawsuit, band mem- wanted a federal law because been an initiation tradition for bers in November 2011 severely she thought there were too years during Theta Chi's "Hell punched and kicked Champion few state prosecutions for hazWeek." on a chartered bus following a ing, with its "culture of silence No one was arrested. Prose- performance.Fourteen people that makes it difficult for vicOreck cutorsfound "no basis forcrim- were charged with crimes in- tims and witnesses to come inal charges," said Eric Farr, cluding manslaughter. Most of forward." Heritage O'Neill disagreed. Wilson's a spokesman for the Catawba the cases are pending. Vacuum County District Attorney. Last summer, Lianne Kow- proposal would unfairly tarPeter Kendall, a L e n oir- iak got in touch with Wilson, get students on financial aid, Now just Rhyne vice p resident, said who had begun promising fed- who would "face a severe penthrough a s p okesman that eral legislation after Champi- alty for conduct well below the $199 the school has "zero toler- on's death. A former elementaance" for h a z ing. M i chael ry school principal who entered Save SAVE $50 or $100 per unit Mayer, executivedirector of Congress in January 2011, Wil$100! on select motorized Indianapolis-based Theta Chi, son received a modest $1,000 Hunter Douglas products d eclined to c o mment. T h e donation from FratPAC that Was Kowiaks reached confidential September. Known for wearing with PowerRiseo $299.99 settlements with th e school flamboyant cowboy hats, the and fraternity, which denied

FratPAG and COngreSS —About 40 percent of U.S. senators and 25 percent of U.S. representatives belonged to fraternities

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wrongdoing. After Harrison's death, "for the first two or three years, we were just zombies," said Lianne Kowiak. Then, she began advocating against hazing, and spoke to student audi-

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A6 T H E BULLETIN • FRIDAY, JULY 26, 2013

Security Continued from A1 "There were some teachers who thought their students would like the lights turned off," he said. "But students asked for it to come back on. It was comforting to them." Dave Holmberg, alternative learning options coordinator for the High Desert Education Service District, thinks t he system is an impressive step in school security. After his 25 years in Bend-La Pine Schools as a teacher and administrator, he feels it's not too far of a step to make for school safety. "Peoplehave come to accept safety cameras in schools," said Holmberg, "This takes the idea to a whole new level

for response to an emergency situation." Calls to the Bend-La Pine Schools district office Thursday seeking comment were not returned. Shady Cove MiddleSchool in Jackson County installed the system, the first school in the country to have it, accord-

ing to Jackson County Sheriff Mike Winters. Installation begins Monday at Shady Cove E lementary School, on t h e same campus as the middle school. It should be online by the time the school year comes around, Tolosa said. "It kills me to think about a child who wants to go to school, play dodgeball and be

after the Sandy Hook school shooting. "Wouldn't it have been good to lock down the school, get on the speaker and tell the shooter it was over?" Tolosa asked. "It would have slowed the shooter d own, m a ybe confused him and potentially stopped his plans." Winters said he explained happy, being cowered down the system to Allen Barber, in a corner and slaughtered," director ofhuman resources Winters said Thursday. for Eagle Point School DisWinters was instrumental trict, who explained it to the in installing the technology at school board. With the school Shady Cove Middle School. board's a pproval, W i n ters T he sheriff s ai d h e t o o k took $100,000 and created a nearly $120,000 seized from sheriff' s office dispatch cendrug dealers and users to pay terfor the emergency system. for security systems in both Local businesses pitched in to schools. help install the system in the "It makes me feel good that school. we could take money from By Memorial Day weekend, drug users and turn it around Nexar SOS was installed. The to save children," he said. response was overwhelming, Winters was working with Tolosa said. "Overall, we're looking to Tolosa on another emergency management project in May see if this is something we when Tolosa told Winters he want to pursue or not," said was developing a school secu- Sale. rity system, and had decided — Reporter: 541-383-0348, to fast-track the technology bandersen@bendbulleti n.com

CHEVROLET

Memory Continued from A1 Steve Ramirez, Xu Liu and other scientists, led by Susumu Tonegawa, reported Thursday in the journal Science that they caused miceto remember being shocked in one location, when in reality the electric shock was delivered in a completely different location. The finding, said Tonegawa, a Nobel laureate for his work in immunology, and founder of the Picower Institute for Learning and Memory, of which the center is a part, is yet another cautionary reminder of how unreliable memory can be in mice and humans, and adds to evidence that he and others first presented a year ago in the journal Nature that the physicaltrace of a specific memory can be identified in a group of brain cells as it forms, and activated later by stimulating those same cells. Although mice are not people, the basic mechanisms of memory formation in m ammals are evolutionarily ancient, said Edvard Moser, a neurosci-

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L I T T L E . . . S A V E A LO ~ T.

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entist at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology, who studies spatial memory and navigation and was not part of Tonegawa's team. At this level of brain activity, he said, "the differencebetween a mouse and a human is quite small." The part of the brain in which memories are formed is similar in mice and humans. "What I f i n d f a scinating about this," Moser said, "is that you actually can point to a physical substrate to memory," what the researcherscall an engram. Neuroscienti sts have long talked about engrams, but Moser saidthe research this year and last was the closest they have gotten to pointing to a spot in the brain and saying, "That is the memory." Tonegawa said that, because the mechanisms of memory formation are almost certainly similar in mice and humans, part of the importance of the

research was "to make people realizeeven more than before how unreliable human memory is," particularly in criminal cases when so much is at stake. That unreliability, he said, prompts a question about evolution: "Why is our brain made in such a way that we form false memories?" No one knows, he said, but he wonders whether it has to do with the creativity that allows humans to envision possible events and combinations of real and imagined events in great detail. That rich internal experiencefuels work in the arts and sciences and other creative activities, he said. "Unless you have that kind of ability, there is no civilization," he said. But it could also provide a lot of raw material for false memories. Perhaps, he said, our faulty memoriesrepresent"atrade-off for this tremendous benefit."

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Editorial, B4 Obituaries, B5

Weather, B6

©

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, JULY 26, 2013

BRIEFING

ixessu ese 0 1 a

Dog 'Chance' not dragged The DeschutesCounty Sheriff's Office has concluded the dog "Chance"

was injured asthe result of it jumping out a vehicle window while the vehicle

was moving, not dragged behind. No criminal citations

have beenissued, according to anewsrelease. The dogwasfound injured Monday onSmith

By Shelby R. King and Scott Hammers The Bulletin

The Oregon Department of Environmental Quality received Thursday a list of potential fixes for sewage contamination of groundwater in southern Deschutes and northern Klamath counties. Dozens of residents turned out for a meeting Thursday

night at La Pine Middle School to hear the recommendations of a committee organized by DEQ to consider the issue. The South Deschutes/North Klamath Groundwater Protection Steering Committee — which hasmet nearly 50 times since its formation about three years ago — presented its recommendations at a joint public meeting of the Board of

Commissioners and the Planning Commission. The committee determined that 85 percent of south DeschutesCounty residents' ground- and tapwater could consist of at least 25 percent partially treated sewage. Their recommendations include asking the DEQ to approve an exception that would allow sewers and sewage

www.bendbulletin.com/local

i newaer

treatment facilities to be built in areas where statewide landuse rules say such systems cannot exist. "I think one of the key successes the committee had was

The committee also recommended that DEQ test and monitor possible groundwater contamination, form a sanitation authority to protect groundwater, limit the amount of livestock per acre, find financial solutions to offset costs to homeowners and perform community outreach and education. SeeWater/B2

bringing DLCD, DEQ, and Deschutes and Klamath counties together about the ... exception," committee member John Blakinger wrote in the official report.

Rock Road in Terrebonne. A deputy told The

Bulletin onWednesday the Sheriff's Office had

a report the dogwas dragged behind a vehicle. That report turned out to

be incorrect. The dogwasnot with

BEND-LA PINE

Bendsewermodel results

District settles

A new computer model of Bend's sewer system reveals the location of existing and future problems. This map shows problems in a section of south Bend. To find out if there are problems in your neighborhood, check a larger map online at (insert URL).

its actual owner and had

Basm 5

Legend

apparently jumpedout the passengerwindow.

Existing problems, even without a storm Existing problems, during a typical storm Problems predicted after 20 years of population growth, during a typical storm Problems predicted after 20 years of population growth, during a major storm

The driver did not know thedog hadjumped, the

news releasesaid. The investigation will be submitted to the Deschutes County District Attorney's Office for review.

The Sheriff's Office says the dog is doing well in the care of BrightSide

Sewer basins

in 5

dispute with former coach

, p e I lp i p

•r Pine Ridge

Pheasant Rur% ~

~

I ii

By Sheila G. Miller The Bulletin

Shelter in Redmond.The dog required hoursof surgeries andwill require more. More than$5,000

Gravity sewer mains Less than 14-inch diameter — G r eater than 14-inch diameter —— —Force main

in donations has been

received for his carefrom as far away asAustralia.

Bend-La Pine Schools has settled a discrimination lawsuit with Summit High School's former cross country coach,

/ t River Rim

a

agreeing to pay $25,000

Gravity main

but not admitting any fault. Dave Clark served Cla r k as the head of Summit High's crosscountry program from the school's opening in 2001 until the end of the 2011 season. During that time, Summit's girls team won four straight Class 5A state championships, and the boys team captured its first state title in fall 2011. He was removed from his coaching post in June 2012, and initially sued the district in October 2012 in Deschutes County Circuit Court, for $400,000. The lawsuit was eventually moved to U.S. District Court in Eugene. In the lawsuit, Clark alleged he was fired because he complained about his program needing more coaches, and because he suggested to officials that the school might be violating federal gender equity law Title IX, with officials claiming he favoredfemale runners and implying his relationships with female runners were inappropriate. The lawsuit asked for up to $50,000 in lost back and futurewages, as well as $250,000 in lost coaching opportunities and $100,000 in non-economic damages. SeeCoach /B5

Warm Springs area fire grows The fire ontheWarm Springs IndianReserva-n tion grew northeast by a couple thousandacres" Thursday, according to Bill Queen, anOregon Incident Management Team Fourspokesman.

Source: City of Bend Greg Cross/The Bulletin

en ma savemone o n Seweru ra e S

The fire, called the

SunnysideTurnoff Fire, is moving toward a small cluster of houses on the

Deschutes knownas Dant, northeast of the Mutton Mountains. "It's heading that n n way, Queen said. We're setting up lines in the

mountains using aridge there, so we'rekeeping our eye onit. " The fire grewby1,660 acres Wednesdaynight,

By Hillary Borrud The Bulletin

or the first time, Bend has a clear picture of the problems throughout nearly all of its sewer system, and that could save taxpayers millions. A new computer model of the system reveals serious problems in the sewers. But there are fewer than previously thought, and the city might have more time than it expected to fix some of them. The information comes from a new hydraulic model that consultants recently completed, which covers 90 percent of the city system. It can identify current problems and predict issues that will arise. "That actually produced some pretty good news," said Tom Hickmann, Bend's engineering and infrastructure planning director. "While

F

according to Northwest

InteragencyCoordination Information. Containment is at 40 percent. The

growth hasslowedsince Tuesday night, when the fire grew by 5,800 acres.

Queen alsosaid the fire has grown out of the

Warm Springs Indian Reservation and is working its way onto both private and Bureau of Land

Management Land. — From staff reports

More fireup date and briefing, 82

Fire updates For the most up-todate information, visit bendbulletin.com. Fire statuses as of Thursday afternoon:

I'~"--- Madras v i

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—' B•rns

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1.Sunnyside Turnoff • Area: 47,153acres; 73.68 square miles

• Threatened structures: 50 • Containment: 40%

• Cause: Human 2. Stagecoach • Area: 330 acres; 0.52

square miles • Threatened structures: 150 • Containment: 40%

• Cause: Human

Tw,R1IC

Interim principal appointed of Montoya filing a race and age discrimination Bend La-Pine complaint against the Schools announced district July 9. Montoya Thursday evening that had been placed on they have selected an Wiseman administrative leave interim principal to June 24 pending an take over Bear Creek Elemeninvestigation. The district will tary School while current not comment on the reasons principal Matt Montoya is on Montoya was placed on leave, paid administrative leave. citing confidentiality laws. Pine Ridge Elementary Montoya's wife, Jennifer School student services special- Montoya, said in June that her ist Anissa Wiseman will take husband received notification up administrative duties at Bear that he might be fired because Creek effective immediately. of job performance issues. "We believe it is critical to Since placing Montoya on have clarity around the buildpaid administrative leave, ing's leadership now for staff the district has opened up and parents," Superintendent a second investigation into Ron Wilkinson said in a news Montoya's discrimination release. "With school starting complaint, and held a closed in just a few weeks, there is a executive session Tuesday. lot of work to complete." According to the news The naming of the interim release, Wiseman has more principal comes on the heels than 18 years of teaching and The Bulletin

Il FiBend, n

A 2007 city master plan would increase sewer capacity with new gravity trunk lines around the city, at an estimated cost of $170 million. This included a $61.6 million gravity line in southeast Bend, which the city already started to build. However, city officials put that plan on

lecting data," Skidmore told the committee at a recent meeting. "By actually having 90 percentofour system modeled now, we just have a better understanding of what the constraints and challenges are." The city did make a significant investment in gathering data and creating the model. To ensure the computer model is accurate, the city did extensive monitoring of sewage flow throughout the city. Consultants used the data to calibrate the model. "By the time we are all done, including additional data gathering efforts, we will probably be in the neighborhood of about $3 million that we have spent between data collection efforts, the model and all associated analysis that goes with it,n Hickmann said. See Sewer/B5

BEAR CREEKELEMENTARY

By Megan Kehoe

-

lage Shopping Center.

hold in May 2012 to develop the new hydraulic model and searchfor less costly solutions. Hickmann said it's already clear the city will be able to defer or avoid tens of millions of dollars in sewer work. "We will likely not be making the level of investment that we thought we were going to need prior," Hickmann sa>d. It's too early to know exactly how much the city might save, Hickmann said. The city created a citizen committee last year to evaluatethe sewer problems and potential solutions. At a recent meeting of the group, Assistant City Manager Jon Skidmore said the results from the new computer model are worth the investment. "This really to me proves the value of investing in col-

P AID ADVERTISEMENT

'Bend

:

we certainly have problems, they weren't as extensive as we thought they may be. That was encouraging." A previous model covered only 30percent ofthe sewer system. In some areas of the city, there are capacity shortages in the sewers that make it difficult for new businesses to open and for new development to occur. In particular, there are problems in southeastBend, the central core of the city and the north end of the city around Cascade Vil-

administrative experience and has served as student services specialist at Pine Ridge Elementary School for the last eight years. She also taught at Bear Creek Elementary for five years in the late 90s and early 2000s, and is familiar with the school. The news release also stated Wiseman is fluent in Spanish. Bear Creek is the only school in the district to have a dual-language immersion program. "I look forward to working closely with students, families, staff and the entire Bear Creek community," Wiseman said in the release. "There are so many great programs at Bear Creek that are designed with all learners in mind — I am excited to be a part of a team that provides so many options for kids." — Reporter: 541-383-0354, mkehoe@bendbulletin.com

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B2

TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, JULY 26, 2013

PUBLIC OFFICIALS For The Bulletin's full list, including federal, state, county and city levels, visit www.bendbulletin.comn/OffiCial.

STATE OF OREGON • Gov. John Kitzhaber, D 160 State Capitol, 900 Court St. Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-378-4582 Fax:503-378-6872 Web: http://governor.oregon.gov • Secretary of State Kate Brown, D 136 State Capitol Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1616 Fax:503-986-1616 Email: oregon.sos©state.or.us • Treasurer Ted Wheeler, D 159 Oregon State Capitol 900 Court St. N.E. Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-378-4329 Email: oregon.treasurer©state.or.us Web: www.ost.state.or.us • Attorney General Ellen Rosenblum, D 1162 Court St. N.E. Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-378-4400 Fax: 503-378-4017 Web: www.doj.state.or.us • Labor Commissioner Brad Avakian 800 N.E. Oregon St., Suite1045 Portland, OR97232 Phone:971-673-0761 Fax:971-673-0762 Email: boli.mail©state.or.us Web: www.oregon.gov/boli

LEGISLATURE Senate • Sen. Ted Ferrioli, R-District 30 (includesJefferson, portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. N.E., S-323 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1950 Email: sen.tedferrioliINstate.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/ferrioli • Sen. Tim Knopp, R-District 27 (includes portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. N.E., S-423 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1727 Email: sen.timknoppINstate.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/knopp • Sen. Doug Whitsett, R-District28 (includes Crook,portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. N.E., S-303 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1728 Email: sen.dougwhitsett©state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/whitsett

House • Rep. Jason Conger, R-District 54 (portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. N.E., H-477 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1454 Email: rep.jasonconger@state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/conger • Rep. John Huffman, R-District 59 (portion of Jefferson) 900 Court St. N.E., H-476 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1459 Email: rep.johnhuffmanIestate.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/huffman • Rep. Mike McLane, R-District55 (Crook, portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. N.E., H-385 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1455 Email: rep.mikemclaneINstate.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/mclane • Rep. Gene Whisnant, R-District53 (portion of DeschutesCounty) 900 Court St. N.E., H-471

Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1453 Email: rep.genewhisnant©state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/whisnant

DESCHUTES COUNTY 1300 N.W.Wall St., Bend, OR97701 Web: www.deschutes.org Phone:541-388-6571 Fax: 541-382-1692

County Commission • Tammy Baney, R-Bend Phone: 541-388-6567 Email: Tammy Baney@co.deschutes

Phone: 541-480-8141 Email: srussell@ci.bend.or.us

• Karen Ward kward©ci.la-pine.or.us

CITY OF REDMOND

CITY OF PRINEVILLE

716 S.W.EvergreenAve. Redmond, OR97756 Phone: 541-923-7710 Fax: 541-548-0706

387 N.E. Third St., Prineville, OR97754 Phone: 541-447-5627 Fax: 541-447-5628 Email: cityhall@cityofprineville.com Web: www.cityofprineville.com

City Council • Mayor George Endicott Phone: 541-948-3219 Email: George.Endicott©ci.redmond .Ql'.Os

Rese

City Council • Betty Roppe

NG Sr ON

Email: broppeINcityofprineville.com • Jack Seley Email: jseley@cityofprineville.com • Stephen Uffelman Email: suffelman©cityofprineville.com • Dean Noyes Email: dnoyes INcityofprineville.com • Gordon Giuespie Email: ggillespie@cityofprineville.com • Jason Beebe Email: jbeebe©cityofprineville.com • Gail Merritt Email: gmerritt@cityofprineville.com • Jason Carr Email: To be determined

County Court

CITY OF SISTERS

• Ken Fahlgren

520 E. CascadeAvenue, P.O.Box39 Sisters, OR 97759 Phone: 541-549-6022 Fax: 541-549-0561

Phone: 541-447-6555 Email: ken.fahlgren INco.crook.or.us

JEFFERSON COUNTY

City Council

City Council

• City Manager Eric King Phone: 541-388-5505 Email: citymanager©ci.bend.or.us

P.O. Box 3055, 16345 Sixth St. La Pine, OR97739 Phone: 541-536-1432 Fax: 541-536-1462

• Nancy Diaz, Laura Dudley, Amy Mccully, Sharon Drr, Shannon Poole, Hilario Diaz Phone:541-546-6494

City Council

City Council

• Jodie Barram Phone: 541-388-5505 Email: jbarramIoci.bend.or.us • Mark Capeu Phone: 541-388-5505 Email: mcapell@ci.bend.or.us • Jim Clinton Phone: 541-388-5505 Email: jclinton@ci.bend.or.us • Victor Chudowsky Phone: 541-749-0085 Email: vchudowskyOci.bend.or.us. • Doug Knight Phone: 541-388-5505 Email: dknight©ci.bend.or.us • Scott Ramsay Phone: 541-388-5505 Email: sramsay©ci.bend.or.us • Sally Russell

• Kathy Agan Email: kaganOci.la-pine.or.us • Greg Jones gjones©ci.la-pine.or.us • Ken Mulenex Email: kmulenex@ci.la-pine.or.us • Stu Martinez Email: smartinez©ci.la-pine.or.us

.QI'.Us

CITY OF BEND 710 N.W.Wall St. Bend, OR97701 Phone:541-388-5505 Web: www.ci.bend.or.us

NEWS OF RECORD July 17, in the 60800 block of Brookswood Boulevard. Unauthorized use — A vehicle was The Bulletin will update items reported stolen at 3:09 p.m. July in the Police Log when such a request is received. Any 17, in the 1100 block of Southwest new information, such as the Brookswood Boulevard. dismissal of charges or acquittal, Theft — A theft was reported at must be verifiable. For more 1:36 p.m. July18, in the 63300 information, call 541-383-0358. block of Lavacrest Street. Unlawful entry — A vehicle BEND POLICE was reported entered at 6:45 DEPARTMENT a.m. July19, in the 61200 block of Brittle Bush Street. Theft — A theft was reported at Criminal mischief — An act of 5:39 p.m. July14, in the1600 criminal mischief was reported block of Northeast Third Street. at 1:24 p.m. July 19, in the 2700 Theft — A theft was reported at block of Northeast Mesa Court. 1:21 p.m. July15, in the 600 block Unauthorized use — A vehicle of Northeast Bellevue Drive. was reported stolen at 3:59 Unlawful entry — A vehicle was p.m.July 22,in the 20400 reported entered at 3:23 p.m. block of Brandis Court. July15, in the 3300 block of Burglary — A burglary was Northeast Stonebrook Loop. reported at 8:24 a.m. July Unlawful entry — A vehicle 23, in the1100 block of was reported entered at 5:47 Northeast Paula Drive. p.m. July15, in the1900 block Burglary — A burglary was of Northeast Taylor Court. reported at1:40 p.m. July Theft — A theft was reported at 22, in the 1700 block of 7:51 p.m. July15, in the1200 block of Northeast Revere Avenue. Southeast Tempest Drive. Criminal mischief — An act of Burglary— A burglary was criminal mischief was reported reported at12:43 p.m. July at 6:44 p.m. July 15, in the 2700 16, in the 20700 block of block of Northeast Mesa Court. Smoke Stack Lane. Theft — A theft was reported at Burglary— A burglary was 9:51 a.m. July15, in the 2600 reported at 9:39 a.m. July block of Northeast Forum Drive. 17, in the 2500 block of Northeast Neff Road. Burglary— A burglary was PRINEVILLE POLICE reported at 10:46 a.m. July DEPARTMENT 17, in the1700 block of Southeast lronwood Court. Theft — A theft was reported at Unlawful entry — A vehicle was 12:55 p.m. July 24, in the area reported entered at 11:34 a.m. of Northwest Third Street.

POLICE LOG

Water Continued from B1 Each of the above recommendations were approved unanimously by the 11-member committee. One recommendation, approved 7-1, calls for a moratorium on requiring residents to upgrade their systems or use alternative treatment technology to limit the amount of nitrates entering the groundwater. In a presentation at Thursday's me eting, Bl a kinger said the alternative treatment technology approach — mandated by Deschutes County in 2 008, then reversed by voters the following year — was never a good solution to the groundwater contamination problem. Because roughly 75 percent of the lots in the area are less than two acres, the continued use of septic systems will cause pollution levels to continue to rise, he said, even if re sidents installed the new technology. In a questiort-and-answer period, residents peppered members of the committee with specific queries. Several asked for c larification as to why alternative treatment technologies are being

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CITY OF CULVER 200 W. First St., Culver, OR97734 Phone:541-546-6494 Fax:541-546-3624

Mayor • Shawna Clanton

HOMES PRICED FROM

CITY OF METOLIUS

~

636 Jefferson Ave., Metolius, OR97741 Phone: 541-546-5533

NiOR T H W ES T $ 3 95,000-$759,900 I' R O S S I N G i

City Council

2487 NW Drouillard Ave.

• Bob Bozarth, John Chavez, Bill Reynolds, Tia Poweu, Patty Wyler Phone:541-546-5533

required in n e i ghborhoods where groundwater is relatively deep,and others asked how the adoption of the recommendations could affect land-useplanning, permitting and new construction. Committee members said answers to such questions would be better put to the DEQ. Deschutes County Planning Commission member Ed Criss told the audience the committee's work could serve as the beginning of a more involved planning process. "You folks realize you're the ones that have the power in this?" Criss said. "Not your elected officials, you do." This informational joint meeting was ca lled a s a first step in t he education and community ou t r each process, said Commission Chairman Alan Unger. "The committee has the opportunity to p resent the work they've done and make recommendations," Unger said. "After this, it will be up to the DEQ to take the report and turn it into the next steps they believe are necessary."

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'A"" dj +

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2341 NW Floyd Ln. TYEE DEVELOPMENT INC

I

I

The Bureau of LandManagement js currently wrapping up the Stagecoach Fire, which started

Monday south of La Pine.Thefire did noi grow Thursday aitd js now 70 percent contained, said BLM spokeswoman Ljsa Clark. It was

about 330 acres. Fjrefjghtjng forces were downgraded from 157 t0125 firefighters Thursday evening. Clark expects the fire to be100 percent

contai ned by6p.m.today.

day, but things are looking really good," Clark said.

District hires Summit assistant principal Bend La-pjne Schools announced Thursday that they have hired Jay Etnjer as assistant prjncjpal of Summit High School. Etnjer currentlyworks as a teacher and department chairat Sam Barlow High School jn Gresham. He

I !r

II

DIRECTIONS:West on Skyliners Rd., right on NW Lemhi Pass Dr., right on NW Floyd Ln.

QI

— Reporters: 541-383-0376, sfzing®bendbulfetirLcom or 541-383-0387,shammersC< bendbulfetirt.com.

A LL A R O U N D

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• Mike Ahern, John Hatfield, Wayne Fording Phone: 541-475-2449 Email: commissioner@co.jefferson

• Mayor Melanie Widmer Email: mwidmer©ci.madras.or.us • Tom Brown Email: thbrownINci.madras.or.us • Walt Chamberlain Email: wchamberlain©ci.madras.

• Royce Embanks Jr. Email: rembanks@ci.madras.or.us • JimLeach Email: jleach©ci.madras.or.us • Richard Ladeby Email: rladebyOci.madras.or.us • Charles Schmidt Email: cschmidt©ci.madras.or.us

County Commission

City Council

• David Asson Phone:503-913-7342 Email: dassonINci.sisters.or.us • Wendy Holzman Phone: 541-549-8558 wholzman©ci.sisters.or.us • Brad Boyd Phone: 541-549-2471 Email: bboyd©ci.sisters.or.us • Catherine Childress Phone:541-588-0058 Email: cchildress©ci.sisters.or.us • McKibben Womack Phone: 541-598-4345 Email: mwomackINci.sisters.or.us

66 S.E. D St., Madras, OR97741 Phone: 541-475-2449 Fax: 541-475-4454 Web: www.co.jefferson.or.us

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• Jay Patrick Phone: 541-508-8408 • Alan Unger, D-Redmond Email: Jay.Patrick©ci.redmond.or.us Phone: 541-388-6569 • Tory Allman I Email: Alan Ungeroco.deschutes.or.us Phone: 541-923-7710 • Tony DeBone, R-La Pine • Joe Centanni Phone: 541-388-6568 Phone: 541-923-7710 Email: Tony DeBone@co.deschutes.or.us Joe.Centanni Nci.redmond.or.us • Camden King Phone:541-604-5402 CROOK COUNTY Email: Camden.King@ci.redmond 300 N.E. Third St., Prineville, OR 97754 .QI'.Us Phone: 541-447-6555 • Ginny McPherson Fax: 541-416-3891 Phone: to bedetermined Email: administration©co.crook.or.us Email: Ginny.McPhersonIoci.redmond CITY OF MADRAS Web: co.crook.or.us .QI.us • Ed Dnimus 71 S.E. D Street, Madras, OR97741 •CrookCountyJudgeMikeMccabe Phone:541-475-2344 Phone:541-604-5403 Phone: 541-447-6555 Fax:541-475-7061 Email: Ed.0nimus©ci.redmond.or.us Email: mike.mccabe©co.crook.or.us .QI'.Us

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FRIDAY, JULY 26, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

B3

REGON AROUND THE STATE

u noma c aira ain reuses o ui overa air By Steven Dubois

Portland and Milwaukie is 50 percent complete, and is projected to open on Sept. 12, 2015. The almost $1.5 billion project includes a bridge across the Willamette River that will be off-limits to cars.

Bridge construction started in 2011, and work on the light-rail line began in May 2012. TriMet said Thursday that the project has created more than 6,800 direct and indirect jobs, including 2,435 in

construction. GOVernar SignS SentenCing dill —Gov. John Kitzhaber has signed a bill he hopes will curb the state's prison population. Kitzhaber signed the measure during a ceremony in his office Thursday, flanked by district attorneys and sheriffs. Among other things,

the measure reduces sentences for certain drug and property crimes and driving with a suspended license. It's projected to keep the prison population flat for about five years. Kitzhaber sought to

limit prison growth for a decade, but he madeconcessions to win support from the law-enforcement community.

Suicide patrols ou Portland dridge —Trainedvolunteers wearing orange vests planned to begin patrolling Portland's Vista

Bridge Thursday evening to prevent more people from committing suicide. The group Friends of Vista Bridge told KOIN that volunteers will be on the so-called suicide bridge until mid-August, when the city plans to install temporary fencing to prevent jump-

ing. There have already been four suicides this year on the bridge in the Goose Hollow neighborhood west of downtown Portland.

Homeless outside Portland City Hall —Twodaysafter

Thomas Boyd The Oregonian

was promoted to l ast year after listing Cogen as one of her two references. Manhas had already been a manager within the health department, and Cogen said he did not pull strings to get her the new,

oury said after the resolution was introduced. But Cogen was not ready to go, saying it's only been a few days since his colleagues called for a n i n d ependent investigation. "I believe the investigation higher-paying job. The resolution calling for will find no abuse of power," Cogen's resignation said the he said. "But, in any event, affair has diminished Cogen's why call for an investigation ability to lead and that his without being willing to even real or perceived misuse of let it begin." county assets to further the Though Cogen received no relationship has lessened the support from the board, he community's trust. got plenty of backing from the "This has obviously been a roughly two dozen citizens huge distraction in the pub- who testified on the matter, lic's eye, and it needs to end," some of whom acknowledged Commissioner Deborah Kafa friendship with the chair-

Proving citizenship a roadblock for driver,94 The Associated Press GOLD HILL — When Helen Mary Thomas was born 94 years ago in Tennessee, there was no doctor in attendance at her parents' rural home, and no birth certificate was issued. That posed no problem for nine decades, until Thomas tried to r enew her O regon driver's license in May. State law now requires drivers to show proof of U.S. citizenship, such as a birth certificate or passport, but she was unable to do so, the Medford Mail Tribune reported. Thomas lives in the Southern Oregon town of Gold Hill, and she has much else to establish her identity. She is a r etired HewlettPackard Co. employee from California who worked in the rivet department. She owns a home, votes, has grown children and grandchildren. She has a Social Security card, she's covered by M edicare, and she's been paying taxes since before World War II. "I'm sure I'm not the only o ne f a l l in g t h r o ug h t h e cracks," she said. "I was born and raised in America. But I never got a birth certificate. It's like I'm not here." The law calling for proof of citizenship was approved in 2008. With licenses getting renewed at eight-year intervals, many people are now showing their legal presence for the first time, said Department of Transportation s p o k esman David House. "Most of them have never had to dig out a birth certificate or a passport to establish that," he said. T he state a g ency g a v e Thomas a temporary license. I t expires Aug. 29. I n t h e meantime, state workers advised her to send paperwork to the Social Security Administration to get information that could establish her place and date of birth. She did, in June, but hasn't gotten back what she needs, leaving her worried about getting around. "I'm on my own — this is a necessity, not a pleasure," she sard.

TriMet says the 7.3-mile Orange Line running between downtown

Embattled Multnomah County board chairman Jeff Cogen takes his chair Thursday for the first time since he admitted having a longterm affair with Sonia Manhas, the county health department's director of policy and planning.

The Associated Press

PORTLAND — The leader of Oregon's most populous county again refused to resign over a sex scandal Thursday, despite pressure from his fellow commissioners. "I deserve a c h ance for the facts to come out," board Chairman Jeff Cogen said, just before a no-confidence vote by his colleagues on the five-member com m i ssion. The otherfour commissioners voted for Cogen to quit, but the resolution failed because it required a unanimous vote. Cogen, 51, e m phatically said "No." The m orning spectacle before a roomful of m edia, county employees and curious members of the public occurred nine days after Cogen admitted having a long-term affair w it h S o nia M a nhas, the county h e alth d e partment's director of policy and planning. The state Attorney General's office is investigating whether Cogen'saffair represented an abuse of power, and whether any p ublic money was misused during the relationship, such as for travel. Cogen is married with two children, as is Manhas. Their relationship began i n 2 0 11 and ended this spring. Manhas, 4 0 , res i g ned Wednesday from the job she

TriMet Orange Line —The Portland regional transit agency

l jS SCHWAB

.

.

Salem police 'most wanted' man in jail —A manwhose face appeared on billboards in the Salem Police Department's10

Most Wanted List was arraigned Wednesday in Marion County Court. Ricky Scott Exe Jr. is facing charges of burglary, bank rob-

bery, carjacking and possessing cocaine and heroin. The Statesman Journal reports he was arrested Friday in Portland. Police had asked the public to help look for the 33-year-old after a burglary last month in which firearms were taken. — From wire reports

Find It All Online bendbulletin.com

See the Official Fair Guide in The Bulletin and Redmond SpokesmanJul y 24th

-•

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tions require that the walkway be clear between 7 a.m. and 9 p.m.

JULY 31$T THROUGH AUSUST 4TH DESCHUTESCOUNTY FAIR 8 EXPO CENTER

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m an. All bu t t w o s ai d h e should remain on the job until the investigation concludes. In general, they said everyone makes mistakes and it should be up to the voters to decide whether he keeps his job. Cogen is up for re-election next year. "I am very glad to not be Mrs. Jeff Cogen today, but I'm also very glad to be a Multnomah County resident and taxpayer under the l eadership of Jeff Cogen," said T.J. Browning of Portland. "I tell you this to remind you the difference between a private trust and a public trust. To err is human."

a homeless camp was removed from the walkway in front of the Portland City Hall, campers are back. The Oregonian reports the

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Other contests throughout the day. Some with cash prizes, some with ribbons, some with carniva1 tickets as prizes. Including: ABODI".'

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• Games and contests by Ridgefield High Lacrosse Team • Smokey Bear Birthday Party, Saturday, 4 p.m.

Sudsy s Sarn It's an interactive water station built like a mini-theme park with animals that talk! Washing your hands has never been so fun! Awarded one of the most popular Fair attractions in the West. THE BULLETIN FAMILY FUN ZONE IS MADE POSSIBLE BY THE SUPPORT OF THESE FINE SPONSORS: ~

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TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, JULY 26, 2013

The Bulletin

EDITORIALS

u icnee sino in on o acase

AN LNDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER

fertile ground. For Bear Creek Elementary School parents, the information gap is vast as they contemplate the situation of Principal Matt Montoya. Montoya, who has an enthusiastic group of supporters, was placed on paid administrative leave in late June by the Bend-La Pine Schools administration. District officials refused to say why, because it's a personnel issue. Into that information vacuum came reports from Montoya's wife that he might be fired based on job performance issues.For parents who believe Montoya has been good for Bear Creek, that didn't add up. But no details were forthcoming from the district, leavingthe parents frustrated and angry. Bend-La Pine Superintendent Ron Wilkinson said legal advice prevents the district from saying more. Montoya's personnel records are protected by state law, Wilkinson said, and the district could be accused of violatinghis rights to privacy and confidentiality if it talked about the reasons for its actions. Wilkinson said he pressed legal advisers recently to agree to reveal the fact that Montoya had filed a discrimination claim against the district after he was placed on leave. Wilkinson said that was the only wayto explain the delay in resolving the situation while that complaint is investigated. But saying more could violate the law and jeopardize possible settlements, he said, and ignoring legal advice could violate requirements of the district's liability insurance.

The result is terrible public policy, in which taxpayers are blocked from critical information about how their public servants are operating, and some parents are alienated from the school district. They lack information they need to evaluate where the fault lies. Rick Kaufman is executive director of community relations for the Bloomington, Minn., schools, and consults with districts across the nation on school communications. He said the Montoya case sounds like the classic type that frustrates many districts and communities. Minnesota tried various legislative changes a few years ago, he said, but one supposed solution only caused other problems. School districts walk a tightrope, he said, between employee rights and the need to inform parents and taxpayers. The Oregon School Boards Association advises its members that it's good employment practice to keep discussions about employee performance confidential, according to communications specialist Alex Pulaski. OSBA attorney Lisa Freiley said the laws involved are complex, both at the state and federal level. In some instances, she added, information can be released after investigation is complete, particularly with prominent officials. We'd argue that a school principal is a fairly prominent person, and we urge Bend-La Pine to make every effort to find a way to make results of its probe public. In the meantime, honesty and healthy public discourse are the losers.

Taxpayers paylobbying tab regonians maynothavebeen aware of it, but theyput nearly $2 million toward lobbying the Legislature this year. In fact, of the top 10 legislative lobbying efforts, eight were financed either by governmentunions or government agencies. Numbers from the Oregon Government Ethics Commission show that Oregon Health 8 Science University spent the most, more than $324,000, on lobbyists during the 2013 legislative session. The Oregon Education Association and the Oregon American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees Council came in at numbers 2 and 3, spending some $571,614 between them. Others in the top 10 included the League of Oregon Cities, the City of Portland, the Oregon Public Employees Union, the Special Districts Association of Oregon and the Service Employees International Union Local 503. Only Altria, the parent company oftobacco company Phillip Morris, and the Oregon Nurses Association were not somehow directly linked to government. Clearly, government unions and

government agencies themselves had a huge stake in what went on in Salemthis spring. There was reform to the Public Employees Retirement System pension program, for one. That alone had an impact not only on unionized public employees but on nearly every government entity in Oregon, from the state itself down to the Winchester Bay Sanitation District. The state budget was another huge item for AFSCME, SEIU and OEA employees, as well. The governor's office, meanwhile, sought money for Gov. John Kitzhaber's education and health programs and worked hard on PERS reform, among other issues. And so on. All of which is well and good, if ironic. Ironic because, in the end, it's the citizens of Oregon who indirectly pick up the tab for all these efforts at persuasion. We're not asked to sign checks for lobbyists, of course, but our taxes keep city halls open, pay teacher salaries, even keep the governor's office running. And when they lobbied, they used our tax money to do so, whether we agreed with them or not.

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NI Nickel's Worth Was Trayvon Martin really a child?

Considering I n ternal R evenue Service's choice of exclusively targeting conservative groups in its brewing 501(c)4 scandal, here's a similar story in the Justice Department of Attorney General Eric Holder. The owner ofGibson, a large donor to conservative causes, lost millions in production and legal fees fighting the Department of Justice charge of ille-

blocking the trail should be cut out to preventinjury. Recently, I walked around it again. The same trees were blocking the If a person writing about the Zimtrail, and several more from last winmerman-Martin case says Trayvon ter were added to the count. The largMartin was a child, it is easy to beest is a monster yellow pine that has lieve that he/she believes that Traythick limbs growing out of its side von was murdered. that require leaving the trail, and cirTo be sure, legally he was a child, cling up a steep side hill to get around meaning he wasn't old enough to gally importing an endangered spe- it and get back to the traiL drink or vote. cies of wood from Madagascar. AfI realize that the Forest Service But this d efinition o f " c h ild" terthe phony and fl awed "form 302, has a big load of things to do every doesn't take into account the height, Finding if Fact" interrogation method year, especially during the fire seaweight and physical development of (allowing two FBI agents to edit their son, and that they have to assign pria person. I have not seen the height, own narrative of the interrogation; no orities of work to be done. But holy weight or body development of 17- video or audio record), Gibson pled moly, Superman, you are charged year-old Trayvon. out. This though Gibson held legal with providing campgrounds and There is evidence of a beating on documentation proving righteous im- trails that are safe to use. Two men George Zimmerman's body in the port practices. (Wall Street Journal, with a chain saw could clear the trail form of multiple abrasions and cuts Aug. 20, 2012: Gibson is off the hook. in a day's time. Why are you waiting on the back of his head (A profes- Who's next?) In addition, he is barred for someone to be injured or killed sional witness for the prosecution from talking about it. Contradicting before acting? said they were not significant'?), and form 302 publicly produces an imGary Will a grossly bloody nose. mediate charge of lying to a federal La pine It is not rational to think that any- agent;a five-year sentence. It's just been reported that a large Why are they still texting? body else, other than Zimmerman, with these injures, would call for help. liberal donor, Martin Guitar, using Trayvon's death is a tragedy. I of- identical wood, wasn't charged. Can anyone explain to me, if the fer my sympathy to his family and All fair-minded people must agree. fine for the use of a cellphone or friends, but I think the citizens of this This needs to be examined. texting while driving is $500, why nation must accept this case as deterWayne Mayo are they still texting and talking on mined by a jury. Scappoose their cellphones that are not hands Edward Hohensee free? Why are there no billboards Bend Trail needs to be cleared up letting people know or electronic signs along the roads flashing this Chilling facts related to Last year, I took a walk around the message? Other states do this. Why shore of North Twin Lake, about two doesn't Oregon do this? You see Gibson Guitar case miles. There were several trees fallen them weaving all over the road talkThere are some chilling facts not and blocking the trail from the snow ing or texting. I don't know many initially thought to play a part in the loads the previous winter. I called the people who can afford too many conviction of Gibson Guitar by the Forest Serviceoffice and reported fines like that. Justice Department back in July 2012 that the trail was blocked by the Vernon Budd for importing endangered wood. trees, and that sections of the trees Redmond

Letters policy

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We welcome your letters. Letters

In My View submissions should be between 550 and 650 words, signed and include the writer's phone number and address for verification.

should be limited to one issue, contain no more than 250 words and include the writer's signature, phone number

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Please address your submission to either My Nickel's Worth or ln My View and send, fax or email them to The Bulletin. Write: My Nickel's Worth / In My View P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708 Fax: 541-385-5804 Email: bulletin©bendbulletin.com

limited to one letter or Op-Ed piece every 30 days.

Access to healthy food problematic in 'food deserts'

w

hen my family and I lived i n Wasco County i n t h e mid 1990s, it was 40 miles to the nearest full-service supermarket. I don't know if the term had been coined yet, but we resided in what's now called a rural "food desert," a rural neighborhood where it's more than 10 miles to the nearest supermarket or supercenter like Wal-Mart. People who live in rural food deserts are more likely to be obese than their nondesert city relatives. So, too, are people who live in another sort of food desert, one the U.S. Department of Agriculture defines as an area with limited access to fresh, healthy, affordable food. Relatively low income is part of the mix in both kinds of food desert, as are relatively low education levels. Food desertsare the reason I don't think taxing so-called bad foods is the way to trim the nation's burgeoning waistline. While food taxes might make middle-class, middle-income

Americans think twice about purchasing that fast-food burger and fries, for people in food deserts, such taxes could serve only to drive up the cost of the only food that's readily available. PolicyLink, which bills itself as a "national research and action institute advancing economic and social equity ..." and The Food Trust, which works to make affordable healthy food available to all Americans, combined efforts to look at 132 published studies on "who has access to healthy food and why it matters." Among other things, they discovered that almost 24 million Americans must go more than a mile to the grocery store, and that low-income areas have 30 percent more conveniencestores — generally crammed with pop, chips, candy and the like but short on fresh, healthy items of any sort. Moreover, those neighborhoods were likely to be home to a variety of fast-food outlets.

packed stuff found in better neighborhoods nearby. You'll pay more for JANET it, to boot. Access is an issue, clearly, and it STEVENS doesn't end with the neighborhood market, unfortunately. In many urThere areother problems, as well. ban areas, getting to a Wal-Mart or While any nearby supermarket is Safeway can be difficult and timebetter than no nearby supermarket, consuming for those who lack their the presence ofa large store doesn't own cars. In rural areas, the accessialways translate into better food at bility problem is even worse. lower cost. There's evidence that the Meanwhile, the studies show, acquality of fresh foods in low-income cess to good, reasonably priced food neighborhood supermarkets is poor- tends to improve eating habits. If giver than it is in nearby middle-income en the chance, people will buy proneighborhoods, for one thing. More- duce and low-fat milk, for example, over, if a supermarket is the only not French fries and ice cream. In one in a neighborhood, its prices are fact, at least one study showed, addlikely to be higher than they would be ing a supermarket to a poor neighotherwise and its selection of healthy borhood can lead directly to weight foods likely to be smaller. loss among the people living there. In other words, if you're poor and Access, then, not a tax on "bad" you have only a single large store to food, is the answer, it seems to me. shop in, you can expect to find ratty- In fact, without more access, a tax looking broccoli or no broccoli at the would serve only to drive up the cost market, not the crisp, green, vitamin- of food to America's poor.

Consider this: A single mom — and more than a third of all American mothers are single — working full time and relying on public transportation, gets off work at 5 p.m. To go to a supermarket she must travel an hour by bus, shop, and then travel an hour or more to get home. By the time she does, sometime after 7 p.m., her kidsare hungry, the frozen juice has melted and she hasn't begun to think about dinner. Is it any wonder she frequently opts for take-out fried chicken and jojos from the neighborhood convenience store? I don't know how we assure that poor neighborhoods have good grocery stores in sufficient numbers to create the competition that keeps prices down and food supplies varied. I do know that taxes will not do that, and until it is done, fried chicken and jojos will continue to be a staple on too many plates. — Janet Stevens is deputy editor of The Bulletin.


FRIDAY, JULY 26, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

BS

OREGON NEWS

BITUARIES DEATH NOTICES Donald R. Sutherland, of Redmond July 8, 1929 - July 19, 2013 Arrangements: Bel-Air Funeral Home, 541-475-2241 Services: Memorial Service will be held on August 16, 2013. Committal at 11:00 a.m. at the Madras Cemetery. Service at 2:00 p.m. at the Presbyterian Church in Redmond.

Gloria Loraine Kunerth, of Bend Jan. 10, 1923 - July 23, 2013 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Bend 541-318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.net Services: A memorial service will be held for Loraine at 11:00 am on Saturday, July 27, 2013 at Bend First United Methodist Church, 680 NW Bond Street. A luncheon will follow the service. She will be laid to rest next to her husband at Pilot Butte Cemetery. Contributions may be made to:

First United Methodist Church, Partners in Care, and the Humane Society of Central Oregon.

Michael Dana Hovde, of Bend Feb. 14, 1959 - July 9, 2013 Services: There will be a celebration of his life at Bend Christian Fellowship, 19831 Rocking Horse Rd., Bend on Sunday, August 4, 2013 at 3:00 PM.

Roberta Genevieve Verrue, of Bend May 31, 1921 - July 12, 2013 Arrangements: Baird Memorial Chapel, La Pine www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A Celebration of Life service will be held in October at Baird Memorial Chapel, located at 16468 Finley Butte Rd., in La Pine. Details will be published in full-length obituary in early October.

Verdelle R. Aker, of La Pine Dec. 23, 1935 - July 23, 2013 Arrangements: Baird Memorial Chapel, La Pine www.bairdmortuaries.com

Obituary policy Death Notices are free and will be run for one day, but specific guidelines must be followed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeralhomes. They may be submitted 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 by 4:30 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication. Obituaries must be received by 5 p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the second day after submission, by1 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication, and by 9a.m. Mondayfor Tuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; please call for details. Phone: 541-617-7825 Email: obits©bendbulletin.com Fax: 541-322-7254 Mail:Obituaries P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708

Marguerite Helena Laughlin March 3, 1915- July 21, 2013 Marguerite, 9 8 , p a s s ed a way peacefully w i t h h e r family by her side on July 21, 2013. She was born in J amestown, NY, t o A r d e n a nd F l o rence Denn. Margueri te li v e d h er ear l ier y e a r s in Los Angeles, CA and then Marguerite m oved t o Laughlin Bend, Oregon in 1948. Sh e r etired as a meat wrapper from Safeway in 1974. She enjoyed b o w l i ng , b a s eball, and most of al l sh e l oved her family. S he is s u r v ived b y h e r sisters, Eleanor Breth and V irginia Mason; h e r c h i l dren, J a n ic e S t i e gmann, Jane Hall, Susan Copelan, J ack B l odgett, an d s t e p son, Ron Laughlin. S he w a s p r e c e ded i n d eath b y h er h us b a n d , Walter Laughlin, her son, Jerry B l o d gett, s t e p-son, E arl L au gh l i n , and b rother, Lloyd D e nn. Sh e h as 10 g r a ndchildren, 23 r eat-grandchildren and our gr ea t - g r eat-grandchildren. There will b e a c e l ebration of Marguerite's life on Saturday, July 2 7 , fr o m 3 -6 p.m. at h e r h o me . I n lieu of f l o w ers, donations may be m ade t o P a rtners In Care. For more informat ion, p l ease cal l A u t u m n Funeral H o m e i n Red mond at 541-504-9485.

Gloria Loraine Hultgren Kunerth January 10, 1923- July 23, 2013 L oraine w a s b o rn to H ilding a n d L e n a Hu l t gren on January 10, 1923, m Clarissa, Minnesota. She g r a d u a te d fr om Clarissa High S chool h in 1942, and married Floyd Kunerth that same m oved t o Gloria Kunerth B e nd, O r egon, in 1 951, where sh e w o r k e d v arious j o b s u n t i l 1 9 5 6 , w hen she went to w ork at JC Penney. She continued in that job until retirement in 1985. They built their home on NE Revere in 1954, where s he lived th e r est o f h e r life. She was blessed with the love of many nieces, nephews a n d f r i e n d s w ho w atched o v e r h e r aft e r Floyd passed away in 1993. She was a long time, very a ctive m e m b e r of th e Methodist Church and the Golden Age Club, at which she played pinochle regularly. To all o f u s n i e ces and n ephews she w i l l a l w a y s be our "Aunt Loraine." We will miss her very much. A utumn F unerals i s e n trusted with L o r a ine's arrangements.

ourt: Hearin onra e victim's sex isto noto ento u ic By Nigel Duara

trial, but the Supreme Court's ruling means it will not be P ORTLAND — T h e O r open to the public. egon Supreme Court has shot T he Supreme Court l i k down a request from the deened the rape pretrial hearfendant in a rape case to open ings to a trial on trade secrets to the public a hearing on his or the invocation of patient— The Oregon Supreme Court's ruling on a request from Dean doctor privilege, situations accuser'ssexual history, afMacBale, a defendant in a rape case, to open up his accuser's that would result in a loss of firming the state's rape shield sexual history privacy or the divulgement of law. The secrecy of such hearings valuable information if they prevents those accused of rape were held in open court. "Openness could potentially from using them as a public fo- dence on an accuser's sexual accuser shot and wounded rum to embarrasstheir accus- history or the accuser's man- a man in 1997, then accused further victimize an already ers, the court ruled Thursday. ner of dress. him of rape. She was con- vulnerable witness or com"Once disclosed in a public Non-opinion evidence of victed of assault and weapons plainant and make the 'comhearing, those 'intimate' per- sexual history o r m a n ner charges and was sentenced plete' administration of justice sonal facts, even if irrelevant of dress can be admitted at to more than five years in (more) difficult, if not imposto the trial, will no longer be trial after one of the secret prison. No rape charges were sible," according to the ruling. private," the justices said in hearings. That designation ultimately filed against the Secret hearings are perthe ruling. "The bell cannot differentiates the M a cBale man. mitted in Oregon case law, as be unrung." case from p r evious cases M acBale also w a nt s a they are in certain instances Portland strip club owner challenging other kinds of jury to hear that an Oregon in most states, particularly Dean MacBale argued in pre- secret hearings, which were Department of C o rrections involving a grand jury or jury trial hearings that his accus- u sually b r ought b y n e w s investigation found that she deliberations. er's sexual history is relevant organizations. had sex with a former food The court in the MacBale "The harm that the Legisla- s ervices coordinator at t h e to her accusations. MacBale case was instead relying on is accused by a female em- ture intended to prevent by re- women's prison where the ac- previous decisions that said ployee of sexual penetration, quiring (a secret) hearing is not cuser wasserving time. hearings cannot be secret if sodomy, and two counts of the appearance of the victim The food services coordi- the court is determining guilt second-degree sexual abuse. as a witness, but the 'degrad- nator was convicted of official or innocence. Court matters M acBale's case now r e ing and embarrassing disclo- misconduct. A fellow female like pretrial hearings don't turns to Clackamas County sure of intimate details about inmate said she, the accuser fall under that definition, the Circuit Court. (the accuser's) private life,"' the and thefood services coordi- justices wrote. The Oregon Legislature in court wrote in the opinion. nator had "three-way sex" in The justices were careful to 1975 deemed certain elements MacBale is seeking to enter the prison's meat locker. limit their finding on secrecy of a rape trial to be irrelevant two elements of his accuser's MacBale can still have a to situations where "confidento the finding of guilt or inno- sexual history into the trial as hearing seeking to enter that tial or secret information is cence, including opinion evi- evidence. In the first one, the information into evidence at (involved)" The Associated Press

Sewer

50 sewer flow monitors for two months, Hickmann said. Continued from B1 City workers want to capture One major decision officials data during major storms, but will face is whether to pay for that can be difficult. In recent projects that would prepare years,the monitors recorded the city for stormwater from data from two storms: a typiunusually severe w eather. cal Central Oregon event and They could also take the less a very high-intensity storm. "When we modeled the syscostly route of preparing for runoff from typical Central tem and how it responded to Oregon storms. (the typical storm), it showed "The bi g f a c tor r e a l ly deficiencies on the 20-year comes down to storm events," horizon but was still relativeHickmann said. "It's hard to ly manageable at this point," collect sewer flow data that Hickmann said. is timed with storm events. The city also collected data These flowmonitors are very during a high-intensity storm expensive to have out in the in January 2011, and when field and to maintain them." workers fed that information It costs roughly $150,000 into the computer model, it for the city to rent and deploy showed many more problem

Coach Continued from B1 Clark accepted a settlement offer from the school d istrict on J un e 25 . T h e settlement, for $25,000, inc ludes all claimed or u n claimed damages, and stipulates the district does not admit fault, liability or damages, but rather is "an offer of compromise of a doubtful and disputed claim." Clark is also entitled to attorney's fees. The amount of attorney's fees has not yet been determined. Clark continues to teach math at Summit High. Clark's attorney, Roxanne

Deaths of note from around theworld: Page Morton Black, 97: Cabaret singer who sang the jingle for New York's Chock F ull o ' N ut s C o m pany i n midcentury radio and t elevision ads. Died on Sunday at her home in the Premium P oint enclave of N e w R o chelle, N.Y. — From wire reports

hope that, moving forward, the District will examine its budget, policies, and coaches in light of the lessons learned from thiscase." Haley Percell, an attorney who handled the lawsuit for Bend-La Pine Schools, also issued a written statement on Thursday. "We are pleasedto see the end of this lawsuit," she wrote. "The district offered to accept a judgment for a fraction of t he original demand so i t could put this lawsuit behind it and concentrate on provid-

AIs px2u3vg

I~ s

By Margalit Fox

first book, a clinical tome titled More than any i nvestiga"Human Sexual Response." tor before them, Masters and Virginia Johnson, a writer, All about sensation, it created Johnson moved sex out of the researcher and sex therapist precisely that when it was pub- bedroom and into the laboratowho with her longtime col- lished by Little, Brown in 1966. ry, where it could be observed, laborator, Wil- Although Masters and John- m easured, recorded, quantified FEATURFD li am Masters, son deliberately wrote the book and compared. Johnson was often described OBpUARy helped make in dry, clinical language to the frank dis- pre-empt mass titillation, their in news articles as a psycholocussion of sex subject — the physiology of sex gist, although in fact she never in postwar America possible if — was unheard of in its day. finished college. not downright acceptable, died Wednesday in St. Louis at an A Free Public Service ~> < Orepan Newspeper assisted living center. She was QIQ~+ vubsshera aseociation 88. I Her son, Scott Johnson, confirmed the death, The Associated Press reported. Masters was a gynecologist on the faculty of the WashOver 80 Oregon Newspapers, ington University School of Medicine in St. Louis when he from 36 Counties, began his research into human sexuality i n t h e m i d-1950s. ' I I I i I I I Johnson, who joined him in 1957 after answering an advertisement for an assistant, o ®gggl~ ~ l3ip or use the worked alongside him for more o QKg f~g ) service to be than three decades. She was automatically emailed of notices variouslyhis research associthat match your needs. ate, wife and former wife. Pa The collaborators burst into M~ kmnESI R M public consciousness with their

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

ing an exceptional learning environment f o r s t u d ents. The judgment represents a compromise of a d o u btful and disputed claim, and does not admit fault, liability, or damage." — Reporter:541-617-7831, smillerlbendbulletin.com

SATURDAY

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build catch basins, to collect stormwater in certain areas. Or it might make sense to fix problems in thesewers so they can handle all of the stormwater. Hickmann expects that a list of potential projects will be ready by late fall. "The truth is, we may not produce significantly different results than prior studies," Hickmann said. "But the idea is the results that we do get are based on better information that the council can buy in on, as well as the city." The plan is for the citizen committee to present a recommended plan of action to the City Council in fall 2014.

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Farra, issued a written statement about the conclusion of the case. "Coach Clark will be paid five years of the coaching salary that he was illegally deprived of by the District through actions it now concedes were unlawful," she wrote in the statement. "The judgment also provides for the payment to Coach Clark of the attorney fees and costs required to right the wrongs done to him by the District. Coach Clark is very pleased that he has been vindicated, and exceedingly grateful to all the athletes, parents, coaches and teachers who supported him. We

areas in 20 years. The city needs more sewer data, and H i ckmann said the citizen advisory committee might soon ask the City Council to approve more flow monitoring this fall and winter. The additional data could help officials decide whether itis necessary to spend more to preparefor severe storms. The next step is for a consultant to use the model to develop projects that would fix the sewer problems. For example, this process might reveal that the city could save money through projects to reduce the amount of stormwater that flows into the sewer system. This could mean the city would purchase land and

But

DEATHS

"Openness could potentially further victimize an already vulnerable witness or complainant and make the 'complete' administration of justice (more) difficult, if not impossible."

(KRxiÃ3

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TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, JULY 26, 2013

W EAT H E R Maps and national forecast provided by Weather Central, LP ©2013.

'

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i

'

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Il a

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j SW W W

Today:t Mostly sunny.

Tonight: Clear.

93 0

55

63/55

58/54 •

71/52

8 gg • oqrlington ,Hw„bt Dalles 94/63

t 87/55•

89/51•

95/53

Granite

warm SPrings •

88/54•

Baker Cl

Madras

94/51

• John

Yachats• ~

RedmOnd

Eugene•

Sunriver

Unity

9 3/46

l.ake g •

62/51

Valeo i 03/69

93/ 5 5

• Brothers 94/51

Cr e scent • Fort Rock 94/46

Chemult 9i/42

93/55

93/49

Slve i r

94/49

Grants

99/60

Rome

'

"

"

• Brooking

'

a IIs 93/57 ~

3/57

Fields•

• Lakeview 93/5 8

Medford

Roseburg.......99/64/0.00.....93/55/s.....86/55/pc Salem ....... 94/61/0 00 ....89/51/s ...84/52/pc Sisters........101/52/0.00.....92/45/s......82/42/s The DaRes......99/59/0.00.....93/60/s......86/58/s

• 42'

Ashla

64/53

93/58

Chiloquin

M dfurd

• 1Q5

Yesterday's state extremes

98/60

Paisley

98/56

McDermitt

98I64

99/60 ~

Meacham

~

H

/

100S

'

P~

..

ralt Laire 78/Ss

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/ S /S6 t ,

.

79/Sg' o'9

79/5 5 ' x --+ +

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3/64

4 C> Honolulu Tmh

Tijuana

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t a at

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6 C 'ALA S K A

75/64

L

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85/70

o Louisville d

ax

iladel p hia 8 5/6 8

ig W n gton, D.C. Charlotte

Birmingham 90/72

.•

lando

2/74

t v+

• Miami 92/77

100s

Monterre 99/77 • Mazatlan 90/77 .'

Juneau 64/49

g

97/77 o

91/72

Vo+8

La Paz 98/73

'5C

• t xt »

82/63 1.

t

o

91/70 )ew Orleans

Chihuahua

70s

75/Srl

+ + 78/60 Bg ggl

• Datlasl~ ~

HAWAI I t

Port d

Columbus ~

.

+v o 82/57M~ w ov~ + • 82/syvh x •a83/62 ~ I A l buquerquex-oklahoma City xtklttle Rock Nashiri BEV67' oao 83/67 • o v xx ~j 8 7/66 83/65 p~ g, •

Ixr'~+++~l~ +

Os~

9

v

w

m

+83 LosAnge

89/75

St paul,p@r~gv

64/54

Plant City, Fla.

> Billings •

d

• d o

a ++++

u 99/60

San Francisco

• 3.QQw

Bismarck

85/57

China Lake, Calif. • 33 0 Saranac Lake, N.Y

v ++

++ ++ Q uebec )4 4 d o o , gp tS+v+v+v+$+ a lr d d d d x xv+ + Thunder Bay 4+ + + + ++ ++ v

Winn mmpeg 68/50

H

• 112

.t ++ V++ 9 + 9

ar ••Ca a lgary Saskatoon 73/55t '

•Seattle 80/57

(in the 48 contiguous states):

FRONTS Cold

a service to irrigators and sportsmen.

Reservoir Acre feet C a p acity Crane Prairie...... . . . . . . 28,848...... 55,000 Wickiup...... . . . . . . . . . . 94,146..... 200,000 Crescent Lake..... . . . . . . 70,175...... 91,700 Ochoco Reservoir..... . . . 18,368...... 47,000 The higher the UV Index number, the greater Prineville...... . . . . . . . . 113,487..... 153,777 the need for eye and skin protection. Index is R iver flow St at i on Cubic ft./sec Deschutes RiverBelow Crane Prairie ...... . 279 for solar at noon. Deschutes RiverBelow Wickiup .... . . . . . . 1,640 Crescent CreekBelow Crescent Lake ...... . 148 LOW MEDIUM HIGH Little DeschutesNear La Pine ...... . . . . . . . 99.8 0 2 4 6 8 10 Deschutes RiverBelow Bend .... . . . . . . . . . 127 Deschutes RiverAt Benham Falls ..... . . . . 1,951 Crooked RiverAbove Prineville Res.. ... . . . . . . 1 Crooked RiverBelow Prinevige Res.... . . . . . 214 Updated daily. Source: pollen.com Ochoco CreekBelow OchocoRes. .... . . . . . 19.4 Crooked RiverNear Terrebonne ..... . . . . . . 99.8 Contact: Watermaster, 388-6669 MEDIUM or go to www.wrd.state.or.us

ULTRAVIOLET INDEX 9

IPOLLEN COUNT LOWI

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g%g

TRAVELERS' FORECAST NATIONAL

o www m Vancouver C • 73/59

WATER REPORT

Legend Wweather,Pcp precipitation, s sun,pcpartial clouds,c clouds,h haze, shshowers,r rain,t thunderstorms,sf snowflurries,snsnow, i-ice,rs-rain-snowmix, w-wind, f-fog,dr-drizzle,tr-trace

INATIONAL WEATHER SYSTEMS

Yesterday's extremes

Yesterday's weather through 4 p.m. inBend High/Low.............. 95/55 24 hours endmg 4 p.m.*. . 0.00" Recordhigh.......104m1928 Monthtodate.......... 000" Recordlow......... 32 in1966 Average monthtodate... 0.46" Average high.............. 84 Year to date............ 3.1 9" Averagelow .............. 49 Average year to date..... 6.1 8" Barometricpressureat 4 p.m30.06 Record 24 hours ...0.22 in1987 *Melted liquid equivalent

FIRE INDEX

Klamath Falls .. 95/55/000 ...93/57/pc ... 87/52/s Lakeview.......97/52/0.00 ....93/58/s..... 89/54/s La Pine........97/49/0.00.....92/42/s......84/37/s Medford......105/70/0.00....101/61/s......97/58/s Newport.......59/48/0.00.....60/51/s......60/51/c North Bend.....61/48/0.00.....64/52/s.....64/52/pc Ontario.......101/64/0.00....102/69/s......98/67/s Pendleton......99/60/0.00.....97/55/s......91/52/s Portland .......90/57/0.00.....85/57/s......81/57/s Prineville.......92/53/0.00.....92/52/s......84/48/s Redmond.......99/53/0.00.....95/49/s......86/45/s

m

95/57

Frenchglen

Lake

TEM P ERATURE PRECIPITATION

Tomorrow Rise Set Mercury....4:25 a.m...... 7:1 6p.m. Venus......8:32 a.m.....10:01 p.m. Mars.......3:40 a.m...... 7:09 p.m. Jupiter......3 33 a.m...... 6 54 p.m. Satum......l:37 p.m.....12:19 a.m. Uranus....11:08 p.m.....1150 a.m.

F r i day S a turdayBend,westoiHwy97......Ext Si sters...............................Ext The following was compiled by the Central H i / Lo/W H i /Lo/WBend,eastoiHwy.97.......Ext. La Pine................................Ext Oregon watermaster and irrigation districts as

Eugene........94/55/0.00.....92/50/s.....86/50/pc

Jordan Valley

Chr i stmas Valley

PLANET WATCH

Redmond/Madras.........Ext. Prineviae...........................Ext Astoria ........ 68/54/0.00.....63/55/s..... 62/55/dr Mod. = Moderate; Exi. = Extreme Baker City......94/53/0.00.....94/51/s......87/49/s To report a wildfire, call 911 Brookings......70/55/0.00....64/53/pc......65/52/s Burns..........97/55/0.00.....97/53/s......90/48/s

IINyssa

95/55

89/42

83/47

Roseburg

Port Orford

• saaz

82 52

City Precipitationvaluesare24-hour totals through4 p.m.

• Pa ulina 95/53

q Juntura

o Bandon

HIGH LOW

81 51

Yesterday Hi/Lo/Pcp

63/54

Florence•

HIGH LOW

80 48

OREGON CITIES

EAST Sunny to partly cloudy and very warm to hot.

82/52

Partly cloudy.

HIGH LOW

SunsettodaY.... 8 36 P.m, Last New F i r st Full Sunrise tomorrow 5 48 a m Sunset tomorrow... 8:35 p.m. Moonrisetoday...10:39 p.m. fdoonset today 10 42 8 m July 29 A09. 6 A09. 14 Aug.20

very warm to hot.

90/54

92/57 Union

oncion WiHowdale 98/56

Aibany~

ewpo

0'eP

La Grande•

Mostly sunny.

84 50

Sunrise today...... 5:47 a.m. MOOn phaSeS

CENTRAL Mostly sunny and

86/49

92/59

97/58

7 Government CamP 76/50 I

S~l~m

Ruggs

Maupin

97 62

Wallowa • Pendleton 8050 • Enterpris 97/55 • Meacham • 91/52

98/63

oWasco 92/58

63/53

93/60 •

~

Sa n dy

• 84/54

McMinnville I

Lincoln City

98/63

River Th'

H illsboro Port and 85/57

TiBamook•

UmatiUa

Hood

'""'" I'"'h IJ

Ia

HIGH LOW

SUN AND MOON SCHEDULE

WEST Early clouds, then becoming mostly sunny.

I a

Sunny.

BEND ALMANAC

As t o ria

Seasideo

Sunny.

3

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I,

CONDITIONS . 4+

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W ar m Stationary Showers T-storms Rain F l urries Snow

Ice

Yesterday Friday Saturday Yesterday Friday Saturday Yesterday Friday Saturday Yesterday Friday Saturday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Abilene, TX......91/76/005... 95/71/t. 90/71/pc Grand Ilapids....79/53/0.00..78/61/pc...71/54/t RapidCity.......84/57/005 ..75/56/pc.80/63/pc Savannah.......91/71/067..90/72/pc...89/75/t Akron..........76/52/000..79/61/pc...75/61/t GreenBay.......80/56/000... 73/52/t. 67/51/pc Reno...........98/67/023... 98/67/t. 95/66/pc Seattle..........87/55/000...80/57/s .. 76/56/s Albany..........73/53/0.00 ..82/59/pc. 84/67/pc Greensboro......81/66/0.00..84/67/pc...85/70/t Richmond.......82/67/003..86/68/pc. 88/70/pc SiouxFalls.......83/65/000..73/50/pc.. 74/55/s Albuquerque.....85/65/001...88/67/t...86/69/t Harnsburg.......78/54/000..82/65/pc.81/69/pc Rochester, NY....74/50/0.01 .. 79/62/pc...83/66/t Spokane........95/65/0.00... 92/57/s .. 86/54/s Anchorage......72/61/004...70/57/c.70/56/pc Hartford, CT.....66/59/003...81/64/t. 87/71/pc Sacramento......94/64/0.00... 97/61/s .. 95/60/s Springfield, MO ..88/62/0.00... 75/60/t. 80/60/pc Atlanta.........89/71/000..90/72/pc...87/71/t Helena..........90/61/000..92758/pc.89/54/pc St Louis.........83/63/000 ..83/62/pc. 79760/pc Tampa..........89/78/021... 92/78/t...90/78/t Atlantic City.....70/64/0.02 ..81/68/pc. 83/74/pc Honolulu........87/74/0.00...90/75/s .. 89/76/s Salt Lake City....98/75/000 ..99/74/pc...93/71lt Tucson..........93/76/001 ... 98/79/t100/78/pc Austin.........100/73/000100/77/pc.97/76/pc Houston........96/78/000..97777/pc...97/77/t SanAntonio....101/77/000..98/77/pc...99/76/t Tulsa...........86/71/000... 81/64/t. 85/65/pc Baltimore .......79/62/0.00 ..85/69/pc...87/71/t Huntsville.......86/67/0.00 ..87/68/pc...85/63/t SanDiego.......73/65/000..75/67/pc.. 75/66/s Washington,DC..82/65/000 ..85/70/pc...86/71/t Bigings.........84/60/000 ..87/60/pc. 90/62/pc Indianapolis.....79/57/0.00..80/64/pc. 77/58/pc SanFrancisco....68/54/0.00... 70/55/s.. 69/55/s Wichita.........88/69/0.00... 82/62/t. 83/65/pc Birmingham .. 86/71/000 ..91/70/pc...87/69/t Jackson, MS.... 91/69/000 92/71/pc .. 87/71/t SanJose..... 80/59/000.. 82/58/s 81/58/s Yakima........102/62/000...95/61/s .. 89/58/s Bismarck........78/57/012 ..71/45/pc.. 74/54/s Jacksonvile......89/72/008... 91/72/t...92/72/t SantaFe........85/61/000 ..80/59/pc.79/60/pc Yuma..........l00/83/000 ..103/83/t104/83/pc Boise..........102/70/000 ..99/60/pc. 95/59/pc Juneau..........62/53/0.27..64/49lsh.. 70/5vc INTERNATIONAL Boston..........65/60/026... 73/65/t. 83/71/pc Kansas City......85/66/015... 82/57/t. 78/61/pc Bndgeport,CT....67/62/000 ..80/67/pc. 84/72/pc Lansing.........78/54/0.00..78/61/pc...72/54/t Amsterdam......81/59/000 80/67/sh 76/68/sh Mecca.........108/88/000 106/82/s. 106/82/s Buffalo.........74/52/000 ..79/63/pc...81/65/t LasVegas......110/88/000 103/86/pc100/84/pc Athens.........104/73/000... 94/76/5 .. 90/75/s Mexico City .....77/57/003 ..74/52/pc...73/52/t BurlingtonVT....72/48/000 ..79/58/pc. 83/66/pc Lexington.......79/60/0 00..83/64/pc...81/63/t Auckland........59/50/000 ..58/46/sh.55/47/pc Montreal........73/50/000 ..79/61/pc .. 81/68/s Caribou,ME.....72/47/000...65/57/r. 70/57/pc Lincoln..........82/66/000 ..81/55/pc. 78/61/pc Baghdad.......105/84/000..110/87/s. 110/88/s Moscow........70/55/015...76/56/c. 66/56/sh Charleston, SC...94/74/000..88/73/pc...88/75/t Little Rock.......86/71/000...83/65/t. 86/66/pc Bangkok........91/81/0.15... 90/75/t...90/76/t Hairobi.........73/55/0.0071/56/pc...71/55/t .. Charlotte........85/69/000..87/69/pc...85/70/t LosAngeles......73/62/000..73/64/pc..73/62/s Beiyng..........97/73/000..82/70/pc. 88/78/pc Nassau.........93/81/000..86/77/pc...83/77/t Chattanooga.....88/66/000..90/68/pc...87/68/t Louisville........81/61/000..84766/pc. 83/62/pc Beirut..........88/75/000...86/72/s ..86/74ls New Delhi.......91/79/000 105/88/pc. 103/87/t Cheyenne.......75/56/000..78/55/pc.80/58/pc MadisonWI.....79/58/000... 75/52/t. 68/52/pc Beritn...........84/66/000 ..91/72/pc .. 95/72/c Osaka..........95/79/000 ..88/78/pc...89/78/t Chicago...... 81/57/000... 78/60/t. 69/58/pc Memphis....... 84/68/00088/67/pc.. 86/68/t Bogota .........66/50/000...61/46/t...63/46lt Oslo............81/57/007 ..83/55/pc. 76/57/sh Cincinnati.......78/55/000 ..82/63/pc...81/59/t Miami . . . . 93/75/000 92/77/t .90/77/t Budapest........84/57/000..94/70/pc .. 98/72/s Ottawa.........73/46/000... 79/59/s. 77/57/sh Cleveland.......75/56/000 ..78/64/pc...76/62/t Milwaukee......79/56/000... 75/58/t. 68/57/pc BuenosAires.....59/36/000...58/46/c.61/49/pc Paris............86/64/000...84l70/t.89/68/sh ColoradoSpnngs.82/55/000... 79/59/t. 82/60/pc Minneapolis.....83/64/0.03..70/51/pc. 69/51/pc CaboSanLucas ..93/79/000..95/79/pc. 97/79/pc Riode Janeiro....64/61/000..67/5ipc. 70/58/pc Columbia,MO...82/59/0.00... 81/56/t. 79/59/pc Nashvige........87/64/0.00..87/66/pc...85/65/t Cairo...........93/73/000 ..100/68/s. 101/73/s Rome...........84/66/000... 86/74/s .. 91/75/s Columbia,SC....91/73/000 ..92/71/pc...90/72/t New Orleans.....91/78/0 00..92/76/pc...93/78/t Calgary.........64/55/000... 73/55/t64/46/sh Santiago........64/32/0.00 ..56/51/pc. 58/55/pc Columbus GA....92/72/000 ..93/73/pc...89/72/t New York.......68/64/0 00..82768/pc. 85/71/pc Cancun.........90/75/000..88/76/pc.88/77lpc Sao Paulo.......52/46/000..60/54/sh. 65/50/pc ColumbusOH....79/56/000..82/63/pc...80/60/t Newark,HJ......68/64/000..84767/pc.85/72/pc Dublin..........70/59/1.32 ..71/56/sh.. 69/56/c Sapporo ........66/64/0.22 ..74/64/pc.. 76/67/c Concord,HH.....74/52/000...75759/r.83/65/pc NorfolkVA......78/69/1 02..83770/pc.86/73/pc Edinburgh.......64/54/000 ..72/53/pc.74/58/pc Seoul...........86/73/000..91/70/pc. 83/70/pc Corpus Christi....96/77/000 ..90/79/pc. 88/80/pc Oklahoma City...86/73/000... 83/67lt. 85/68/pc Geneva.........88/66/000 ..91/66/pc .. 88/66/s Shanghai.......l04/86/000 ..102/79/t. 93/82/pc DallasFtWorrh...95/75/000... 97/74/t. 92/72/pc Omaha.........84/70/000 ..79/55/pc. 78/60/pc Harare..........73/45/000... 69/44/5 .. 73/47ls Singapore.......86/77/000... 89/79/t .. 89/79/c Dayton .........77/52/000 ..80/62/pc...78/57/t Orlando.........86/72/1.36... 92/74/t...92/75/t Hong Kong......82/77/168... 87/80/t...86/79/t Stockholm.......81/54/000..79758/sh. 78/60/pc Denver....... 80/57/000... 86/60/t. 85/61/pc PalmSprings....103/83/0.00 103/83/pc105/80/pc Istanbul.........88/70/000... 91/68/s ..84/73ls Sydney..........66/45/000...65/50ls.67/44/pc DesMoines......87/62/000..79/54/pc. 75/56/pc Peoria..........82/56/0.00..80/57/pc. 73/56/pc lerusalem.......85/66/0.00...85/66/s ..87/70ls Taipei...........91/81/0.00 ..88/80/pc. 89/80/pc Detroit......... 76/54/trace ..79/66/pc...77/59/t Philadelphia.....74/63/0 00..85/68/pc. 87/72/pc Johannesburg....68/43/0.00...65/40/s .. 65/42/s Tel Aviv.........86/75/0.00...91/70/s .. 92/7us Duluth..........81/59/0.13... 64/49/t. 64/47/pc Phoenix........100/76/0.75 ..105/87/t106/87/pc Lima...........61/59/0.00...70/60/s ..70/60ls Tokyo...........84/75/0.00... 86/73/t...85/74/t ElPaso..........87/64/1.51..95/74/pc. 90/73/pc Pittsburgh.......76/55/0.00..79/62/pc...76/62/t Lisbon..........77/64/000 ..75/60/pc 74/59/pc Toronto.........73/55/000 75/59/pc. 72/57/sh Fairbanks........75/59/000..74/53/pc.. 79/55/c Portland,ME.....72/56/000...71/60/t. 81/63/pc London.........79/59/0.35..78/56/pc.. 78/58/c Vancouver.......73/55/0.00...73/59ls. 72/57/pc Fargo...........83/56/000..69/46/pc.. 70/49/s Providence......68/60/0 72...76/66/t. 85/70/pc Madrid .........99/64/0.00... 97/6us ..84/64lc Vienna..........84/68/0.00... 91/72/s. 92/72/pc Flagstaff ........77/55/1.34...80/59/t...80/57/t Raleigh.........80/69/0.00..86766/pc...90/7ut Manila..........88/77/000... 87/79/c...85/78/t Warsaw.........75/59/000 ..88/66/pc. 87/70/pc

OREGON NEWS

Heart stops at 29,000 feet, but Portland man lucksout By Katy Muldoon

C igarroa turned to M a n jula and inquired about Prem's PORTLAND — Prem Racardiac history. ghu's lucky numbers might Thirteen years ago, she told as well be his flight and seat: the doctor, Prem had a heart American Airlines' No. 1006; transplant at, of al l p l aces, seat 24D. OHSU. Workman remembers That's where the 67-year-old thinking, "How can this be'?" «We Were meant tO be tOretired custodian was at about 2 p.rrL April 3, gether that day,u she said. when he suffered carThe plane made a quick, diac arrest at 29,000 steep descent. When it rolled to feet. a stop at Salt Lake City InterI'm praying." O minous a s t h a t national Airport, the pilot got s ounds, it was the right P r e m W ithin a min u t e , on the PA again. He explained place at the right time, flightattendants arrived what Cigarroa and Funicello given that he was surround- with a d e f ibrillator, which, had done for Prem. Passened, far and away, by the right when powered on, delivers gers burst into applause. company. electricity to stop arrhythmia, When medics boarded and Prem was in t h e m i ddle allowing the heart to re-estab- took Prem away in a wheelseat. His wife, Manjula, was lish an effective rhythm. chair, they applauded again. next to the window. As they Cigarroa, clinical chief of headed toward Dallas to visit the K n ight C a r diovascular A life saved "The spirit on t hat plane their daughter, the Southeast Institute at Oregon Health 8 Portland couple chatted and Science University, placed the was so high," Workman says. joked. defibrillator pads on Prem's "A life had been saved." Prem fell silent. chest. Just before electrifying In Dallas, Funicello and her When M anjula glanced the device, the doctor noticed mother continued on their way, his way, she noticed his eyes Prem move. heading for a cruise through closed. His pallor looked gray. Workman, directorof OHSU the Panama Canal. Workman He sat too still. cardiovascularservices — the and Cigarroa, in Texas for a S he tapped hi m o n t h e woman h olding C i garroa's meeting of cardiology leaders, Cheek Saying, "Wake up!u laptop — heard Prem moan. went about their business. He didn't respond. She saw his eyes flutter open. Back in Portland, Workman She doesn't recall what she Cigarroa felt for a pulse. nominated Cigarroa and Funisaid next, but Manjula's disThere it was. cello for a Golden Rose Award, tress got the attention of those Manjula heard two words: given monthly at OHSU for "He's back." around her. e xceptional patient care or Dr. Joaquin Cigarroa, seatC igarroa a d v ised f l i g ht outstanding service. ed on the aisle one row behind a ttendants t o d i s ar m t h e None of them knew Prem's Prem, handed his laptop to defibrillator. name, so without telling the Judi Workman, his co-worker O ver th e n ex t 1 0 m i n - doctor or n u rse, Workman across the aisle. He stepped utes, Prem f u l l y r e g ained s leuthed a r o un d OH S U 's f orward, t u r ned t o Pr e m consciousness. transplant program, inquirand checked for a pulse but Cigarroa told the attendants ing which patient, likely a couldn't find one. the plane should land as soon gentleman in his 50s then and He called to flight attendants as possible. Prem needed a of South Asian descent, had a to get an automated external hospital. heart transplant 13 years ago. defibrillator, then tried to drag She dialed his number. uOh my gOOdneSS," She rePrem out of his seat onto the Unscheduled stop floor. The armrest, stuck in the The aircraft was near Salt members him saying, "I've down position, was in the way. Lake City and on the public been looking for you.u He'd not known who saved Flight attendants and pas- address system, the pilot adsengers converged to help but vised passengers they'd make his life. He wanted to thank in the cramped space, they an unexpected landing there them. couldn't budge Prem. for amedical emergency. They Workman asked if he'd like A woman sitting by t h e shouldn't be on the ground to surprise Cigarroa and Funiwindow, behind Prem's wife, long, but if they had connect- cello and thank them in person sprang to her feet. "I'm a nurse ing flights i n D a l las, they at Wednesday's Golden Rose frOm OHSU,n She Said. "I Can might miss them. Award ceremony at OHSU. help." Workman, who held Prem's Shortly after noon, WorkCandace Funicello bolted h and an d c o m forted h i m man stood at a microphone past her mother, seated in the through the l anding, didn't before a crowd of co-workers middle, and helped Cigarroa hear anyone grouse. and told them the story. The Oregonian

lift Prem across the armrest and onto the aisle floor. P anic-stricken, Man j u l a watched as Cigarroa opened Prem's shirt a n d s t a r ted hands-only cardiopulmonary resuscitation. Other than the sound of the doctor at work, she says, all she heard was the nurse'smother, Betty Osmondson, saying, "Don't w orry, h oney,

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IN THE BACI4: BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NE%S > Scoreboard, C2 Golf, C2 Sports in brief, C2

MLB, C3 NFL, C4

© www.bendbulletin.com/sports

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, JULY 26, 2013

WCL BASEBALL

COLLEGES

Bend loses at Klamath Falls

Pac-12's cottca s orc an e

KLAMATH FALLS — Bend got home runs

from Cullen O'Dwyer, Turner Gill and Keach Ballard, but the Elks still

dropped a 9-7decision

// o

to the Klamath Falls Gems in West Coast

i~

League baseball action on Thursday night. O'Dwyer gaveBend the early lead with a

two-run homer in the first. Ballard, who also doubled and singled

inN AA

4

tw

g

for Bend, hit a two-run home run in the second to give Bend a 4-0 lead.

By Ralph D. Russo

Bend was still ahead

4~

5-2 through 2/s innings, but the Gems scored four times in the third for a 6-5 advantage. Bend plated a run in the fifth to tie the game, but Klamath scored two in the sixth to take the lead

The Associated Press

I) s'

uki t(g1jt" •t ~

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for good. Gill, a Madras High product, hit his

Ryan Brennecke /The Bulletin

home run, a solo shot in the seventh, to make

Debbi and Tom Long (far right) pose with their grandchildren (from left) Rachel, Merle, Kayla and Isabel and their horse Lebu on Wednesday at the Oregon High Desert Classics in Bend. Debbi and Tom own Long Farms, with family members riding for the equestrian center and helping out at the Classics.

the score 8-7 before

theGems tackedonan insurance run. Bendhad the basesloadedinthe ninth but failed to score. Bend had15 hits on the night. Kyle Giusti went 3-for-4 and

EQUESTRIAN: OREGON HIGH DESERT CLASSICS

Todayat the Classics

knocked in two runs, Chase Fields had three

Competition at the Or-

singles, and Tyler Servais doubled, singled and scored twice.

egon High Desert Classics will begin at 8 a.m., with the final events concluding tonight at about 7 o'clock. The second of two $2,500 United States

With the loss, the Elks fell into a tie with the Corvallis Knights atop the South Divi-

Hunter Jumper Associa-

sion. Both teamshave

tion National Hunter Derby events will begin at about 4 p.m. today in the Side by Side Hunter Ring 1 and will

a record of 23-15. Bend plays at Klamath Falls

again today at 6:35 p.m. — From wire reports

• Three generations of a family competeandwork for Idaho'sLongFarmsat the Bendhorse show

MLB

A-Rod's health distracts Yankees

By Emily Oller The Bulletin

Every summer, the Oregon High Desert Classics attract a variety of competitors to Central Oregon. For Long Farms, the horse show is one of the highlights of the year. "This is the funnest horse show ever!" Debbi Long, 58 and of Eagle, Idaho, said Wednesday. "We love the facility, and we love the fact thatit'sfora good cause, forJ Bar J (Youth Services). We have a passion for children and a passion for children who need help." Long Farms is a family-run equestrian center in the strictest sense. It is owned by Tom and Debbi Long, andtheir three sons, Chad, Kenneth and Tren, ride the horses and help run the stable. Tom's and Debbi's nine grandchildren ride and work at the center,and they learn about the business from their parents and grandparents. This week in Bend at the High Desert Classics, four of those grandchildren — Rachel, 12; Kayla, 10; Isabel, 8; and Merle, 7 — are rid-

NEW YORK — Alex

Rodriguez's already strained relationship with the New York

Yankees hit another low on Thursday when he pushed to be activated from the disabled list, the team refused and he had a lawyer join the

discussion of his injury rehabilitation. Already a target of

Major LeagueBaseball's drug investigation, the

third basemanangered the Yankeeswhen he obtained a second medical opinion on his strained left quadriceps this week without informing the team in

writing, a step required by the sport's collective

bargaining agreement. The Yankeesintend to

ing and helping their grandparents

discipline him, most likely with a fine. "Do you trust the Yankees?" Rodriguez

was asked during an interview on WFANradio. A-Rod's answer was telling.

"Um. You know, I'd

rather not get into that,"

he responded. "'I'm just frustrated that I'm not on the field tomorrow." Sidelined since hip

surgery in January, Rodriguez issued a

with the seven horses they brought from their hometown of Eagle, a suburb of Boise. "For us it's a great opportunity to spend time with our grandkids," Debbi Long said. "To teach them work and teach them responsibility. Whether it's hot or cold, rainy or sunny, horses still take work!" Last week, during the first week of the 24th annual High Desert Classics, Kenneth and Tom competed against Debbi and Rachel, Kenneth's daughter, in the $1,000 Some Day Farm Pro/Am Team Relay. Kenneth and Tom rode their Chilean Warmblood gelding, Lebu, while Rachel and her grandmother rode their warmblood mare, Zingara. "The best part is that we get to encourage each other as a team, but everyone has to perform individually," Debbi said. It was Kenneth, 35, Tom, 59, and Lebu who won the relay. Rachel and Debbi put up a good fight by clearing all of the jumps, but their time put them in eighth place. See Family /C4

to play when eligible to come off the disabled list Saturday, and the

Yankees wereclose to completing a deal for Chicago Cubs outfielder Alfonso Soriano. — The Associated Press

and movement. The Handy

Hunter Round (second round) is scored on pace and handiness. According to Dianne Johnson,the High Des-

ert Classics horse show manager, the R.W. Mutch Equitation Classic is a new event at the show that should be exciting to watch. The Classic will be located in the Swan Training Grand Prix Ring, also at about4 p.m. The annual High Desert

Classics are being staged for the 24th year at J Bar

J Boys Ranch onHamby Road in northeast Bend.

Spectators are welcome; admission is free. On the weh:

www.jbarj.org/ohdc/

New York Times News Service

I' i

kees plans, asgeneral manager Brian Cash-

believes he'll be ready

Derby has two rounds. The Classic Hunter Round (first round) is judged onperformance, hunter pace, style

By Peter May

that wasn't in the Yanman said A-Rod would likely not play for the Yankees until August. Meanwhile, captain Derek Jeter said he

ing riders at the Classics. Jumps will be set at 3 feet with four option fences set at 3 feet 3 inches to 3 feet 5 inches. The National Hunter

Murder case achallenge for team chemistry, a Patriot says

day saying hewanted to homestand opener against Tampa Bay.But

showcase up-and-com-

NFL

statement early Thursbe activated for today's

HARTFORD, Conn. — Larry Scott of the Pac-12 joined the chorus of commissioners calling for sweeping change in the NCAA, and said it can happen without confrontation and with the five most powerful football conferences still competing on the field with the other five. Scott was the last of the leaders of the big five conferences to make a public push for NCAA reforms that will allow the schools with the most resources to have more freedom to determine how they use them. "I don't think of it as much S c o tt of an us vs. them situation as maybe is the impression out there," Scott said Thursday as the Pac-12 wrapped up a mini-media days on the East Coast that included their football coaches appearing on ESPN. "I'm certainly aligned with what you heard from my colleagues this week in terms of the need for transformative change, but I think it can be evolutionary and not revolutionary. See NCAA/C3

Charles Krupa l The Associated Press

"I think it's going to test this team's

chemistry ... It's goingto test to see hoI/I/important football is to us. — New England Patriots tackle Vince Wilfork (pictured), talking about the effect on his team of the murder case involving former Patriots tight end Aaron Hernandez

FOXBOROUGH, Mass. — The New England Patriots followed the example set the day before bytheirhead coach. They talked about the sadness of a lost life. They talked about the need to move forward. The team captains Tom Brady and Vince Wilfork did not mention the full name of their former teammate Aaron Hernandez — theonly topic of conversation when they addressed the news media on Thursday. Referring not only to the homicide for which Hernandez is charged, but also to the casualties from the Boston Marathon in April, Brady said: "There's a very human, compassionate element that we all have, and when it's someone you know has been on our team, it's a very sad thing. I think that we as a team have tried to move forward with better awareness and understanding of these types of things. Hopefully nothing like this ever happens again." See Patriots/C4

SAILING

77 years later, yacht repeats transpacific win By Chris Museler New Yorlz Times News Service

It took a thousand or so miles of sailing with the long, powerful waves of the Pacific Ocean for Hannah Jenner, a rising star in ocean racing, to get comfortable in this year'sTranspacific Yacht Race. Jenner, a 31-year-old from Britain, is used to racing ultralight 40-footers across oceans. But in the Transpac this month she was sailing Dorade, a 52-foot wooden sailboat from 1930 that is trimmed in varnished mahogany and adorned with polished bronze hardware. "When I first was asked, I said: 'Really? How old is this boat'? Isn't it going to break?'" Jenner said. "I'm used to boats that become more stable the faster they go. This boat rolls like crazy. It's like learning all over again." Dorade, considered the forebear of modern ocean racing yachts, won the 2,225-nautical-mile Transpac race from Los Angeles to Honolulu in 1936. And 77 years later, the slender white hull with tall spruce masts rolled to victory again, beating the most modern carbon-fiber ocean racers to win its division and the overall King Kalakaua Trophy. See Yacht/C4

i (IIIij saturday,July27th 6:35pm vs. WenatcheeApplesox

VZ33 CC&Vi7 DOCI ZIICitZ'tt'll Sunday, July 2$th

5:05pmvs.WeflatcheeApplesox Monday,July 29th6:35pmvs.WenatcheeApplesox

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Wednesday,July31st 6:35pmvs. Cowlitz Black8ears iREE MIDS WEONESOAF Thursday, Aucyust1st 6:35pmvs.Cowlitz BlackBears 'CAP NIGHT

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TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, JULY 26, 2013

SPORTS ON THE AIR

COREBOARD

TODAY MOTOR SPORTS

Formula One,Hungarian GrandPrix, practice NASCAR, Nationwide, lndiana250, practice NASCAR, Sprint Cup, Brickyard 400, practice Grand-Am, Brickyard Grand Prix GOLF Champions Tour, Senior British Open

U.S. Junior Amateur PGA Tour,Canadian Open Web.com Tour, BoiseOpen

Time TV/Radio 5 a.m. N BCSN 7:30 a.m. Speed

9 a.m.

1 0 a.m. noon

WCL WESTCOAST LEAGUE

League standings North Division

E S PN2

G olf Golf

3:30 p.m. G o lf

TENNIS ATP, Atlanta Open, quarterfinal ATP, Atlanta Open, quarterfinal

t p.m. 4 p.m.

WTA, Bank of theWest Classic, quarterfinal

8 p.m. ESPN2

BASEBALL MLB, St. Louis at Atlanta MLB, Minnesota at Seattle BEACH VOLLEYBALL

4 :30 p.m. M L B 7 p.m. Roo t

Long BeachGrand Slam (tapedj

5 p.m. N BCSN

BOXING Juan Carlos Burgos vs. Yakubu Amidu

6 p.m.

E S PN2 E S PN2

E S PN2

SATURDAY

RobertStreb Jin Park

BASEBALL

8:30 a.m. Speed 4:30 p.m. Speed

W 23 23 21 1B 14

L 15 IB 19 19 25

W BendElks 23 CorvagisKnights 23 CowlitzBlackBears 19 MedfordRogues 20 KlamathFalls Gems 1B KitsapBlueJackets 14 Thursday's Games KlamathFalls 9, Bend7 Kitsap 3, Victoria 0 WallaWallaB,Cowlitz 4 Corvagis5, Medford4 Wenatchee11, Bellingham3 Today's Games Bend atKlamathFalls, 6:35p.m. Victoria atKitsap, 6:35p.m. WallaWallaatCowlitz, 6:35p.m. MedfordatCorvalis, 6:40p.m. Bellingham atWenatchee,7:05p.m.

L 15 15 19 21 20 27

WenatcheeAppleSox WallaWallaSweets Bellingham Bels VictoriaHarbourcats Kelowna Falcons South Division

Thursday'sSummary

MOTOR SPORTS

Formula One,Hungarian GrandPrix, qualifying NASCAR, Sprint Cup, Brickyard 400, practice NASCAR, Nationwide, Indiana 250, qualifying NASCAR, Sprint Cup, Brickyard 400, qualifying AMA, Motocross Series, Minnesota AMA, Motocross Series, Minnesota NASCAR, Nationwide, Indiana 250

NHRA, SonomaNationals, qualifying (taped) GOLF Champions Tour, Senior British Open PGA Tour, Canadian Open

PGA Tour,Canadian Open U.S. Junior Amateur Web.com Tour, BoiseOpen

Time TV/Radio 5 a.m. N BCSN 6 a.m. E S PN2

Gems 9, Elks 7

9 a.m. S peed

Grantham,Anderson(2), Jordan(3), Borde(5), Booser(7) andWildung, Servais. Adams,Lingos(4), Burke(7),Karraker(B)andMeredith. 2B—Bend: Servais, Ballard.Klamath: Hough.HR Bend O'Dwyer, Gi I, Ballard.

t 1 a.m. E S P N noon NBC t p.m. N BCSN 1:30 p.m. ESPN 4 p.m. ES P N 9 a.m. E S PN2 t 0 a.m. Gol f noon CBS

1 p.m.

Gol f

3:30 p.m. G o lf

BOWLING

U.S. Open, men's andwomen's championships

9 a.m.

E S PN

BEACH VOLLEYBALL

Long BeachGrand Slam Long BeachGrand Slam

t0a.m. NBCSN

1 p.m.

NB C

LACROSSE

Chesapeake atDenver

11 a.m. ESPN2

BASEBALL M LB, Los Angeles Angels atOakland MLB, Boston at Baltimore BASKETBALL WNBA, All-Star Game TENNIS ATP, Atlanta Open, semifinal WTA, Bank of the West Classic, semifinal MIXED MARTIALARTS

UFC, preliminary bouts UFC, Johnson vs. Moraga HORSERACING Diana Stakes, Jim Dandy Stakes SOCCER MLS, Los Angeles at Colorado

noon

Fox

4 p.m.

MLB

12:30 p.m. ABC t p.m. 7 p.m.

E S PN2 E S PN2

2 p.m. 5 p.m.

FX Fox

2 p.m. N BCSN 4 p.m.

E S PN2

MLS,ChicagoatHouston

6 p.m. NBCSN

MLS, Portland at San Jose

7:30 p.m. Root

Listings are themostaccurateavailable. The Bulletinis not responsible for latechangesmade by Nor radio stations.

GOLF ROUNDUP

American leadsway at Canadian Open The Associated Press O AKVILLE, Onta r i o — Brendan Steele topped the Canadian Open leaderboard Thursday at 7-under 65, birdieing five of the first seven holes on his back nine at Glen Abbey. "I love being up h ere," Steele said. "I played in '06 and '07 on PGA Tour Canada. And really, got me ready to play the Nationwide Tour, which i played in '08, '09 and '10. It was a great progression in my life. I had a great time Up here. Made a lot of friends and spent two summers traveling the country." The 30-year-old American had eight birdies and a bo-

gey, dropping a shot on his final hole — the par-4 ninth. He won the 2011 Texas Open for his lone PGA Tour title. "Really, just a n o v erall good day," Steele said. "Hit a lot of good shots and was able to hole some putts. When you have a good round like that and you play that well, you kind of have everything going. But today was probably the most complete round that I've had all year, so that was kind of nice. Didn't miss many greens, didn't hit many shots off line, and I was able to roll a few putts in." Matt Kuchar, a two-time w inner thi s y ear, wa s a stroke back along with Scott Gardiner and Scott Brown. Kuchar eagled the par-5 18th hole, his ninth hole of the

day. "it was fun to be out here. It was perfect conditions," Kuchar said. "I feel like last

week, conditions were so challenging and so difficult at the British Open, to come here and to play golf that is more friendly and more what we're used to on the PGA Tour was great. "The conditions are spectacular. The course is in great shape. We had very l i ttle wind, good temperature, so it was a great opportunity. The par 5s are all attainable and birdieable." Gardiner was tied for the lead after eagleing the par-3 15th hole, but he bogeyed the next hole. Hunter Mahan and David Lingmerth shot 67, and Chez Reavie, the 2008 winner at Glen Abbey, was another stroke back in a group that included Bubba Watson and Trevor Immelman. Also on Thursday: Sauers fires 67 at Senior British: SOUTHPORT, England — American Gene Sauers shot a 3-under 67 in windy conditions at Royal Birkdale to take the first-round lead in the Senior British Open. Germany's Bernhard Langer, the 2010 winner, was a stroke back along with South Africa's David Frost, ALtstralia's Peter Senior and the Philippines' Frankie Minoza. Defending champion Fred Couples opened with a 74. Three tied in Russia: MOSCOW — England's Simon Dyson, Sweden's R i k ard Karlberg and China's Liang Wen-chong shot 5-Under 67 to share the first-round lead in the European Tour's Russian Open.

Bend

221 B10 1BB — 7 15 1 Klamath Falls 024 BB2 1gx — 9 11 2

GOLF PGA Tour canadianOpen Thursday

At GIen AbbeyGolf Club 0akville, Ontario Purse: $5.6 million Yardage:7,253; Par:72(35-37)

First Ro und(Leadingcores) S a-amateur 31-34—65 Brendan Steele 31-35—56 ScottBrown 34-32—66 Matt Kuchar 29-37MB Scott Gardiner 32-35—67 DavidLingmerth 30-37—67 HunterMahan 32-36—BB ChezReavie 33-35—BB PatrickReed Chris Kirk BubbaWatson

Ky eStanley TrevorImmelman AaronBaddeley KevinChappe l Joe Affrunti JamesDriscoll Vijay Singh StuartAppleby George McNeil RorySabbatini Will Claxton

JamesHahn HidekiMatsuyama AndresRomero CharleyHoffman RobertoCastro GaryWoodland BradFritsch GregOwen DavidHearn BrandtSnedeker RobertGarrigus MorganHofmann Seung-YulNoh DanlelSumm erhays JasonBohn CameronBeckman MarkWilson Jeff Overton RyanPalmer ChadCampbell Justin Leonard Billy Horschel Tim Petrovic Jeff Gove Pat Perez Kyle Reifers MarcelSiem BobbyGates CameronPercy HenrikNorlander RogerSloan WilliamMcGirt Casey Wittenberg Matt Every Scott Piercy EmieEls John Merrick Scott Stallings Sang-MoonBae Scott Langley RickyBames Justin Bolli DavidMathis JesseSmith Si Woo Kim

AndrewSvoboda a-CoreyConners D.J. Trahan Richard HLee Jeff Maggert FabianGomez Graham DeLaet GeoffOgilvy Scott Verplank Justin Hicks TroyMatteson

31-37—65 33-35—BB 34-34—BB 32-36—6B 32-36—BB 33-35—BB 33-35MB 35-34—59 33-36—69 34-35—69 32-37—69 33-36—59 34-35M9 31-38—69 34-35—69 35-34—59 34-35—69 33-36—69 32-37—69 34-35—69 34-36—70 34-36—70 34-36—70 36-34 70 31-39 — 70 36-34 — 70 35-35 — 70 34-36 — 70 34-36 — 70 33-37 — 70 34-36 — 70 33-37 — 70 33-38 — 71 34-37 — 71 36-35 71 37-34 — 71 34-37 — 71 34-37 — 71 35-36 — 71 33-3B—71 34-37 71 33-38 — 71 34-37 — 71 35-36 — 71 33-3B—71 34-37 — 71 33-3B—71 35-36 — 71 35-36 — 71 35-36 — 71 33-3B—71 36-35 71 37-34 — 71 36-35 — 71 33-38 — 71 36-35 — 71 35-36 — 71 36-35 71 36-35 — 71 35-36 — 71 36-36 — 72 35-37 — 72 35-37 — 72 34-3B—72 34-38 — 72 34-38 — 72 36-36 — 72 36-36 — 72 35-37 72

Martin Flores Ryo Ishikawa LukeGuthrie CameronTringale BrianGay Jim Furyk RobertAllenby BrianStuard JasonKokrak BenKohles Alistair Presnell LukeList Jim Herma n Charl Schwartzel JesperParnevik LukeDonald MikeWeir CamiloVilegas DustinJohnson Y.E.Yang GraemeMcDowell

36-35 72 34-38—72 35-37—72 33-39—72 34-38—72 37-35—72 37-35—72 35-37—72 36-35 72 36-36—72 35-37—72 37-35—72 34-38—72 35-37—72 36-36—72

Also

35-3B 73 35-38—73 35-3B—73 36-37—73 36-38—74 40-35—75 37-38—75 36-40—76

W L T Pts GF R eal SaltLake 1 1 6 4 37 3 3 Portland B 2 10 34 30 Los Angeles 10 B 3 33 32 Vancouver 9 6 5 32 33 FC Dallas 8 5 B 32 27 Colorado B 7 7 31 26 Seattle 7 7 4 25 22 SanJose 6 9 6 24 21 ChivasUSA 4 11 5 1 7 I B NOTE. Threepoints forvictory, onepoint fortie.

TENNIS Professional

Senior British Open Thursday At Royal Birkdale Golf Club Southport, England Purse:2 million Yardage: 7,0B2;Par:72 First Round(LeadingScores) a-amateur 34-33M7 GeneSauers(U S) 37-31—6B FrankieMinoza(Philippines) 33-35—BB DavidFrost(SouthAfrica) 35-33—BB BernhardLanger (Germany) 34-34—6B PeterSenior(Australia) GaryHallberg(U.S.) 35-34—69 JohnCook(U.S.) 34-35—69 CoreyPavin (U.S.) 33-36—59 Jeff Hart(U.S.) 34-35M9 PeterFowler(Australia) 33-36—69 TomPerniceJnr(U.S.) 35-35 — 70 MarkMcNulty(Ireland) 33-37 — 70 SandyLyle(Scotland) 32-38 — 70 GregTurner(NewZealand) 36-34 — 70 MarkWiebe(U.S.) 35-35 — 70 StevePate(U.S.) 34-36 — 70 Philip Walton(Ireland) 35-35 70 MassyKuramoto (Japan) 36-34—70 TomKite(U.S.) 33-37—70 PaulWesselingh(England) 34-36—70 35-35—70 RoccoMediate(U.S.) 34-36—70 GaryWolstenholme(England) 34-37—71 JohnInman(U.S.) a-ChipLutz(U.S.) 35-36—71 RussCochran(U.S.) 33-3B 71 36-35—71 Jeff Sluman (U.S.) KatsuyoshiTomori (Japan) 34-37—71 ChienSoonLu(Taiwan) 36-35—71 KhokiIdoki (Japan) 34-37—71 JoseRivero(Spain) 35-36—71 RodSpittle(Canada) 34-37—71 SteenTinning(Den) 35-36—71 GaryTrivisonno(U.S.) 35 36 71 Jay DonBlake(U.S.) 36-35—71 LarryMize(U.S.) 33-3B—71 MikeGoodes(U.S.) 34-37—71 Also Colin Montgom erie (Scotland) 34-3B —72 36-36 — 72 TomLehman(U.S.) 35-38—73 TomWatson(U.S.) 37-37 74 FredCouples(U.S.) 38-36—74 MarkO'Meara(U.S.) 36-39—75 FredFunk(U.S.) 35-39—77 BobGilder(U.S.)

BASKETBALL VVNBA WOMEN'SNATIONAL BASKETBALLASSOCIATION All Times PDT

EasternConference

Minnesota Los Angeles Phoenix Seattle SanAntonio Tulsa

W 12 11 9 8 7 4

L 5 5 9

Pct GB .706 .BBB 'Iz .500 3'/z 9 .471 4 1 1 .389 5'/z 1 2 .250 7r/z

W 14 12 9 7 6 6

L 3 6 9 10 12 14

WesternConference

25 27 24 21 32 35

Saturday's Games ColumbusatTorontoFC,11 a.m. SportingKansasCity atMontreal, 4p.m. PhiladelphiaatVancouver,4p.m. RealSaltLakeat NewYork, 4p.m. Los Angeleat s Colorado, 4p.m. NewEnglandatD.c. United,4 p.m. Chicag oatHouston,6p.m. Port landatSanJose 730pm

Champions Tour

Chicago Atlanta Washington Indiana NewYork Connecticut

GA 20 IB 25

Pct GB .B24 667 2'Iz .500 5'/z .412 7 .333 B'/z .300 gr/z

Thursday's Games SanAntonio65,NewYork53 Indiana71,Tulsa60 Seattle73,LosAngeles66

Today'sGames No games scheduled Saturday's Game All-StarGameat Uncasvile, Conn,12:30p.m.

Bank oi theWestClassic Thursday At TheTaubeFamily Tennis Center Stanford, Calif. Purse: $795,000(Premier)

Surface: Hard-Outdoor Singles SecondRound DominikaCibulkova(3), Siovakia, def. Stefanie Voege e,Switzerland, 7-5, 7-6(5). JamieHampton, UnitedStates, def. NicoleGibbs, UnitedStates,7-5,6-7(5), 6-3. UrszulaRadwanska(7), Poland,def. Daniela Hantuchova,Slovakia,7-5(3), 7-6(3). VeraDushevina,Russia, def.MadisonKeys, United States,7-6(0), 6-2. Atlanta Open Thursday At The Atlanta Athletic Club

Norcross, Ga. Purse: $B23,730(WT250) Surface: Hard-Outdoor Singles SecondRound RyanHarrison,UnitedStates, def.IgorSijsling (4), Netherlands,6-4,6-3. Denis Istomin,Uzbekistan,def. Yen-hsunLu(5), Talwan,7-5,6-2. JamesBlake,United States,def.Evgeny Donskoy

(B), Russia6-3, , 6-2. SantiagoGiraldo,Colombia, def. MichaelRussel, UnitedStates,5-7,6-3, 3-0retired.

John Isner (1), UnitedStates, def. RyanHarrison, UnitedStates,7-5(9), 4-6,7-5. KevinAnderson,SouthAfrica, def. MathewEbden, Australia 6-7(7), 6-2,6-2.

Croatia Open Thursday At ITC Stella Maris Umag, Croatia Purse: $614,700(WT250) Surface: Clay-Outdoor Singles SecondRound AndreasSeppi (2), Italy,def. AndreasHaider-Maurer, Austria,6-1, 4-0, retired. HoracioZeballos, Argentina,def. CarlosBerlocq (B), Argentina,3 6,6-3, 6-2. TommyRobredo (5), Spain, def. Viktor Troicki, Serbia,6-0,6-4. Aljaz Bedene, Slovenia, def.Alexandr Dolgopolov, Ukraine,6-3, 6-1. Swiss Open Thursday At RoyEmersonArena Gstaad, Switzerland Purse: $614,700(WT250) Surface: Clay-Outdoor Singles SecondRound Daniel Brands,Germ any, def. RogerFederer (1), Switzerland,6-3,5-4. Robin Haase,Netherlands, def. JankoTipsarevic (3), Serbia6-2, , 6-2. Victor Hanescu,Romania, def. RobertoBautista Agut (B), Spain,7-6(2), 3-2, retired. MarcelGranollers,Spain,def. FedericoDelbonis, Argentina,6-2,7-5. Baku Cup Thursday At Baki TennisAkademiyasi Baku, Azerbaijan Purse: S235,000(Intl.) Surface: Hard-Outdoor Singles SecondRound ShaharPeer,Israel, def. ChanelleScheepers (3), SouthAfrica, 2-6,7-5,6-3. ElinaSvitoina(7), Ukraine,def. Nastassla Bumett, Italy, 6-0,7-6(3). Magda Linege,Poland, def. Kristyna Pliskova, CzechRepublic, 3-6,6-1, 6-2. TadejaMajeric, Slovenia,def. TerezaMartincova, CzechRepublic,7-6(5), 6-3. Galin aVoskoboeva,Kazakhstan,defKaterynaKozlova, U kraine, 4 5, 6-3, 6-1.

SOCCER

the AZLAngels. OAKLAND ATHLETICS—Placed C John Jaso on the 7-dayDL.Recal ed CStephenVogt from Sacramento (PCL).SentINFVinnie Catricala outright to

Midland(Texas)

National League ATLANTA BRAVES PlacedRHPTim Hudson on the 15-day DL. Recaled LHPAlex Woodfrom Gwin-

nett (IL). LOS ANGELESDODGERS Desi gnated LHP Ted Ligy for assignment.RecalledINF-OFElian Herrera from Albuquerque (PCL). MIAMI MARL INS—Placed OFMarcell Ozunaon the15-dayDL,retroactive to July 2a PHILADE LPIHAPHILLIES—Reeased RHP Carlos Zambrano .Placed OF Domonic Brown onthe 7-day DL. Recalled OF SteveSusdorf fromLehighValley

(IL).

ST.LOUIS CARDINALS— Recalled LHP MarcRzepczynskifromMemphis (PCL). OptionedRHPCaros Martinezto Memphis.

BASKETBALL National Basketball Association DALLASMAVERICKS—Re-signed C-F Brandan Wright. NEW YORKKNICKS— Re-Signed F Kenyon Martin. ORLANDOMAGIC— SignedG RonniePrice. TORONTORAPTORS— Named Bill Bayno and JesseMermuysassistantcoaches.PromotedJama Mahlalelatoassistantcoach. FOOTBALL National Football League ARIZONA CARDINALS—Agreed to termswith OT Eric Winston on aone-yearcontract andLB John Abrahamon a two-year contract. PlacedWRRyan Swope onthe reserve/retired list. ATLANTA FALCONS—Agreed to termswith QB Matt Ryan onafive-year contract extension. CHICAGO BEARS—Announced the retirement of DT SedrickEllis. Signed DLJamaal Andersonto a one-yearcontract DENVER BRONCOS—Signed DT Sylvester Williams to atour-year contract. DETROIT LIONS—ReleasedGBil Nagy. GREEN BAYPACKERS—Signed DEDatoneJones and SRyanMcMahon. HOUSTONTEXANS— PlacedRBArianFoster,SEd Reed andWRDeVier Posey onthePUPlist. PlacedLB Darryl Sharpton onthenon-football injurylist andTE GarrettGrahamon the non-football illness list. Activated LB SamMontgomeryandOTBrennanWilliams. SignedCBElbert MackandNT Daniel Muir. INDIANAP OLIS COLTS—WaivedTEWeslyeSaunders. SignedLBDaniel Adongo. JACKSONVI LLE JAGUARS— Waived TE Kyler Reedand SChris Banjo. SignedKAdamYates and WR ColeMcKenzie. MINNESOT AVIKINGS Signed DTSharrif Floyd, WR CordarrellePattersonandCBXavier Rhodes. NEW ENGLANDPATRIOTS— Re-signed OL Tyronne Green.ReleaseOLMatt Stankiewitch. NEWYORKGIANTS—SignedOLJustin Pughand QB Ryan Nassib. NEW YOR KJETS—Placed RBMike Goodson on the reserve-didnot reportlist. SignedDLLeger Douzable, WR Braylon Edwards andDTSheldon Richardson. PlacedRBJoe McKnight ontheactive-PUPlist. Waived-injuredDEJakeMcDonoughandWRThomas Mayo. OAKLAND RAIDERS—SignedDBDJ Hayden. SAN DIEGOCHARGERS— Placed LB Melvin IngramandSBrandonTaylor ontheactive-PUP list. SAN FRAN CISCO49ERS Activated LB Darius Fleming and WRKyle Williams from active-PUP list. PlacedWRMichael Crabtreeonthe active-PUP hst and DT Lamar Divensonthe actlve-non-footbaI injury list. SEATTI. ESEAHAWKS— PlacedDEChrisClemons, WR PercyHarvin, TEZachMiler, DEGreg Scruggs, CB TharoldSimonandRBRobert Turbin onthe PUP hst. Placed LBKoreyToomer onthe non-football injury list. WASHINGTONREDSKINS— Waived S Jordan Bernstine and SDevinHolland. PlacedDEAdam Carriker, OL Maurice Hurt andCBJosh Wilson on the reserve-PUP list. SignedSJoseGumbsandQB Ryan Mouton.ActivatedCBJosh Wilson from the PUP list. HOCKEY

NationalHockeyLeague

EDMON TONOILERS—SignedDDarnell Nurseto athree-yearentry-levelcontract. NASHVILL EPREDATORS— AnnouncedMilwaukee (AHL)coachDeanEvasonandassistantcoachStan Drulia have eachsigned contract extensionsthrough the 2014-15 season.NamedFrank Jury assistant equipmentmang aer for Milwaukee.SignedF Nick Spahng to aone-yearcontract. TAMPABAYLIGHTNING— NamedDavidAlexander goaltending andvideocoachfor Syracuse(AHL). TORONTOMAPLE LEAFS— Signed generalmanagerDaveNonis toative-year contract extension. COLLEGE CALIFOR NIA—Signed women's basketball coach LindsayGottlieb to a two-yearcontract extension, throughthe2017-1Bseason. COLORADO STATE — Announced sophomore basketball GJohnGi lon is transferring fromArkansas-LittleRock. GEOR GIA—Announcedjunior OLKoton Houston was grantedreinstatementby the NCAAfollowing threeyearsundersuspension for ananabolic steroid he was givenior shouldersurgery. TEXAS —GrantedsophomoreWRCaylebJonesan unconditionalrelease.

DEALS

MLS

Transactions

MAJORLEAGUESOCCER All Times PDT

BASEBALL

Eastern Conference W L T Pts GF S portlng KansasCity 10 5 6 3 6 31 Montreal 9 5 5 32 31 NewYork 9 7 5 32 29 Philadelphia 8 6 7 31 32 Houston B 6 5 29 22 NewEngland 7 7 6 27 25 Chicago 7 9 3 24 24 Columbus 6 9 5 23 23 TorontoFC 2 10 B 14 1 7 D.C. 2 14 4 1 0 9

WesternConference

AssignedConcepcion to Orem(Pioneer)andPerezto

GA 20 29 24 30 19 1B 29 25 2B 33

Major LeagueBaseball MLB—Suspeded n Pittsburgh minor leagueRHP Delvin Hiciano(DSLPirates) 50gamesafter fortesting positivefor metabolitesof stanozolol. Suspended Arizonaminor leagueRHPEric Smith (Mobile-SL) 50 gamesafter asecondviolation for adrug ofabuse. AmericanLeague HOUSTONASTROS— Signed SSWilsonAmador. KANSAS CITYROYALS—Announced interim hitting coachGeorge Brett will return tohis positionas vice presidentofbaseball operations. LOS ANGE LES ANGELS—Acquired OF Julio ConcepcionandRHPAndresPerezfromthe NewYork Mets foraninternational signingbonusallotment slot.

FISH COUNT Upstream daily movement ofadult chinook,jackchinook,steelheadandwild steelheadatselected Columbia River damslastupdatedonWednesday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd Bonneville 53 0 9B 3, 4 B5 2,161 T he Dalles 41 9 92 1, 2 5 9 75 7 John Day 35 4 79 930 553 McNary 4 62 63 755 42B Upstream year-to-date movement ofadult chinook, jack chinook,steelheadandwild steelheadat selected ColumbiaRiverdamslast updatedonWednesday Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd Bonneville 171,791 59,02B 39,425 21,529 The Da les 149,55B 52,023 19,709 10,565 John Day 127,544 47,656 13,734 6,555 McNary 122,504 35,95B 9,1 64 3,954

SPORTS IN BRIEF FOOTBALL

petition for a third year.

team mired in aneight-game skid. Heleaves with them showing signs of life. The Hall of

FalCOnS,Ryan agreeOn eXtenSiOn — Now that he's wearing a$100 million smile,

TENNIS

FamerannouncedThursdaythathewasstepping down from his on-field job and returning

quarterback Matt Ryan is ready to get backto work for the Atlanta Falcons. "I've always not

Troicki danned18 manthS — Serbian

worried about the business side of it," Ryan

tennis player Vjktor Troicki has beensus-

as vice president of baseball operations since retiring as a player following the1993 season.

said. "I really think as a player, if you're hung up or worried about that or thinking about all

pended for18 months for refusing to submit to blood testing before the Monte Carlo Mas-

The Royals were hitting just.261 when he assumed the job along with Pedro Grifol, who will

those things, you're taking awayfrom what you shouldbedoing."RyanandtheFalconsagreed

ters. The International Tennis Federation said

stay on as thepermanent hitting coach. The

to a five-year contract extension on Thursday

Thursday he broke an anti-doping rule in April by"refusing or failing without compelling justj-

team's batting average hasn't improved much during Brett's short stay, but the offense is no

that was being finalized as heled theoffense

fication to submit to sample collection." Troicki

longer stagnant.

through practice on the first day of training camp. A person familiar with the situation says

was told to provide a urine and blood sample. The ITF said in a statement the 27-year-old

Ryan's extension is for $103.75 million, with $59 million guaranteed. Theperson said Ryan

player gave aurine sample but told the doping control officer he was ill and didn't want to give

to the Royals' front office, where he's served

TRACK & FIELD

will average $20.75 million during the first

abloodsample.Theban,byanindependent

BOlt talkS dOPingSCandalS —Usain

three years of the extension.

tribunal, ends Jan. 24, 2015.

Bolt believes the recent doping scandals in sprinting hurt the sport and insists he's running clean. The world's fastest man stopped

Georgia linemanfinally clearedGeorgia received an important boost for 2013 ity. Houston was granted reinstatement by the

LOCBI t88m fBIIS —Jefferson County's 50/70 (jntermedjate, ages 1-13j 1 baseball team

short of condemning fellow Jamaican sprinters Asafa Powell and Sherone Simpson or American rival TysonGay,whose failed doping tests have left the sport in turmoil ahead of

NCAA following three years under suspension for an anabolic steroid he was given for shoul-

lost its final game in its Little League All-Star regional tournament. California District 55 beat

worlds. "Definitely, it's going to set us back a little bit," Bolt said Thursday in London before

der surgery. Houston wasdeclared ineligible in

the Central Oregon team7-0 in the final day of

a Diamond Leaguemeet — his first competi-

January of 2010, his first semester at Georgia, following routine NCAA drug testing which

pool play in lrvine, Calif. Jefferson County went 0-4 at the tournament.

tion in the city since his three gold medals at

terone. The substance continued to show up

Brett Out aS RoyalS hitting COaCh-

focus on this." Bolt said it won't affect his preparations for the upcoming world champi-

in Houston's system in subsequent tests. He has two years of eligibility remaining andcould

George Brett took over as the Kansas City Roy-

onships In Moscow.

on Thursday when offensive lineman Kolton Houston finally won his long battle for eligibil-

BASEBALL

detected the bannedsubstance, 19-norandrosals' interim hitting coach with the rudderless

last year's Olympics. "But as aperson, I can't

— From staff and wire reports


FRIDAY, JULY 26, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

C3

MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL uutandings

E TorHunter (3), A.Dunn(7) DP Detroit 1, Chicago 1. LOB —Detroit 4, Chicago 5. 28—Gillaspie (10), Viciedo(14), Flowers(12). HR—Tor.

NOTHING TO SEEHERE

AH TimesPOT

Hunter(10), V.Martinez(9), B.Pena(3), Flowers(9). SB — AI.Ramirez(21). CS—A.Dunn (I). AMERICANLEAGUE East Division W L Boston 61 42 TampaBay 60 42 Baltimore 57 46 NewYork 54 48 Toronto 46 55 Central Division W L Detroit 56 45 Cleveland 53 48

Kansas City Minnesota Chicago

Oakland Texas Seattle Los Angeles Houston

48 51 43 56

40 59 West Division W L 59 43 56 46 49 53 48 52 34 67

Pct GB .592 588 '/z .553 4 .529 6'/z .455 14

/

/'r

Pct GB .554 .525 3 .485 7 .434 12 .404 15

A

/

Pct GB .578 .549 3 .480 10 .480 10 .337 24'/~

Thursday'sGames

N.Y.Yankees2,Texas0 Chicago WhiteSox7, Detroit 4 Toronto 4,Houston0 Tampa Bayat Boston, ppd., rain Kansas City 7, Baltimore1 L.A. Angel8, s Oakland3 Seattle 8 Minnesota 2 Today's Games Boston(l.ackey7-7) atBaltimore (Til man12-3),4:05

p.m. Tampa Bay(I-legickson 9-3) at N.Y.Yankees(Sabathia 9-8), 4.05p.m. Texas(M.Perez3-3) at Cleveland(Kluber 7-5), 4:05 p.m. Houston(l.yles4-4) at Toronto(Dickey8-11), 4:07 p.m. Philadelphia(Hamels 4-12) at Detroit (Fister 8-5), 408 p.m. KansasCity (Shields 4-7) at ChicagoWhite Sox (Quintana 5-2), 5:10p.m. LA. Angels(Wigiams5-6) at Oakland(Coon 13-3), 7:05 p.m. Minnesota(Diamond5-9) atSeatle (F.Hernandez114), 7:10p.m. Saturday's Games TampaBayatNYYankees, 1005am. Houston at Toronto, 10:07a.m. L.A. Angelsat Oakland,12:05 p.m. Minnesota at Seatle,1:10 p.m. Bostonat Baltimore,4:05 p.m. Texas atCleveland,4:05p.m. Philadelphiaat Detroit, 4:08p.m. KansasCity atChicagoWhite Sox,4:10p.m. NATIONALLEAGUE East Division W L Atlanta 57 45 Philadelphia 49 53 Washington 49 53 NewYork 45 53 Miami 38 62

Central Division

W L 62 37 60 40 59 44 45 55 42 59 West Division W L Los Angeles 53 48 Arrzona 53 49 Colorado 49 54 San Francisco 46 55 SanDiego 46 57

St. Louis Pittsburgh Cincinnati Chicago Milwaukee

Pct GB .559 .480 8 .480 8 .459 10 .380 18

Pct GB .626 600 2i/z

.573 5 .450 17'/r .416 21

Pct GB .525 .520 '/z .476 5 .455 7 .447 8

Thursday'sGames

Arizona3,ChicagoCubs1 Cincinnati 5,L.A.Dodgers2 Today's Games N.Y. Mets(Mejia 0-0) at Washington(Zimmermann 12-5), 10:35a.m.,1stgame N.Y.Mets(Harvey8-2)atWashington (Dhlendorf 2-0), 4:05 p.m.,2ndgame Philadelphia (Hamels4-12) at Detroit (Fister 8-5), 4:08 p.m. Pittsburgh(Locke9-2) at Mrami(H.Alvarez0-1), 4:10 p.m. St. Louis (Wainwright 135) at Atlanta (Minor 9-5), 4:30 p.m. Milwaukee(W.Peralta 7-9) at Colorado(Chatwood 6-3), 5:40p.m. San Diego (Stults 8-8) atArizona(Delgado 2-3), 6:40 p.m. Cincinnati (H.Bailey5-9) at LA. Dodgers(Kershaw 9-6), 7:10p.m. ChicagoCubs(E.Jackson6-11) at San Francisco (M Cain6-6) 7;15p m Saturday's Games N.Y.MetsatWashington,12.05 p.m. St. I.ouis atAtlanta,12:05pm. Philadelphiaat Detroit, 4:08p.m. PittsburghatMiami, 4:10p.m. Milwaukee atColorado, 5:10p.m. San DiegoatArizona,5:10 pm. Chicag oCubsatSanFrancisco,6:05p.m. Cincinnati atL.A.Dodgers, 6:10 p.m.

American League

Mariners 8, Twins 2 SEATTLE — Hisashi Iwakuma allowed four hits in six shutout

innings, and Seattle scored six runs in the second enroute to a victory over Minnesota. Iwakuma (10-4), who won his third straight decision, struck out nine and walked one. Nick Franklin hit a three-run home run in the

Mariners' big second inning. Minnesota

NCAA

Louis scored three times in the third in a win over Philadelphia.

National League Jeffrey Phelps/The Associated Press

Bryan VonDeclan has the name ofMilwaukee Brewers suspended player Ryan Braun covered up on his shirt as he takes his seat before the baseball game between the San Diego Padres and the Brewers on Thursday in Milwaukee.

ab r hbi 5111 41 1 3 3000 4010 411 0 411 0 211 0

1000

C olaegdh 3 0 1 0 Zuninoc 2 1 1 1 H ickscf 3 0 0 0 HBlancc 2 1 1 1 F lormnss 4 I I 0 Ackleycf 4 I 3 2 Totals 3 8 2 8 2 Totals 3 58 11 8 N linnesota 000 0 0 0 002 — 2 Seattle 060 020 Ogx — 8 E Franklin (7), Seager 2 (7). LOB Minnesota 11,Seatle 5. 28—C.Herrmann (2), Bernier (2),

Congerc 4 1 1 0 Rosalesss 2 0 0 0 A ybarss 3 2 2 0 Vogtph 1 0 0 0 T otals 3 7 8 127 Totals 3 3 3 6 2 L os Angeles 0 0 1 0 4 3 000 — 8 Oakland 0 00 201 000 — 3 DP Oakland1.LOB LosAngeles6,0akland6.

Reds 5, Dodgers 2 LOS ANGELES — MatLatos threw 7z/s innings, and Cincinnati Xavier Paul to beat Los Angeles,

ending the NLWest leader's sixgame winning streak.

Philadelphia St. Louis ab r hbi ab r hbi R oginsss 3 0 2 0 Mcrpnt2b 4 I I I M Yong3b 3 0 0 0 Jaycf 4111 U tley2b 3 0 0 0 Craiglf 3000 DYongrf 4 0 0 0 MAdmslb 4 0 1 1 R uf1b 3 0 1 0 YMolinc 3 0 0 0 L.Nixlf 4 1 0 0 Freese3b 2 0 0 0 Mayrrycf 4 0 2 0 SRonsnrf 3 0 1 0 Kratzc 4 0 2 1 Kozmass 3 1 1 0 K ndrckp 2 0 0 0 Lynnp 0000 Susdorfph 1 0 0 0 BPtrsnph 1 0 0 0 Bastrdp 0 0 0 0 Rosnthlp 0 0 0 0 Mulicap 0 0 0 0 T otals 3 1 1 7 1 Totals 2 73 5 3 P hiladelphia 0 0 0 1 0 0 000 — 1 St. Louis 003 000 Ogx — 3 E—Ruf (I). DP—Philadelphia I, St. Louis 3. LOB —Philadelphia 7, St. Louis4. 28—Rogins (20).

Cincinnati Los Angeles ab r hbi 28 — Trumbo (21), CYoung (13). HR —D.Norris (6). C hoocf 5ab0 r2hbi 1 Crwfrdli 5 1 10 SB — Cespedes(6). SF—Trout. P aullf 2 1 1 1 Purgrf B.Miger(6), K.Morales(24), Seager (26), H.Blanco LosAngeles IP H R ER BB SO Heiseyph-lf 2 0 0 0 AdGnzl1b 440112 20 C.WilsonW,11-6 7 5 3 3 3 6 (4), Ackley2(10).HR—Franklin (8). Votto1b 4 0 2 0 I-IRmrzss 4 0 2 0 Minnesota IP H R E R BB SO DDe LaRosa 1 0 0 0 0 1 P higips2b 2 1 0 0 Ethiercf 4 0 0 0 CorreiaL,7-7 12- 3 7 6 6 1 0 J.Gutierrez 1 1 0 0 0 0 B rucerf 4 I I 2 A.Egisc 4 0 0 0 Pressly 3 3 2 2 I 3 Oakland 38 — Jay(2). SB—Rogins(10). S—Lynn2. Frazier3b 4 1 2 0 Schmkr2b 3 0 1 0 1 1-3 1 0 0 0 1 Straily L,6-4 Duensing 41-3 7 5 5 2 5 Mesorcc 4 1 1 0 M.ERisph 1 0 1 0 Philadelphia IP H R ER BB SO 2-3 4 3 3 0 1 Thielbar 1 0 0 0 0 1 J.chavez K.KendrickL,9-7 6 5 3 3 2 I Clztursss 4 0 I I HrstnJr3b 3 0 I 0 Roenicke I 0 0 0 0 1 Otero 3 1 0 0 0 2 L atosp 3 0 0 0 Greinkp 1 0 0 0 Bastardo 2 0 0 0 0 3 Seattle Neshek 1 0 0 0 0 0 M Parrp 0 0 0 0 Puntoph I 0 0 0 St. Louis lwakuma W,10-4 6 4 0 0 I 9 J.chavez pitchedto 4battersin the6th. L ynn W,12-5 7 5 I I 4 6 H annhn ph 0 0 0 0 Howellp 0 0 0 0 Farquhar 2 1 0 0 0 3 HBP —by Straily (Pujols). WP—C.Wilson, Straily, Chpmnp 0 0 0 0 Marmlp 0 0 0 0 RosenthalH,24 1 1 0 0 0 I 0 Perez 1 3 2 2 0 1 J.chavez Mujica S,30-32 1 1 0 0 0 2 Uribeph 0 0 0 0 HBP—byIwakuma(Colabego). WP —Iwakuma2. T—3:13.A—20,468(35,067). T 2:38. A 45,567 (43,975). T otals 3 4 5 105 Totals 3 42 9 2 T—3:03. A—18,135(47,476). C incinnati 110 00 2 0 0 1 — 5 L os Angeles 00 0 1 0 0 010 — 2 Mets 7, Braves 4 Royals 7, Orioles1 E Choo (3). DP Cincinnati 1, LosAngeles2 Yankees 2, Rangers 0 LOB—Cincinnati 6, LosAngeles 8. 28—Frazier (21), KANSAS CITY, Mo.— Jeremy C.crawford(15). HR—Paul(6), Bruce(21). SB—Vot- NEW YORK — John Buck drove ARLINGTON, Texas — Hiroki Guthrie pitched six solid innings to (4), H.Raim rez (6) S Greinke in three runs and Zack Wheeler Kuroda pitched sevenscoreless Cincinnati IP H R E R BB SO and Billy Butler homered as beat Atlanta for the second time in

innings, Mariano Rivera got gifts before posting another saveand

New York beat Texas to split the four-game series. After David Robertson worked a1-2-3 eighth, Rivera pitched the ninth for his 33rd save this season, extending his career record to 641. New York

Texas

ab r hbi ab r hbi ISuzukiri 4 0 1 0 Kinsler2b 4 0 1 0 Ligirdg3b 4 0 1 1 Andrusdh 4 0 2 0 C anodh 4 I 1 0 N.cruzrf 3 0 0 0 VWegslf 3 0 1 0 ABeltre3b 4 0 1 0 G ardnrcf 0 0 0 0 Przynsc 4 0 0 0 Nunezss 4 0 1 1 Morlnd1b 4 0 0 0 D Adms2b 4 0 1 0 Profarss 3 0 2 0 O veray1b 4 0 0 0 DvMrplf 3 0 0 0 Mesacf-If 3 0 1 0 LMartncf 3 0 1 0 AuRmnc 4 1 3 0 T otals 3 4 2 102 Totals 3 20 7 0 N ew York 000 0 0 1 0 10 — 2 Texas 0 00 Ogg 000 — 0 E—A.Beltre (11). DP—New York 1, Texas1. LOB—NewYork8,Texas6.28—Ligibridge (1), Cano

Kansas City beat Baltimore. Baltimore Kansas City ab r hbi ab r hbi M cLothlf 4 0 0 0 AGordnlf 3 I I 2 Machd3b 4 0 0 0 Hosmertb 4 1 1 1 Markks rf 4 0 1 0 BButler dh 3 2 2 1 A.Jonescf 3 0 1 0 S.Perezc 4 1 1 1 C Davis1b 4 0 0 0 Loughrf 4 0 2 2 Wiete rsc 4 0 2 0 Mostks3b 3 0 0 0 Hardyss 3 0 0 0 AEscorss 4 0 0 0 Urrutiadh 4 I 2 0 Getz2b 3I I 0 B Rorts2b 3 0 2 1 Dysonci 3 1 2 0 Totals 3 3 1 8 1 Totals 3 17 107 B altimore 000 01 0 0 0 0 — 1 Kansas City 2 1 0 0 3 0 10x 7 DP — Baltimore1, KansasCity2. LOB —Baltimore 7, Kansas City 5. 28 8 Roberts (5), B.Butler(20), Getz(6). 38—Urrutia (1), AGordon(3). HR —8Butler

M orrsn1b 4 0 1 0 Boggsp 0 0 0 0 L ucas3b 4 1 1 1 CGnzlzlf 1 0 0 0 DSolan2b 4 1 1 2 Pachecph-1b 3 1 1 0 Mrsnckcf 4 0 0 0 Cuddyr1b-rf 3 1 2 1 B rantlyc 4 I 1 0 WRosrc 4 1 2 1 Cishekp 0 0 0 0 Bckmnrf-f 4 0 0 0 Eovaldi p 2 0 0 0 Arenad3b 4 0 2 0 DJnngsp 0 0 0 0 JHerrrss-2b 3 0 0 0 Dobbsph 1 0 1 0 Nicasiop 1 0 0 0 Quagsp 0 0 0 0 Ottavinp 0 0 0 0 Sloweyp 0 0 0 0 Tlwtzkph-ss 1 0 0 0 M athisc 0 0 0 0 Totals 3 4 5 8 4 Totals 3 23 7 2 Miami 0 00 000 014 — 6 Colorado 0 00 000 003 — 3 E—Stanton(8), Eovaldi(I). DP—Miami l. LOBMiami 3,Colorado5.28—Yelich (1), Stanton2(13), Cuddyer(21). HR—D.Solano (2). CS—Hechavarria

Detroit IP H R E R BB SO past Pittsburgh andended the VerlanderL,10-8 6 11 7 7 2 4 Nationals' losing streak at six. EReed 2 1 0 0 1 0 Chicago Pittsburgh Washington PeavyW,8-4 7 4 4 4 2 7 ab r hbi ab r hbi LindstromH,11 1 0 0 0 0 0 S Martelf 3 1 0 0 Harperlf 5 3 3 2 A.Reed S,26-30 I 1 0 0 I 2 Mercer2b-ss 4 1 3 1 Lmrdzz2b 5 2 3 1 Peavypitchedto 1baterin the 8th. Mcctchcf 4 0 0 0 Zmrmn3b 5 1 3 1 T—2:48. A—30,348(40,615). RMartnc 4 1 1 I AdLRc1b 4 0 2 2 P Alvrz3b 4 0 1 0 Werthrf 4 0 0 0 GSnchz1b 3 2 3 0 Dsmndss 4 1 1 0 Blue Jays 4, Astros 0 S niderph-rf 1 0 0 0 Spancf 3 0 1 1 Tabat aph I 0 0 0 Stmmnp 0 0 0 0 (6) S—Nicasio TORONTO — MarkBuehrle M orrisp 0 0 0 0 Tracyph 1 0 0 0 Miami IP H R E R BBSO JHrrsnrf-2b-rf5 1 3 4 Clipprdp 0 0 0 0 pitched a two-hitter and Toronto Eovaldi 6 3 0 0 2 4 B armesss 3 0 1 0 RSorinp 0 0 0 0 ended a season-worst sevenDa.JenningsW,1-1 1 0 0 0 0 1 G Jonesph-1b2 0 0 0 Krolp 0000 Quags H,B 1 0 0 0 0 1 AJBrntp 3 0 0 1 Hairstnph 1 0 0 0 game losing streak, beating Slowey 0 3 3 2 0 0 Mazzarp 0 0 0 0 KSuzukc 5 0 1 0 Houston. Buehrle (6-7) struck out Blackp 0 0 0 0 GGnzl CishekS,20-22 I 1 0 0 0 0 zp 2 0 0 0 Colorado a season-high nine. Walkerph-2b 0 1 0 0 Berndncf 2 2 0 0 Nicasio 7 2 0 0 1 9 Totals 3 7 7 127 Totals 4 1 9 147 1 2 1 1 0 2 P ittsburgh 000 1 0 2 0 04 — 7 DttavinoL,0-2 Houston Toronto 1-3 4 4 4 0 0 W ashington 4 0 0 0 0 0 032 — 9 W.Lopez ab r hbi ab r hbi Boggs 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 Twooutswhenwinning runscored. Vigarss 2 0 0 0 Reyes ss 4 0 3 0 Slowey pi t ched to 3 ba t e rsinthe 9th. E G.Sanchez(2), PAlvarez(17), Mercer (9). A tuve2b 4 0 0 0 RDavislf 4 0 0 0 WP Ottavino. DP — W as hi n gton 1. LOB — Pi t t s burgh 10, Wa s hi n gJ castroc 4 0 0 0 Bautistrf 2 2 0 0 —Mercer 2(12), Barmes(9), Harper(11), T—4:07. A—33,165(50,398). Carterlf 3 0 0 0 Encrnc1b 2 1 1 1 ton 11. 28 Lombardozzi 2 (11). 38—Ad.LaRoche (3). HRJDMrtndh 3 0 1 0 DeRosadh 2 0 0 0 J.Harrison (1), Harper(14). SB—S.Marte(29). Wagac1b 3 0 0 0 Lindph-dh 1 1 1 1 Padres10, Brewers 8 Pittsburgh IP H R E R BB SO Maxwgrf 3 0 1 0 Mlzturs2b 3 0 1 2 AJBurnett 7 9 4 I I 5 MDmn3b 3 0 0 0CIRsmscf 3 0 1 0 MILWAUKEE — Carlos Quentin Mazzaro 2-3 3 3 3 1 1 B Bamsci 2 0 0 0 Arenciic 3 0 0 0 Black 1 3 0 0 0 1 1 and Jesus Guzmanhomered and Lawrie3b 3 0 0 0 Morris L,4-4 2-3 2 2 2 0 0 T otals 2 7 0 2 0 Totals 2 74 7 4 San Diego got 16 hits on its way to Houston 0 00 000 000 — 0 Washington G.Gonzal e z 52-3 8 3 3 4 11 beating Milwaukee. — 4 Toronto 000 100 30x 11 - 3 1 0 0 0 1 DP — Houston 3. LOB —Houston 4, Toronto2. StammenH,1 0 0 0 0 0 San Diego 28 — J.D.Martinez(15), Reyes (7), Encarnacion(18), ClippardH,18 1 Milwaukee 13 2 4 4 2 I Lind (22),Col.hasmus(21). CS—Villar (1), M.lzturis RSoriano ab r hbi ab r hbi K rol W,1-0 BS,1-1 2-3 1 0 0 1 2 Evcarrss 4 3 2 0 Weeks2b 4 0 0 0 (4). S —Villar. Houston IP H R E R BB SO HBP—byA.J.Burnett(Harper,AdLaRoche). H eadly3b 5 0 1 0 Aokirf 41 11 T—3:39.A—38862 (41,418). BedardL,3-8 5 3 1 I I 6 Quentinlf 3 1 2 3 Segurass 5 0 0 0 Harreg 3 4 3 3 2 2 A lonso1b 5 1 2 2 Lucroyc 5 1 2 0 Toronto Venalecf 5 1 2 0 CGomzcf 5 2 3 1 Cardinals 3, Phillies1 BuehrleW,6-7 9 2 0 0 2 9 Amarst2b 5 1 3 1 JFrncs1b 4 2 1 1 HBP —byBuehrle(B.Barnes). Denorfirf 5 0 1 0 YBtncr3b 5 2 4 2 ST. LOUIS — Lance Lynn al l owed T—2:18. A—24,188(49,282). R Riverc 4 2 2 1 Gindllf 30 12 one run in seven innings andSt. Volriuezp 2 0 0 0 Gagardp 1 0 0 0

got home runs from JayBruce and

N.Y.Mets7, Atlanta4 Washington 9, Pittsburgh7 San Diego10,Milwaukee8 Miami 5,Colorado3 St. Louis 3, Philadelphia1

Seattle ab r hbi Dozier 2b 5 0 1 0 BMilerss CHrmn c-rf 5 1 2 1 Frnkln 2b Mornea 1b 4 0 1 0 Ibanezlf Bernier 3b 1 0 I I KMorlsdh Doumit rf 4 0 1 0 Seager3b Butera c 1 0 0 0 Smoak1b Ploutte3b-lb 4 0 0 0 MSndrsrf Thoms If 4 0 0 0 Bayph-rf

. J. ~ ~~ @~

homer of his career, a two-run shot in the bottom of the ninth inning that lifted Washington

LatosW,10-3 72 - 3 8 2 1 I M.ParraH,7 1-3 0 0 0 0 ChapmanS,24-27 1 1 0 0 1

4 0 2

GreinkeL,8-3 Howell Marmol

4 2 I

Los Angeles

7 1 I

6 4 4 1 2 0 0 1 2 I I I

HBP—by Greinke (Phigips). WP—Chapman, Greinke. T—3;10. A—53,275(56,000).

Diamondbacks 3, Cubs1 PHOENIX — Aaron Hill drove in

two runs with a homeranddouble, helping Arizona top theChicago

seven major leaguestarts as New York split a four-gameseries. Atlanta

New York ab r hbi ab r hbi S mmnsss 4 0 0 0 EYonglf 2 1 1 0 R Jhnsncf 4 1 1 0 ABrwnlf 3 1 1 0 J .Uptonrt 4 0 0 0 Hwknsp 0 0 0 0 F Frmn 1b 3 2 2 1 Parnellp 0 0 0 0 Gattislf 4 0 0 0 DnMrp2b 5 2 3 1 Uggla2b 3 1 1 2 DWrght3b 5 1 2 1 CJhnsn3b 3 0 I 0 Byrdrt 5I 3 I G .Lairdc 3 0 0 0 Satin1b 3 1 1 0 A .Woodp 2 0 0 0 JuTmrss 4 0 1 1 L oep 0 0 0 0 Buckc 5 0 2 3 Constnzph 1 0 0 0 Lagarscf 2 0 0 0 Varvarp 0 0 0 0 ZWhelrp 3 0 0 0 Dcrpntp 0 0 0 0 Ardsmp 0 0 0 0 Heywrdph I 0 0 0 Niwnhsph-If 2 0 0 0 Totals 3 2 4 5 3 Totals 3 97 147 Atlanta 1 00 201 000 — 4 New York 004 0 0 3 Ogx - 7 E—F.Freeman(8), Ga tis (4), Buck(4). DP—New York 1. LOB —Atlanta 5, New York 14. 28Re.Johnson (7), A.Brown(1), Dan.Murphy(26), Buck

Thayerp 0 0 0 0 Figarop 1 0 0 0 Guzmnph 1 1 1 2 LSchfrph 1 0 1 1 Vincentp 0 0 0 0McGnzlp 0 0 0 0 Grgrsnp 0 0 0 0 KDavisph 0 0 0 0 T htchrp 0 0 0 0 Kintzlrp 0 0 0 0 Stauffrp 0 0 0 0 Maldndph 1 0 0 0 Kotsayph 1 0 0 0

S treetp 0 0 0 0 Totals 4 0 10169 Totals 3 9 8 138 San Diego 103 2 0 0 4 00 — 10 M ilwaukee 000 1 0 2 500 — 8

E—YBetancourt(8). DP—SanDiegoI, Milwaukee 1. LOB —San Diego8, Milwaukee10. 28—Alonso

(8), Venable 2(10), Gindl (2). HR—Quentin (13), Guzman(7), Aoki (5), C.Gome z (16), Y.Betancourt (10). SB —Ev.cabrera (35), Gindl (2), K.Davis(2). S—Volquez.SF—Quentm. San Diego IP H R E R BB SO VolquezW8 8 5 1 - 3 6 3 2-3 I 0 ThayerH,17 1 -3 4 4 Vincent 1-3 2 1 Gregerson ThatcherH,11 1 - 3 0 0 StaufferH,3 1 0 0 StreetS,18-19 I 0 0 Milwaukee GagardoL,8-9 3 2-3 86 2 1-3 2 0 Figaro Mic Gonzale z 1 4 4 Kintzler 2 2 0 WP — Mic.Gonzalez2. T 3:55. A 34,372(41,900).

3 0 4 1 0 0 0

3 1 0 1 0 0 I

5 0 0 1 0 1 2

6 0 4 0

3 0 0 0

4 2 1 0

Leaders ThroughThursday's Games

AMERICANLEAGUE BATTING —Micabrera, Detroit,.358; Mauer,Minnesota,.324,DOrtiz, Boston,.323; Trout,LosAngeles, .321; Loney,Tampa Bay, .316; ABeltre, Texas,.308; TorHunter,Detroit, .308. RUNS —Micabrera, Detroit, 76, CDavis, Baltimore,74;AJones,Baltimore, 70; Trout, LosAngeles, 67;Bautista,Toronto,66,DeJennings,TampaBay,66; Encarnacion, Toronto, 63. RBI — CDavis, Baltimore, 97; Micabrera, Detroit, 96; Encarnacion,Toronto, 75; Fielder, Detroit, 74; AJones,Baltimore, 71;Cano,NewYork, 70, NCruz, Texas,70. TRIPLES —Trout, LosAngeles, 8; Elsbury Boston,7. HOME RUNS —CDavis, Baltimore, 37, Micabrera, Detroit, 31;Encarnacion,Toronto,26; ADunn, Chicago, 24; Ibanez,Seatle, 24;Bautista, Toronto, 23;

Ncruz,Texas, 23. STOLEN BASES—Egsbury, Boston,37; RDavis, Toronto,27;McLouth, Baltimore, 25.

PITCHING —Scherzer, Detroit, 14-1; MMoore, Tampa Bay,14-3; Colon, Oakland13-3;Tilman, Balt i more,12-3; FHernand ez, Seattle,11-4; CWilson,Los game series. (9). CS Dyson (3). SF—A.Gordon. Angeles,11-6;Masterson,Cleveland,11-7. Baltimore IP H R E R BB SO ERA — FHemandez, Seattle, 2.43; Kuroda, New Chicago Arizona Mig.Go zanlezL,8-4 42-3 8 6 6 1 0 York, 2.51;Coon,Oakland, 2.52;AniSanchez,Detroit, ab r hbi ab r hbi Patton 11-3 1 0 0 0 0 2.68; SaleChi , cago, 2.81; Darwsh,Texas, 2.86; IwaFr.Rodriguez 1 1 1 1 0 0 L akect 4 0 1 0 Eatoncf 3 1 0 0 kuma,Seattle, 2.87. Matusz 1 0 0 0 1 1 Stcastrss 3 0 1 0 A.Hi02b 4 1 2 2 STRIKEOUTS —Darvish, Texas,161, Scherzer, Rizzo1b 4 0 0 0 Gldsch1b 4 0 0 0 KansasCity (10). 38 —DWright (6). HR —FFreeman (11), Uggla Detroit, 157, FHernandez,Seattle, 147; Masterson, GuthrieW10-7 6 6 1 1 1 5 Ransm3b 3 0 0 0Kubellf 3 0 0 0 Clevel a nd,145; Sal e,Chicago,142; Verlander,Detroit, (21). SB —D.Wright(16). Bowdenp 0 0 0 0 Prado3b 4 0 1 0 Crow I I 0 0 I I Atlanta IP H R E R BB SO 132; DHolland, Texas, 129;Iwakuma,Seatle,129. K.Herrera 1 1 0 0 0 2 D Navrrph 1 0 0 0 GParrarf 2 0 0 0 NATIONAL LEAGUE A.Wood 4138 4 4 2 5 (20), Nunez(7), Au.Romine 2 (7). CS—Nunez (3), Coleman B Parkrp 0 0 0 0 Nievesc 4 I 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 I BATTING —YMolina, St. Louis, .336; Craig, St. 12-3 4 3 3 2 2 Loe L,0-1 Mesa(1),Kinsler(7). S I Suzuki Schrhltrf 4 0 2 0 Pnngtnss 3 0 2 1 HBP — by P a tton (D y son), by Mi g .G o n za l e z (M ous t a Louis, .334; Cuddyer, Col o rado, .331; CJohnson,AtVarvaro I I 0 0 0 0 New York IP H R E R BB SO G igespilf 2 1 0 0 Mileyp 30 0 0 kas). 1 1 0 0 1 2 lanta,.326;Mcarpenter,St.Louis,.325; Votto,CincinD.carpenter KurodaW,10-6 7 6 0 0 1 3 D eJess ph I 0 0 0 Putz p 00 0 0 T—2:48.A—17,675 (37,903). nati,.321;Posey,SanFrancisco,.318. New York D.RobertsonH,24 1 0 0 0 0 1 Barney 2b 4 0 0 0 Ziegler p 0 0 0 0 RUNS —Mcarpenter,St. Louis,79; Votto,CincinZ.WheeleW4-1 r 6 4 4 3 2 5 MRiveraS,33-35 I 1 0 0 0 0 Castigoc 3 0 2 1 nati, 72;Choo,Cincinnati, 71; CGonzalez, Colorado, AardsmaH,3 I 0 0 0 1 I Texas White Sox 7, Tigers 4 Viganvp 2 0 0 0 HawkinsH,10 1 0 0 0 0 0 71 Goldschmidt,Arizona,65;Hogrday,St. Louis,64; D.HogandL,8-6 7 1-3 8 2 2 I 2 Valuen3b I 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 SMarte,Pittsburgh, 63. Scheppers 2-3 1 0 0 0 0 Totals 3 2 1 6 1 Totals 3 03 7 3 PamegS,20-24 1 CHICAGO — Jake Peavy pitched RBI — Goldschmidt, Arizona,83;Philips, Cincin—by D.carpenter (Lagares), by Z.Wheeler (UgSoria 1 1 0 0 1 1 Chicago 0 00 000 100 — 1 HBP nati, 81; Craig,St. Louis, 79;Bruce,Cincinnati, 71; gla). WP —Loe, Z.Wheeler. T—2:56. A—35,139(48,114). into the eighth inning andChicago Arizona 100 110 Ogx — 3 DBrown,Philadelphia,69; CG onzalez, Colorado, 67; DP — Chicago 1, Arizona 1. LOB—Chicago 7, T—3:27.A—35,793(41,922). beat Justin Verlander andDetroit FFreeman, Atlanta, 65. Arizona 7. 28 —St.castro (24), Schierholtz 2 (22), Angels 8, Athletics 3 TRIPLES —CGomez,Milwaukee,9, SMarte, Pittsas the Tigers again played minus Castigo(16),A.Hig(11), Prado(17), Nieves(6), Pen- Marlins 5, Rockies 3 burgh, 8;Segura,Milwaukee,8.. nington(9). HR —A.Hil (5). SB—Prado(3). Miguel Cabrera. HOME RUNS —PAlvarez, Pittsburgh, 26; CGonOAKLAND, Calif.— Albert Pujols, IP H R E R BB SO Chicago zalez,Colorado,26;DBrown,Philadelphra,24; GoldViganueva L,2-7 5 6 3 3 3 5 DENVER — Rob Brantly scored Mike Trout and Mark Trumbo each Detroit Chicago schmidt, Arizona,22; Bruce, Cincinnati, 21; Uggla, Bowden 2 1 0 0 0 0 on a wild pitch to break up a ab r hbi ab r hbi Atlanta,21;Beltran,St.Louis,19. drove in two runs to power Los 8 Parker 1 0 0 0 1 0 AJcksn cf 4 I 1 0 DeAzacf 4 0 0 0 scoreless game in the ei g hth STOLEN BASES—Ecabrera, SanDiego 35; SeArizona AngelespastOakland. TrHntr rf 4 1 1 2 AIRmrz ss 4 2 2 2 gura, Miwaukee,30; SMarte, Pittsburgh, 29.. 72-3 5 1 I 3 4 inning, Donovan Solano homered Miley W,7-8 HPerez 2b 0 0 0 0 Riosrf 402I PITCHING —Wainwright, St.Louis,13-5; Corbin, 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 in a four-run ninth, and Miami Putz H,3 Los Angeles Oakland Dirks If 4 0 0 0 ADunnlb 2 1 1 0 Arizona,12-1;Zimmermann,Washington,12-5; Lynn, ZieglerS,5-5 1 1 0 0 0 1 ab r hbi ab r hbi Fielder 1b 4 0 0 0 Konerkdh 4 0 1 1 St. Loui s ,12-5; 7tied at10. waited out a 93-minute rain delay WP —Mi ey2. VMrtnz dh 4 1 1 1 Kppngr2b 4 0 1 1 ERA — Kershaw, LosAngeles, 2.01; l.ocke,PittsShucklf 5 3 2 0 Crispdh 4 0 0 0 T—2:52. A—23,341(48,633). to beat Colorado. Cowgig If 0 0 0 0 Lowrie2b 4 0 1 0 JhPerlt ss 4 0 1 0 Gigaspi3b 3 1 1 0 burgh,2.11;Harvey,NewYork, 2.23; Corbin, Arizona, Trout ci 4 0 1 2 Dnldsn3b 4 0 0 0 D.Kegy 3b-rf 2 0 0 0 Viciedolf 4 I 2 0 2.31, Wainwright,St. Louis, 2.44;Leake,Cincinnati, Pujols dh 4 1 3 2 CespdsIf 2 1 0 0 B.Pena c 3 1 1 1 CWegspr-If 0 0 0 0 Miami Colorado 2.73, Fernandez,Miami,2.74. Nationals 9, Pirates 7 Hamltn rf 5 1 1 1 Freimn1b 4 0 1 0 RSantg2b-3b3 0 0 0 Flowrsc 4 2 2 2 ab r hbi ab r hbi STRIKEOUTS —Harvey, NewYork, 157,Kershaw, Trumo1b 5 0 1 2 CYoungcf 4 1 2 0 Totals 3 2 4 5 4 Totals 3 3 7 127 Hchvrrss 3 0 0 0 Fowlercf 4 0 0 0 Los Angeles,148; Samardzrla, Chicago,139;WainHKndrc 2b 4 0 0 0 DNorrsc 4 1 2 2 Detroit 0 00 200 110 — 4 WASHINGTON — Bryce Harper Yelichlf 4 1 I 0 LeMahi2b 4 0 0 0 wright, St.Louis,137; Latos,Cincinnati, 136;GGonCagasp 3b 3 0 1 0 Reddckri 4 0 0 0 Chicago 200 401 Ogx — 7 delivered the first game-ending Stanton rf 4 1 2 1 WLopez p 0 0 0 0 zalez,Washington,136, HBailey,Cincinnati,133.

cuss revamping how Division I is run. Scott, Mike Slive of the SoutheastContinued from C1 ern Conference, John Swofford of "I don't think it will be as confron- the Atlantic Coast Conference, Bob tational and controversial a process Bowlsby of the Big 12 and Jim Delaas some ofthe reports I have heard ny of the Big Ten have taken turns this week." at football media days around the NCAA President Mark Emmert country over the past week calling for told The Indianapolis Star on Thurs- changes to the way the NCAA passes day that he agrees with Scott and his legislation. fellow commissioners, and vowed sigThe most notable issue has been a nificant changes to the way rules and $2,000 stipend that would be added to policies are made. the athletic scholarship to cover the "There's one thing that virtually ev- full-cost of college attendance. The erybody in Division I has in common big fiveconferences want to be able right now, and that is they don't like to give the stipend to all scholarship the governance model," Emmert told athletes. "Schools that have resources and the Star. "Now, there's not agreement on what the new model should be. But want to be able to do more for studentthere's very little support for continu- athletes are frustrated, concerned ing things in the governing process that we're being held back from doing the way they are today." more for the student-athletes in terms Emmert told the Star he will call for of the stipend," Scott said. a Division I summit in January to disThe stipend was shot down by

Cubs and earn a split of the four-

some of the less wealthy NCAA Division I schools that might not be able to afford it. There are 349 schools in Division I, 125 at the highest level of college football called FBS. "The idea that there is an even playing field in terms for resources is a fanciful and quaint notion," Scott said. Scott compared the stipend being stymied to the delays in bringing instant replay to college football in 2000s. "Instant replay took longer than it needed to get into college football because not everyone could do it," he said. "There are still some schools out there whoseconferences can't afford instant replay. It doesn't strike me that the world's fallen in or that it's created some crisisjust because everyone can't have instant replay." Scott said university presidents that make up the NCAA board of di-

rectors will talk about reform when they meet next month. Proposals could come later this year. Scott said he still wants FBS to have a "so-called big tent," with more than just the top five conferences being included. "That's why the reports of a possible breakaway and things like that are overcooked," he said. "That's not anyone's agenda." He saidthe movetoward more ninegame conference schedules and an emphasis on strength of schedule in the upcoming College Football Playoff will naturally lead to fewer games between the big five conferences and the other five FBS leagues (Mountain West Conference, American Athletic Conference, Sun Belt, Mid-American Conference and Conference USA). But there will still be competition between the two groups. What is l i kely t o d ecrease are

games between FBS and FCS teams and so-called g uarantee games, when a school from a power conference pays hundreds of thousands of dollars to a school from a lesser conference to play a road game. Some FCS and lower-level FBS programs, especially those in the Sun Belt and MAC, rely on those guarantee game payouts to fund their athletic programs, and losing them could be a problem. "I'm not very sympathetic. I just don't think the concept of buy games is a healthy thing for college football or for fans," Scott said. "It's been a quirk in the system that they've benefited from and good for them. I certainly don't feel like it's an entitlement or right they have. To me that's not a higher priority than creating higher quality college football matchups. "There is plenty of socialized revenue distribution through the NCAA."


C4 TH E BULLETIN • FRIDAY, JULY 26, 2013

Patriots

this team's chemistry," he said. "It's going to test everyone that's in this locker room, individually and as a team. It's going to test to see how important football is to us. As a family, you just have to take it day by day, move forward day by day. At the end of the day, the ball is going to continue to roll, and the last thing we want to do is be stuck behind the ball. We have to try to stay above it." Asked to describe his emot ions Thursday and on t h e day Hernandez was led away from his home in handcuffs, Brady said: "How long ago was that? About six weeks ago? I think everyone had a certain range of e m otions, but those were really personal and I dealt with them. At some point you have to move forward, and Ithinkwe as a team are doing that. Certainly it's been a challenging offseason, but we're going to try to move forward the best we know how." Wilfork said: "You're not just dealing w i t h f o o tball right n ow . Y o u're d ealing with a human being, you're dealing with life. To come to training camp on a note like this is tough, but at the same time, we have to continue to do our job. We're not going to disrespect anything that's going on with the families, but we do have to play football. Our job is to play football." Just as Belichick did the day before, Brady took pains t o note the number of r e s pected players wh o h a v e worn Patriots jerseys over the past decade, mentioning Tedy Bruschi, Troy B r own and Mike Vrabel. He cited the formerquarterback Drew Bledsoe as his role model. He echoes the statements of his coach, who said that while the team brand might have been tarnished by Hernandez — and by episodes involving others on the team — the franchise as a whole had not lost its way. "We realize that i n l i g ht of the recent situation, those things ge t o v ershadowed," Brady said. "We have to work h ard t o r e - establish w h at we're all about, and that's to win games and to be the best representatives of this team and organization and representatives for this city that we

Continued from C1 The Patriots used the two days before the start of camp to address the H e rnandez situation, with Bill Belichick speaking Wednesday for the first time on the matter and Brady and Wilfork, the two most veteran captains, doing the same on Thursday. Two o ther captains, Devin M c Courty and Jerod Mayo, also spoke with reporters. Belichick gave a s e venminute p r e p ared s p e ech Wednesday an d a n swered questions fo r 1 5 m i n u tes. Brady m entioned H e rnandez's firstname once, saying he was "really not supposed to comment on Aaron; I wish I could." Hernandez's name did not cross the lips of Wilfork. A tight end for the Patriots from 2010 until he was released on June 26, Hernandez is charged with first-degree murder for the execution-style shooting death of an acquaintance, Odin Lloyd, on June 17. Additionally, he faces fivegun-related charges and is also a suspect in a double homicide in B oston in July 2012. He is being held without bail in a county jail in North Dartmouth, Mass. The Patriotsreleased Hernandez on the day he was arrested. On Thursday, news broke that Hernandez is h o lding what authorities say appears to be a gun in several surveillance photos that were released and had been recorded shortly after Lloyd was shot to death. The photos taken from Hernandez's home surveillance system are contained in more than 100 pages of court recordsreleased by Attleboro District Court. The pictures show Hernandez in his basement holding a gun shortly after Lloyd was k i l led, an affidavit released Thursday says. The surveillance was cut off within minutes. The opening of t r a i ning camp Friday may put anend to the Hernandez questions; Belichick said he would no longer talk about the case, and he is advising his players to do the same. But while the issue may go away from the public d i scourse, Wilfork said there still could be repercussions. "I think it's going to test can possibly be."

Training camphot spots this summer A map is always agood ideafor anyone planning a roadtrip to NFL training camps.

The map wehave in mind is not so much geographic or topographic. It's a guide to the hot spots where the story lines are juicy, the position battles intense, the rosters in flux or being retooled.

Here's a Pick 6 of the campmelodramas:

PATRIOTS,FOXBOROUGH, MASS. For most franchises, undergoing so many roster changeswhile making so much news off the field could set Up a distraction-filled buildup to a disappointing season. But these are the Patriots, and

coach Bill Belichick doesn't allow such things. Hefinished (in his mind, at least) addressing the AaronHernandez murder arrest on Wednesday, saying, "We'll try to do agood Iob in bringing people into this organization in the future and try to learn from the mistakes that we've made along the way, of which there have been plenty."

Even if the club won't talk about Hernandez, this is a challenging preseason for New England. The Patriots need to reinvent their passing game — Tom Brady's top five receivers from 2012,

at least until star TERobGronkowski is healthy, are gone —and Upgrade their defense.

REDSKINS,RICHMOND, VA. This camp is all about one guy: Robert Griffin III. It shouldn't be, but when there are so many health questions about the dynamic Offensive Rookie of the Year and he plays quarterback, well, it will be RG3 24/7. Coach Mike Shanahan won't make asecond mistake ofplaying RG3 when he isn't up to snuff, and Griffin's every practice move will be well-documented. But with the Redskins favored in the

NFC East, keeping aneye on howtheir secondary and offensive line come together will be just as worthwhile.

EAGLES, PHILADELPHIA Welcome to the NFL,Chip Kelly. Now let us catch our breath while you run that up-up-Up-tempo offense. Kelly brings with him from Oregon the quintessential fast-

paced, spread-'em-out, go-for-the-big-play attack. With the likes of Michael Vick, LeSeanMcCoy, DeSeanJackson and Jeremy Maclin, it will be exciting, don't-blink stuff. Watching how it works, or

how many kinks theEaglesmust work out in the newsystem, will put Philly on the must-see list.

CHIEFS,ST.JOSEPH, MO. No coaching change, not evenKelly to Philly, was as intriguing as Andy Reid immediately landing in Kansas City after his14-year stint with the Eagles ended. The Chiefs were abysmal last season,

going 2-14 yet having six players making the ProBowl. Now they have a quality quarterback in Alex Smith, a perenni-

ally successful coach, anaggressive new general manager, and the look of a teamthat could soar in the standings. SEAHAWKS, RENTON,WASH. Lots of reasons to journey to the Pacific Northwest, not the

least of which is watching the further development of QBRussell Wilson. And Seattle's defense yielded the fewest points in the league in 2012 and could be stronger.

But there also arestorm clouds: LBBruce irvin's four-game suspension makesfive Seahawks players getting suspended for using performance enhancers since 2011.Doescoach PeteCarroll have things under control on his supremely talented team? CARDINALS, GLENDALE, ARIZ. At age 60, Bruce Arians finally has a head coaching gig. He earned it with a 9-3 record as interim coach for leukemia-stricken

Chuck Pagano in Indianapolis last season. Hebrings an aggressive mindset and actually has a quarterback, Carson Palmer, who can get the ball downfield. He also will find ways to get star WR Larry Fitzgerald the ball. Often. —TheAssociated Press

Harvin's hip immediately anissuefor Seahawks The Associated Press RENTON, W a sh. It didn't take long for the Seattle Seahawks to face a potential injury problem. This one involves their most expensive offseason acquisition, Percy Harvin. The Seahawks' new offensive toy has suffered an unknown hip injury that landed him on the physically unable to perform list when training camp opened Thursday. The injury is in the area of Harvin's labrum, which has immediate-

Family Continued from C1 "I just wanted to beat my daughter and my mom!" Kenneth said, laughing after winning Saturday's relay with his

dad. Although Rachel was unable to beat her dad in the relay, she had a successful first week at the horse show. She placed first in the Children's Jumpers 14 R Under 1.10-meter class, the Limit Jumpers 1.10-meter class and the modified Amateur/Junior Jumper 1.15-meter class. Tom's and D ebbi's other granddaughter, Kayla, a l so rode last week. She placed third in th e W ishful Jumpers event, where fences were set at 2 feet, and she placed in the top six in all five of her competitions. On Wednesday, Kayla won the Hopeful Jumpersclass,in which she jumped fences also set at 2 feet. Debbi has always owned horses. But while her three sons were growing up, they took a greater interest in the Longs' other family-run business: kayaking. Tom was a national j u n ior/development

coach for young kayakers, and his sons Chad and Kenn eth are f ormer USA N a tional Slalom Kayaking Team members. "All of my kids will try to qualify for the Olympics in

NFL ly drawn concern that it could be a problem that would cause Harvin to miss significant time before ever seeing the field with his new team. "Percy has a hip issue that he's dealing with that came up over the summer. We're trying to figure it out. We're going to do everything we can to help him out, to make the right decision and take care of him in every way,"Seattle coach Pete

Carroll said. "He was working out just a week or so ago going full speed, but it was bothering him enough we took some looks at it." Carroll did not rule out surgery as the solution, but he felt the team has time to get Harvin ready.

"We're going to go ahead

and do it step by step right now," Carroll said. "I know he was working full speed just a few days ago but we need to take care of him." The Seahawks made an ag-

gressive move to bolster an already potent offense when they tradedthree draft picks, including t h eir 2 0 13 f i r stround selection, to Minnesota in exchange for Harvin. Then Seattle locked up Harvin longterm, signing him to a six-year extension. A dding Harvin t o a n o f fense already featuring Russell Wilson, Marshawn Lynch and Sidney Rice immediately raised the Seahawks' already lofty status as contenders in the NFC.

race in th e n ext T ranspac. Disney said he had considered Continued from C1 racing the wooden maxiyacht Racing classic wooden Windward P assage, which yachts is not unusual, but broke the course record in the sailing is often restrict- 1971, a result often called the ed to coastal day racing Transpac's g reatest s i n gle around buoys. D o rade's performance. owner, Matt Brooks, has a B rooks' schedule for D o more ambitious goal of rac- rade is primarily an attempt to ing his yacht in all the great re-create history. The list of fuocean races the boat won ture races planned for the boat in the 1930s and '40s. includes the N ewport B erHe said he was told that muda Race, the Transatlantic the Dorade was a "piece of Race and the Fastnet Race. antique furniture" and that For this y ear's Transpac "it couldn't be done," but race, Brooks and hi s crew Brooks and his crew re- spent last winter in San Franceived the overall winner's cisco and Los Angeles testtrophy for the Transpac on ing different sails, navigation Thursday, which should si- equipment and sailing techlence skeptics. niques while racking up more " What w e f o und w a s than 1,000 miles of ocean sailthat the b oat l oves the ing. Dorade is the oldest boat ocean," said Brooks, who to race and win the Transpac, bought the boat i n 2 010 but Brooks treated the yacht for $880,000. "You can tell like any other top racing proshe's doing what she loves gram in the fleet. to do." Brooks had new masts deDorade was designed in signed and built, in spruce, to 1929 by Olin Stephens, one handle the additional stresses of sailing's most successful of new l a m inated, aramid designers. The yawl was fiber sails. The hull, which design No. 7 for the fledg- was slightly asymmetrical as ling firm Sparkman and a result of its age, was faired Stephens in New York. and re-scanned. Some of the Stephens, then 21, and best sailors in the world were his brother Rod were at the brought on to round out the helm when themahoganyseven-person crew, including planked, engineless boat an America's Cup navigator made its first mark in the and an around-the-world race history books, winning the skipper. "The boat was extremely 1931 Transatlantic Race. Small and powerful, Do- well s a iled," s ai d R o b bie rade beat the traditional Haines, an Olympic gold medschooners of the time. The alist who was a h elmsman designer and his crew re- aboard Pyewacket. "Though ceived a ticker-tape parade it's disappointing to us, part upon their return to New of me kind of likes seeing DoYork, and the win set the rade win." stage for S t ephens' esWhat Jenner and the rest of teemed career. Dorade's crew learned on their Dorade's finishing time two-week sojourn was that the in the Transpac race this genius of the boat's design and year was 12 days, 5 hours, how the sailors in the 1930s 23 minutes, 18 seconds, skillfully sailed her never go knocking more than a day out of style. " It was definitely a n e w off the boat's 1936 run. The greatest distance covered style of steering," Jenner said. in a day, or best 24-hour "Everything all of us know we run, was 224 miles in 1936, had to forget and go to the oldbut 203 miles this year. school type of sailing." Handicap rules used for Few boats have as grand offshore racing allow boats a history a s D o rade's, but of diff erent sizes and types Brooks hopes to prove a point to compete in th e same with the boat. "I hope this win will make race with time allowances and staggered starts. Fig- people sit up and take notice uring in those allowances, that these boats can still do Dorade's adjusted time of what they were designed to 5 days, 12 hours, 20 min- do," he said. "They shouldn't utes, 55 seconds, beat Roy be restricted to dockside muP. Disney's state-of-the-art seum pieces." 70-footer Pyewacket, which had an adjusted time of 5 days, 14 hours, 51 minutes, 21 seconds. Dorade started a week earlier than Pyewacket, which finished the course in 8 days, 15 hours, 41 minutes, 3 seconds. "The whole idea of a boat like Dorade pulling this off has great benefits," Disney said, referring to the publicity the win has attracted. He added that he hoped more classic boats would P

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2016 in my sport (kayaking)," to fail," Tom said. "And if you Tom said. "And Rachel's (other) grandmother and grandfather were also Olympians in the kayak world. So our breeds gopretty deep in competitive sports." These days, Debbi and Tom have five granddaughters who have taken more of an interest in riding. And instead of cheering on from the sidelines at horse shows, Tom and sons Kenneth and Chad decided to compete as well. "I started riding out of defense," Tom said. "That being, if I am here (at the horse show) I would rather ride than sit around.... I got involved with riding because the family is evolving that way." According to To m L o ng, kayaking and horseback riding are similar because they share similar r e quirements for success. "They're both balance-related sports," Tom said. "They're s uper similar i n t e r m s o f training, so I coach the kids as a kayak coach. I don't teach riding, I teach balance and the mental side of things." The Long family is used to winning, whether it's kayaking or show jumping. But Tom says that losing is just as important as winning. "We look at winning a little bit different, in the sense that you pick any sport, doesn't matter what it is, you're going

Yacht

to become an Olympian, but that's not the point. The endcan handle failure you'll be successful. So what I look for game is to learn responsibility when I'm working with any of and hard work." $1,190,000 • Po n d erosa Properties — Reporter: 541-383-0375, the kids is to have the result positive when they fail." eoller@bendbulletin.com. Carol Daeis, Broker • 54 1 .588.9217 The youngest Long at this week's High Desert Classics will be playing flag football for the first time this fall and says that he has learned to be happy in sports competitions whatever the outcome may be. "I'm going into flag football, so I have to get used to losing and winning," 7-year-old Merle said. "So if I lose I'm OK, ifI win, it's OK. I love it." Tom says he welcomes his g randchildren t o t r y n e w things outside of jumping and kayaking. But, he and Debbi hold the kids accountable for their commitments. "(Grandpa) makes us come to the barn if we say we're going to come," Isabel said. "That's right," Tom added. "If they say they're going to ride today, then they have to. They can't run out on their responsibility." ' ~ 18707 SW Century Dr., Bend Although Debbi and Tom ',www.widghcom ~ (54 1) 382-4449 enjoy seeing their grandchilG OL F C L U B dren compete and do well, their primary goal is to teach the kids values they can use • I i • later in life. "The responsibility end of it is something that they'll

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be able to apply to anything in life," Debbi said. "And so I don't know if anyone is going

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C5 © To look upindividual stocks, goto bendbulletin.com//buSinss. Alsoseearecapin Sunday's Businesssection.

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, JULY 26, 2013

NASDAO

DOW 15,M5.61 ~ '

3,605.19

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586P500

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25 5g

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Improving confidence

10 YR T NOTE 2.57%

4 3g

1,690.25

S&P 500

15,640

Close: 1,699.26

15,520 '

Change: 4.31 (0.3%)

Americans' confidence in the economy has been improving this

1,640 '

1 0 DA Y S

15,400

year. The U.S. economy is showing more signs of growth. Employers added an average 202,000jobs every month over the past six

1,700

16,000

1,650

15,500

1,600

15,000

months, up from 180,000 in the previous six. The housing market is also gaining strength. The University of Michigan's latest consumer sentiment survey index, due out today, is expected to be essentially unchanged since June.

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Vol. (in mil.) 3,241 2,035 Pvs. Volume 3,278 1,711 Advanced 1744 1648 Declined 1 322 8 3 3 New Highs 1 61 2 3 1 New Lows 111 16

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not seasonally adlosted

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DDW DDW Trans. DDW Util. NYSE Comp. NASDAQ S&P 500 S&P 400 Wilshire 5000 Russell 2000

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Change: 13.37 (0.1%) 1 0 DAY S

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C H G . %CHG. WK MO OTR YTD +0.09% L L +18.71% -0.05% +21.33% +0.35% L T +10.67% +0.31% L L +14.11% +0.71% L +19.40% +0.26% L +1 8.52% +0.40% L +21.00% +0.43% L +19.63% L +24.12% +0.99%

15560.33 15455.59 15555.61 +13.37 -3.39 6450.13 6355.04 6438.78 502.39 498.54 5 01.44 + 1 . 74 9636.36 9566.30 9635.06 +30.00 3606.19 3579.20 3605.19 +25.59 1690.94 1680.07 1690.25 + 4 . 31 1235.11 1225.47 1 234.72 + 4 . 87 17943.90 17823.38 17938.58 +76.16 1054.19 1040.79 1054.18 +10.35

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Source: FactSet

Housing boost Lumber supplier Weyerhaeuser reports second-quarter earnings today. The company has benefited this year from a rebound in home construction, which has stoked demand for its products. At the same time, raw materials costs have been rising. Wall Street anticipates that Weyerhaeuser's latest quarterly report card will show improved earnings and revenue versus the same period last year. WY

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'13 20

Operating EPS

$0.09 2 Q '12

2Q ' 1 3

Price-earnings ratio:

32

based on trailing 12 months' results

Dividend: $0.80 Div. yield: 2.7% Source: FactSet

Alaska Air Group Avista Corp Bank of America Barrett Business Boeing Co

ALK 32.69 68.00 60 .37 -.79 -1.3 Y L AVA 22.78 29.26 28 .78 + .34 t1.2 V L BAC 6 . 90 15.03 14 .83 +.12 +0.8 BBSI 19.99 62.82 68 .33 +6.18 +9.9 L L BA 6 9 .03 109.49 106.70 25 -0.2 w L CascadeBancorp CACB 4.50 7.18 6 .3 2 +.21 +3.4 V Columbia Bnkg CDLB 16.18 25.55 24 .95 21 -08 w L Columbia Sporlswear COLM 47.72 66.69 62 .81 + 17 +03 V L CostcoWholesale COST 93.20 119.39 117.45 -.45 -0.4 L Craft Brew Alliance BREW 5.62 10.00 9 .1 7 -.11 -1.2 L FLIR Systems FLIR 18.55 29.58 31 .91 +2.82 49.7 Hewlett Packard HPQ 11.35 26.71 26 .24 +.13 +0.5 L Home Federal BncpID HOME 9.64 14.81 14 .55 +.15 41.0 L L Intel Corp INTC 19.23 26.90 23 .06 + .13 $-0.6 L V Keycorp K EY 7 . 71 12.44 12 .36 -.01 -0.1 L L Kroger Co KR 2 0 .98 39.32 39 .68 +.55 +1.4 L L Lattice Semi LSCC 3.17 5.71 5 .0 3 w L LA Pacific L PX 9 . 87 22.55 16 .67 53 -3.1 V L MDU Resources MDU 19.59 — 0 28.65 28 .20 +.06 +0.2 w L Mentor Graphics MENT 13.21 — o 20.78 20 .35 +.08 +0.4 V L Microsoft Corp MSFT 26.26 36.43 31 .39 57 -1.8 ~ w Nike Inc 8 NKE 44.83 66.07 62 .49 14 -0.2 V L Nordstrom Inc JWN 50.90 63.34 61 .44 02 ... w L Nwst Nat Gas NWN 41.01 50.80 44 .92 +.47 +1.1 L L OfficeMax Inc DMX 3 . 71 ~ 13.17 11.7 7 +.3 2 +2 .8 L L PaccarInc PCAR 35.44 ~ 60.00 5 6. 1 3 -.07 -0.1 V L Planar Systms P LNR 1.12 ~ 2.36 1.83 -.00 -0.1 w L Plum Creek PCL 39.17 ~ 54.62 48.9 8 +.2 3 +0 .5 W L 4y —270.00 230.70 -2.56 -1.1 w L Prec Castparts PCP 150.53 Safeway Inc S WY 14.89 ~ 28.42 25. 6 1 +. 1 0 +0.4 W L Schnitzer Steel SCHN 2307 ~ 3 303 2 570 + 04 +0 2 L L Sherwin Wms SHW 127.92 ~ 194. 5 6 17 2.94 + . 88 +0.5 v Stancorp Fncl SFG 28.74 — 4 2 53.20 52 .50 -.82 . . . L L StarbucksCp SBUX 43,04 — o 69 90 68 .17 +1.56 +2.3 W L Triquint Semi TQNT 4.30 — o 7.29 7.9 8 +1 .19 +17.5 L L Umpqua Holdings UM P Q 11,17— o 17,23 17 .00 + . 04 +0,2 L L US Bancorp USB 30.96 — 0 37.74 37 .46 -.08 -0.2 L L Washington Fedl W A FD 15,34 — o 22,76 22 .40 -.05 -0,2 L L Wells Fargo &Co WF C 3 1 .25 — 42 44.79 43 .65 -.66 -1.5 W L Weyerhaeuser W Y 2 2.55 ~ 33.24 29.1 4 +. 2 8 +1.0 v L

L L L L

L L L L L L V

+ 40.1 +76 . 3 1033 14 0 .80 +19. 4 +1 0 . 1 171 21 1 .22 +27.7 +109.5 86746 26 0 .04 + 79. 4 + 1 98.9 105 33 0 . 52 +41 . 6 45 1 . 0 5224 19 1 . 94 +1.0 +23.9 7 42 +39 1 +46 1 218 20 0 . 40 +17 7 +22 5 95 20 0 . 88 +19 0 +34 0 1336 25 1 . 24 +41. 5 +1 0 . 3 33 +43.0 +54.0 3579 21 0 .36 + 84 . 1 +4 8 .210900 dd 0.58 +17.1 +52 . 6 32 cc 0.24a +11. 8 -4.7 93158 12 0 .90 + 46.8 +60 .2 12831 14 0 .22f + 52.5 +88 . 0 4 3 95 1 4 0. 6 0

Newell Rubbermaid's latest quarterly results should provide insight into how the company's restructuring efforts are faring. The consumer products company, which makes Sharpie pens and Rubbermaid containers, disclosed plans last fall to restructure its business into two groups, a development organization and a delivery organization. Newell Rubbermaid reports second-quarter earnings today.

Dividend Footnotes: 6-Extra dividends were paid, ttct are not included. tt - Annual rate plus stock c - Liquidating dividend. 6 - Amount declared or paid in last12 months. 1 -Current annual rate, wtttctt was mcrsased by most recent divldsnd announcement. i - Ssm ot dividends patd after stock split, no regular rate. I - Sum of dlvidsnds patd tttts year. Most recent dlvldsnd was omitted or deferred k - Declared or patd thls year, 6 cumulative issue with dividends marrears. m - Current annual rate, which was decreased by most recent dividend announcement. p - Imtial dividend, annual rate not known, yleld not shown. r - Declared or paid in prscsdmg 12 months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock approtcmate cash value on sx-distrittstion date.PE Footnotes:q - Stock is 6 clossd-2nd fund - no P/E ratio shown. CC - P/Eexceeds 99. dd - Loss in last 12 months

' ","" Hershey lifts outlook The maker of Kit Kats, Twizzlers and Hershey's Kisses raised its outlook for the year and increased its dividend Thursday. Hershey's actions came as it reported secondquarter net income increased 18 percent as candy sales increased and the cost of

ingredients dropped. For the year, Hershey's expects that new products such as Hershey's Kisses Deluxe and Hershey's Drops chocolates, set to

Hershey (HSY)

/ ~g ~ g

AP

Thursday's close: $93.90

Zynga SiriusXM Microsoft BcstonSci FordM iShJapan

2963749 931579 926434 867464 705590 651341 616363 567814 510757 437223

34.36 +7.85 23.06 + . 13 168.93 + . 41 T Rowe Price Real d TRREK 14.83 + . 12 3.50 + .22 VALUE BL EN D GR OWTH 3.78 + . 10 -.57 31.39 cC o 10.83 +1.22 69 16.96 —.41 oo oc 11.65 -.22 6L

Gainers NAME Alco Strs

L AST

cC 69

C H G %C H G

1 3.81 +5 . 2 3 3 4.36 +7 . 8 5 5 3.77 + 1 0.94 9 0.14 + 1 6.42 7.98 +1 . 1 9 CoStar 1 57.02 + 2 3.05 CarboCer 8 4.43 + 1 2.10 TripAdvis 7 1.10 +9. 9 6 Repros wtA 2 5.00 +3. 4 7 InterMune 1 4.76 +1 . 9 5

Facebook DNEDK Medidata TriQuint

NAME SwedLC22

Sequenom Crocs

LAST 8.00 3.30 13.55 11.16 20.13

CC

+61 . 0 +2 9 . 6 «C +2 5 . 5 69 +2 2 . 3 «C +1 7.5 oo +1 7 .2 Morningslar Ownership Zone™ +1 6 .7 +16 . 3 O e Fund target represents weighted +16 . 1 average of stock holdings +1 5 . 2 • Represents 75% offund'sstock holdings

Losers CHG %CHG -4.06 -33.7 -1.39 -29.6 -3.43 -20.2 -2.02 -15.3 -3.34 -14.2

CATEGORY Real Estate MORNINGSTAR

RATING™ *** y ryr ASSETS $3,574 million

EXP RATIO 0.78% MANAGER David Lee SINCE 1997-10-31 RETURNS3-MD -1.0 Foreign Markets YTD +9.3 NAME LAST CHG %CHG 1-YR +12.4 Paris -6.73 -.17 3,956.02 3-YR ANNL +16.1 London 6,587.95 -32.48 —.49 5-YR-ANNL +7.9 Frankfurt -80.13 —.96 8,298.98 Hong Kong 21,900.96 -67.97 -.31 TOP 5HOLDINGS Mexico -86.95 -.21 Simon Property Group Inc 40,752.09 Milan 16,431.97 -10.74 —.07 Public Storage Tokyo -168.35 -1.14 14,562.93 Stockholm 1,232.95 + 2.61 + . 2 1 Prologis Inc Sydney -3.50 -.07 AvalonBay Communities Inc 5,018.30 Zurich 7,865.38 -57.69 —.73 Equity Residential

Clearfield DncoMedn

~

~

~

94

Ann u al dividend.: $1.68 Div. yield: 1.8%

SelectedMutualFunds

Morningstar gives this fund a gold rating, noting that its manager Marketsummary David Lee has led the fund since Most Active its 1997 inception, and he has NAME VOL (Ogs) LAST CHG achieved a strong record. Intel S&P500ETF BkofAm

$68 ~

Source: FactSet

FundFocus

Facebook

52-WEEK RANGE

*annualized

AP

quarter, as it processed more transactions worldwide. $200

PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1Y R 3 Y R 5YR 1 3 5 American Funds BalA m 22.88 +.03 +13.1 +20.8 +14.2 +8.5 A A A BcndA m 1 2 49 . . . -24 -1.3 +3.7 44.2 D C E CaplncBuA m 56.33 +.16 +8.6 +15.0 +10.9 +5.0 8 A C CpWldGrlA m 41.40 +.09 +12.9 +28.1 +11.8 +4.4 C C D EurPacGrA m 44.35 +.13 $7.6 +25.3 +8.0 +2.8 D D A FnlnvA m 47.75 +.11 t17.7 +30.3 +15.9 +6.9 C C D GrthAmA m 40.76 +.12 +18.7 +33.1 t15.9 t6.9 A C C IncAmerA m 19.71 +.02 +11.0 +18.3 +13.1 +7.9 8 A A InvCoAmA m 35.58 +.10 +18.9 +28.9 +15.1 +7.3 C D C NewPerspA m35.54 +.12 413.7 +28.9 +13.6 +6.6 C 8 8 WAMutlnvA m37.18 +.04 +20.3 +27.6 +18.1 +8.5 D A 8 Dodge &Cox Income 13.53 -.01 - 0.9 +1.1 +4.6 +6.9 A 8 8 IntlStk 39.18 +.27 4 13.1 +38.5 410.2 43.3 A A A Stock 150.44 +.12 + 24.5 +41.1 +18.8 +8.0 A A C Fidelity Contra 90.28 +.56 + 17.5 +25.3 +16.6 +8.1 D 8 8 GrowCo 112. 68 +.80+ 20.9 +29.8 +19.8 +9.7 8 A A LowPriStk d 47 .98 +.06+ 21.5 +37.3 +18.9+11.4 B 8 A Fidelity Spartan 500l d xAdvtg 59 .95 +.15+ 19.9 +29.1 +17.8 +8.5 C 8 B FrankTemp-Franklin Income C m 2. 37 ... +8 . 1 + 15.8 +10.7 +7.3 A A A IncomeA m 2.3 5 . .. +8 . 5 + 1 6.5 +11.2 +7.9 A A A FrankTemp-Tem leton GIBondAdv 13.06 -.03+0.1 +8.7 +6.6 +9.6 A A A Oppenheimer RisDivA m 20. 11 +.07+16.2 +25.3 +15.1 +6.5 E D D RisDivB m 18. 20 +.06+ 15.6 +24.0 +14.1 +5.5 E E E RisDivC m 18 . 11 +.06 + 15.7 +24.3 +14.3 +5.7 E D E SmMidValA m40.58 +.29 + 25.2 +42.3 +14.6 +5.8 A E E SmMidValB m34.10 +.25 + 24.6 +41.1 +13.7 +5.0 A E E PIMCO TotRetA m 10 . 79 +.01 -2.8 -0.4 +4.1 +7.1 C C B T Rowe Price Eqtylnc 31.48 + .07+20.1 +31.8 +16.8 +8.8 C C B GrowStk 44.4 6 + .29+ 17.7 +26.8 +18.1 +8.8 C A B HealthSci 54.1 2 + .47+31.3 +39.1 +32.2+16.9 C A A Newlncome 9. 4 4 ... -2.7 - 1.5 +3.4 +5.8 D D C Vanguard 155.96 +.40 +19.9 +29.2 +17.8 +8.5 C 8 8 500Adml 500lnv 155.95 +.40 +19.8 +29.0 +17.6 +8.4 C 8 8 CapDp 43.08 +.23 +28.1 +44.9 +18.1 +9.6 A A A Eqlnc 28.75 +.06 +20.7 +28.7 +19.8+10.2 D A A StratgcEq 26.72 +.12 +24.6 +40.5+21.0 +9.4 A A C Tgtet2025 15.00 +.05 +10.4 +19.2 +11.8 +6.6 C 8 8 TotBdAdml 1 0.67 . . . -2.3 -2.2 +3.3 t5.4 E D D Totlntl 15.58 +.05 +5.6 +25.0 +7.1 +1.0 D E 0 TotStlAdm 42.61 +.17 +20.6 +30.9 +18.2 +9.0 8 A A TotStldx 42.59 +.17 +20.5 +30.7 +18.1 +8.9 8 A A USGro 24.95 +.17 +17.4 +28.6 417.4 47.7 8 8 C Welltn 37.67 . . . 412.7 +19.6+13.0 +8.5 8 A A FAMILY

PCT 10.04 4.98 4.46 Fund Footnotes. b - rse covering market costs ls paid from fund assets. d - Deferred sales charge, or redemption 4.29 fes. f - front load (salss charges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually a marketing fss and either asales or 4.29 redemption fse. Source: Mornlngstar.

+

i)048

1.3243

Logitech Int'I LOGI Close:$7.15L0.68 or 10.5% The gadget and computer accessories maker posted a surprise profit and stronger-than-expected revenue in its fiscal first quarter. $7.5 7.0

180

6.5

M J 52-week range $124.26~

J $196.66

M J 52-week range $6.24 ~

J $16.29

Vol35.5m (1.7x avg.) PE: 5 4.7 Vol3 2.9m (7.0x avg.) P E: 6 . 9 Mkt. Cap:$100.8 b Yiel d : 0 .7% Mkt. Cap:$1.24 b Yie l d : 11.8% UA Close:$69.38 %7.55 or 12.2% The athletic clothing company said that its second-quarter net income more thandoubled as consumers bought more of its products. $70

DR Horton DHI Close: $19.38 V-t.82 or -8.6% The homebuilder reported strong third-quarter sales growth, but the pace of sales fell in May when mortgage rates started rising. $30 25

60

20 M J 52-week range

$44.32 Vol35.8m (4.5x avg.) Mkt. Cap: $5.83 b

J

IMAX Close:$25.60 %0.50 or 2.0% The big-screen movie theater operator said that its second-quarter net income rose 7 percent, helped by new theaters.

$62.96~ Vol321.6m (4.9x avg.) Mkt. Cap: $44.01 b

M J 52-week range

J

$69.55 $16.93 ~ $27.76 P E: 60 .9 Vol3 22.9m (3.1x avg.) P E: 6. 4 Yield: ... Mkt. Cap:$6.25 b Yiel d : 0. 8 %

Imax

Facebook FB Close:$34.36 %7.85 or 29.6% The social media giant pushed aggressively into mobile advertising and reported much-improved second-quarter revenue and profit. $35 30 25

M J 52-week range $17.66 ~

J $34.66

Vol3 364.4m (8.4x avg.) PE: 3435.9 Mkt. Cap:$60.12 b Yield: ...

Crocs CROX Close: $13.55 %-3.43 or -20.2% The maker of colorful plastic shoes and other footwear reported second-quarter results that fell far short of Wall Street expectations. $16 116 14

M J 52-week range

J

$134.7 1 $12.69 ~ $16.66 PE: 1 27.1 Vold14.6m ( 11.2x avg.) P E:9 . 3 Yield: ... Mkt. Cap:$1.19 b Yield: ... AP

SOURCE: Sungard

launch in China in the fourth quarter, will help drive sales. The company predicts that revenue will rise 7 percent in 2013. It had previously forecast a 5 to 7

Price-earnings ratio (Based on past 12 months' results):29 10-Y R * :10% Total return this year:29% 5-YR*: 21%

satre tls

V

InterestRates

percent gain. The company also raised its earnings forecast slightly, to $3.68 to $3.71 per share. Analysts polled by FactSet predicted $3.66 per share. Hershey lifted its quarterly dividend by 6.5 cents, or 16 percent to 48.5 cents.

EURO

StoryStocks

L L w +26 . 1 + 5 1.5 1437 dd L -13.7 +62.4 3258 23 L +32. 8 +3 0 .4 4 2 9 c c 0. 6 9 $30 p L +19.6 +38 .1 37 1 2 2 0. 1 8 w + 1 7.5 + 12.7 61636 12 0 .92 25 V + 21. 1 +3 6 .5 4 4 07 2 3 0. 8 4 L +14.8 +20 .9 76 3 1 7 1. 2 0 M J J L +1.6 -4.0 6 5 21 1.8 2 52-week range L +36.6 +2 03.0 8 8 5 2 0.0 8 a $16.66~ $26.99 L + 24.2 +5 2 .2 1 2 73 2 0 0 .80a Vol33.2m (4.1x avg.) PE: .. L +27.8 +2 1 .6 2 dd Mkt. Cap: $1.72 b Yield: .. L +10. 4 +2 7 .9 4 4 1 3 4 1. 7 6f L +21. 8 +4 5 .0 1 654 2 4 0. 1 2 Baidu BIDU L + 41. 6 +7 1 .9 2 769 12 0 .80f Close:$125.85 At 2.48 or 11.0% L -153 + 05 199 9 2 07 5 China's Internet search engine operw +12.4 +32 .2 1 357 25 2 . 0 0 ator reported a rare drop in profits as it expands into mobile services L +43.2 +76 . 5 298 12 0. 9 3f L + 27. 1 +3 3 .5 6 858 3 5 0. 8 4 where it expects to see growth. $140 L + 65.2 +39 .6 11085 dd L + 44,2 +37 ,8 1 0 68 1 8 0 , 60f 120 L + 17.3 +14 .6 6 4 16 1 3 0 . 92f 100 L +32,8 +44 ,4 3 5 4 1 6 0, 3 6 L +27.7 +36 . 3 2 9194 12 1 . 2 0 M J J 52-week range L + 4.7 +29 . 5 5 2 24 32 0 . 80f

Restructuring update

' ]I)

Stock indexes rose modestly Thursday, enough to send the Standard & Poor's 500 index to its 13th gain in the last 16 days. The index flipped between modest gains and losses throughout the day after more companies reported second-quarter results and economic reports came in mixed. Orders for long-lasting manufactured goods rose more than economists expected in June, an encouraging sign. But more workers filed for unemployment benefits last week than economists expected, an indication that layoffs may be increasing. Producers of raw materials and utility stocks had some of the day's biggest gains. That offset modest losses for industrial companies.

Under Armour

52-WK RANGE oCLOSE YTD 1YR VOL TICKER LO HI C LOSE CHG %CHG WK MO OTR %CHG %RTN (Thous)P/E DIV

NAME A

+

Close $194 61L7 86 or 4 2/o The credit-card payment processor returned to a profit in its fiscal third

66 M

CRUDEOIL $105.49

Visa '

NorthwestStocks F

)4

Dow Jones industrials

1

''''''' I' s'

+

$20.15

14,000 '

StocksRecap

Consumer Sentiment Index

SILVER

GOLD $1,329.00 ~

The yield on the 10-year Treasury note fell to 2.57 percent Thursday. Yields affect interest rates on consumer loans.

NET 1YR TREASURIES YEST PVS CHG WK MO OTR AGO 3-month T-bill

. 01

6-month T-bill

. 0 6 .06

-0.01 w w ... w w

w w

.10 .13

52-wk T-bill

.11

-0.01

L

.17

L

.22

.02 .12

BONDS

The price of natural gas fell for the fourth time in the last five days in a mixed day for commodities. Crude oil, gold and silver rose, while the wholesale price of gasoline fell.

L

.56

L L

1.40 2.45

NET 1YR YEST PVS CHG WK MO OTR AGO

Barclays Long T-Bdldx 3.41 3.40 +0.01 Bond Buyer Muni Idx 5.17 5.16 +0.01 Barclays USAggregate 2.36 2.31 +0.05 PRIME FED Barclays US High Yield 5.95 5.82 +0.13 RATE FUNDS Moodys AAACorp Idx 4.37 4.31 +0.06 YEST 3.25 .13 Barclays CompT-Bdldx 1.58 1.57 +0.01 6 MO AGO 3.25 .13 Barclays USCorp 3 .23 3.18 +0.05 1 YR AGO3.25 .13

Commodities

L W

2-year T-note . 3 3 .35 -0.02 L W 5 -year T-note 1 .38 1 .3 8 ... L W 10-year T-note 2.57 2.59 -0.02 L L 30-year T-bond 3.64 3.65 -0.01 L L

L L L L L W WW L W L L L W

L L L L L L L

2.19 4.23 1 7. 1 7 1. 0 3 2. 3 .80 2 9.7

CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD Crude Dil (bbl) 105.49 105.39 +0.09 +14.9 Ethanol (gal) 2.20 2.33 - 1.07 + 0 . 5 Heating Dil (gal) 3.04 3.05 -0.39 -0.3 + 8 .7 Natural Gas (mm btu) 3.64 3.70 - 1.46 Unleaded Gas(gal) 3.02 3.05 - 1.24 t 7. 3 FUELS

METALS

Gold (oz) Silver (oz) Platinum (oz) Copper (Ib) Palladium (oz)

CLOSE PVS. 1329.00 1319.70 20.15 20.01 1447.00 1455.20 3.19 3.18 739.85 744.40

%CH. %YTD +0.70 -20.7 +0.66 -33.2 -0.56 -6.0 +0.22 -12.4 - 0.61 + 5 . 3

CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD -6.4 1.22 1.22 +0.07 1.25 1.21 +2.93 -13.2 4.96 Corn (bu) 5.08 -2.41 -29.0 Cotton (Ib) 0.86 0.86 +0.29 +14.4 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 320.70 318.00 +0.85 -14.2 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.46 1.46 +0.17 +26.0 Soybeans (bu) 13.55 13.93 -2.68 -4.5 Wheat(bu) 6.49 6.53 -0.61 -16.6 AGRICULTURE

Cattle (Ib) Coffee (Ib)

Foreign Exchange The dollar fell against other currencies following mixed U.S. economic reports. The dollar fell against the euro and British pound, and it sank back below the 100

Japanese yen level.

h5N4 QG

1YR. MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.5361 +.0048 +.31% 1 .5511 C anadian Dollar 1.0 2 87 —.0030 —.29% 1.0145 USD per Euro 1.3243 +.0048 +.36% 1 . 2160 —.58 —.58% 78.12 Japanese Yen 99.59 Mexican Peso 12.6 688 + .0326 +.26% 13.5954 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3. 5787 —. 0066 —. 18% 4.0665 Norwegian Krone 5.9297 —.0005 —.01% 6.0702 South African Rand 9.7882 —.0039 —.04% 8.4053 6.4974 —. 0183 —. 28% 6.9643 Swedish Krona Swiss Franc .9323 —.0053 —.57% .9878 ASIA/PACIFIC Australian Dollar 1.0854 -.0063 -.58% . 9 684 Chinese Yuan 6.1373 -.0032 -.05% 6.3915 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7575 -.0004 -.01% 7.7573 Indian Rupee 59.025 -.111 -.19% 56.015 Singapore Dollar 1.2672 -.0018 -.14% 1.2552 South Korean Won 1116.78 -3.02 -.27% 1151.05 Taiwan Dollar 29.98 + .03 +.10% 30 . 16


© www.bendbulletin.com/business

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, JULY 26, 2013

CentralOregon fuel prices Price per gallon for regular unleaded gas and diesel, as posted Thursday at AAA Fuel Price Finder

(aaa.opisnet.comj. GASOLINE • Gordy's TruckStop, 17045 Whitney Road,

La Pine.......... $3.70 • Space Age,20635 Grandview Drive, Bend............ $3.70 • Fred Meyer,61535 U.S. Highway 97,

Bend ........... $3.77 • Safeway, 80 N.E.Cedar St. Madras....... $3.78 • Ron's Oil,62980 U.S. Highway 97,

Bend............ $3.83 • Chevron,2005 U.S. Highway 97,

Redmond ....... $3.84 • Texaco,178 Fourth St.,

Madras ......... $3.90 • Chevron,1210U.S. Highway 97,

e sc ar e i n By Nathaniel Popper New York Times News Service

Federal prosecutors on Thursday brought what they called the largest hacking and data breach case in the

country, charging five people with running an organization that hacked the computer networks of more than a dozen corporations, stealing and selling at least 160 million credit and debit card numbers. The scheme was run by four Russian nationals and a Ukrainian, said the prosecutors, who announced the indictments in Newark, N.J. Paul Fishman, the U.S. attorney for the District of New Jersey, said losses ran into the hundreds of millions of dollars. "The losses in this case are staggering," Fishman said at a news conference in Newark.

"This type of crime is really the cutting edge of financial fraud." The victims in the scheme, which prosecutors said ran from 2005 until last year, included Visa; JCPenney; 7-Eleven; JetBlue; Heartland Payment Systems, one of the world's largest credit and debitprocessing companies; and the French retailer Carrefour. A separate case involving one of the defendants and the Nasdaq stock exchange was filed by the U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York. "The defendants and their co-conspiratorspenetrated the secure computer networks of severalofthe largestpayment processingcompanies, retailers, and financial institutions in the world, and stole the personal identifying information of others such as

a a I e aC CaS

user names and passwords," prosecutors said. The defendants were identified as Vladimir Drinkman, Alexander Kalinin, Roman Kotov and Dmitriy Smilianets of Russia and Mikhail Rytikov of Ukraine. Drinkman is in custody in the Netherlands and Smilianets is in custody in the United States. The whereabouts of the other three was unclear. The attacks underscore the broader threat that hacking poses to a financial system that is almost entirely reliant on networked communications. In the Nasdaq case, Kalinin is accused of hacking into the servers used by the exchange. From November 2008 through October 2010, he installed malicious software, or malware,on servers that

"/y '

Karsten Moran/New YorkTimes News Service

Paul Fishman, the U.S. attorney for the District of New Jersey,

speaksata news conference announcing charges in ahacking case in Newark, N.J., on Thursday. Federal prosecutors charged five people Thursday with running an organization that hacked the computer networks of more than a dozen corporations, stealing and selling at least160 million credit and debit card numbers. allowed him to delete, change or steal data, according to the indictment unsealed Thurs-

Madras ......... $3.90 • Chevron,3405 N. U.S. Highway97, Bend $3.92 • Chevron,398 N.W. Third St., Prineville........ $3.94 • Chevron,2100 N.E. U.S. Highway 20,

Bend............ $3.96 • Texaco,2409 Butler

Market Road, Bend............ $3.96 • Chevron,1501 S.W. Highland Ave.,

Redmond ....... $3.96 • Chevron,1001

Railway, Sisters .. $3.96 DIESEL • Fred Meyer,61535 U.S. Highway 97, Bend ....... . . . . $3.83

• Safeway, 80 N.E.Cedar St. Madras .......$3.84 • Chevron,2005 U.S. Highway 97,

Redmond ....... $3.85 • Chevron,1095 S.E. Division St., Bend. $3.90 • Chevron,1210 U.S. Highway 97,

Madras ......... $3.90 • Chevron,2100 N.E. U.S. Highway 20, Bend........ . . . . $3.96 • Texaco,178 Fourth St.,

Madras ......... $3.99 The Bulletin

BRIEFING

Nonprofit lender opening inBend Craft3, a newtype of nonprofit financial institution, plans to open its Bend office on Thursday. Based in llwaco, Wash., Craft3 is a com-

munity development financial institution,

according to a news release. It expects to provide community development loans to individuals, nonprofits, entrepreneurs and oth-

ers in Crook, Deschutes and Jefferson counties who do not haveaccess to regular financing Craft3 has scheduled

etan r o e ct isun erwa atu tra- een ome in en Editor's note:Tom Elliot t and Barbara Scott invited The Bulletin to follow theirattempt to build the ultimate green home inBend and document the project from start to finish.

fraud charges

k

Dean Guernsey/The Bulletin

cKernan Enterprises employees spread a fabric liner along the bottom of the wastewater treatent wetland at Desert Rain. land will treat all the water except for toilet waste, said James Fagan, co-owner of Timberline Construction and Desert Rain project manager. Fagan expectstheproject to be90percent complete today, andfinished earlynextweek In addition to the building of the wetland, Fagan said, land-

scaping has started. Patios, pavers, walkways and driveways are being installed, and then native plants will be put in place. "It's always fun to clean the site up and climb out of the dirt," he said. — Reporter: 541-617-7818, rrees@bendbulletin.com

NEW YORK — Federal authorities announced a raft of criminal charges Thursday against SAC Capital, the hedge fund run bythe billionaire Steven A. Cohen, an unusually aggressive move that could cripple one of Wall Street's most successful stock trading firms. In the 41-page indictment, which includes four counts of securities fraud and one count of wire fraud, prosecutors charged SAC and its units with permitting a "systematic" insider trading scheme to unfold between 1999 and 2010, activity that generated hundreds of millions of dollars in profits for the firm. The case seeks to attribute criminal acts of several employees to the company itself, claiming that the fund "enabled and promoted" the illicit behavior. "When so many people from a single hedge fund have engaged in insider trading, it is not a coincidence," Preet Bharara, thetopfederalprosecutorin Manhattan, said at a news conference Thursday. In a statement, an SAC spokesman argued that"The handful of men who admit they brokethe law does notrefl ect the honesty, integrity and characterofthethousands ofmen and women who have worked at SAC over the past 21 years."

'Orange is theNew Black' a Netflix hit? Guessagain By Scott Collins Los Angeles Times

3-6 p.m. Thursday at its office, 917 N.W. Harriman St. For more information, visit www.craft3.org. — Bulletin staff report

With "Orange Is the New Black," Netflix looks like it has another hit. Or does it? One issue with the streaming service is that no one really knows how many viewers are watching original series, such as women-in-prison comedy "Orange" and the political drama "House of Cards." Netflix isn't rated by Nielsen, the company that measures TV viewing, and executiveshave refused to

• The Human Society of Central Oregon Thrift Store has moved to a new 5,000-square-foot space building at 61220 S. U.S. Highway 97 in Bend, across from Walmart. The agency has scheduled a grand opening todaySunday. Tolearn more visit www.hsco.org or call 54 I -388-3448. • PureCare Dental, of Bend, has been recognized by the BendChamber of Commerce as the New and Emerging Business of the Year during the Sage Awards. Launched in 2010 as a startup, PureCare Dental has grown to11 staff members and serves more than 1,600 patients.

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DISPATCHES

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percolate through the wetland. During that time, it is purified by the bacteria that live on the rocks and plants within the wetland. Then it flows into a reclaimed water tank, where it is either stored or used for irrigation and water features. The nearly 4-foot-deep wet-

SAC Capital indicted on New York Times News Service

JL

The Bulletin

constructedwetland. The wetland will be divided into two sections, separated by a dam, Elliott said. The wastewater will enter the first chamber. As it fills, water slips over the 3-foot dam into the second chamber to help slow the filtration process. It takes the water about seven days to

Hedgefund

By Ben Protess and Peter Lattman

s'

By Rachael Rees Construction on a 600square-foot wetland to purify wastewater has begun at Desert Rain on Northwest Shasta Place. "All the fun started Monday morning," said Tom Elliott, who's been waiting years to build the wetland in an effort to meet the Living Building Challenge, the environmental standards he's following with his wife, Barbara Scott. "No water leaves the site that arrives on the site," he said, referring to the requirement thatwastewater be processed on-site. Last month, the couple becamethe firstin Ottegonto receive state and cityapproval to tteat and teuseresidential wastewater frum sinks, showers and laundry, calledgraywater. Andpart of thatpttocess is hav-

d a y . The infected servers did n o ti nclude the platform for secu r i ties trading.

releaseany viewership data whatsoever. So while some media outlets are describing "Orange" as a "smash," for all we know it could really be a dud. The uncertainty is rankling many investors and media veterans, who argue that it's tough to figure out just how popular these shows really are, even if the Emmy nods for "House of Cards" last week make it clear Hollywood has acceptedstreaming seriesas viable programming.

But wait. It may be possible to at least formulate an idea of the viewership for "Orange," even if it just amounts to an educated guess. And, yes, a guess is all it is. But we did say educated. First, let's consider that Netflix now claims about 30 million subscribers for its paid content. That makes it (as of earlier this year) just a shade larger than HBO, which has 28.8 million subscribers. HBO's most popular show is the fantasy "Game of Thrones," which delivers

somewhere around 5 million viewers on nights when episodes are first shown. But once you add up all the various platforms over the ensuing days — time-shifted viewing on DVRs, on-demand, etc. — "Thrones" gathers an audience of more than 13 million. We're guessing that "Orange" is nowhere near as popular as "Thrones." First, it's very early in the "Orange" life cycle, and "Thrones" has had years to build that audience. Second, "Orange" is a dark comedy-

and, as the saying goes, satire is what closes on opening night. "House of Cards" may have gotten 13 million viewers over time, but "Orange" won't. A better pay-cable antecedent is probably "Weeds," the Showtime comedy overseen by Jenji Kohan, who's also the show runner of "Orange." "Weeds" drew fewer than I million viewers on opening night and, once all the various platforms were added up, was getting just north of 3 million viewers.

BEST OF THE BIZ CALENDAR MONDAY • Real Estate Career Discovery Night:Jim Mazziotti, principal managing broker and franchise owner of Exit Realty Bend, presents an introduction to a career in real estate that covers costs, income, training

and lifestyle; RSVP at soarwithexit@gmail.com or call Jim at 541-4808835; free; 6 p.m.; Exit Realty Bend, 354 N.E Greenwood Ave., No. I00; 541-480-8835. WEDNESDAY • Nonprofit Grant Writing: Discover

tips on research, effective writing, board involvement, grant management and reporting; students are encouraged to bring a current grant project; identify funding sources, especially in Oregon; registration required; $69; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.;

COCCChandler Building, 1027 N.W. Trenton Ave., Bend;541-383-7270. AUG. 9 • Cricket Trailer Tour: Representativesfrom the travel trailer company wil demofour newCricket Trailers;registration requested atwww.

crickettrailer.com;free; 4-7 p.m.; BeaverCoachSales & Service, 62955BoydAcres Road, Bend;800-382-2597. AUG.10 • Cricket Trailer Tour: (See above) AUG.14 • How to Start a Business: Registration

required; $15; 6-8 p.m.; COCCChandler Building, 1027 N.W.Trenton Ave., Bend; 541-383-7290. AUG. 20 • CRR-Terrebonne Chamber of Commerce networking social: Hosted by ThePrinting Post; for more

information, call 541923-2679; 5:30 p.m.; The Printing Post, 639 S.W. Forest Ave., Redmond; 541-548-7 I 01. For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday's Bulletin or visit bendbulletin. comlbizcal


IN THE BACI4: ADVICE 4 ENTERTAINMENT > 50-Plus, D2-3 Parents a Kids, D4-5 Pets, D5 THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, JULY 26, 2013

O www.bendbulletin.comiallages

BRIEFING

SUPPORT SYSTEM

Gym mayhelp reduce obesity

Teaching seniors to downsize

A newstudyfrom

Cornell University is the first to find that the amount of time el-

ementary-school-aged children spend in gym

class may correlate to the likelihood of them

becoming obese.

• Conference to be held in September

The study, which

will be published in the Journal of Health Economics, found that

By Mac McLean

when schools increased

The Bulletin

the amount of physical education required by

Downsizing or moving from a larger home to a smaller one can be a positiveexperience forbaby boomers and seniors. It can cut out stress associated with maintaining a place that no longer meets their needs. But it can also have its pitfalls, downsizing expert Mary Spann said, especially when it comes to navigating the real estate market and dealing with children who may want the home they grew up in to stay in the family's hands. That's why Spann has spent the past three years teaching people ways to overcome these pitfalls with her free "The Upside of Downsizing" conferences, one of which will be held at the Stone Lodge Independent Senior Living Community, in Bend, on

60 minutes per week, the likelihood of a fifth

grader being obesewas reduced by nearly 5 percent.

The researchers also found that increased PE time reduced the probability of boys becoming

obese, butdidnotseem to have the same effect

on girls.

TV tip-overs a danger to kids Thousands of young children are injured each year from falling

televisions, according to a new report in the journal Pediatrics. Each year, 17,000

kids are treated in U.S. emergency rooms for injuries related to TVs. About half of the

injuries were caused

Sept. 26 (See, "If you go," Page D2).

by a television falling

off a dresser, and 31 percent were caused by a TV falling from an

entertainment center or TV stand. Kids younger than 5 were the most

at risk, representing 64 percent of all of the injured children.

Falling TVs were

Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin/072413

Linda Saukkonen, 69, browses through the books at the Bend Public Library on Wednesday. According to a recent survey, about 7 percent of baby boomers and seniors visit their libraries at least once a week.

• Newestgenreisdriving thebookmarket in Central Oregon,acrossthe country

most likely to injure a child's head or neck, ing an injury to that body region, followed

inda Saukkonen stopped by the Bend Public Library on the way home from a doctor's ap-

by legs at 22 percent.

pointment Wednesday afternoon so she could fill her canvas bag with books she wanted

anchors or anti-tip devices can help keep the TV in place. The authors of the report

also recommend that

to read. "I usually go to the library two or three times a week," said Saukkonen, a 69-year-old Sunriver resident who still has five movies at home she picked up from the library. "Sometimes I'll

parents avoid putting

remote controls or toys on top of the television, which can entice children to try to climb up

check out a whole year's worth of magazines at one time if it's a publication I don't subscribe to." A recent survey conducted by the Pew Research Center's Internet and American Life Project

to reach the items.

found more than half of baby boomers — a term that applies to people born between 1946 and 1964

More to become caregivers by2050

— have visited a public library in the past year to attend an event, do research on a computer or

A recent report from the Congressional Budget Office estimates

that anywhere between 7 and 11 percent of

Americans younger than 65 will be caring for an older adult — either on a formal,

paid basis or on an informal, volunteer basis — when the

youngest baby boomers celebrate their 86th birthday in 2050.

Based on the current rate of functional

lossamong Americans who are 65 or older, the report's authors predict 30 percent of

the country's seniors will need some type of

long-term-care services to help them perform their activities of daily life within the next 40

years. That figure could be as low as 22 percent if the functional-loss

rate decreases or as high as 34 percent if it

increases. Providing these services could cost anywhere between 1.9 and 3.3 percent of the country's gross do-

check out a book.

which found that in 2010 these services

cost only1.3 percent of the country's gross domestic product. — From staff reports

experience." SeeDownsize/D2

The 77.3 million A mericans who make up this generation also purchased one-fourth of the new books sold in 2011, according to another report conducted by Bowker, a private research firm serving publishing firms, booksellers and public libraries. Eager to capitalize on this audience and their reading habits, a group of authors, including M arsha Roberts — author of the 2012 memoir "Confessions of an Instinctively Mutinous Baby Boomer" — has created a new genre of literature, known as boomer lit, which features stories told from the perspective of boomers.

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The audience Maybe it was the subject matter, but when Liz Goodrich organized "Know Boomers!,"a series of eventsatthe Deschutes Public Library system in January 2011, she noticed members of the country's largest generation made up a considerable portion of the audience. "It was a good series, and I thinkthey really enjoyed it," Goodrich said of the crowd, which was especially drawn to events featuring music from the 1960s, a discussion about volunteering and lectures about the Beat Generation writers. Goodrich, the library system's community relations coordinator, said she came up with the series because the oldest baby boomers were t urning

GOOD QUESTION

When should my teen learn to drive? Editors Note:Good Question is a monthly feature in which a local expert answers a question related to family life. Have a question about your family? Send it to family@ bendbulletin.com.

+~~~ .

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'

Joal Smith browses through the books at the Bend Public Library on Wednesday so she can find a book about parenting techniques to give her daughter. 65 that year. She figured since these people were getting ready to retire, if they hadn't already, then they'd probably want something to do.

"They are our biggest age group,"

Goodrich said. Boomers make up a sizable portion of the crowd at any library event, whether it's a cooking class or a meeting of the Classics book club. "They are the folks with more time on

their hands (than anybody else) and they've been coming to our events." But while Goodrich can speak from what she's seen at the library's events, neither she nor Assistant Library Director Kevin Barclay could provide stats on how many boomers use the library, how often they visit or what types of books they check out. SeeBoomer Lit/D3

mestic product in 2050,

according to the report,

downsizing can be a happy

By Mac McLean • The Bulletin

with 63 percent report-

Installing safety

"The whole idea behind these conferences is to get people into a healthy living environment," said Spann, 55, who worked as an interior designer in Portland for 26 years. "We're trying to let the world know

Boomerlit stats 25 percent

21 percent

7percent

of new books purchased in 2011

of people ages 50 to 64 visit

of people ages 50 to 64 visit

were purchased bybaby boomers.

their local library at least once amonth.

their local library at least once aweek.

Source: Pew Research Center's Internet and Amencan Life Pre/ect, and Bewker

• My child just turned • 15 and wants to start learning how to drive. I'm debating whether to let him learn yet because I'm not sureifhe isready for the responsibility. How can I tell?

P • Mark M • La rson >) is a driving instructor and owner of Deschutes Larson Drive rEducation Inc. Larson has taught driver's education with Bend-La Pine Schools and High Desert Educational Service District since 2007. Larson said that while many of his students learn to drive at the age of 15, more are learning to drive later in their teens. He attributes this change to social media. "When I was that age, people talked on the phone or drove when they wanted to see each other," Larson said. "Now with social media, teens have all these things to help them keep in contact with their friends. They don't necessarily need to drive as much." SeeQuestion/D4


D2

TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, JULY 26, 2013

Email information for the Activities Calendar at least 10 days before publication to communitylife@bendbulletin.com, or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.

0-PLVS

Getting seniorseonnected: 54/o bave noIntemet aeeess ByXi Chen

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Cronftite News Service

V Il,

WASHINGTON Platforms for j obs, government a nd other services are i n creasingly moving online, but 30 percentofAmericans do not have an Internet connection to accessthose resources,according to a recent United States Census Bureau report. "It may b e s urprising to some people, because a lot of people think everyone has a computer, everyone has Internet at home, everyone knows how, and that's not true," said Annette Vigil, m anager of South Mountain Community Library in Phoenix, Ariz. The lackof accessisparticularly common for seniors, with about 54percent ofAmericans aged 65 and older having no Internet access. That makes computers and computer classes at libraries and senior centers "really popular," according to Vigil, whose library offersfree computer classes in English and Spanish every week. South M o untain's e x perience is not u nusual, said Kathryn Zickuhr, an analyst from the Pew Research Center,which has reported on the digital divide. "When seniors or other people who don't use the Internet very much need to go online, to access government forms that are now online-only, they go to libraries for help," Zickuhr said. T he Census survey d e scribed a "connectivity continuum" that ranged from people with no computer or Internet access at home, to those who have multiple devices to access the Internet. Nationally, 15.9 percent of peoplehad no home computer and another 14.4 percent had a computer but no I nternet access in 2011 — the year profiled in the report. On the other end of the spectrum, 37.3 percent of Americans were "highly connected," with access from home and elsewhere. Men and women were about even in terms of access, while Asians and Caucasians had

Downsize Continued from 01 During the housing crisis, while struggling to maintain her interior design business, she found a new niche in helping stage homes for seniors who were moving into a retirement community. She said most of her clients benefited from this transition — or from moving from their home toa condominium — because it gave them a chance to live in a community where they did not have to deal with the physical work and emotional stress associated with owning a home. "Even if you ar e able to h ire someone to c ome b y and do your housecleaning, ( maintaining a h o me) c a n be a stressful situation," said Spann, who is looking to reduce the amount of stress in her life by moving from the three-level home she and her

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/

National Telecommunications and Information Administration via McClatchy-Tribune News Service

San Francisco residents get training in computer use at a senior center in California. Seniors are less likely than other age groups to be connected to the Internet, according to a recent Census Bureau report.

Web, notpuite worldwide Individuals age 3 and older and their connection to the Internetin 2011, according to the U.S. Census Bureau:

NATIONAL No connection anywhere: 30.3 percent

Connection, butnotat home:5.6 percent Connection at homeonly: 26.7 percent

Connection athomeand elsewhere:37.3 percent

higher levels of connectivity than African-Americans and Hispanics. Greta Byrum, an a nalyst from the Open Technology Institute at New America Foundation, said it is essential that "people from all walks of life have access to the Internet and digital resources." "This should be a leading policy priority and a focus of investment," Byrum said. Vigil agreed that it is important for citizens to get online, because it is "the way the world is now." "The world has changed from 10 years ago," Vigil said. "You can't apply for jobs anymore, unless you know how to get on the Internet." That's where libraries and

If yougo What:The Upside of

Downsizing When:9:30 a.m. Sept. 26 Where:Stone Lodge

IndependentSenior Living Community,1460 N.E. 27 St., Bend

Cost:Free Contact:Toreserve aspot or for more information, call 541-719-1691 or visit www.

upsideofdownsizing.com

55-year-old husband share to a smaller residence. Through this work, Spann developed a six-step checklist that helped people make the transition from a larger home to a smaller home. She also built relationships with real estate agents who help people navigate the housing market and financial planners who

other facilities come in. "There are many people in our community, who don't have computers athome and don't know how to use them, so it's very i mportant that they have a place that they can come learn the basics and practice," Vigil said. At Chandler's Senior Center in Chandler, Ariz., classes teach people "how to move the mouse, how to type and everything," said Loretta Colson, a customer service representative at the center. She said many of the seniors have never used the Internet before and don't have anyone to learn from. The Surprise Senior Center in Surprise, Ariz., has been operatinga computer lab and offering training classes for 10 years, said Leslie Rudders, a supervisor at the center. Classes are held six times a month on the basics of the computer and Internet. "They want to learn, they realize it is the way of the future," Rudders said. "To function in today's modern world, everybody needs to have basic computer skills." And Rudders said senior citizens want to b e able to email family members or stay in touch with friends, like everyone else. "They want to send pictures, see pictures, email back and forth, which gives them nice context," she said.

help them protect their assets. Spann featured presentations by these experts when she offered her first "The Upside of Downsizing" conference in Portland in 2010. She later enlisted the help of family counselors who help navigate the emotional conflicts that arise when a person runs into problems with children who, for f i n ancial or emotional reasons, want the house to stay in the family. Other emotional conflicts may involve a fear of leaving a neighborhood where someone has lifelong friends or a desire to keep a garden or workshop. "Sometimes a per s o n's home can become a part of our identity," she said, explaining how its easy for people to feel attached to a home that no longer meets their needs or has become too hard for them to manage. Spann's conferences also include space for exhibitors

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ACTIVITIES CALENDAR TODAY BEND KNIT-UP:$2; 10 a.m.noon; Rosie Bareis Community Campus, 1010 N.W.14th St.; 541-728-0050. SENIORLUNCH PROGRAM: Live band, dancing, games and social activities; lunch served at11 a.m.-12:30 p.m.; free for seniors 60 and older; $3.50 donation accepted; 10 a.m.-2 p.m.; Bend's Community Center, 1036 N.E. Fifth St.; 541-312-2069 or www. bendscommunitycenter.org/ programs/uscb-senior-lunchprogram. THE GOLDENAGECLUB: Pinochle; 12:45-4 p.m.; Golden Age Club, 40 S.E. Fifth St., Bend; 541-389-1752. BINGO:6 p.m.; American Legion PostNo.44,704 S.W .Eighth St., Redmond; 541-548-5688.

SATURDAY BINGO:Noon; Bend's Community Center, 1036 N.E. Fifth St.; 54 l-312-2069. 100TH ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION:Celebration with rededication; public welcome; free;1 p.m.; Redmond Masonic Center No. 154, 627 S.W. Seventh St.; 541-408-1740.

SUNDAY BINGO:12:30 p.m.; American Legion Post No. 44, 704 S.W. Eighth St., Redmond; 541-548-5688. THE GOLDENAGECLUB: Pinochle; 12:45-5 p.m.; Golden Age Club, 40 S.E. Fifth St., Bend; 541-389-1752. OREGON OLDTIME FIDDLERS: Circle jam for those interested in playing, all ages welcome, nonsmoking and alcohol free; 1-3:30 p.m.; VFW Hall, 1836 S.W. Veterans Way, Redmond; 541-647-4789.

lunch-program. THE GOLDENAGE CLUB: Double deck pinochle; 11:45 a.m.; Golden Age Club, 40 S.E. Fifth St., Bend; 541-389-1752. CRIBBAGE CLUB: Newcomers welcome; 6-8:30 p.m.;Elks Lodge, 63120 N.E. Boyd Acres Road, Bend; 541-317-9022. SWEETADELINES'CENTRAL OREGON SHOWCASE CHORUS: 6:30 p.m.; Redmond Senior Center, 325 N.W. Dogwood Ave.; 541-4474756 or www.showcasechorus.org.

TUESDAY LA PINE CHAMBER TOASTMASTERS: 8-9a.m .;Gordy's Truck Stop, 17045 Whitney Road; 541-77 I-9 I77.

THE GOLDENAGE CLUB:Canasta; 9:45 a.m.-2 p.m.; Golden Age Club, 40 S.E. Fifth St., Bend; 541-389- I752. SENIORLUNCH PROGRAM: Live band, dancing, games and social activities; lunch served 11 a.m.-12:30 p.m.; free for seniors 60 and older; $3.50 donation accepted; 10 a.m.-2 p.m.; Bend's Community Center, 1036 N.E. Fifth St.; 541-312-2069 or www. bendscommunitycenter.org/ programs/uscb-senior-lunchprogram. HIGHNOONERSTOASTMASTERS: Classroom D; noon-1 p.m.; New Hope Evangelical Church, 20080 S.W. Pinebrook Blvd., Bend; 541-382-6804. BEND KNIT-UP: 6-8 p.m .;Gossamer The Knitting Place, 550 S.W. Industrial Way; 541-728-0050.

WEDNESDAY SENIORLUNCH PROGRAM: Live band, dancing, games and social activities; lunch served11

a.m.-12:30 p.m.; free for seniors 60 and older; $3.50 donation accepted; 10 a.m.-2 p.m.; Bend's Community Center, 1036 N.E. Fifth St.; 541-312-2069 or www. bendscommunitycenter.org/ programs/uscb-senior-lunchprogram. BEND CHAMBER TOASTMASTERS: Noon-1 p.m.; The Environmental Center, 16 N.W. Kansas Ave.; 541-383-2581. KIWANISCLUB OF REDMOND: noon-1 p.m.; Juniper Golf Course, 1938 S.W. Elkhorn Ave.; 541-5485935 or www.redmondkiwanis.org. REDMOND AREATOASTMASTERS: Noon-1 p.m.; Ray's Food Place, 900 S.W. 23rd St.; 541-905-0841. PRIME TIME TOASTMASTERS: 12:05-1 p.m.; Home Federal Bank, 555 N.W. Third St., Prineville; 541-447-6929. THE GOLDENAGECLUB: Pinochle; 12:45-4p.m.;GoldenAge Club,40 S.E. Fifth St., Bend; 541-389-1752. BINGO:6 p.m.; American Legion Post No. 44, 704 S.W. Eighth St., Redmond; 541-548-5688. COMPASSIONATE COMMUNICATION:There are prerequisites to joining group; $2-$5 donation requested; 6:157:45 p.m.; Spiritual Awareness Community, 157 N.W.Franklin Ave., Bend; 541-728-0878 or bryn© compassionatecenter.org. HIGH DESERTCORVETTECLUB: Jacket night; 7 p.m.; Pilot Butte Drive ln, 917 N.E. Greenwood, Bend; 541-549-6175.

THURSDAY VFW BREAKFAST:$8.50; 8-10 a.m.; VFW Hall, 1503 N.E. Fourth St., Bend;541-390-6837. COMMUNITY HEALINGNIGHT: Canned food drive; 5-7 p.m.; Shilo Inn Suites Hotel, 3105 O.B. Riley Road, Bend; 541-389-1159.

Kemple

® MEMORI A l

Children's

MONDAY

en a inic

SENIORLUNCH PROGRAM: Live band, dancing, games and social activities; lunch served11 a.m.-12:30 p.m.; free for seniors 60and older; $3.50 donation accepted; 10 a.m.-2 p.m.; Bend's Community Center, 1036 N.E. Fifth St.; 541-3 l2-2069 or www.bendscommunitycenter. org/programs/uscb-senior-

In our effort to provide dental care to children in Deschutes County who can't afford it, the Kemple Memorial Children's Dental Clinic wishes to thank the following dentists for their volunteered services in June, 2013. VOLU N T E E R DE N T ISTS TREATING KEM PLE KIDS IN OWN OFFICES IN JUNE, 2013 Dr. Marci Aplin-Scott Dr. David Bitner Dr. Scot Burgess Dr. Elise Burrus Dr. David Cauble Dr. Steve Christensen Dr. Karen Coe Dr. Kevin Coombe Dr. Blake Drew Dr. David Dunscombe Dr. Greg Everson Dr. Matt Falkenstein Dr. David Fuller Dr. Brad Hester Dr. Dennis Holly Dr. Mark Jensen Dr. Brad Johnson Dr. Jeff Johnson

where attendees can l earn about a number of services including funeral homes, computer training programs for

seniors, hospice programs, financial advisers, insurance companies and benefits programs offeredby the Veteran's Administration. — Reporter: 541-617-7816, mmclean@bendbulletin.com

Get a taste of Food. Home 5 Garden In

• r. Gre ~or Jones

Dr. Maureen Porter Dr. Zack Porter Dr. Catherine Quas Dr. Thomas Rheuben Dr. Mehdi Salari Dr Anne Scott Dr. Jeff Timm Dr. Andrew Timm Dr. Ryan Timm Dr. Steve Timm Dr. Peter Yonan Dental Professionals Tiffany Foy RDH Linda Robinson RDH Sara Speir RDH arol Harken oA

Q c

At the KempleMemorial Children's Dental Clinic, ourmission is to improvethe health and well-being of children in DeschutesCounty byfacilitating critical preventative, educational anddental treatment servicesfor children whosefamilies cannot access basic dentalcare.Weadvocate for all children needlngtimely, hlghquality dental care.

AT HOME • • TheBulletin

'

'

I

N EW N A M E , N E W B U I L D I N G , S AME G R EA T S T A F F ! Harmony House is Becoming Bend BendTransitional Carewas designed with the patient in mind. Furnished with the comforts of home and the latest in nursing and rehabilitative

technologies we work toward a speedy and comprehensive recovery. Our multi-disciplinary team of professionals will coordinate care to help restore patients recovering from trauma, surgery or major illness back to their desired lives, homes and communities.

BEND T RANSITIO NA L C A R E Your Life. Our Commitment.


5 0-PLU S

FRIDAY, JULY 26, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

D3

an si cueasa u on • Ohio centenarian a 'true inspiration' to members ofthe Akron Button Club By Jewell Cardwell Alzron Beacon Journal

AKRON, Ohio — Affable, refined and everthe fashion maven, Peggy Irene Harry has long been admired by her many diverse attachments: family and friends, as well as her fellow residents and staff at The Merriman, an assisted living facility in Akron. And the fresh inductee into the centenarian club — she turned 100 on Monday — is quite the doyenne of still other attachments: namely buttons. Peg, as she prefers, is a longtime member of the A k r on Button Club and the National Button Society. On a recentMonday morning at the monthly meeting of the local club, which convenes at Akron's St. Paul's Episcopal Church, not surprisingly, she was being toasted by fellow members. Peg — a 48-year collector — like the other members, is very button-specific. Hers are the highly treasured, pierced/ carved iridescent white buttons known as "Bethlehem" and "Jordan" pearls. "They look just like lace," she explained, joie de vivre percolating in her voice.

Boomer Lit Continued from 01 Luckily, reports from t he P ew Research Center a n d Bowker fill in t his gap. According to the research: • Boomers were responsible for 25 percent of new-book purchases in 2011 and 30 percent in 2010 (Bowker); • 21 percent of people ages 50 to 64 visit their local libraries at least once a month and 7 percent visit it at least once a

week (Pew); and, • 16 percent of people ages

Member Liz Vernon, of Akron, even bakedbutton-shaped shortbread cookies to celebrate the pretty-in-pink Peg, for the way she has threaded her way into their lives and helped to get them even more hooked in their hobby of collecting these miniature works of art. "Miss Peg is a true inspiration," said 15-year member Vernon. "She had pneumonia and the flu in December, then a bad sinus infection. But she bounced back ... She's the most

"Peg embodies the spirit of Button Club

Widowed in 1988, the stayat-home mother and former Akron schoolteacher said she got hooked on collecting after discovering her grandmother's button box. She formerly m aintained collections of thimbles, stamps and handkerchiefs, and headturning gardens of peonies that were prized, cut and dried for bouquets. Arriving later in the month to celebrate her m i l estone birthday will be her daughter, Dr. Betty Tarnowski of Charleston, S.C., a c a ncer specialist with th e National I nstitutes o f He a l th ; t w o g randchildren a n d thr e e

grandmother's tin filled with buttons of al l p edigrees:"I up making bracelets for collectors: generosity, ended Christmas (for several female enthusiasm and relatives). Each told a different story. I used Daddy's Army knowledge." buttons on one, and the but— Charlene Baker, tons on the outfit my mother button club member, wore to the hospital when she speaks of Peggy Harry delivered us." Baker — wh o d o nned a b utton r i n g f r o m Z a m b ia — seemed to echo the sentigreat-grandchildren. Make no mistake about it, ments of other members when Peg Harry plans to commemo- she exclaimed, "You can never rate her birthday all month be too absurd when it comes long. to buttons. This really is a cool "It's never too early to cel- hobby!" "Little Peg," she continued, ebrate your 100th birthday!" "is so dear to us and to the next she opined. Her fellow button club mem- generation of collectors." bers — who brought lots of The beauty of the A k ron party fixings for the occasion Button Club, as one member — couldn't have agreed more. pointed out, is in the dissimiEarly in l ine to w ish the larity of tastes as it has some honoree well was Charlene members who snap up plastic Baker, of Gates Mills, who is buttons that cost as little as as committed to the hobby and 50 cents apiece while others' the club as anyone other than investments are more exotic perhaps Peg. and can go into the hundreds "Peg embodies the spirit of of dollars. Button Club collectors: generSeveral members plan to osity, enthusiasm and knowl- make the trip t o A p pleton, edge," Baker noted, adding, "I Wis., in August for the Nacome in any kind of weather tional Button Society's "Dialike the mailman. I love this mond Jubilee" convention and club." competition. Baker was forever linked Vernon — a longtime colwith button collecting when lector of antiques and many she visited a dress shop and things sewing-related — got eyed a display case of brace- hooked on buttons some 19 lets made from the most gor- years ago while attending an geous buttons you would ever estate sale in Hudson, Ohio, want to see. where the entire contents of Soon after that, she found a general store were up for h erself popping o pen h e r grabs. "I purchased all of the

t he hallmark events of t h e 1960s unfolded around her. Roberts s ai d e x p eriencing this time period during her teenage years shaped not only her life choices but how she viewed the events that took place around her. She said boomer lit authors use this perspective in their writing, whether they're putting together a work of science fiction like Nougat's Forever Young series, a work of erotica like Shelly Lieber's "The Prince Charming Hoax," or a

buddy book like Linda Lange's "Incomplete Passes." "Books in this genre have to reflect our perspective," she said. Boomer lit also touches on themes boomers may encounter when they're making the transition from being an adult to being an older adult in today'ssociety,Roberts says. Roberts said Michael Murphy, her favorite boomer lit author, did a really good job explaining t hi s p e rspective when he wrote "Goodbye to Emily" in J anuary. Accord-

caring and sharing person you would ever want to meet." Asked about her secret to

a long and healthy life, Peg — who relies on a walker for safety — didn't hold back: "I exercise every day in my room. I wouldn't miss it! It re-

ally does help me keep going ... But I think it's also in my

genes."

ing to Murphy's website, this book tells the story of a retired collegeprofessor who decides to make one final road trip to Woodstock with his friends, one of whom has early onset Alzheimer's disease, one year after his wife, Emily, died. "Only a boomer can write that story," said Roberts, who like many boomer lit authors thinks her particular genre has the ability to become as popular at Young Adult literature, which tells stories about children and teenagers making

Phil Maaturzo/Akron Beacon Journal

Akron Button Club member Peg Harry, left, and Marge Movsesian greet upon arriving at their monthly gathering at St. Paul Episcopal Church in Akron, Ohio. Harry turned 100 on Monday.

buttons there. I wrote the biggest check I've ever written in my life." When she did get around to joining the Akron Button Club, Vernon said it afforded her notonly a priceless education on a subject she'd come to love, but also many priceless

friendships along the way. "Collecting buttons is the s tory of h i story i n m i n i ature and craftsmanship," she said. "It dates back to George Washington's inaugural buttons at the First Continental Congress ... So, we're just not here playing with buttons."

the transition to adulthood. But for now, Roberts said, boomer lit has still yet to be recognized as an official genre of literature — a recognition paranormal romance, a subgenre of romance novels that applies themes from science fiction, fantasyorhorrorstoriesrecently achieved.Many people may not realize it's out there. That was the case with Joal Smith, a Bend resident who seemed interested in boomer lit but had never heard of it before. Though she stopped by the

downtown Bend libraryto find a parenting book she could give her daughter, Smith said she usually checks out books she may have read, seen or heard a recent review of, titles that pop out when she's scrolling through the list of books she can find on her e-reader and recent books some of her favorite authors have written. "If something catches my eye I'll request it," she said. — Reporter: 541-617-7816, mmclean@bendbulletin.com

50 to 64 owned an e-reader in

April 2012 (Pew). Interestingly enough, neitherone of these studies found boomers werethetop age group in any of their categories. The Bowker study found Millennials, the generation born between 1989 and 1999, were responsible for 30 percent of new-book purchases, while the Pew Research Center found members of this generation and Generation X, or people born between 1965 and 1981, visited a library more often than boomers. Researchers suggest this may be because the younger generations are more likely to have young children at home; parents visit the library more often than nonparents. The fact that boomers may not bethe largest consumers of the written word doesn't mean they don't deserve their own genre of literature, said Roberts, who sees the evolution of boomer lit as being of an overall effort to target boomers with free time. "There's starting to be this realization that (boomers) are a huge market," she said.

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The genre R oberts said b o omer l i t started officially in O ctober 2012 when Claude Nougat, an American author who l ives in Italy, formed a discussion group on the literature website Goodreads t o d i s cuss some books she felt appealed to boomers. Books on this list include "About Schmidt" by Louis Begley, "The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel" by Deborah Moggach, as well as Nougat's "A Hook in the Sky" and her "2213: Forever Young" series. "When I w r ote my book, the term boomer lit did not exist," Roberts said, explaining she classified her book as belonging to the inspirational m emoir genre when it w a s published last year. "But I definitely would have chosen it as my genre if it did." Roberts said one of the qualities that makes boomer lit unique is that its stories are told by boomers. "We grew up in a time of enormous change, and I think boomer lit needs to reflect this perspective," Roberts s a i d. She says she was the same age as Sally Draper, the teenage daughter of Don Draper on the AMC series "Mad Men," when

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TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, JULY 26, 2013

PARENTS 4 ICIDS Question

FAMILY CALENDAR

Continued from D1 He said many students wait until they're 16, 17 or 18 to learn how to drive. In his experience,about 75 percent of students who get behind the wheel later in their teens do so because they didn't feel ready at 15. This, Larson said, isn't always a bad thing. "The brain doesn't fully develop until around the age of 25," Larson said. "Yet we're putting kids behind the wheel at the age of 15." Larson said the best thing to do to determine whether your teen is ready for driving is to sit down and have a conversation. Talk about how he or she is feeling about driving, and also express concerns you might have. Ask what the true motivation to drive is, which will give some insight into whether or not he or she is ready for the responsibility. "A lot of times, parents want their teens to drive so they can act as family chauffeurs," he said. "But if they're arguing and fighting w it h y o unger siblings, that can be a huge distraction." Larson said t h e l e ading cause of accidents with teen drivers is caused by distractions, which include cellphone usage and talking to passengers in the car. Larson recommends watching the way your teen interacts with siblings at home. If they argue a lot, letting your teen cart around siblings is probably a bad idea. Even if they do get along, Larson said, it's important to set some serious ground rules as to behavior in the car. Larson recommends sending your teen to any driver's education school rather than teaching them yourself. "Parents aren't always the best instructors," Larson said. "If the mom or dad says something about their driving, teens can get defensive and think that they're being yelled at." An instructor comes in as a neutral third-party, and teens are generally more willing to listen and learn from them as opposed to their parents. Making your child wait a few years past the legal age of driving before they get behind the wheel doesn't hinder their abilities, Larson said. "It actually setsthemahead," Larson said. "A student that waits until they're 17 to drive, rather than 15, is usually much better in class. Their brain is more developed and they're more emotionally stable." When your child does obtain his or her license, Larson said, it's important to clearly set limits and ground rules to encourage safe driving. "Driver's education doesn't stop the day they get their license," Larson said. "The license is so that they can begin tobecome a good, safe driver." — Reporter: 541-383-0354, mhehoe@bendbulletin.com

MADRASSATURDAYMARKET: Freeadmission;9 a.m .-2 p.m .; Sahalee Park, 7th and B Streets; OREGON HIGHDESERT 541-489-4239. CLASSICSII: A U.S.Equestrian Federation class AA international CENTRALOREGONSATURDAY MARKET:Featuring arts and crafts hunter-jumper competition; from local artisans; free admission; proceeds benefit J Bar JYouth Services; free admission; 8 a.m.-5 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; parking lot across from Bend Public Library, 600 N.W. p.m.; J Bar J BoysRanch, 62895 Wall St.; 541-420-9015 or www. Hamby Road, Bend;541-389centraloregonsaturdaymarket.com. 1409, tryan©jbarj.org or www. NORTHWEST CROSSING jbarj.org/ohdc. SATURDAYFARMERSMARKET: SISTERS FARMERSMARKET: Free; 10 a.m.-2 p.m.; NorthWest 3-6 p.m.; Barclay Park, West Crossing, Mt. Washington and Cascade Avenue andAsh Street; Northwest Crossing drives, Bend; www.sistersfarmersmarket. www.nwxevents.com. com. SISTERSARTS8I CRAFTS MUSIC IN THE CANYON: FESTIVAL:Featuring arts, crafts, Featuring the Portland-based food, entertainment, a classic car rock band Mexican Gunfight; cruise (Saturday only) and a silent free; 5:30-8 p.m.; American auction benefiting the Make-ALegion Community Park, 850 Wish Foundation of Oregon; free; S.W. Rimrock Way, Redmond; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Creekside Park, www.musicinthecanyon.com. U.S. Highway 20 and Jefferson "SEUSSICAL JR.": Prineville Avenue; 541-420-0279 or www. Music Theatre Camp puts on centraloregonshows.com. its rendition of the children's PROSPECTINGAND PANNING: musical; free, donations Stake a claim and pan for gold; $2 accepted; 6 p.m.; Pioneer Park, plus price of admission; $15 adults, 450 N.E. Third St., Prineville; $12 ages 65 and older, $9 ages 5-12, 541-419-9579. free ages 4 and younger; 11 a.m.-4 MUSIC IN THEPARK:A p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 "Hallelujah Hoedown" with S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-382Mud Springs GospelBand and 4754 or www.highdesertmuseum. the Tucker Family Band; free; olg. 6:30 p.m.; Sahalee Park, 7th THE BACKYARDFARMERS and B Streets, Madras; www. MARKET:Free; 11a.m.-4 p.m.; centraloregonshowcase.com. Celebrate the Season, 61515 "A MIDSUMMERNIGHT'S American Lane, Bend;541-244-2536 DREAM":The classic play by or bendsummermarket©gmail.com. Shakespeare is performed by the Bend Experimental Art Theatre; ADULT SUMMER READING PROGRAM CELEBRATION: $15 adult, $10 students 18 and Featuring live music, refreshments, younger; 7 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. Lafayette Ave., raffles and giveaways; bring your own picnic; free; noon-1:30 p.m.; Bend; 541-419-5558 or www. Crook County Library, 175 N.W. beatonline.org. Meadow Lakes Drive, Prineville; SCHOLARSHIPBENEFIT 541-447-7978 or www.crooklib.org. CONCERT:Featuring all students "A MIDSUMMERNIGHT'S and instructors from the Booher DREAM":2and7p.m. at2nd Family Music Camp; $5, $25 for families over five people; 7 p.m.; Street Theater; see Today's listing for details. Sisters Community Church, BOOHER FAMILYCONCERT: The 1300 W. McKenzie Highway; music camp's wrap-up concert; 541-815-3873 or www. $10, $5 ages 6-17, free for children boohercamp,com. younger than 6; 3 p.m.; Sisters Community Church, 1300 W. McKenzie Highway; 541-815-3873 SATURDAY or www.boohercamp.com. "SEUSSICAL JR.": 6 p.m. at WINGS ANDWHEELS:Features Pioneer Park; see Today's listing for a fly-in, pancake breakfast, details. aircraft displays, kids activities, antique car show and more; free admission; pancake breakfast $8, $5 for children11-16 and SUNDAY free for children 10 and younger; 7:30-11:30 a.m.; Sunriver OREGON HIGHDESERT CLASSICS Airport, 57200 River Road; II:A U.S. Equestrian Federation 541-593-4609. class AA international hunterjumper competition; proceeds OREGON HIGHDESERT benefit J Bar J Youth Services; free CLASSICS II:A U.S.Equestrian 8a.m.-5 p.m.;J BarJ Federation class AA international admission; Boys Ranch, 62895 Hamby Road, hunter-jumper competition; Bend;541-389-1409,tryan@jbarj. proceeds benefit J Bar J Youth Services; free admission; dinner org or www.jbarj.org/ohdc. reservations required at $85 per RUN FORTHEBIRDS: 8K and person; 8 a.m.-9:30 p.m., 4:30 children's1Kflatand scenic runs, p.m. Grand Prix dinner, 5:30 p.m. prizes, post-race celebration, and Grand Prixjumping event; J Bar free entry to the nature center; J Boys Ranch, 62895 Hamby proceeds benefit the Sunriver Road, Bend; 541-389-1409, Nature Center & Observatory; $25 tryan@jbarj.org or www.jbarj. in advance, $35 day of race, $15 org/ohdc. for children's1K; 8 a.m. race start, 7 a.m. late registration, 9:30 a.m. PRINEVILLEFARMERS children's race; Sunriver Resort, MARKET:Free; 8:30 a.m.-12:30 17600 Center Drive; 541-593-1000 p.m.; Prineville City Plaza, 387 N.E. Third St.; 541-447-6217 or or www.sunriver-resort.com/birds. TONATURE:Featuring prinevillefarmersmarket©gmail. PASSPORT com. interpretive stations, activities and

TODAY

stamps for event passport; shuttle provided to/from the resort or Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic and Recreation Center; free;10 a.m.-1 p.m.; Sunriver Nature Center & Observatory, 57245 River Road; 541-593-4394. SISTERSARTS 5 CRAFTS FESTIVAL:10 a.m.-4 p.m. at Creekside Park; see Saturday's listing for details. "A MIDSUMMER NIGHT'S DREAM": 2 p.m. at2nd StreetTheater; see Today's listing for details. SUMMER SUNDAYCONCERT: The one-man rock act Tony Smiley performs; free; 2:30 p.m., gates open at noon; Les SchwabAmphitheater, 344 S.W. Shevlin Hixon Drive, Bend; www.bendconcerts.com.

season passes, free for seniors and children 5 and younger; 10 a.m.-10 p.m.,concertat7p.m., doors open at 5:30 p.m.; Deschutes County Fair 8 Expo Center, 3800 S.W. Airport Way, Redmond; 541-548-2711 or www.expo.deschutes.org . BEND FARMERSMARKET:Free admission; 3-7 p.m.;Brooks Alley, between Northwest Franklin Avenue and Northwest Brooks Street; 541-408-4998, bendfarmersmarket©gmail.com or www.bendfarmersmarket.com. PICKIN' ANDPADDLIN' MUSIC SERIES:Includes boat demonstrations in the Deschutes River; Polecat performs bluegrass, with John Hise; proceeds benefit Bend Paddle Trail Alliance; $5, free for children 12 and younger; 4-6 p.m. demonstrations, 5-9 p.m. music; Tumalo Creek Kayak MONDAY 8 Canoe, 805 S.W. Industrial Way, Suite 6, Bend; 541-317-9407 or POP-UP PICNIC:Live music with food and beverages; bring a blanket 411@tumalocreek.com. WHERE'S WALDO PARTY: A and canned food for Neighbor wrap-up party for the month long Impact; free admission; 5-7 p.m.; W here's Waldo hunt;cakeand The CosmicDepot,342 N.E.Clay Ave., Bend; 541-385-7478 or www. activities; free; 4 -6 p.m., raffle drawings at 5:30 p.m.; Paulina thecosmicdepot.com. Springs Books, 252 W. HoodAve., Sisters; 541-549-0866. WHERE'S WALDO PARTY: A TUESDAY wrap-up party for the month long W here's Waldo hunt;cakeand REDMOND FARMERS MARKET: Free admission; 3-6 p.m.; Centennial activities; free; 4 -6 p.m., raffle Park, Seventh Street and Evergreen drawings at 5:30 p.m.; Paulina Avenue; 541-550-0066 or redmond Springs Books, 422 S.W. Sixth St., Redmond; 541-526-1491. farmersmarket1@hotmail.com. FIVE:Junior Toots TUESDAYFARMERSMARKET:Free ALIVEAFTER performs reggae, with Sagebrush admission; 3-7 p.m .;Brookswood Rock; at the north end of Powerhouse Meadow Plaza, 19530 Amber Meadow Drive, Bend; 541Drive; free; 5-8 p.m.; Old Mill 323-3370 or farmersmarket@ District, 661 S.W.Powerhouse brookswoodmeadowplaza.com. Drive, Bend; 541-389-0995 or www. aliveafterfivebend.com. TWILIGHT CINEMA:A screening of the 2002 film "Ice Age"; free; MUSIC IN THECANYON:Featuring 6:30 p.m.; Sunriver Homeowners bluegrass and blues from Burnin' Aquatic & Recreation Center,57250 Moonlight; free; 5:30-8 p.m.; Overlook Road; www.sunriversharc. American Legion Community Park, com or 541-585-3333. 850 S.W. Rimrock Way, Redmond; www.musicinthecanyon.com. PICNIC IN THEPARK: Featuring flamenco guitar player Todd WEDNESDAY Haaby; free; 6-8 p.m.; Pioneer DESCHUTESCOUNTY FAIR 8[ Park, 450 N.E. Third St., Prineville; 541-447-6909 or RODEO:Carnival rides, games, rodeoanda Cheap Trickconcert; www.crookcountyfoundation. $6-$10 daily passes, $11-$19 org/events.

DESCHUTES COUNTYFAIR5 RODEO: Carnival rides, games and a Kip Moore concert; $6-$10 daily passes, $11-$19 season passes, free for children 5 andyounger; 10 a.m.-10 p.m., concert at 7 p.m., gates openat 5:30p.m.;DeschutesCounty Fair8 Expo Center, 3800 S.W.Airport Way, Redmond; 541-548-2711 or www. expo.deschutes.org. SMARTATTHELIBRARY:Learn what it takes to volunteer to read inthe local elementary schools andcreate abookinspired art piece; free; 3:30-5:30 p.m.; Downtown BendPublic Library, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-355-5601 or www. getsmartoregon.org. MUNCH & MUSIC: The New Wave andsynthpop bandAnimotion performs; with food, arts and crafts booths, children's areaand more; dogs prohibited; free; 5:30 p.m.; Drake Park, 777 N.W.Riverside Blvd., Bend; www.munchandmusic.com. TWILIGHT CINEMA:An outdoor screening of the 2005 film "Madagascar"; bring a low-profile chair or blanket; free; 6:30 p.m.; Village at Sunriver, 57100 Beaver Drive, Sunriver; 541-585-3333.

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FRIDAY, JULY 26, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

DS

PARENTS 4 ICIDS STORY TIMES

PETS CALENDAR OBEDIENCE FORAGILITY: Six weeks; $120; 5 p.m. Mondays; Desert SageAgility,24035 Dodds Road, BEHAVIORADJUSTMENT Bend; Stephanie Morris at 541-633TRAINING SEMINAR:Taught by 6774 or www.desertsageagility.com. certified instructor; free; 9 a.m.PUPPY101:Socialization, basic noon Aug. 10; donations accepted; Friends for Life Dog Training, 2121 skills and playtime for puppies 8- to13-weeks old; $85; fourS.W. Deerhound Ave., Redmond; week class; 6-7 p.m. Thursdays; Dennis Fehling at 541-350-2869. preregister; Dancin'Woofs; Kristin DOG TRAININGSEMINAR: Author Kerner at 541-312-3766 or www. Suzanne Clothier; $250, $300 after dancinwoofs.com. Aug. 1; 9 a.m. Sept. 21-22; Friends for Life Dog Training, 2121 S.W. PUPPY BASICMANNERSCLASS: Deerhound Ave., Redmond; Dennis Social skills for puppies up to 6 Fehling at 541-350-2869. months old;$110;seven-week class, cost includes materials; 6-7 RUN FOR THE BIRDS: Annual p.m. Mondays; preregister; Friends 8K and children's1K benefiting for Life Dog Training, 2121 S.W. the Sunriver Nature Center and Deerhound Ave., Redmond; Dennis Observatory; $30 and $15 for kids' Fehling at 541-350-2869 or www. race; 8 a.m. Sunday; Sunriver Main friendsforlifedogtraining.com. Lodge, 17600 Center Drive; www. sunriver-resort.com/birds. PUPPY LIFESKILLS: $120 for six SISTERSDOGGIE DASH & STROLL: weeks; 5 p.m. Tuesdays; Desert SageAgility,24035 Dodds Road, Three-mile dash, 2-mile stroll and Bend; Jan at 541-420-3284 or canine carnival; $25 per participant www.desertsageagility.com. (dog and owner) and $50 for up to three participants before Aug. 1, day PUPPY KINDERGARTENCLASSES: of event is an additional $5; 8:30 Training, behavior and socialization a.m.-noon Aug. 3; Sisters Park 8 classes for puppies10- to16-weeks Recreation District building, 1750 old; $80; 6:30 p.m. Thursdays; W. McKinney Butte Road; register preregister; call for directions; at www.sistersrecreation.com, Meredith Gage, 541-318-8459 or drop off applications at SPRD or the www.PawsitiveExperience.com. Sisters Public library. TREIBBALLCLASS: Urban herding sport involving eight exercise balls, CLASSES a goal and165-foot field; $120 for six weeks; Saturdays, call for times; BASIC COMPANIONSHIP:Basic Desert Sage Agility, 24035 Dodds commands and skills; $120; sixRoad, Bend; Jan at 541-420-3284 or week class; 6-7 p.m. Tuesdays or www.desertsageagility.com. Wednesdays; preregister; Dancin' Woofs; Kristin Kerner at 541-312TRAINING, 3766 or www.dancinwoofs.com. BEGINNEROBEDIENCE:Basic skills, BOARDING recall and leash manners; $110ANNE GESER: In-home individual 125; 6 p.m. Mondays or Tuesdays; training with positive reinforcement; preregister; call for directions; Meredith Gage, 541-318-8459 or www.pawsitiveexperience.com. INTERMEDIATEOBEDIENCE: Off-leash work and recall with distractions; $110; 6 p.m. Wednesdays; preregister; call for directions; Meredith Gage at 541-318-8459 or www. pawsitiveexperience.com. OBEDIENCE CLASSES: Six-week, drop-in classes; $99.95; 4 and 5 p.m.Mondays,4 and 5 p.m.Fridays, and12 p.m. Saturdays; Petco,3197 N. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; Loel Jensen at 541-382-0510.

EVENTS

541-923-5665. CASCADE ANIMALCONNECTION: Solutions for challenging dog behavior, Tellington TTouch, private lessons; Kathy Cascade at 541-5168978 or kathy@sanedogtraining. com. DANCIN' WOOFS:Behavioral counseling; 63027 Lower Meadow Drive, Suite D, Bend; Kristin Kerner at 541-312-3766 or www. dancinwoofs.com. DIANN'S HAPPYTAILS: Private training, day care, boarding/board and train; La Pine Training Center, Diann Hecht at 541-536-2458 or diannshappytails@msn.com or www.diannshappytails.com. DOGS LTD & TRAINING: Leash aggression, training basics, day school;59860 Cheyenne Road, Bend; Linda West at 541-318-6396 or www.dogsltdtraining.com. FRIENDSFOR LIFE DOG TRAINING: Private basic obedience training and training for aggression/serious behavior problems; 2121 S.W. Deerhound Ave., Redmond; Dennis Fehling at 541-350-2869 or www. friendsforlifedogtraining.com. LIN'SSCHOOL FOR DOGS: Behavior training and AKCringready coaching; 63378 Nels Anderson Road, Suite 7, Bend; Lin Neumann at 541-536-1418 or www. linsschoolfordogs.com. PAWSITIVE EXPERIENCE:Private training and consulting; Meredith Gage, 541-318-8459 or www. pawsitiveexperience.com. ZIPIDY DO DOG: Daycare, boarding, groomingand dog walking;675 N.E. Hemlock Ave., Suite 112, Redmond; www.zipidydodog.com, 541-526-1822 or zipidydodog@ bendbroadband.com.

and libraryyouth events • For the week of July26to Aug.f. Story times are free unless otherwise noted. I :

12:30p.m.tocloseWednesday. • BACKPACK EXPLORERS:Ages 3-4; explore museum's animal habitat, share stories and songs;10to11 a.m. Thursday; $15 perchild nonmembers, $10 per child members. • TOTALLY TOUCHABLETALES: Ages 2-5; storytelling about animals andpeople of the High Desert; 10:30 a.m. Tuesday.

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2690 N.E. U.S. Highway 20, Bend; 541-318-7242 • ONCE UPON ASTORY TIME: All ages; 11 a.m. Friday. I

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19530 Amber Meadow Drive, Bend; 541-388-1188 • STORY TIME:All ages; 11 a.m. Thursday. 'll

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175 S.W. MeadowLakes Drive, Prineville; 541-447-7978 • WEE READ: Ages 0-3; 10 a.m. Monday andWednesday. • BORDERCOLLIEINTERNATIONAL: All ages; performing dogs showcase tricks; 6:30 p.m. Tuesday. • READ TODOGS:kids practice reading to dogs; ages 712, 1 to 2:30 p.m.Wednesday;ages 3and older, 11a.m. to noon Thursday. • KIDSLEGO CLUB:Ages5-12;4to5 p.m.Friday. • TEENPROGRAM:Ages13and older; 6 p.m. Thursday. I I

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• FAMILY STORY TIME: All ages; 10:30 a.m. Thursday. • TECH LAB: Ages12-17; 3 p.m. Monday. • UNDERGROUND CREW:Ages 6-11; Kids learn about rocks; 10:30 a.m. Wednesday. • TEEN GAME DAY:Ages12-17; 1 p.m. Wednesday.

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• BABY STEPS: Ages 0-18 months; 11:30 a.m. Wednesday and1:30 p.m. Thursday. • TODDLIN' TALES: Ages18-36 months; 10:15 a.m. and 11 a.m. Tuesdayand10:15 a.m. Wednesday. • PRESCHOOLPARADE:Ages3-5;10:30 a.m.Fridayand 1:30 p.m. Tuesday. • UNDERGROUND CREW:Ages 6-11; Kids learn about rocks; 10:30 a.m. Thursday. I •

16425 First St.; 541-312-1090

601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-617-7097

241 S.W. Seventh St., Madras; 541-475-3351 • BABIESAND TODDLERS STORY TIME: 10:10 a.m. Tuesday. • PRESCHOOLAND OLDER STORY TIME:Ages3-5; 10:30 a.m. and 6:30 p.m. Tuesday. • SPANISHSTORYTIME:All ages; 1 p.m. Wednesday.

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827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541-312-1054 • BABY STEPS: Ages 0-18 months;11 a.m. Thursday. • PRESCHOOL PARADE: Ages 3-5; 10:15 a.m. and 1:30 p.m. Wednesday. • TODDLIN' TALES:Ages18-36months;10:15a.m. Thursday. • UNDERGROUND CREW:Ages 6-11; Kids learn about rocks; 10:30 a.m. Tuesday.

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62080 DeanSwift Road; 541-330-3760 • TODDLIN' TALES: Ages 0-3; 9:30 a.m. Wednesday. • PRESCHQQL PARADE:Ages 3-5; 9:30 a.m. Thursday. • SATURDAY STORIES:All ages; 10 a.m. Saturday. • UNDERGROUND CREW:Ages 6-11; Kids learn about rocks; 1:30 p.m. Thursday. • DRIVE-IN:Ages 6-11; turn a box into a car and watch a movie;2to 3:30p.m.W ednesday.

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110 N. Cedar St.; 541-312-1070

• FAMILY FUN STORYTIME: Ages 0-5; 10:30 a.m. Thursday. • UNDERGROUND CREW:Ages 6-11; Kids learn about rocks; 1:30 p.m.Tuesday. •

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56855 Venture Lane; 541-312-1080 • FAMILY FUN STORYTIME: Ages 0-5; 10:30 a.m. Tuesday. • UNDERGROUND CREW:Ages 6-11; Kids learn about rocks; 1:30 p.m. Wednesday. • TEEN GAME DAY:Ages12-17; 1 p.m.

59800 S. U.S.Highway 97,Bend;www.highdesertmuseum. org; 541-382-4754 • Unless noted, eventsincluded with admission ($15 adults, $12ages 65and older,$9ages 5-/2, free ages4 andyounger) • WILD WEDNESDAYS: Ages 7-12; treasure hunt;

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D6 TH E BULLETIN • FRIDAY, JULY 26, 2013

ADVICE 4 E N T ERTAINMENT

'Writers' Room' shows TV's creative process TV TODAY TV SPOTLIGHT "The Writers' Room" 10p.m. Monday, Sundance Channel By Tirdad Derakhshani ThePhiladelphiatnquirer

P HILADELPHIA — Th e image of the writer funneling the muse's whisperings onto paper has tickled the imagination for decades. Books about t he creation of b o oks a n d biopics about great poets are a cultural mainstay. S o it's no surprise a T V show would be devised about

the creative goings-on at some of today's most lauded series. Hosted by Jim Rash — the Academy Award-winning cowriter of "The Descendants" — Sundance Channel's "The Writers' Room," which premieres Monday, takes us to the heart of the creative process behind six current shows, including HBO's "Game of Thrones," Showtime's "Dexter" and FX's "American Horror Story." The season premiere features a roundtable discussion with "Breaking Bad" creator Vince Gilligan, series star Bry-

an Cranston, and more than a half a dozen of the show's writers. Yep, TV shows are w r itten by teams, not churned out by a single starving, absinthe-drinking, G a u loises-

puffing (and beret-sporting), consumptive genius toiling in some godforsaken garret. "We chose to focus the show on TV as opposed to films, because of the fascination of the idea of the (writers') room," said Rash during a recent sitdown. "The idea of a collective taking a show creator's vision and becoming in the process

really a writing family." Sarah Colleton, co-executive producer and writer for "Dexter, appears on "The Writers' Room" w it h t h r ee fellow writer-producers and star Michael C. Hall, added, "I haveenormous respect for the room." Rash said most of the shows he discusses this season are quite dark. The episode on "Game of Thrones" explored "theeffectof the story'sdarkness on people who hadn't read the books." "In the first season, they didn't know t hat th e m a in

c haracter ( E d dard S t a r k , played by Sean Bean) would

be killed off. I mean, (Bean) was on the posters!" Considering that each writers' room is filled with opinionated, creative thinkers, one imagines it would be ruled by chaos. "The thing I n o t iced the most is that everyone has their roles," said Rash. "There are the quiet ones who chime in with one comment which really brings it all home ... and there are those who are more hyper. And they all rib each other."

PARENTS'GUIDE TO MOVI ES This guide, compiled by Orlando Sentinel film critic Roger Moore, is published here every Friday It should be used with the MPAA rating system for selecting movies suitable for children. Films rated G, PG or PG-13areincluded, along with R-ratedfilms that may have entertainment or educational value for older children with parental guidance.

"THE WOLVERINE" Rating: PG-13 for sequences of intense sci-fi action and violence, some sexual ityand language. What it's adout: The ever-haunted Wolverine revisits Japan and remembers a horror from his past and an old debt. The kid attractor factor: Wolverine, the coolest X-Man, by far, battling sword-slinging ninjas. Goodlessons/badlessons:All good soldiers seek"an honorable death." Violence: Much blood is spilled,

slashings, shootings, stabbings. Language: Wolverine curses, when the need arises. Serc A menage a trois is interrupted. Drugs: None. Parents' advisory: Quite violent, this one pushes the PG-13 boundaries. OK for 12 and older.

"R.I.P.D." Rating: PG-13 for violence, scifi/fantasy action, some sensuality, and language including sex references.

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What it's adout: Dead cops are put back on the beat chasing the evil dead through the mean streets of Boston. The kid attractor factor: Based on a comic book, cops with exotic weapons battling "Men in Black" monsters, Ryan Reynolds and Jeff Bridges making wisecracks. Goodlessons/badlessons:The best time to atone for your sins is while you're still living. Violence: Quite a bit, nothing too bloody. Language: A little profanity, a few

20th Century Fox

Hugh Jackman stars in "The Wolverine." See the full review in today's GO! Magazine. profane finger-gestures. Sex: Intimacy, innuendo, nothing explicit.

avin sani ri tste ormom

Drugs: None. Parents' advisory: Pretty tame, for an action picture. OK for10 and older.

MOVIE TIMESTODAY • There may be anadditional fee for 3-D and IMAXmovl'es. • Movie times are subject to changeafter press time. I

Dear Abby: I was a single mom for most of my teenagers' lives. We have never been financially stable, and lately things have hit an alltime low. I am prone to bouts of depression. I remarried last year, and my husband unfortunately does not DEAR understand or tolerABBY ate the depressions. He feels I should just "get over" things. He also doesn't believe in antidepressants. It got so bad I attempted suicide last weekend. My husband said my doing that was abusive to HIM. Had the pills I took not made me throw up, I would have happily waited to die. There aresix people on my medical aid, and the available funds are more than half used up. For me to see a psychiatrist will take a huge chunk out of it. I am caught between a rock and a hard place. If I do it, my family will miss out on medical care should the need arise later in the year. Is it selfish to try to hang onto what is left of my sanity? — On The Edge in Johannesburg, South Africa

Dear On The Edge: That your husband chooses not to recognize that depression is an illness — one that's treatable — is a reflection of his ignorance. That he would tell you your attempted suicide was abusive to HIM suggests that he is more concerned with himself than he is with

set. I feel they were ill-equipped to handle my emotional issues growing up, and they should be more concerned with their grandchildren in retirement than taking in strangers. When I heard the news, I tried my best to sound supportive, but they could tell I was upset. How can I handle these feelings? Would it be beneficial to tell them how I feel? You have teenage — Mommy-to-be children who n eed in North Carolina their mother. Trying to hang onto D ear Mommy-to-be: A way t o what's left of your sanity and get handle your feelings would be to the medications you need isn't self- view the situation from the perish — it's SOUND THINKING. If spective of an adult, not a jealous not foryour sake, please seek help child. That your parents will foster now for theirs. this teenager doesn't mean they Dear Abby: I'm pregnant with my will love their grandchildren any first child and live 800 miles from less. my parents, who are retired. We On some level they may be tryhave a good relationship now, but ing to make up for the mistakes growing up I had major emotional they made in your upbringing. Beissues my parents didn't handle cause they were ill-equipped to recwell. Years of therapy in my early ognize your emotional problems adulthood helped to fix them. does not mean they won't be wiser My parents have just told me now. I suggest you wait to discuss they have been approved to be fos- this with them until you're feeling ter parents and will be caring for less resentful. an emotionally disturbed teenager soon. While I know I should be — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com happy for them, I'm extremely upor P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles,CA 90069

HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORFRIDAY, JULY 26, 2013: This yearyoudevelop a new understanding of the value of a partnership in your life. If you are single, you could meet someone very special. Resist putting this person on a pedestal, because he or she Stars show the kind eventually will ofdayyou'llhave f a l loff.lfyouare ** * * * D ynamic attached, spend ** * * P ositive mo r e quality ** * A verage tim e with your ** So-so sweetie. He or she * Difficult flourishes with your time and attention. ARIES adores hanging out with you.

ARIES (March 21-April19) ** * You seem to put yourself on the back burner today. This atypical behavior catches others' eyes and encourages unusual interest. You are likely to say little and allow their curiosity to build. Confirm plans. Tonight:You blossom once more, just in time for the weekend.

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YOUR HOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar

CANCER (June21-July 22)

you feel as if someone is trying to win you to his or her side, you are likely to become even more difficult to convince. You might wonder how sincere this person is being. Tonight: Don't push so hard.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)

** * Reach out to those whose opinions you respect. You have a lot of responsibility on your shoulders, so take and appreciate any advice from those you trust. You might spend most of the day gathering opinions. Catch up with an older friend later. Tonight: In the limelight.

** * Pressure builds unless you tinker with some aspect of your life. You might want to consider eliminating this problem area altogether. Youalso could decide to reach out for feedback from someoneyou trust. He or shemight help you seethe issue more clearly. Tonight: Funandgames.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)

** * * You might want to move in a new ** * * You could be a little too fixated direction or do something in a unique way. on dealing with someone inyour own Constructive conversations will enlighten way. Though it might seem like the most practical approach, it could create a rift that youandalso clearup anyconfusion.You might be impossible to repair for years. will discover how futile it is to fight over Consider listening to a well-meaning friend. the details instead of focusing on the big Tonight: Treat yourself well. picture. Tonight: Treatyour mind.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)

** * * B e open to an unusual invitation, but make sure thatyou are on the same page regarding who, what, where and TAURUS (April 20-May 20) when. A discussion in a meeting could be ** * * U se the morning hours to quite exciting, yet also a bit inconclusive. complete as m uchasyou can.Cutbackor Relate to one individual directly in order to eliminate any behavior that could interfere get solid results. Tonight: Be a duo. with your efficiency. Please note thatyou do not have the control you might like. By LIBRA (Sept. 23-Dct. 22) ** * * D ive into your list of to-dos, and midafternoon, you are likely to pull back. don't hesitate to askfor help. You might Tonight: Not to be found. surprise yourself with how much youenjoy GEMINI (May 21-June20) working with a close associate. Deal with ** * * A l l eyes are on you. The pace someone directly, but be awarethatyou youset,thedemandsyou make and your might want to shift gears and head inan attitude all affect others' responses. You unexpected direction. Tonight: Visit friends. could be a little too exhausted for this SCORPIO (Dct. 23-Nov. 21) role, and, by midafternoon, you might ** * * You could be testing your limits decide to pass your hat to someone else far more than you thoughtyou would. If with a sigh of relief. Tonight: All smiles.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) ** * * You will feel as though you are on top of a money matter, but someone might be putting on a facade. If you suspect that something is off, find out what it could be. Ask appropriate questions, and you'll receive strong feedback. Tonight: If you have to make the first move, do so.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) ** * * Y ou'll move through the morning with your focus on doing a lot of explaining. Confirm plans and answer questions. You have the tendency to confuse people easily. Do your best to avoid this problem. Make time to buy a token gift or card for a loved one. Tonight: Indulge a friend. © 2013 by King Features Syndicate

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Regal Old Mill Stadium16 8, IMAX,680 S W.Powerhouse Drive, 541-382-6347 • THE CONJURING (R) Noon, 3:25, 7:40, 10:20 • GROWN UPS 2 (PG-I3) I2:30, 4: IO, 7:45, IO: I5 • DESPICABLE ME(PG) 2 10:45 a.m., 1:20, 4, 6:30, 9:15 • THE HEAT (R) 12:05, 3, 7:05, 9:55 • THE LONE RANGER(PG-13) 11 a.m., 2:25, 6:10, 9:35 • MONSTERS UNIVERSITY (G) 11:15a.m., 2:55 • PACIFIC RIM (PG-13) 12:45 • PACIFIC RIM IMAX 3-D (PGI3) 12:25, 3:35, 7, 10:05 • RED 2 (PG-13) 11:25 a.m., 3:10, 6:25, 9:10 • R.I.P.D. (PG-13) I2:40, 4:25, 7:25 • R.I.P.D. 3-D (PG-13) 9:50 • THIS IS THE END(R) 7:50, 10:25 • THE TO DO LIST (R) 11:35 a.m., 2:35, 6:50, 9:20 • TURBO (PG) 11:50 a.m., 2:50, 6:05, 9 • WHITE HOUSE DOWN(PG-13) 10:50 a.m., 2:40, 6:35, 9:45 • THE WOLVERINE (PG-13) 11:45 a.m., 3:15, 4:15, 6:45, 7:30, 9:45, 10:20 • THE WOLVERINE 3-D (PG-13) 12:15, 3:45, 7:15, 10:15 • WORLD WAR Z (PG-13) 11:10a.m., 2:20, 6:15, 10 • Accessibility devices are available for some movies. •

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Regal Pilot Butte 6, 2717N.E.U.S. Highway 20, 541-382-6347 • FRUITVALE STATION (R) 12: I5, 3:15, 6:15, 8:35 •THE KINGSOF SUMMER (R)12:45,3:45,6:45,8:50 •THE LONERANGER (PG-13)11:30a.m.,2:30,5:30,8:30 • MUD (PG-13) 11:45 a.m., 2:45, 5:45, 8:25 • STAR TREK INTODARKNESS(PG-13) Noon, 3, 6, 8:45 • THE WAY WAYBACK(PG-13) 12:30, 3:30, 6:30, 9 I

Sp.m. onH A, "SharkTank" — A third-generation cattleman from Peoria, III., approaches the Sharks for seed money for his line of gourmet meats, while a San Diego man hasan innovative filtered bottle that makes dirty water potable. A chemical engineer from New Orleans pitches a spandexbodysuitthathe hopes to turn into the next big thing, while two Las Vegasmenseek investment in their creation, a cooler with interior LED lighting. 8 p.m. onE3, "ACM Presents: Tim McGraw's Superstar Summer Night" — Not for country fans only, this special has McGraw performing with and introducing a diverse lineup of artists that includes Nelly, Ne-Yo, Pitbull and John Fogerty. The Band Perry, Keith Urban, Lady Antebellum, Taylor Swift, Jason Aldean, Dierks Bentley and McGraw's wife, Faith Hill, are also in the lineup. g P.m.on STARZ, "Magic City" — The new episode seesthe Miramar Playa hosting a decadent DJ convention. Ike (Jeffrey Dean Morgan) tries to rig the Cuban lottery, while Ben's (Danny Huston) quest for revenge is misdirected. Mercedes (Dominik Garcia-Lorido) shares a secret with Vera (Olga Kurylenko). 10 p.m. on l3,"BlueBloods" — As Jamie (Will Estes) comes to grips with the consequences of his actions on the job, Erin (Bridget Moynahan) questions Mayor Poole (David Ramsey) on the witness stand. Susie Essman ("Curb Your Enthusiasm") and Annabella Sciorra guest star in "Front Page News." 10 p.m. on MAX, "Banshee" — Carrie (Ivana Milicevic) flees the hospital so she canget her family out of town as Rabbit (Ben Cross) closes in. Kai (Ulrich Thomsen) introduces Rebecca (Lili Simmons) to the world of business. Alex (Anthony Ruivivar) calls on one of Kai's thugs to help him deal with a labor problem at the casino. 11:15 p.m. on SHD, Movie: "Trainspotting" — With some truly disgusting scenes, this 1996 British drama isn't easy to watch, but it deserves to be seenand appreciated for its realistically gritty portrayal of heroin addiction. Ewan McGregor leads the cast as Renton, a young addict trying to get clean but having difficulty staying that way. EwenBremner, Kevin McKidd, Jonny Lee Miller and Robert Carlyle also star. ©Zap2it

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McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 N.W.Bond St., 541-330-8562 • THE GREAT GATSBY (PG-13) 6 • THE HANGOVER PARTIII (R) 9:30 • After 7 p.m., shows are21and o/der only. Youngerthan21 mayattend screenings before7 pm.ifaccompanied by a legal guardian. I

Tin Pan Theater, 869 N.W.Tin Pan Alley, 541-241-2271 • DIRTY WARS (NR) 6:30 • FAR OUTISN'TFAR ENOUGH: THE TOMI UNGERER STORY(no MPAArating) 4:15 • FRANCES HA(R) 8:30 I

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Pine Theater, 214 N.Main St., 541-416-1014 • TURBO (UPSTAIRS — PG)4: IO,6:30 • THE WOLVERINE (PG-13) 4, 7 • Theupstairs screeningroomhaslimited accessibility.

John Day Burns Lakeview

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BESTTIRE VILLIIE PROMISE

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Madras Cinema 5, 1101S.W. U.S. Highway97, 541-475-3505 • DESPICABLE ME(PG) 2 Noon, 2:20, 4:40, 7:05, 9:25 • GROWN UPS 2(PG-13)12:35,2:50,5:05,7:20,9:40 • RED 2 (PG-13) 1:50, 4:25, 7, 9:30 • TURBO (PG) Noon, 2, 7:10, 9:30 • TURB03-D(PG) Noon,5 • THE WOLVERINE (PG-13) 4:10, 6:50 • THE WOLVERINE 3-D (PG-13) 2: IO, 9:20

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Sisters Movie House, 720 Desperado Court, 541-549-8800 • THE HEAT (R) 7:30 • RED 2 (PG-13) 5, 7:30 • R.I.P.D. (PG-13) 5:45, 8 • TURBO (PG) 5: I5 • THE WOLVERINE (PG-13) 5, 7:45

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ON PAGES 3&4. COMICS & PUZZLES ~ The Bulletin

Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.com THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, JULY 26, 2013

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T h e

B u l l~ t j n : 0

00 I Want to Buy or Rent

CASH for dressers, dead washers/dryers 541-420-5640 Just bought a new boat? Sell your old one in the classifieds! Ask about our Super Seller rates!

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Holiday Bazaar & Craft Shows

Items for Free

Pets & Supplies

Pets & Supplies

Pets & Supplies

Stepper, adjustable resistance, easy to m ove, JOIN IN THE FUN! needs hydraulic fluid, Central Oregon Free! 541-388-9270 Saturday Market's First Annual Prince & Princess Day! Pets & Supplies Come dressed in your finest/craziest Prince, Princess or Magic Fairy costumes for the GRAND PARADE

2-door refrigerator with 1 pm Sat. 7/27! t op freezer, go o d The Boys & Girls Club will working order. have a "royal accessory 541-383-7603

17 7 7

booth" (crowns, sashes, swords & magic wands. Also face painting, balloon artist 8 photo booth!

Downtown Bend, across from library.

Open 10-4 Saturdays 541-420-9015

541-385-5809

A pet sitter in NE Bend, warm and loving home with no cages, $25 day. Linda at 541-647-7308

700. 541-325-3376

Spaniel purebred puppy wormed, shots, health guar; some trainin, $650

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Antiques & Collectibles

Disney memorabilia work

& up. 541-280-1537 a fn

BOXER AKC puppies reat litter, 1st shots Cavalier King Charles

Adopt a nice cat from PetSmart or Tumalo Find exactly what rescue! Fixed, shots, you are looking for in the ID chip, tested, more! CLASSIFIEDS Sanctuary open Sat/ Sun 1-5, other days by appt. 65480 78th, Canidae Dog Food Bend. Photos, map at All Life Stageswww.craftcats.org. Buy 12 get 1 free. 541-389-8420, or like 44 lbs. - $46 us on Facebook. Quarry Ave Hay & Feed www.quarryfeed.com Adult b arn/shop/working cats, fixed, shots, some friendly, some Cavalier King Charles 2 not. No fee & free de- females 8 wks AKC $1200. 541-678-3724 livery. 541-389-8420

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Queensland Heelers Standard & Mini, $150

O r e g o n

Yorkie pups AKC, parents in home, healthguar. $650 & up. 541-777-7743 210

Furniture & Appliances

$7~

246

253

Guns, Hunting & Fishing

TV, Stereo & Video SAVE on Cable TV-Internet-Digital PhoneSatellite. You've Got A C hoice! O ptions from ALL major service providers. Call us to learn more! CALL Today. 888-757-5943.

Are you a year-round hunter? Protect your investment! Ceramic coating protects your high-end firearms from weather and mois(PNDC) ture. Certified Cerakote appl i cator. Coating options from Computers traditional black to custom camo. Call T HE B U LLETIN r e for an estimate on quires computer adThe Bulletin your project. vertisers with multiple aen ner cent aro eeon trnte rere Commercial ad schedules or those Ceramic Coating, selling multiple syslnc. 541-332-2902 tems/ software, to disclose the name of the Bend local pays CASH!! business or the term "dealer" in their ads. for all firearms & Private party advertisammo. 541-526-0617 Vintage head & footers are defined as CASH!! board, lightweight alum. those who sell one For Guns, Ammo & $75 obo 541-419-6408 computer. Reloading Supplies. 541-408-6900. 242 Exercise Equipment Musical Instruments I

of art nWalt's Music Mak-

www.rightwayranch.wor ers" print, ¹ 2 86/I 800, dpress.com certificate of authenticity, very good cond, S chnoodle P u ps, 3 framed, m ales, D ew s a n d $450. 541-620-1461 t ails, 1 st shot s , The Bulletin reserves w ormed, raised w / the right to publish all kids. Parents on site. ads from The Bulletin $400. 541-410-7701 newspaper onto The Bulletin Internet website.

ALSO - 1r/2 yr old female, $1000. 541-408-5909

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Chihuahua puppies, teacup, shots & dewormed, (2) A/C window units, $250. 541-420-4403 12,000 BTU, $125 ea. 541-388-8339 Chihuahua/Yorkie Puppy, Female, shots, A1 Wsshers&Dryers DON'T MISS TNIS loving, sweet, t i ny, Teeter Inversion Table, $150 ea. Full warElect. guitar - Schecter apricot. With kennel. NXT-4, new! $150, ranty. Free Del. Also Diamond. Red finish. $250 541-815-4052 DO YOU HAVE 541-389-9919 wanted, used W/D's $200. 541-419-9251 SOMETHING TO 541-280-7355 Donate deposit bottles/ SELL Yamaha electric base cans to local all volFOR $500 OR uitar, natural finish. • G olf Equipment Ethan A l len F r e nch unteer, non-profit resLESS? 280 290 200. 541-419-9251 Provincial L o w -Boy cue, to h elp w /cat Non-commercial Estate Sales Sales Northeast Bend Sales Southeast Bend Sales Redmond Area spay/neuter vet bills. c hair, t u fted s o l i d2005 Yamaha golf cart, advertisers may 6 batteries w/charger, Cans for Cats trailer wood, cream color, place an ad Misc. Items California Pottery, lin- G arage/Moving S a l e 7/26 & 27, 9-1. House- at Jake's Diner thru Look What I Found! like new. Must see to $1950. 541-977-1974 with our You'll find a little bit of ens, tins, crates, home Sat.7/27 9 : 0 0 -3:00, h old items, se t o f appreciate. $300 obo. 7/30, then at R ay's "QUICK CASH CHECK YOURAD Advertise V A CATION decor some furn. holi- Pool Table, Video Ar- dishes for 8, Keltcraft Foods on Century Dr. 541-280-2538. everything in SPECIAL" day items, D i sney, cade, power tools and by Noritake pattern D onate Mon-Fri a t SPECIALS to 3 milThe Bulletin's daily 1 week 3 lines 12 lion P acific N o rthbottles, misc. 1676 NE more. 20539 Rolen Kilkee pattern, some Smith Sign, 1515 NE GENERATE garage and yard sale SOME or Cackler, Fri & Sat. 8-3 westerners! 29 daily section. From clothes Ave., off Brosterhous gardening equip., etc. 2nd; or at CRAFT in EXCITEMENT in your k atH ~a newspapers, six Rd. by Hwy 97. 710 NW 21st Ct. to collectibles, from Tumalo anytime. 541- neighborhood! Plan a Sale! Guns, Ad must states. 25-word clashousewares to hard- Community garage sale and don't 389-8420. I nfo/map, tools, tackle, trailers, G ARAGE SALE. 2 7 1 Fri/Sat, 8am-3pm. include price of sified $540 for a 3-day ware, classified is forget to advertise in on the first day it runs www.craftcats.org collectables. S E A M A NDA C T . 750 NE Negus Pl. Baby/ n~ re;te r $500 a d. Cal l (916) always the first stop for furniture, classified! to make sure it isn corFri. & S a t . , 3 6 0 16 kids clothes/toys, Duncan or less, or multiple Tons of great stuff! 2 88-6019 o r vis i t cost-conscious German Shepherds AKC 541-385-5809. rect. nSpellcheck and Terry Dr., follow signs. Fife table/chairs, couch, SAT. 9-2 ONLY items whose total www.pnna.com for the consumers. And if www.sherman-ranch.us human errors do ocJumpinq Jack camp NEED TO CANCEL does notexceed Pacific Nor t hwest you're planning your 541-281-6829 cur. If this happens to Garage sale: Broster- trailer, too(s, bits & bobs! YOUR AD? $500. Daily Con n ection. own garage or yard ** FREE ** your ad, please conhous Storage 61380 The Bulletin German Shorthair (PNDC) sale, look to the clas- Garage Sale KIt Multi-Family Sale! tact us ASAP so that Brosterhous Rd. FriClassifieds has an Call Classifieds at Pointer pups AKC, sifieds to bring in the 2340 NW Antler Ct. corrections and any "After Hours" Line 541-385-5809 Beautiful mother-of-the an ad in The day only 8:00 a.m. white/ liver. exc. hunt buyers. You won't find Place Fri. to Sun. 9-6. Toys, adjustments can be www.bendbulletin.com bride long gown, size Bulletin for your ga3:00 p.m. Tools, apCall 541-383-2371 or gentle family dog. a better place tools, furn. antiques, made to your ad. med., c h ampagne. rage sale and repliances, furniture and 24 hrs. to cancel $350.541 389-6899 for bargains! electronics, A/C unit. 541-385-5809 O rig. p r ic e $ 2 9 8 , ceive a Garage Sale more! your ad! HUNTERS Call Classifieds: The Bulletin Classified asking $160 cash only Kit FREE! MULTI-FAMILY SALE G erman S hort H a i r 541-385-5809 or in Silvies Hunt Unit. GARAGE SALE Fri. 8 to see call Pointer loving sweet Refrigerator, 26 cf Frigid- New Jack Nicholas right Cabin in the pines, runFri. & Sat. 8-4, email K!T INCLUDES: Sat. 8-3, Piano, $450. aire, water/ice in door, 541-382-7573. /-yr. female free to 5402 NW 49th St., classifred@trendtrulletrn.ccrm hand clubs with bag, 4 ning water, green yard, • 4 Garage Sale Signs $200. 541-379-3530 gd cond., misc. 2238 good home, i n exc Redmond. Household woods, 7 irons, putter. 20 amenities. Or need priBend Indoor Swap 282 • $2.00 Off Coupon To SE Wind Rider Lane. items, quilting, stamp- health. 541-848-7747 Round maple table w/ Titleist balls plus 2 doz. vate place for camp trailMeet - A Mini-Mall full Toward Your Sales Northwest Bend Use call before 2 p.m. ing, & much more. others. $275 cash. North ers? Call 541-589-1130 leaf, $49. Dropleaf table, Next Ad of Unique Treasures! Moving Sale, Fri., Sat. View at 97 of f Coole y . • 10 Tips For "Garage 3rd St. & Wilson Ave. 8 Sun., 8-4, 61034 MULTI-FAMILY SALE Jack Russell/Black Lab $65. Nice! 541-420-2220 541-382-0956, Jerry. Estate/Garaqe Sale, elkridgecabin.com Sale Success!" 10-5 Thurs-Fri-Sat. Geary Dr. Off Parrell Fri./Sat. 9-4 no early- mix p u ppies. 1 0 Washer/Dryer, Frigidaire Sat, 8-3, 305 NW DelaNew Voodoo tactical 36" Rd. Lots of Misc. bird sales! Proceeds w eeks o l d . $75 . Gallery HD, Stackable, ware. Vintage furniture, gun case, $65. Matching Buying Diamonds Oregon's all for charitable orga- Please call Exc. $400. 541-549-6036 antiques, housewares. PICK UP YOUR /Gold for Cash tact. range bag, $45. Multi-family Sale Sat. nizations. Convenient 541-233-6872 or Largest 3 Day Fri. Sat. Sun., 8-3 p.m. GARAGE SALE KIT at Washer/dryer Whirlpool 9mm ammo, 500 rnds, Saxon's Fine Jewelers 9-2. Lots of u nique location I 4 197 SW email GUN & KNIFE 541-389-6655 708 N W Ri v e rside 1777 SW Chandler HD, 5 yrs runs great. $165. 600 rnds .45 cal, household items, an- Tommy Armour Ln. by kayla.millard@hdesd. SHOW Blvd. D rake P a r k, Ave., Bend, OR 97702 $400. 541-350-1201 $220. 541-306-0166 tiques, furniture, some T he G r eens G o l f org for more info. BUYING clothing, h o usehold l July 26th, 27th, 28th Taurus Judge, 50 rnds, Lionel/American i tems, r u gs, Course. Flyer The Bulletin baby sporting goods, fun. Portland Expo decorative pi l l ows, Kittens 3 fixed males, The Bulletin $450. .223 480 rnds, trains, accessories. Center glassware, ceramics Sat-Sun, 7/27-28, 10-4, 1st shots 8 wormed. recommends extra Sat. 7/27, 9-3, 3138 NW 541-408-2191. $200. 7.62x39, 800 rnds, 1-5 exit ¹306B FREE Ready to go to n. — I Craftsman Drive, Aw- Full Contents of House a nd m u c h mo r e ! 1151 NW 21st Place. $300. 9mm 500 rnds, Furniture, small Admission $10 BUYING & SE L LING forever homes. chasing products or • brey B utte. T o y s,Moving Sale! Sat. 7-3, 221 SE Airpark. $140. 541-306-0166 appliances, books, Fri. 12-6, Sat. 9-5, 541-420-0097 All gold jewelry, silver services from out of I tools, clothes. 2615 NE Ocker Drive (off Stonehaven neighborhand-crafted items! Wanted: Collector Sun.10-4 and gold coins, bars, l the area. Sending I Sat. only 9-5, 2188 NW Wells Acres). T r oybilt hood Garage Sale, seeks high quality KITTENS! Fo s t ered, cash, c hecks, o r • I 1- 8 00-659-3440 I rounds, wedding sets, mower, outdoor gear, Clearwater, 2 blocks fishing items. class rings, sterling silSat., 9am - 2:30pm, friendly, fixed, shots, l credit i n f o rmation l CollectorsWest.com~ east of Thai Thai res- skis, bikes; lots of gar- Corner of Murphy & Call 541-678-5753, or ID chip, more! Variver, coin collect, vinSales Other Areasg may be subjected to den tools, woodworking, taurant in NWX 503-351-2746 tage watches, dental ety of colors & per- l FRAUD. For more l & general tools, table- Country Club. Bill Fl e ming, sonalities. Adopt from information about an g Moving Sale Fri/Sat 8-2 284 saw; stereos, La-Z-Boy Weatherby V a nguard gold. Guns, Hunting 541-382-9419. 290 foster h o me (see chair, Oak table, chairs 8 11350 SW Powell Butte advertiser, you may I compact 243 WinSales Southwest Bend Hwy. Misc. h o use- TomTom Motel Mgr, call t h e & Fishing leaf; teaching supplies... Sales Redmond Area Or e gonI chester, blued, com- Car memorabilia: parts hold, ATV parts, tool- across from Sonic) or State Attor ney ' posite stock with 3x9 & magazines. $5-$10. Fri & Sat, 8-4. Fishing Girls white bdrm furn., sanctuary (65480 78th boxes, whls/tires. 1000 rnds .556 ammo, l General's O f fi c e Burris s c o pe , 2 541-598-7636 tackle, patio stuff, sm. bookcase, doll house, 4-Family Garage Sale St., Tumalo), Sat. 8 $625. 600 rnds 45acp, Consumer P rotec- • stocks, 1 youth, 1 full trampoline, computer girl's clothes, misc. 5 760 NW 4 9t h S t . , PRE-moving Sale! Sun. 1-5 PM. Just $25 $300. 2200 rds of.22LR, Full luxury bedspread 2 Tetherow C r ossing, t ion ho t l in e at I length, exc. c o n d. desk, camping gear, household. Sat. 8-2 Mechanic tools, dog per kitten; adopt a pair l 1-877-877-9392. $260. 541-647-8931 shams, 3 pillows, $35. Redmond, 8-5, 7/26 8 $495. 541-382-4470 much more. 5 9878 2729 Red Oak Drive, grooming supplies, for $40! 3 8 9 8 420, 458-206-4825 eves. 2 7. Drive w est o n Navajo Road. rds factory 45 Long off NE 27th St. dryers, pens, www.craftcats.org. 253 Maple, onto N o rth- (cages, t!Ietin 300 LThe Br shampoos, etc), colColt, $240. 500 rnds 38 GENERATE SOME G arage Sale, Fri. & w est Way, l ef t o n TV, Stereo & Video spl, $260. 541-647-8931 EXCITEMENT Sat., 9-5 . 1 9 862 Ar- Huge 3-family sale! Coyner, right on 49th. lectibles, antiques, lots Lab Pups AKC, black & IN YOUR row Wood Dr. (in Ro- 8-2 Fri. 7/26 off Boyd 8th driveway on right. more! July 26-27, 8-5, yellow, Master Hunter 212 DirecTV - Over 1 4 0 380 Ruger LCP-LM pisA cres n e a r Elk s 1018 Chapman Rd, sired, performance pediNEIGBORHOOD. maine V i l lag e off Everything from soup tol w/laser, NIB, $350. channels only $29.99 Gilchrist, OR Antiques & Lodge. Follow signs. gree, OFA cert hips & ela garage sale and Brookswood). T o o ls, to nuts 8 in between! Call Bob, 541-788-6365 a month. Call Now! Plan (Jackpine Village). bows, 541-771-2330 don't forget to adverCollectibles fishing, 56' Ford pickup, H uge Moving Out o f Triple savings! www.kinnamanretrieveracom tise in classified! motorhome, household. State Sale, s o me- ESTATE/MOVING SALE: Beautiful Eagle 380 S&W BodyGuard, $636.00 in Savings, 541-385-5809. Everything must go. new in box, $365. Free upgrade to Gething for e v eryone! Crest home Quality furniture, fridge, air com- Labrador purebred pupCall Bob, 541-788-6365 yellows & blacks, nie 8 2013 NFL Sun- GET FREE OF CREDIT Huge Garage Sale! Fri. & Sat., 8-4. 2448 pressor, pressure washer, snow blower, Husq- pies, day ticket free!! Start CARD DEBT NOW! 60928 Aspen Drive, NE Ravenwood Dr. varna mower, power 8 hand tools, ladders, 20 males & females, ready 3x9x40 Leupold scopes today! Cut payments by up Fri. and Sat., 8-4. fishing poles 8 tackle, outdoor, full kitchen PLUS now! $300. 541-771-5511 2), 1 stainless, 1 black, saving MOVING Fri.-Sat. 8-2. 1-800-259-5140 Variety of everything! family antiques: barber pole, world war col250 ea. 541-647-8931 to half. Stop creditors RV, tools, furniture, (PNDC) lectibles, time stamp clock, toys and cap guns, from calling. Sat.& Sun. 7/27-28, 9-3. sporting, household, e• Beautiful hand400 rnds of .380, $200. DISH T V fountain pens, paper memorabilia, silver, jew61486 Diamond Lake g ardening. Ret a i ler. 866-775-9621. 634 8 6 Manx k ittens, a s st'd carved coffee table 200 rnds of .357 mag, Dr. Legos, some furn., C ricketwood R o a d , elry, glassware 8 china, Oriental, vintage fishai (PNDC) colors, short tails, $30 (44 n x 1 9'/4n x 17r/zn) $140. 200 rnds .44 mag, Starting ing & hunting, political & worlds fair items, fire speakers, bikes. $19.99/month (for 12 follow signs. $160. 541-647-8931 Cash. 541-678-7599 and 2 matching end NEW CARPET, 13'x15', collectibles, many unique items! Fri-Sat 9-4 mos.) 8 High Speed clove color, $200 obo. Yard Sale 7/26-27, 8-6. tables (shown) 24%n numbers Fri. 8a.m. Signs not allowed! Take Storage/Moving Sale, I nternet starting a t (4) Spinning f ishing 60847 Jasmine Place. Poodle teacup puppies 541-815-1562 x 15 n x 24tA". Built in Cline Falls Hwy fo Coopers Hawk fo Nutpoles, si x d i fferent $14.95/month (where Tools, kitchen items, hall 63277 Service Rd., Apricot, 8 weeks, $300 Taiwan between cracker to Golden Pheasant fo Eagle Crest reels, lures & plus lots available.) SAVE! Ask Palm Tree plant, 11 ft. 541-977-0035 & throw rugs, new youth F ri. 9-2, S a t . 7 - 3 . 1940-1950, all glass Blvd. to Wm. Lyche Dr., go to 2nd of extra fishing equip. About SAME DAY In- tall, health, 50+ yrs. quilts, queen bedframe 8 Sporting goods, tools, covered, in excelSundance Ridge Loop to 10162 Oregon Hot Springs W orth o ve r $ 5 0 0 . stallation! CALL Now! old. Commercial or rails, some furniture, 3 POODLE Toypups 8 lent condition. $1000 recliners, rocker, desk Spa, yard maint. tools, Attlc Estates & Appraisals 541-350-6822 teens. Also,POMAPOOS OBO. 541-382-6731 Asking $295 O B O. 1-800-308-1563 h ome. $500 O B O . chairs (and other stuff!) 5th Wheel, furniture. Call 541-475-3889 541-388-9270. 541-388-9270 pics at www.atticestatesandappraisals.com (PNDC)

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E2 FRIDAY, JULY 26, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541 -385-5809 476

541-385-5809 or go to www.bendbulletin.com KlkGlhN

AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES Monday • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri • Tuesday • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Mon.

Wednesday •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • e Noon Tuese

Qrj s 325

Hay, Grain 8 Feed Baler Twine Most Common Sizes

Thursday • • •••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • N oon Wed. Fr i d ay . . . . . . • • • • • . • • • • • • • • . • Noon Thurs. www.quarryfeed.com Call The Bulletin At 541-385-5809 Saturday Real Estate • • • • • • • • • • • 11:00 am Fri • Place Your Ad Or E-Mail Saturday • • • • 3:00 pm Fri. At: www.bendbulletin.com 341 Sunday. • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri • Horses & Equipment Quarry Ave. Hay & Feed 541-923-2400

a

Employment Opportunities

Heavy equipment operator position. Central Oregon based excavation and site work company looking for a motivated, honest hard working person to join the team. Fun, hard working, healthy work environment. Applicant must be willing to work full time, have a minimum of 2

years experience running heavy equipment with a valid drivers license and transportation. Pay DOE. Please fax all resumes to 541-548-0130

PRIVATE PARTY RATES Starting at 3 lines

Place aphotoin your private party ad for only $15.00 perweek.

"UNDER '500in total merchandise

OVER '500in total merchandise

7 days .................................................. $10.00 14 days................................................ $16.00

Garage Sale Special

4 days.................................................. $18.50 7 days.................................................. $24.00 14 days .................................................$33.50 28 days .................................................$61.50

4 lines for 4 days..................................

(caii for commercial line ad rates)

A Payment Drop Box is available at Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN ( *) REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin reserves the right to reject any ad at any time.

CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m.

*Must state prices in ed

lllness forces sale. National show horse, 20 yr. old gelding, paTURN THE PAGE pered, 1/2 saddleFor More Ads b red 8 1 / 2 A r ab. The Bulletin Sound. Incl. western saddle, blanket 8 all tack. Boarding avail Housekeeper private $700. 541-388-8509 homes cleaning team member needed, week 383 days only. No weekProduce & Food ends, eves or holidays. THOMAS ORCHARDS

Kimberly,Oregon

• Early semi cling Sweet Scarlet peaches

La Pine Economic Development Manager -Part Time Position

• Early semi-cling Sweet Scarlet peaches

PURPOSE OF POSITION:

U-pick Ready-picked

The Bulletin bendbulletin.com

541-815-0015

• Santa Rosa Plums

Employment Opportunities

Loans & Mortgages

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To execute the plans and programs of BRING CONTAINERS business retention/ for U-PICK expansion and reOpen 7 days week, 8 cruitment for a.m. to 6 p.m. ONLY! projects within the 541-934-2870 g reater L a Pin e PLEASE NOTE:Check your ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction is Look for updates on Faarea, and t hereby needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right to accept or cebook. We are at the assist in creating or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these newspapers. The publisher Bend Farmers Market on retaining pr i mary shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Classified ads running 7 or more days Wednesdays, 3-7 p.m. employment in the will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday. community o f La Pine. Assist Eco260 nomic Development Misc. Items Misc. Items • Commercial/Office • Building Materialsg for Central Oregon (EDCO) and local Equipment & Fixtures *REDUCE YOUR T ONNEAU COV E R Prineville Habitat leaders with attractCABLE BILL! Get an A .R.E. f i t s '07 ReStore ing new primary emCommercial s t ainless All-Digital Sat e l lite present Toyota 6 .5' ployers to the comInsurance s teel 30x30 x 3 0 Building Supply Resale system installed for Box. S l ate Metallic. cooler, NW Murphy Ct. m unity. M u s t b e pre v iously 1427541-447-6934 FREE and program- All hardware included used by b e verage r esident of S o u th SAVE $$$ on AUTO 616 ming s t a rting at $500 541-536-3045 Open to the public. Deschutes County. INSURANCE from the distributor. Also Want To Rent 421 $ 24.99/mo. FRE E S alary Rang e : m ajor names y o u smaller cooler availHD/DVR upgrade for Wanted- paying cash able. 541-749-0724. $29,000 - $ 3 4,000 know and trust. No Schools & Training quiet s ecure new callers, SO CALL for Hi-fi audio & stuHeating & Stoves DOE forms. No hassle. No Mature, NOW (877)366-4508 dio equip. Mclntosh, obligation. Call Christian male seeks Oregon Medical TrainJ BL, Marantz, D y (PNDC) NOTICE TO Go to www.barrett READY F O R MY room. 541-420-4276 ing PCS - Phlebotomy naco, Heathkit, SanADVERTISER business.com/ QUOTE now! CALL Tools classes begin Sept. 3, 627 sui, Carver, NAD, etc. Since September 29, 2013. Registration now branches/location/ 1-888-706-8256. The Bulletin Offers Call 541-261-1808 17" floor mod. drill press 1991, advertising for OR/bend Vacation Rentals (PNDC) P Free Private Party Ads used woodstoves has medicaltrainin .com or call 541-382-6946 3/4 hp, 5/8 and ¹2 mt. & Exchanges • 3 lines - 3 days Check out the 541-343-31 00 for more information c huck. $395, e x c . been limited to mod528 • Private Party Only classifieds online els which have been and application. cond. 541-330-5516 Loans 8 Mortgages • Total of items adverOcean front house, 470 c ertified by the O r tised must equal $200 www.bendbuiietin.com each walk from town, egon Department of Domestic 8 or Less Updated daily WARNING Pedestal moun t ed Environmental Qual2 bdrm/2 bath, TV, In-Home Positions The Bulletin recomFOR DETAILS or to bench grinder, 8" 3/4 Fireplace, BBQ. $95 I IINNEI Realll( • saeeeell GNlrlEIY ity (DEQ) and the fedmends you use cauPLACE AN AD, Wild bird feeder w/ 6 HP, 3450 rpm w/ acper night, 3 night MIN. En v ironmental Caregiver needed for feeder stations, NIB. c ess. $ 2 25., e x c . eral tion when you proCall 541-385-5809 208-342-6999 Protection A g e ncy Fax 541-385-5802 $35. 541-678-5407. cond. 541-330-5516 elderly bedridden Ranch Managerfor 400 vide personal (EPA) as having met acre ranch in Central Or- information to compalady. SE Bend. 632 smoke emission stan- 3 shifts, nies offering loans or Apt./Multiplex General 261 Fri. 4:30-9pm; egon. Responsible for dards. A cer t i fied Sat. 7:30am-12:30 day-to-day operations & credit, especially & Medical Equipment w oodstove may b e staff,un4-9 pm. Background m anagement of those asking for adidentified by its certifiCHECK YOUR AD der direction of board of vance loan fees or check. 541-419-3405 Medical Alert for Secation label, which is directors. Must provide companies from out of La Pine Habitat Meet singles right now! niors - 24/7 monitorpermanently attached exceptional & p r ofes- state. If you have No paid o perators, ing. FREE Equipment. RESTORE 476 to the stove. The Bulsional service to ranch just real people like concerns or quesFREE Shipping. Na- Building Supply Resale letin will no t k nowEmployment owners and guests, Will Quality at tions, we suggest you you. Browse greet- tionwide Ser v i ce. ingly accept advertisOpportunities provide maintenance of LOW PRICES consult your attorney ings, exchange mes- $ 29.95/Month C A L L i ng for the s ale of equipment 8 e n v iron- or call CONSUMER sages and connect Medical Guardian To52684 Hwy 97 on the first day it runs mental stewardship of uncertified Add your web address 541-536-3234 HOTLINE, to make sure it is corlive. Try it free. Call day 85 5 - 345-7286. woodstoves. to your ad and read- property. Must have 5 now: 8 7 7 -955-5505. Open to the public . 1-877-877-9392. rect. "Spellcheck" and (PNDC) years' ranch manageers on The Buiietin's human errors do oc(PNDC) ment or related experiweb site, www.bendBANK TURNED YOU cur. If this happens to Fuel & Wood • bulletin.com, will be ence & high school diDOWN? Private party your ad, please conable to click through ploma. No calls. Send will loan on real estact us ASAP so that automatically to your resume: ranchmanagero tate equity. Credit, no All Year Dependable corrections and any aperionmgmt.com Firewood: Seasoned website. problem, good equity adjustments can be Lodgepole, Split, Del. is all you need. Call made to your ad. RESTAURANT Bend: 1 for $175 or 2 AUTOMOTIVE Oregon Land M ort541-385-5809 MCMENAMINS for$335. Cash, Check Call54I 3853809topromoteyour service Advertisefor 28daysstarting at'IIO Irtrir rterralparkageir noiovarlrbleonorrwebaiei gage 541-388-4200. The Bulletin Classified OLD ST. FRANCIS or Credit Card OK. ROBBERSON is now hiring 541-420-3484. LINE COOKS! Qualified apps must Credit Young man willing to split Central Billing I Building/Contracting Landscaping/Yard Care Landscaping/Yard Care /stack firewood. Wage Robberson Ford, have an open 8 flex crer wllB negotiable. 541-419-6651 Central Oregon's ¹1 schedule i n c luding, tts tatt NOTICE: Oregon state NOTICE: Oregon LandD ealership is a c days, eves, w e eklaw r equires anyone scape Contractors Law cepting applications ends and h olidays. who contracts for (ORS 671) requires all Gardening Supplies for both an experiWe are looking for Responsibilities include posting payments and Zcdà d gua//iP construction work to businesses that adenced Import Serapplicants who have & Equipment • be licensed with the vertise t o pe r f orm vice Tec h nician, previous exp. related invoices, researching and resolving billing isZa~<0a ~/,. Construction Contrac- More Than Service Landscape ConstrucMazda p r e ferred, exp. and enjoy work- sues, collecting on past due accounts, maintors Board (CCB). An tion which includes: and an experienced customer account information and proPeace Of Mind BarkTurfSoil.com ing in a b usy cus- taining active license p lanting, decks , full t i m e S e r vice tomer viding customer support. Requires knowledge ser v ice-orimeans the contractor fences, arbors, Technician, Ford exMicrosoft Office, strong verbal and written ented enviroment. We of Fire Protection is bonded & insured. water-features, and in- PROMPT D ELIVERY perience preferred, communication skills, excellent customer sera re also w i lling t o Fuels Reduction Verify the contractor's stallation, repair of ir541-389-9663 at our Bend location. skills and ability to negotiate. Les Schwab train! We offer oppor- vice •Tall Grass CCB li c ense at rigation systems to be Our growing quality tunities for advance- has a reputation of excellent customer service • Low Limbs www.hirealicensedlicensed w i t h the organization offers ment and e x cellent and over 400 stores in the Northwest. We ofcontractor.com •Brush and Debris Landscape ContracFor newspaper g reat benefits i nbenefits for e l igible fer a competitive salary, excellent benefits, reor call 503-378-4621. tors Board. This 4-digit delivery, call the cluding medical & irement, and c ash b onus. Visit u s a t : employees, including twww.LesSchwab.com. The Bulletin recomn umber is to be i ndental insurance, vaProtect your home Circulation Dept. at vision, medical, chiro, mends checking with with defensible space cluded in all advercation, 401k, profit 541-385-5800 dental and so much the CCB prior to contisements which indisharing, etc. To place an ad, call Resumes will be accepted through more! Please apply tracting with anyone. cate the business has Email resume to ser541-385-5809 July 31, 2013. Please send resume Landscape online 24 /7 at Some other t r ades a bond,insurance and vice@robberson.com or email and salary requirements to: Maintenance www.mcmenamins.com also req u ire addiworkers c ompensa- classifiedobendbulletin.com or Apply in person at ZYLSHuman.Resources O lesschwab.com. t ional licenses a nd Full or Partial Service tion for their employor pick up a paper app Robberson Ford Emails must state "Central Billing • Mowing eEdging Bulletin at any McMenamins certifications. ees. For your protec- The Mazda Semng CentralOregon since l903 Clerk" in the subject line. • Pruning eWeeding tion call 503-378-5909 2100 N.E. 3rd Street location. Mail to: 430 No phone calls please. Concrete Construction Sprinkler Adjustments or use our website: N. Kill i ngsworth, Bend, OR 97701 www.lcb.state.or.us to SUPER TOP SOIL Portland OR, 97217 Robberson Ford is a www.herehe eoilandbark.com EOE JJ & B Construction, Fertilizer included check license status Screened, or fax: 503-221-8749. drug free workplace. soil & combefore contracting with quality concrete work. with monthly program EOE. Call 503-952-0598 for mi x ed , no the business. Persons post Over 30 Years Exp. info on other ways to doing land s cape rocks/clods. High huSidewalks; RV pads; a pply. P l ease n o Advertising lts not too late mus level, exc. for maintenance do not Special Projects Editorial Assistant Driveways; Color & phone calls or emails flower beds, lawns, CPA-TAXt Gr owr equire an L C B Stamp wor k a v a il. for 8 beautiful to individual locations! The Bulletin is seeking a motivated, energetic, ing, team-oriented gardens, straight landscape cense. creative and skilled editorial assistant to join Also Hardwood floorE.O.E. s creened to p s o i l. Bend, OR CPA/ the Special Projects team. This part-time posiing a t aff o rdable • Lawn Restoration Consulting firm hirBark. Clean fill. De• Weed Free beds SEAMSTRESS: Manu- tion will support in the production of magaprices. 541-279-3183 ALLEN REINSCH ing a Staff Accounliver/you haul. • Bark Installation CCB¹190612 facturing c o m pany zines, tabloids, event guides and other special Yard maintenance 8 tant. Bachelor's 541-548-3949. seeks person com- publications by offering writing, photography clean-up, thatching, degree, CPA certifiDebris Removal mitted t o p r o viding and general editorial assistance 20 hours each EXPERIENCED plugging 8 much more! cation and 2-3 week. quality work in a reCall 541-536-1294 Commercial years recent public Lost & Found • JUNK BE GONE laxed a t m osphere. The successful candidate will contribute by: & Residential accounting tax exExperience in produc- • Being a Storyteller — The editorial assisI Haul Away FREE Senior Discounts Maverick Landscaping Found air mattress in a perience required. tion sewing preferred, tant must prove to be a s avvy storyteller For Salvage. Also 541-390-1466 Mowing, weedeating, yd bag, 7/18. Call to iden- Send cover letter however will train the whether writing copy, constructing a feature Cleanups 8 Cleanouts Same Day Response detail., chain saw work, tify, 541-312-9500. and resume to: right person. Please story or photographing subjects/topics covMel, 541-389-8107 bobcat excv., etc! LCB SGA CPAs, 499 come t o 5 3 7 SE ered in our publications. Candidate must show Found; tailgate for a ¹8671 541-923-4324 SW Upper Terrace, he/she can create solid content on a variety of Glenwood Dr, Bend, Concrete/Paving pickup on Horse Butte Dr., Suite A, Bend, OR 97702 to fill out an levels, both visually and via the written word. Rd, on 7/20. Call to OR 97702 Nelson • Sharing Ideas — We're seeking a creative application. Painting/Wall Covering identify, 541-389-2420 Doug Strain Landscaping & thinker as well as a creative doer. Contribute Construction, Inc. Maintenance to our team by sharing a part of yourself — your WESTERN P A INTING LOST between 7/11-12. Concrete Division Serving Central womans 10-diamond ideas, your personality and your flair for turnResidential 8 CO. Richard Hayman, Oregon Since 2003 anniversary ring. Very ing ideas into stories and/or visual concepts Commercial concrete; a semi-retired paintResidental/Commercial sentimental. Reward! (e.g. feature photography). The ideal candifoundations, driveways, ing contractor of 45 Advertising Account Executive date will be eager to work toward his/her full sidewalks 8 curbs. years. S m all Jobs Sisters, 541-549-1132 Sprinkier potential both independently and as a memCall Chris for appt. Welcome. Interior 8 Activation/Repair The Bulletin is looking for a professional and ber of the team. Exterior. c c b ¹ 5184. 541-280-0581 Back Flow Testing • Serving as a Team Player —Expect to do a driven Sales and Marketing person to help our 541-388-6910 CCB¹109532 REMEMBER: If you customers grow their businesses with an little bit of everything, from writing feature stoMaintenance have lost an animal, expanding list of broad-reach and targeted ries, photographing interesting subjects and Handyman .Thatch & Aerate don't forget to check assisting with community events to formatting products. This full time position requires a • Spring Clean up USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! The Humane Society background in consultative sales, territory calendars, managing a database and proofI DO THAT! •Weekly Mowing Door-to-door selling with Bend management and a ggressive prospecting reading lines of copy. The editorial assistant Home/Rental repairs & Edging 541-382-3537 skills. Two years of media sales experience is will wear several hats. Small jobs to remodels •Bi-Monthly 8 Monthly fast results! It's the easiest Redmond preferable, but w e w i l l t r ai n t h e r i g ht This is an entry level position offering the ideal Honest, guaranteed Maintenance way in the world to sell. 541-923-0882 candidate. In c l udes a compe t itive opportunity for an up-and-coming creator of work. CCB¹151573 •Bark, Rock, Etc. Pi compensation package including benefits, and quality content to discover his/her full potential Dennis 541-317-9768 The Bulletin Classified 541-447-7178; rewards an aggressive, customer focused while publishing work within some of Central ~Landsca in ERIC REEVE HANDY •Landscape 541-385-5809 or Craft Cats salesperson with unlimited earning potential. Oregon's most successful publications. QualiSERVICES. Home 8 541-389-8420. Construction fied candidates must possess good writing and Commercial Repairs, •Water Feature Email your resume, cover letter basic photography skills, be computer savvy, Carpentry-Painting, Remodeling/Carpentry To the lady who lost her Installation/Maint. and salary history to: and have access to reliable transportation Pressure-washing, •Pavers sunglasses/ reading Jay Brandt, Advertising Director (proof of insurance required). Hours are flexHoney Do's. On-time •Renovations glasses at the Three SILVER LINING jbrandt O bendbulletin.com ible, and benefits will be offered with the posipromise. Senior S isters Lions y a rd CONSTRUCTION •Irrigations Installation or drop off your resume in person at tion. Discount. Work guarsale l as t w e e kend Residential const., 1777 SW Chandler, Bend, OR 97702; The Bulletin is a drug-free workplace. EOE. 7 /1 9-20, they h a v e anteed. 541-389-3361 Senior Discounts remodels, maint. Or mail to PO Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708; To apply, send a cover letter, resume and or 541-771-4463 been found! Please Bonded & Insured 8 repair. CCB ¹199645 No phone inquiries please. writing/photography samples to: Bonded 8 Insured 541-815-4458 Cody Aschenbrenner call Hel e n at EOE / Drug Free Workplace bmontgomery O bendbulletin.com. CCB¹181595 LCB¹8759 541-263-1268 541-595-6967

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is located at: 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, Oregon 97702

(ready by Sat. 7/27)

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Apt./Multiplex NE Bend

Cut y ou r S T UDENT**No Application Fee ** LOAN payments in 2 bdrm, 1 bath, SecretaryII HALF or more Even if $530 & $540 w/lease. Provides administraLate or in Default. Get Carports included! tive a n d cl e r ical Relief FAST. M u ch FOX HOLLOW APTS. support to Healthy LOWER p a yments. Beginnings in Bend. Call Student Hotline (541) 383-3152 Cascade Rental 40 Hr/wk temporary 855-747-7784 Management. Co. position. N o t l ess (PNDC) than $13.07 per hr., Call for Speciais! benefits package in- LOCAL MONEY:Webuy Limited numbers avail. secured trust deeds 8 c luded. Fo r i n f o . 1, 2 and 3 bdrms. note,some hard money contact Holly Remer, W/D hookups, patios loans. Call Pat Kelley 541-383-6357 or or decks. 541-382-3099 ext.13. holly.remerohdesd. MOUNTAIN GLEN, ol'g. 541-383-9313 573 For details 8 Professionally Business Opportunities application: managed by Norris & www.hdesd.org Stevens, Inc. A Classified ad is an EASY W A Y TO SUBSIDIZED UNITS REACH over 3 million Studio, 1 8 2 bedroom Pacific Northwestern628 over ers. $54 0 /25-word and/or Disability. c lassified ad i n 2 9 Multi-Family Housing/ chasing products or I daily newspapers for Project-based. services from out of ' Call the Pa- Greenwood Manor Apts I the area. Sending 3-days. cific Northwest Daily 2248 NE 4th St. c ash, c hecks, o r Connection (916) Bend, OR 97701 I credit i n f o rmation 2 88-6019 o r em a i l 541-389-2712 I may be subjected to elizabeth Ocnpa.com TDD 800-735-2900 FRAUD. for more info (PNDC) www.gres.com For more informaEqual Housing tion about an adver- Extreme Value Adver-- O p portunity I tiser, you may call tising! 29 Daily newsthe Oregon State 648 papers $540/25-word I Attorney General's 3-d a y s. Houses for Office Co n s umert classified 3 million PaRent General Protection hotline at t Reach cific Northwesterners. I 1-877-877-9392. For more information Rented your call (916) 288-6019 or LThc Bullct ttx Property? email: The Bulletin Classifieds elizabeth Ocnpa.com has an for the Pacific NorthTrucking "After Hours"Line. west Daily ConnecClass B Driver Call 541-383-2371 Immediate openings, tion. (PNDC) 24 Hours to straight truck, with 2 a d .' t~a cel o Communications years experience. M-F Visual nights. Some l ifting Business For S ale! Rent /Own B2B Services. Great 3 bdrm, 2 bath homes required. Benefits. Repeat Clients. Low $2500 down, $750 mo. E-mail resume to Overhead. Great Loc. OAC. J and M Homes kellymoftlinc.com High Net To Gross. 541-548-5511 No Exp Nec! Finance 8 Training Available! 658 Call:1-800-796-3234 Houses for Rent Redmond 2 bdrm/1 bath modest mobile on 5 ac. Teth-

erow Crossing. $635. mo. 541-420-8915 or (602) 740-0503

prj 0 705

Real Estate Services Boise, ID Real Estate

For relocation info, call Mike Conklin, 208-941-8458 Silvercreek Realty 745

Homes for Sale 6 Bdrm, 6 bath, 4-car, 4270 sq ft, .83 ac. corner, view. By owner, ideal for extended family. $590,000. 541-390-0886

NOTICE

All real estate advertised here in is subject to t h e F e deral F air H o using A c t , which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or intention to make any such preferences, l i m itations or discrimination. We will not knowingly accept any advertising for r ea l e state which is in violation of this law. All persons are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised are available

on an equal opportunity basis. The Bulletin Classified

The Bulletin

FOR SALE When buying a home, 83% of Central Oregonians turn to

The Bulletin servingcentral oregon since rete

Call 541-385-5809 to

place your

Real Estate ad. 747

Southwest Bend Homes

Widgi Creek golf course h ome, 3 b d rm, 2t/a b ath, 2355 s q . f t . , t urn-key, f u lly f u r nished, oversized 3 car garage. 6th tee box, views of pond 8 fairway. $5 2 9 ,000. Contact B r ia n I Metcalfe Real Estate 541-420-2638 753

Sisters Homes

Squaw Creek Canyon Estates 70075 Sorrel Dr. (corner of Sorrel & Mt. View) completely renovated over 3000 sq. ft. 3 bdrm, 2 full bath home, new energy eff. furnace & heat pump, wide plank wood floors, walk-in closets and p a ntry, stone fireplace with woodstove insert, 1 t/a acres, fenced, covered decks, 2-car garage, mtn. views. Just reduced! $ 3 8 5,000. Call (503) 786-7835 (recording) 762

Homes with Acreage 2 Bdrm 2 Bath on 2

acres - Large shop/ garage, fenced yard, cabin. LaPine $83,000. 541-390-7394 or 541-771-0143 763

Recreational Homes & Property 637 Acres with recreation cabin and stream. in forest, west of Silver Lake, OR .541-480-7215



E4 FRIDAY, JULY 26, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9

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The whole tooth

1 Dinner spread 11 Streets of Rage

By FRANK STEWART Tribune Media Services

T oday's N o r th-South w e r e a dentist and a manicurist my club calls "Tooth and Nail" because that's how they argue. Nail found herself at six spades. She took theace of diamonds and c ounted 11 tri c k s . L ac k i n g transportation to ruff a diamond in dummy, Nail needed a heart trick. She led a heart to her queen, but West took the aceand forced dummy to ruff a diamond. Then, with West holding 10-8-6-2, Nail couldn't draw trumps and went down.

do you say? ANSWER: B i d t h r e e c l u bs, Stayman. If partner next bids three diamonds to deny a four-card major suit, settle for 3NT. If he bids three hearts or three spades and can have as many as 22 points for his 2NT, you can raise to five to invite slam. Six hearts will be a good spot if he has K 4, A K 5 3, K Q 2, A K 4 3. North dealer Neither side vulnerable NORTH 41KJ4 9 K73 0A 4 AKQ J 7 4

ARGUMENT Came the inevitable argument: Nail: "Your hand wasn't w orth opening two clubs, and you had no right to commit to slam." Tooth: "Your two spades promised a good five-card suit. I could take over with Blackwood." The bidding was questionable. Still, Nail could nail down 12 tricks by leading the king of hearts at Trick Two. If W est w i n s and l eads a diamond, South ruffs in d ummy, takes the K-J of trumps, and leads to the queen of hearts to draw trumps and run the clubs. And that's the whole tooth and nothing but.

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THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, JULY 26 2013 E5

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 Lots

ATVs

Boats & Accessories

Motorhomes •

881

882

Travel Trailers

Fifth Wheels

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Beautiful b u ilding lot just st e p s from Meadow Lakes Golf C ourse, $95, 0 00

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Trucks & Heavy Equipment

Antique & Classic Autos Chrysler 30 0 C o u pe 1967, 44 0 e n g ine, auto. trans, ps, air, frame on rebuild, repainted original blue, original blue interior, original hub caps, exc. chrome, asking $9000 or make offer. 541-385-9350 Ford Mustang Coupe 1966, original owner, V8, automatic, great shape, $9000 OBO. 530-515-8199

541-480-3937 776

Honda TRX 450R sport Beautiful h o u seboat, NATIONAL DOLPHIN Trail Sport 2013 quad 2008, low hrs, new $85,000. 541-390-4693 37' 1997, loaded! 1 Keystone Montana 23' Travel Trailer 1987 Freightliner COE 3wheels 8 DNC perf. pipe www.centraloregon 2955 RL 2008, slide, Corian surfaces, Like new, used twice. axle truck, Cummins en$4250. 541-647-8931 houseboat.com 2 slides, arctic wood floors (kitchen), Tow with SUV or gine, 10-spd, runs! $3900 insulation, loaded, obo. 541-419-2713 GENERATE SOME ex- 2-dr fridge, convection small pickup. Queen Delivered and Set up 870 excellent never used '02 3/4 bd, 2 ba. 42,900 citement in your neig- microwave, Vizio TV & bed, air, TV, micro, 2009 26' Load Max flatBoats & Accessories condition. $33,500 roof satellite, walk-in '10 2/3 bd, 2 ba. 47,900 borhood. Plan a gabuilt-in stereo, electbed gooseneck trailer, 541-923-4707 shower, new queen bed. ric awning, barbecue, 541-350-1782 rage sale and don't White $4000. 541-416-9686 leather hide-aforget to advertise in extras. Non-smoker. Smart Housing LLC bed & chair, all records, Selling due to health; classified! 385-5809. Montana 2006 3400 no pets or s moking. FACTORY SPECIAL Sacrifice, RL, 37', 4 slides, ArNew Home, 3 bdrm, $28,450. $16,000 obo. I tic options, K/bed, I 1/3 interest in Columbia Seresng Cenrral Oregon since 1903 $46,500 finished Call 541-771-4800 Ford Ranchero Call Jim, 541-401-9963 w/d combo. M ust on your site. 400, $150,000 (located 1979 12s/g' HiLaker fishing ~ sell $22,990.OBO. ~ O Bend.) Also: SunriJ and M Homes RV with 351 Cleveland 541-548-5511 Call f o r det a i ls ver hangar available for boat with trailer and CONSIGNMENTS Backhoe modified engine. 805-844-3094. newly overhauled 18 sale at $155K, or lease, LOT MODEL WANTED 2007 John Deere Body is in I~ La Pine Address © $400/mo. h.p. Johnston o u t1994 Yamaha Wave We Do The Work ... LIQUIDATION 310SG, cab 4x4, excellent condition, 541-948-2963 b oard, $ 85 0 o b o . Raider, low hrs exc. 4-in-1 bucket You Keep The Cash! Prices Slashed Huge $2500 obo. Eves 541-383-5043, $2250. 541-480-3937 On-site credit Savings! 10 Year Extendahoe, 541-420-4677 WEEKEND WARRIOR I days 541-322-4843 Ads published in eWaapproval team, hydraulic thumb, conditional warranty. Toy hauler/travel trailer. ~ <A a -Wl = a web site presence. Finished on your site. 13' SmokerCraft, 15 hp tercraft" include: Kay24' with 21' interior. loaded, like new, Yamaha, Minnekota ks, rafts and motorWe Take Trade-Ins! 500 hours. ONLY 2 LEFT! Sleeps 6. Self-controlling, d o wnrigger, Ized personal Free Advertising. New $105,000. Redmond, Oregon tained. Systems/ super clean e xtras, atercrafts. For BIG COUNTRY RV 541-548-5511 appearancein good Sell $75,000. MONTANA 3585 2008, "boats" please see Bend: 541-330-2495 interest i n w e l l$3200. 541-416-1042. 541-350-3393 JandMHomes.com condition. Smoke-free. exc. cond., 3 slides, 1/3 equipped IFR Beech Bolass 870. Redmond: Ford T-Bird, 1966, 390 Tow with i/g-ton. Strong king bed, Irg LR, nanza A36, new 10-550/ 541-548-5254 engine, power every541-385-5809 suspension; can haul Arctic insulation, all prop, located KBDN. Mitsubishi Fuso thing, new paint, 54K ATVs snowmobiles, options $35,000 obo. $65,000. 541-419-9510 1995 14' box truck original m i les, runs even a small car! Great 541-420-3250 with lift gate, great, excellent condiprice - $8900. 184,000 miles, tion in & out. Asking Call541-593-6266 Garage Sales 14'8 e boat, 40hp Mer$8,500. 541-480-3179 needs turbo seal. cury outboard (4-stroke, Need help fixing stuff? $3500 or best offer. Garage Sales electric trim, EFI, less 541-420-2323 Winnebaqo Suncruiser34' Call A Service Professional than 10 hrs) + electric 2004, only 34K, loaded, find the help you need. Garage Sales trolling motor, fish finder, too much to list, ext'd www.bendbulletin.com $5000 obo. 541-548-2173 1/5th interest in 1973 850 warr. thru 2014, $54,900 Find them Cessna 150 LLC Dennis, 541-589-3243 Snowmobiles Looking for your in 150hp conversion, low Ford Thunderbird next employee? time on air frame and The Bulletin ( 2) 2000 A rctic C at Brougham 1978 motor Place a Bulletin help 1955, new white soft engine, hangared in Peterbilt 359 p o table top, tonneau cover Z L580's EFI with n e w Travel Trailers wanted ad today and home, Dodge chassis, Classifieds Bend. Excellent perwater t r uck, 1 9 9 0, covers, electric start w/ R-..m 17' coach, sleeps 4, reach over 60,000 and upholstery. New formance & afford3200 gal. tank, 5hp reverse, low miles, both 14' a luminum chrome. B e a utiful rear dining. $4500. 22' Kit Companion 1979 readers each week. 541-385-5809 e bo a t able flying! $6,500. p ump, 4 3 hoses, excellent; with new 2009 w/trailer, 2009 Mercury 541-602-8652. travel trailer, awning, Your classified ad Car. $25,00 0 . 541-410-6007 camlocks, $ 2 5,000. Trac-Pac 2-place trailer, micro., and full bath. will also appear on Nuyya 297LK Hitch541-548-1422 motor, fish finder, 541-820-3724 drive off/on w/double tilt, 15hp Good classified ads tell $2,150. 541-788-8791 Hiker 2007, All seabendbulletin.com lots of accys. Selling due $2500. 541-815-8797 the essential facts in an which currently resons, 3 slides, 32' to m e dical r e asons. interesting Manner. Write perfect for snow birds, ceives over 1.5 milUtility Trailers • $6000 all. 541-536-8130 left kitchen, rear from the readers view - not lion page views evlounge, extras, must the seller's. Convert the ery month at no Arctic Cat ZL800, 2001, 4'x8' util. trailer 26" see. Prineville extra cost. Bulletin facts into benefits. Show short track, variable sides, tailgate ramps, 541-447-5502 days & Classifieds Get Reexhaust valves, electhe reader how the item will 15 n spare tire, $480. 541-447-1641 eves. 1974 Bellanca GMC s/g ton 1971, Only sults! Call 385-5809 tric s t art, r e v erse,14' LAZER 1993 sailhelp them in someway. 541-318-8503. 1730A $19,700! Original low or place your ad manuals, re c o rds, boat with trailer, exc. This Cougar 33 ft. 2006, on-line at mile, exceptional, 3rd new spare belt, cover, cond., $2000 o b o. advertising tip 14 ft. slide, awning, owner. 951-699-7171 bendbulletin.com heated hand g r ips, 541-312-4168. 2180 TT, 440 SMO, Automotive Parts, brought to you by easy lift, stability bar, nice, fast, $999. Call 180 mph, excellent bumper extends for Service & Accessories Tom, 541-385-7932, The Bulletin 882 extra cargo, all accondition, always cess. incl., like new hangared, 1 owner 20" polished alloy wheels Fifth Wheels • Yamaha 750 1999 Pilgrim 27', 2007 5th condition, stored in for 35 years. $60K. with 295/50R-20 tires, Mountain Max, $1400 wheel, 1 s lide, AC, RV barn, used less GM 6-hole bolt pattern. CHECK YOURAD • 1994 Arctic Cat 580 TV,full awning, excel,ix t han 10 t i mes l o $495. 541-330-5714 In Madras, EXT, $1000. I lent shape, $23,900. c ally, no p et s o r MGA 1959- $19,999 • Zieman 4-place call 541-475-6302 14' Seadoo 1997 boat, 541-350-8629 Convertible. O r igismoking. $20,000 trailer, SOLD! twin modified engines. I Antique 8 nal body/motor. No obo. 541 -536-2709. All in good condition. 210hp/1200lbs, fast. Alfa See Ya 2005 40' RV Executive Hangar rust. 541-549-3838 Classic Autos Located in La Pine. $5500. 541-390-7035 excellent cond, 1 owner, CONSIGNMENTS at Bend Airport (KBDN) Call 541-408-6149. WANTED 60' wide x 50' deep, 4-dr frig w/icemaker, gas on the first day it runs ~ Oo stove/oven, convection to make sure it isn corWe Do The Work ... w/55' wide x 17' high bi860 oven, washer/dryer rect. nSpellcheck and You Keep The Cash! fold dr. Natural gas heat, M Ore P i X a t Bel)db(jleti)I.COm Motorcycles & Accessories combo, flatscreen TV, all human errors do ocOn-site credit offc, bathroom. Adjacent 1921 Model T electronics, new tires, approval team, to Frontage Rd; great 16' cur. If this happens to O ld T o w n Delivery Truck your ad, please conweb site presence. visibility for aviation busiCamper c a n o e, many extras. 7.5 diesel HDFatBo 1996 gen, lots of storage, We Take Trade-Ins! ness. Financing availtact us ASAP so that Restored & Runs exc. cond, $ 7 50. basement freezer, 350 Creek Side 20' able. 541-948-2126 or corrections and any Free Advertising. $9000. 541-312-8740 Cat Freightliner chassis. 2010, used 8 email 1jetjock@q.com adjustments can be BIG COUNTRY RV 541-389-6963 Asking $86,500. See at times, AC, flat made to your ad. Bend: 541-330-2495 Crook County RV Park, Piper A rcher 1 9 8 0, screen TV, oven, Redmond: Mustang 1966 2 dr. 541-385-5809 17.5' Glastron 2002, ¹43. 520-609-6372 based in Madras, al- 1952 Ford Customline 541-548-5254 microwave, tub/ The Bulletin Classified coupe, 200 cu. in. 6 Chevy eng., Volvo Coupe, project car, flatways hangared since cyl. Over $12,000 inshower, awning, outdrive, open bow, head V-8, 3 spd extra new. New annual, auto Completely BOUNDER 1993 vested, asking $9000. been stored, 885 stereo, sink/live well, Rebuilt/Customized pilot IFR one piece parts, & materials, $2000 34.6', 43k miles, All receipts, runs non-smokers, no w/glastron tr a i ler, obo. 541-410-7473 Canopies & Campers windshield. Fastest Ar2012/2013 Award • e loaded, $13,900. good. 541-420-5011 incl. b oa t c o v e r, pets, 1 owner. Winner cher around. 1750 toInfo Call Like new, $ 8 500. $13,900 obo. Mustang 5.0, 1990 tal t i me . $6 8 ,500. Showroom Condition 541-536-8816. 541-447-4876 541-410-2360 Convertible, 1 owner, 5 = p 541-475-6947, ask for Many Extras Fleetwood Prowler 32' spd, low miles, very few Rob Berg. Low Miles. People Look for Information 2001, many upgrade made of t h i s m o del .,tri. $17,000 About Products and options, $14,500 obo. $6900. Good investment! 541-548-4807 541-480-1687, Dick. Services Every Daythrough Lance 8s/g' camper, 1991 Chevy C-20 Pickup 541-382-7689 Great cond; toilet 8 fullThe Bulletin Classifieds 1969, all orig. Turbo 44 Advertise your car! HD Screaming Eagle segse size bed. Lightly used. auto 4-sid, 396, model g, Add A Picture! Electra Glide 2005, Recently serviced, -:I Reach thousands of readers! CST/al options orig 103 n motor, two tone 17' Cris Craft Scorpion, I m~ $4995. 503-307-8571 Call 541-385-5809 owner, $19,950, candy teal, new tires, fast & ready to fish! I/O & Superhat/i/k 541-923-6049 The Bulletin Classifieds Jayco Eagle 23K miles, CD player trolling motor. Lots of exOwnership Share 26.6 ft long, 2000 Keystone Ch allenger hydraulic clutch, ex- tras! $5000. 541-318-7473 Available! L cellent condition. 2004 CH34TLB04 34' Economical flying 17' STARCRAFT 60 hp Highest offer takes it. Fleetwood D i s covery Sleeps 6, 14-ft slide, fully S/C, w/d hookups, in your own and 9.9 Merc motors, 40' 2003, diesel moawning, Eaz-Lift 541-480-8080. new 18' Dometic awIFR equipped e xc. f i shing b o a t , torhome stabilizer bars, heat w/all ning, 4 new tires, new Lance Camper 1994, Cessna 172/180 HP for 8 air, queen BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS $6000. 541-815-0665 Must Sell! Health forces options-3 slide outs, Kubota 7000w marine fits long bed crew cab, only $13,500! New walk-around bed, Chevy Nova - 1976, sale. Buick Riviera 1991, Search the area's most 18.7' Sea Ray Monaco, satellite, 2 TV's,W/D, diesel generator, 3 tv, a/c, loaded. $6200 Garmin Touchscreen very good condition, $3,400. classic low-mileage car, comprehensive listing of 1984, 185hp, V6 Meretc. 3 2 ,000 m i les. slides, exc. cond. in- OBO. 541-580-7334 avionics center stack! Rebuilt 327 engine. $10,000 obo. garaged, pampered, classified advertising... Cruiser, full canvas, life Wintered in h e ated s ide & o ut . 27 " T V Exceptionally clean! Call Matt 541-280-9463. non-smoker, exclnt cond, 541-595-2003 real estate to automotive, vests, bumpers, water shop. $89,900 O.B.O. dvd/cd/am/fm ent. Lance Camper, 2011 Hangared at BDN. $4300 obo 541-389-0049 992, new cond , 2 merchandise to sporting skis, swim float, extra 541-447-8664 center. Call for more ¹slides, 2 awn i ngs, Call 541-728-0773 goods. Bulletin Classifieds prop & more. EZ Loader details. Only used 4 & AC, FIND IT! appear every day in the trailer, never in saltwater, times total in last 5 i/g built-in ge n print or on line. always garaged, very years.. No pets, no power jacks, wired for BVY IT! solar, t i e-downs incl. clean, all maint. records. smoking. High r etail Call 541-385-5809 SELL IT! $27,700. Will sell for $28,500. 541-977-5358 www.bendbulletin.com $5500. 541-389-7329 The Bulletin Classifieds Chevy Wagon 1957, $24,000 including slidThe Bulletin 4-dr., complete, Plymouth B a r racuda i ng hitch that fits i n To Subscribe call G ulfstream S u n T-Hangar for rent Serrrng Central Oregon snceisea Keystone Sprinter your truck. Call 8 a.m. $7,000 OBO / trades. 1966, original car! 300 541-385-5800 or go to at Bend airport. sport 30' Class A to 10 p.m. for appt to Please call hp, 360 V8, center31', 2008 Call 541-382-8998. 1988 ne w f r i dge, 541-389-6998 see. 541-330-5527. www.bendbulletin.com lines, 541-593-2597 King size walkeg TV, solar panel, new around bed, electric refrigerator, wheelawning, (4) 6-volt 18'Maxum skiboat,2000, c hair l i ft . 4 0 0 0W batteries, plus many inboard motor, g r eat g enerator, Goo d more extras, never cond, well maintained, Honda Shadow/Aero $8995 obo. 541-350-7755 condition! $18,000 smoked in, first obo 541-447-5504 750, 2007 Black, 11K owners, $19,900. mi, 60 mpg, new detachable windshield, Call 541-410-5415 .v JAMEE 1982 20', Mustang seat & tires; low miles on it, detachable Paladin self-contained. Runs Mallard by F leetwood, backrest 8 luggage rack w/keylock.VanceGreat, everything 1995, 22' long, sleeps 7, 19.5' Bluewater '88 I/O, Hines pipes, great works. $3,000. twin beds, fully equipped, sound. Cruise control, new upholstery, new elec541-382-6494 clean, good cond, $6500 tronics, winch, much more. obo. 541-678-5575 audible turn signals for safety. $4495 obo. $9500. 541-306-0280 Jack, 541-549-4949 20' 1993 Sea Nympf Fish & Ski, 50 hrs on new fish finder, chart Protect your engine engine, 8 VHF radio with and exhaust sys- plotter 'Little Red Corvette" antenna. Good shape, t ems! Cera m ic full cover, heavy duty KOUNTRY AIRE coating is the ideal, trailer, kicker and electric Orbit 21'2007, used 1994 37.5' motorlong lasting t reat- motors. only 8 times, A/C, home, with awning, ment for high heat oven, tub s hower, $7500 or best offer. and one slide-out, and heat sensitive micro, load leveler 541-292-1834 P Only 47k miles parts. Cert i f ied hitch, awning, dual and good condition. Cerakote applicator. batteries, sleeps 4-5, Monaco Dyna Y PRICFRNUCN< A wide variety of $25,000. EXCELLENT CON004 Col'vette 541-548-0318 eppa .ccsngggi ~ colors t o c h o ose 20.5' Seaswirl SpyDITION. All accesConvertible so!Id (photo aboveis of a from. Call for an essories are included. der 1989 H.O. 302, pea atures include Coupe, 350, auto similar model & not the timate on your $15,000 OBO. 285 hrs., exc. cond., counters, 4-tir actual vehicle) with 132rniies gets Sorface project. 541-382-9447 micro, stored indoors for f 'tl e, convecttoo 26-24 inpg Add lots Commercial l ife $ 9900 O B O . er, ceCeramic Coating, 541-379-3530 built-in washer/drye, more descriptionand Roadranger, 1996 o Inc. 541 -332-2902 interesting facts for clean, solar unit, 6 volt ralitic ti'le ftoor, TU, batteries. $5000 obo ii~te tlis)i, $99! Look how much Manufactured/ Mobile Homes

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541-3B5-5809

Victory TC 2002, runs great, many accessories, new tires, under 40K miles, well kept. $5500 or P artial Trade/firearms 54 I -647-4232

541-416-1042

Look at: Monaco Windsor, 2001, loaded! (was $234,000 Bendhomes.com 20' Seaswirl 1992, 4.3L new) Solid-surface for Complete Listings of V6 w/OMC outdrive, open counters, convection/ Area Real Estate for Sale bow, Shorelander trlr, nds micro, 4-dr, fridge, some interior trim work. washer/dryer, ceramic $4500. 541-639-3209 tile & carpet, TV, DVD, RV dish, leveling, CONSIGNMENTS 21' 2001 Skiers Choice satellite power cord WANTED Moomba Ou t b ack, 8-airbags, reel, 2 full pass-thru We Do The Work ... 383 stroker engine, trays, Cummins ISO 8.3 You Keep The Cash! $8500 o r c o nsider 350hp turbo Diesel, 7.5 On-site credit trade for good vehicle Diesel gen set. $85,000 approval team, with low mileage. obo. 641-233-7963 web site presence. Call 541-604-1475 or We Take Trade-Ins! 541-604-1203 (leave Free Advertising. Get your msg if no answer) BIG COUNTRY RV business Ads published in the Bend: 541-330-2495 "Boats" classification Redmond: 541-548-5254 include: Speed, fish- G ROW I N G ing, drift, canoe, house and sail boats. Starcraft Galaxy 1999 with an ad in For all other types of pop-up camp trailer, watercraft, please go The Bulletin's exc. cond. sleeps 6-8, to Class 875. "Call A Service extra tires & wheel, 541-385-5809 partial trades considProfessional" e red. $ 2900 o b o . Directory 541-549-9461

The Bulletin

ass-through d akirig size bed tray, an A!I for onlY @49,000 541-000-000

Your auto, RV, motorcycle,

boat, or airplane ad runs until it sells or up to 12 months

n a girl couldhave in asweet car liketh!$!

$12,50P 54~-o00-OOO

(whichever comes first!) Includes up to 40 words of text, 2" in length, with border, full color photo, bold headline and price. • Daily publication in The Bulletin, an audience of over 70,000. • Weekly publication in Central Oregon Marketplace —DELIVERED to over 30,000 households. • Weekly publication in The Central Oregon Nickel Ads with an audience of over 30,000 in Central and Eastern Oregon • Continuous listing with photo on Bendbulletin.com * A $290 value based on an ad with the same extra features, publishing 28-ad days in the above publications. Private party ads only.


E6 FRIDAY JULY 26, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9

932

Antique & Classic Autos

Sport Utility Vehicles •

Aut o m obiles

Nissan 2011 Juke awd Honda Civic EXL2012 NAV, moonroof, sedan, Nav., 20k mi., PROJECT CARS:Chevy ¹016566 $20 , 9 95 ¹ 349483. $20,995 2-dr FB 1949-(SOLD) 8 Chevy Coupe 1950 rolling chassis's $1750 Oregou ea., Chevy 4-dr 1949, Oregon AutnSouroe complete car, $ 1949; AutnSnurce 541-598-3750 Cadillac Series 61 1950, 541-598-3750 www.aaaoregonauto2 dr. hard top, complete aaaoregonautosource.com source.com w/spare f r on t cl i p ., $3950, 541-382-7391

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975

Tick, Tock Tick, Tock...

Automobiles

Pickups

Buick Century Limited 2000, r un s g r e at, ...don't let time get beautiful car. $3400. 541-312-3085 away. Hire a professional out Buick Lucerne CXS 2006 Sports sedan, of The Bulletin's low miles, all the nice "Call A Service Chevy 2500 HD 2003 features you'll want, 4 WD w o r k tru c k , truly an exc. buy at Professional" 140,000 miles, $7000 $8000. Come & see Directory today! obo. 541-408-4994. no charge for looking. Ask Buick Bob, CRAMPED FOR Mercury Sable 2000 4-dr 541-318-9999 sedan, good condition, CASH? $2750. 808-640-5507 Use classified to sell those items you no CHECK YOUR AD longer need. Please check your ad Call 541-385-5809 on the first day it runs Vehicle? Call The Bulletin to make sure it is correct. Sometimes inand place an ad Suung Central Oregon smce u03 today! s tructions over t h e Dodge 1-ton dually, 2001 phone are misunderAsk about our Cummins diesel, Knap"Whee/ Deal"! stood and an e rror heide service box, new can occur in your ad. for private party tires, great cond, $7100. advertisers If this happens to your 541-280-4671 ad, please contact us the first day your ad appears and we will be happy to fix it as

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Legal Notices •

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Legal Notices

of which was filed with be published once a reasons f or the Chapter475); and/or LEGAL NOTICE the abo v e-entitled week for circulation in ments by reference is r eviewing officer t o Estate of NANCY M. (2) Was used or inPrineville, Or e gon. permitted only as pro- consider; a n d a t ended for u s e i n CHAPMAN. NOTICE Court. You have a right to be vided for at 36 CFR statement that committing or f aciliTO INTE R ESTED You must "appear" in represented by coun- 218.8(b). demonstrates t he tating the violation of, PERSONS. Case No: this case or the other connection between solicitation to violate 13PB0083. N o t i ce: side will win automati- sel at every stage of O bjections may b e c ally. T o "appear" the proceeding. If you The Circuit Court of prior specific written attempt to violate, or to: R egional comments on the conspiracy to violate the State of Oregon, you must file with the are financially unable mailed Forester, O b j ection court a l egal docuto retain an attorney, for the County of Desparticular p r o posed the criminal laws of O ff i cer, project or activity and the State of Oregon chutes, h a s ap- ment called a "motion" the court will appoint Reviewing Nor t hwest t he content o f t h e regarding the manuThe one to represent you. Pacific p ointed M a rtin A . or "answer." (541) Region, USDA Forest objection, unless the facture, distribution or Duncan as Personal "motion" or "answer" Telephone Service, Attn. 1 5 70 objection concerns an p ossession of c o nRepresentative of the (or "reply") must be 447-6541 if you wish and issue that arose after trolled given to t h e c o u rt assistance in obtain- Appeals su b stances Estate of Nancy M. the designated (ORS Chapter 475). Chapman, deceased. clerk or administrator ing a court-appointed Objections, PO Box 3623, Portland, OR opportunities for All persons having within 30 days of the attorney. If you have comment. IN THE MATTER OF: claims against said date of first publica- questions about these 97208-3623. Objections delivered tion specified herein matters, you should estate are required to y mai l m u s t b e For additional (1) US Currency in p resent th e s a m e , a long with t h e r e - contact an a ttorney b before the information: Rod the amo u n t of with proper vouchers q uired filing fee. I t immediately. Date of creceived lose o f t he f i f t h Bonacker, Pro j ect 3 ,500.00, Case N o to Martin A. Duncan, must be i n p r o per first publication: July business day after the Leader, phone (541) 13-63449 seized April c/o ANDREA SHAR- form and have proof 1 2, 2013. D ate o f objection filing period. 383-4761, email 4, 2013 from SebasTEL, ATTY AT LAW, o f service o n t h e second p u blication: For emailed rbonacker@fs.fed.us. tian Servantes. PO Box 688, Bend, plaintiff's attorney or, July 19, 2013. Date of o bjections, ple a se if the plaintiff does not third publication: July OR 97709 within four email to: LEGAL NOTICE have a n at t orney, 26, 2013. DATED this months from the date (2) US Currency in the Notice of Public Hear- amount of $1,056.00, of first publication of proof of service on the 2nd day of July, 2013. objections-pnw-region ing Meeting T ype: Case No 1 3-57342, DAINA A. VITOLINS, al-office@fs.fed.us. this notice as stated plaintiff. put Public Hearing by Po- s eized M a rch 2 6 , below, or they may be If you have any ques- DISTRICT A T T OR- Please OBJECTION and the lice Chief Jeff Sale as 2013 from Lily Sanbarred. All p e rsons tions, you should see NEY. project name in the the J u stice A s sis- tulli. whose rights may be an attorney immediLEGAL NOTICE subject line. tance Grant manager. affected by this pro- ately. I f y o u n e ed Legal Notice of Electronic objections Meeting Date: Tues- (3) US Currency in the ceeding may obtain help in finding an atPredecisional must be submitted as day July 30 , 2 0 13. amount of $1,605.00, additional information torney, you may con- Administrative Review part o f a n ac t u al Meeting Time 9am. tact the Oregon State US Currency in the from the records of e-mail message, or as Location: Bend Police amount of $ 3 22.00 (Objection) Period the court, the P e r- Bar's Lawyer Referral Draft Decision (DN) and a n a t t achment i n Department 555 NE at and US Currency in sonal Representative, Service o n line Finding of No Microsoft Word (.doc), 15th Street, B e nd, the amount of $28.00, www.oregonstatebar. or the A ttorney for Significant Impact rich text format (.rtf), Oregon. Pur p ose: Case No 13-005385, Personal Representa- org or by calling (503) (FONSI) or portable document P ublic h earing f o r s eized M a rc h 1 2 , tive. Dated and first 684-3763 ( in t h e Environmental format (.pdf) only. For written and oral views Portland metropolitan 2013 from Tina and p ublished July 2 6 , Assessment electronically mailed to the City of Bend for Joel Elshoff 2013. Personal repre- area) or toll-free else- Special Use Permit: objections, the sender the proposed use of where in Oregon at s entative: Martin A . City of Bend Bridge should norm a l ly the 2013 Justice AsDuncan, 140 0 W. (800) 452-7636. Creek Water Supply receive an automated sistance Grant for the This summons is is25th, ¹10, Anchorage, LEGAL NOTICE System electronic City of Bend Police sued pursuant to AK 99503. Attorney OF SEIZURE Deschutes National acknowledgement Department. You can NOTICE ORCP 7. for Personal RepreFOR CIVIL Forest, Bend-Fort Rock from the agency as direct questions or s entative: And r e a RCO LEGAL, P.C. FORFEITURE Ranger District confirmation of comments on the Shartel, OSB¹96178, POTENTIAL receipt. If the sender above date by calling TO ALL PO Box 688, Bend, Michael Botthof, OSB CLAIMANTS This legal notice pro- does not receive an 5 41.322.2992 f ro m ¹113337 O R 9 7 7 09 , Te l e AND TO ALL ac- 9am to 9:30am. Coninformation on automated phone: (541) mbotthof@rcolegal.com vides PERSONS how to object to the knowledgement of the tact f o r ad d itionalUNKNOWN 330-1704, Fax: (541) Attorneys for Plaintiff READ THIS City of Bend Bridge receipt of the questions prior to this 511 SW 10th Ave., 330-1844, Email: anCAREFULLY Creek Water Supply o bjection, it i s t h e meeting please call Ste. 400 drea@shartellaw.com System Draft D eci- sender's responsibility Kristel Muirhead at Portland, OR 97205 LEGAL NOTICE sion Notice and Find- to e n s ur e ti m e ly 541.322.2994. Acces- If you have any interest P: (503) 977-7840 in the seized property IN THE CIRCUIT ing of No Significant r eceipt b y othe r sible meeting inforF: (503) 977-7963 COURT FOR THE Impact and Environ- means. If you chose mation - this meeting described below, you must claim that interSTATE OF OREGON mental A s sessment to hand deliver your event/location is acLEGAL NOTICE est or you will autoIN AND FOR THE bef o r e cessible. Sign L anIN T H E CIR C U IT (EA). T h e p r oject o bjections COUNTY OF COURT O F THE area is located within: Sept. 5, 2013, deliver guage, int e rpreter matically lose that inDESCHUTES the Pac i fic service, assistive lis- terest. If you do not STATE OF OREGON Township 17S, Range it t o 1 1E, S e ction 3 4 ; Northwest R e gional tening devises, mate- file a c laim for t he FOR THE COUNTY property, the property SUNTRUST OF DES C H UTES Township 18S, Range Office, 333 SW First rials in alternate formay be forfeited even MORTGAGE, INC., 10E, Sections 1, 2, 7, Avenue, Por t land, mat, such as Braille, PROBATE DEPARTits successors in Oregon, 97208-3440. large print, electronic if you are not conMENT. In the Matter 8, 9, 10, and 11; and of any crime. interest and/or assigns, o f the E s t at e o f Township 18S, Range If you chose to hand formats and any other victed To claim an interest, 11E, Sections 3, 4, 5, deliver your objection accommodations are LOUISE BLASQUEZ, Plaintiff, 6 , 7, a n d 8 , W i l - on or after September a vailable upon a d - you must file a written Decedent. Case No. with the forfeiV. lamette Meridian. 5, 2013, deliver it to 13PB0071. NOTICE vance request. Please claim UNKNOWN HEIRS OF TO the Pacific Northwest contact Kristel Muir- ture counsel named INT E RESTED below, Th e w r i tten JANIS CLAIRE John Allen, the reRegional Office, 1220 head no l ater than PERSONS. NOTICE ADAMS-ISSAK; DAVID IS HEREBY GIVEN sponsible official and SW 3 r d Ave n ue, July 25 , 2 0 1 3 at claim must be signed by you, sworn to unADAMS; REBECCA that the undersigned Deschutes NF Super- Portland, OR, 97204. 541.322.2994 kmuir- der penalty of perjury ADAMS-GAGE; has been appointed visor, has decided to Hand deliveries can head © bendoregon.g before a notary public, STATE OF OREGON; personal representa- implement Alternative occur between 8:00 ov providing at least 5 and state: (a) Your OCCUPANTS OF tive. All persons hav- 2 as described in the A M and 4 3 0 P M , days notice prior to THE PREMISES; M onday thro u gh the event will help en- true name; (b) The ing claims against the EA. In Alternative 2, address at which you AND THE REAL Friday except legal sure availability. estate are required to the Deschutes Nawill a c cept f u t u re PROPERTY LOp resent them, w i t h tional Forest would is- holidays. Objections m ailings f ro m th e LEGAL NOTICE CATED AT 22960 may also be faxed to: vouchers attached, to sue a Special Use court and f o rfeiture YUCCA COURT, Permit to the City au- Regional F o r ester,NOTICE OF SEIZURE the undersigned percounsel; and (3) A FOR CIVIL BEND, OREGON sonal representative thorizing construction Attn: 1570 Objections s tatement that y o u 97701, a nd o p e ration o f at in care of David W. (503)-808-2339 FORFEITURE TO ALL have an interest in the POTENTIAL before September 5, Smiley, D a vid W . about 10 miles of reseized property. Your Defendants. placement water sup- 2013. Obj e c tions CLAIMANTS AND TO Smiley,P.C., 70 SW deadline for filing the ALL UNKNOWN Case No. 13CV0591 ply pipeline and up- f axed o n o r af t e r Century Drive, Ste. grades to the City's S eptember 5, 2 0 1 3 PERSONS READ THIS claim document with 100-333, Bend, Orforfeiture cou n s el CAREFULLY SUMMONS BY Bridge Creek intake should be faxed to the egon 97702, within n amed below is 2 1 PUBLICATION Deschutes N a tional four months after the building. Intake buildfrom the last day date of first publica- ing upgrades include Forest fax number at If you have any inter- days est i n t h e s e i zed of publication of this TO THE DEFENinstallation of new fish 541-383-5553. tion of this notice, or property d e s cribed notice. Where to file DANTS: UNKNOWN screens that would be O b)ections must b e t he claims may b e HEIRS OF JANIS or below, you must claim a claim and for more barred. All p e rsons compliant with c u r- postmarked D a ina CLAIRE ADAMSby the that interest or you will i nformation: whose rights may be rent Oregon Depart- received ISSAK: m ent of F i s h a n d Reviewing O ff i c er, automatically lose that Vitolins, Crook County affected by the proAttor n ey Regional F o r ester, interest. If you do not D istrict ceedings may obtain Wildlife requirements. Office, 300 NE Third file a c laim for t he In the name of the State additional information within 45 days from of Oregon, you are from the records of T he a n alysis h a s the date of publication property, the property Street, Prineville, OR h ereby required t o been completed and of notice of the objec- may be forfeited even 97754. the Court, the perappear and answer sonal representative, t he C it y o f Be n d tion in The Bulletin, if you are not con- Notice of reasons for the c omplaint f i led or the lawyers for the Bridge Creek Water Bend, OR . The victed of any crime. Forfeiture: The propa gainst you i n t h e personal representa- S upply Syste m publication date is the To claim an interest, erty described below above-entitled C ourt you must file a written was seized for forfeitive, David W. Smiley, Project is now subject exclusive means for and cause on or be- P.C. Dated and first to the pre-decisional calculating the time to claim with the forfei- ture because it: (1) fore the expiration of published on July 26, administrative review file a n obj e ction. ture counsel named Constitutes the probelow, Th e w r i tten ceeds of the violation 30 days from the date 2 013. Those wishing to file BERN I C E process pursuant to claim must be signed of, solicitation to vioof the first publication BLASQUEZ, Per- 36 CFR 218 subparts an objection should late, attempt to vioof this summons. The sonal Representative, A and B (aka the ob- not rely upon dates or by you, sworn to undate of first publica- PO Box 2208, Terre- jection process). timeframe information der penalty of perjury late, or conspiracy to violates, the criminal tion in this matter is provided by any other before a notary public, bonne, O R 9 7 7 60, and state: (a) Your laws of the State of July 19, 2013. If you (541) 678-3988. The d raft D e cision source. true name; (b) The Oregon regarding the fail timely to appear N otice and EA a r e and answer, plaintiff LEGAL NOTICE available at the Issues r a ised in address at which you manufacture, distribuwill a pply t o the IN THE CIRCUIT Bend/Ft. Rock Ranger o bfections must b e will a c cept f u t u re tion, or possession of above-entitled c o u rt COURT OF THE District, 63095 Desbased on previously m ailings f ro m t h e controlled substances for the relief prayed STATE OF OREGON chutes Market Road, submitted sp e c ific court and f orfeiture (ORS C h apter475); and/or (2) Was used for in its c omplaint. FOR THE COUNTY OF Bend, OR; and on the written com m ents counsel; and (3) A This is a judicial foreCROOK Forest Service web regarding the s tatement that y o u or intended for use in have an interest in the committing or f aciliclosure of a deed of JUVENILE site: proposed project or t rust i n w h ic h t h e DEPARTMENT http://www.fs.fed.us/n activity and attributed seized property. Your tating the violation of, plaintiff requests that IN THE MATTER OF epa/nepa projects?for to the objector, unless deadline for filing the solicitation to violate, t he plaintiff b e a l COOK, LUCAS est =110601. A copy the issue is based on claim document with attempt to violate, or forfeiture cou n sel conspiracy to violate lowed t o f o r eclose DOB: 07-17-2006 of the Environmental new information that the criminal laws of y our interest in t h e A Child. Assessment and draft arose a f t e r the n amed below is 2 1 following d e s cribed CASE NO. 13JU0837 D ecision Notic e opportunities for days from the last day the State of Oregon regarding the manureal property: SUMMONS and/or additional incomment. The burden of publication of this notice. Where to file facture, distribution or LOT TWENTY-THREE TO: SHARDI COOK formation can also be is on the objector to a claim and for more p ossession of c o nobtained by contact- demonstrate (23), BLOCK FOUR I N THE NAME O F su b stances ing Rod Bonacker at compliance with this i nformation: Da i n a trolled (4), CIMA R RON THE STATE OF ORCITY, R E CORDED E GON, you are d ithe above address or requirement for Vitolins, Crook County (ORS Chapter 475). NOVEMEBER 26, rected to appear beb y calling h i m a t objection issues. District Attorney Office, 300 N E T h i rd IN THE MATTER OF: 1978, IN CABINET A, fore the above entitled 5 41-383-4761 or b y P AGE 1 7 9 , DES - court at 300 NE Third emailing him at rbon- An o bjection m u st Street, Prineville, OR (1) One 2006 Honda CHUTES COUNTY, Street, Prineville, Or- acker@fs.fed.us. include a description 97754. VIN OREGON. egon on July 23, 2013 of those aspects of Notice of r e asons Accord, at 9:00 a.m. in conDuring the objection the proposed project for F orfeiture: The 1HGCM66506A05453 Commonly known as: nection with the above period, only those in- a ddressed b y th e property d e s cribed 1, Case No 12-2200 22960 Yucca Court, e ntitled m a tter. A dividuals or organiza- objection, i n c luding below was seized for and 12-1481, seized December 19, 2012 Bend, Oregon hearing will be held tions that s ubmitted specific issues related forfeiture because it: from Jeffrey Paxton. 9 7701.NOTICE T O upon a petition filed specific written com- to t h e pro p osed (1) Constitutes the DEFENDANTS: on June 5, 2013, con- ments during a desig- project; if applicable, proceeds of the violaR EAD THESE P A - cerning Lucas Cook. nated opportunity for how t h e ob j e ctor tion of, solicitation to P E RS CARE F ULLY! This summons is pub- public p a r t icipation believes the v iolate, a t tempt t o LEGAL NOTICE A lawsuit has b een lished pursuant to the (scoping or the 30-day environmental violate, or conspiracy Public auction to be started against you in order of the Honor- public comment pe- a nalysis o r dra f t to violates, the crimi- held on August 10, the abo v e -entitled able Judge A h ern, riod) may object (36 decision s p ecifically nal laws of the State 2 013 at 9 :0 0 a m ., court b y S u n Trust Circuit Judge of the CFR 218.5). Objec- violates law, of Oregon regarding Wickiup Sto r age, Mortgage, Inc., plain- Juvenile Court dated tions must meet the regulation, or policy; the manufacture, dis- 52419 Skidgel Rd., La tiff. P laintiff's claims the 8th day of July, r equirements of 3 6 suggested remedies tribution, or posses- Pine. The unit to be are stated in the writ- 2013. The order diCFR 218.8(d); incor- that would resolve the sion of controlled sub- sold is U nit F-6/15, ten complaint, a copy rects this summons p oration o f doc u - objection; supporting stances (ORS Kean Dillon.

~ The Bulletin ~

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Ford F250 SuperCab 2001, Triton V8, May '15 tags, ONLY 89K miles, $6495 obo 541-610-6150

I nternational Fla t Bed Pickup 1963, 1 t on dually, 4 s p d.

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Chevrolet Equinox 2006 LT, 4-dr Silver exterior/ graphite interior,

59,706 miles, V6 3.4 liter, auto, AWD, leather, sunroof, tow

pkg, alloy wheels, power windows, 4-wheel ABS, tilt, power door locks, cruise, roof rack, traction control, AC, AM/ FM premium sound multi-disc CD. Below Blue Book at $10,850. Call Neal, 541-385-3085

Just bought a new boat? Sell your old one in the Chevrolet Corvette classifieds! Ask about our Coupe 2007, 20,700 Super Seller rates! mi., beautiful cond. 541-385-5809 3LT loaded, victory two-tone red, DON'TMISSIHIS leather, powerseats, with logos, memory, Olds Aurora 1999, white headsupdisplay, 4-dr, 134K miles, front nav., XM, Bose, tilt, wheel drive, leather, chrome wheels, upair, CD/radio, excelgraded drilled slotlent condition. $4000 ted b rake r o tors, or best offer. extra insulation, al541-548-5886

ways garaged, serious only $36,500. 541-771-2852.

Chrysler Newport (2) 1962 4 door sedans, $2500 and $5500. La Pine, 541-602-8652.

Chevrolet Tahoe 2003 4WD with LT Preferred Equipment Group, very good condition 178,000 hwy miles.

Nissan 350Z 2005 Black, excellent condition, 22,531 gently driven miles, 1 owner, non-smoker, $15,500.

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1996, 73k miles, Tiptronic auto. transmission. Silver, blue leather interior, moon/sunroof, new quality tires and battery, car and seat covers, many extras. Recently fully serviced, garaged, looks and runs like new. Excellent condition $29,700 541-589-4047

1996, 350 auto,

132,000 miles. Non-ethanol fuel & synthetic oil only, garaged, premium Bose stereo,

gj Chevy Equinox LT Sport AWD 20 10. Auto, 6-Spd w/Overdrive, 29 Hwy mpg, 41K miles, traction control, keyless entry, moonroof, air, power e v erything, X M S a tellite e n gaged, OnStar avail. MP3. $21,500. Call 541-41 9-0736.

Ford Bronco 1981 4 speed 4x4, 302 engine, low m iles, h eaders, roll b a r, hitch kit, good tires, straight body, runs great, $950. 541-350-7176

Ford Excursion 2004

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Porsche 911 Turbo

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CORVETTE Convertible 2005 Automatic LS2 high performance motor, only 29k miles, Sterling S ilver, b l ack leather interior, Bose premium sound stereo, new quality tires and battery, car and seat covers, many extras. Rec e ntly factory serviced. Garaged. Beautiful car, Perfect cond. $29,700 541-589-4047

Wllta~yt~i One owner, Turbo Diesel, Eddie Bauer 4WD, 46,400 miles,

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Porsche Carrera 911 2003 convertible with hardtop. 50K miles,

new factory Porsche motor 6 mos ago with 18 mo factory warranty remaining. $37,500. 541-322-6928

CORVETTE COUPE Glasstop 2010 Grand Sport -4 LT loaded, clear bra

hood & fenders. New Michelin Super Sports, G.S. floor mats, 17,000 miles, Crystal red. $45,000. 503-358-1164.

Ford Focus S 2010 se d an, A/C 3 1 k m i .

Toyota Camryst 1984, SOLD; 1985 SOLD; 1986 parts car only one left! $500 Call for details, 541-548-6592

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Toyota Yaris 2010 wonderful little car, 40 mpg on hwy,

Jeep Grand ¹138045 $1 1 , 495 $8,500. 541-410-1078 C herokee 1 9 99, 1 59,970 mile s . I I Oregon 4WD, au t o matic AuroSouroe transmission, cloth 541-598-3750 interior, power evwww.aaaoregonautoerything, A/C, source.com Volkswagen Karmann trailer hitch. Well maintained & runs Ford Taurus 2003 SSE Ghia 1970 convertible, s edan, exc . c o n d very rare, new top & inte great. $4250. 63,000 miles. $5,000 rior upholstery, $9000. 541-385-5286 541-389-9569

541-389-2636

IMPROVIIVG YOUR HEALTH AND WELL-BEING r g

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' Health Datebook keeps you informed on all local health happenings R classes ' Nutrition, Fitness, Money & Medicine A

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Rolling Stones tribute . • Grateful Dead fIlm • • • D

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EDITOR

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, JULY 26, 2013

insi e

Cover design by Aithea Borck, Greg Cross/The Bulletin

Ben Salmon, 541-383-0377

bsalmon ©bendbulletin.com

REPORTERS Beau Eastes, 541-383-0305 beastesObendbulletin.com David Jasper, 541-383-0349 djasper©bendbulletin.com Megan Kehoe, 541-383-0354 mkehoe O bendbulletin.com Karen Koppel, 541-383-0351 kkoppelObendbulletin.com Jenny Wasson, 541-383-0350 jwasson@bendbulletin.com

DESIGNER Althea Borck, 541-383-0331 aborck©bendbulletin.com

SUBMIT AN EVENT GO! is published each Friday in The Bulletin. Please submit information at least 10 days before the edition in which it is printed, including the event name, brief description, date, time, location, cost, contact number and a website, if appropriate. Email to: events©bendbulletin.com Fax to: 541-385-5804,

Attn: Community Life U.S. Mail or hand delivery: Community Life, The Bulletin 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, OR 97702

ADVERTISING 541-382-1811

Take advantage of the full line of Bulletin products. Call 541-385-5800. ull

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RESTAURANTS • 10

GAMING • 23

• A review of Brickhouse Steak and Seafood in Bend

• A review of "Civilization V: Brave New World" •W hat's hotonthegaming scene

DRINKS • 12 MUSIC • 3 • COVER STORY: Classic rock fans unite! • Cheap Trick at the Deschutes fair • "Springsteen & I" movie • Rolling Stones tribute band • Grateful Dead on the big screen • Son Volt rocks at the Tower Theatre • Teddy Presberg visits Silver Moon • Megafauna is progressive rock • Sarah Donner plays a houseconcert • Dirk Quinn Band at The Sound Garden

• Take a run around town to a brewpub! • Oregon Brewers Festival in Portland • IPA festival planned at10 Barrel

ARTS • 13 • Welcome to Sarah Nawrocki's 'Cabinville' • An updateonactorAndyHi ckman • Art Exhibits lists current exhibits

MOVIES • 25

• "The Wolverine,""The WayWay Back," "The To DoList," "Dirty Wars," "Far Out Isn't Far Enough" and "Fruitvale Station" open in Central Oregon • "Ginger & Rosa,""Starbuck,""Trance" and "Kiss of the Damned" are out on Bluray and DVD • Brief reviews of movies showing in Central Oregon

CALENDAR • 16 • A week full of Central Oregon events

PLANNING AHEAD • 18

GOING OUT • 8

• A listing of upcoming events • Talks and classes listing

• Grit and Grizzle plays Parrilla Grill • A listing of live music, Djs, karaoke, open mics and more

OUT OF TOWN • 20 MUSIC RELEASES • 9 • Sara Bareilles, Pet ShopBoysand more

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• 15th annual Pickathon in Happy Valley • A guide to out of town events

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THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, JULY 26, 2013

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Submitted photo

Cheap Trick founding members, from left, Rick Nielsen, Tom Petersson and Robin Zander, will rock the Deschutes County Fair on Wednesday in Redmond.

• The pure power-poppersneverlet fansdown, saysoneof their biggest By David Jasper The Bulletin

f I've learned one thing, it's never count Cheap Trick out. Thirty-one years ago, I attended my first rock concert: pure power-pop quartet Cheap Trick at the Sunrise Musical Theater in South Florida. I was 14 and went with my older sisters, at least one of whom was in adolescent love with singer Robin Zander.

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It was 1982, circa the "One on One" album, and I'm sure in some record exec's minds, Cheap Trick was already past its prime. It had taken a few albums for these guys from Rockford, Ill., to get any chart traction despite the great works that were "In Color" and "Heaven Tonight." T hey broke i nto t h e m a i nstream with 1978's "Live at Budokan," which spawned their big-

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gest hit, "I Want You to Want Me." Nevertheless, by '82, that hit was a distant four years in the past. By the time I saw them, founding bass player Tom Petersson had (temporarily) departed the band. Albums like "Next Position Please" failed to make more than a thud. But someone forgot to tell Cheap Trick to give up. The famous line about the band is that they play

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their hearts out for fans whether in apacked arena or a half-empty dive. And in 1982, I was blown away by, well, all of it. The longhairs in the crowd, the energy, the standing on chairs to see better, the crunchy riff of "She's Tight," guitarist Rick Nielsen's stage antics, Bun E. Carlos sitting there looking more like an accountant crunching numbers than a rock drummer. I left with ringing ears, a black Cheap Trick T-shirt bearing the famous dripping-paint logo and a

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permanent soft spot for the band. When songs like "Tonight it's You" — about as gorgeous a pop song as you could expect in the mid-'80s — went into rotation on MTV in 1985, I was rooting for them. Likewise "The Flame," t heir schmaltzy last hit of t h e '80s (unless you count their cover of The King's "Don't be Cruel") that was written by hitmakers rather than Cheap Trick personnel, and foisted on the band by their label.

Continued Page 5


music

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THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, JULY 26, 2013

CheapTrick isn't the only rock 'n' roll giant on Central Oregon'scultural calendar this week. Here are 3morewaysto relive good times.

By Ben Salmon• The Bulletin

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here are plenty of rock stars big enough to warrant their own documentaries.

But there arevery few whoare so mas-

The trailer — see it at www.springsteenandi.

com — features several people talking about their Springsteen love, from amanhugging Bruce after

sive and so meaningful that a filmmaker could

getting dumped to a woman who used to tell her

focus solely on their fans. Bruce Springsteen — songwriter extraordinaire, tireless performer, rock'n' roll everyman and generational icon — is one of the latter. And so, "Springsteen 8 I" exists.

son (tongue-in-cheekily, we think) the Bosswas

The documentary, which will screen Tuesday in Bend, "incorporates the efforts of more than

concert footage. So even if the fans aren't your thing, you get lots of Bruce. And that's a good thing. "Springsteen & I" film; 730 p.m.Tuesday; $15; Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX 680S.W.

2,000 fans around theworld who submitted personal video clips to make the ultimate collective

filmmaking experience about howSpringsteen andhismusicbecame thesoundtracktosomany lives."

7

his father. That's all great, but it's also worth noting that the film features lots of performances, behind-

the-scenes clips andnever-before-seen archival

PowerhouseDrive, Bend; www.fathomevents.com or 541-382-6347.

I ast weekend, I walkedawayfrom a garage

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sale with a copy of the Rolling Stones' classic "Exile on Main St." album on vinyl. For $1!

Once home, I openedthe gatefold and looked

at pictures of Mick Jagger and Keith Richards and the rest of the band, and thought about how amazing and fortuitous it was that they came together

50 year sago,clicked,andbecame oneofthe greatest rock bandsever. In their wildest dreams, I'll bet they couldn't have imagined their next half-century back then. Anyway, when one ofthebiggestrock bands ever celebrates 50 years together, so do its tribute acts, and that means this is a big year for Satisfaction, the vaunted Stones tribute that will bring its show to Bend's Tower Theatre on Thursday.

I

Courtesy Jo Lopez

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Satisfaction tours internationally, with convincing players, authentic costuming, and a set list that features all the Stones' hits. The band is so good, Paramount Pictures contacted Satisfaction in 2008 to assist with promotion of Martin Scorsese's Stones documentary"Shine a Light." Chances aren't great that we'll get the actual Rolling Stones in Central Oregon anytime soon (though some might say they're a tribute act at this

point, too), so if it's Stones music youwant, then you need to get some Satisfaction,

Satisfaction: A Rolling Stones Experience; 8 p.m.Thursday, doors open 7p.m.;$29-$39, plus fees,available through the venue;Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; www.towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700.

Submitted photo

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id you know that one of the most legendary concerts in the history of the Grateful Dead happened at the Oregon Country Fair in Veneta in1972? Hardcore Deadheads surely know that, but I didn't. It's true. According to a news release from the

Creamery afloat — was originally shot in16mm

companyputtingonThursday'sDeadconcert

Thursday's screening is part of the third annual "Grateful Dead Meet Up at the Movies" event, which will bring the film to 450 theaters around the country, including Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX in Bend. "Grateful Dead Meet Up at the Movies" film; 730 p.m. Thursday; $1250; Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX 680S.W.Powerhouse Drive, Bend, www.fathomevents. com or541-382-6347.

film in Bend, the band's previously unreleased

"Sunshine Daydream" concert is "the most

highly sought after Grateful Dead show captured on film," featuring songs like "Dark Star," "Jack Straw," "Playing in the Band," "Bird Song," "I Know You Rider" and more. The concert — apparently a fundraising effort to help the Kesey family keep their Springfield

film but has been restored to high-def resolution, with fancy new audio mixes. It also features

never-before-seen footage, recently recorded interviews and special appearances by "key members of the (Dead) community and a cavalcade of Merry Pranksters."

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music

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, JULY 26, 2013

GO! MAGAZINE o PAGE 5

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From Page 3 Nielsen has both knocked and defended"The Flame," and though I know its troubled past, it is Zander's rich pipes on that tune, and I will still attempt to sing along to it in the grocery store. In 1995, I was working at an altweekly in Tampa and was assigned to see Cheap Trick at a cheesy venue called Frankie's Patio. By that time, by most accounts, Cheap Trick was finished. Their previous album, 1994's "Woke Up with a M o nster," was slammed by critics as a blatant attempt to hang with the grunge kids. So I didn't know what to expect other than"not much." Without much jostling, you could get as close to the stage as you wanted, and I did. The band played all its best songs, and a few Ididn't know. They even trotted out "The Flame." Moreover, thoughthey were all in their 40s, they were every bit as good as — maybe better than — they'd been 13 years earlier. In 1996, they released the box set "Sex, America, Cheap Trick," a revelation. From their hits to their experiments to their novelties, they'd been more prolific than I'd realized. Indie darlings like Billy Corgan publicly heralded the underappreciated band, and joined them on stage. They worked with producer Steve Albini. Zander lives in Tampa, and though I only ever got to interview him by phone (I tried to con him into lunch), Cheap Trick was good for about a show a year during the time I lived there, and I caught every one of them through 2001. My calves ached every time from involuntary pogoing during "Surrender," always a lateshow crowd pleaser, and with lyrics

Located in the Bend Fred Meyer Complex

If yougo What:CheapTrick When:7 p.m. Wednesday, doors open 5:30 p.m.

What:Deschutes County Fair

Cost:Free with a ticket and paid

2-3, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Aug.4

fair admission (see prices at right).

Cost:Adults: $10 daily, $19 season. Seniors (62+) free onWednesday. Seniors and children (6-12): $6 daily, $11 season. Sunday is $5 for all.

Pick up tickets between 2 and 7

p.m.Wednesday atanyMcDonald's location (while supplies last). No purchase necessary, but haveyou tried the McDouble?

When:10a.m.-10 p.m. Wednesday and Thursday, 10a.m.-11 p.m. Aug.

/

I

I

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Children 5 and younger are admitted

free.

Where:Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center, 3800 S.W. Airport Way, Redmond Contact:www.expo.deschutes.org or 541-548-2711

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0 like these, it's the only song of teen angst you'll ever need: "When I woke up, Mom and Dad are rolling on the couch / rolling numbers, rock and rollin, got my Kiss records out." Cheap Trick has continued to tour, sometimes playing an entire album, or anhomage toThe Beatles.They've put out a new record now and then, and critics have been kind. In April, they played a couple of shows featuring the entire Budokan set, 35 years after the fact. Their catalog is probably a lot deeper than you know, and their powers broader. From the long instrumental intro to "Ain't That a Shame" to the classic rock of "Southern Girls" to the balladry of "If You Want My Love," to Petersson's nightly turn as a singing bassist, "I Know What I Want," Cheap Trick never, ever lets fans down. These guys are the embodiment of rock 'n' roll, one of the best bands America ever produced and most

I~

people don't even realize it. They're like The Ramones of arena rock, but unlike The Ramones, they're still around, playing their hearts out. And we should all see them while we have the chance. No, I can't guarantee that the band's Deschutes County Fair show on Wednesday will make you a fan for life the way their '82 show in South Florida did for me. Three of the playersare in their60s now, and Carlos isn't behind the kit — he's been replaced on tour by Daxx Nielsen, the guitarist's son. But I know this: Cheap Trick always playtheir hearts out, andthere's no way I'm counting them out. — Reporter: 541-383-0349, djasper@bendbulletin.com

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4th Annual Sunriver Art Faire

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Which TeddyPresberg will visit the Moon? Teddy Presberg seems to be a tough guy to nail down. He lives in St. Louis. Or maybe Portland. Or both. He has (almost) certainly lived in each at some point. He records under his own name. And also as part of the Resistance Organ Trio. And as part of Soul Rub. And under another name that is not appropriate for a family

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, JULY 26, 2013

Teddy Presberg and the Resistance Organ Trio, with Garett Brennan; 9:30 p.m. Saturday; $5; Silver Moon Brewing /lc Taproom, 24 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; www .silvermoonbrewing.com.

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Megafauna will rock NtK HQ inBend

The band name Megafauna, for me, evokes the idea of an indie-folk band that makes quaint, quiet music. I think the -fauna part is leading my newspaper. And lastly, the music he brain to the word fawn, and makes is a slippery mix of thus gentle, fuzzy thoughts of psychedelicjazz, experimena cute baby deer. tal soul and outsider funk that Anyway. floats in and out of different The thing is, I should be headspaces, always carrying paying more attention to the Mega- part of t hi s A ustin, a kind of oddball-cool vibe. It's the music, no doubt, that Texas, band's name. Led by connected Presbergwith the New York C it y t r ansplant renowned electro/funk/jazz Dani Neff, Megafauna plays label Ropeadope Records, rock music ofthe progreshome to acts like DJ Logic sive variety, with unexpectand Charlie Hunter, which ed rhythmic and d y namic released his solo debut album shiftsand sense of grandeur. "Blueprint of Soul." Think 1990s alt-rock filtered S aturday n i gh t a t Sil - through an extensive collecver Moon, Presberg willbe tion of experimental and jazz backed by t h e R e sistance r ecords and you're on t h e Organ Trio. What does that right track. mean, exactly? Go see 'em Visit w ww. m egafauna and find out. music.com to hear some of

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their stuff and find out why this is a good band to share a bill with local garage-blues howlers Silvero.

Megafauna, with Silvero; 9 p.m. Thursday; $8; NtK HQ, 1330 N.E. First St ., Bend; mojavegreen81®gmail.com.

Bendhouse welcomes singer Sarah Donner In 2013, a successful music career can take many forms.

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At the Faire: 65Juried Artist Booths Fine Arts & Crafts Entertainment Food Court Art Activity Center

(for Kids8 Demos) Saturday Street Dance Sunday Breakfast

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There's the old way: Sell lots of your recordings to people, tour the world, fill seats in arenas, etc. And then there are new ways, thanks in large part to the Internet. There are many of them, and they can be illdefined and confusing, and success is a r elative thing anyway. What one artist calls success, another may consider failure. What looks like success from the outside may not feel like success on the inside. Sarah Donner's success is a new way of success. A former musical theatre performer, she has four self-produced albums to her name and her music has been all over TV shows. But what makes her success particularly 21st century are the nearly 2.5 million views of two of her videos on YouTube: "Sarah Donner and the sleepy kitten" (featuring a kitten falling asleep to her song "Treeline") and the hilarious "The Motherf--ing Pterodactyl," which was cowritten with p opular online cartoonist The Oatmeal. Those videos and views pushed Donner from veteran East Coast folk-pop singer to "weblebrity," to borrow a word from her bio. She is also a s elf-described "catlady" who fosters kittens. And o n M o n day n i ght, she'll bring her quirky tunes and sharp sense of humor to a house concert in Bend. Seating is limited, so organizers are recommending you buy in advance. Details on how to do that are below. Sarah Donner; 7 p.m. Mon-

day; $10, available at www .elisemichaelsmedia.com/ sarah-donner-concert; directions to the Bend venue will be emailed after ticket purchase; 541-480-5813.

Dirk Quinn Band mixes funk, jazz, rock Like a lot of kids — of all eras — Dirk Quinn got into playing the guitar thanks in large patt to Led Zeppelin. T hen he grew up a b i t , moved on, and fell head over heelsforboth classic and contemporary jazz. "Liberated by the idea of free improvisation," says his bio, "he was finally able to realize and focus his musical vision." T hat v ision, t u rn s o u t , sounds like a kid that grew up on pop and rock and then shifted to jazz. Quinn's music is a b ouncy, smoky-nightc lub-ready fusion of f u n k , jazz and rock that sounds like it should soundtrack an evening of drinks, lounging and dancing in some very hip, urban area. Is Bend urban? Feels like it. But is it very urban? Probably not. Nonetheless, Quinn and his band will stop in our town Sunday night to plant goodtimes seeds at The Sound Garden. H ear more of w hat t h e band does at www.dirkquinn .com. Dirk Quinn Band; 6 p.m. Sunday; $7 plus fees in advance a t w w w .bendticket .com, $10 at the door; The Sound Garden, 1279 N.E. Second St., Bend; www.the soundgardenstudio.com. — Ben Salmon


music

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, JULY 26, 2013

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Aug. 2 —Aaron Tippin (country),Deschutes County Fair, Redmond, www.expo. deschutes.org. Aug. 2 —The Twangshifters (country-rock),Silver Moon Brewing & Taproom, Bend, www.silvermoonbrewing.com. Aug. 3 —The Autonomics (rock),Parrilla Grill, Bend, 541-617-9600. Aug. 3 —Kansas (classic rock), Deschutes County Fair, Redmond, www.expo.deschutes. org. Aug. 4 —Cedric Watson 8 Bijou Creole (zydeco),Les Schwab Amphitheater, Bend, www.bendconcerts.com. Aug. 4 —Black Pussy (stoner rock),Silver Moon Brewing & Taproom, Bend, www. silvermoonbrewing.com. Aug. 7 —High Street Band (big band) at Alive After 5, Old Mill District, Bend, www. aliveafterfivebend.com. Aug. 8 —Rootz Underground (reggae),Munch & Music in Drake Park, Bend, www. munchandmusic.com. Aug. 11 —Michael Franti & Spearhead (smile-pop),Les Schwab Amphitheater, Bend, www.bendconcerts.com. Aug. 13 —Whiskey Shivers (Americana),Silver Moon Brewing & Taproom, Bend, www.silvermoonbrewing.com. Aug. 14 —Wheeler Brothers (Americana),McMenamins Old St. Francis School, Bend, www. mcmenamins.com. Aug. 15 —Igor and RedElvises (Russian rock 'n' roll),Munch & Music in Drake Park, Bend, www.munchandmusic.com. Aug. 24 —Les Claypool's Duo de Twang(twang times two, I guess), Century Center Courtyard, Bend, www. randompresents.com. Aug. 28 —Craig Carothers (folk), McMenamins Old St. Francis School, Bend, www. mcmenamins.com. Sept. 25 —Kris Orlowski (indie-folk),McMenamins Old St. Francis School, Bend, www. mcmenamins.com. Oct. 4 —Steve Martin and the Steep CanyonRangers (bluegrass),Les Schwab Amphitheater, Bend, www. bendconcerts.com. Oct. 9 —Super Water Sympathy (pop-rock),McMenamins Old St. Francis School, Bend, www. mcmenamins.com.

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lights up Tower stage or all intents and purposes, Jay Farrar is Son Volt, and Son Volt is Jay Farrar. So when I say, "It's been wonderful, as a fan of twangy music, to hear Jay Farrar seemingly revitalized over the past couple of years," that reflects directly onto Son Volt, which plays the Tower Theatre on Saturday night. That may sound likea backhanded compliment, but it's not intended that way. Farrar deserves nothing but praise for his quarter-century of solid songwriting, his seminal role in the alt-country explosion of the mid1990s, and his contributions to the Americana canon. He is, truly, one of the most important figures in the past 20-plus years of twangy rock. He just made a string of records in there that I didn't particularly care for. No big deal. But let's ignore those: Farrar's first musical endeavor (at least known outside the St. Louis area) was Uncle Tupelo, one of the greatest bands ...

well, ever. They made four albums, all outstanding. Then Farrar split (and the ashes of Tupelo evolved into Wilco) and he formed Son Volt, which released an alt-country classic, "Trace," in 1995. A couple very good albums followed, and then a bunch more that were OK. The point of all this is that last year, Farrar helped make "New M u ltitudes," a collection of songs (by four different songwriters) set to unused Woody Guthrie lyrics, and that album was excellent. And this year's Son Volt record, "Honky Tonk," is a gorgeous, genuine country record that mines the famous Bakersfield Sound, which means beautiful pedal steelguitar as far as the eye can see. It's the band's best release in years. Son Volt, with Colonel Ford; 8 p.m. Saturday, doors open 7 p.m.; $26 or $3750, plus fees, available through the venue; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; www.towertheatre. org or 541-317-0700. — Ben Salmon

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PAGE 8 • GO! MAGAZINE

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, JULY 26, 2013

going out Looking for something to do? Check out our listing of live music, DJs, karaoke, open mics and more happening at local nightspots. Find lots more at www.bendbulletin.com/events.

DNEW MUSIC FROM GRITAND GRIZZLE Local old-time/bluegrass band Grit and Grizzle has had an album recorded for a while. So they planned

a CD-release showfor Saturday at Parrilla Grill

(details below) thinking they'd have discs in hand

with time to spare. But problems poppedup, and now they're not sure what they'll have to offer folks who show up. They're sure they'll have something. "We might spend Saturday morning burning CDs," said bassist Tim Lindgren earlier this week. Grit and Grizzle formed aboutayear and a half ago when guitarist Gabriel Juarez called up banjoist

Tyler Canfield andasked if hewanted to jam. "He ~byl.llfliei@n tI

had like three songs that were ... almost bluegrass," Canfield said. "They just needed banjo." Shortly thereafter, the two brought in Lindgren

— all three areBendHigh School grads —and

TODAY JAZCRU:Jazz; 6:30 p.m.-8:30 p.m.; River Rim Coffeehouse, 19570 Amber Meadow Drive, Bend; 541-728-0095. FINN MILES:Indie-pop; 6 p.m.; Cross Creek Cafe, 507S.W.Eighth St., Redmond; 541-548-2883. JACKIEBARRETT:Pop; 6 p.m.; Country Catering Co., 900 S.E.Wilson Ave., Bend; 541-383-5014. THE PRAIRIEROCKETS:Americana; 6 p.m.; Jackson's Corner, 845 N.W. Delaware Ave., Bend; 541-647-2198. LINDY GRAVELLE: Country and pop; 6 p.m.; ZeppaBistro, Sunriver; www. sunriver-resort.com. JIM CORNELIUSAND MIKE BIGGERS: Folk; $5-10; 7 p.m.; Angeline's Bakery & Cafe, 121 W.Main Ave., Sisters; 541-549-9122. RENO HOLLER: Pop;7 p.m .;Tumalo Feed Co., 64619 U.S.Highway 20, Bend; 541-382-2202. THE RIVERPIGS: Roots-rock; 7:30 p.m.; Kelly D's Irish Pub,1012 S.E.Cleveland, Bend. FUN BOBBY: Rock; 8:30 p.m.; Northside Bar 8 Grill, 62860 BoydAcres Road, Bend; 541-383-0889. BRANDONANTAKKANDTHEHELL HOUNDS: Cowpunk, with the Flangz and Dan Frost; 9 p.m.; TheAstro Lounge, 939 N.W.Bond St., Bend; www. astroloungebend.com. NORTHWEST SHOWCASE: Hip-hop, with KaneskeAutomatic, TNT, Cary Hays and more; 9 p.m.; $10; Domino Room, 51 N.W. GreenwoodAve., Bend;www. thewittmusic.com. WILLOWGROVE:Country, with

CheyenneWest;$5;9:30 p.m.;Silver Moon Brewing & Taproom, 24N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-388-8331 or www.silvermoonbrewing.com. DJ DARKSYDE:10p.m.; Liquid Lounge, 70 N.W. Newport Ave., Bend.

SATURDAY DARREN JOHNSON: Folk-rock;6:30 p.m.8:30 p.m.; River Rim Coffeehouse,19570 Amber Meadow Drive, Suite190, Bend; 541-728-0095. BOBBY LINDSTROM ANDED SHARLET: Rock and blues; 10a.m.-1 p.m.; Chow,1110 N.W.Newport Ave., Bend; 541-728-0256. BROKEN DOWNGUITARS: Blues, folk and rock; 5-8 p.m.; Elk LakeResort, 60000 Century Drive, Bend; 541-480-7378. LA JEDER: Acoustic folk, with Amanda Sarles; 6-10 p.m.; TheOld Ironworks, 50 S.E. Scott St., Bend. GRITAND GRIZZLE:Old-time and bluegrass, with Mai and Joefrom MMR; CD-release party; $5; 7 p.m.; Parrilla Grill, 635 N.W. 14th St., Bend; 541-617-9600. JAZZ AT JOE'S VOLUME 43:The series continues with singer Rebecca Kilgore and pianist DaveFrishberg; SOLD OUT; 7 p.m.; Greenwood Playhouse,148 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; www.jazzatjoes. com. MATT GWINUP: Jazz-folk; 7 p.m.; portello winecafe, 2754 N.W.Crossing Drive, Bend; 541-385-1777. RENO HOLLER:Pop;7 p.m.;Tumalo Feed Co., 64619 U.S.Highway 20, Bend; 541-382-2202. SAGEBRUSHROCK:Classicrock;7:3011:30 p.m.; Checkers Pub, 329 S.W.Sixth St., Redmond; 541-548-3731.

SON VOLT: Alt-country, with Colonel Ford; $26-$37.50; 8 p.m.; TowerTheatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; www.towertheatre.

org. (Pg.7) DAVID BOWERS COLONY: Americana; 8 p.m.;Dojo,852 N.W .BrooksSt.,Bend; 541-706-9091. FUN BOBBY: Rock;8:30 p.m.;Northside Bar & Grill,62860 Boyd Acres Road, Bend;541-383-0889. DJ CODICARROL:9 p.m.; The Astro Lounge,939 N.W. BondSt., Bend; 541-388-0116. DJ STEELE: 9 p.m.; The Summit Saloon 8 Stage,125N.W.OregonAve.,Bend; 541-749-2440. TEDDY PRESBERG ANDTHE RESISTANCEORGAN TRIO:Psychedelic jazz, with Garret Brennan; $5; 9:30 p.m.; Silver Moon Brewing & Taproom, 24 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend;541-388-8331 or www.silvermoonbrewing.com. (Pg. 6)

SUNDAY HILST AND COFFEY:Chamber-folk; 10 a.m.; Chow,1110 N.W.Newport Ave., Bend; 541-728-0256. SUMMERSUNDAYCONCERT:With oneman rocker TonySmiley;2:30 p.m.;Les Schwab Amphitheater, 344 S.W.Shevlin Hixon Drive, Bend; 541-318-5457 or www.bendconcerts.com. BOBBY LINDSTROM ANDED SHARLET: Rockand blues;4-6 p.m.;10 Barrel Brewing Co., 1135N.W.Galveston Ave., Bend;541-678-5228. BRENTALAN: Funk, pop and rock, 5:30-8 p.m.; The Lodge atSuttle Lake,13300 U.S. Highway 20, Sisters; 541-595-2628. DIRK QUINN BAND:Funkand jazz; $7$12; 6 p.m.; TheSound Garden,1279 N.E.

a drummer (who hassince departed) and began playing around town, focusing on street-corner busking for tips. The band eventually found itself

under the wing of the MoonMountain Ramblers' Joe Schulte, who helped 'emget gigs and recorded the songs they hope to releasethis weekend. Grit and Grizzle's songs are energetic and melodic string-band jams that recall bands like Old Crow Medicine Show and The Devil Makes Three, though Canfield also cites old-school artists like Bela Fleck

and Earl Scruggs as influences. Juarezwrites most of the tunes, with Canfield chipping in a couple of banjo barnburners. It's all highly likeable. "We can attract the drunk, dancing crowd and have

5-year-olds running around in front of us," Canfield said. "That's what's cool about it. It's fun. I love

playing our music."

Second St., Bend; 541-633-6804 or www. thesoundgardenstudio.com. (Pg. 6) LOS RATONES: Rock; 7-9 p.m.; Broken Top Bottle Shop & AleCafe,1740 N.W. Pence Lane, Suite1, Bend; 541-728-0703. SAYS THE SNAKE:Metal, with Exfixia and Lore Uprise; 8 p.m.; Third Street Pub, 314 S.E. Third St., Bend; 541-306-3017.

MONDAY KARAOKE: 6:30 p.m.; Northside Bar 8 Grill, 62860 Boyd Acres Road, Bend; 541-383-0889. OPEN MIC NIGHT:8 p.m., signups at 7:30 p.m.; The Astro Lounge, 939 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-388-0116.

TUESDAY MOUNTAINSTANDARD TIME: Bluegrass; 6 p.m.; GoodLife Brewing Co., 70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-728-0749. BOBBY LINDSTROM ANDDEREK MICHAELMARC:Rock and blues; 7 p.m.; Northside Bar 8 Grill, 62860 Boyd Acres Road, Bend; 541-383-0889. JIVE COULIS:Rock, with The Mondegreens; 10 p.m.; The Astro Lounge, 939 N.W. Bond St., Bend; www. astroloungebend.com.

WEDNESDAY HILST8 COFFEY: Chamberfolk;6p.m .; Sweet Saigon, 915 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 54 I-382-0772. OPEN MICNIGHT:6:30 p.m.-8:30 p.m.; River Rim Coffeehouse,19570 Amber Meadow Drive, Suite190, Bend; 541-728-0095.

— Ben Salmon

ALIVEAFTERFIVE: Reggaeby Junior Toots, with Sagebrush Rock; free; 5-8 p.m.; north end of Powerhouse Drive, Old Mill District, Bend; 541-389-0995 or www.aliveafterfivebend.com. ALLANBYER:Folk; 5:30-8:30 p.m.; Level 2 GlobalFood 8 Lounge,360 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, No. 210, Bend; 541-323-5382. MOUNTAINSTANDARD TIME: Bluegrass; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School,700 N.W .Bond St.,Bend; www.mcmenamins.com. GIRASOLESFLAMENCO TOUR: Savannah Fuentes performstraditional Flamenco songs anddances; $12-$30, $8 for children; 8 p.m.; TheSound Garden, 1279 N.E. SecondSt., Bend; 541-6336804 or www.thesoundgardenstudio. com. ANDY FRASCO &THEU.N.: Blues and funk; $10; 9 p.m.; TheAstro Lounge, 939 N.W. BondSt., Bend; www. astroloungebend.com.

THURSDAY LEROY NEWPORT'SBANJO JAM: Bluegrass/banjo; 6:30 p.m.-8:30 p.m.; River Rim Coffeehouse,19570 Amber Meadow Drive, Suite190, Bend; 541-728-0095. OPEN MIC:8 p.m.; Northside Bar & Grill, 62860 Boyd Acres Road,Bend; 541-383-0889. MEGAFAUNA: Indie rock, with Silvero; $8; 9 p.m.; NtK HQ,1330 N.E.1st St., Bend; mojavegreen81©gmail.com. (Pg. 6) EDM DANCE PARTY:10 p.m.; Liquid Lounge, 70 N.W.Newport Ave., Bend. • TO SUBMIT:Email events@bendbulletim.com. Deadline is 10 days before pubhcation. Please include date, venue, time and cost


GO! MAGAZINE ~ PAGE 9

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, JULY 26, 2013

musie releases Here and there Oct. 4 —Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www.

pcpa.com or 800-273-1530

choir offers majestic harmony. "Shouting in the Evening" builds to a crescendo while Neil Tennant sings of a simple pleasure: "What a feeling, shouting in the evening." Pet Shop Boys Most impressive is the album's freshness,no doubt ferried along "ELECTRIC" by producer Stuart Price,best Kobalt Records known for his work with, among A dozen records into a 3 0 others, Madonna, the Killers and plus-year career and the British Scissor Sisters. synth-pop duo Pet Shop Boys In fact, were this exact resound as vital, catchy and fruscord released by two handsome 21-year-olds with a h o t l a bel, trated as ever. M odern w it h o u t fee l i n g the young dance freaks would forced and filled with the mego crazy. But two young dudes lodic bounce that typifies their couldn't make a synth-pop rebest work, "Electric," in a word, cord so polished and seamless, bangs, and sees the Pet Shop one with a m a t urity m atched Boys at their most celebratory only by the constant quest for and wittiest. surprise. Onlythe Pet Shop Boys "Love Is a B o u rgeois Con- can do that, as evidenced by struct" giddily denounces love "Electric." — Randall Roberts, with a big thumping dance beat while in the background a men's Los Angeles Times

Mayer Hawthorne "WHERE DOES THISDOOR GO" Republic Records In a summer where Justin Timberlake and Robin Thicke made the randy white guy a staple of R&B radio, Mayer Hawthorne should be a star. He honed his talents on the great L.A. label Stones Throw; his charismatic falsetto is a f ormidable seducer's tool, and he's a dapper live performer. So it's a shame that his latest major-label LP comes off like an unwanted hand on your thigh. "Where Does This Door Go" is smooth to the point of cloying, yet completely all over the place in its productions. Daft Punk may have made yacht-rock and smooth jazz cool again, but here tracks such as "Backseat Lover" and "Her Favorite Song" miss the affection and precision and just spill the mimosa pitchereverywhere. He doesn't have the gravitas to pull off a straight dub tune such as "Allie Jones," and Kendrick La-

Robert Randolph & The Family Band "LICKETY SPLIT" Blue Note Records "Turn it up to 10 and get loud in here," Robert Randolph sings early in "Amped Up," the opening track on "Lickety Split," his first studio album with his Family Band in three years and his debut for Blue Note Records. It's a declaration of purpose: "Lickety Split" is an amped-up party album that rarely pauses for breath. Randolph is a peerless pedal steel player, and his roots in the sacred steel church tradition sur-

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face in "Born Again," a secular love song that crosses classic gospel lyrics with Stephen Stills' "Love the One You're With."

— August Brown, Los Angeles Times

— Steve Klinge, The Phi ladel phia Inquirer

Court Yard Hounds

pop music, and does nothing else to light a fire in terms of "AMELITA" innovation. "Amelita" is, thus, one of those Columbia Records If t h e E a g les a p proached "pleasant" albums that d o n't country music from the rock side shock, but allow the listener to of the fence, then Court Yard ease into a mode of relaxation. H ounds approach it f rom t h e And that may not be a bad thing, country-pop side of the tracks. but how much you dig "Amelita" "Amelita," their second album, is dependent on how much you is full of hooky crossover tracks enjoy mainstream country-pop that are bound to be pleasing music. — Zachary Houle, PopMatters.com to those who enjoy good, solid

Sara Bareilles

mar is wasted on the inexplicable raga-riffing of "Crime." When he finds his sweet spot, delightfully silly c uts such as "Corsican Rose" and"Wine Glass Woman" could totally work as hipster boat-party m usic. But the reason bouncy singles such as Thicke's "Blurred Lines" have owned the summer is that they make the pickup scene feelso fun. "Where Does This Door Go" feels like a once-promising OK Cupid date that's gone off the rails.

Throughout the album, Rand olph's leads dazzle, but t h e songs themselves are secondary, and he's much more forceful and personable as a guitarist than as a singer, which is less of a distraction when heard live than from the studio. This is an album built for the jam-band circuit, foregrounding rousing blues and funk grooves, from a perky cover of the Ohio Players' "Love Rollercoaster" to the note-bending guitar jam "Brand New Wayo," one of two tracks with Carlos Santana.

"THE BLESSED UNREST" Epic Records Sara Bareilles sings "Manhattan" with heavy exhaustion, like a woman beaten down by the marathon she's just finished."You can have Manhattan, I know it's forthe best," she exhales, over a dark, slow-moving piano, redolent of the early, elegantly pugnacious Billy Joel. "I'll gather up the avenues and leave them on your doorstep/ And I'll tiptoe away so you won't have to say you heard m e leave." She's not snide or colorfully melodramatic - just spent. That's the fourth song on "The Blessed Unrest," her new album, and it speaks loudly. It especially shouts down the songs that precede it, which — including the single "Brave" — are booming and jangly, songs that announce in scale what Bareilles' sweet and sometimes nervy voice doesn't always do on its own. Still, it's a surprise that Bareilles' best song on this album

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terly "Kaleidoscope Heart," from 2010.Those albums boretraces of

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is hermost morose. She's never matchedthepep ofher2007 debut single, "Love Song," a song about what sort of song she's unwilling to write. That theme — writing about writing — re-emerges on the first couple of songs of this album, like an early college writing experiment. The album is suffused with that kind of seriousness — not the emotional sort, as on "Manhattan," but the stylistic sort. Worse, "The Blessed Unrest" isn't as smilingly eclectic as her better earlier work, especially the often mas-

cabaret, girl-group pop, college a cappella groups — a whole host of future karaoke repertoryand were built around Bareilles' good cheer, which buoys her even in down moods. By contrast, "The Blessed Unrest" is all shoulder-droopingheft, and her musicalchoices are vexing. On "Hercules," she's Fiona Apple manquee,and barely that; "Eden" conveys early Madonna, of all things; and "Islands" suggests that Enya may have popped up on Bareilles' iTunes Shuffle with some regularity. Bareilles i s h i d in g b e hind styles that aren't her own. Only on "Little Black Dress" does that strategy pay off. It sounds like an Amy Winehouse sketch, with a zippy horn-led arrangement. Vocally, Bareilles sounds bright, too, and comfortable — doing her familiar trick of making the melancholy chirp. — Jon Caramanica, The New York Times


PAGE 10 • GO! MAGAZINE

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, JULY 26, 2013

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The main room at Brickhouse Steak and Seafood restaurant in downtown Bend has shuttered doors that open up to a spacious sidewalk dining area.

• Relocated to theFirehall in downtown, Brickhouseisamong Bend's best

Brickhouse Steak and Seafood

www.brickhousesteakhouse.com

By John Gottberg Anderson

Location:5 N.W. Minnesota Ave.,

p.m. Tuesday to Saturday

For The Bulletin

or quality steaks and seafood, served by a highly professional staff in an inviting atmosphere, the Brickhouse restaurant has no equal in Central Oregon. Relocated three months ago from Bend's Mill Quarter to downtown's red-brick Firehall, Brickhouse is a worthy successor to the stylish space previously held by the Staccato and Bourbon Street restaurants. It has been five years since owner Jeff Porad established the Brickhouse in downtown Redmond, 2t/zyears since he added a presence in Bend with a second restaurantoverlooking the Deschutes River. Now, with the new Brickhouse, he's let it be known that he is a culinary force to be reckoned with in downtown Bend.

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This is a restaurant that is defined more by the quality of its meats, seafood and produce than by any particular inclination toward creative cuisine. The menu is a traditional one, featuring the likes of filet mignon, blackened rib eye and New England lobster tail. "Our steaks are sourced from Snake River Farms and Double R Ranch in Idaho," Porad said. "They are hormone-free, custom-aged at least 28 days and hand cut. We also feature Wagyu beef, which is American Kobe beef, which exceeds the quality of all other U.S. beef brands." Meat of this quality, it is true, does not come cheap. A Brickhouse diner will pay $70 for a 10-ounce Wagyu filet mignon, nearly twice that of a standard filet (priced at $39). A true steak connoisseur won't bat an eyelash.

Continued next page

Bend Hours:4:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. daily Price range:Appetizers $8 to $15, entrees $16 to $50 Credit cards:American Express, Discover, MasterCard, Visa

Kids' menu: Sevenmealchoices priced at $8 Vagetarian menu:Themenu offers only salads, but pasta andvegetable dishes may beprepared on request Alcoholic davaragas:Full bar

Outdoorseating: Broadsidewalk area Reservations:Highly recommended Contact:541-728-0334 or

Also in Redmond:412 S.W. Sixth St., 541-526-1782; open 4:30 to 9:30

Scorecard OVERALL:A Food:A. A traditional menu is characterized by high-quality meats,

seafood and produce. Service:A. Highly professional staff treats every table with courtesy and attention.

Atmosphere: A-.Themoodiscasual fine dining, extending from classy dining room to sidewalk.

Value:A-. High-priced Wagyu steaks are balanced by ahandful of dinners priced under $20.


restaurants

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, JULY 26, 2013

GO! MAGAZINE PAGE 11

From previous page II

Many others, however, will. For them, Brickhouse offers an 8-ounce New York cut for as little as $25 and a handful of so-called "casual dinners" for under $20, including chicken marsala and beer-battered prawns. A meal here need not break the bank.

Check-Qut Qur ® ' Applebee'S IIew Menu!

Ambience and service In renovating the Firehall, Porad and his wife and co-owner, Jodi, placed an emphasis on casual fine dining. The front room, including the bar (with a brass pole down which firemen once slid), has shuttered doors that open to spacious sidewalk dining. Access toan adjacent side room has been widened to make it an integral part of the seating area. A back room is more formal, with large plush booths enabling more privacy for family gatherings or romantic rendezvouses. This is a family business, so the couple's children are also involved — Jeff's son Taylor Porad is manager ofthe Bend restaurant, Jodi's daughter Bre Peters is manager of the Brickhouse in Redmond. But many other faces will also be familiar to Bend foodies, from lounge staff to table servers. My dining companion and I knew that I was recognized,so I kept an eye on the treatment received by other tables — and it appeared as though every diner was treated with similar courtesy and attention. Too often, servers make the mistake of delivering a meal and immediately forgetting th e d i n ers. This was not the case at Brickhouse. Assuring that beef was cooked to order, that side dishes were to our liking and that our wine glasses remained full, were part of the normal regimen forthese servers.

Starting dinner Freshly baked bread and butter launched our recent shared dinner at Brickhouse, followed by a pair of appetizers and a couple of salads. Fresh seared sea scallops, cooked to perfection, were glazed with a honey-likesorrelbeurre blanc sauce and garnished with slivers of lime and lemon peel. A carpaccio of Wagyu beef was dressed with capers and shaved Parmesan cheese, then lightly drizzled with white truffle oil. My companion's Caesar salad didn't have quite the anchovy paste she likes, but it was fresh and light, served with a t angy house-made Parmesan dressing. My caprese salad was bold and wonderful, featuring thick slices of seasonal heirloom tomatoes, whole basil leaves and big chunks of buf-

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Filet Oscar from Brickhouse Steak and Seafood includes beef tenderloin, Dungeness crab, asparagus, mashed potatoes and Bearnaise sauce. falo mozzarella. It was drizzled with olive oil but not with balsamic vinegar. Salt and pepper accentuated its fresh flavor.

Great entrees As an entree, my friend was delighted with her filet Oscar. A 10ounce filet of beef tenderloin, cooked rare with a warm center, was topped with a generous amount of Dungeness crab meat and served with sev-

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eral spears of green asparagus and a richand buttery Bearnaise sauce. Skin-on Yukon Gold mashed potatoes accompanied, and a glass of peppery Seven Hillscabernet sauvignon from Walla Walla was a perfect complement. I ordered my main course from the fresh fish selection. Pan-seared Alaskan halibut, falling apart at the touch of my fork, was sauteed in white wine with artichoke hearts, chopped tomatoes and a hint of truffle oil. The fish was served with white rice and a vegetable medley of long green beans and slivered carrots. A lightly oaked MacRostie Sonoma Valley c h ardonnay, a s re c o mmended by JeffPorad, accented the flavors.

Bar bites Brickhouse is the sort of place I can drop by solo, enjoy a proteinrich bar snack and be thoroughly satisfied. On one such recent visit, I arrived to find that an order of sushi-grade, big-eye ahi tuna had been flown in fresh that morning from Hawaii. I couldn't turn my back on such good fortune. The lightly marinated tuna poke was the tastiest raw fish I've had in many a moon.

On another such occasion, I enjoyed a small steak, cooked perfectly to order. And I feel just as welcome whether I am eating a light meal at the bar or an elaborate dinner for two in the dining room. — Reporter: janderson@ bendbulletinicom

SMALL BITE •

The Cascade Culinary Institute at Central Oregon Community College will host its third annual Farm to Table fundraising dinner Saturday, emphasizing foods farmed and raised locally. Served outside the Elevation restaurant from 4 to 9 p.m., the 16-course meal — prepared by a team of student chefs — will include such dishes as organic faro with foraged mushrooms and lamb cheeks braised in pinot noir. The $100 cost includes a reception, dinner and educational demonstrations. Reservations are essential: 877-541-2433. 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; www .elevationbend.com.

Find It All Online bendbulletin.com

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PAGE 12 • GO! MAGAZINE

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, JULY 26, 2013

rinks

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choice not to ditch work Wednes-

day and headover to Portland for the beginning of the Oregon Brewers Festival. But if you're having doubts about

your decision, don't worry: You've

By Beau Eastes

10 Barrel to hostIPAfestival 10 Barrel Brewing Company is inviting people to decide next month which among four West Coast cities has the best IPA. At the Battle of the Beer Cities festival, people can sample16 different IPAs from Bend, Portland, Seattle and

San Diego. The event is scheduled for 4-10 p.m. Aug.14 in the brewery's parking lot at 1135 N.W. Galveston Ave., Bend. The breweries that will represent

Courtesy Timothy Horn

still got time to make the drive, join the

The Bulletin

heads up

OregonBrewers Festival All right, so you're a goody twoshoeswho made theresponsible

• FootZone events bring runnerstogether and end at apub eer seems to make everything go a little bit better. Even running. S ince the beginning o f t h e year, the downtown Bend shoe store FootZone has been hosting monthly group runs that end at a local pub. Mud, sweat and beers, if you wilL Participants in the free event usually receive a discount on appetizers and drinks at the bar of choice. "We want t o h u manize the running e x perience w henever we can," said Teague Hatfield, FootZone's owner and operator. "You don't have to have a certain body type or wear the geeky short shorts to run. Generally, our goal is to do fun stuff like this whenever we can." Hatfield's store also sponsors a themed run on the last Thursday of each month that on occasion — shocker! — has ended with beers. July's Last Thursday event was a "Float Run" in which thirsty athletes ran two miles from FootZone to Riverbend Park and then floated down the Deschutes River to the Tumalo Creek Kayak 8 Canoe shop, where ice cream floats

event spotlight

masses andenjoysometasty brews. The annual Oregon Brewers Festival, which runs through Sunday at Tom McCall Waterfront Park in downtown Portland, is featuring brews from more

than 80 craft breweries across the country this year. Admission to the event is free, but fest-goers will have to purchase a 2013

souvenir tasting glass for $7 to beable to drink, plus tokens in order to get beer. Onetoken, which costs $1, will get you a taste of beer, while four tokens will getyou a full glass. Make sure to hit up an ATMbeforehand; the booths

selling tasting glasses andtokens only take cash. TodayandSaturday,tapsareopenfrom noonto9p.m.,andonSunday from noon to 7 p.m. Token and mug sales close a half-hour prior to the taps shutting off

In addition to finding a healthy representation of Bendbeers, visitors can Submitted photo

Runners quench their thirst with beer from GoodLife Brewing Co. during one of FootZone's monthly group runs.

also expect to find Alameda Brewing Co.'s Huckleberry Hound, Maui Brewing

Co.'s Lemongrass Saison, andOskar BluesBrewery's G-Knight Imperial Red IPA, just to name a very few. For afull list, visit www.oregonbrewfest.com and cl ck i on— you guessed it— "BEERS."

— Megan Kehoe

made out of root beer and real beer, Obsidian Stout, awaited them. Past Last T h u rsday events have included the "Donut Run" with a donut and chocolate milk reward and a "Short Shorts Run" that celebrated every runner's f avorite fashion faux pas and ended with beers at Crow's Feet Commons. "People are realizing that having an active lifestyle, part of that is being social and meeting new folks," said Hatfield, whose pub runs have attracted as many as 100 people. "And it helps that we

always try to keep these things free. Part of our role in the community is t o p r ovide fun, free events." (Please note that the runs are free, but the beer is not.) "We've always been drawn to these creative opportunities, especially since we don't have to make a living off it," Hatfield added. "We do that by selling shoes ... but ever since we've been around, any time we can do something fun and goofy and irreverent, we do."

Bend are10 Barrel, DeschutesBrewery,

Barrel, said thecompanywasjust look-

Crux Fermentation Project and Boneyard Beer. From Seattle, there will be

ing for a way to include it. "Their beers are so good, they had to

Elysian Brewery,GeorgetownBrewing

be in the lineup," Milgrom said.

Company, Fremont Brewing and Naked

Each brewery will send one keg of IPA, either a standard or specialty brew,

City. SanDiegowill be represented by Stone BrewingCo., Ballast Point Brewing & Spirits, Green Flash Brew-

ing CompanyandSocietie Brewing Co. From Portland, therewill be Burnside Brewing Company, Gigantic Brewing

Companyand BreaksideBrewery. A fourth brewery in thePortland category — Pfriem Family Brewers — is actually from Hood River. Bec Milgrom, who

handles eventsand marketing for10

— Reporter: 541-383-0305, beastes~bendbulletinicom

to the event. Therewill also be abarbecue during the festival. Entry is free, but people who want to taste the beers

must purchase a 9-ounce tasting glass, plus $1 tokens. Then participants can vote for the best beer city. "We kind of just wanted to try these

beers," Milgrom said, "so we found an excuse to do it." — /3ulietin staff report

what's happening? WEDNESDAY CASK SERIESRELEASE: McMenamins releases the Note Taker IPA as part of Oregon Craft Beer Month; with happy hour pricing all night; free admission; 5 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www. mcmenamins.com.

WINE TASTING:Taste wine from Et Fille from Newberg; free; during quilt show; Cork Cellars Wine Bar8 Bottle Shop,160S. Fir St., Sisters; 541-549-2675. WEDNESDAY — AUG. 7

WINE TASTING: Taste wine from Andrew Rich Wines from Carlton; free; during quilt show; Cork Cellars Wine Bar & Bottle Shop,160S. Fir St., Sisters; 541-549-2675. WINETASTING:Season Cellars from Southern Oregon will offer samples; free;6-9 p.m .;BrokenTop Bottle Shop & AleCafe,1740 N.W. Pence Lane, Suite1, Bend; 541728-0703 or www.btbsbend.com. FRIDAY — AUG. 9

SCOTCH &CIGAR DINNER:

McMenamins pairs Islay, Highland and Speyside and more scotches with a multicourse dinner followed by cigars; $60, reservations required; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St.FrancisSchool,700 N.W .Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www. mcmenamins.com. MONDAY — AUG. 12

PUB RUN: A group run to Worthy Brewing followed by $1off a pint; free run, registration requested; 5:30p.m.;FootZone,842N.W .W all St., Bend; 541-317-3568 or www. footzonebend. com/events/footzonepub-run-to-worthy-brewing. WEDNESDAY — AUG. 14 BATTLE OF THEBEERCITIES: An IPA festival featuring breweries from Bend, Portland, Seattle and San Diego; 4-10 p.m.; 10 Barrel Brewing Co., 1135 N.W. Galveston Ave., Bend; 541678-5228 or www.facebook. com/10BarrelBrewingCompany. • SUBMIT ANEVENT by emaihng dnnksO bendbulletin.com. Deadline is 10 days before publication. Questions? Contact 541-383-0377.


GO! MAGAZINE PAGE 13

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, JULY 26, 2013

arts t

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The fold-out map of Cabinville, from Sarah Nawrocki's zine, "Welcome to Cabinville." The fictional community is loosely based on Three Rivers, where Nawrocki lives. s

Submitted photos

Artist Sarah Nawrocki poses with "The Storm Witness!," a full-color comicposter about a young boywho sees a tree fall during a storm.

• Local artist Sarah Nawrocki createdgraphic novel 'Welcometo Cabinvile' By David Jasper

Cabinville," a zine about critters populating a fictional community rtist S a r a h Na w r o cki called Cabinville, loosely based has lived in at least seven on the place she lives now: Three states. Rivers, an unincorporated comShe earned h e r b a c helor's munity south of Sunriver. degree from the Rhode Island In a w ay, she's come back School of Design. She has a Mas- around to the comics, graphic ter of Fine Arts from Cranbrook novels and zines she read in her Academy of Art in Michigan. She youth. "When I got into high school, I taught painting to kids in Hawaii. She taught art history at Penn just wanted to read comics. And State University. She worked as a that's kind of how I am now," she studio assistant to acclaimed Jap- said. "My whole studio is filled anese artist Takashi Murakami in with comics." New York. Nawrocki l ived i n P o r t land Right now, though, the 34-year- till the age of 14, when her famold is all about drawing comics. ily pulled up stakes and moved to Just last week, she completed Houston. the first issue of "Welcome to As you can imagine, moving in The Bulletin

A

her teens"was really rough, but it's funny, because (that's when) I came across Factsheet 5," an erstwhile guide to zines and indie publishers of the moment. "Back then, there wasn't the Internet," Nawrocki said. "We didn't really have access to any of that. It was the early '90s, and so Factsheet 5 was a really big part of me feeling like, 'Oh, there's other people out there who are doing creative stuff.'" S he put out a z i n e i n h i g h school, and with the help of an art teacher, "we figured it out so that all of my electives were art electives, and she helped me get into the Rhode Island School of

Design."

After graduation, she left Rhode Island for Hawaii, after which she headed to grad school. It was after graduating that she worked with Murakami for a year. "I'm still processing all the stuff I learned there, and it's been six years," she said. "It was just a really amazing, intense experience." At age 30, 16 years after she'd left, she moved back to Portland, only to struggle in finding work related to art. "So I started a stuffed animal company," she said. She did the craft show circuit for a while and eventually found work in property management. In December, she met her fiancee, musician and f u rniture maker Bill More, through Match .com. She moved toThree Rivers in March. The two are in the pro-

cess of launching a design company together under the name Fare Well Design Factory. "It's like a pinata exploded," she said of their home. "We have so many creative things that we like to do." And, of course, she's drawing comics for the first time since high school, with plenty of encouragement from More. Both her degrees concentrated in textiles — art and crafts made of fiber — yet during both programs, she said, "I really just wanted to be drawing." "I've always kind of drawn little things here and there, but I really didn't take it seriously. I've always read comics, but didn't have the confidence to really do it," she said.

Continued next page


arts

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MOCKINGBIRD GALLERY 869 NW WALL ST. • 541-388-2107

www.mockingbird-gallery.com

25 NW MINNESOTA AVE. ¹5 • 541-388-0155

www.karenbandy.com SAGE CUSTOM FRAMING 8 GALLERY 834 NW BROOKS ST. • 541-382-5884

www.sageframing-gallery.com PAUL SCOTT GALLERY 869 NW WALL ST. • 541-330-6000

www.pailjscottfineart.com RED CHAIR GALLERY 103 NW OREGON AVE. • 541-306-3176

www.redchairgajjerybend.com I

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• Local theater actor, who was badly injured in a bike accidentJuly 5, ismaking aslow recovery By David Jasper

KAREN BANDY DESIGN JEWELER

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THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, JULY 26, 2013

than I ever believed possible, and

The Bulletin

(I'm) fighting to stay conscious.

n a recent phone interview, Bend actor Andrew "Andy" Hickman twice compared himself to John Wayne, with a n e x pletive sandwiched between the Duke's first and last names. And when you hear what he went through earlier this month, you might agree. Hickman, 52, is the son of Cascades Theatrical Co. c o-founder Carol Bryant, and he's appeared in several plays since moving back to Bend two years ago from Portland, including a memorable turn as Sir Toby Belch in CTC's production of "Twelfth Night" last winter. At around 8:45 p.m. July 5, Hickman was riding his bike east on Franklin Avenue toward his east side home after his shift at Noi, the downtown Thai restaurant where he works as a bartender. "I do not remember much about that bike ride home from work," he said. What he does remember is shortly after coming out of the pedestrian walkway east of the U.S. Highway 97 underpass, he attempted to negotiate a little hop off the Les Schwab Tire Center driveway and into the bike lane — something the avid bike rider said he's done "since I was 11 years old ... 10,000 times, 20,000 times," he said. "It's Simple Simon. It's not even a jump." Nevertheless, the next thing he knew, "I'm on the ground crawling, making noises like a sheep," Hickman said. Bystanders and passersby rushed to his side, but given his "shock-addled brain," he said, he waved people away. "My right side was in more pain

Snowflakes in front of my eyes. Everything's going white," he said. Hickman declinedan ambulance and walked his relatively unscathed bike the 2 miles home. Twice, he considered getting back on to "finish the ride," as he put it. He even stopped behind First Presbyterian Church on Ninth Street and said a prayer. Hickman, who is unmarried and lives alone, managed to get himself in bed. Early the next morning, he was awakened when his Bengal tomcat — Walter, who weighs more than 20 pounds — jumped on him. "I let out a shriek that traumatized us both," Hickman said. "That's when I got up and went to the bathroom and that's when I found out, 'Whoa, we're not just going to urgent care.'" The actor wound up spending the next week at St. Charles Bend, laughing now at the thought of declining an ambulance: "I dodged a bullet. I tell you what." Hickman sustained a number of injuries to his internal organs. "They took a massive clot out of my bladder. My liver has a deep contusion and a minor laceration," he said. He also injured a kidney. "The membrane that surrounds my kidney has held together. Minor leak in one end, minor crack in the other," he said. Hickman has no health insurance and said he will need to recuperate before getting back behind the bar. "I'm not going to be exactly toting bus tubs, racks of glassware and hauling kegs around. I'm even concerned about shaking cocktails at this point," he said.

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From previous page The first installment of "Welcome to Cabinville" is a tale of a dog, rabbit and rodent friends who unknowingly imperil an insect that's taken up residence in a log they're about to toss on a firepit. It ends in a cliffhanger of a sort. Unfold the zine, and there's a colorful aerial view of Cabinville, with homes, pines, trucks and trailers surrounded by water. A lot like Three Rivers, which is "awesome," Nawrocki said. "It's so weird and

such an interesting mix of people." She and More talked of newcomers and lifers, upscale vacation homes

and A-frame cabins, kids playing outside all day and wandering dogs. "Welcome to Cabinville" No. I is being sold at Pegasus Books in downtown Bend. If you're in the Old Ironworks Arts District, there's a copy shelved in the Bend Zine Library, located in The Workhouse. The zine is also available for $2 at wwwwelcome t ocabinville.bigcartel.com, alo n g with two comic posters by Nawrocki.

Joe Kline/The Bulletin file photo

Andrew Hickman, 52, rehearses for a spring storytelling event. Earlier this month, Hickman, who works as a bartender, was badly injured in a bicycle accident. Hickman doesn't yet know the tally of his medical bills, but hopes to tap friends in Central Oregon's music and theater scene to help stage a Sept. 21 benefit to offset medical costs. "I can't sit back and be idle about this. Let's face it — 27 hours a week at $8.95 an hour plus tips, I am the

working poor," he said. While still in the planning stages, Hickman said the event's theme may be "With a Little Help from My Friends." It will likely feature a mix of music and storytelling, including a medical odyssey that, for Hickman, ts sttll develop>ng. "I've got a ton of comic material that just keeps writing itself, from the accident to the entire stay in the hospital," he said. S tay tuned t o G O ! f o r m o r e details. — Reporter: 541-383-0349, djasper@bendbulletin.com

She isn't sure how many more times she'll revisit Cabinville, but promised there are more installments to come. Nawrocki is also working on a comic about a world in which "rebel humans mate with animals and all the suburbanites move to underground refugee camps because the animal/humans take over," she said in a follow-up emaiL "I hope it will be as interesting on paper as it is in my head." — Reporter: 541-383-0349, djasperCbendbulletin.com


THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, JULY 26, 2013

ART E XHI B I T S AMBIANCEART CO-OP:Featuring gallery artists; 435 S.W. Evergreen Ave., Redmond; 541-548-8115. ARTISTS' GALLERYSUNRIVER: Featuring local artists; 57100 Beaver Drive, Building19; www. artistsgallerysunriver.com or 541-593-4382. ATELIER 6000:Featuring "Educators That Print," an exhibit of local and regional educators who incorporate printmaking; through Monday; 389 S.W. Scalehouse Court, Suite120, Bend; www. atelier6000.org or 541-330-8759. BEND CITYHALL: Featuring the work of young artists who have utilized children's foundations in our community; through September; 710 N.W.Wall St.; 541-388-5505 or rchristie© bendoregon.gov. BEND D'VINE:Featuring acrylic work by Brenda Reid Irwin; 916 N.W. Wall St.; 541-323-3277. BLUE PINEKITCHENANDBAR: Featuring paintings by Brenda Reid Irwin; through July; 25 S.W. Century Dr., Bend; 541-389-2558. CAFE SINTRA:Featuring "3 Points of View," a continually changing exhibit of photographs by Diane Reed, Ric Ergenbright and John Vito;1024 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-8004. CANYONCREEKPOTTERY: Featuring pottery by Kenneth Merrill; 310 N. Cedar St., Sisters; www.canyoncreekpotteryllc.com or541-549-0366. CROW'S FEETCOMMONS: Featuring mixed media paintings by Shelli Walters; through July; 875 N.W. Brooks St., Bend; 541728-0066 or www.facebook. com/Shelliwaltersstudio. DISCOVERSUNRIVER: Featuring "Color 8 Texture," works by Karen Bandy and Helen Brown; opening reception 2-6 p.m. Saturday; through Aug. 12; 57198 Beaver Dr., Sunriver; 541-388-0155. DON TERRAARTWORKS: Featuring more than 200 artists; 222 W. Hood Ave., Sisters; 541549-1299 or www.donterra.com. DOWNTOWN BEND PUBLIC LIBRARY:Featuring "Anticipation," a themed exhibit in various wallhanging media; through Aug. 5; 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-389-9846. FRANKLIN CROSSING:Featuring oil paintings by Janice Druian and Vicki Shuck; through Saturday; 550 N.W. Franklin Ave., Bend; 541-382-9398. FURNISH.:Featuring works by Sue Smith; 761 N.W. Arizona Ave., Bend; 541-617-8911.

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"Splash of Gold," by Richard McKinley, will show at Mockingbird Gallery through July. GHIGLIERI GALLERY: Featuring original Western-themed and African-inspired paintings and sculptures by Lorenzo Ghiglieri; 200 W. Cascade Ave., Sisters; www.art-lorenzo.com or 541-549-8683. HELPINGYOUTAX 8( ACCOUNTING:Featuring paintings by Carol Armstrong; 632 S.W. Sixth St., Suite 2, Redmond; 541-504-5422. JENNIFERLAKEGALLERY: Featuring paintings by Jennifer Lake; 220 W. CascadeAve., Sisters; www.jenniferlakegallery.com or 541-549-7200. JILL'S WILDcTASTEFUL) i WOMEN WAREHOUSE:Featuring works by Jill Haney-Neal; Tuesdays and Wednesdays only; 601 North Larch St., Suite B, Sisters; www.jillnealgallery.com or 541-617-6078. JOHN PAULDESIGNS: Featuring custom jewelry and signature series;1006 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-318-5645. JUDI'S ARTGALLERY:Featuring works by Judi Meusborn Williamson; 336 N.E. Hemlock St., Suite13, Redmond; 360-325-6230. KAREN BANDYDESIGNJEWELER: Featuring "Vineyards and Vessels" with new paintings and jewelry by Karen Bandy; through July; 25 N.W. Minnesota Ave., Suite 5, Bend; www.karenbandy.com or 541-388-0 I55. LA MAGIEBAKERYANDCAFE: Featuring landscape watercolors by Patricia W. Porter; through July; 945 N.W. Bond Street, Bend; 541-241-7884. LOCALWORKS:Featuring local artists and craftsmen; 151 S. Elm St., Sisters; 541-306-7344. LORISALISBURY FINEART GALLERY:Featuring a co-op of local artists; 391 W. CascadeAve., Sisters; 541-508-8884 or www.

lorisalisburygallery.com. LUBBESMEYER FIBERSTUDIO: Featuring fiber art by Lori and Lisa Lubbesmeyer; 450 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Suite 423, Bend; www.lubbesmeyerstudio. com or 541-330-0840. MARCELLO'S ITALIANCUISINE AND PIZZERIA:Featuring several local artists; 4 Ponderosa Road, Sunriver; 541-593-8300. MOCKINGBIRDGALLERY: Featuring "Catching Light," plein air works by Jack Braman and Richard McKinley; through July; 869 N.W. Wall St., Bend; www. mockingbird-gallery.com or 541-388-2107. MOSAIC MEDICAL:Featuring mixed-media collage paintings by Rosalyn Kliot; 910 S. U.S. Highway 97, Suite 101, Madras; 541-475-7800. ONE STREETDOWNCAFE: Featuring local artist Linda Francis-Strunk; through July; 124S.W.Seventh St.,Redmond; 541-647-2341. THE OXFORD HOTEL: Featuring oil paintings by Janice Druian and Vicki Shuck; through today; 10 N.W. Minnesota Ave., Bend; 54 I-382-9398. PATAGONIA OBEND:Featuring photography by Mike Putnam; 1000 N.W. Wall St., Suite 140; 54 I-382-6694. PAUL SCOTTGALLERY: Featuring works by Toni Doilney and Geoffrey Gorman; through July; 869 N.W. Wall St., Bend; www.paulscottfineart.com or 54 I-330-6000. PRONGHORN CLUBHOUSE: Featuring mixed-media works by Marjorie Wood Hamlin; through Aug. 3; 65600 Pronghorn Club Dr., Bend; 541-693-5300. QUILTWORKS:Featuring quilts by Donna Cherry, with the group exhibit"Celebrations"; through

GO! MAGAZINE PAGE 15 July; 926 N.E. Greenwood Ave., Suite B, Bend; 541-728-0527. RED CHAIRGALLERY:Featuring "Natural Elements," photography by Dorothy Eberhardt, glass jewelry by Larissa Spafford and glasswork by Deb Borine; through July; 103 N.W. Oregon Ave., Bend; www.redchairgallerybend.com or 541-306-3176. REDMONDAIRPORT: Featuring a juried exhibition of work created during an art event at Smith Rock State Park; through Aug. 18; 2522 Jesse Butler Circle; 541-548-0646. SAGEBRUSHERSART SOCIETY: Featuring an all-members juried exhibition; through Saturday; 117 S.W. Roosevelt Ave., Bend; 541-617-0900. SAGE CUSTOM FRAMING AND GALLERY:Featuring "Interpretations: Works in a Series" by the High Desert Art League; through Saturday; 834 N.W. Brooks St., Bend; 541-382-5884. SISTERS AREACHAMBEROF COMMERCE:Featuring fiber art by Rosalyn Kliot; 291 E. Main Ave.; 54 I-549-0251. SISTERS ARTWORKS: Featuring custom quilt tiles by Kathy Deggendorfer; through Tuesday; 204 W. Adams Ave.; www.sistersartworks.com or 541-420-9695. SISTERS GALLERY8( FRAME SHOP:Featuring landscape photography by Gary Albertson; 252 W. Hood Ave.; www.garyalbertson.com or 541-549-9552. SISTERS PUBLICLIBRARY: Featuring "Quilting Meets Couture," quilts from unusual couture clothing fabrics and "New Vision-Seeing Sewing, Living Differently," quilts by neurovisually blind artist Claire Spector; through July; 110 N. Cedar St.; 541-312-1070. ST. CHARLESBEND:Featuring "Caregiver Art," watercolors, jewelry and more; through

Sept. 30; 2500 N.E. Neff Road; 541-382-4321. ST. CHARLESREDMOND: Featuring landscape and wildlife photography by Douglas Berg; through Sept. 30; 1253 N.W. Canal Boulevard; 541-548-8131. SUNRIVERAREAPUBLIC LIBRARY:Featuring the Watercolor Society of Oregon's Traveling Show; through Aug. 24; 56855 Venture Lane; 541-312-1080. SUNRIVERLODGE BETTY GRAY GALLERY:Featuring paintings by Pam Jersey Bird, Judy Hoiness and Ann Ruttan; through Saturday; 17600 Center Drive; 541-382-9398. TOWNSHEND'SBEND TEAHOUSE:Featuring works by Megan McGuinnes; through July; 835 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541312-2001 or www.townshendstea. com. TUMALO ARTCO.: Featuring "Nature's Flamboyance," digital media by Dorothy Freudenberg, scuplture and mono prints by Danae Bennett-Miller; watercolors by Helen Brown; through July; 450 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Suite 407, Bend; www.tumaloartco.com or 541-385-9144. VISTABONITA GLASS ART STUDIO AND GALLERY: Featuring glass art, photography, painting, metal sculpture and more; 222 W. Hood St., Sisters; 541-549-4527 or www.vistabonitaglass.com.

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PAGE 16 • GO! MAGAZINE

THE BULLETIN • FR

I TODAY

SATURDAY

OREGON HIGHDESERT CLASSICS U: A U.S. Equestrian Federation class AA international hunter-jumper competition; proceeds benefit J Bar JYouth Services; free admission; 8a.m.-5 p.m.; J Bar J Boys Ranch, 62895 Hamby Road, Bend; 541389-1409, tryan©jbarj.org or www.jbarj. org/ohdc. TOUR OFHOMES:Featuring self-guided tours of homes throughout Central Oregon; free; noon-6 p.m.; visit website for locations; 541-389-1058 or www.coba.org. SISTERSFARMERS MARKET:3-6 p.m .; Barclay Park, West CascadeAvenue and Ash Street; www.sistersfarmersmarket. com. MUSIC IN THE CANYON: Featuring the Portland-based rock band Mexican Gunfight; free; 5:30-8 p.m.; American LegionCommunity Park,850 S.W . Rimrock Way, Redmond; www. musicin thecanyon.com. "SEUSSICAL JR.": Prineville Music Theatre Camp puts on its rendition of the children's musical; free, donations accepted; 6 p.m.; Pioneer Park, 450 N.E. Third St., Prineville; 541-419-9579. LAST SATURDAY: Event includes art exhibit openings, live music, food and drinks and a patio and fire pit; free; 6-10 p.m.; Old Ironworks Arts District, 50 Scott St., Bend; www.j.mp/lastsat. MUSIC IN THE PARK: A"Hallelujah Hoedown" with Mud Springs Gospel Band and the Tucker Family Band; free; 6:30 p.m.; Sahalee Park, 7th and BStreets, Madras; www.centraloregonshowcase.com. "A MIDSUMMER NIGHT'S DREAM": The classic play by Shakespeare is performed by the Bend Experimental Art Theatre; $15 adult, $10 students18 and younger; 7 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-419-5558 or www.beatonline. org. SCHOLARSHIPBENEFITCONCERT: Featuring all students and instructors from the Booher Family Music Camp; $5, $25 for families over five people; 7 p.m.; Sisters Community Church, 1300 W.McKenzie Highway; 541-815-3873 or www. boohercamp,com. BRANDON ANTAKKAND THE HELLHOUNDS: The California countrypunk band performs, with the Flangzand Dan Frost; free; 9 p.m.; TheAstro Lounge, 939 N.W. BondSt., Bend; 541-388-0116 or www.astroloungebend.com. WILLOWGROVE:The Portland country band performs, with CheyenneWest; $5; 9:30 p.m.; Silver Moon Brewing & Taproom, 24 N.W.Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-388-8331 or www. silvermoonbrewing.com.

JHtl/ 27 WINGS ANDWHEELS: Features a fly-in, pancake breakfast, aircraft displays, kids activities, antique car show and more; free admission; pancake breakfast $8, $5 for children11-16and free for children 10 and younger; 7:30-11:30 a.m.; Sunriver Airport, 57200 River Road; 541-593-4609. OREGON HIGHDESERT CLASSICS II: A U.S. Equestrian Federation class AA international hunter-jumper competition; proceeds benefit J Bar J Youth Services; free admission; dinner reservations required at $85 per person; 8 a.m.-9:30 p.m., 4:30 p.m. Grand Prix dinner, 5:30 p.m. Grand Prixjumping event; J Bar J Boys Ranch, 62895 Hamby Road, Bend; 541-389-1409, tryan@jbarj.org or www. jbarj.org/ohdc. PRINEVILLEFARMERS MARKET: Free; 8:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m.; Prineville City Plaza, 387 N.E. Third St.; 541-447-6217 or prinevillefarmersmarket©gmail.com. MADRAS SATURDAY MARKET: Free admission; 9 a.m.-2 p.m.;Sahalee Park, 7th and B Streets; 541-489-4239. CENTRAL OREGON SATURDAY MARKET:Featuring arts and crafts from local artisans; free admission; 10a.m.-4 p.m.; parking lotacross from Bend Public Library, 600 N.W. Wall St.; 541-420-9015 or www. centraloregonsaturdaymarket.com. NORTHWEST CROSSINGSATURDAY FARMERS MARKET:Free; 10 a.m.2 p.m.; NorthWest Crossing, Mt. Washington and Northwest Crossing drives, Bend; www.nwxevents.com. SISTERS ARTS 8[CRAFTS FESTIVAL: Featuring arts, crafts, food, entertainment, a classic car cruise (Saturday only) and a silent auction benefiting the Make-A-Wish Foundation of Oregon; free; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Creekside Park, U.S. Highway 20 and Jefferson Avenue; 541-420-0279 or www.centraloregonshows.com. TOUR OFHOMES: 10 a.m.-6 p.m. at various locations in Bend; see Today's listing for details. PROSPECTINGANDPANNING: Stake a claim and pan for gold; $2 plus price of admission; $15 adults, $12 ages 65 and older, $9 ages 5-12, free ages 4 and younger; 11 a.m.-4 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or www. highdesertmuseum.org. THE BACKYARDFARMERS MARKET: Free; 11 a.m.-4 p.m.; Celebrate the Season, 61515 American Lane, Bend;

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TODAY-SUNDAY OregonHighDesert Classics H:Last week to smell horses at J Bar J Ranch.

SATURDAY & SUNDAY Sisters Arts &Crafts Festival: Taste the yummy food at the fest in Sisters.

WEDNESDAY Pickin' and Paddlin':Hear the

bluegrass sounds of Polecat.

WEDNESDAY Girasoles Flamenco Tour:See their feet spin and dresses whirl.

THURSDAY Rolling Stones tribute: Useyour sixth sense at theTower!

541-244-2536 or bendsummermarket@ gmail.com. ADULT SUMMER READINGPROGRAM CELEBRATION:Featuring live music, refreshments, raffles and giveaways; bring your own picnic; free; noon-1:30 p.m.; Crook County Library, 175 N.W. Meadow Lakes Drive, Prineville; 541447-7978 or www.crooklib.org. REDMOND MASONICLODGE ¹154: 100th Anniversary celebration with rededication; public welcome; free;1 p.m.; Redmond Masonic Center,627 S.W. Seventh St.; 541-408-1740.

"A MIDSUMMER NIGHT'S DREAM": 2 and 7 p.m. at 2nd Street Theater; see Today's listing for details. BOOHERFAMILYCONCERT:The music camp's wrap-up concert; $10, $5 ages 6-17, free for children younger than 6; 3 p.m.; Sisters Community Church, 1300 W. McKenzie Highway; 541-815-3873 or www.boohercamp.com. RIVERFEASTFUNDRAISER: Dinner and music along the banks of the Upper Deschutes River; proceeds benefit Deschutes River Conservancy; $65 per person, $120 per couple, reservation requested; 4:30-9:30 p.m.; Mary

McCallum Park, River Road, Sunriver; 541-382-4077 or www.deschutesriver. org. "SEUSSICAL JR.":6 p.m. at Pioneer Park; see Today's listing for details. "AFTER MARKET" PARTY:Meet the farmers who grow the food and enjoy music, dancing and drinks; $12 in advance, $15 at the gate; 7-10 p.m.; Celebrate the Season, 61515 American Lane, Bend; 541-244-2536 or bendsummermarket@gmail.com. JAZZ ATJOE'S VOLUME 43:The series continues with singer Rebecca Kilgore


GO! MAGAZINE PAGE 17

DAY, JULY 26, 2013

Jesus Montoya of Spain andBulgarian guitarist Roberto de Sofia; $12-$30, $8for children; 8 p.m.; TheSound Garden,1279 July 28 Jull/ 29 July 31 N.E. Second St., Bend; 541-633-6804 or www.thesoundgardenst udio.com. OREGON HIGHDESERT CLASSICS II: POP-UP PICNIC:Live music with food DESCHUTESCOUNTY FAIR& RODEO: ANDY FRASCO & THE U.N.: The bluesA U.S. Equestrian Federation class AA and beverages; bring a blanket and Carnival rides, games, rodeo and aCheap international hunter-jumper competition; canned food for Neighbor lmpact; Trick concert; $6-$10 daily passes, $11-$19 funk singer-songwriter performs; $10; proceeds benefit J Bar J Youth Services; free admission; 5-7 p.m.; The Cosmic season passes, freefor seniors and children 9 p.m.; TheAstro Lounge, 939 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-388-0116 or www. free admission; 8 a.m.-5 p.m.; J Bar J Depot, 342 N.E. Clay Ave., Bend; 5415 and younger; 10 a.m.-10 p.m., concert at astroloungebend.com. Boys Ranch, 62895 Hamby Road, Bend; 385-7478orwww.thecosmicdepot. 7p.m.,doors open at5:30 p.m.;Deschutes 541-389-1409, tryan@jbarj.org or www. com. County Fair & ExpoCenter, 3800 S.W. jbarj.org/ohdc. THURSDAY Airport Way, Redmond; 541-548-2711 or SARAH DONNER:The East Coast www.expo.deschutes.org. (Story, Page3) RUN FORTHEBIRDS: BKand children's singer-songwriter performs a house Aug. 1 1Kflat and scenic runs, prizes, postconcert in Bend; $10; 7 p.m.; location BEND FARMERS MARKET:Free race celebration, and free entry to the provided after ticket purchased; 541admission; 3-7 p.m.; Brooks Alley, DESCHUTES COUNTYFAIR8[RODEO: nature center; proceeds benefit the 480-5813 or www.elisemichaelsmedia. between Northwest Franklin Avenueand Carnival rides, games and a Kip Moore Sunriver Nature Center 8 Observatory; com/sarah-donner-concert. (Story, Northwest Brooks Street; 541-408-4998, concert; $6-$10 daily passes, $11-$19 $25 in advance, $35 day of race, $15 for Page 6) bendfarmersmarket©gmail.com or www. season passes, free for children 5 and children's 1K; 8 a.m. race start, 7 a.m. bendfarmersmarket.com. younger; 10 a.m.-10 p.m., concert at 7 late registration, 9:30 a.m. children's PICKIN' ANDPADDLIN' MUSICSERIES: p.m., gates openat5:30 p.m.;Deschutes race; Sunriver Resort, 17600 Center TUESDAY Includes boat demonstrations in the County Fair & Expo Center,3800S.W. Drive; 541-593-1000 or www.sunriverDeschutes River; Polecat performs Airport Way, Redmond; 541-548-2711 or resort.com/birds. bluegrass, with John Hise; proceeds www.expo.deschutes.org. Jull/ 30 PASSPORT TONATURE: Featuring benefit Bend PaddleTrail Alliance; $5, SMARTAT THE LIBRARY: Learn what interpretive stations, activities and REDMOND FARMERS MARKET: free for children12 and younger; 4-6 p.m. it takes to volunteer to read in the local Free admission; 3-6 p.m.; Centennial stamps for event passport; shuttle demonstrations, 5-9 p.m. music; Tumalo elementary schools and create a bookprovided to/from the resort or Sunriver Park, Seventh Street and Evergreen Creek Kayak &Canoe,805 S.W.Industrial inspired art piece; free; 3:30-5:30 p.m.; Avenue; 541-550-0066 or Homeowners Aquatic and Recreation Way, Suite 6, Bend; 541-317-9407 or 411[N Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 Center; free; 10 a.m.-1 p.m.; Sunriver redmondfarmersmarket1©hotmail.com. tumalocreek.com. N.W. Wall St.; 541-355-5601 or www. Nature Center 8 Observatory, 57245 TUESDAY FARMERSMARKET: Free WHERE'SWALDOPARTY: A wrap-up getsmartoregon.org. River Road; 541-593-4394. admission; 3-7 p.m.;Brookswood party for the monthlong Where's Waldo MUNCH & MUSIC: TheNewWave and SISTERS ARTS 8[CRAFTS FESTIVAL: Meadow Plaza, 19530 Amber hunt; cake andactivities; free; 4-6 p.m., synthpop band Animotion performs; with 10 a.m.-4 p.m. at Creekside Park; see Meadow Drive, Bend; 541raffle drawings at 5:30 p.m.; Paulina food, arts and crafts booths, children's Saturday's listing for details. 323-3370 or farmersmarket© Springs Books,252W .Hood Ave.,Sisters; area and more; dogs prohibited; free; 5:30 brookswoodmeadowplaza.com. 541-549-0866. TOUR OFHOMES: 10 a.m .-6 p.m. at p.m.; Drake Park, 777 N.W. Riverside various locations in Bend; see Today's MOUNTAIN STANDARDTIME: The WHERE'SWALDO PARTY:A wrap-upparty Blvd., Bend; www.munchandmusic.com. listing for details. for the monthlong Where's Waldo hunt; Colorado bluegrass band performs; TWILIGHT CINEMA:An outdoor free; 6 p.m.; GoodLife Brewing cake and activities; free; 4-6 p.m., raffle "A MIDSUMMER NIGHT'S DREAM": 2 screening of the 2005 film "Madagascar"; drawings at 5:30 p.m.; Paulina Springs Co., 70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; p.m. at 2nd Street Theater; see Today's bring a low-profile chair or blanket; free; 541-728-0749. Books, 422 S.W .Sixth St.,Redmond; listing for details. 6:30 p.m.; Village at Sunriver, 57100 541-526-1491. Beaver Drive, Sunriver; 541-585-3333. SUMMER SUNDAYCONCERT:The oneTWILIGHT CINEMA:A screening of ALIVEAFTERFIVE: Junior Toots performs the 2002 film "Ice Age"; free; 6:30 (Story, Page 27) man rock act Tony Smiley performs; reggae, with Sagebrush Rock; at the north free;2:30 p.m.,gates open atnoon;Les p.m.; Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic "GRATEFULDEADMEETUPATTHE end of Powerhouse Drive; free; 5-8 p.m.; Schwab Amphitheater, 344 S.W. Shevlin & Recreation Center, 57250 Overlook MOVIES":A film capturing the band's Old Mill District, 661 S.W. Powerhouse Hixon Drive, Bend; www.bendconcerts. Road; www.sunriversharc.com or 541legendary, previously unreleased "Sunshine Drive, Bend; 541-389-0995 or www. 585-3333. (Story, Page 27) com. Daydream" concert at the1972 Oregon aliveafterfivebend.com. Country Fair; $12.50; 7:30 p.m.; Regal AUTHOR PRESENTATION:Southern OREGON ENCYCLOPEDIAHISTORY MUSIC IN THECANYON:Featuring Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 S.W. Oregon poets Jonah Bornstein and NIGHT:"Seeing the Elephant: Songs Steve Dieffenbacher will read from their Inspired by the Oregon Trail" presented bluegrass and blues from Burnin' Moonlight; Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-382-6347 or free; 5:30-8 p.m.; American Legion www.fathomevents.com. (Story, Page4) work; free; 3-4 p.m.; Dudley's Bookshop by The Quons; free; 7 p.m., doors open Community Park, 850 S.W.Rimrock Way, Cafe, 135 N.W. Minnesota Ave., Bend; at 6 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis SATISFACTION: A ROLLING STONES Redmond; www.musicinthecanyon.com. 54 I -749-2010. School,700 N.W. Bond St.,Bend;541EXPERIENCE: Atribute to the rock band 382-5174 or www.mcmenamins.com. PICNIC INTHEPARK: Featuring featuring authentic costuming and many WILLOW GROVE:The Portland country flamenco guitar player ToddHaaby; free; classic hits; $29-$39 plus fees; 8 p.m., band performs as part of the Turf Tunes "SPRINGSTEEN & I":A screening of a doors open at 7 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 concert series; free; 5-7 p.m.; Sunriver compilation of the personal insights and 6-8 p.m.; Pioneer Park, 450 N.E.Third St., Prineville; 541-447-6909 or www. N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or Homeowners Aquatic & Recreation reflections of Bruce Springsteen fans; crookcountyfoundation.org/events. www.towertheatre.org. (Story, Page 4) Center, 57250 Overlook Road; www. $15; 7:30 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium sunriversharc.com. 16 8 IMAX, 680 S.W. Powerhouse MOUNTAINSTANDARDTIME: The MEGAFAUNA:The progressive rock Colorado bluegrass band performs; free Drive, Bend; 541-382-6347 or www. band from Austin, Texas, performs, with DIRK QUINN BAND:The Philadelphia fathomevents.com. (Story, Page 4) admission; 7 p.m.; McMenamins OldSt. Silvero; $8; 9 p.m.; NtK HQ,1330 N.E. jazz-funk band performs; $7 plus fees Francis School,700 N.W .Bond St.,Bend; First St., Bend; mojavegreen81@gmail. in advance, $12 at the door; 6 p.m.; JIVE COULIS:The Ashland rock band 541-382-5174 or www.mcmenamins.com. com. (Story, Page 6) The Sound Garden,1279 N.E. Second performs, with the Mondegreens; free; St., Bend; 541-633-6804 or www. GIRASOLESFLAMENCO TOUR:Savannah • SUBMIT AN EVENTat www.bendbulletin. 10 p.m.; The Astro Lounge, 939 N.W. thesoundgardenstudio.com. (Story, com/submitinfo or email events@bendbulletin.com. Fuentes performstraditional Spanish Bond St., Bend; 541-388-0116 or www. Deadline is 10 days before publication. Questions? Page 6) Flamencosongsand danceswith singer astroloungebend.com. Contact 541-383-0351.

SUNDAY

Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-977-5637 or www.jazzatjoes.com. SON VOLT:Thealt-country pioneers perform, with Colonel Ford; $26-$37.50, plusfees;8 p.m .,doors openat7 p.m .; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www.towertheatre.org. (Story, Page 7) TEDDY PRESBERG ANDTHE RESISTANCEORGAN TRIO:Psychedeli c jazz from St. Louis, with Garret Brennan; $5; 9:30 p.m.; Silver Moon Brewing & Taproom, 24 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-388-8331 or www. silvermoonbrewing.com. (Story, Page 6)

MONDAY

WEDNESDAY


PAGE 18 • GO! MAGAZINE

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, JULY 26, 2013

planning ahea AUG. 2-8 AUG. 2-3 — MADRASGARDENCLUB GARDEN TOUR: Tour seven private gardens around the Madras/Culver area; garden owners will answer questions; $10 in advance, $15 day of tour, free for children 12 and younger, free for seniors 75 andolder;9a.m.-3 p.m.;Madras Garden Depot, 60 N.W. Depot Road; 541-475-2068. AUG. 2-4 — DESCHUTESCOUNTY FAIR & RODEO: Carnival rides, games, rodeo and concerts; $6-$10 daily passes,$11-$19 season passes,freefor children 5 and younger, $5 for everyone Aug. 4; 10 a.m.-11 p.m. Aug. 2-3, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Aug. 4, concert at 7 p.m., gatesopen at5:30 p.m.;Deschutes County Fair 8 Expo Center, 3800 S.W. Airport Way, Redmond; 541-548-2711 or www.expo.deschutes.org. AUG. 2-4 — FLASHBACK CRUZ:A classic car show of vehicles from 1979 and earlier; event includes display of cars, live music and more; see website for detailed schedule; free for spectators; 2-8 p.m. Aug. 2, 8 a.m.-10 p.m. Aug. 3, 9:30 a.m. cruise to Mt. Bachelor Aug. 4; Drake Park, 777 N.W. Riverside Blvd., Bend; 541-480-5560 or www.centraloregonclassicchevyclub. com. AUG. 3-4 — "HERO'S WELCOME": A puppet show for families who are welcoming home awounded parent from military deployment; proceeds benefit Central Oregon Veterans Outreach; $5 suggested donation; 2 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-312-9626 or www.2ndstreettheater.com. AUG. 7-8 — CROOK COUNTY FAIR: The theme is "Boots, Chaps & Cowboy Hats" featuring a talent show, dance performances, live music, kids zone and more; free admission; 5-10 p.m. Aug. 7,10 a.m.-10 p.m. Aug. 8; Crook County Fairgrounds, 1280 S. Main St., Prineville; 541-447-6575 or www. crookcountyfairgrounds.com. AUG. 2 — SISTERSFARMERS MARKET:3-6 p.m.; Barclay Park, West Cascade Avenue andAsh Street; www. sistersfarmersmarket.com. AUG. 2 — ARCHITECTURE SHOWCASE:Central Oregon Professional Architects Network will display work by local architects as part of the First Friday Gallery Walk; free; 4-9 p.m.; St. Clair Place, 920 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5535. AUG. 2 — FIRST FRIDAY GALLERY WALK:Event includes art exhibit openings, artist talks, live music, wine and food in downtown Bendandthe OldMill District; free; 5-9 p.m.; throughout Bend. AUG. 2— MUSIC IN THECANYON: Featuring funky music with The

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High Street Band will perform at Alive After Five on Aug. 7 in the Old Mill Sweatband; free; 5:30-8 p.m.; American LegionCommunity Park,850S.W . Rimrock Way, Redmond; www. musicint hecanyon.com. AUG. 2— MUSIC IN THEPARK: "Rappin' Rhythms" with Mosley Wotta; free; 6:30 p.m.; Sahalee Park, 7th and B Streets, Madras; www. centraloregonshowcase.com. AUG. 2 — "CHRISHORNER — STORIESFROM THE PELOTON": Featuring stories and a Q-and-A session; $10 plus fees, $3 plus fees for children; 7 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www. cascadegranfondo.com. AUG. 3 — "ART OF THE WEST SHOW" OPENS:Featuring juried art work by Western artists on exhibit through Aug. 17; included in the price of admission; $15adults, $12 ages 65 and older, $9 ages 5-12, free ages 4 and younger; High DesertMuseum, 59800 S.U.S.Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or www. highdesertmuseum.org.

AUG. 3 — PRINEVILLE FARMERS MARKET:Free; 8:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m.; Prineville City Plaza, 387 N.E. Third St.; 541-447-6217 or prinevillefarmersmarket@gmail.com. AUG. 3— SISTERS DOGGIE DASH 8 STROLL:Features a 5K dash and a 3.2K stroll with your dog followed by a canine carnival with pet vendors, food vendors and more; proceeds benefit the Sisters Library Early Reading Program; $25 until Thursday, $30 on event day; 8:30 a.m.; Sisters Park and Recreation District, 1750 W. McKinney Butte Road; 541-549-2091 or www. sistersrecreation.com. AUG. 3 — MADRASSATURDAY MARKET:Freeadmission; 9 a.m.-2 p.m.; Sahalee Park, 7th and B Streets; 541-489-4239. AUG. 3— SUNRIVER QUILT SHOW: The annual outdoor show and sale features over 300 quilts, potholders, table runners and more; free admission; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Village at Sunriver, 57100

Beaver Drive; 541-593-3563 or www. mtnmeadowquilter.org. AUG. 3 — CENTRAL OREGON SATURDAYMARKET:Featuring arts and crafts from local artisans; free admission; 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; parking lot across from Bend Public Library, Parking Lot, 600 N.W. Wall St.; 541-420-9015 or www. centraloregonsaturdaymarket.com. AUG. 3 — DESCHUTES COUNTY FAIR & RODEO PARADE:Features floats representing Central Oregon Americana; free; 10 a.m.; downtown Redmond; 541-548-2711. AUG. 3 — NORTHWEST CROSSING SATURDAYFARMERSMARKET:Free; 10 a.m.-2 p.m.; NorthWest Crossing, Mt. Washington and Northwest Crossing drives, Bend; www.nwxevents.com. AUG. 3 — THEBACKYARD FARMERS MARKET:Free;11 a.m.-4 p.m.; Celebrate the Season, 61515American Lane, Bend; 541-244-2536 or bendsummermarket© gmail.com. AUG. 3 —CASCADELAKESRELAY:

A216-mile and132-mile walking relay with a finish line party featuring music, beer garden andfood; free; noon-8 p.m.; Riverbend Park, 799 S.W.Columbia St., Bend; 541-350-4635 or www. cascaderelays.com. AUG. — 3 THE AUTONOMICS: The Portland progressive rock band performs; $5; 7 p.m.; Parrilla Grill, 635 N.W.14th St., Bend; 541-617-9600 or www. reverbnation.com/theautonomics. AUG. 4 — BUCKAROO BREAKFAST: Featuring sausage,pancakes,eggs, hashbrowns, pan bread, baconand beverages; $8, $5 for children; 6-10 a.m.; Deschutes County Fair & ExpoCenter, 3800 S.W. Airport Way, Redmond; 541-548-2711. AUG. 4 — SUMMER SUNDAY CONCERT: The Loui siana-basedzydecoactCedric Watson & Bijou Creole performs; free; 2:30 p.m., gates open at noon; Les Schwab Amphitheater, 344 S.W.Shevlin Hixon Drive, Bend; 541-318-5457 or www.bendconcerts.com. AUG. 4— SUNRIVER MUSIC FESTIVAL — FESTIVALFAIRE:Themed "Under a Western Sky," with dinner, live and silent auctions and music; $100; 4:30 p.m.; Sunnver Resort Great Hall, 17728 Abbott Drive; 541-593-9310, tickets©sunrivermusic.org or www. sunrivermusic.org. AUG. 4 — BEND STORYTELLING CIRCLE: Features a group of people telling and listening to stories; bring a story under 10 minutes; free; 6-8 p.m.; Higher Ground, 2582 N.E. Daggett Lane; 541-389-1713 or bendstorytelling©gmail.com. AUG. 5 — POP-UPPICNIC: Live music with food and beverages; bring a blanket and canned food for Neighbor Impact; free admission; 5-7 p.m.; TheCosmic Depot, 342 N.E.Clay Ave., Bend; 541-3857478 or www.thecosmicdepot.com. AUG. 6 — REDMOND FARMERS MARKET: Freeadmission; 3-6 p.m.; Centennial Park, Seventh Street and Evergreen Avenue;541-550-0066 or redmondfarmersmarket1©hotmail.com. AUG. 6 — TUESDAY FARMERS MARKET: Freeadmission; 3-7 p.m.; Brookswood Meadow Plaza, 19530Amber Meadow Drive, Bend; 541-323-3370 or farmersmarket@ brookswoodmeadowplaza.com. AUG. 6 — SMARTATTHELIBRARY: Learn what it takes to volunteer to read in the local elementary schools and create a book-inspired art piece; free; 5-7 p.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541-355-5601 or www. getsmartoregon.org. AUG. 6— GREEN TEAM MOVIE NIGHT: A screening of the documentary"A Place at the Table" about the growing epidemic of hunger in America; free; 6:30-8:15 p.m.; First Presbyterian Church, 230 N.E. Ninth St., Bend; 541-815-6504.


THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, JULY 26, 2013

AUG. 7 — BENDFARMERS MARKET:Free admission; 3-7 p.m.; Brooks Alley, between Northwest Franklin Avenue and Northwest Brooks Street; 541-408-4998, bendfarmersmarket@gmail.com or www.bendfarmersmarket.com. AUG. 7 — VOLUNTEERCONNECT BOARDFAIR: The annual event to explore volunteer leadership positions with 25 nonprofit organizations seeking new board members; free; 4-6 p.m.; Bend's Community Center, 1036 N.E. Fifth St.; 541-385-8977 or www. volunteerconnectnow.org. AUG. 7 — ALIVEAFTERFIVE: High Street Band performs, with Rob Fincham and LoVoci; at the north end of Powerhouse Drive; free; 5-8 p.m.; Old Mill District, 661 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-389-0995 or www. aliveafterfivebend.com. AUG. 7 — MUSIC ON THE GREEN: A summer concert series featuring the country band Carrie Cunningham 8 the Six Shooters, food, crafts, retail and more;free;6-7:30 p.m.;Sam Johnson Park, S.W. 15th St. and S.W.Evergreen Ave., Redmond; 541-923-5191 or http:// visitredmondoregon.com. AUG. 7— PICNIC IN THE PARK: Featuring country western band Earl Wear 8 Haywire; free; 6-8 p.m.; Crook County Fairgrounds, 1280 S. Main St., Prineville; 541-447-6909 or www. crookcountyfoundation.org/events. AUG. 8 — "BIG,LOUD & LIVE10": A cinema event featuring the world's most elite marching music ensembles; $18; 3:30 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, 680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-382-6347. AUG. 8 — MUNCH & MUSIC:The reggae band Rootz Underground

performs; with food, arts and crafts booths, children's area and more; dogs prohibited; free; 5:30 p.m.; Drake Park, 777 N.W.RiversideBlvd.,Bend;www. munchandmusic.com.

AUG. 9-15 AUG. 9-11 — SUNRIVERART FAIRE: An art show with over 65 artist booths featuring fine arts and fine crafts; proceeds benefit nonprofits in Central Oregon; free admission; 9:30 a.m.-7 p.m. Aug. 9-10, 9:30 a.m.-4 p.m. Aug. 11; Village at Sunriver, 57100 Beaver Drive;877-269-2580, sunriverartfaire@yahoo.com or www. sunriverartfaire.com. AUG. 9-10 — CROOK COUNTY FAIR:The theme is"Boots, Chaps 8 Cowboy Hats" featuring dance performances, live music, bull riding, barbecue, kids zone and more; free admission; 10 a.m.-10 p.m.; Crook County Fairgrounds, 1280 S. Main St., Prineville; 541-447-6575 or www. crookcountyfairgrounds.com. AUG. 9-10 — COUNTRY FAIR 8[ART SHOW:Featuring a juried art show and sale, silent auction, raffles, music, food, games and more; proceeds are donated to local community support agencies; free; 5-8 p.m. preview Aug. 9, 10 a.m.-3 p.m. Aug. 10; Episcopal Church of the Transfiguration, 68825 N. Brooks Camp Road, Sisters; 541-549-7087. AUG 9 —SUNRIVER MUSIC FESTIVAL POPS CONCERT: The Sunriver Music Festival Orchestra performs a pops concert with Bill Ganz' Western Band; $26-$42, $10 youth; 7:30 p.m.; Summit High School, 2855 N.W. Clearwater Drive, Bend; 541-593-9310, tickets@sunrivermusic.org or www. sunrivermusic.org.

planning ahead AUG. 10— WINGS AND WHEELS: Features an airport open house, fly-in, pancake breakfast, aircraft displays, kids activities, classic cars, raffle and more; raffle proceeds will be donated to a local charity; free; 8 a.m.-3 p.m.; Prineville Airport, three miles southwest of Prineville on state Highway126; 541-416-0805 or www.617.eaachapter. org/photos/flyer.png. AUG. 10— HIGH DESERT CELTIC FESTIVALAND SCOTTISH HIGHLAND GAMES:Event includes Highland games, dancers, food, storytelling, live music and more; $10 adults, $7 seniors and students ages 6-17, free ages 6 and younger; 9 a.m.-6 p.m.; Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center, 3800 S.W. Airport Way, Redmond; www.hdcs.net/festivalpage.html. AUG. 11 — SECONDSUNDAY: Featuring poet, artist and musical performer Mosley Wotta also known as JasonGraham; free;2 p.m .; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-312-1034 or www. deschuteslibrary.org. AUG. 11 — MICHAELFRANTI & SPEARHEAD:The pop-reggae star returns to Bend; $36 plus fees; 6:30 p.m., gates open 5 p.m.; Les Schwab Amphitheater, 344 S.W. Shevlin Hixon Drive, Bend; 541-318-5457 or www. bendconcerts.com. AUG. 11 — SUNRIVER MUSIC FESTIVAL CLASSICALCONCERT I: "Music Moves You" featuring selections from Verdi, Ravel, Bernstein and more; $30-$60, $10 youth; 7:30 p.m.; Sunriver Resort Great Hall, 17728 Abbott Drive; 541-593-9310, tickets©sunrivermusic.org or www. sunrivermusic.org.

GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 19

Submitted photo

A Wild Horse Train-the-Trainer Shortcourse will begin July 30 at the Deschutes County Sheriff's Posse Clubhouse. See below for details.

Talks 8 classes GENEALOGY101:Learn the basics of genealogy and how to use library resources to help in your quest; free; 2 p.m.Saturday;Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541-3 I2-1 050. AARP DRIVERSAFETYCLASSES: Learn the current rules of the road and defensive driving techniques; $14, $12 for AARP members; 9 a.m.4 p.m. with a lunch hour Monday; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. Reed Market Road; 541-388-1133. WILD HORSETRAIN-THE-TRAINER SHORTCOURSE:Learn how to train and gentle wild horses from regional experts; free, $50 attendance deposit; begins July 30 and continues every Tuesday 6-8:30 p.m. through Sept. 14; BLM adoption is final session; registration required by Sunday; Deschutes County Sheriff's Posse Clubhouse,

65432DeschutesPleasantRidge Road, Bend; 541-447-8165 or www. cowildhorse.org. CASA101:Learn about children in foster care in Deschutes County; free; 4-5 p.m.Tuesday;LaM agie Bakery 8 Cafe, 945 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-389-1618 or www. casaofcentraloregon.org. OREGON ENCYCLOPEDIAHISTORY NIGHT:"Seeing the Elephant: Songs Inspired bythe Oregon Trail" presented by The Quons; free; 7 p.m. Tuesday, doors open at 6 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-3825174 or www.mcmenamins.com. WATERYWONDERS: Learn about the health ofthe Deschutes River and discover stream critters; free; 11 a.m.-noon Thursday; McKay Park, 166 S.W. Shevlin Hixon Drive, Bend; 541-383-5592 or www. deschuteschildrensforest.org.

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PAGE 20 • GO! MAGAZINE

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, JULY 26, 2013

outo town Aug.3— Hockey,Wonder Ballroom, * Portland; TF Aug. 4 —TromboneShorty 8 Orleans Avenue with JJGrey &Mofro, Oregon CONCERTS Zoo, Portland; www.zooconcerts.com Through July 27 —Phish, Gorge or 503-226-1561. Amphitheater, George, Wash.; www. Aug. 5 —Lyle Lovett and his Large livenation.com. Band,The Shedd Institute, Eugene; Through July 28 —Northwest World www.theshedd.org or 541-434-7000. ReggaeFestival,Bob's Ranch,Marcola; Aug. 7 —GogolBordello, Roseland www.nwwrf.com or 503-922-0551. Theater, Portland; TW* Through July 28 —What The Festival: Aug. 8 —Fitz and the Tantrums, An electronic music festival featuring the * genre's leading artists; Wolf Run Ranch, Wonder Ballroom, Portland; TF Aug. 8 —Lee Brice, Oregon Zoo, Dufur; www.whatthefestival.com. Portland; www.zooconcerts.com or July26 — An Evening withRandy 503-226-1561. Newman,Oregon Zoo, Portland; www. Aug. 9 —Five Iron Frenzy, Wonder zooconcerts.com or 503-226-1561. * July 26 —SonVolt, WOW Hall, Eugene; Ballroom, Portland; TF Aug. 9-12 —Beloved Sacred Arts www.wowhall.org or 541-687-2746. and Music Festival,Tidewater Falls, July 27 —The Flaming Lips, * Tidewater; www.belovedfestival.com. McMenamins Edgefield, Troutdale; CT Aug. 10 —Michael Franti 8 July27 — Leann Rimes,Oregon Zoo, Spearhead,McMenamins Edgefield, Portland; www.zooconcerts.com or * Troutdale; CT 503-226-156 I. Aug. 10 —ToddSnider's Traveling Folk July 28 —Indigo Girls, Oregon Zoo, Show: Featuring HayesCarH, Shawn Portland; www.zooconcerts.com or MuHins & Sarah Jarosz,Oregon Zoo, 503-226-1561. Portland; www.zooconcerts.com or July 29 —The Cult, Roseland Theater, 503-226-1561. Portland; TW* Aug. 11 —Leon Russell, Aladdin July 29 —The Uncluded(Aesop Rock Theater, Portland; TF* & Kimya Dawson),Wonder Ballroom, * Aug. 13 —Reckless Kelly, Portland; TF McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, * July 30 —Donnathe Buffalo, WOW Portland; CT Hall, Eugene; www.wowhall.org or Aug. 13 — SteelyDan, McMenamins 541-687-2746. Edgefield, Troutdale; SOLDOUT; CT* Aug. 1 —Minus TheBear, Roseland Aug.14 —Yeah Yeah Yeahs, Theater, Portland; TW* * McMenamins Edgefield, Troutdale; CT Aug. 2-3 —Pink Martini, McMenamins Aug. 16 —LosLobosand LosLonely Edgefield, Troutdale; CT* Boys,Oregon Zoo, Portland; www. Aug.2-4 — Oregon Jamboree M usic zooconcerts.com or 503-226-1561. Festival:Featuring Toby Keith, Aug. 16 —Rebelution/Matisyahu, LukeBryan,DwightYoakam; Sweet * Cuthbert Amphitheater, Eugene; TW Home; www.oregonjamboree.com or 888-613-68 I2. Aug. 16-17 —RandyTravis, Chinooks Winds Casino Resort, Lincoln City; Aug. 2-4 —Pickathon:Featuring Feist, CANCELED;www.chinookwindscasino. Andrew Bird, The Devil Makes Three and Divine Fits; Pendarvis Farm, Happy com or 888-624-6228. Valley (near Portland); www.pickathon. Aug. 16-18 —WiHamette Country com. Music Festival:Lineup includes Aug. 2-4 —Watershed Music Festival: Carrie Underwood, Brad Paisley and Darius Rucker; Brownsville; www. Featuring Luke Bryan, Toby Keith and willamettecountrymusicfestival.com or Brad Paisley; Gorge Amphitheater, 541-345-9263. George, Wash.; www.watershedfest. Aug. 17 —Daryl Hall and JohnOates, com. Maryhill Winery & Amphitheater, Aug. 2-11 —OregonFestival of Goldendale, Wash.; www. American Music:Entitled "Hooray maryhillwinery.com or 877-627-9445. For Hollywood: The Songbook at the Movies, 1930-48," the festival kicks Aug. 18 —"A Midsummer's Night with The Monkees":Featuring Michael off a two year celebration of the classic American Songbook in Hollywood;The Nesmith, Micky Dolenzand Peter York; Shedd Institute and Hult Center, Eugene; Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www.theshedd.org or 541-434-7000. www.pcpa.com or 800-273-1530. Aug. 3 —An Evening with Lyle Lovett Aug. 18 —Steven Curtis Chapman, Craterian Theater at The Collier Center and His Large Band,Oregon Zoo, Portland; SOLDOUT;www.zooconcerts. for the Performing Arts, Medford; www. com or 503-226-1561. craterian.org or 541-779-3000. The following is a list of other events "Out of Town."

Courtesy John Keel

The Woods Stage is one of seven unique stages at Pickathon, held Aug. 2-4 at the Pendarvis Farm just outside Portland. The Barr Brothers, shown here, performed on the stage at last year's event.

• Happy Valley welcomes morethan 45 artists to musicfestival By Jenny Wasson The Bulletin

lacing emphasis on innovation and sustainability, Pickathon strives to be the best weekend festival for music lovers and families. Now entering its 15th year, the annual music festival kicks off Aug. 2-4 at the Pendarvis Farm in Happy Valley, just outside Portland. The festival features more than 45 artists on seven stages. Headliners for 2013 include Feist, Andrew Bird, Divine Fits and The Devil Makes Three. The festival also features the world's largest tension fabric structure, accordingto a news release.Using more than 12 miles of rope and several hundred-thousand yards of fabric, the structures provide ample shade during hot, sunny days. Pickathon prides itself on being a f amily-friendly event and this year features new "Kids! At Pickathon" programming, including classes,workshops and kid-centric performers. Children can go on an edible and medicinal plant walk, try blacksmithing, make various arts and crafts or watch the Saturday

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Morning Cartoon Show with The Cardboard Songsters, back by popular demand. Organizers of Pickathon are also leading the way in their approach to sustainability. In 2010, they eliminated all plastic beverage containers. This year, Pickathon will once again be "the only large outdoor music festival in the United States to minimize all single-use cups, dishware and utensils," according to a news release. Patrons can bring their own dishware or use a token system for Pickathon dishes. The festival also uses renewable energy to power its stages and lights and encourages alternative transportation. Weekend passesare $260 and allvehicles require a parking pass that costs $65. Children ages 12and younger are admitted free. One-day passes arealso available for $130 each day. Participants eager to set up camp can purchase an early Thursday pass for $75. For more information and to purchase tickets, visit www.pickathon.com. — Reporter:541-383-0350, j Mrasson@bendbulletin.com


out of town

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, JULY 26, 2013

GO! MAGAZINE PAGE 21

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Courtesy Benny Mistak

RJD2is one of the performers at What The Festival at the Wolf Run Ranch in Dufur. Kicking off today, the electronic music festival runs through Sunday. Aug. 20 —Melvins, Wonder Ballroom, * Portland; TF Aug. 20 —Rebelution/Matisyahu/CoHie Buddz,Britt Pavilion, Jacksonville; SOLD OUT; www.brittfest.org or 800-882-7488. Aug. 20 —SummerSlaughter Tour, Roseland Theater, Portland; TW* Aug. 21 —Brandi Carlile, Britt Pavilion, Jacksonville; www.brittfest.org or 800-882-7488. Aug. 23 —E-40, Roseland Theater, Portland;

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CT:CascadeTickets, www.cascade tickets.com or 800-514-3849

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Aug. 23 —Regeneration Tour2013: A Flock of Seagulls, Erasure's AndyBell and Howard Jones,Britt Pavilion, Jacksonville; www. brittfest.org or 800-882-7488. Aug. 23-25 —Eugene Celebration, downtownEugene;www.eugenecelebration. com or 541-681-4108. Aug. 24 —Cake, Britt Pavilion, Jacksonville; www.brittfest.org or 800-882-7488. Aug. 24 —Willie Nelson & Family, Maryhill Winery & Amphitheater, Goldendale, Wash.; www.maryhillwinery.com or 877-627-9445.

LECTURES 8K COMEDY Aug. 9-10 —Williams 8 Ree, Chinooks Winds Casino Resort, Lincoln City; www. chinookwindscasi no.com or888-624-6228. Sept. 5 —Fred Armisen, McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; CT* Sept. 7 —"An Evening with Lily Tomlin," Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www. pcpa.com or 800-273-1530. Sept. 8 —Dennis Miller, Britt Pavilion, Jacksonville; CANCELED;www.brittfest.org or 800-882-7488. Sept. 13-14 —Sylvia Browne, Chinooks Winds Casino Resort, Lincoln City; www. chinookwindscasi no.com or888-624-6228

SYMPHONY 8K OPERA Aug. 2 —Mei-Ann Chen/Jon Kimura Parker/ Britt Orchestra,Britt Pavilion, Jacksonville; www.brittfest.org or 800-882-7488. Aug. 2, 4 — "Otello": Opera by Giuseppe

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Verdi; part of Portland SummerFest's"Opera in the Park" series; free; Portland; www. portlandsummerfest.org. Aug. 3 —Mei-Ann Chen/lan Parker/Britt Orchestra,Britt Pavilion, Jacksonville; www. brittfest.org or 800-882-7488. Aug. 9 — Teddy Ahrams/Yuja Wang/Britt Orchestra,Britt Pavilion, Jacksonville; www. brittfest.org or 800-882-7488. Aug. 10 —TeddyAbrams/Augustin Hadelich/ Britt Orchestra,Britt Pavilion, Jacksonville; www.brittfest.org or 800-882-7488. Aug. 16 —David Danzmayr/Lisa Smirnova/ Britt Orchestra,Britt Pavilion, Jacksonville; www.brittfest.org or 800-882-7488. Aug. 17 —David Dansmayr/Jennifer Koh/ Britt Orchestra,Britt Pavilion, Jacksonville; www.brittfest.org or 800-882-7488. Aug. 18 —SymphonyPops/Project Trio/Britt Orchestra,Britt Pavilion, Jacksonville; www. brittfest.org or 800-882-7488.

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THEATER 8K DANCE Through Aug. 4 —"The Tamer Tamed": Staged reading; written as a sequel to "The TamingoftheShrew" by Shakespeare's contemporary John Fletcher; presented bythe Portland Shakespeare Project; Alder Stage, Portland Repertory Theatre, Portland; www. portlandshakes.org or 503-313-3048. ThroughAug.4— "The Tamingofthe Shrew":Shakespeare comedy presented by the Portland Shakespeare Project; Alder Stage, Artists Repertory Theatre, Portland; www. portlandshakes.org or 503-313-3048.

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PAGE 22 • GO! MAGAZINE

From previous page

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THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, JULY 26, 2013

Through Oct. 6 —MaryhiH Museumof Art:The following exhibits are currently on Through Oct. 11 —OregonShakespeare display: "Eanger Irving Couse on the Columbia Festival:"A Streetcar Named Desire" River" (through Sept.15), "Outdoor Sculpture (through Nov. 2), "The Tenth Muse," "My Fair Exhibition" (through Oct. 6), "Kenneth Lady" (through Nov. 3) and "The Taming of Standhardt: Impressions" (through Nov. 15) the Shrew" (through Nov. 3) are currently and "Arthur Higgins: Prints" (through Nov.15); running at the Angus Bowmer Theatre; "The Goldendale, Wash.; www.maryhillmuseum.org Unfortunates" (through Nov. 2), "King Lear" or509-773-3733. (through Nov. 3) and "The Liquid Plain" Through December —"The Sea & Me":A new (through Nov. 3) are currently running at children's interactive exhibit; Oregon Coast Thomas Theatre; "Cymbeline" (through Oct. Aquarium, Newport; www.aquarium.org or 11), "The Heart of Robin Hood" (through 541-867-3474. Oct. 12) and "A Midsummer Night's Dream" (through Oct.13) are currently running on the Aug. 1-Sept. 8 —"Behind the Shoji": Show Elizabethan Stage; Ashland; www.osfashland. and sale of Japanese-inspired arts and crafts; org or 800-219-8161. Portland Japanese Garden, Portland; www. Aug. 2-11 —"The Music Man": 1957 musical japanesegarden.com or 503-223-1321. by Meredith Wilson; part of the 2013 Shedd Aug.10and Sept. 21 —TheShire Tours: A Theatricals season; The Shedd Institute, unique landscape in the Columbia River Gorge; Eugene; www.theshedd.org or 541-434-7000. created by architect John Yeon; Portland; 541-346-4363. EXHIBITS Aug. 17 and Sept. 14 —Watzek House Tours:Oregon's newest National Historic Through July 28 —"The Earth Laughsin Landmark; oneofJohnYeon's mostrenowned Flowers":Featuring scenic, close-ups and architectural works; Portland; 541-346-4363. artistic renderings of wild flowers from the Sept. 14-Nov. 15 —"Windowsto Heaven: Columbia Gorge area; Columbia Center for the Treasures from the Museum of Russian Arts, Hood River; www.columbiaarts.org or Icons":Featuring 25 historically significant 541-387-8877. Russian icons that date from1590 to the Through July 28 —Jordan Schnitzer Museum present; Maryhill Museum of Art, Goldendale, of Art:The following exhibits are currently on Wash.; www.maryhillmuseum.org or display: "Su Kwak LightJourney:An Odyssey 509-773-3733. in Paint" (through July 28) and "New American Acquisitions" (through Dec. 29); Eugene; jsma. Sept. 18-20 —0-Tsukimi (Moonviewing Festival):Featuring a candle-lit tea ceremony, uoregon.edu or 541-346-3027. live music, samples of tea and saki and Through Aug.18 —"Desert Air: Photographs seasonal foods; Portland JapaneseGarden, by George Steinmetz":Featuring images of Portland; www.japanesegarden.com or the world's deserts by award-winning National 503-542-0280. Geographic photographer George Steinmetz; Oregon Museum of Science and Industry, MISCELLANY Portland; www.omsi.edu or800-955-6674. Through July 28 —Oregon Brewers Through Aug. 25 —Portland Art Museum: The following exhibits are currently on display: Festival,Tom McCall Waterfront Park, Portland; www.oregonbrewfest.com. "Fierce: Animal Life from the Collection" Through July 28 —SolWest Fair, Grant (through Aug. 25), "Cyclepedia: Iconic Bicycle County Fairgrounds, John Day; www. Design" (through Sept. 8), "Man/Woman: solwest.org or 541-575-3633. Gaston Lachaise" (through Sept. 8) and "Ceramics of the Islamic World: The Ottis Through Aug. 29 —Top Down:Rooftop Collection" (through Oct. 27); Portland; www. Cinema:Movies screen Thursdays atop the portlandartmuseum.org or 503-226-2811. Hotel deLuxe's parking structure; Portland; www.nwfilm.org or 503-221-1156. Through Sept. 8 —"Mummies of the World: The Exhibition":The largest exhibition of Aug. 2-4 —Shaniko Days, Shaniko; mummies and related artifacts ever assembled; 541-489-3434. Oregon Museum of Science and Industry, Aug. 2-4 —Ukulele Festival, Oakridge Portland; www.omsi.edu or800-955-6674. Lodge 8 Guest House, Oakridge; www. Through Sept. 9 —"Sinners & Saints: oakridge-lodge.com or 541-782-4000. Indelicate Stories of Emigrants in theWest": Aug. 9-10 —Klamath Falls Great Northwest A collection of stories drawn from first-person PRCA Rodeo,Hancock Event Center, Klamath accounts are woven into narratives that Falls; www.greatnorthwestprcarodeo.com or highlight the morals and values of pioneers, 541-884-3280. early settlers and early inhabitants of the Aug. 17 —"Peaks & Valleys: A Square Columbia Plateau; National Historic Oregon Trail Interpretive Center, Baker City; www.blm. Dance,"Flora School Education Center, Flora; www.floraschool.org or gov/or/oregontrail or 541-523-1843. 541-828-7010. Through Sept. 21 —"Object Focus: The Aug. 24 —FAREWalk for Food Allergy, Bowl,"Museum of Contemporary Craft, Portland; www.museumofcontemporarycraft. Memorial Park, Wilsonville; www. foodallergywalk.org or 424-672-3261. org or 503-223-2654. Through Sept. 21 —"Soundforge": Installation Aug. 25 —Car Show at The Oregon combines video, audio and sculptural elements Garden:Featuring valuable classic and custom automobiles from private collectors in an interactive piece that explores forging throughout the Northwest, live music, metal as an act of fabrication and percussion; beer, wine and food;The Oregon Garden, Museum of Contemporary Craft, Portland; Silverton; www.oregongarden.org or www.museumofcontemporarycraft.org or 503-874-8100. 503-223-2654.


GO! MAGAZINE PAGE 23

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, JULY 26, 2013

gaming

no

1s OI'1c a vance Ii

• Latest expansion of 'Civilization V' wins with new culture, diplomacy mechanics

Nintendo/The Associated Press

"Animal Crossing: New Leaf" is the top handheld game for July.

By Adam Biessener

TOP 10

Game Informer Magazine

w

o rl d - c o n q u e r i n g wargames are nearly as old as the video game medium. Dozens o f p o l i shed variations on the theme have entertained us for decades. Such expansive empires are exceptions to the rule of human history, though. Modeling the kind of soft power through which Venice built its trade hegemony and Denmark stamped an outsized influence on European politics has historically been much more difficult. "Civilization V: Brave New World" pushes the latest incarnation of the legendary strategy franchise in that direction with great success. "Brave New World" follows in many "Civilization" entries' footsteps by pulling out themes of human history and crafting around them, rather than embarking on a Quixotic quest to accurately model unbelievably complexinter-

HANDHELDGAMES The editors of Game Informer Magazine rank the top handheld

games forthe month of July: 1. "Animal Crossing: New Leaf"

(3DS) 2. "Shin MegamiTensei IV" (3DS) 3. "Limbo" (Vita) 4. "Donkey Kong Returns 3-D"

(3DS) Mcclatchy-Tribune News Service

"Civilization V: Brave New World" fleshes out the peaceful side of the human-history strategy epic with new diplomatic options and a revamped culture war. dio, and mash end turn" cultural victory. Segregating cultural Great Person generation from the others is a wonderful change that lets one to three cities focus on that, and removes the punishing need for cultural nations to focus exclusively on artist specialists. The

a ctions. In reality, the Unit- R E V I EW ed Nations doesn't meet every 60 years to debate two proposals that could include a global embargo on a major power, but that implementation makes a vastly more fun and interesting game mechanic.

Culture and diplomacy The revamped cultural victory path is the best part of "Brave New World." Splitting the new tourism rating off of the existing empirewide culture score lets empires pursuing cultural hegemony engage in a slew of new interactions that otherwise-occupied nations can safely ignore while focusing on their own goals. Saturating the world with explorers digging up ancient artifacts once Archaeology isdiscovered creates new diplomatic pressures and production priorities that are more fun to navigate than the old "build a bunch of Museums, beeline for Ra-

u

'CIVILIZATION V: BRAVE NEWWORLD' 9.25 (out of 10) PC

2K Games, Firaxis

cu l t ural endgame is much

better delineated inthetech tree, so a culture-pursuing empire develops quite differently than any other as it must invest in expensive late-game buildings to multiply its tourism score. The addition of trade routes is another change that encourages you to look outside your borders through a lens other than conquest. Crushing barbarians is more important when they roam neutral territory between your e mpire and a trading partner, since that extremely expensive and valuable route can beeasily destroyed by any unopposed military. Having your trade lines cut by a hostile civilization is devastating. Fighting over control of critical shipping lanes is a welcome addition to combat, which previously took place almost exclusively around fortified cities. The diplomatic victory improvements areless ofa resounding suc-

ESRB rating: E

cess. Winning a world-leader vote still ends up being a simple matter ofbuying off as many city-states as possible more often than not, but the addition of the World Congress creates an exciting new vector for peaceful interactions for any kind of playthrough. Sending diplomats around the world to procure votes for a pet project is great fun, and a powerful way to shape the world without going to war.

Still the same strategy game Like "Gods 8z Kings" before it, "Brave New World's"greatest success isn't in its new systems. The trick that Firaxis has managed for a second time is in not upsetting the existing game. The World Congress is not so powerful that warmongers have to drop everything they're doing to deal with it, and tourism is not an overwhelm-

ing tide of city-flipping offensive culture that forces you to abandon your space program to combat its effects. I don't enjoy the poor interfacefor swapping Great Works with rival empires, but that entire

minigame can be completely ignored by any ruler not racing for a cultural victory — and following that path isn't nearly as timeconsuming as managing a war, so culture-pushing leaders have the attention to spare. Multiplayer is dramatically improved in " Brave New World." Firaxis badly needs to release the "Pitboss" server software as a standalone program so that one Steam client doesn't need to be dedicated to running the server instead of the game — which the company has said is coming — but the reworked architectureunder the hood works much better in online games. I have few complaints about this second and final expansion to "Civilization V." My favorite game in recent years is better than ever thanks to "Brave New World." The way Firaxis has fleshed out the thin areas of the game without screwing up the many things it does right is impressive. Peaceful no longer means passive.

5. "Hotline Miami" (Vita) 6. "Shin Megami Tensei: Devil

Summoner — SoulHackers" (3DS) 7. "Guacamelee" (Vita) 8. "Thomas WasAlone" (Vita) 9. "Prolect X Zone" (3DS) 10. "MuramasaRebirth" (Vita) Game lnformer Magazine

TOP PAID APPS ANDROID 1. "Where's My Mickey?" 2. "Crazy Taxi" 3. "Tiny Thief" 4. "Monsters University" 5. "Scribblenauts Remix" APPLE

1. "Where's My Mickey?XL" 2. "Minecraft — Pocket Edition" 3. "iStoryTime Turbo Movie

Storybook Deluxe" 4. "Sprinkle Islands" 5."Doc McStuffins: Time For Your Check Up!" McClatchy-Tribune News Service


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GO! MAGAZINE PAGE 25

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, JULY 26, 2013

movies

sam

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• 'TheWolverine' goes deeper into thestory of the immortal mutant from X-Menlore o be, or not" .. . l et's make it "To slash, or not to slash." Because this latest X-Men movie is a lot more existential than r ecent i nstallments in this comic book series have been. "The Wolverine" is nothing if not ambitious — a moody, haunted tale of Logan the Wolverine

&»

(Hugh Jackman) coping with his ghosts and settling old debts — in Japan, no less. It's the perfect country for a guy who appreciates

a good, sharp blade. And if t h i s J ames Mangold ( "Walk the Line") take on t h e superhero franchise stumbles up blind alleys, overreaches and turns long and repetitious by its bloody-bland predictable t h i rd act, at least it g i ves Jackman something worth chewing over for the first 90 minutes. We first see our man Logan in solitary, stuck in a well in a Japanese POW camp at the end of World War II. His captors panic at the sight of a couple of B-29 bombers,and one frees the American prisoners, very uncharacteristic behavior historically, but h e y, this is comic book history. Logan shields the guard when the big blast comes because this turns out to be Nagasaki, where the second atomic bomb was detonated to force Japan's surrender. Decades later, the immortal mutant with the Adamantium knives in his fists is summoned to the side of the man he saved by a martial arts pixie (Rila Fukushima). "Eternity can be a curse," the dying old man (Hal Yamanouchi), now a billionaire, speculates. "A man can run out of things to live for." He offers his savior the chance to lose his immortality, to live a normal life span without the super-healing powers and strength that make the very idea that Wolverine would have ever been a prisoner of war absurd.

Ben Rothstein/20th Century Fox/The Associated Press

Hugh Jackman returns to his starring role as the title character in "The Wolverine."

ROGERMOORE

"The Wolverine" 122 minutes

PG-13, for sequences of intense sci-fi action and violence, somesexuality andlanguage Wolverine finds himself mixed up in the succession between the dying man and his heirs. The Japanese mob, the Yakuza, is trying to nab the supermodel-thin granddaughter Mariko (Tao Okamoto), and Wolverine chases her cross-countryto protecther. Wolverine takes his place within Japanese culture as a Ronin, a

loner, a samurai without a leader or purpose. He's dreaming a lot about the mutant he loved but had to kill (Famke Janssen), and fretting over the dying old man's doctor (Svetlana Khodchenkova), a fork-tongued devil so thin she makes Mariko consider a diet. And then his powers start to fail him. Mangold sets up an interesting premise — an immortal tired of living faced with mortality. How brave can Wolverinebe when the bullets leave permanent holes, when every arrow fired by a ninja could kill and every slashing-fight against samurai sword-wielding foes could be his last'? Then the movie stumbles into the curse of the feeble villains — none worthy of Wolverine's knives — and the trap of endless fights. The action sequences are

grimly violent and entertaining, but there is no one written or cast in this worthy of his best efforts. Jackman has great presence in this role, brooding, sulking, wisecracking to alarmed airport metal detector operators. "Hip replacement." This " Wolverine" g et s o u r hopes up — and falls short. If you're the sort who stays through the credits an d s w oons over whatever variation on the "Nobody ever dies in Marvel-land" the tease for the next film promises, this is for you. For anybody with a more demanding palette, even of a summer comic book movie, "The Wolverine" may leave you wanting the higher-minded movie this one promised to be — for a while. — Roger Moore is afilm critic for McClatchy-Tribune News Service.

Jackman'srole Hugh Jackman, the 44-

year-old actor, plays the Marvel mutant for the sixth time in "The Wolverine," which opens this week. A seventh

appearance ("X-Men: Days of Future Past") is being filmed in Montreal.

Jackman's foray into the world of Wolverine was unveiled in the 2000 film "X-

Men." He reprised the character in "X2" (2003), "X-Men: The Last Stand" (2006) and "X-Men Origins: Wolverine" (2009). The Australian actor also made acameoappearance in the 2011 prequel "XMen: First Class." — The OrangeCounty Register


movies

PAGE 26 • GO! MAGAZINE

a

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, JULY 26, 2013

a a e ' w i ns This 'To Do List' is raunchy, funny eomie imin

person can come of age at any time. But in the movies, a lot of that growing up seems packed into the summer months. Especially for boys. That's when a lad can hang out on the beach, come to some sort of arrangement with girls and endure entirely too much of his c losely-observed family for h i s own good. "The Way Way Back" is a seminostalgic coming-of-age dramedy from the folks who wrote "The Descendants." It's about a shy, put-upon lad, his long-suffering mother, the mom's difficult new beau and the vacation where a lot of theseissues come toa head. Liam James is 14-year-old Duncan, whose relationship with Trent (Steve Carell), the well-off creep who mother Pam (Toni Collette) is living with, is summed up on the driveto Trent's beach house. Size yourself up, Trent says, and tell me how you'd rank on a scale of one to 10. The kid shrugs, hems and haws, and says "a six." "I think you're a three." Trent is a bully, a guy moving this relationship with Pam and Duncan and Trent's daughter from a previous marriage into "a family." A long stay at his house on the Massachusetts shore, where Trent has old friends and "history," will be the test. A boozy, profane neighbor, Betty (Allison Janney), and thefun couple Joan (Amanda

A

Peet) and Kip (Rob Corddry), ensure that the kids will get an eyeful of adults reliving their more irresponsible past — the '80s, with pot, beer and infidelity in the mix. Lovely Susanna (AnnaSophia Robb) catches Duncan's eye. But it's not until he falls into the clutches of slackersmart-aleck Owen (Sam Rockwell) that things look up. Owen lures Duncan into working at Water Wizz, the aged water park that he manages — whenever he manages to be in the mood to manage it. Duncan learns to ogle bikini babes on the water slides and how to sarcastically win over that special someone — in Owen's

case, Caitlyn (Maya Rudolph). Over the course of a few weeks, Duncan'ssecret job teaches him his true self-worth. What actors turned Oscar-winning screenwriters (and now direc-

)

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o many "lose my virginity over th e s ummer" comedies, from ~t"Amerii ti ti i ~ tt c~~ ??i i t can Pie" to i"Superbad," "Can't a Hardly Wait" t o " G irl N ext Door." But aside from the hilarious "Twilight Saga," how many have told that torrid tale from the girl's point of view? "The To Do List"is asummer romantic comedy dedicated to rectifying that imbalance in a single stroke. It follows a methodical, college-bound teen (Aubrey Plaza) who hurls herself at this "problem" through a summer course of study. And what follows is a raunchy romp, a "Bridesmaids" to the "Hangovers" of too many hormonal boy movies about taking that "Virginity Hit." W riter-director M agg i e Carey has assembled a cast that's too old to be playing high schoolers, set her story in the early 1990s and come up with a rude, sometimes uproarious comedy that is as filthy as "American Pie," with just a hint of that film's sentimental sweetness. Plaza, of TV's "Parks and Recreation" fearlessly puts it all out there as a teen who's put out that she hasn't "put out." Her Brandy is nerdy, needy, and more funny/skinny than sexy-thin in a swimsuit. And she is obsessed with making lists. All it takes is a little peer pressure from her supposedly more experienced pals (the hilarious Alia Shawkat and Sarah Steele) to make her add "losing it" to her prep-for-college list — r ight after "buy shower shoes." F ilthy F i o n a (Shawkat) knows every form of sex and every euphemism for it that 1993 Boise, Idaho, can provide. Brandy, ignoring the insults of her oversexed sis (Rachel Bilson, perfectly cast) and clueless concern of her p arents (Clark Gregg and Connie Britton), takes a turn toward sin and away from the Mormon kids' graduation night party ~

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Liam James stars as14-year-old Duncan in the drama-comedy "The Way Way Back."

ROGERMOORE

The performances and the ready supply of one-liners make this an amusing look

at a new generation getting "The WayWay Back" 103 minutes PG-13, for thematic elements,

language,some sexualcontentand brief drug material tors) Nat Faxon and Jim Rash have done is mash up assorted vacation comedies — especially"Meatballs" — into a mother-son vs. mother's boyfriend melodrama. Rockwell has the amusing goof-off mentor role that Bill Murray played at the beginning of his career, and Collette and Carell et al act out some of the darker corners of "Beaches" and "Little Miss Sunshine." B oth w r i t er-directors h a v e chewy bit-acting roles as water park employees in the film, which further adds to the scruffy, offhanded feel of"The Way Way Back." Trent has restored an ancient station wagon, with its rearmost rear-facing "way, way back" seat giving the film its title. And in this beach town, '80s music is still the rage. The screenwriters try to avoid writing a period piece about their fondly-remembered past, but don't quite pull it off. Like"The Kings of Summer,"the kids often take a back seat to the adult players here, with Carell, in a

lost down memory lane. rare bad-guy role, creating a fullyformed jerk with none of the broad caricature touches that made his career. Collette makes Pam a pitiable figure — smart enough to see who Trent is, too broken to think she deserves any better. Janney is broad and loud and never funnier than when Betty is telling people how to talk to her son with the lazy eye: "Just stare at the bridge of his nose. That's what I do." And Rockwell, playing another

in a long line of larger-than-life eccentrics, turns the frustrated standup comic Owen into a slacker icon — saying "Don't let the Dahmer glasses fool you" when introducing Duncan to the concession stand

clerk (Jim Rash), and dispensing random bits of quirky advice. "The Way Way Back" tries too hard tobe all things to all audiences — kids learning about love and life, adults seeing themselves, boozily nostalgic for their youth. But the performances and theready supply of one-liners make this an amusing look at a new generation getting lost down memory lane. — Roger Mooreis a film critic for McClatchy-Tribune IVews Service.

ROGERMOORE

"The To Do List" 106 minutes

R, for pervasive, strong, crude and sexual content including graphic dialogue, drug andalcohol use, and language — all involving teens the moment she finishes her valedictorian speech. Ever on task, she keeps sweet and worshipful Cameron (Johnny Simmons) as a sexual experience backup. But her first day as lifeguard at the local pool, she picks out the hunky Rusty (Scott Porter) and plans her summer's big finish. Until then, she checks positions, petting variations and foreplay/fooling around items off her sexual "To Do List." Plaza is brilliant at p l aying someone smart and yet blithely incompetent at the social-sexual demands of her peers. "So many 'jobs,'"she astutely observes as Fiona runs down that corner of carnality. Plaza and Bilson make believably shrill sibling r i vals, with the bombshell Bilson scoring laugh after laugh with her putdowns. Bill Hader is the slacker manager of the pool where Brandy tests her methods, Christopher MintzPlasse is the would-be player who long ago stole the heart of poor Brandy-pal Wendy (Steele), and Andy Samberg has a cameo as a rocker wannabe. Like most such comedies, the one-big-idea tends to wear thin and Carey struggles to keep this bouncing along as it t r averses that tightrope between tee-hee and tasteless. But the blank-faced Plaza never lets up and never lets on that Brandy is on anything less than a quest: for life experience, liberation and — dare we hope it'? — love. — Roger Mooreis a film critic for McClatchy-Tribune IVettrs Service.


movies

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, JULY 26, 2013

of migrating misfit creatures embark on a hilarious quest to reunite a human baby with his tribe. Featuring an all-star voice cast,including RayRomano,John Here's what's showing on Central Leguizamo andDenis Leary. The2002 film kicks off the Twilight Cinema series. "Ice Oregon movie screens. For Age" screens at duskTuesday onthe lawn showtimes, see listings on Page31. at the Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic & Recreation Center. Games and activities begin at 6:30 p.m. This free event is open to the public. For more information, Reviews by RogerEbe/t, Richard Roeper or contact 541-585-3333. (PG) RogerMoore,unlessotherwisenoted. — Synopsis from 20th Century Fox "Madagascar" —Spoiled bytheir upbringing with no ideawhat wild life is HEADS UP really like, four animals from NewYork "2 Guns" —AcademyAward winner Denzel Central Zoo escape,unwittingly assisted by four absconding penguins, and find Washington andMark Wahlberg leadan themselves in Madagascar,amonga all-star cast in "2 Guns," anexplosive bunch of merry lemurs. Featuring an action film that tracks two operatives from all-star voice cast, including BenStiller, competing bureauswhoare forced on the run together. But there is abig problemwith Chris Rock andDavid Schwimmer. Part of their unique alliance: Neither knows that the the Twilight Cinemaseries, the 2005 film screens at dusk Thursday at TheVillage other is anundercover federal agent. The at Sunriver. Gamesand activities begin film opens locally Aug. 2with afewearly at 6:30 p.m. This free event is open to the screenings Thursday. (R) public. For more information, contact 541— Synopsis from film's website 585-3333. (PG) "Happy FeetTwo" —Sequel to the Oscar— Synopsis from IMDB winning 2006 film, with the Penguin Nation "Racing Stripes" —Azebra raised on now trapped at the bottom of a giant ice afarm in Kentucky dreams of becoming bowl. It has muchchoreography, many a racehorse in this heartwarming tale musical numbers ranging from Queen to that combines live action and computer Puccini, a subplot involving krill, and two animation. Featuring the voices of Frankie many penguins standing around looking Muniz, Mandy Moore, Michael Clarke too interchangeable for characters in a 3-D animated movie. Part of the "Summer Duncan, Jeff Foxworthy, Joe Pantoliano, David Spade,Snoop Dogg, Dustin Movie Express," this film screens at10 Hoffman andWhoopi Goldberg. Part of a.m.TuesdayandW ednesday atRegal the "Summer Movie Express," this 2005 Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX in Bend.Cost film screens at10 a.m. Tuesdayand is$1.Rating: Twoandahalfstars.99 Wednesday at RegalOld Mill Stadium16 & minutes. (PG) —Ebe/t IMAX in Bend.Cost is $1. (PG) "Ice Age" —Heading south to avoid — Synopsis from IVarnerBros.Pictures a bad case of global frostbite, a group

O N LOCA L S CRE E N S

GO! MAGAZINE PAGE 27

clandestine war on terror is now globally entrenched. Far from ending, the film argues, the fight has spread and begun breeding an increasing hatred of the United States that would havedelighted Osama bin Laden.Because itisa hidden war, there are few congressional restraints on how it is conducted. The bearer of these bad tidings, Jeremy Scahill, who wrote the movie with David Riker, is a national security correspondent for The Nation and the author of the recently published "Dirty Wars: The World Is a Battlefield" and "Blackwater: The Rise of the World's Most Powerful Mercenary Army." Scahill, 38, narrates the film like a hard-boiled gumshoe following leads in a film noir. The cinematography includes some noirish touches, and there is somber music by the Kronos Quartet. Like "Inside Job," Charles Ferguson's incendiary expose of Wall Street malpractice,"Dirty Wars" cuts to the chase. This film was not given a Ron Koeberer /The Weinstein Company/The Associated Press star rating. 87 minutes. (no MPAArating) Ariana Neal, left, and Michael B. Jordan star in nFruitvale Station." — StephenHolden,TheNew York Times "Far OutIsn't Far Enough:TheTomi Ungerer Story" —Fewartists are as far "Reservoir Dogs" — Theyweresix perfect Smurf-essence. Butwhen hediscovers removed in persona from the art that made strangers assembled to pull off the perfect that only a real Smurf can give him what them famous asTomi Ungerer, the Frenchcrime, but whentheir simple robbery he wants, Gargamel kidnapsSmurfette. explodes into bloody ambush, the ruthless Returning cast includes Neil Patrick Harris, born illustrator and writer came tofame killers realize one of them is apolice Jayma Mays, Sofia Vergara, Katy Perry as in the1950s and '60s with award-winning children's picture books — "TheThree informer. This1992 Tarantino film screens Smurfette and HankAzaria as Gargamel. Robbers," "One, TwoWhere's My Shoe?" Saturday andSundayat the Volcanic The film opens locally Wednesday. (PG) "Flat Stanley" and manyothers. But he had Theatre Pub inBend. Cost is $4. (R) — Synopsis from film's website a sideline career — erotica. And onceit — Synopsis from MiramaxFilms became known that this beloved children's "The Smurfs 2" —In this sequel to book author — contemporary of Maurice Sendak andJules Feiffer, and almost as the hybrid live action/animated family WHAT'S NEW famous — had written "The Underground blockbuster comedy "TheSmurfs," the Sketchbook" and the like, Americans in evil wizard Gargamel creates acouple "Dirty Wars" —The thesis of Richard particular were shocked. And his kid-lit of mischievous Smurf-like creatures Rowley's pessimistic, grimly outraged career fizzled out. called the Naughties that he hopeswill and utterly riveting documentary "Dirty Wars" is that America's largely let him harness the all-powerful, magical Continued next page

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movies

PAGE 28 • GO! MAGAZINE

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, JULY 26, 2013

From previous page

unriVer nS7'r e/iVu 36TH SEASON — AUGUST 9-27, 2073

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"Far Out Isn't Far Enough" is anengaging documentary about this playful artist, his career and his determination to go his ownway. Filmmaker BradBernstein reveals a survivor of the German occupation of his Alsatian town (his own housebarracked Germantroops), a hip artist who migrated to NewYork during the Golden Age of lllustration (the1950s) and conquered children's lit but was neversatisfied with the pablum that the mediumseemedto demand. Bernstein uses animation to spice up a fairly routine artist's biography documentary. Like many such films, the subject seems more fascinating than "FarOut Isn't Far Enough's" treatment of him. Rating: Twoand a half stars. 98 minutes. (no MPAA rating) — Moore "Fruitvale Station" — "Fruitvale Station" is a tragedy as fresh astoday's headlines, as moving as losing someone close to you. A retelling of the last day in the life of OscarGrant, a young black man gunned down by atransit cop in front of scores of witnesses in Oakland onNewYear's Day in 2009, RyanCoogler's often wrenching film begins with that death — captured on cellphone video — andtakes us back through a life of hottempered blunders but compassionate potential, an ex-con who might haveturned the corner just as it all came to anend for him. Michael B. Jordan ("Red Tails") is never less than riveting asOscar, and he has to be.Coogler's film is built on the mundane, routine actions of an ordinary New Year's Eve. But Coogler and Jordan's greatest achievements are in humanizing astatistic, putting blemishes on anicon — Oscarand his case becamenotorious — and letting us grieve for the tragedythat happenedandthe potential that was lost that fateful NewYear's at Oakland's Fruitvale Station. Rating: Three stars. 90 minutes. (R) — Moore "The To Do List" — Somany"lose my virginity over the summer" comedies, from "American Pie" to "Superbad," "Can't Hardly Wait" to "Girl Next Door." But aside from the hilarious "The Twilight Saga," how manyhavetold that torrid tale from the girl's point of view? "The ToDo List" is a summer romantic comedydedicated to rectifying that imbalance in asingle stroke. It follows a methodical, college-bound teen (Aubrey Plaza) who hurls herself at this "problem" through a summer course of study. And what follows is a raunchy romp, a"Bridesmaids" to the "Hangovers" of too manyhormonal boy movies about taking that "Virginity Hit." Writer-director Maggie Careyhasassembled a cast that's too old to be playing high schoolers, set her story in the early1990s and come upwith a rude, sometimes uproarious comedy that is as filthy as "American Pie," with just a hint of that film's sentimental sweetness. Rating: Threestars.106 minutes. (R) — Moore "The WayWayBack" — "The WayWay Back" is a semi-nostalgic coming-of-age dramedy from the folks who wrote "TheDescendants." It's about a shy, put-upon lad, his long-suffering mother, the mom's difficult new beauand the vacation where a lot of these issues come to a head. "TheWayWayBack" tries too hard to be all things to all audiences — kids learning about love and life, adults seeing themselves, boozily nostalgic for their youth. But the performances and the ready supply of one-liners makethis an amusing look at a newgeneration getting lost down memory lane. Rating: Threestars. 103 minutes. (PG-13) —Moore "TheWolverine" — "To be, or not" ... let's make it "To slash, or not to slash." Because this latest X-Men movie is alot more existential than recent installments in this comic book series havebeen. "The Wolverine" is nothing if not ambitious — a moody, haunted tale of Logan the Wolverine (Hugh Jackman) coping with his ghosts and settling old debts — in Japan, no less. It's the perfect country for a guywho appreciates a good, sharp blade. And if this James Mangold ("Walkthe Line") take onthe superhero franchise stumbles up blind alleys, overreachesand turns long and repetitious by its bloody-bland

predictable third act, at least it gives Jackman something worth chewing over for the first 90 minutes. This film is available locally in 3-D. Rating: Twoand ahalf stars. 122 minutes. (PG13) — Moore

STILL SHOWING "The Conjuring" —"The Conjuring" is like a prequel to 40 years of demonic possession thrillers, a movie about the original ghost hunters, EdandLorraine Warren, and anearly case this "Amityville Horror" couple found so terrifying they never talked about it — "until now!"James Wan,who madehishorrorbones with "Saw" and outgrew torture porn with the superbly spooky "Insidious," reunites with his "Insidious" star Patrick Wilson for this solid and sometimes hair-raising thriller about a haunted house, the family of sevenhaunted by it. It conjures up afewfrights, but "The Conjuring" is more solid than sensational and spine-tingling. Think of it as ahorror history lesson, the original "based on atrue story" to explain those things thatgo bump inthe night. Rating: Twoand ahalf stars. 112 minutes. (R) —Moore "Despicadle Me 2" — There's a fizzy silliness to "Despicable Me 2" that will make it a huge word-of-mouth hit among keydemographics. That would be 2- to 6-year-olds, and parents who enjoy seeing their kids curled into balls of uncontrollable laughter. Youneed to have seen the original 2010 comedy to get the most out of this sequel. Luckily, a lot of people have. "Despicable Me," Universal Studios' first venture into computer-animated cartooning, was a smash. It offered a nifty novelty, with a wouldbe supervillain as the central character. Gru (Steve Carell with a larynx-twisting Hungarian accent) was a perversely winning mashup of Dr. Seuss' Grinch and Charles Addams' Uncle Fester. The roster of grown-up characters is smaller than in the first outing to make more room for the Minions' accident-prone antics and gobbledygook versions of platinum-selling pop hits. It's all as bright and bouncy as arollercoaster ride. Pretty much anygagthat would go overthehead ofa 7-year-old has been removed. For an adult, the predictability could turn you blase. For kids, revisiting these jokes is ahowl. Pinkie promise. Rating: Three stars. 98 minutes. (PG) — Colin Covert, Minneapolis Star Tribune "Epic" — The latest animated film from Fox's Blue Sky division, "Epic" depicts good vs. evil forces battling over the fate of the natural realm. Director Chris Wedge ("Ice Age," "Robots") gives us lush, often breathtaking visuals of a world within our world — a forest populated by tiny Leaf Men who ride hummingbirds and do battle with an equally minuscule army of nasty creatures known as Boggans. Anall-star cast provides the voice work, which proves to be distracting. Kids won't mind, but the voices will take adults out of the story. Rating: Two and a half stars. 100 minutes. (PG) —Roeper "Frances Ha" —Greta Gerwig makes "hapless" a happening thing in "Frances Ha." Which is no surprise, because she's spent her brief career mastering variations on a hapless theme. Gerwig ("Lola Versus," "Greenberg") and director Noah Baumbach ("Greenberg," "The Squid and theWhale") team up to give us the quintessential Greta time-capsule picture, a movie that sums up the navel gazing of Generation Y andsummons up every Gerwig character from the era in one giddy yet wistful package. Frances (Gerwig) is an exemplar of a sort of age-specific form of denial. A Sacramento native, she's settled in NewYork to becomeamodern dancer.Thealwayscharming Gerwig, sort of a ungainly girl next door ("I can't account for my bruises."), turns Frances into a tour de force — impulsive and needy, chatty and unread, hopeful but regressive. Rating: Three stars. 86 minutes. (R) —Moore

Continued next page


movies

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, JULY 26, 2013

GO! MAGAZINE PAGE 29

Disney-Pixar/Ttte Associated Press

Mike (voiced by Billy Crystal), top center, and Sully (voiced by John Goodman) hang out with classmates in "Monsters University."

From previous page "The Great Gatsby" — Big andbold and brassy, Baz Luhrmann's "Gatsby" fills every second of its 142-minute running time with imagesdesignedto take your breath away, but it is first and foremost F. Scott Fitzgerald's "Gatsby." Leonardo DiCaprio stars as Gatsby, in perhaps themost overtly vulnerable version of the character, andCarey Mulligan gives a delicate, intricately crafted performanceas DaisyBuchanan.Luhrmann's dazzling sense of visual style is perfectly suited to the first half of the movie, but when the story becomes moreabout confrontations, you can almost sense Luhrmann fidgeting as hetries to figure out how to keepthe plates spinning. Rating: Threeand ahalf stars. 142 minutes. (PG13) —Roeper "Grown Ups 2" — Whatever comedic fires and bursts of genuinely inspired humor AdamSandler once possessedhaveburned out long ago. Case in point: this toothless sequel, which presents a number of potential conflicts but doesn't have the energy to pursueany of them. Overthe last 10 years, Sandler hasheadlined moreterrible comediesthananyoneinHollywood.Youhaveto be REALLY successful to be able to keepchurning out so many mediocrities over such a long period. Rating: Oneand ahalf stars. 101 minutes. (PG13) — Roeper "The Hangover Part HI" — Perhaps responding to criticism of the sequel or perhaps just wanting to challenge himself, director Todd Phillips has delivered a film so different from the first two "Hangovers," one could evenask if this is supposed to be acomedy. It plays more like a straightforward, real-world thriller with a few laughs than a hard-R slapstick farce. You don't see too manygenre-hopping threequels, so, credit to Phillips and his team of co-writers for trying to do something different with the now familiar characters of Phil (Bradley Cooper), Stu (Ed Helms), Alan (Zach Galifianakis) and the ever-bland Doug (Justin Bartha). But the big fix might have changed things just a little too much. Rating: Two stars. 100 minutes. (R) —Roeper "The Heat" — On paper (and in the ads), "The Heat" looks like a high-concept pitch: a copbuddy movie, only the buddies are — wait for it — dames! The good news is this Sandra Bullock-Melissa McCarthy vehicle clicks on all cylinders. Thanks to standout performances from the enormously appealing leads, excellent workfrom the supporting cast, a smart and brilliantly funny script by Katie Dippold and nimble direction from Paul Feig, this is one of the most entertaining movies of the year. Rating: Three and ahalf stars. 117 minutes. (R) — Roeper "Iron Man 3" — Robert Downey Jr. is just plain great in this film. Filled with breathtakingly brilliant special effects, bolstered by excellent

supporting performances from a half-dozen othertop-tier actors, crackling with sharp humor and working as astory that stands alone while often acknowledging the larger Marvel(ous) universe,"Iron Man 3" is one of the best entries in this modern golden age of superhero movies. Working from a smart if sometimes meandering script, director Shane Blacktakes us on a 3-D thrill ride in which a LOT of stuff is blown up, and the skies are filled with superheroes, supervillains and humans falling to their seemingly certain deaths. It's a great start to the summer movie season. Rating: Three and a half stars. 130 minutes. (PG-13) —Roeper "The Kings of Summer" — A TVwriter and an online Funny or Dievet concocted this amusing, sentimental "Superbad" with less edge, a teen boys' fantasy, roughing it, impressing the girls and coming of age. For anR-rated teen comedy, "Kings of Summer" is an awfully nostalgic one, with old fashioned comic rituals (the boys take an oath to each other, they turn an abandoned pipeline into a percussion instrument), an "Our Gang"/"Andy Griffith Show" style kids' construction project and parents who have the same problems as their kids, but eventually realize it. "Kings" adds up to asummer movie that staggers down that fine line between sentimental and snarky, a tale of nature and nurture and first love that manages more charm than any R-rated movie about horny teens has a right to. Rating: Three stars. 93 minutes. (R) — Moore "TheLone Ranger"— In the unholy mess that is "The LoneRanger," we finally have a movie that combines the slapstick antics of a live-action "Road Runner" cartoon with a villain so bloodthirsty, he literally cuts out the heart of a vanquished foe andeats it. Everything that could go wrong with this movie does go wrong, from a rare badperformance from the great Johnny Depp, who plays Tonto as acrazy desert vaudeville performer, to the decidedly unmemorable work from the promising talent Armie Hammer asthe title character, to a script that feels like some sort of mash-up of every attempt to reboot a storied franchise. Some films are for everyone. This film is for just about no one. Rating: Oneand a half stars. 149 minutes. (PG-13) —Roeper "Monsters University" — A slight and underwhelming prequel that isn't nearly as inventive, funny or involving as the original, "Monsters lnc." (2001). Though colorful and sweet-natured and occasionally capable of producing the mild chuckle, this is a safe, predictable, edge-free, nearly bland effort from Pixar, a studio that rarely hedges its bets. It's better than "Cars 2," but not in the sameleague as the "Toy Story" sequels. Rating: Two and a half stars. 110 minutes. (G) —Roeper

Continued next page

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PAGE 30. GO! MAGAZINE

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Spall and Oliver Platt as afriendly, avuncular gay couple. Written and directed by Sally Potter ("Yes," "The Tango Lesson"). Noextras were listed for this film. Rating: Threestars. 89 minutes. (PG-13) —Ebert "Starbuck" — Thanks to an unscrupulous sperm bank —which over two years ended upgiving out one pseudonymous donor's nearly daily deposits to all its female clients — David Wozniak (akaStarbuck) wakes up 20years later to discover that he has produced aseemingly miraculous 533 offspring. That news gets delivered to David (Patrick Huard) by a lawyer for the children, 142 of whom havebanded together to file a class action suit, demanding to know the identity of their biological father. Almost immediately upon receiving an envelope containing the identities of his progeny, David begins surreptitiouslytracking them down. One by one,hebeginsbestowinga belated parental influence onthem. David himself is transformed by

N EW D V D B LU - R A Y R EL E A S E S The following movies were released the week ofJuly 23.

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"Ginger S Rosa" —Thefilm tells two coming-of-age stories, one political, one emotional. Ginger (Elle Fanning) and Rosa (Alice Englert) grow up in a London weary from shortages of food, living space andcheer. Who could have guessedSwinging London and the Beatles were onthe way? Ginger becomescompletely swept up inthe BantheBomb movement and, in her youthful fatalism, becomes convinced the Earth is on the brink of nuclear annihilation. With Alessandro Nivola as Ginger's dad, Christina Hendricks as hermom,Annette Bening as a leftist friend, and Timothy

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the sudden announcement that his girlfriend (Julie LeBreton) is pregnant DVD and Blu-ray Extras: Deleted scenes, bloopers, audio commentary and a music video. This film wasnot given a star rating. 108 minutes. (R) — The Washington Post "Trance" — DannyBoyle plays fast and loose with reality in "Trance," a trippy thriller about an amnesiac man who gets hypnotized in order to remember where hehas hidden a stolen, multimillion-dollar painting. You're never quite sure whether what you're seeing is actually happening or merely the result of a character's post-hypnotic suggestion. That's one of the film's pleasures. James McAvoy plays Simon, anemployee of an art auction house who, after a blow to the head, forgets what he hasdonewithacanvashe'shelping a gang of criminals steal. Vincent Cassel plays Franck, the suaveyet ruthless mobster who will stop at nothing to get the painting. And Rosario Dawson plays Elizabeth, the

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, JULY 26, 2013

opportunistic hypnotherapist Franck hires to unlock Simon's unconscious. There's a little too much happening in the film's violent, frenetic conclusion, which involves the retrieval of fractured memories, the confession of betrayals and somany narrative loops within loops that the film's big reveals never makesatisfying sense. Maybe it's not supposed to. In the end, Simon isn't the only one who gets bashed on thehead by"Trance." DVD Extras: Three featurettes and audio commentary; Blu-ray Extras: Two additional featurettes and deleted scenes. This film was not given a star rating. 104 minutes. (R) — The Washington Post

ALSOTHISWEEK:"Kiss of the Damned" COMING UP: Movies scheduled for national release July 30 include "G.l. Fox Searchlight Pictures Ma MCT Joe: Retaliation." Rosario Dawson stars as an — "DIfD and Blu-ray Extras" opportunistic hypnotherapist in from wire andonline sources the thriller "Trance."

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"Mud" —Thecinema'sleading purveyor of Southern Gothic, Jeff Nichols, hands Matthew McConaughey his latest tour de force turn in "Mud," a down anddirty if entirely-too-long mythic melodrama in the "Tobacco Road" tradition. Nichols ("Shotgun Stories," "Take Shelter") has cooked up anexotic stewthat includes obsessive love, a woman unworthy of it, a criminal on the runandaHuckFinncoming of age tale set against a dying way of life in backwaters Arkansas. It doesn't trivialize "Mud" to label it TennesseeWilliams lite — at least in its romantic notions. Nichols gets good performances out of oneand all, but lets himself get so caught up in his sense of place that this potboiler hangs aroundmore than a few minutes after that pot has come to a boil. But "Mud" is a vivid reminder that for all the changescable TVand Interstate highways havewrought, there still corners of the country we hear very little about, places with a voice, vibe and vigor that are still distinctly emphatically Southern. Rating: Three stars. 130 minutes. (PG13) —Moore "Pacific Rim" — This ridiculously entertaining (and often just plain ridiculous) monster-robot movie plays like a gigantic version of that Rock'Em, Sock'Em Robots gamefrom the1960s, combined with the cheesy wonderfulness of black-and-white Japanese monster movies from the 1950s. Director Guillermo del Toro has a weirdly beautiful visual style, and there's rarely an uninteresting shot in "Pacific Rim." Heand the cast doa fine job of selling this madness, even as the talk of neural bridges andother scientific claptrap grows increasingly dense andmeaningless. This film is available locally in IMAX 3-D. Rating: Three stars. 131 minutes. (PG-13) — Roeper "Red 2" — Thejoy of "Red" was seeing a cast packed with Oscar winners (Helen Mirren, Morgan Freeman, Richard Dreyfuss, Ernest Borgnine) andvery good actors (John Malkovich, Mary-Louise Parker, Brian

Cox and Karl Urban) flesh out and class up a BruceWillis action film. "Codgers makethe coolest killers" was its motto. And if anything, this "Retired, Extremely Dangerous" sequel ups theante. There's a new acronym — "ICE: Incarcerated, Cannot Execute." They've replaced killed-off Oscar winners with Anthony Hopkins as anaddled old scientist and Catherine Zeta-Jones as aRussian agent and one-time lady loveof Frank's. And the change in directors to comedy-specialist DeanParisot ("Galaxy Quest") means there's a laugh a minute amid all this mayhem. It's all ground we've sort of covered before and things do tend to drag before the too-violent third act turns too-bloody. But"Red 2" goesdown easily, from Malkovich's demented moments of relationship advice to Dame Hele n'stenderandamusing "Hitchcock" reunion with Sir Anthony. There's a knowing twinkle in their eyes, and in everybody else's. Rating: Two and ahalf stars. 108 minutes. (PG-13) — Moore "R.I.P.O." — Jeff Bridges collects a big paycheckbut burns through agood chunk of his reservoir of Oscar-winning good will with "R.I.P.D.," theworst comic bookadaptation since"Jonah Hex." I'd say hedrags RyanReynolds down with him, but Reynolds is anold hand at mediocremoviesadaptedfrom that medium. AsNick, he's a bland and generic Bostoncop —morally tested by temptation, murderedby his immoral partner (KevinBacon). It's Bridges, doing asort of Wild BillRooster Cogburn-by-way-of-The Dude, who sticks his neckout. And asfaintly amusing andreminiscent of TommyLee Jones' "Men in Black" turn asthis might be, there's noway thesetwo smart guys didn't see this waspiffle on the page. Whatever "RED"and"Flightplan" director Robert Schwentke might have promised, this is amoviewith no depth, no intellectual heft andzero ambition. There's not anoriginal thought, action, character or situation in between the big, expensiveandgeneric effects. This film is available locally in 3-D.Rating: One and ahalf stars. 95 minutes. (PG13) — Moore

Continued next page


movies

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, JULY 26, 2013

From previous page "Star TrekInto Darkness" — Director J.J. Abrams is a true talent, and he's also a pop-culture savant who has great respect for the legacy of this franchise aswell as akeen understanding of themega-importance of box-office figures. There's no better choice to make the best, the purest ANDthe most accessible bigbudget"Star Trek" movie possible. Yet with all the futuristic splendor and fine performances, "Into Darkness" only occasionally soars. With Chris Pine, Zachary Quinto, Benedict Cumberbatch. Rating: Three stars. 132 minutes. (PG-13) —Roeper "This Is the End" — Here's one ofthe most tasteless, ridiculous and funniest comedies ofthe 21st century. In its own sloppy, raunchy, sophomoric, occasionally self-pleased and consistently energetic way, "This Is the End" is just about perfect at executing its mission, which is to poke fun at its stars, exhaust every R-rated possibility to get a laugh, andevensneak in afew insights into Hollywood, the celebrity culture and the nature of faith. Rating: Four stars. 107 minutes.(R) — Roeper "Turbo" — In animation shorthand, "Turbo" is "'Cars' with snails." It's light on the jokes, but cute, with animation so vivid it looks photo-real. It's another "impossible dream" tale, this time of a motorhead mollusk who has a need for "terrifying, blinding speed." Theo (RyanReynolds) is an auto-racing obsessedgarden snail who longs to escapehis colony of tomato-munchers. Thesituations are more amusing than thedialogue. And as vivid as the racescenes arezooming over, through and under Indy cars — if we want to watch photo-real auto-racing we canturn on the TV. So while small children may beenchanted bythis little gastropod that could, adults will be moresorely tested. For all the horsepower "Turbo" boasts about, the movie tends toward the sluggish — as in "slow as aslug." This film is available locally in 3-D. Rating: Two and ahalf stars. (PG) —Moore "White House Down" — "White House Down," the second POTUSin-danger film in three months, isn't supposed to be somegritty thriller. It's just a big, loud, popcorn movie from Roland Emmerich, director of "IndependenceDay." But "Transformers 3" was subtle compared to this nonsense. Emmerich doesn't flinch as he shamelessly borrows from better movies and constantly insults our intelligence with jingoistic manipulation and cheesy one-liners. Epicfail. Rating: Zero stars. 137 minutes. (PG-13) —Roeper "World War Z" — If you're as zombie' d outasIam by now,andyou feel"The Walking Dead" cableTV series has set the all-time standard for popular culture entertainment about the flesh-chomping undead, your reluctance to see"World War Z" is understandable. All I can tell you is, there's fresh blood here. "World War Z" traffics in a lot of familiar territory, but thanks to the wickedly vibrant source material (Max Brooks'2006 horror novel), some slick anddarkly funny directorial choices by Marc Forster and terrific performancesfrom Brad Pitt and the supporting cast, it's entertaining as hell. Rating: Three and a half stars. 116 minutes. (PG-13) — Roeper

MO V I E

T I M E S • For the zoeekof July26

• There may be an additional fee for 3-Oand IMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change after press time. • Accessibility devices areavailable for some moviesat Regal Old Mill Stadium16 &IMAX. I

GO! MAGAZINE PAGE 31

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• As of press time, complete movie times for Wednesday and Thursday at the RegalOld Mill Stadium 16zt IMAX were unavailable. Check The Bultetin's Community Life section those days for the complete movie listings.

"++**" -ClaudiPauid.CUSA NOMY

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Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, 680S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend, 541-382-6347 • THE CONJURING (R) Fri-Wed: Noon,3:25,7:40,10:20 • GRATEFUL DEAD MEETUPATTHE MOVIES:SUNSHINE DAYDREAM (no MPAA rating) Thu: 7:30 • GROWN UPS 2 (PG-13) Fri-Thu: 12:30, 4:10, 7:45, 10:15 • DESPICABLE ME2 (PG) Fri-Thu: 10:45 a.m., 1:20, 4, 6:30, 9:15 • HAPPY FEET TWO(PG) Tue-Wed: 10 a.m. • THE HEAT (R) Fri-Thu: 12:05, 3, 7:05, 9:55 • THE LONE RANGER(PG-13) Fri-Tue: 11 a.m., 2:25, 6:10, 9:35 • MONSTERS UNIVERSITY (G) Fri-Tue: 11:15 a.m., 2:55 • PACIFIC RIM (PG-13) Fri-Tue: 12:45 • PACIFIC RIMIMAX3-D (PG-13) Fri-Thu: 12:25, 3:35, 7, 10:05 • RACING STRIPES (PG) Tue-Wed: 10 a.m. • RED 2 (PG-13) Fri-Thu: 11:25 a.m., 3:10, 6:25, 9:10 • R.I.P.D. (PG-13) Fri-Tue: 12:40, 4:25, 7:25 • R.I.P.D. 3-D (PG-13) Fri-Tue: 9:50 • SPRINGSTEEN & I (no MPAArating) Tue: 7:30 • THIS IS THE END(R) Fri-Tue: 7:50, 10:25 • THE TO DO LIST (R) Fri-Thu: 11:35 a.m., 2:35, 6:50, 9:20 • TURBO (PG) Fri-Tue: 11:50 a.m., 2:50, 6:05, 9 • WHITE HOUSE DOWN(PG-13) Fri-Mon: 10:50 a.m., 2:40, 6:35, 9:45 Tue: 10:50 a.m., 2:40, 10:05 • THE WOLVERINE (PG-13) Fri-Tue: 11:45 a.m., 3:15, 4:15, 6:45, 7:30, 9:45, 10:20 Wed-Thu: 11:45 a.m., 3:15, 6:45, 9:45 • THE WOLVERINE 3-D (PG-13) Fri-Thu: 12:15, 3:45, 7:15, 10:15 • WORLD WAR Z (PG-13) Fri-Tue: 11:10 a.m., 2:20, 6:15, 10 ' I I

Regal Pilot Butte 6, 2717 N.E.U.S.Highway 20, Bend, 541-382-6347 • FRUITVALE STATION (R) Fri-Sat: 12:15, 3:15, 6:15, 8:35 Sun-Thu: 1, 4, 7 • THE KINGS OF SUMMER (R) Fri-Sat: 12:45, 3:45, 6:45, 8:50 Sun-Thu: 1:15, 4:15, 7 • THE LONE RANGER(PG-13) Fri-Sat: 11:30 a.m., 2:30, 5:30, 8:30 Sun-Thu: Noon,3,6 • MUD (PG-13) Fri-Sat: 11:45 a.m., 2:45, 5:45, 8:25 Sun-Thu: 12:15, 3:15, 6:15 • STAR TREK INTODARKNESS(PG-13) Fri-Sat: Noon, 3, 6, 8:45 Sun-Thu: 12:30, 3:30, 6:30 • THE WAY WAYBACK(PG-13) Fri-Sat: 12:30, 3:30, 6:30, 9 Sun-Thu: 12:45, 3:45, 6:45 I

McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend, 541-330-8562 • EPIC (PG) Sat-Sun: 11:30 a.m. Wed: 3

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Tony Stark (piayed by Robert Downey Jr.) must find a balance between being a superhero and being himself in "Iron Man 3." • THE GREAT GATSBY(PG-13) Fri-Thu: 6 • THE HANGOVER PARTIII (R) Fri-Thu: 9:30 • IRON MAN(PG-13) 3 Sat-Sun: 2 • After 7p.m.,showsare21and olderonl y. Younger than 21mayattend screenings before 7 p.m. ifaccompanied by alegal guardian. Tin Pan Theater, 869 N.W.Tin Pan Alley, Bend, 541-241-2271 • DIRTY WARS (NR) Fri-Sun: 6:30 Mon-Thu: 7 • FAR OUTISN'TFAR ENOUGH: THE TOMI UNGERER STORY(no MPAArating) Fri-Sun: 4:15 Mon-Thu: 5 • FRANCES HA(R) Fri-Sun: 8:30 Tue-Thu: 9 I

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Redmond Cinemas,1535 S.W.Odem Medo Road, Redmond, 541-548-8777 • DESPICABLE ME 2(PG) Fri-Sun: 11:30 a.m., 1:45, 4, 6:15 Mon-Thu: 1:45, 4, 6:15 • GROWN UPS 2 (PG-13) Fri-Sun: Noon, 2:15, 4:30, 6:45, 9 Mon-Tue: 2:15, 4:30, 6:45, 9 • PACIFIC RIM (PG-13) Fri-Thu: 9:30 • RED 2 (PG-13) Fri-Sun: 11:30 a.m., 2, 4:30, 7, 9:30 Mon-Thu: 2, 4:30, 7, 9:30 • THE SMURFS 2 (PG) Wed-Thu: 2:15, 4:30, 6:45, 9 • THE WOLVERINE (PG-13) Fri-Sun: 12:15, 3:15, 6:15, 9:15 Mon-Thu: 3:15, 6:15, 9:15

Sisters Movie House,720 Desperado Court, Sisters, 541-549-8800 • 2 GUNS (R) Thu:8 • THE HEAT (R) Fri-Tue: 7:30

• RED 2 (PG-13) Fri, Mon-Wed: 5, 7:30 Sat-Sun: 2:30, 5, 7:30 Thu:5 • R.I.P.D. (PG-13) Fri, Mon-Tue: 5:45, 8 Sat-Sun: 3:30, 5:45, 8 Wed: 8 Thu: 7:30 • THE SMURFS 2 (PG) Wed-Thu: 4:45, 7 • TURBO (PG) Fri, Mon-Tue: 5:15 Sat-Sun: 3, 5:15 Wed: 5:45 • THE WOLVERINE (PG-13) Fri, Mon-Thu: 5, 7:45 Sat-Sun: 2:30, 5, 7:45 I

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Madras Cinema 5,1101S.W. U.S. Highway 97, Madras, 541-475-3505 • DESPICABLE ME 2 (PG) Fri-Thu: Noon, 2:20, 4:40, 7:05, 9:25 • GROWN UPS 2 (PG-13) Fri-Tue: 12:35, 2:50, 5:05, 7:20, 9:40 • RED 2 (PG-13) Fri-Thu: 1:50, 4:25, 7, 9:30 • THE SMURFS 2 (PG) Wed-Thu: 12:25, 2:45, 5:05, 7:25, 9:40 • TURBO (PG) Fri-Thu: Noon, 2, 7:10, 9:30 • TURBO 3-D (PG) Fri-Thu: Noon, 5 • THE WOLVERINE (PG-13) Fri-Thu: 4:10, 6:50 • THE WOLVERINE 3-D (PG-13) Fri-Thu: 2:10, 9:20

Pine Theater, 214 N.MainSt., Prineville, 541-416-1014 • TURBO (UPSTAIRS — PG) Fri: 4:10, 6:30 Sat-Sun: 2, 4:10, 6:30 Mon-Thu: 6:30 • THE WOLVERINE (PG-13) Fri:4,7 Sat-Sun: 1, 4, 7 Mon-Thu: 6:15 • The upstairs screening room has limited accessibility.

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PAGE 32 • GO! MAGAZINE

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, JULY 26, 2013

WE'RE GIVINGAW AY M AGAZI N E

TICICETS

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ONLY INTHE BULLETIN'S GO!MAGAZINE

g +<pr~4~~ g g PORTION OF PROCEEDS BENEFIT THE EDUCATION FOUNDATION FOR BEND-LAPINE SCHOOLS

S RTURD R V

RUGUST 31 This summer your ticket to the season's best concerts may be inside your GOI MAGAZINE. Look for it every Friday in The Bulletin.

STEVE MARTIN

Make sure you get a copy of The Bulletin every Friday for your chance to WIN!

LoeLoeoee

Loe Lo!IELveove SRTURDRY SEPTE M B E R

7

WIN CKET TI SFQRTHECQhlCERT QFYQURCHQICE! Any Friday GO! Magazine can hold a winning ticket! Look inside home delivery, store

FRI D RY OCTOBER 4

copies andracks throughout Central Oregon!Winners receivetwo concert tickets. Golden tickets must be redeemed a minimum of1 day prior to the concert of your

choice. Goldentickets are only goodduring the 2013 Concert Series. Goldentickets

TO SUBSCRIBE CALL:

541-385-5800

must be redeemed at the Ticket Mill in the Old Mill District, Mon — Sat10-6, Sun11-5.

Original GoldenTicket must be presented. GoldenTickets havenocash value. BROUGHT TOYOU BY:

Ilj

The Bulletin bendbulletin.com dddaOLD MILL DIsTRIcT FQR THE LATEsT coNGERTINFQvlslT WWW.bendCOnCertS.COm


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