Serving Central Oregon since 1903$1.50
SUNDAY April 27, 2014
e erson oun ums
Ranchers fight drought,',225, BUSINESS • E1
COMMUNITY LIFE• C1
bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD
ELECTION 2014
NS,= MAY20 —
MeaSleS —As morepeople
S
avoid vaccinating, outbreaks are beginning to rise.A3
•
EL E CTION
bendbnlletin.com/elections
•
•
Senate
Plus: Health exchanges
primary
— Insurers are already expecting premiums to increasenext year.A7
draws eyes of nation
2 neW SaintS —Pope Francis strikes a fine balance ashe honors his predecessors.AS
ln SpertS —Local preps:
By Lily Raff McCnulou
baseball, track and more.01
The Bulletin
In recent weeks, the Oregon Republican primary for U.S. Senate has been in
~ S .~
Excavating 'ET' —Thou-
~
sands of copies of "the worst game ever made" for Atari are unearthed in NewMexico. A7
the Wall Street Journal, on Fox News, on MSNBC and
'.4/I'
on the Washington Post's website. That's an impressive
Heartdleed —Is thenature
publicity rap for candi-
of open-source software to blame for the security bug?F1
dates who have little name
SOuth KOrea —Primeminister offers to resign.A2
And a Wed exclusiveHow Obamashocked Canada as the Keystone pipeline's frustrator-in-chief. bendbnuetin.com/extrns
EDITOR'5CHOICE
Wal-Mart fortune is reshaping schools By Motoko Rich New York Times News Service
WASHINGTON — DC Prep operates four charter schools here with 1,200 stu-
dents in preschool through eighth grade. The schools, whose students are mostly poor and black, are among the highest performing in Washington. Last year, DC Prep's flagship middle school earned the best test
scores among local charter schools, far outperforming the average of the city's traditional neighborhood schools as well. Another, less trumpeted,
distinction for DC Prep is the extent to which it — as well as many other
As Deschutes County District Attorney, Patrick Flaherty...
As a member of the BendCity Council, John Hummel...
2010: After unseating longtime DA MikeDugan, Flaherty sends letters to four deputy district attorneys informing them he will not employ them when he takesoffice the following month.
2001: City gives up on collecting$300,000loan to Tower Theatre Foundation in return for three meetings eachmonth at the theater. Hummel, however, is the lone opponent of thedeal.
By Shelby R. King The Buuetin
Since announcing his bid for the Deschutes County District
Attorney's Office last September, challenger John Hummel has repeatedly criticized incumbent Patrick Flaherty's choice in removing former DA employees from their positions, moves that led to litigation that was settled
2011: Three of the dismissed deputy DAs, Brentley Foster, Jody VaughanandPhil Duong, file lawsuits against Flaherty and county officials seeking reinstatement and roughly $22.5 million in damages. In 2013, the lawsuit settles, giving the three a total of$710,000.
out of court by the state to the
tune of $1.35 million. While the litigation came on Flaherty's watch, Flaherty would
2011: Flaherty fires DA's office investigator Sharon Sweet. In April 2013 Sweet files a lawsuit alleging discrimination, and in March 20f4, the lawsuit was settled. Sweet received $310,000.
argue Hummel's two terms on the Bend City Council were also expensive. No former employee has sued Hummel, but Flaherty pointed out after the candidates' last debate that litigation isn't the only "I haven't mentioned it before, but if taxpayer dollars are such
an issue we should talk about all the millions of dollars my opponent cost taxpayers while he was on City Council, before he picked
taliation. In March 2014, that
lawsuit settled and Jensonwas awarded$10,314.
up and left town," Flaherty said. When Flaherty took office in
2013: As of Aug. 23, 2013, the Oregon Department of Administrative Services had paid Flaherty's attorney more than$172,000;the Oregon Department of Justice hadspent $24,000and Deschutes County had spent nearly$28,000 to defend itself in the deputy DA lawsuit.
tween front-runners Jason
Conger, a state representative from Bend, and Monica
Wehby, a physician from Portland, has captured national attention.
One, though the vulnerability of incumbent Democrat Jeff Merkley is
open to debate, Republicans believe they could wrest control of the Senate in No
vember. The numbers are close enough that interest is growing even in heavily Democratic states such as Oregon.
2002: The city decided to take over Juniper Utility after customers complained of poor service. The city has since spent$5 to $7 millionupgrading the old system. It also paid $9.6 millionto settle a lawsuit filed by its former owner.
Two, both candidates
have compelling personal stories that are easily condensed into catchy sound
bites. Conger, a state representative from Bend, grew up in poverty and almost dropped out of high school before eventually graduating from Harvard Law. His website describes his story
2003: City manager David Hales resigns; city had paid more than$158,000 to recruit Hales/pay outthemanagerhe replaced, then paid$105,000 to head off employment-related claims by Hales. The
as "Homeless to Harvard."
Wehby, of Portland, is a pe diatric neurosurgeon whose first television ad features
Bulletin filed suit against the
city to get Hales' evaluation; a judge ruled the city had to pay the paper's legal fees.
way to spend taxpayer dollars.
2013: Nicole Jenson, a trial assistant in the DA'soffice, files a lawsuit alleging Flaherty changed her schedule asre-
recognition in a decidedly blue state. There are a few reasons whythe battle be-
the quip that politics is "not
brain surgery." Wehby's opposition to the Affordable
2003: City waives a $150,000loan it gave toward the new BendSenior Center. Hummel supported this. City also covered the funding gap
Care Act has prompted
campaign bumper stickers that read, "Keep your doctor. Change your Senator." And third, at least to some, the race between
associated with the cost to
January 2011, three deputy district attorneys whom he did not reappoint, Phil Duong, Brentley Foster
and Jody Vaughan, filed wrongful termination lawsuits, asking for a
total of $22 million. The Oregon Department o f A d m i nistrative Services eventually settled with the three for $710,000 total. SeeDA/A6
construct the newcenter.
Conger and Wehby is representat iveofagreater struggle within the GOP. The tea party, a grass-roots movement that sprung
2006: City pays$220,000 for six used buses toget Bend Area Transit launched —80 percent is paid for by afederal grant. A city mechanic called them junk andthecity bought them anyway.All six of the buses were sidelined by2008.
from the Republican Party in 2009, continues to frac-
ture the conservative base See Senate /A4
charter schools in the city — relies on the Walton
Family Foundation, a philanthropic group governed by the family that founded Wal-Mart. See Wal-Mart /A5
Renunciations of U.S.citizenship reach record high By Adam Geller The Associated Press
Correction In a story headlined, "Landfill property could add to OSU-Cascades," which appeared Friday, April 25, on Page A1,thescope of Deschutes County's environmental work was incorrect. The county paid $438,000 for site assessments across the county, not just on the demolition landfill site.
The Bulletin regrets the error.
there was something more. "We thepeople...."declared
With the envelope's arrival, Tapanila, a native of upstate
Inside the long-awaited
the script inside her U.S. pass-
New York who has lived in
package, six pages of government paperwork dryly
port — now with four holes punched through it. Her depar-
Canada since 1969, joined a largelyoverlooked surgeof
affirmed Carol Tapanila's anx-
ture from life as an American
Americans rejecting what is, to
ious request. But when Tapanila slippedthe contents from
was stamped final on the same page: "Bearer Expatriated Self."
millions, a highly sought prize:
the brown envelope, she saw
TODAY'S WEATHER r
U.S. citizenship. Last year, the U.S. government reported a
record 2,999 people renounced
Americans living abroad is indeed driving the jump in manent residency; most are abandoned citizenship, experts widely assumedto be driven by say. But renouncers often cona desire to avoid paying taxes tradict the stereotype of the on hidden wealth. financial scoundrel. Many are The reality, though, is more from very ordinary economic complicated. The government's circumstances. pursuit of tax evaders among See Citizenship /A6 citizenship or terminated per-
The Bulletin
INDEX
Chance of rain High 47, Low29 Page 06
Business Calendar Classified
Ef -6 Community Life Cf -8 Milestones C2 Pu zzles B2 Crosswords C6, G2 Obituaries B4 Sp o rts 61-6 Local/State B f -6 Opinion/Books F1-6 TV/Nlovies
AnIndependent Newspaper
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Vol. 112, No. 117,
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o
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, APRIL 27, 2014
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Ukraihh'thhSIOhS —As Western governments vowed to impose more sanctions against Russia and its supporters in eastern Ukraine, a group of foreign military observers remained in captivity Saturday accusedofbeing NATO spiesbya pro-Russianinsurgency.TheGerman-led, eight-member teamwastraveling under the auspices of the Organization of Security and Cooperation in Europewhenthey were detained Friday. Vyacheslav Ponomarev, theself-proclaimed "people's mayor" of Slovyansk, described the detained observers as "captives" and said that they wereofficers from NATOmember states. "As we found maps onthem containing information about the location of our checkpoints, we get the impression that they areofficers carrying out a certain spying mission," Ponomarev said, adding they could be released in exchangefor jailed pro-Russian activists.
OI'eSI IlOvef ef "When I saw the people's sad- Geun-hye accepts it. Park had ness and fury, I thought it was not commented publicly on the S EOUL, South K or ea natural for me to step down resignation. Prime Minister Chung Hong- with an apology," he said. The prime minister's post is won, the No. 2 official in the Chung would be the high- largely ceremonial, with the South Korean government, est-ranking government of- executive power concentrated apologized and offered to re- ficial to lose his job over the in the presidency. The prime sign today as the country re- sinking, South Korea's worst minister is sometimes fired mained angry and saddened disaster since 1995, when a when the government needs to over the sinking of a ferry that department store collapsed in take responsibility for a major left 302 people, a vast majority Seoul, killing 501 people. scandal or policy failure. of them high school students, South Koreans were espeAs of this morning, 115 ferdead or missing. cially traumatized because ry passengers remained missThe government has come most of the dead and missing ing. The number of the surviunder fire as early investiga- were students on a class trip. vors, 174, has not changed for tions revealed a slew of loopMany survivors reported the past 11 days. The official holes in safety measures and that the crew repeatedly in- death toll was at 187, where it a lax regulatory enforcement structed passengers to stay in- has remained because of bad that investigators said conside while the ship was listing weather. tributed to the sinking of the dangerously and gradually Divers trying to reach inside 6,825-ton ferry, the Sewol, on sinking off southeastern South the ship have been stymied by April 16. Korea. strong waves and rapid curIt was also criticized for The ship's captain, Lee Jun- rents. Once inside, they face failing to respond quickly and seok, 69, and 14 other crew the more challenging task of efficiently to th e c risis and members escaped the ferry making their way through for fumbling during the early on the first two Coast Guard narrow corridors clogged with stagesofrescue operations. ships arriving at the scene. All debris to try to reach into small A somber-looking Chung of them areunder arreston cabins in the front and a large accepted the criticism today criminal charges, including ac- communal sleeping hall in the when he offered "an apology cidental homicide. backof the ship where many of Chung's resignation will be- the students were believed to to the people" during a nationally televised news conference. come official if President Park have been trapped. By Choe Sang-Hun
New York Times News Service
AfghahlSthh Cl'8Sh —A British helicopter crashed in southern Afghanistan on Saturday, killing five NATO troops in the single deadliest day this year for foreign forces asthey prepare to withdraw from the country, officials said. TheBritish defense ministry confirmed that all five of the deadwereBritish. Maj. Gen. Richard Felton, commander of the Joint Helicopter Command,said the crashappeared to be "a tragic accident." In Kabul, anAfghan university official identified two Americans killed by alocal policeman at a hospital in the capital earlier this week. Theshooting was the latest by a member of Afghanistan's security forces against those theyare supposed to protect. The cause of the helicopter crash wasnot immediately known. Flight 370 —Australian authorities are likely to widen the underwater search for wreckagefrom the missing Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 after an unmannedsearch vehicle has sofar failed to find any trace of the missing jet on theseabed in aremote patch of the Indian Ocean, officials said Saturday. TheJoint Agency Coordination Center said in a statement that the submersible Bluefin 21 hadsearched 95 percent of an areaaround wherethe authorities detected the last acoustic ping believed to havecome from thejet, which disappeared March 8with 239 people onboard. BP SPill —Four years agothe Deepwater Horizon oil rig caught fire and exploded, killing 11men, spewing millions of barrels of oil into the Gulf of Mexico andstaining, seemingly indelibly, the imageof BP,the international energy giant responsible for thewell. Its reputation in free fall, the companyset aside billions of dollars and saturated theairwaves with contrite pledges tomakethousands of businesses andworkers whole. Now,though, in full-page newspaperads, interviews anda gusher of court filings, BPofficials have insisted that their good intentions are being hijacked bygreedy lawyers and underhanded claimants.
ADMINISTRATION Chairwoman Elizabeth C.McCool..........54f-383-0374 Publisher Gordon Black .................... Editor-in-Chief John Costa........................541-383-0337
SChOOI Stadbihg —The young manwho the authorities say fatally stabbed aclassmate in the hallway of aConnecticut high school is being held in amedical facility under psychiatric evaluation, his lawyer said Saturday. Thelawyer, Richard Meehan, said his client, who is16, could be held there for up to15 days. After that, Meehansaid, he will probably be charged as anadult. Friends of the suspect have identified him asChris Plaskon. Thesuspect was initially charged as a juvenile, but Connecticut law allows the authorities to try minors as adults for murder and other serious crimes, Meehansaid.
OBAMA'S ASIA TRIP
DEPARTMENT HEADS Advertising JayBrandt.....541-383-0370 Circulation Adam Sears...541-385-5805 FinanceHolly West..........54f-383-032f HumanResources Traci Donaca.....................541-383-0327 Operations James Baisinger...............541-617-7624
Califhfhlh glhl phfmitS —In the two months since a federal court sided with a group of gunowners andfound California's law on concealed-weapons permits unconstitutional, nearly 4,000 residents in this county of 3.1 million people haveapplied for one, eight times the number usually logged in a year. While no permit is required to own a gun, California residents must obtain one to carry a concealed weapon outside their home or business.
TALK TO AN EDITOR Business Tim Doran.........54f-383-0360 CifySheila G.Miler ..........541-617-7631 CommunityLife, Health JulieJohnson....................541-383-0308 Editorials RichardCoe.....541-383-0353 GO! Magazine Ben Salmon....................... Home,All Ages AlandraJohnson...............541-617-7860 NewsJanJordan..............541-383-0315 Photos DeanGuernsey.....541-383-0366 Sports Bill Bigelow............541-383-0359 State Projects Lily Raff McCaulou...........541-410-9207
— From wire reports
SI'1<irING Ck;NTIR~ ( ) Rl',('()N
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. MA!r()
REDMOND BUREAU Street address.......226N.W.Sixth St. Redmond, OR 97756 Mailing address....P.O.Box788 Redmond, OR 97756 Phone................................541-504-2336 Fax ....................................541-548-3203
CORRECTIONS The Bulletin's primary concern is that all stories areaccurate. If you knowof an error in a story,call us at541-383-0356.
.CIAI,IN l aa~
half a century. Trade, defenseand maritime security are among the issues Obamaand Prime Minister Najib Razak were expected to discuss during talks today. Malaysia is one of a dozencountries involved in the Trans-Pacific Partnership free-trade negotiations, a top priority for Obama's global economic agenda.
YGIur Projects ' '. Started- Today Enjoy o u r Sumpn' hf,
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Oregon Lottery results As listed at www.oregonlottery.org and individual lottery websites
POWERBALL
The numbers drawnSaturday nightare:
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U.S. supporter is front-runner ~i > QNTN, in Afghanistan'spresidential vote ' 'S MF.-Q~'PA, By Rod Nordland and Azam Ahmed
with the United States and a more militant stance against
casualties and night raids. Karzai, who is stepping
New York Times News Service
the Taliban, as encouraging. Abdullah, a northerner of
down after 12 years in power,
KABUL, A f ghanistan
Abdullah Abdullah, a long-
mixed Tajik and Pashtun eth-
has been neutral throughout the campaign and has main-
nicity, would also become one tained silence on the i ssue of the few northerners to lead since the April 5 election. supporter of the United States, a country long dominated by emergedSaturday as theclear Pashtuns from the south. front-runner in Afghanistan's The election, the third for presidential election. president since the NATO-led In preliminary results re- invasion of 2001, appears to leased Saturday, Abdullah had have been the country's most won 45percent ofthevote,not democratic yet. The turnout enough to avoid a runoff with was roughly 50 percent highAshraf Ghani Ahmadzai, a er than that of the last elecformer World Bank economist tion, the deeply tainted race •
and Karzai adviser, who had
won 32 percent. But Afghan government officials say Abdullah is on the verge of forging alliances with at least two of the runners-up to gain their
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support, and possibly the pres- other top two Pashtuns — Zalidency, in the next round. mai Rassoul, believed to have Either of the top two candi- been Karzai's favorite, and Gul dates would represent a sig- Agha Sherzai, a former warnificant break with the years lord favored by the CIA and of deteriorating relations the popular in the Taliban's southUnited States has had with Af- ern heartland — were expectghanistan under Karzai and a shift toward greater bilateral
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The numbers drawnSaturday nightare:
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But the United States and its NATO allies were likely to
The estimated jackpot is now $1.7 million.
see the apparent advantage for the often acrimonious criticism Abdullah, with his long record from the Afghan president of advocating closer relations over prisoner releases, civilian
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U.S. soldiers use their smartphones to take pictures of President BarackObamaafter he delivered a speech at amilitary base in Seoul, South Korea, on Saturday. The president touted economic and military ties to South Korea during his visit, and later moved onto Malaysia in the first visit by a U.S.president there in
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SUNDAY, APRIL 27, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
A3
TART TODAY
• Discoveries, breakthroughs,trends, namesin the news— the things you needto know to start out your day
It's Sunday, April 27, the117th day of 2014. Thereare248 days left in the year.
HAPPENINGS SainthOOd —Twoliving popes will canonize two of their predecessors. A8
HISTORY Highlight:In1521, Portuguese explorer Ferdinand Magellan was killed by natives in the Philippines. In1509,Pope Julius II placed the Republic of Venice under an interdict following its refusal to give up lands claimed by the Papal States. (The pope lifted the sanction in February 1510.) In1777, the only land battle in
Connecticut during the Revolutionary War, the Battle of Ridgefield, took place, resulting in a limited British victory. In1805,during the First Barbary War, anAmerican-led force of Marines andmercenaries captured the city of Derna, on the shores of Tripoli. In1813,the Battle of York took place in UpperCanadaduring the War of1812as a U.S.force defeated the British garrison in present-day Toronto before withdrawing. In1822, the18th president of the United States, Ulysses S. Grant, was bornin Point Pleasant, Ohio. In1865, the steamerSultana exploded on the Mississippi River near Memphis, Tenn., killing more than 1,400 people, mostly freed Union prisoners of war. In1938, King Zog I of the Albanians married Countess Geraldine Apponyi de Nagy-Apponyi. In1941, Germanforces occupied Athens during World War II. In1967, Expo '67 wasofficially opened in Montreal by Canadian Prime Minister Lester Pearson. In1973, Acting FBI Director L. Patrick Gray resigned after it was revealed that he'd destroyed files removed from the safe of Watergate conspirator E. Howard Hunt. In1982, the trial of John
Hinckley Jr., who hadshot four people, including President Ronald Reagan, beganin Washington. (The trial ended with Hinckley's acquittal by reason of insanity.) In1994, former President Richard M. Nixon wasremembered at anoutdoor funeral service attended byall five of his successors at the Nixon presidential library in Yorba Linda, Calif. Ten years ngo:Iraqi police moved into the streets of the besieged city of Fallujah following hours of pounding of Sunni insurgents by U.S.warplanes andartillery. A ruptured pipeline beganspilling some 100,000 gallons of diesel fuel into Suisun Bay,east of San Francisco. Five years ngo: A 23-monthold Mexico City toddler died at Texas Children's Hospital in Houston, becoming the first swine-flu death on U.S.soil. A strong earthquake struck central Mexico, rattling nerves among residents already tense from a swine flu outbreak. One of President Barack Obama's Air Force Onejets, a Boeing 747, and anF-16fighter jet panicked NewYorkers as they circled over lower Manhattan and the Statue of Liberty for what turned out to be aphoto op. One year ngo: North Korea announced that Kenneth Bae, an American missionary detained for nearly six months, was being tried in the Supreme Court on charges of plotting to overthrow the government (Bae was later sentenced to15 years of hard labor). Center-left leader Enrico Letta forged a new Italian government in a coalition with former Premier Silvio Berlusconi's conservatives.
BIRTHDAYS Announcer CaseyKasemis 82. Rhythm-and-blues singer CubaGoodingis70.Rockmusician Ace Frehley is 63. Pop singer SheenaEaston is 55. — From wire reports
NEED TO KNOW
eases ou rea s reac an —ear
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How torecognize measles
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The U.S. measles vaccine program has reducedcases from millions in the1950s and 1960s to a low of 37 in 2004.Thediseaseismaking abitofacomeback,however,and parentsandevendoctorsdonotalways recognize the symptoms. INFECTION COMPLICATIONS Measles vlrns Encephalitis, a Measles, also called brain swelling that rubeola, invades cells that ( y can leave children (, line the back of the throat deaf or mentally and the lungs. It is highly impaired. For every contagious and spreads thousand U.S. through the air, and it is children who get particularly dangerous for c measles, one or babies and young children. two will die from it. • r ~o o+rg • • • • • • 1s ll 'lv • •
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Victoria Roberts/New YorkTimes News Service
Dirty mushrooms:To clean or not to clean?
SYMPTOMS
By C. Clalborne Ray New Yorh Times News Service
The first symptom is a high fever. Next comes runny nose, cough andred eyes. Finally a rash of tiny red spots begins at the head and travels down the body, but the disease is contagious well before the rash begins.
post," she said. "It's usually
Q •• off the growing me-
heat-treated, not entirely ster-
zso -U.S. CASES OF"MEASLES BYYEAR -
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dium
150
129
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Source: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
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ile, but a lot of organisms have st o r e-bought been killed."
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from
mushrooms. Is it safe to eat'? Every producer has its Should the stems be further own recipe, induding organic trimmed? things like straw, peat moss, • Although it is always manure if it is obtainable, • a good idea to rinse canola meal or cottonseed off fruits and vegetables, the meal, and inorgaruc things consumer is not at much risk like lime or gypsum. Then it from commercially grown is allowed to compost — that
"
100
in what is basically com-
'14
Bonnie Berkowitz and Alberto Cuadra /The Washington Post
m ushroom residue, in t h e
is, ferment — and then it is
opinion of Kathie Hodge, an associate professor ofmycology at Cornell. "Even if you don't dean the mushrooms, it's probably fine," said Hodge, who writes the Cornell Mushroom Blog. Common grocery store mushrooms, Agaricus bisporus, which indude the white button, cremini and portobello varieties, "are grown
heat-treated, "trying to get rid of most things so the mush-
rooms will take over," Hodge said. Mushrooms can rot like anything else, she said, and the rotten ones should not be eaten. But cutting off the stem ends is purely cosmetic. And commercially grown mushrooms are certai nly safer than mushrooms gathered in
the woods bynonexperts.
A rising number of unvaccinated children is a major contributor, public health experts say. By Lenny Bernstein
able to get, vaccinations, before
The Washington Post
they arrive inthe United States.
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Measles has infected 129 people in 13 states so far this
She said the CDC is also seeing growth in the disease pertusyear, the most in the first four sis, also known as whooping months of any year since 1996, cough. officials from the Centers for Before vaccinations were Disease Control and Weven- available, about 500,000 peotion reported Thursday. They ple were infected with measles warned clinicians, parents and annually in the United States, others to watch for the poten- a number that fell to about 60 tially deadlyvirus. after the disease was all but Thirty-four of the cases were eliminated in 2000. Since 2010, imported via travel to other it has increased to an average countries, including 17 from of 155 cases per year. the Philippines, where a huge Still, she said, fewer than I outbreak has affected20,000
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people and caused 69 deaths, United States have received no said Anne Schuchat, director vaccines at all. "Vaccinating of the National Center for Im- your children is still a social munization and Respiratory norm in this country," she said. Diseases. In a telephone news conferThe United States has had
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no measles deaths reported Thomas Frieden lauded the from the outbreak, and none Vaccines for Children program since 2003. But Schuchat ac-
knowledged that "it's probably just a numbers game, probably
sulted in 55,000 cases, primarily because poor and uninsured
have more." One or two of ev-
children had not been immu-
nized. Among children born in fatal, accordingto the CDC. the following two decades, the California, with 58 cases, CDC estimated, vaccinations has been hit hardest by one of prevented an estimated 322 the 13 separate outbreaks of million illnesses and 732,000 measles in the United States. deaths, saving about $295 bilNew York has seen 24 infec- lion. The program provides tions, and Washington state free vaccinationsfor measles has had 13. and 13 other diseases. But "we can't let our sucMeasles is a highly contagious respiratory disease that cessesresultin complacency," generally affects young chil- Frieden said. "In fact measles, dren, causing fever, a runny is very common in some parts nose, a cough and a distinctive of the word.... And it travels rash all over the body. About fast." He said 20 million people one in 10 children also gets across the globe get the disease an ear infection and one in 20 annually, and 122,000 of them comes down with pneumonia. die. ery 1,000 cases of measles are
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certed public health campaign, of vaccinations. Three were too especially among lower-in- young for routine vaccination come families, has made mea- and three others were not vacsles outbreaks rare. The dis- cinated for unknown reasons. ease has been considered eradEleven had received two or icated since 2000. But today, more doses of vaccine that did the number of unvaccinated
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a problem, Schuchat said.
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, APRIL 27, 2014
Senate
At the time, she was medical
Continued fromA1
class president and chairwoman of the Texas Medical Asso-
Meanwhile, some Republicans warn that if the party
How can I leave all these kids?"
"He told me, 'You're not leavDiego. Four years later, Conger ing the kids, you're taking care and his wife decided to raise of everybody...,'" she said. their children in a small town. Since announcing her canThey moved to Bend, where didacy in October, Wehby said Conger co-founded a real es- she has scaled back her meditate investment company now cal practice to about half time. called Cornerstone Realty If she wins the primary, she Holdings. He started his own said she will take a sabbatical law practice, then joined the to campaign full time. law firm of Miller Nash LLP,
where he is a partner. Conger and his wife homeschooled their five children, ages 8 to 22. They initially tried it as a logistical solution while
tion would not be legal except
ciation medical student section. After graduating, in 1984, Wehby became the first woman to enroll in and graduate from the neurosurgery residency at the University of California, Los Angeles. Next, she completed a fellowship in pediatric neurosurgery at the University of
doesn't bend on social issues such as same-sexmarriage and abortion, it will lose its appeal amongyounger voters. Five Republicans will appear on the Republican ballot, induding Mark Callahan, Timothy Crawley and Jo Rae Perkins. Only two candidates, Utah. however, have dominated the She moved to Portland in 1998 to work as director of pediatric neurosurgery at Randall JasonConger Children's Hospital at Legacy Conger, 46, was raised by Emanuel. parents whom he describes as Though she has never held "part of the hippie movement" public office, Wehby has held of the 1960s. His professional leadership posiparents divorced tions, induding president of when C o nger the Oregon Medical Associawas 8. He moved tion, where she led a statewide around frequent- campaignform edicalm alpracly before settling tice reform in 2004. That ballot Conger in Cr e scent City, measure lost. Calif. His family As a doctor, she said, she is struggled to stay afloat, even in touch with Oregonians from spending one summer living all over the state and has an inout of a truck camper. At 16, af- timate understanding of health ter repeatedly dashing with his care. She said she has often father, Conger moved out of his considered running for office family home. He married his but wanted to wait until her high school sweetheart, Amy, four chil dren, now teenagers, at21. were older. "It's like having a baby: That same year, he ran for City Council in Crescent City There's never a good time, you and lost by about 20 votes. just have to go for it at some He was recruited to work on point," she said. the campaign of a local conIn the last year, as her ingressional candidate, Frank terest gn.w more serious, she Riggs. Riggs won and Conger said she talked several times spent a year working for him with Tom Coburn, a physiin Washington, D.C., before cian-turned-senator from Oklareturning to the West Coast. homa. Shewas on the brink of After studying at a community launchingher campaign when college, he completed his bach- she phoned Coburn from her elor's degree at California State home office. It was September University, Humboldt. Conger and she said she was looking excelled on the law school en- out a west-facing window, totrance exams and was accept- ward the Coast Range, crying ed to Harvard Law School. as she asked him, "How didyou He graduated in 2000 and decide to leave your practice? went to work for Cooley LLP as a corporate lawyer in San
pro-life. "Life begins at conception and ... in an ideal world, abor-
student body president, senior
"I haven't wanted to leave
my medical practice yet. I think it's important to stay grounded and keep in touch with what's
going on," she said. Wehby lives in southwest
relocating during law school, Portland, down the sheet from Conger said. But they came to her ex-husband. She divorced appreciate the benefits such as in2007. a flexible schedule and the freedom to align the curriculum with the family's faith.
Questions about influence
District 54 representative to the Oregon House. He won re-election in 2012 and announced
in the state. The Oregonian
More recently, Wehby has In2010, Conger defeated one- been linked to Andrew Miller, term Democratic incumbent president of Stimson Lumber Judy Stiegler to become the and one of the top GOP donors reported in October that Wehby and Miller had introduced
his candidacy for U.S. Senate each other as their date at politin October. If elected, Conger
ical events. In an interview last
said, there are three main issues he would begin work on immediately. "First, repeal Obamacare and replace it with a more mod-
week, when asked to characterize her relationship with Miller,
inthe case of rape (or) whenthe life of the mother is in jeopardy," he said. Conger believes that Roe v. Wade, the 1973 Supreme Court decision that prohibited states
from banning abortion, was wrongly decided. "It was almost arbitrary,"
he said. "I don't think there's a dear federal, constitutional
xh
role. It's a state issue."
ihaRF
A Catholic who was raised in the South, Wehby, said she, too, sees herself as pro-life. But
to some, she sounds decidedly pro-choice. "I've dedicated my life to in-
M~
fants and small children, I op-
4
erate on ... little preemies that
Andy Tullis/The Bulletin file photo
Republican U.S. Senate candidate Jason Conger, standing, gives his opening statement while his
four primary opponents wait their turn during a January forumfor Republican candidates seeking Jeff Merkley's Senate seat at the Shilo Inn in Bend. The four other candidates, seated on either side of Conger, are, from left, Mark Caliahan, Timothy Crawley, Jo Rae Perkins and Monica Wehby.
lations, "If you squint, you get to new convention center and ho- 14." That's twice as many seats tel in Portland. as the Republicans would have Under federal law, individ- to pick up to win the majority. uals may onlydonate $2,600 Rubin conceded that Oregon's to a candidate per election cy- seat is "not likely to go to the bill that included funds for a
de, but unlimited donations are permitted to PACs. The
GOP, but it's not nutty to think it might." In her bit about Ore-
catch: A PAC is strictly prohib- gon, the final state in her count ited from coordinating with a to 14, Rubin made no mention candidate's campaign. That's of Conger. Instead, she said the where Wehby's friendship with state has "a highly competent Miller has drawn scrutiny. female Republican doctor MonOn MSNBC, liberal talk icaWehby running againstJeff host Chris H ayes sarcasti- Merkley." cally lamented: "Why can't a In an April 11 column in wealthy guy go out and buy The Wall Street Journal, Fred something nice for the special Barnes, a Fox News commensomeone in his life without ev-
eryone getting so suspicious?" Wehby deniedany collaboration between the campaign and the PAC. She said she had no idea who was funding the ads until she saw the FEC fil-
tator and executive editor of The Weekly Standard,wrote
of Wehby: "The National Republican Senatorial Committee hasn't endorsed her, but it tells
anyone who asks that she's the strongest GOP contender." That
ing, which was first reported nod has led to Wehby's signifby Oregon Oracle earlier this icant fundraising advantage month.
"There is absolutely no co-
over Conger, Barnes wrote. But Barnes went on to cite a
ordination between our cam- recent survey by a Republican paign and the group that was firm, Harper Polling, which doing those (ads)," Wehby said. determined that Conger would "I'm a friend. I have nothing to actually fare better against the do with those ads. I'm not go- incumbent than Wehby would. ing to comment any further on Conger trailed Merkley 47 perthem." cent to40 percent,according Miller did n o t r e spond to the poll, and Wehby trailed to voice mails requesting him 46 percent to 36 percent. comment. All of this helps explain why Wehby went on to ask why Conger insists that if this prinobody alleges coordination m ary race follows the oft-used between Conger's campaign establishment-versus-outsider and Oregon Right to Life, a pro- narrative, he plays the part of life organization that has en- the challenger. Never mindthat dorsed Conger and is running Wehby has never held political radio ads promoting him and office, he said, she is clearly the "establishment" candidate. attacking Wehby.
are just 23 or 24 weeks (gestational age)," she said. "I operate on those babies and I try to save their lives."
Abortion is, she said, "a societyissue.We have to make people know that there are other alternatives. We have to make sure they know about adoption,
part of the motivation to promote Monica. They wanted a that they have prenatal care, pro-gay-marriage candidate in that they don't feel that there's D.C.," Conger said. such a scarlet letter on their chest." Gaymarriage Wehby said she rejects the Wehby scoffed at the idea notion that abortion shouldbe a that she was being promoted decidingissue for voters. "In this country, the law is by out-of-state interests. And she said her views on gay mar- that (abortion) is a personal deriage are more nuanced than cision," she said. "It's between Conger makes them out to be. a woman and her faith, a womShe sees gay marriage as an an and her family, a woman issue for states, not the federal and her physician ... as a sengovernment. ator, you're not going to be "As Republicans, we are all changingthatanyway. We've about personal freedom," she got issues that we can actually said. "That's what our coun- do something about as a sentry was founded on: religious ator, and so to turn this into a freedom and personal free- litmus test just doesn't make dom. The federal government any sense." Wehby's careermeans that shouldn't be involved in the marriage business.... We also abortionis not ahypotheticalishave to respect the religious sue for her, it's an everyday one, freedom and beli efs of every- she said. "I counsel moms all the time one. So I don't believe that churches should be forced to on this issue, And I can honestperform ceremonies that they ly say, in 17 years, I have never don't agree with." recommended to a mom to terConger said gay marriage m inate a pregnancy,"she said. is a complicated issue because it inherently involves "consti-
"I'm very honest with them, I'll
tell them what's going on with tutional tension:" freedom of the baby. But often I'm the only speech and freedom of religion one that tells them anything on one side, equality on the good. Wehby's most recent televiother. "I fall on the side of: Well, this sion spot, 'Trust," touches lighthas been the definition of mar- ly on the topic of abortion. riageforthousands ofyears.... In the ad, a Gresham mother And the justification for chang- describes learning, 21 weeks ing it doesn't seem compelling into her pregnancy, that there to me," he said. was something wrong with her He said that because the tra- baby's spine. Her obstetrician dition of marriage is rooted in said she should consider termiprocreation, states have a nat- nating the pregnancy. Instead ural interest in promoting the Wehby operated on the newtraditional definition. born infant, successfully recon"When I think of an 'estab"The nature of the state in- structing the girl's lower spine. Gayle Atteberry, executive director of Oregon Right to lishment' candidate, I'm think- terest is in perpetuating itself," Continued next page Life, said the group has been ing of the organizations that he said. "Procreation can only "extremely careful not to have have enormous resources na- happen between a man and a Amcrnn, Dishwasher any relationship whatsoever" tionally. Their center of gravity woman, so there is, I think, a I with Conger or his campaign. is Washington, D.C.," he said. state interest in promoting trai • "It's kind of sad," she said. Conger said he is bothered ditional marriage." "We haven't talked to Jason in by the sort of intervention in a Conger said he does believe months and months. I saw him primary that he believes the civil unions or domestic partat a public meeting once, but National Republican Senatorial nerships should be available
W ehby said: "W e'refriends." The issue cropped up when that's it." Committee has demonstrated. Miller, along with Nevada Conger said his campaign Conger said he would prefer est and more proven set of re- businessman Loren Parks, "deliberately severed any com- that outside money and influforms that will actually make created a Political Action Com- munication wit h ( O regon) ences stay out of the race until healthcare more affordable," mittee called "If He Votes Like Right to Life" after the organi- voters within Oregon have sehesaid. That In Salem Imagine What zation endorsed him, to prevent lected their candidate. Second, Conger said he He Will Do In Congress." Ac- conflicts of interest. But Wehby said Conger met wants to "restore active man- cording to a quarterly report Atteberry declined to specify with the National Republican agement ofour federal for- filed with the Federal Election how much the organization is Senatorial Committee, too. She ests." Increased logging would Commission this month, Parks spending on the commercials, declined to assign any sort of jump-start rural economies by donated$75,000 and Millerdo- but the group's quarterly report narrative to the primary. "I don't have any interest in putting people to work felling nated $30,950 to the PAC. Mill- filed with the Federal Election trees and operatingmills. Man- er's sum includes an in-kind Commission this month shows getting into a food fight with ufacturing would rebound, and donation worth $5,950 — an it has already spent more than my fellow Republicans," she secondary economies would anti-Conger billboard on Inter- $54,000 on radio and video said. "To be honest, I've been grow, too, he said. More reve- state 205 in Clackamas County advertising related to the Con- focused on Jeff Merkley the nue would mean more taxes to outside of Portland. ger-Wehby race. whole time. I think I'm the best fund schools and public safety. The PAC has also paid for a candidate to beat Jeff." back Wehby And logging would improve radio commercial that criticizes GOP leaders Conger said the way he sees forest health and reduce costly, Conger's House votes for bills Jennifer Rubin, a conserva- it, the Republican "establishriskywildfires, he added. to create the beleaguered state tive writer for The Washington ment" tends to prefer more Third, Conger said he would health insurance exchange Post, penned a column on April liberal candidates because exwork to balance the budget and and build a now-defunct bridge 3 that tallied U.S. Senate seats perts in Washington believe reduce the deficit. over the Columbia River. It also that might swing from blue to they will have wider appeal. "We have over $2.7 trillion of criticizes his vote for a budget red in November. By her calcu"My sense is that was a big federal revenue every year," he said. "That seems like a lot of money to run the country with.
"so that people who are in love
have the ability to legally bind their lives together."
HNlsoN
Abortion
TV.APPLIANCE
Congerdescribes himselfas
Errands Etc. LLC Bonded
541-977-1737 www.errandsetcogmx.com Yard work • Trash Hauling
Clean Out Apartments, Garages,Basements, Storage Units, etc. Major Credit Cards Accepted
S omewhere, someone w i l l
not get the federal dollars that they've been getting. But it just has to be done."
MonicaWehby Wehby, 51, was born and
Give in the Best
Way Possible
raised in Nashville, Tenn. Her
father worked as an accountant and small-business owner, and her mother as a registered nurse. Growlng up m Nashville, Wehby said she was surrounded by music and learned to play the guitar, banjo and piano. Beginning at age 18, Wehby's life history starts to read like a curriculum vitae. She at-
tended the University of Notre Dame, then the Baylor College of Medicine, in Houston, where
she saidshe firstpondered the idea of running for Senate.
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OHSU & DOERNBECHER F OUNDATI O N S
SUNDAY, APRIL 27, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
From previous page The ad shows a healthy-looki ng 12-year-old girl, a n d ends with the mother saying, through tears, "all of Washington needs to be full of people like Dr. Wehby." On the campaign's Dwitter feed, the ad was introduced as
at the time: Pass this bill or use
the federal exchange. "It's not like by v oting against this bill you've suddenly opted out of Obamacare," he said. "That would have meant
Wal-Mart Continued fromA1 Since 2002, the charter network has received
close to $1.2 million from
using the federal site, which lookedto memore like embracing federal-run health care.... telling the mother's "remark- All the Cover Oregon bill did able story and why every life is was create a public corporation precious." Wehby's campaign to be the insurance exchange." has sai dit'sspending hundreds Health exchanges such as of thousands of dollars to air Cover Oregon, Conger pointthe ad regularly. ed out, are just one part of the The ad was touted on several 2,600-page statute. "If I would have known in popular websites when it was released last week. Conserva- 2011 what I know now, which tive news site RedState lauded is that there would be an abit as "a hammer of a campaign solutely epic failure to ... cre-
Walton in direct grants. A
ad," and The Fix, a bipartisan
ed advocacy group fights for more public funding and autonomy for charter
blog run by The Washington Post, hailedit as"one of thebest political ads of 2014."
ate a state health exchange, I wouldn't have voted for it," Conger said. "We've wasted an extraordinary amount of
money.... So I understand the Affordable CareAct criticism. But to call it a vote for If there's one opinion that the Obamacare is beyond any poscandidates share, it's this: the sible interpretation." Affordable Care Act is awful. Both Conger and Wehby have Uphill battle for Republicans expended considerable camJim Moore, a professorof paign energy trying to portray politics and government at Pathemselves as the candidate cific University, said he's been
Walton-funded nonprofit helped DC Prep find building space when it moved its first two schools from a chapel basement into former warehouses that now
have large classrooms and wide, art-filled hallways. One-third of DC Prep's
teachers are alumni of Teach for America, whose largest private donor is Walton. A
W a l t on-fund-
schools in the city. Even the local board that regulates
charter schools receives funding from the Walton Family Foundation.
In effect, Walton has
Gabriella Demczuk/New YorkTimes News Service
Ann Carison works last month with prekindergarten students at a school in Washington run by KIPP, a charter network supported by the Walton foundation. The foundation Ied by the family that built Wai-Mart has spent more than $1 billion on some of the fastest-growing, and most divisive, trends in education.
subsidized an entire chart er school system in t h e
nation's capital, helping
divisive, trends in public ed-
to fuel enrollment growth so that close to half of all
ucation — including teacher evaluations based on student
Wehby participated in a na- al interest in this race. "This is not a tea party cantional television ad opposing
public school students in
test scores and publicly fund-
the city now attend char-
ed vouchers for students to at-
the health care bill before it
ters, which receive taxpay- tend private schools. "The influence of philaner dollars but are privately operated. thropy in terms of the bang for the buck they get is just really Billion-dollar investment kind of shocking," said Jack
who despises it the most.
surprised by the level of nationdidate trying to take on Mitch
passed, in 2010. She said she McConnell," he said, referring had to change her home to a challenger who has phone number because
put the Senate minori-
she received so many
ty leader's place on the November ballot in Ken-
threats. Yet Conger has crit-
tucky in question. "This
icized Wehby for not is two kind of low-level opposing the Affordable MerkIey cand idates hoping to Care Act wholly enough get interest. Compared to vow to repeal it. She has said to other primaries ... this is not a complete repeal would be very high profile. And yet it's logistically unfeasible at this on the radar." point. Moore said Merkley's dom"It's agreat goal to tryto have inance is underscored by polls affordable health care available like the one by Harper Pollto everybody. But they didn't ing that found Conger stood a do it right," she said. "The way slightly better chance against to do it would have been in-
the senator than Wehby did.
cremental approaches ... with
Neither Republican candidate
proven methods that work. Not
won more than 40 percent of the vote in that survey.
a massive overhaul like this." Wehby said she supports But in 2012, according to the creation of high-risk in- Moore, Oregon u n derwent surance pools, the expanded an "accidental experiment" to use of health savings accounts gaugethebaseline for Repuband tort reform to lower health
lican support. In the prima-
care costs. She does not agree with requiring a certain level of coverage for all insurance plans, forcing large employers to insure workers who work
ry that year, no Republicans ran for state attorney general
fewer than 40 hours a week or
tle-known Republican on the
or treasurer. But two w r ite-
in campaigns launched after the primary landed one lit-
mandating that individuals buy Novemberballotin each race. Both won about 40 percent of "The biggest problem is the the vote. gaw's) interference in the docMoore conduded that was tor-patient relationship," she the percentage of Oregonians said. "Because that is a very who were likely to check any personal relationship .... In- box with "Republican" next to stead, people are having to the name. change doctors, premiums are Even Knute Buehler, a Bend skyrocketing and it's causing physician and moderate Reall kinds of problems." publicanwho ran forsecretary Conger, on the other hand,
of state and is now running
has said he would fight to re- for Conger's seat in the state peal the entire law. He would
House, won only 43.2 percent of the vote in his loss to Dem-
then indude some popular provisions of the law in its replace- ocrat Kate Brown. Buehler, ment, such as allowing parents Moore pointed out, had stateto keep their children on their wide name recognition, biparplan until age 26. tisan appeal and the advantage "And I think we need to look at things like permitting inter-
of running for an office that
ers," he said. "I like health sav-
To a pundit on t h e East
isn't viewed as particularly state competition among insur- political. ings accounts in an expanded Coast, Moore said, it might sense. I think insurers should look like the gap between Conbe allowed to offer incentives
ger's estimated 40 percent and
to engage in healthy behavior Merkley's estimated 47 per... without (having to obtain) a cent is small enough to close. waiver."
But Moore said that could be
Conger has also needled tough in Oregon. For one thing, Wehby for working with Ore- he said, it's likely to cost more gon's other Democratic sena-
than 10 times the $1.1 million
tor, Ron Wyden, on his failed that Wehby has reported raisattempt at health care reform ing so far. Conger has raised that preceded the Affordable
even less than Wehby. At this point, Moore said he
Care Act. In 2007 and again in 2009,Wyden, along with Sen. doesn't see either candidate Robert Bennett, R-Utah, tried beating Merkley. "But six months is an eternito pass the Healthy Americans Act. Wyden's plan for universal ty in politics," he added. health care appeared to have
At this time in 2008, Merk-
bipartisan support but failed
ley was engaged in a tough Democraticprimary race and
to make it to a vote. The law is sometimes described as a blue-
whoever won that "stood no
print for the Affordable Care chance," Moore said, against
its spending across the country. The foundation has awarded more than $1 billion in grants nationally to educational efforts since 2000, making it one of the
largest private contributors to education in the country. It is one of a handful
of foundations with strong interests in education, including those belonging to Bill and Melinda Gates of
"The W a lton
Charter controversy
ber,the nation became aware
Medical Association. Wyden,
of what is now called the Great
many of them fierce, can-
Act.
Merkleycould become more vulnerable between now and the general election on Nov. 4 with some kind of personal
"It had bipartisan support and it was budget-neutral," she meltdown, such as an affair, sald.
according to Moore. Another
Wehby has accused Con- economic crash could turn votger of initially supporting the ers away from incumbents. Or Affordable Care Act based on a now-simmering issue such as his 2011 vote, as a member of the Affordable Care Act could the state House, for the bill that heat up to boiling and jolt votcreated the state health insur-
ance exchange, Cover Oregon. The exchange cost $248 million and its website, originally intended to offer one-stop comparative shopping for health
ers' priorities.
"Something like that could happen," Moore said. "But in effect, those are out of control of the candidates. The strat-
egy right now seems to be: Get through the primary, put The state decided Friday to together as good a campaign scrap its exchange altogether, as you can and hope the wind in favor of the federal one. blows the right way." Conger said he and other — Reporter: 541-410-9207; insurance, still doesn't work.
lawmakers faced two options
Iraff@bendbulletin.com
A separate Walton foundation that supports higher education bankrolls an academic department at the University
of Arkansas in which faculty,
charter schools, voucher pro-
F a m i ly investments. Neither Pianta
was president of the Oregon
terthan the Affordable Care
ual members of the Walton
ter, Mass.
Foundation has been deep- nor the Curry School have rely committed to a theory of ceived funding from Walton. change, which is that we Critics say Walton backs have a moral obligation to schools and measures that provide families with high take public dollars — and, quality choices," Sternberg some say, the most motivated said. "We believe that in families — away from the pubproviding choices we are lic schools, effectively creating also compelling the other a two-tier educational system schools in an ecosystem to that could hurt the students raise their game." most in need. Although Wal-Mart opened The supporters and critics of charter schools,
versation," Moore said.
tanks, conduct research on
of the Holy Cross in Worces-
family have made millions of grams and other policies the dollars in campaign donations foundation supports. to candidates for local school Microsoft; Eli Broad, a Los Last year, the Walton Fam- boards and state legislatures Angeles insurance billion- ilyFoundation gave $478,380 that support causes funded by aire; and Susan and Mi- to a fund affiliated with the the foundation. chael Dell, who made their Chicago public schools to help Walton's largest recipients money in computers. The officials conduct community include the Charter School groups have many overlap- meetings to discuss their plan Growth Fund, which helps ping interests, but analysts to close more than 50 schools charter school networks exoften describe Walton as at a time when charters were pand ($101.6 million since following a distinct ideo- expanding in the city. 2000); Teach for America, logical path. And Walton played a role in which recruits high-achieving In addition to giving a recent battle in New York, collegegraduates fortwo-year grants t o r i g ht-leaning giving a grant to a charter ad- teaching stints in poor disthink tanks like the Thom- vocacy group that helped pay tricts and now places about a as B. Fordham Institute and for advertisements attacking third of its corps members in the American Enterprise Mayor Bill de Blasio after he charter schools ($67.2 million); Institute for Public Polidenied public space to three KIPP, one of th e c ountry's cy Research, the Walton schools run by Success Acad- best-known and largest charfoundation hired an educa- emy Charter Schools, a net- ter school networks ($58.7 miltion program officer who work in which students have lion); the Alliance for School had worked at the Ameri- gotten high scores on stan- Choice, anational advocate for can Legislative Exchange dardized tests. private school vouchers ($18.4 While charter schools and million), whose board includes Council, a co n servative business-backed g r oup. vouchers may benefit those Carrie Penner, a member of Walton has also given to families that a t tend t h ese the Walton family; and Greatcentrist organizations such schools, there may be unin- Schools Inc., an online schools as New Leaders for New tendedeffects on the broader information database ($15.5 Schools, a group co-found- public school system. million.) ed by Jon Schnur, a former Grant recipients say WalLast year, the foundation senior adviser to President ton i n jects e n trepreneurial announced a two-year $8 Barack Obama's transition energy into public education million grant to Studentsteam and to Education Sec- and helps groups eager to try First, an advocacy group led retary Arne Duncan. new ideas move more quickly by Michelle Rhee, the former In 2013, th e W a l ton than they could if they relied schools chancellor in Washf oundation s p ent m o r e solely on publicly managed ington who oversaw many of than $164 million across bureaucracies. Thousands of the policy changes funded by the country. According to children, they say, attend bet- Walton in the district's public Marc Sternberg, who was terschools because ofoptions schools. StudentsFirst n ow appointed director of K-12 Walton supports. pushes for the extension of "The supply of new models many of those same policies e ducation reform at t h e Walton Family Foundation and new ideas is really import- in states across the country, in September, Walton has ant, and so I think it's a very contributing to the campaigns given grants to one in ev- positive thing," Robert Pianta, of lawmakers who support the ery four charter startups dean of the Curry School of group's agenda. "What they're doing in in the country, for a total of Education at the University of $335 million. Virginia, said of the Walton terms of education is they're
Republican two-term Sen. Gordon Smith. Then, in Septem-
tails of the bill. The bill wasn't perfect, she said, but it was bet-
several of whom were recruited from conservative think
schools open up, it's like a new to source fo r m an y c h a rWal-Mart store moving in," ter schools seeking startup said Kevin Welner, director of grants. In addition to funding the National Education Policy large networks like KIPP, Center at University of Colora- which is expanding in Washdo in Boulder. "You could look ington, the foundation has at it and say well, the schools given grants to several standin a community are losing alone schools. families because of healthy The Richard Wright Public competition the same way that Charter School for Journalism the hardware store is losing and Media Arts, housed in a customers because of healthy building across the street from competition. But that doesn't the Washington Navy Yard take into account the long- on the southeast part of the term harms to the community, city, received $250,000 from which are probably greater Walton in 2011. The school than any short-term benefit." used themoney to buy computers for students, as well as Politicaldonations chemistry lab equipment and In addition to the founda- recordinggear forthe school's tion's activities, many individ- media studio.
Walton's in v e stments Schneider,an assistant profeshere are a microcosm of sor of education at the College
Act. At the time, Wehby said, she
whom she considers a friend, Recession. "It changed that entire conasked her to look at medical de-
A5
lunches. According to Marco
Clark, the founder and head of the school, one in five students have special needs and one in
10 have been involved with the criminal justice system. On a recent morning, the
range of academic abilities in the school was apparent. In
an advancedplacement world history class, 11th-graders gave rapid-fire answers to questions about Native American tribes, with the teach-
er asking "Why'?" to gauge whether students were mere-
ly regurgitating memorized facts. Upstairs, in an eighth-
grade reading class, several studentsasked the teacher for help in understanding a passage about the world's largest harp. One boy struggled to eke out what he thought was the
main point. "It about how can orchastra works," he wrote. Several students noted that
they had come from schools in which they either did not feel safe or were not learning
much. Clark acknowledged that the school was still working to raise test scores, and
had added extra math and reading classes. "Those who want to criti-
cize any philanthropy group for giving money to kids to change their futures," said Clark, "there's something wrong with them."
trying to create an alterna-
tive system and destabilize what has been the anchor of
American democracy,"said Randi Weingarten, president of the American Federation
of Teachers, the country's second-largest teachers union. Walton hasbecome a gor
/
rr
g
its first two stores in the na-
tion's capital just in December after a protracted battle over
the retailer's wages, the Walnot be easily divided into ton Family Foundation has political camps. Supporters played a role in steering the include both Republicans direction of public education and Democrats, although in the city for more than a decritics tend to come more cade. Since 2000, the foundafrom the left. In Washing-
tion has invested more than
ton, where the charter system has strong backing in City Hall, supporters have been moresuccessfulthan in New York, where oppo-
$80 million here, not only in
sition from teachers unions
millions into a controversial overhaul of tenure, the imple-
and others has kept charter school enrollment to about 6 percent, despite growth in the past decade.
All of the school's students
qualify for federally subsidized free or reduced price
HWY 20E & Dean SwiftRd. (1 block West of Costco) p
541-323-S011 • sf3rks.com
charter schools but also in
support of taxpayer-funded vouchers for students to attend private schools. It poured mentation of stricter teacher
evaluation systems and the introduction of performance pay
The size of the Walton in the district's public schools. f oundation's w a l le t al Walton also supports mealows it to exert an outsize sures that labor leaders say influence o n ed u cation undermine union protections
policy as well as on which schools flourish and which
for teachers. Like-minded
are forced to fold. With its many tentacles, it has
ing together in many cases, so there are few dissenting
helped fuelsome of the fastest growing, and most
voices. " When l o t s
Walton recipients are work-
of c h arter
GRAND OPENING NAY 5™ I '
•
A6 T H E BULLETIN • SUNDAY, APRIL 27, 2014
DA
unrelated to the faulty buses.
"It's interesting and disapContinued from A1 pointing that Patrick would A f o r mer i n v estigator, say that," Hummel said. "BeSharon Sweet, also sued Fla- cause when he left the DA's herty and the county, alleg- office the first time it was be-
ing wrongful termination and cause he got into a spat with discrimination. That case was also settled, and Sweet got
$310,000 from the state and county. And the state settled w ith Nicole Jenson, a D e -
his boss. He quit and left on
the eve of a major homicide trial and the case had to be handed to a DDA that didn't
know anything about it and they lost. He left our commu-
schutes County Circuit Court trialassistant,for $10,314 af- nity at risk and he should be ter she sued Flaherty, alleging embarrassed by that." he caused her hardship by Flaherty abruptly quit as a changing her work schedule. deputy district attorney after All lawsuits were settled with- then-DA Mike Dugan refused out admission of wrongdoing to assign him a high-profile or liability, according to court m urder case. He q ui t f i v e documents. weeks before a complex murHummel said he doesn't dis- der-by-abuse case against Lisa agree with Flaherty's choice to Lynn Stickney, accused of fire employees or change their shaking a baby to death, was schedules, but said he went scheduled for trial. After Flaabout it incorrectly.
herty left, Stickney's case was
"I'm not going to be reluc- reassigned to another deputy tant to let someone go, but if district attorney. Stickney was I do it, they may (sue) me, ab- found not guilty beyond a reasolutely, but if they do it they'll sonable doubt. "When I left after being here lose," Hummel said at an April 15 candidate forum. "Because,
for 12 years I didn't leave the
you know what'? I would have community at risk," Hummel done it the right way.... I sald. know how to hire, I know how
to fire, I've fired before and there's never been a successful lawsuit against me."
Citizenship Some call
hear about
inition. Six years after Tapanila's husband lost his job at a Boeing factory in Washington state and they moved to Canada for work, thecouplebecame citizens of their new country.
She says U.S. consular officials told her that, by swearing allegiance to Canada, she might well have lost her American citizenship. After retiring from a job as an administrative assistant at an oil company in Calgary, Tapanila began putting $125 a month into a special savings account for her developmental-
ly disabled son, matched by the Canadian government. In her
Juniper Utility
will, she authorized creation of a trust fund to draw on retire-
their U.S. citizenship and
m ent savings and other assets
Critics have also come after Hummel for the council's
dropping that of another country.
while Hummel was a coun-
t he water b ecause of sediment.
cilor, made many controversial choices. Though Hummel shouldn't be held solely responsiblefor decisions made by the seven-person council, he was sometimes referred
Since taking over the utility company in 2002, the city has poured $5 million to $7 million into repairs, in addition to the $9.6 million a judge ordered the city to pay the former
to as a "maverick" and was a strong advocate for causes he
owner. "I stand behind that deci-
believed in, regardless of their popularity with other council
sion. If people want to say we
the
Last year, Texas Sen.
Walter Bieri/The Associated Press file photo
know she was required to file U.S. tax returns until 2007,
when her daughter raised the
the U.S. until she was 5, then again for two more years before she turned11. Mauch kept dual citizenship until she became mayor.
his wife was doing well enough that he imagined one day they could get there. The idea of the giving up Swiss citizenship U.S. government taxing his gained through marriage. Canadian wife's money didn't seem right.
South. Here everyone is so nice. They invite you into their
"When I learned about that, I
U.S. ties say tax laws drive de-
Avoiding taxes
One of the few times rejected U.S. citizenship has gotten significant ink was Facebook co-founder Eduardo Saverin's 2011 decision to turn in his American
his decisions caused him to be
Hall because at the time real
sued as an individual. "There is a big distinction
estate was sky high and we could have either sold or
here.The federal government,
leased the downtown location.
state government, counties It would have been good for and cities deal in billions of the taxpayers," he said. "We dollars and when you're deal- bought the land but when we ing in that much money there voted to move City Hall, I lost. are going to be lawsuits," he I know there was a lot of lobsaid. "I have never been sued, bying going on and the other individually. Patrick has been councilors were getting a lot of sued, as an individual, sever- pressure." al times, for his actions. That And there were some pershows he is the problem." sonnel issues during Hummel's time on council as well.
Bend cycled through three city managers in about two years during Hummel's first term on City Council. First, in 2001, when a new batch of
councilors, including Hummel, took their spots on the
council, longtime City Manager Larry Patterson was asked
to leave. David Hales took his Hummel, undeterred, says he spot, but resigned after two
tem, but voters didn't want it.
y ears. Both men had to be
bought out of their contracts city budget to come up with and the city spent thousands money to purchase buses. To of taxpayer dollars recruiting keep costs down, the council forthejob. bought used buses at a disSome fault the council for counted price, but they turned t he quick t u rnover of c i t y out to be lemons. A Bulletin managers, but Hummel says publicrecords request from the situation was not unusual. "With government leaders, 2007 determined a mechanic sent to inspect the buses said like the city manager or cabithey had several mechani- net members, it's not only not cal problems. The mechanic unusual, it's expected you're
going to have a change like that," Hummel said. "It's not unexpected that when new
City Council regimes are sworn in they hire a new city
manager." Hummel said his only re"He ignored the voice of the gret during his time on the
have criticized the decision.
voters and bought the buses anyway," Flaherty said. "He
council is that, upon Hales'
disregarded the law and then, when things went haywire, he blamed the mechanic.Then what did he do? He quit."
City Council refused to release the documentation of Hales'
resignation, Hummel and the last performance evaluation to the public. The Bulletin took the council to court after
not know the buses had me- requesting a copy of the evalchanical problems, and said uation and having its request denied. The Bulletin won, and
fixed-route bus system. the council was forced to re"They were lemons and I ac- lease the information and pay cept responsibility for that. I'm The Bulletin's legal fees. "(Patterson) said if we didn't the guy in charge and I made the decisions," he said. "I'm release his performance evalnot perfect and I didn't make uation he wouldn't seek his a perfect decision, but look at severance package," Hummel the end result. We got a bus said. "In retrospect, I realize system in place without intro- that wasn't my decision to ducing any new taxes." make." — Reporter: 541-383-0376, sking@bendbulletin.com
dent of Switzerland since
taxation was "not the crucial
accounts of many Americans
r e m a ined an
lives. I thought that was de-
for hers.
"How would my dients pay me?" says Nelson, who is 71 and also an author of mystery
Taxes play little or no role in
encountered."
There wasn't one single thing that pushed him away.
and expatriation. Even then, U.S. artists and
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But his children wanted to at-
tend Austrian colleges and he
I~
and his wife wanted to vote in
the country they considered home. The family was tired of renewing visas and work permits. And so they signed documents giving up U.S. cit-
advises people on expatri- izenship. Now, one of the last ation. "For many of these vestiges of American culture in people, this is not a tax issue their home is watching Seattle at all." Seahawks games online. Even some who a cSports played the central knowledge tax worries say role in Quincy Davis' decision. decisions to renounce are Davis, raised in Los Angeles far more complicated than and Mobile, Ala., played proa simple desire to avoid fessional basketball in Europe paying. after three years as Tulane Peter Dunn, born in Chi- University's leading scorer. By cago and raised in Alaska, 2011, he was home studying moved to Canada to pursue to become a firefighter when a graduate degree in theolo- he was offered a spot on a Taigy. He met his wife, Cather- wanese pro squad. He's since ine, and they made Toronto helped lead the Pure Youth home when her work as one C onstruction team t o t w o of the owners of an aviation championships. maintenance firm made her When the team's owner sugthe breadwinner. gested last year that he join Dunn
cials told her such a decision
and a mistake as minor as an mocracy. Apparently, I've got it overdraft could mean the same all wrong."
-
nation," said John Richardson, a Toronto lawyer who
ship on his behalf, saying offi-
mustbe made bythe individual of growing up in the U.S. Even alone. "You know, we are not rich after moving to Europe, she continued sending five to 10 people and we are not tax emails a week to members of evadersand we are not traitors Congress, opposing the Iraq and I'm more than tired of beshe reconsidered. war and the Patriot Act. After ing labeled that way," Tapanila During the last A meri- 15 years, she acquired Swiss says. "I'm sorry that I've given my can presidential election, "I citizenship so she could vote. asked myself 'Where do I feel But she began considering ex- son this burden and I can do at home?' And the answer is patriation only in 2010 after a nothing about it ... I thought clear: In Zurich and in Switzer- banker told her that, because we had some rights to go wherland. My attachment to Amer- of new U.S. financial report- ever we wanted to go and some ica is limited to my very early ing laws, it was closing the choices we could make in our
novels. "Where does my Soother decisions. cial Security get deposited? In recent years, federNorman Heinrichs-Gale's Where does my pension get al officials have stepped parents w er e m i s sionaries deposited'?" up pursuit of potential tax from Washington state who The jump in renunciations evaders, using the Foreign raised him in Asia and the Mid- reflects evolving views about Account Tax Compliance dle East. In 1986, he traveled national identity, said Nancy Act, which requires that to Austria with his American Green, an AmericanprofesAmericans overseas report wife, and they found work at a sor at the L'Ecole des Hautes assets to the IRS or pay stiff conference center in an alpine Etudes en SciencesSociales penalties. Those trying to valley town of 6,000. The jobs in Paris. When the U.S. got its comply complain of costly were supposed to last a year. start, citizenship was defined fees for accountants and But the couple stayed, sending by "perpetual allegiance" lawyers, having to report their children to local schools. the British notion of nationality the income of non-AmeriOn yearly trips to the U.S. he as a birthright that could never can spouses, and decisions felt increasingly like a strang- be changed. by some European banks er. "I never forget going into a American colonists rejectto close accounts of U.S. citi- grocery store and just being ed that to justify becoming zens or deny them loans. stunned by my choice of cere- citizens of a newly indepenBut some of those surren- als," Heinrichs-Gale says. "I dent country. But changeable dering citizenship say their was stunned by just the pace of citizenship wasn't widely emreasons are as much about life compared to what we have braced until the mass immilife as about taxes, particu- here,stunned by the extremes gration of the late 1800s, says larly since the U.S. govern- of wealth and poverty that I Green, a historian of migration $96,600in yearly income. Decisions to renounce "are driven by a whole range of emotional considerations.... You've got anger, you've got fear, you've got a strong sense of indig-
Tapanila, 70, has tried and failed to renounce U.S. citizen-
Nelson has vivid memories
accounts.
ment does not tax Americans abroad on their first
paid about $2,000 in U.S. taxes, including on funds in her son's disability savings account.
for her retirement and her son.
in particular, hit a political factor for my decision. But I nerve, along with scan- will not miss the U.S. tax budals surrounding UBS and reaucracy either." Credit Suisse, which were caught matching wealthy Changing lifestyles
Americans with o ffshore
lawyers and accountants and
zenship to protect money saved
1995, relinquished her U.S. passport. youth," Mauch said. Double But Saverin's decision,
she should have one. She has sincespent $42,000 on feesfor
"I wish I were wealthy," said
Corine Mauch arrived at the
Rich, the ex-wife of pardoned trader March Rich, 2 012 and
homes, they're so hospitable. ... There's no crime, no guns. I can't help but love this place." Many others cutting their
aftera border officer told her
same decisionby a different Nelson, who says she takes route. Mauch was born a U.S. in about$50,000 a year from citizen to Swiss parents who pensions and earnings from were college students in Iowa. publishing an online journal They lived in the U.S. until covering credit union news.
U.S. citizenship. D enise
lives in London. Last fall, singer Tina Turner, a resi-
t r oubles were
decided that to protect mywife, cisions that have nothing to do In 2012 she turned in the I better expatriate," he says. with secreting wealth. passport, renouncing U.S. citi-
chased the site for $4.7 million. Hummel said he voted for the purchase because he thought the plan was to relocate City
expatriated in
subject. Her
compounded by her decision to apply for a U.S. passport
The Bulletin. The city pur-
Then there was the issue of
Tapanila says she didn't
Members of the Zurich City Council stand with Mayor Corine
the city's decision to purchase the land that formerly housed
the same thing again because it was a public health issue."
to provide for her son, who is now 40, after her death.
Ted Cruz acknowledged Meuch, center, in Zurich in 2010. Meuch was born e U.S. citizen to the Canadian citizenship Swiss parents who were college students in iowa. They lived in
passport after moving to Singapore. Saverin likely avoided millions of dollars she was 5, then again for two in taxes by doing so short- more years before she turned ly before Facebook's initial 11. Mauch maintained dual stock offering. citizenship even after she was Other wealthy A m eri- elected to Zurich's city council. cansalsohave relinquished But when she became mayor,
shouldn't have condemned it, fine," he said. "But I would do
ways right during his tenure on the council, and said in Hall there. But when the vote hindsight there were things he to actually relocate came bew ould havedone diff erently. fore the council, it failed. "I supported moving City But he pointed out that none of
Hummel also said his decision to leave the council was
Canada has tested that redef-
c o mpatriots
mix her child's formula with
he's proud the city now has a
it — by choice. But Carol Tapanila's life in
When Americans do
fore returning to the U.S. The Bend City Council,
Hummel maintains he did
who could keep — or surrender
she's lived in Switzerland 24 years. "It felt like a divorce. It felt like a death. I took the second oath and I left the consulate and I threwup."
"100 percent committed to our United States Constitution," announced she was
wrote a memo warning city officials he wouldn't recommend buying them, but the city purchased the buses anyway. Many, including Flaherty,
1I~"~ ', 'f j
ton accent lingers though
unacceptably low. One woman told Hummel that she couldn't
sat down with then-Mayor Bill Friedman and tr immed the
zenshiphas come to beviewed as belonging to an individual,
nationality back," says Donna-Lane Nelson, whose Bos-
The Carter Foundation in Liberia for about two years be-
Before Bend had a f ixed-
only since then that U.S. citi-
I couldnever,ever get my
Rep. MicheleBachmann, R-Minn., saying she was
route bus system, several citizens approached the City Council saying one was needed. The council proposed a tax increase to establish a bus sys-
away on certain grounds. It's
past decade. At the U.S. consulate in Geneva, "I talked to a man who explained to me that
approachedby many citizens stating water pressure was
were the problem.
the government could take
of renouncers have swollen more than fivefold in the
Hummel resigned from the council. He then worked for
In 2006, six broken buses
izenship remained a privilege
Nonetheless, the ranks
he was born to, but said he would renounce it. In 2012,
Bus purchase
taxes. Until the 1960s, U.S. cit-
"accidental A m ericans," who recall little of life in the U.S., but long ago happened to be born in it. Others say they renounced because of politics, family or personal identity. Some say signing away citizenship was a huge relief. Others recall being sickened by the decision.
Hummel says the council was
ten to my constituents." Hummel said he wasn't al-
suspected of trying to avoid
k
t h emselves
2008, but in February 2007
"I'm not shy about sharing my opinion on an issue, and I do my homework before making a decision," Hummel said. "But I can absolutely change my mind if I hear input from the public or councilors. I lis-
in the 1920s were criticized,
Continued from A1
rejecting citizenship, it's more often people keeping
Hummel was elected twice decision, during his first term, to the Bend City Councilto condemn Juniper Utility in 2000 and 2004. His second Co., which served four southterm would have ended in east Bend neighborhoods.
members.
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SUNDAY, APRIL 27, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
LOOKING AHEAD:OBAMACARE
Pan ricin
Kaiser Health News
With the results sure to af-
up rates. A sign-up surge at the end of March is another reason
fect politics as well as pock- not to rely on early claims etbooks, health insurers are information. preparing to raise rates next
year for plans issued under the Affordable Care Act. But how much depends on
Late sign-ups Just as the first enrollees were more likely to need immediate care, insurers think
their ability to predict how newly enrolled customers people who pushed the dead— for whom little is known line may be healthier and regarding health status and younger. If so, they would balmedical needs — will affect ance the risk and help cover 2015 costs.
"We're working with about
the cost of the early birds.
"It's clear that sick people a third of the information that were signing up" for January we usually have," said Brian coverage, said David Axene, Lobley, senior vice president a fellow of the Society of Acof marketing and consumer tuaries working with insurers business at P e nnsylvania's to set 2015 rates. "The quesIndependence Blue Cross. tion now is, were the later "We've really been combing people healthier?" the data to get a first look." N obody knows. W h i le March enrollees seem to have Rising prices been younger on balance, At stake are price increas-
their health status remains
es that buyers on the federal largely a mystery. exchange, HealthCare.gov, Blue Shield of California and other online marketplac- signed more than 50,000 peoes will encounter when they ple during the last two weeks get renewal notices this year. of March. Forecasting success or fail-
"It's still too early to draw
ure could also affect whether insurers stay on the exchanges, a key pillar of the health overhaul. The 2014 enrollment period
conclusions," said Amy Yao, Blue Shield's chief actuary. "I
closed at the end of March for
cent confidence" that they'll hit the rate-setting sweet spot
most consumers. But carriers selling medical plans on
have the best actuarial team
in the whole country. Even with that, it's less than 50 perfor 2015, she said.
It's unclear how many of the 8 million who enrolled f ederal regulators in l a te through the exchanges were May or June — even though previously uninsured. Many they have little idea about the who di d h a v e c overage HealthCare.gov must file initial 2015 rate requests with
health and potential costs of their newly enrolled mem-
bers.Deadlines also loom for state-run exchange filings. WellPoint, the biggest player in the online exchanges, is talking about double-digit
ALAMOG O R DO, N.M.— A decades-old urban legend was put to rest Saturday when workers for a documentary film production company recovered "E.T." Atari game cartridges from a heap of garbage buried deep in the New Mexico desert. The "Atari grave" was, until that moment, a highly
laterthis year on Microsoft's Xbox game consoles. The city of A l amogordo agreed to give the documentarians up to 250 cartridges
debatedtale among gaming enthusiasts and other selfdescribed geeks for 30 years. The story daimed
and plan to sell the rest that are unearthed.
that in its death throes, the
video game company sent about a dozen truddoads of cartridges of what many
Mayor SusieGalea hopes
-ATARII
ever to be forever hidden in a concrete-covered land-
this brings more tourists to this southeastern New Mexico town that is home to an Air Force base and White Sands National Monument.
fill i n s outheastern New Mexico.
through, unfortunately," she
call the worst video game
"Lots of people just pass
The search for the cartridges of a game that contributed to the demise of
SBld.
The"E.T." gameis amongthe
Atari will b e featured in
Film director Zak Penn shows a box of a decades-old Atarl game
an upcoming documenta- "E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial" found in a landfill in Alamogordo, N.M. ry about the biggest video game company of the early '80s. out boxes, games and other At- and had to sneak past the seAs a backhoe scattered ari products. curity guard. But it paid off as a huge scoop of 30-year-old Most of the crowd left the they found dozens of crushed trash and dirt over the sand, landfill before the discovery, but still playable cartridges. the film crew spotted box- turned away by strong winds The game's finding came es and booklets carrymg that kicked up massive douds as nosurpriseto James Heller, the Atari logo. Soon after, a of dust mingled with garbage. a former Atari manager who game cartri dge turned up, By the time the games were was invited by the production then another and another. found,only afew dozen people to the dig site. He says in 1983 Film director Zak Penn remained. Some were playing the company tasked him with showed assembled gaming the infamous game in a make- finding an inexpensive way to fans onecartridge retrieved shift gaming den with a TV and dispose of 728,000 cartridges from the site and said that an 1980s game console in the they had in a warehouse in El hundreds more were in the backof a van, while others took Paso, Texas. After a few local surrounding mounds of selfies beside alife-size E.T. doll kids ran into trouble for scavgarbage. inside a DeLorean car like the enging and the media started About 200 residents and one that was turned into a time calling him about it, he decided game enthusiasts gathered machine in the "Back To The to poura layer ofconcrete over early Saturday at the old Future" movies. the games. "I never heard about again it landfill in Alamogordo to Among the watchers was watch crews search for up to Armando Ortega, a city official until June 2013, when I read an amillion discardedcopies of who as a teenager back in 1983 artide about E.T. being exca"E.T. The Extraterrestrial" got a tip from a landfill employ- vated," he remembers. He was ee about the massive dump of
games. "It was pitch dark here that
meaning their new insurers couldn't see their health
ed to hide forever. "I feel pretty relieved and psyched that they actually got to see something," Penn said as members of the pro-
histories. At CoOportunity Health, a
the mounds of trash, pulling
switched carriers this year,
not aware of the controversy
new. "It is a n
mare to try to guess what you're going to get," Gold said.
the marketplaces, but I think it's anyone's guess" about
tration allowed many people to keep old plans that aren't
It's not just member health that insurers have to think about. The Obama adminis-
R @MARINE
that were almost impossible to escape and would appear constantly andunpredictably. The game designer, Howard Scott Warshaw, says he does
not mind his creation being called that. "It may be a horrible game, but 32 years after, you are here, talking to me about it. It's a tremendous honor," that it still generates public
discourse. He, however, manages to
t•
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said, are "on par for what we
much later.
Given the uncertainties that
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percent.
That would still be far higher than growth in the economy or family incomes.
valves designed to keep highcost members from pushing
that the E.T. falling into traps
)t •
members will become a little
ily mean average costs will soar. For one thing, insurers figured they would cover more sick patients this year and priced plans a ccordingly. Early pharmacy data at Independence Blue Cross, Lobley
insurance" and other safety
Tina Amini, deputy editor at
gaming website Kotaku, says the game tanked because "it was practically broken" with
thought to be healthier on av-
ing illness. That reduces what weaker next year. Insurers they know about customers have to factor that into their and raises the likelihood that rates. they'll sign sicker, more exAnd they need to look at pensive members who were the big picture. previously denied coverage. What economists call the At CoOportunity Health, a cost trend — how high prices nonprofit carrier in Iowa and rise per procedure and how Nebraska, many enrollees many procedures Americans scheduled medical treatments get this year — may be the — including surgeries — as biggest variable in setting soon as possible after their pricesfor2015,expertssaid. coverage began Jan. 1, said And the trend seems to be chief operating officer Cliff up. After several years of relGold. Among the procedures atively tame increases that were several expensive trans- many tie to a sluggish econoplant operations, including my, medical spending accelheart and lung procedures erated late last year. that can cost more than $1 Even so, the forces affectmillion each. ing 2015 premiums may not But insurers tend to receive drive up ACA prices as much pharmaceutical claims long as some are forecasting. Findbefore hospital bills. They ing that insurers have gotten are poring over these early discounts from select hospiprescript ion records for clues tals and doctors, the Congresabout new members' medical sional Budget Office recently status. lowered its estimate for the Pharmacy-benefit manag- cost of premiums and taxpayer ExpressScripts published er subsidies under the health data April 9 showing that law. "I'm not expecting doumarketplace enrollees in January and February were sub- ble digits like some people stantially more likely than av- have predicted" for 2015 rate erage to have HIV infections, increases, Axene said. "I'm chronic pain, depression and expecting mid-to-high sinother high-cost ailments. gle digits" — from 6 to 8.5
ers this year than planned, the health law includes "re-
gamers?
I
erage) affects average costs in their new policies. B ackup r esources f o r surers to accept all applicants plans with disproportionate this year for the first time shares of sick and expensive
more chronically ill custom-
tler debate remains. Was it the worst game ever unleashed on
W4 N4eeriets are Wree!
wall." The health law required in-
expected." Even if c arriers signed
With the whether-or-not E.T.
was buried in Alamogordo controversy solved, the other, sub-
Seasosp+
what the precise changes compliant with A C A r u l es. will be, said Sabrina Corlette, Carriers must calculate how project director at the George- that exception (people covtown University Center on ered under old plans are
But that doesn't necessar-
bounce back for severalyears.
and never spoke out "because stress that the company took nobody asked." too long to secure the rights for night, but we came with our The documentary about the the game and with Christmas flashlights and found dozens search is being developed by production schedules pressing of games," he said. Theybraved companies including Xbox En- he was left with just five weeks the darkness, coyotes and tertainment Studios, and the to design, write and test "the snakes of the desert landfill film is expected to be released worst game ever."
duction team sifted through
a ctuarial night-
fore the November elections. Analysts' exp e ctations vary, but nobody is predicting decreases. "We'll see rate increases in
without asking about exist-
video game industry that didn't
from the health law, every
one ofthe 74,000 customers is
"It's like nailing Jell-0 to a
of Atari and the collapse in the U.S. of a multimillion-dollar
start-up created with funding
creases would give ammuni-
Health Insurance Reforms.
factors blamed for the dedine
Juan Carlos uorca/The Associatedpress
that the game's maker want-
rate hikes for 2015. Such intion to Republican critics be-
Burie in esert:'t eworstgameever' By Juan Carlos Llorcae The Associated Press
osesc a en e orinsurers By Jay Hancock
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come with a major new social law, officials at Independence
Blue Cross don't think the picture will become clear until "We always viewed this as a three-year plan," Lobley said. "We always thought there would be a lot of volatility in years one and two. We
really thought 2016 would (bring) market stability in the individual market."
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AS TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, APRIL 27, 2014
Scots ponder:Shouldthey stayor should theygo? By Steven Erlanger and Katrin Bennhold
Vadim Ghirda/The Associated Press
A man wears a flag depicting Pope John Paul II on Saturday outside St. Peter's Square at the Vatican. The faithful are gathering in Rome to attend today's ceremony where Pope Francis will elevate his predecessors John XXIII and John Paul II to sainthood.
Francis stra es ivi e in onor of pfe ecessors By Jim Yardley
ing with th e V atican press
New York Times News Service
office for the ceremony, disV ATICAN CITY — P o pe agreed with those who see the John XXIII was the rotund ceremony as a calculated gesItalian pontiff with a common ture of reconciliation. "Some would say that, but touch, who told jokes, embraced the poor and became
of sex and almost as much whether the union 307 years whisky as rain. ago had been a good ideaNew York Times News Service H aving o p ened ju s t "Aye" or "Nae." EDINBURGH — The Roy- months before S cotland "Nae," John Menzies deal Lyceum Theatre here has votes whether to regain its cided, popping his theater a modest hit on its hands, a independence, the play has ticket into the designated slightly scabrous play that received mixed r e views, slot. "We should never have tells the story of Scotland's w hich it s d i r ector, M a r k p arliamentary vote to d i s- Thomson, described as "up sold out our country in the solve itself and join the king- and down, from cardiac ar- first place, never," said Mendom of England in 1707. rest and back." He staged it zies, a 46-year-old graphic "Union," by Tim Barrow, now, he said, "as a political designer. "Luckily, we will depicts the English as con- act, to confront Scotland soon get a chance to set that niving, Queen Anne as a with itself." right." ravenous simpleton and the Barrow says he will vote The votes for indepenScots who voted for union "yes," for Scottish indepen- dence seemed to just outas having been bribed by dence, on Sept. 18. Thom- number those against, reachthe English and their agents, son calls himself "one of the ing a little bit higher in the who included Daniel Defoe. great undecided." After each clear ballot boxes. But in real There is much to tug at the performance, there is an in- life the balance is still the heartstrings of t h e S c ots: formal poll among the audi- other way, with every poll a passionate poor Scottish ence, with a late-night rush so far giving the pro-union bard, perfidious Englishmen, to vote in the ballot boxes camp a clear, though shrinkcynical a r istocrats, plenty set up in the foyer, asking ing lead.
For
the
i nd e pendence
camp it is in many ways a race against time: Over the last six months the momentum has shifted toward
independence, but at least one-sixth of Scottish voters
in recent polls have said they were undecided or refused to answer.
With the polls tightening, the former Labour prime m inister
G o r do n Br o w n
spoke in Glasgow last week in defense of the union, arguing that Scotland is better
off economically inside the United Kingdom, especially in terms of pensions and so-
cial welfare. The referendum, open to anyone registered to v ote,
is binding and need pass by only one vote.
Get the phone you
want for zero down.
I wouldn't go that far," Rosica
beloved as "the Good Pope." said. "We don't use something To many liberal Catholics, he like this to do that." is still revered for the Second Vatican Council, th e l a n dmark event of the 1960s that sought to move the Roman Catholic Church into the mod-
ern age. Pope John Paul II was the
charismatic Polish pontiff who liked to sneak away from
Without question, though,
the event has stirred considerabledebate among many Catholics, about the process
of canonizing saints and about
( O li~
the legacies of the two former
popes, especially John Paul. He is regarded as a defining figure of th e 2 0th century,
the Vatican to ski and who
revered for his fight against
retooled the papacy in a new era of globalized media. His vision of a more rigid Catholicism made him a revered figure amongmany conservative
Communism in Eastern Eu-
Catholics suspicious of the lib-
eralizing spirit introduced by
But posthumously, criticism of his papacy has sharpened,
John XXIII. "The man who took the lid
for how his retrenchment of church power to the Vatican
off and the man who tried to
ultimately led to scandals, and
put it back on," said Eamon
for his failure to confront the
Duffy, a professor of the history of Christianity at the University of Cambridge. Now a new pope, Francis, is making his most public at-
clerical sexual abuse scandal, even asevidence mounted ofa
tempt to sew together the two
or should not happen at all.
Tuesday
'IO
rope and admired by many for how he endured suffering during his long, public illness before his death in 2005.
tt ts t
ics argue that his canonization has been wrongly fast-tracked Alr
1$IVil
protest that he is unworthy of
cis will preside today over a sainthood. first-of-its-kind joint canonizaMore than any pope, John tion of the former popes, both Paul recognized the emoiconic figures in the 20th-cen- tional and symbolic value of tury church who will be ele- conferring sainthoods as he vated to sainthood during a
(j+
sought to spread Catholicism
Mass at St.Peter'sSquare. around the world, experts For Francis, who has spent say. He canonized 482 saints the first year of his papacy — more than all his predestraddling the divisions with- cessors combined. To do this, in the church, this twinning he streamlined the canonizaallows him to deftly avoid ele- tion process, reducing to five vating one man over the other years the waiting period after and serves his broader agenda a person's death before the of de-emphasizing ideological canonization process can be battles as he tries to renew ex- initiated. citement among the faithful and reversea steady decline in
When John Paul died, his s uccessor, B e nedict X V I ,
church attendance.
waived the shorter waiting period and sped up the pro-
" The Catholic Church i s
s
widespread crisis. Some crit-
men's different legacies as Advocates for sexual abuse he pushes his own vision of a victims have come to Rome to church under a big tent. Fran-
s
9te+ rss
e Designedby Appe FCC10:BCG-E2
0 •
big enough to encompass the cess so that John Paul will devotees of John XXIII and now become a saint only nine John Paul II," said Kathleen
years after his death. When
Sprows Cummings, director Benedict unexpectedly reof the Cushwa Center for the signed last year, leading to the Study of American Catholicism at the University of Notre
Dame. "That is the message he is sending." Unquestionably, the pairing has transformed the Mass
election of Francis as pope, the
sainthood process for John Paul had largely been completed, even as some critics
argued that it was happening
into a g l obal media event.
too fast. "Francis has inherited this,"
Huge crowds are pouring
said Duffy, the historian, not-
® i one s
into Rome, w it h e s timates ing that the new pope would that hundreds of thousands of have faced a huge outcry
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people — possibly more than had he sought to slow things 2 million — will fill St. Peter's down. "In a sense, doing these
Switch to the network that brings 4G LTE t o nearly 9096
Square or w atch th e cere-
two together is the least-bad
mony on more than a dozen solution. He can't be accused largescreens erected in piaz- of identifying with a single zas acrossRome. Portraits of party." both former popes have been Francis himself has shown draped on St. Peter's Basilica, a willingness to use his own and souvenir shops are selling discretion in naming saints. This month, he waived the canonization trinkets. "We love both popes," said requirement of e v idence of Antonio Rossi, 31, a teach- two miracles performed at the er from Naples who walked posthumous intercession of a with his girlfriend around the candidateand declared three square Friday. "They are two new saints from the Americas: figures who left a great mark a former Jesuit priest from on the Catholic Church. What is important is that they both
become saints, because that is how I perceive them in my life." V atican o ff icials h a v e played down the political subtext of the ceremony, arguing that reducing the two former popes to a left-right political shorthand is inaccurate and cheapens what for many Catholics is a joyous and deeply spiritual moment. The Rev.
of our customers, and we'll pay off your old contract.
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Brazil and two leading Catho-
lic figures from Canada. With his folksy style, Francis is often compared to John XXIII, the son of a t e nant farmer in northern Italy. The canonization process for
John, who died in 1963, had been underway for decades but was slowed by his lack of the secondrequired miracle. Francis intervened, waiving the requirement and pairing him with John Paul for today's
Thomas Rosica, who is work- event.
Thingswewant youIo know:A newRetail InstallmentContract attdSharedConnect Plan required. Credit approval required.Regulatory Cost Rscovetr Feeapplies (currstttly S1.57/litte/month);this is ttota taxorgvmt. requiredcharge.Add. fees,taxesattdtermsapply andvary bysvc. attd eqmt Offersvalid in-storeat participatinglocationsonlyattdcannot becombined.Seestoreoruscelular.com for details. 46LTEttot available in all areas.Seeuscelular.com/4Gfor completecoveragedetails. 4GLTEservice providedthroughKing StreetWireless, apartner oiU.S.Cellular. LTEis atrademark of ETSI. Contract PayoffPromo:Offer validonmaximum oi two lines.Mustportitt currentnumberto U.S. Ilelulare attd purchasenewSmartphotte ortablet throughaRetail InstallmentContract ona Shared Connect Plan.Submit final bil identifyingearly terminationlee (ETF)chargedbycarrier within 60daysofactivation dateto ttscellular.com/cotttractpayoff sr viamail toU.S.Ilelular ContractPayoff Program5591-61; POBsx 752257; ElPaso,TX88575-2257. Customer wil be reimbursed for theETFreflected ottfinal bill ttpto $350/litte. Reimbursement informof a U.S.Cellular Mastsrilard®DebitCardissued byMetaBank llllembsrFDIIl pursuantts licensefromMasterCard Intsmatiottal Incorporated.Thiscarddoesttothave cashaccess attd canbeusedat anymerchant lscaliott that acceptsMasterilsrd Debit Ilards withintheU.S.only. Cardvalid throughexpiration date shownott front of card.Allow 12-14 weeks for processing.Tobseligible, customermustregisler for MyAccount Alsovalid onbusinessaccountsfor newlines ttpto 10lines. Iletail InstallmentGottlract: Retail Installment Contract (Ilontrsct) and monthlypaymentsaccording to thePayment Schedulein tite Contract required.If yottarein default si terminateyour Ilontrsct, wsmayrequire yott to immediately paythe entire ttnqaidAmount Financedaswell as ottr collectioncosts,attorneys' feesandcourt castsrelatedtoenforcing yourobligatlonsundertheContract KansasCustomers: Inareasinwhich U.S. Cellular receivessupport fromtheFederal UnlversalService Fund,all reasonablersquests for servicemustbemst. Unresolvedquestlonsconcerning services availability canbedlrsctedto theKansasCorporation CommissionONceof Pttblc Affairs andConsumerProtectionat 1-800-662-0027.Limited-timeoffer. Trademarksandtrade namesaretheproperty of their respectlveowners. Additional termsapply. Seestore orttscellttlar.comfor details. ©2014 U.S.Celular
Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B4-5 Weather, B6
© www.bendbulletin.com/local
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, APRIL 27, 2014
BRIEFING
tions, like Economic Devel-
Bishop reachesout to ousted Bend priest
could mean $100,000 less over the next year for local
week,county management Deschutes County has reanalyst Judith Ure said comceived an average of $550,000 missioners would likely have
opment for Central Oregon, and social programs like the
By Scott Hammers
Bethlehem Inn, Central Ore-
The Bulletin
nonprofits.
over the last five years from
to trim more than $92,000
For 30 years, Oregon countieshave received 2.5 percent
the lottery pool. But with fewer people gambling as the
from its lottery fund budget
gon Veterans Outreach, Court Appointed Special Advocates
Bishop Liam Cary of the Diocese of Baker has invited
in the next fiscal year, com-
and others.
of the state's lottery proceeds,
recession's impacts have lin-
pared with the current year.
Father James Radloff to return to the Catholic church,
OREGON LOTTERY FUNDS
i inrevenue Ioe e •
2 people injuredin rollover accident Two people were injured early Saturday in a single-vehicle rollover on the Old Bend-Redmond Highway, according to Oregon State Police. At around 1:17 a.m., a northbound SUVdriven by Kaylyn A. Frizzell, 23, of Redmond, went off the highway near Tumalo Road and rolled over in a field. Frizzell and passengerJacob Schotthefer, 30, from Powell Butte, were both injured and taken to St. Charles Bend by ambulance. Troopers cited Frizzell for driving under the influence of intoxicants.
•
• DeschutesCountycould see$100ICless for its various programs By Elon Glucklich The Bulletin
to fund a variety of programs. The idea is for counties to
Deschutes County officials are warning that a drop-off
support projects that help improve quality of life and boost
in Oregon lottery revenue
the economy.
gered, the revenue has started to drop.
In a memo to Deschutes County commissioners this
The new fiscal year starts July 1. The county typically splits up its pot among more than a dozen nonprofit organiza-
SeeLottery/B5
less than a week after the priest announced plans to establish a competing
icin u
a eI e u s
church in Bend.
Radloff
two years as the
pastor of Bend's St. Francis of Assisi parish when Cary stripped him of his post last fall for unspecified reasons and proposed sending him
Truck blocks Santiam Pass A Beaverton man was cited for failing to drive within his lane Saturday after the truck he was driving jackknifed on Santiam Pass, according to Oregon State Police. Hector Lopez Viay was westbound on U.S. Highway 20 near Suttle Lake around 7 a.m. when he lost control on the icy roadway. His truck and trailer went off the westbound shoulder, bounced off a cement barrier and went across the eastbound lanes and into the guardrail. The truck blocked both lanes of traffic for 90 minutes before one lane was reopened. All lanes were cleared by about10:30 a.m., state police said.
March in Bend raises $45K Participants in the March of Dimes 2014 March for Babies raised more than $45,000 on Saturday in Bend. Approximately 250 people joined in the eventin Riverbend Park, according to a March of Dimes news release. The park was packed with strollers, families and corporate teams. A total of $910,000 was raised in nine such events Saturday throughout Oregon and southwest Washington. The money raised goes for prenatal wellness programs, research grants, neonatal intensive care unit family support programs and advocacy efforts for healthier babies, according to the March of Dimes. — Bulletin staff reports
Well shot! Reader photos
• We want to see your photos showing "spring in full swing" for another special version of Well shot! that will run in the Outdoors section. Submityour best work at bendbulletin.com /spring2014and we'll pick the best for publication. • Email other good photos of the great outdoors to readerphotos© bendbulletin.com and tell us a bit about where and when you took them. We'll choose the best for publication. Submission requirements: Include as much detail as possible — when and where you took lt, and any special technique used — as well as your name, hometown and phone number. Photos must be high resolution (at least 6 inches wide and 300 dpi) and cannot be altered.
Radloff had serv e d nearly
to a church in Merrill near
Klamath Falls. Both Cary and the diocese have been silent about the nature of the
dispute. Radloff appealed his removal to the Vatican, which ruled in favor of the
diocese in February. See Priest /B5
CROOK COUNTY
Permit funds dwindle as data center projects wlap Up
Photos by Scott Hammers/The Bulletin
Wanda Hennesay and Mike Vigue team up to clear a particularly rich corner of the off-leash area in Pine Nursery Park on Saturday morning at a volunteer cleanup hosted by the Bend Park & Recreation District and DogPac.
By Elon Glucklich
• Volunteers tidy upcity's off-leash areas
The Bulletin
Facebook and Apple have done more than construct
By Scott Hammers
es would be an unpleasant
the biggest buildings Crook
The Bulletin
discovery. Kim Johnson, volunteer
County has ever seen.
Localswillingto get their hands dirtier than usual descended on Bend's off-leash
dogparks Saturday, picking up, well, dogpoop. Pound after pound after pound of dog poop, along with any other garbage found lying around
Their data center projects overlooking Prineville have generated $1 million or more for the county through fees on the tech giants' building
coordinator forthe park district, said that in addition
to routine maintenance and cleanup by district staff, each
of the district's dogparks has been "adopted" by a family, group or company that the Bend Park & Recreation helps keep things tidy. Still, District's seven off-leash the waste inevitably piles up. Jan Gifford, in yellow, checks in volunteers at Saturday morn"In a perfect world, eving's cleanup event at Pine Nursery Park's off-leash area. areas. Saturday's event was the eryone would clean up after secondyear in a rowthe themselves, but that's not reality — they don't," she said. takes a firm stance on repark district has organized and don'tcome back with a a volunteer deanup for each Saturday's deanup was sponsible dog ownership, bag of poop, you've missed of its dog parks. At Pine co-hosted by the park disincluding picking up anyan opportunity," she said. Nursery Park, the district's trict and DogPac, a Bend thing one's dog might leave Julie Cannon of Bend, newest and largest off-leash group that advocates for behind. Saturday's deanup helping with the cleanup area, a couple dozen volunexpanded off-leash access to was in that spirit, she said, effort alongside her daughter, teers spent the morningpick- parks, trails and public lands though being a conscientious said Bend's dogparks don't ing through the sagebrush in Central Oregon. dog owner is a full-time, always get the appreciahon and rock, looking for what DogPac board member year-round job. they deserve. "If you go to a dog park under different circumstanc- Jan Gifford said the group See Park/B5
permits.
An examination of Crook County permits shows Apple has paid more than $93.5 million to build the first of its
two planned, 338,000-squarefoot data centers just west of
Prineville. Nearby, Facebook has paid nearly $64 million to build two data center
facilities. The county receives a small
percentage of the value of each permit. But as the projects have
drawn closer to completion, the money from new building permits has dwindled. SeePermits/B6
PrOgreSS made OniCePlant in 1914 Compiled by Don Hoiness from archivedcopies of The Bulletin at the DesChutes Historical Museum.
side in every war the United
dition space for cold storage and ice storage as well as that occupied by machinery. The work is employing
100 YEARSAGO
States has been engaged in. He himself was in the Civil
construction now going on
War and another son was in
means a substantial addition
the hospital corps in the Philippines during the war with Spain.
to the ordinary pay roll disbursements in the town.
For the week ending May 3, 1914
Son is in Marine Corps
YESTERDAY
George Lowell, who lives 7 Ice Plant Progresses miles out on the Bend-Burns Good progress has been road is especially interested made on the new refrigeratin the recent developments ing plant in the past week. in the Mexican trouble by Already the frame work is up reason of the fact that one and the ice making machinof his sons is in the United ery is on the road. At present States Marine Corps now
indications the plant will be
stationed on an American
in operation on April 25, the
war vessel in Mexican waters. This son, Byrd Lowell,
date set in the contracts.
According to Mr. Lowell the family has been rep-
The building in its final dimensions is 40x65 feet, a room 24x46 having been providedforthecreamery in case it accepts the power company's offer for the room
resented on the American
rent free. There will be in ad-
went up to Walla Walla for the harvest last fall and while there enlisted.
12 men and with the other
BUFFET
75 YEARSAGO For the week ending
May 3, 1939
Nazis elated over Hitlel"S SPeeChtOday Nazis hailed the "utter defeat" of President Roosevelt
by Adolph Hitler today as Hitler himself studied world reaction to his Reichstag
speech and prepared, another important address, this one for a gigantic May Day demonstration of workers Monday. SeeYesterday/B2
Suhday, May 11'" 3 Seatings ll : 0 0 ~M, 1:15 pM, and 3:00 PM A dults $37.~ Ch i l d r e n 6 - 1 2 $ 1 4 .~ C hildren 5 an d u n de r F R E E Reservations Required
541-383-8200 or
ajhuey@brokentop.com 62000 Broken Top Dr. www.brokentop.com
B2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, APRIL 27, 2014
E VENT
ENDA R
Oregon Alliance; free, open to the public; 2:30 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. Wall St.; LIGHT OFHOPERUN: A family 541-389-0785. friendly1K,5K or10K certified run; FOODIE CRAWL:Progressive dress as your favorite superhero; dinner in downtown Bend and proceeds benefit Court Appointed raffle, followed by dessert, live Special Advocates of Central music and silent auction; proceeds Oregon; $10 for family fun run, benefit BCC's Feed the Hungry $30 for 5K and 10K; 9 a.m.-noon; Riverbend Park, 799 S.W. Columbia program; $65, $20 for only dessert and after-party; 3 p.m.-6 p.m., St., Bend; 541-389-1618 or www. after-party at Liberty Theatre from lightofhoperun.org. 5 p.m.-8 p.m.; Bend's Community "RIO 2":A screening of the movie Center, 1036 N.E. Fifth St.; 541for families of children with special 312-2069 or www.thefoodiecrawl.
Email events at least 10 days before publication date to communityli fe@bendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.
Sisters; 541-815-9122 or www. belfryevents.com.
TODAY
sensory needs; $8perchild,
parents and caregivers are free; 10 a.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 8 IMAX, 680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-408-1092 or www.j.mp/1mhMGSb. "I REMEMBER YOU": A play by Bernard Slade about a lounge pianist-singer that meets ayoung
beauty whoresemblesawoman from a past love affair; $19, $15 seniors, $12 students; 2 p.m.; Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-3890803 or www.cascadestheatrical. OI'g.
"RECEPTION TOFOLLOW": A comedic interactive theater experience in the style of "Tony 'n Tina's Wedding"; $18, $12
students and seniors (meal included), reservation requested; 2 p.m.; Summit High School, 2855 N.W. Clearwater Drive, Bend; 541-355-4103 or www.bend.k12.
or.us/shs. "GMO OMG":Ascreening of the film about a father's journey to find out how GMOs affect his children and the planet, sponsored by the Right to Know GMO Central
Ol'g.
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/
Submitted photo
A screening of the documentary "GMO OMG" is slated for tonight at the Downtown Bend Public Library in an event sponsored by Right to Know GMO Central Oregon Alliance.
THE TAO OFBLUEGRASS - A PORTRAIT OFPETER ROWAN: A screening of the documentary about bluegrass legend Peter Rowan, followed by a Q-and-A with about a fly-fishing trip to Canada producer-director Christine Funk; and how a friendship has grown $8 in advance plus fees, $10 at the apart; free; 6 p.m.; Redmond door; 6:30-8:30 p.m., doors open at Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes 5:30 p.m.; The Belfry, 302 E. Main Ave.; 541-312-1050 or www. Ave., Sisters; 541-815-9122 or deschuteslibrary.org. www.belfryevents.com. BOOK DISCUSSION:Discuss A CENTRAL OREGON YOUTH Novel Idea's "The Dog Stars" by ORCHESTRA SPRINGCONCERT: Peter Heller; free; 6 p.m.; Paulina Free, donationsaccepted;7 p.m .; Springs Books, 422 S.W. Sixth St., BendHighSchool,230 N.E.Sixth Redmond; 541-526-1491 or www. St.; 541-556-6335. deschuteslibrary.org/calendar. SONGCRAFTERS:Featuring Stacie "FIVE DANCES":A screening Lynn Johnson of Broken Down of the film about five dancers Guitars, Steve Miller of Necktie living in New York City and their Killer, Trevor Martell of Patrimony rites of passage; $5 at the door; and Noelle Bangert; $5; 8 p.m.; 7 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W. 70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881. 541-323-1881. MUZES TOUR:Featuring four
MONDAY A NOVELIDEA:"LOW & CLEAR": A screening of the documentary
female rappers, Sassy,Jaeda, Kelley Makand Valentina, with DJ Dirtbag; $5; 9 p.m.; Dojo, 852 N.W. Brooks St., Bend; 541-706-9091 or www.dojobend.com.
TUESDAY "THE HEALTHCARE MOVIE": A screening of the film about climate change and the global health threat it could pose, presented by Health Care for All Oregon; free; 5:30-7:30 p.m.; Brooks Room, Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-617-7050. OREGON ENCYCLOPEDIA HISTORY NIGHT: SteveJohnson from the Central Oregon Irrigation District presents "Free Land - Just Add Water"; free; 7 p.m., doors open at 6 p.m.; McMenamins Old St.FrancisSchool,700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www. mcmenamins.com. PETER ROWAN:TheGrammy award-winning bluegrass singersongwriter performs; $25 plus fees in advance, $30 at the door;
7-10 p.m., doors openat 6 p.m.; The Belfry, 302 E. Main Ave.,
THURSDAY
BOUQUETS OFTHE HEART: Featuring a three-course luncheon, a presentation on the creative WEDNESDAY process of floral arrangements and LUNCH ANDLECTURE: Learn how a silentauction; proceeds benefit to make defensible space beautiful The Bloom Project; $55; 11:30 and easy to create; bring asack a.m.; Mt. Bachelor Village Resort lunch or eat at the cafe; included Conference Center, 19717 Mount in the price of admission; $12 Bachelor Drive, Bend; hberkman@ adults, $10 ages 65 and older, thebloomproject.org or www. $7 ages 5-12, freeages4 and thebloomproject.org. younger; noon-1 p.m.; High Desert HAUTE GALA:A spring fashion Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway show, silent auction, drinks and 97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or www. appetizers; proceeds benefit the highdesertmuseum.org. Central Oregon Chapter of the "THE METROPOLITANOPERA: Women's Council of Realtors and COSI FANTUTTE" ENCORE: Bend Area Habitat for Humanity; Mozart's opera about testing the $35, $36 online; 5-9 p.m.; ties of love; opera performance Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic transmitted live in high definition; 8 Recreation Center, 57250 $24, $22 seniors, $18 children; Overlook Road; 541-585-5000 or 6:30 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium www.hautegala.com. 16 8 IMAX, 680 S.W. Powerhouse TOUR DESCHUTES KICK-OFF Drive, Bend; 541-312-2901. REGISTRATIONPARTY: Register A NOVEL IDEA:THE NIGHT SKY BY for the Tour Des Chutes bike ride or EYE:Learn about the constellations noncompetitive run, live music and and the mythology behind them, door prizes; $50, $20 for children followed by an outdoor viewing; 15 and younger for ride before July bring warm clothes; free; 7-9 p.m.; 1; 6-9 p.m.; Deschutes Brewery Downtown Bend Public Library, 8 Public House, 1044 N.W. Bond 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-617-7050 or St., Bend; 541-382-9242 or www. www.deschuteslibrary.org. tourdeschutes.org. BUCKLERASH:The Ashland "PARTICLE FEVER":A screening outlaw country band performs; of the documentary about six free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. scientists during the launch of the Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond Large Hadron Collider followed St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www. by a Q-and-A with Larry Price, a mcmenamins.com. member of the ATLAS detector DELTA HALOS:The Medford team depicted in the movie; $9, acoustic-soul band performs; $5; 9 $7 for seniors and children; 7 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W. p.m.; Sisters Movie House,720 Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 Desperado Court; 541-549-8833 or or www.volcanictheatrepub.com. www.sistersmoviehouse.com. I
Yesterday
er with ticket selling and publicity.
Contlnued from B1 Whatever the world view was of Hitler's speech it was evident th at in s pired Na z i
50 YEARS AGO For the week ending
opinion was that he had com- May 3, 1964 pletely demolished President Phil Brogan draws Roosevelt's peace appeal. The speechwas called "the Grand Marshal role political execution o f R o o -
"East of the Cascades" is to be the theme of the 1964
"I have everything I need." Langlois likewise has no complaints about class sizes which range from six to 20 students, or her commute to
political errors and palpable absurdities."
D iplomatic
quart e r s
watched the Polish situation. In Hitler's statements reveal-
ing his demandsfor Danzig and for a strategic right of way across the Polish corri-
dor, in his comparing Poland to Czechoslovakia, they saw the outstanding problems in
Germanrelations. The view was taken that Hitler had implied a non-mil-
itary solution of his demands against Poland. But diplomat-
ic informants expressed belief that Hitler was obviously angry because Poland had rejected hisdem ands. Comment of t h e V o e lkischer Beobachter, the offi-
cial Nazi party newspaper, and hence authoritative in its comment, said of the Hitler
as Eur o p e's nizations in the parade. guardian angel is over." The A ride through the streets of
fuehrer'sspeechwas not only documentary proof of his dialectic mastership but was also an historic expression of the sovereignty of the German spirit as compared with the bumptiousness of those
Prineville will be nothing new for Brogan. He wasraised on a Crook County ranch in the Ashwood community, now in
who think themselves over-
The second round of the first beer keg derby ended Sunday when a group of Portland State College coeds plopped their metal keg into the surf at Seasideafter rolling it from Portland. The girls made the trip
"The Pirates of Penzance,"
a Gilbert and Sullivan operetta, will be presented by Bend High School students
at 8 o'clock tonight under the
er, the tracks were punched
from the classroom, is part
ers say the town just slowly burned down over the years,
of theLow-cost housing made available todistrict teachers. She concedes that the iso-
and no one wanted to rebuild it. T hat wasn't t ru e o f t h e
Every Tuesday In ATHOME
"If I
cent music contest in Salem,
da Blohm and Chris Mitchell,
took turns pushing the keg, one mile each, while the others rode along ina car. Seaside residents treated
Leading roles in the operetta are taken by Mary El- the girls to a breakfast when len Banks, Shirley Meland, they arrived. Marcille Tillman, Mary Ellen Runge, Edna Fisher, Ken 25 YEARS AGO Sawyer, Dick Miller, Paul Danielson, Don Pe derson For the week ending and Jim Wh isenand. Two May 3, 1989 girls chorus of about twenty
members, a pirates chorus Teensbecome family of 20 and a policeman's cho- at boarding school
(Continuedfrom lastweek) Sue-Dean Langlois consid-
Several fa culty me mbers ers herself lucky to havelandare assisting in the direction ed her first teaching at Crane
of the performance. Miss last September. "It's a re al well funded Moe is helping with stage direction, Miss Sandine with
school," she says, as her stu-
dances, Miss Hessler with
dents peer at slides of protozoa under new microscopes.
/
P
eve r l ef t h e r e , I
wouldn't te ach an ymore," says Goff. "I'm spoiled here. I think you could look far and wide and not find a better place to teach."
P
P
Great things happen when people are inspired. TourdesChutes.org
Kick-Off Registration Party Deschutes Brewery Public House Thursday, May 1st6pm — 9pm Register for the Tour des Chutes and receive a complimentary pint at the party, which includes snacks, live music, door prizes and entertainment from Bend Velo Rollers.
Tour des Chutes Event High Lakes Elementary School Saturday, July 12th
TheBulletin
Join hundreds of other cyclists for the largest scenic tour event in the region, with five routes from 7 to 100 miles.
in 19 hours flat, 45 minutes
will provide the accompani-
costumes and Mi s s K as -
through to Bu r ns. Old-tim-
Get A Taste For Food, Home & Garden
Girls better'Keg'record
better than the time made by The high school orchestra, PSCboys two weeks ago. the only orchestra to receive The girls, Nora Vissner, a "superior" rating in the re- Jan Smith, Judy Bross, Lin-
rus of eight have parts in the operetta.
student, Goff uses one word "polite."
Jefferson County.
direction of H o m er W a l tz.
ment, with Helen Hansen as pianist.
Asked to describe the typical
line for the railroad. In the late 1920s, howev-
other entries. Questionnaires
sevelt's r ole
Operetta to be given tonight
3,000 marked the end of the
lation takes some adjustment on the part of newcomers, school, whose original buildthe author of that book, Phil and she has made the transi- ings were destroyed by fire in F, Brogan, Bend newspaper- tion to buying her clothes out 1967 and replaced a year later man, science writer and geol- of a catalog. Grocery shop- with new metal structures. ogist, is to be the grand mar- ping, on the other hand still That was just two years beshal of the annual parade. means a trip to Burns. She fore Ed Goff came to Crane, Gary Ro m ine, p a r ade notes that there is a small choosing it over job offers chairman, said early plans convenience store in Crane, at Salem, Eugene, Bend and aimed at making the round- adjoining the tavern, but it Portland. up parade the biggest and carries only such essentials Goff, who teaches wood liveliest in the history of the as baked beans, toilet paper, shop and drafting, admits Prineville western show are milk andbeer. About the only there we re ti m es t h at h e in the making. other building left over from wished he had taken the job The theme se lected f o r more populous times is the in Bend. Now, looking at the Bend-LaPine district's finanthe parade, "East of the Cas- post office. cades," is also the name of Named for t h e sa n d hill cial woes after a year in the Brogan's book which has cranes na t ive t o eas t e rn safety net, he's glad hedidn't. beenthe best seller in Oregon Oregon, Crane once was a Like (Crane p r i n cifor more than three months thriving community with a pal-cum-Superintendent and is now in its second edi- theater, several banks four Henry "Bill") Th ew, Goff tion with a third edition ap- hotels, three pool halls, four was planning to stay only a parently in the near future. restaurants, numerous feed year or two. Instead, he got Romine said t h e t h e m e lots, a livery stable, a lumber hooked on having the best selected for the parade is yard, a store and a weekly high school wood shop in Orexpected to give the cue to newspaper. egon,thanks to a district genmany merchants and orgaThe first school was built erouswith its money. nizations for their floats and in nearby Lawen in 1918 and Teaching at Crane also is
speech: havebeen mailed to business"One thing is clear: Roo- es, fraternal and other orga-
lords of the world."
easy, he says. There are no discipline problems, no dope.
work. The triplex she lives in, located just across the street
sevelt." The president was invited to re sign because Crooked River Roundup,and of his "conviction of such a maze of hi s toric un t ruths,
moved to Crane in 1920, at a time when the community of
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ANNUAL G E NERAL MEMBERSHIP MEETING Open to all residents, property owners &
5K RUN - NEWTHIS YEAR: Enjoy the COPA Kids Family Fun R u n t h rough NorthWest Crossing neighborhood to benefit children with
cancer. ~j PACIFIC POWER
I'
Monday, May 5th 6:30pm - Spm
~ N QRTHWEsT
Q)
Hollinshead Barn Guest Speakers: FIRE LEVY EXPLANATION Larry Langston Fire Chief SLOWER SAFER BEND Barb Campbell SEWER INFRASTRUCTURE MASTER PLAN City of Bend Pizza & Beverages will be served!
Let's turn the answerson
HEALTH SYSTEM
businessin the Mtn View Neighborhood.
NORIIBNST
+g4,IviEcMVATloN ' SPINE
SM. by50t cI FowsNfo //c
Central Oregon Radiation Oncology Assc., Clear 101.7, KOHD, Les Schwab Tire Centers, Microsemi, Paul B. Leighton Design, REI, Robberson Ford-Mazda, Suntrack Sound
Supporting cancer care and survivorship for adults and children in Central Oregon
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Register Online at TourdesChutes.org
SUNDAY, APRIL 27, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
B3
REGON AROUND THE STATE
Pr u tors: Rei ious ei were centra to12- ear-o i 's eat The Associated Press
t reatment is sinful, and i n -
CORVALLIS —
stead trusts in God to heal
A L in n
120-year Snntnnon — AEugenemanwhopolice sayis homeless has beensentenced to120 years inprison after hewasfound guilty of rape andkidnapping charges.TheEugeneRegister-Guard reports 29-year-old Michael A.Eastmanwasconvicted of sexually assaulting an18-year-old woman in a field near aninterstate in 2012. Eastmanwas convicted of threecounts of first-degree rapeandonecount of first-degree kidnapping. Eachcharge carried a30-year sentence.Eastmanwas labeled adangerous offender. UnderOregonlaw, that meansa person has a psychological condition that makesthem likely to reoffend.
out medical care, and the rea- when her brother, Anthony son they didn't do it was their Hays, 7, died of leukemia in religious beliefs," Prosecutor 1994 after his parents failed to Keith Stein said. "This is what providemedical careforhim .
County judge will soon decide them through faith, The Albawhether a family's religious ny Democrat-Herald reported. Syble's parents, Travis and the case is about, and in truth, beliefs are relevant to the death of their daughter. Wenona Rossiter, face man- this is what happened." Syble Rossiter, 12, died of slaughter charges. Mark Heslinga, defense atcomplications from diabetes, Their attorneys want to ex- torney for Wenona Rossiter, and she endured such a dra- clude evidence of the couple's said evidence of religious bematic weight loss in the month beliefs from the trial, arguing liefs would be prejudicial. "My client is requesting he beforeshe died thata teacher that such evidence would be confronted her mother about prejudicial. be tried for the actions of that the issue. Prosecutors said the fami- day, not for his religious beThe family is part of the ly's beliefs are the reason they liefs," said Tim Felling, Travis Church of the First Born, a failed to seek medical care. Rossiter's attorney. "They knew she was in fundamentalist sect that beWenona Rossiter's familieves traditional medical great periL (They) didn't seek ly made history in the 1990s,
T wo years later, a
Elementary SChOOIillneSSeS — Portland Public Schools says parents at asouthwest Portland elementary school havebeennotified by letter that somestudents mayhavefallen ill from norovirus. While district spokesmanLarry Binghamsays there havebeennoconfirmed cases of thevirus at RiekeElementary School, 40 children called insick Thursday andanother 20 kids called insick Friday.Theschool alsosent 10 children home. On a normal day,the school hasabout eight to10 children out sick. Binghamsaysthe school hasnotified the Multnomah County Health Department as well andcustodians arecleaning anddisinfecting the school. Norovirus causesnausea,vomiting and diarrhea. Some peoplecomedown with a fever, experiencechills, headache, muscle acheandgeneral tiredness. Most peopleget better in one totwo days.
Linn
County jury convicted his father, Loyd Hays of Brownsville, on charges of criminally negligent homicide. He was sentenced to five years' probation. Hays' wife, Christina,
was acquitted. They were the first people in Oregonto beprosecuted for following their religion rather than taking a sick child for medical care.
— From wire reports
MEDICAL MARIJUANA
KLAMATH BASIN
Corva is' irst ispensaryaims to 'transcen t e stereotypes'
Overduebird refugeplantriggers lawsuit
By Bennett Hall Corvallis Gazette-Times
The first thing you notice
In fact, it looks like a cross
months out is just not right,"
pointed out the Klamath Ba-
Matt Baun, a spokesman Oregon program manager for for the USFWS, said that the WaterWatch of Oregon. Basin refuges'plan is the larg"The fact we don't have est and most complex ever a plan for these refuges 18 undertaken in the region. He
of 1997 requires the USFWS
Oregon Wild and Water- to develop and implement a Watch of Oregon — filed the plan for each unit within the suit to compel the U.S. Fish national wildlife refuge sysand Wildlife Service to re- tem, according to the release. lease a Comprehensive ConUnder the act, the Depart-
That's intentional, says Kay-
la Dunham, co-owner of The Agrestic Green Collective. "We were just trying to tran-
servation Plan for the Klam-
scend the stereotypes," she said. "We wanted it to be an elegant kind of place, a place Andy Cripe I Corvallis Gazette-Times peoplewouldn'teverbeembar- Jennifer Poulsen, a caregiver, picks up medicine from bud tenders rassed to come into." Erik Winn, left, and Michael May last week at The Agrestic Green When it opened its doors Collective. The dispensary opened April 15, becoming the first April 15, The Agrestic became medical marijuana dispensary to begin operations in Corvallis.
residents with valid Oregon Medical Marijuana Program cards have a place to legally obtain the weed without growing their own or arranging for an
tion of all plans.
Audubon Society of Portland,
between a doctor's office and a high-end women's boutique.
ry law. For the first time, local
Jim McCarthy, communications director and Southern
Three conservation groups filed a l awsuit Thursday against the federal wildlife agency tasked with developing new management tools
refuges. McCarthy said. According to a news reThe National Wildlife Reflease, the three groups — the uge System Improvement Act
marijuana dispensary is that it doesn't look like a drug den.
under Oregon's new dispensa-
ecological importance," said Oct. 9, 2012, for the comple-
Klamath Falls Herald a News
for Klamath Basin wildlife
about Corvallis' first medical
the first medicinal cannabis outlet operating in Corvallis
By Lacey Jarrell
ment of the Interior Secre-
ath Basin National Wildlife taryisrequired to prepare a Refuge Complex. The Klam- plan for each refuge within 15 ath Basin CCP is 18 months years after the date National past deadline. Wildlife Refuge System ImThe plan is long overdue in provement Act was enacted. area of such "extraordinary The law set a deadline of
"We wanted it to be an elegant kind of place, a place people wouldn't ever be embarrassed to come into."
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was approved earlier but is not
quite ready to go. High Quality Compassion is shooting for a Wednesday opening date. At least three other Corvallis businesseshave applied for state certification but have not yet
received it.
Warm welcome
i
-
ed in staff shortages, have slowed progress. However, finalizing the c onservation
plan has remained a top priority for Fish and Wildlife, he said. An internal USFWS
draft is undergoing review now, he added. "We are working to com-
plete it as soon as possible," Baun said.
r
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•g
numerous security measures, ent ones to see what works best •
induding m otion d e tectors, for them." surveill ance cameras and a
•
separateroom with safes for Other products locking up marijuana when the Prices vary from strain to business is closed. strain and grower to grower. On Monday, The Agrestic's The process dozen or so offerings ranged Patients who come in to pur- from $7 to$10.50 per gram, chase cannabis — or caregiv- with modest price breaks for ers who want to buy for their larger quantities — $49-$70 for patients — first must check in a quarter-ounce, $98-$135 for a
Dunham said The Agrestic with the receptionist, presentingtheirOMMP cards andphoers in its first week, averag- to identification. The cards are ing 40 to 50 a day, induding a scanned into the dispensary's steadystream ofpeople on the computersystem and stored in first day. an encrypted database for re"Everybody walked in with cord-keepingpurposes. a smile on their face, one after The staff doesn't ask cardanother," she said. holders what their qualifying served morethan 300 custom-
Part of the reaction comes
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sequestration, which result-
— Kayla Dunham, co-owner of The Agrestic Green Collective
OMMP-licensed caregiver to
grow it for them. Another local dispensary
0
sin plan will encompass five refuges, while most plans are for only one refuge. Baun said budget cuts and
medical condition is, but peo-
half-ounce and so on.
Customers also can purchase cannabis concentrates or topical oils, and the dispensary plans to add tinctures and vaporizer cartridges. Small marijuana-i nfused caramels and chocolates also are available. What they can't buy are cannabis-laced baked goods from the pastry case in the dispen-
from having their preconcep- ple sometimes volunteer that tions overturned. Extensive information. Among the more sary area. Dunham and her renovations have completely common ones so far have been partner, Erik Winn, had hoped transformed the 672-square- cancer, multiple sderosis and to make medicated cupcakes, foot building, which once was post-traumatic stress disorder. cookiesand pastries a major the office for a used car lot. Once the OMMP card and part of their business model. Visitors to The Agrestic walk ID have been verified, the re- But just last month, after first through the front door into a ceptionist buzzes the customer threatening to ban most edibles small waiting room decorat- through a security door into from dispensaries, the state ed in a striking modern style, the dispensary area. Again, it's issued restrictive new rules with b l ack-and-white-striped not what many people might aimed at keeping cannabis-inchairs, a black-and-white pol- expect. fused products away from ka-dot rug, a green wall with Glass-f ronted display cases children. white tree-trunk graphics, a hold double rows of apotheSo The Agrestic decided to large potted fern and green cary jars filled with "flowers," keep the pastry case but stock and white hanging light globes. the trendy term for the neatly only nonmedicated baked There's also a fabric art wall
trimmed buds of the canna-
goods — and even those are not
hanging that lists dictionary bis plant. Each jar is labeled definitions of the word "agres- with the variety of marijuana
for sale. Instead, customers get a free treat to take home.
tic," which Dunham insists is
it contains, with names such
And they'll take their pur-
more than a winking reference as Blackberry Kush, Purple to the setting of the marijua- Rose, SilverSurferand Golden na-themed TV show "Weeds." Pineapple. Like a physician's waiting Restaurant-style menus tell room, it has magazines to read, customers what's available at
chase home in style, wrapped intissuepaper in an elegantgift bag imprinted with the Agrestic's logo. "We want people to find this
a TV to watch and a reception-
the moment, and "bud tenders"
ist waiting behind a sliding glass window in one wall.
in artfully designed Agrestic T-shirts are on hand to help
accessible," Dunham said. "We don't want themtothinkthere's
But instead of a framed med-
them decide what strain might ical license hanging in a place suit thembest. of pride, there's a framed disIn addition to different levpensary certifi cate adorned els of THC, the active ingredi-
anything shady about it." Dunham's customers aren't
the only ones who find Corvallis' first medical marijuana dispensary defying their expecwith agreen cross. And instead ent that produces a marijuana tations. Dunham herself has of filing cabinets full of medical high, there are other chemical been taken aback by the reacrecords, the receptionist's office
constituents an d
holds shelves full of young marijuana plants in individual pots. No marijuana is on display anywhere in the waiting room. As requiredby state law, access
properties that can have a va-
to areas where cannabis is kept
must be strictly controlled. No consumption is allowed on the premises, and there are
b o t anical tion she gets from her clientele.
riety of therapeutic effects, according to bud tender Michael
"It goes beyond excitement," she said. "People aren't coming here because they want to use it recreationally; they're coming here because they're very
May. May said he spends an average of 15 minutes with each sick. I've been surprised at how customer. people are just moved to tears "There's so many strains," he
said. "People are trying differ-
at times because they can get
relief."
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, APRIL 27, 2014
BITUARIES Bobby Dell Long Eugene H. Kuther
DEATH 1VOTICES Loretta Norma irons, of Bend
Roy Martin Bunting, of Redmond
Feb. 24, 1923 - April 20, 2014 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Bend 541-318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.net Services: Private Family services were held. Contributions may be made
Feb. 29, 1920 - April 17, 2014 Arrangements: Autumn FuneralsRedmond (541-504-9485) www.autumnfunerals.net Services: A Memorial Mass will take place Thursday, May 1, 2014 at 11:00 AM at St. Thomas Catholic Church, located at 1720 NW 19th Street in Redmond,
to:
Any Veterans organization of choice.
Dorothy Mae Luttrell, of Redmond Sept. 7, 1933 - April 23, 2014 Arrangements: Autumn FuneralsRedmond (541-504-9485) www.autumnfunerals.net Services: A Memorial Service is planned for a later date. Contributionsmay be made to:
Hospice of Redmond 732 SW 23rd Street Redmond, OR 97756 www.hosplceofredmond.org
Oregon.
n
Margaret nMargo Marie Williams, of Madras April 20, 1921 - April 24, 2014 Arrangements: Deschutes Memorial Chapel, (541)382-5592; www.deschutesmemorialchapel.com
Services: 1:00 PM, Tuesday, April 29, 2014; Funeral Service at Deschutes Mausoleum Chapel, 63875 N. Hwy 97, Bend.
Wendell Kay Baskerville, of Bend
Kirk M. Dennis, of Sunriver/Bend
Feb. 28, 1930 - April 17, 2014 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Bend 541-318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.net Services: Private Family Services will be held at a later date. Contributionsmay be made
Feb. 1, 1966 - April 23, 2014 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home of Bend 541-382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A Celebration of Kirk's Life will be held on Sunday, April 27, 2014, at 2:00 PM at Holy Trinity Catholic Church located at 18143 Cottonwood Road in Sunriver. Contributions may be made
to:
Alzheimers Association of Oregon, 1650 Northwest Naito Parkway, Suite ff190, Portland, Oregon 97209.
Jack Ross Keeling, of Crooked River Ranch Jan. 19, 1937 - April 22, 2014 Arrangements: Autumn FuneralsRedmond (541-504-9485) www.autumnfunerals.net Services: A private Celebration of Life will take place at a later date. Contributions may bemade to:
Partners In Care Hospice 2075 NE Wyatt Court Bend, Oregon 97701 www.partnersbend.org
Kristan "Kris" Erin Cordeil, of Bend Nov. 13, 1944 - April 23, 2014 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home of Bend 541-382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com
Services: A Memorial Service will be held Saturday, May 3, 2014, at 1:00 PM, at Mountain View Bible Church, located at 211 NE Revere Avenue in Bend. Contributions may be made to:
Partners In Care 2075 NE Wyatt Court Bend, Oregon 97701 www.partnersbend.org
Wendell Kay Baskerville Fob. 28, 1930- Apr. 17, 2014 Wendell Kay Baskerville, age 84, passed away April 17, 2014 in Bend, OR. O ften known a s ' D el ' t o t hose who k n e w h i m , h e was born t o C h a r les an d Edna Jones Baskerville of Des Moines, IA F e b ruary 28, 1930. As a young man he was interested in flying planes. At one time he was the youngest licensed pilot in Iowa. Del enlisted in the A ir F o rc e f r o m 1 9 5 1 t o 1955 and underwent p i l ot t raining a t M a r a n a A i r f ield in A r i z ona. After h i s h onorable d i scharge, D e l met his future w i fe, Janet Warner at t h e U n i v ersity of Iowa, where they w e r e both enrolled as students. T hey w e r e m a r r i e d A u gust 30, 1958 in Iowa City, I owa. They l i ved fo r s e v eral years in Burbank, CA b efore moving to B end i n 1 980. Del w a s a n i n s u r ance agent w i t h P r u d ent ial. A f te r h e r e t i r ed, h e v olunteered with t h e U . S . Forest S e r v ic e a t L ava Lands Visitor Center. He is survived by his wife; a daughter, Wendy Gross; sons, Michael and Christopher Bas k e r v ille ; an d grandson, Andrew Gross. In lieu of flowers the fami ly r equests donations b e made t o t h e A l z h eimer's Foundation. Autumn Funerals Bend is honored to serve the family, (541) 318-0842, www.autumnfunerals.net
to:
A memorial donations account has been set up for Kirk's daughter and donationscan be made at any Bank Of The Cascades inthe name of Kirk Dennis.
(David) Reagan Rice
May 31, 1927 - April 15, 2014 Born o n M a y 3 1 , 1 9 27, died on A p ri l 15, 2014, of natural causes. Grew up in State College, PA, graduated from St ate
College
(
High S chool i n 1945. Graduated from
Academy in A nnapolis, MD , in David Rice 1949. Rec eived a MS from the University of M ichigan (Ann A r b or, MI ) in Electrical E n g ineering, 1956. After graduating from the N aval A cademy, h e w e n t on to become a Navy pilot of multi-engine sea transport planes. His first duty w as fl y i n g t r a n sport b e t ween California an d H a w aii. His second duty w a s t eaching math back at th e A cademy. R e t i r in g f r o m full-time Navy duty, he became an active member of the Naval Reserve, where he retired as Commander after completing the regular twenty year stint. In 1 9 59 , h e b e g a n a 42-year car e e r w i th AT&T/Bell L ab o r a t ories/ L ucent T e chnologies. H e lived in C h atham, NJ, for nearly 30 o f t h ese y ears. He and Marjorie moved to Morristown, N J , i n 1 9 9 1, where he retired in 2001. R eagan wa s a l w ay s a n active m e m b e r of th e C hurch of C h r i st, f i rst i n C hatham, N J , a n d t he n briefly in Bend, OR, where he moved in 2012. Singing w ith a n d d ir e c t in g th e
congregation were among
h is v o l u n t ee r co n t r i b u tions to the church, as well as bu i l din g m a i n t enance a nd h a n d y ma n s u p p o r t . R eagan continued to p u r s ue his i n t erest i n v o c a l p erformance wit h a M o r ristown-based b a rbershop quartet from 2005 - 2008, a ppearing w it h t h e g r o up on several occasions. S urviving f a m i l y me m b ers i n c l ud e h is w i fe , M arjorie; so n s , D av i d , P hihp, J a mes, a n d T h o mas; and eight g r andchild ren, M a ry , J a son, K i m -
berly,
M e ghan, P h i l lip,
A drienne, R e a g an , an d John. Reagan wa s p r edec eased b y h i s b r ot h e r Randall. Funeral ar r an g e ments are being handled by Baird F uneral H o m e s . Do n a tions may be given to Hospice House in Bend.
May1,1937-Octobor 27, 2013
July18, 1923- April 17, 2014
Bobby Dell L o ng , 77, of Bend, Oregon, died on October 27, 2013, due to complications related to COPD and kidney disease. B obby was born on M a y 1, 1937, in Ada, Oklahoma, to R o bert E. "Trig-
E ugene H e n r y "Gene" K uther passed away A p r i l 17, 2014, in Bend, Oregon. Gene, also fondly known as " Pooch", was b or n t o t h e late Joseph and Antoinette Kuther in Ferdinand, Idaho July 18, 1923. Gene s erved i n World W ar II , and th e Korean W ar. He married Elizabeth gene Kuther "Bettien
ger" Long a nd D u l cena Pearl
(Trotter)
1
L ong, t h e e ldest o f f our c h i l dren: Raymond Bobby Long Murray Garland E ugene and S h i rley A n n . T he family m o ved t o L A , in 1944. He graduated from El Segundo High School in 1955. A fter serving i n t h e A i r F orce, Bo b a t t e n ded E l C amino C o m m unity C o l lege, where he met his fut ure w i f e , C a r l ee n G a i l R ief. They w e r e m a r r i ed o n M a rc h 2 5 , 1 9 61, a n d lived in To rrance, Californ ia, w h e r e t h e y r ai s e d t hree c h i l dren , M i ch a e l Dell, J e r al d Sc o t t an d Christine Louise. As a y o unger m an, B ob l ayed b ase b al l an d a st-pitch softball. H e w a s an avid m otorcycle racer, r acing flat - t r a ck , m otocross and even the Mint 4 00. Bob l o v e d t o c a m p and t r a v e l ar o u n d t he c ountry with hi s family i n his van. He moved his family and a small company to N e w -
berg, Oregon, in 1972. Af-
ter divorcing in 1976, Bob s tarted a c a r ee r i n p u r c hasing, pr imarily i n t h e mobile home and motor home i n du s t r i es . He m oved t o B e n d i n 1 9 8 1 , where he worked for Beaver Coaches-related comp anies until h e r e t i red i n 1994. Bob met his life partner, Janice Armstrong in 1987. A fter he r e t ired, they en j oyed traveling th e c o u n try in hi s v an, celebrating
4 p.m. happy hour a n d
Jackson Laboratory via The New York Times
Douglas Coleman, a Canadian-born scientist who discovered that
genes — not willpower, eating habits or other behaviors — could cause obesity in some people, at the Jackson Laboratory. Cole-
Duman in 1947. Gene dedicated hiscareer to the c onstruction i n dustry. Gene and Bettie retired to Ferdinand, Idaho, where Gene served two terms as mayor. L a ter they lived in The Dalles, Redmond, and
man died on April 16 at his home in Lamoine, Maine. Ho was 82.
Bend, Oregon.
Gene was an avid bowler,
and enjoyed golf. He was k nown f o r hi s sk i l l i n " Pitch", t h e ca r d g a m e . Gene will b e r e membered for his positive and caring attitude, his giant heart, and t he way h e m ad e al l f e el welcome in his presence. Gene is survived by Bettie, his wife of 66 years; four s ons, B e r ni e a n d Den a K uther, J e rr y a n d Pa t s i K uther, C l if f a n d Le s l i e Kuther, and Ed an d C arol Kuther; four grandchildren; and t w o gr e a t-grandchildren. Surviving siblings are Cletus K u t her , K a t h erine
Colemandiscovereda genetic cause of obesity
tors for a living, Douglas spent much of his youth investigatDouglas Coleman, a Cana- ing how things worked by dian-born scientist who upset taking them apart. He earned scientific dogma by discov- a chemistry degree from Mcering that genes — not will- M aster University in Hamilpower, eating habits or other ton, Ontario, and a doctorate behaviors — could cause obe- in biochemistry from the Unisity in some people, died April versity of Wisconsin. 16 at his home in Lamoine, In 1 9 58, facing poor emMaine. He was 82. ployment prospects The cause was FE A T URED in a c ademia or inaggressive b a sal og P UARy dustry in Canada, he cell cancer, said a became a research (Bain), Antoinette (Haugen), spokeswoman for scientist at the Jackand Marlene (Van Metre). the Jackson Laboratory in Bar son Laboratory, which studies Preceding Gene in d eath w ere s i b l i n gs , L e o n a r d Kuther, Elaine (Kinzer), and Marie (Duman). In lieu of fl o w ers, please c onsider H e ar t n ' Hom e H ospice, 920 S W E m k a y , Suite 104, Bend OR 97702. M emorial service will b e held 10:00 a .m . M o n d ay, June 9 a t W i l l amette National Cemetery, 11800 SE Mt. Scott B l v d., P o r tland Oregon 97086.
DEATHS
By Lawrence K. Altman
Harbor, Maine, where Cole-
m o use genetics to learn about
man spent his entire research human disease. He intended career. to spend a year or two there Beginning in the 1960s, to gain experience in genetics Coleman's research showed and immunology, but stayed that a blood-borne substance u n til he retired in 1991. After
could curb hunger. In the 1990s, his findings led Dr. Jeffrey Friedman's team at
r e t iring, he turned a tract of l and he owned into a nature p r eserve.
the R ockefeller U n i versity in Manhattan to identify the
In t he mi d - 1960s, when M a r g aret Dickie and Priscilla
gene that produces the appe- Lane of the Jackson Laboratotite suppressant leptin, which ry discovered a mutant strain is released by fat cells. of obese mice — called db, for For their work, Coleman diabetes — Coleman helped
spending time together. and Friedman shared t h e co m p are it with the only other B ob i s l o v e d a n d s u r prestigious Lasker Award k n own strain of obese mice, ELSEWHERE v ived b y , Jan i c e A r mfor basic medical research in called ob. s trong; his ch i l dr e n , 2010. Their discoveries upendB o t h strains rapidly develM ichael Long, Jerry L o n g Deaths of note from around ed the conventional wisdom op marked obesity. But db a nd Ch r i s t i n e (Eddie) theworld: that fat cells are simply ener- m i c e also become thirsty and Newell; his grandchildren, George McDonald, 90: A gy storage bins, and demon- diabetic,anddieyounger. Andrew Michael Long and Col e m an deduced that norH unter Bleu Newell. B o b unionleader who helped navi- strated that fat tissue is a n is also survived by his sibgateorganized labor's orderly endocrine organ required for mal mice might have a blood-
lings, Ray (Verna) Long, Garland Long, and Shirley
(Randy) Bookey; Janice's sons,
M a r k , M a tt
an d
retreat from its peak of power normal development. Scien- borne factor that prevented in the New York newspaper tists have learned from their obesity. Conversely, he specindustry at the end of the cen-
research and others' that fat
u l a t edthattransferringblood-
and, by some accounts, produces a variety of hor- b o rne factors from a diabetic Shawn ( Sayuri) A r m - tury strong; and countless rela- helped save the city's surviving mones, cytokines and other mouse might make a normal tabloids. Died April 20 in Mon- chemicals in the body's natu- mouse obese. tives. ral weight-control system. He is survived by his sons, F amily a n d f r i e nd s a r e mouth Park, N.J. Phillip Hayes Dean, 83: A Douglas Leonard Coleman David and Thomas, and a invited to attend a m emorial celebration on Friday, playwright whose stage por- was born on Oct. 6, 1931, in grandson. His wife, the forMay 2, 2014, 2:00 p.m. untrait of the actor and social cru- Stratford, Ontario. Influenced mer Beverly Benallick, and a t il 5:00 p.m., at 1 764 N E sader Paul Robeson aroused by his father, Leonard, who t h ird son, John, died before C arson W a y , B e n d , O r - one of the theater's more un- repaired radios and refrigera- him. egon, 97701. At 4:00 p.m., usual controversies. Died April t here will b e a b r i e f t r i b 14 in Los Angeles. ute, followed by a toast to Bob's life and a chance to share stories and r emembrances of him. Memorial co n t r i b utions m ay be made to th e K i d ney Association of Oregon.
William Voss Elder III, 82: A retired B a ltimore M u seum
REMEMBERING JOHN HANCOCK
of Art curator who helped first lady Jacqueline Kennedy during the 1960s bring antique furnishing to the White House.
Iviay 11, 1946 — February 19, 2014 Please join us for a memorial service to honor the spirit and legacy of John Hancock on Ivtay 11, 2014, from 2-4:00 p.m. at Runway Ranch, 22655 Peacock Lane, Bend, Oregon.
Died April 17 in Randallstown, Md.
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 editall
submissions. Pleaseinclude contact information in all
correspondence. For information on any of
these services oraboutthe 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 5p.m. Monday through Thursday for
publication on thesecond day after submission, by1 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication, and by
9 a.m. Mondayfor Tuesday publication. Deadlines for
display adsvary; 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
Nina Caosian, 89: Romanian poet and translator who ob-
tained political asylum in the United States after the Communist-era secret police found
her critical poems scribbled in a friend's diary. Died April 14 at her home in New York City. — From wire reports
In lieu of flowers, John would love knowing you donated to his favorite event, the High tlt Dry Bluegrass Festival. For additional details please RSVP by Ivtay 4, 2014 at iohnhancockmemorial©gmail.com
• ~
W
Phyllis Ann Coe Long Phyllis AnnCoeLong,age96of Redmond, Oregon,wentto her / heavenlyrewardon Sunday,.April13, 2014. She is survivedbyherfour children, David, Edwin'Jim', Judith andStephen; andbyher grandchildren, Maryann Barsky ,StephanieLongandMatthew Long. Phyllis wasborninto aCentral Oregonpioneerfamily and grewupInBendandRedmond.Shegraduatedfrom Bend HighSchool Inf936 andthen attended Blola University InLosAngelesto preparefora lifetime of ministry toothers. As a youngwoman,she served In theRedCross Inboth the EuropeanandAsian theaters ofWorld WarII. Herjob wasto assist both the injuredsoldiers, as well as their families dealingwith the soldiers' hospitalization andmedical treatment overseas.An accomplishedaccordion player, sheprovided entertainment forour troops ontwo continents. Shecontinuedto playher accordion throughhersenior yearsandenjoyedsharing hertalent withthe residentsof somelocal seniorcitizen homesuntil lastyear. Phyllis married Ed Long, anAlfalfa resident, in1949. Ed'sworkwith theFederalAviationAdministration requiredtheir movetoAlaska in 1953.They raised their childrenwhile living in remotevilages, whichrequired Phyllis to assumethe roles of teacher andnurse (amongothers), as well as mother. In1968they returnedto Redmondwhere shewasinvolved with their church andcommunity activities. She wasanindefatigable ladyofgreat intellect, staminaandfocus. Sheloved theLord, wasaprayer warrior, andwaswell knownas acompassionateChristianalwaysreadyto help others. Phyllis livedindependently intohermid-90s.Sheactively servedasDeschutes PioneerQueenIn2011.Bend High School recently honoredherasoneof their OutstandingGraduates. We will missher, but herinfluenceandmemory wil alwaysbewith us. Amemorialservice tocelebrateherlife will be heldat HighlandBaptist ChurchInRedmond onMay10th at12 noon. Donationsmaybe madeto the RedCrossInherhonor. The familydeeplyappreciatesthewonderful caregiversandHospiceof Redmondwhohelped Phyllis during herlast months.
SUNDAY, APRIL 27, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
Lottery
BITUARIES
Continued from B1 But the state lottery fund
"is not as robust as we might have hoped," Ure told commissioners during a work session this week. None of the numbers are
eo lottery sales have been
cession, county Finance Di-
weaker recently than they were during the worst of the
rector Wayne Lowry told
recession." Video lottery rev-
enue make up 85 percent of
In other words, Oregonians are spending less on
the lottery funds that go to counties, so the decline is af-
n onessentials and i n t u r n putting less into the state lot-
$28,500 from the county lot-
B5
tery fund during the current fiscal year.
commissioners.
Commissioners
coul d
avoid any cuts by shifting m oney out
of t h e c oun-
Hollein, anarchitect who
set in stone at this point, and
dreamedupwitty designs
until they start putting the
By Margaiit Fox
r eputation in the 1960s designNew York Times News Service ' g a shop, barely 12 feet wide, ln H ans Hollein, a P r i tzker devoted to candles. Prize-winning architect who The son of a family of minb reathed witty postmodernist i' ng engineers, Hans Hollein life into everything from build- w as born March 30, 1934, in
cast, released by the state in
ty's general fund. But they seemed hesitant to take that fecting everyone. tery fund. step Wednesday, though no "We're starting to feel the firm decisions were made. In January 2013, a federal "The big picture is that we payroll tax holiday expired, effect of those things," Lowincreasing the amount taken ry said Wednesday. may need to take $5,000 or out of employee paychecks During the work session, $10,000 out of certain placfor Social Security. commissioners looked at es," county Commissioner The higher tax rates cut how the proposed cuts would T ony DeBone said o f t h e into employee incomes at affect local nonprofits. nonprofits' expected funding a time when personal savThirteen organizations re- amounts. ings were already on the ceived between $4,000 and — Reporter 541-617-7820
February, warned that, "Vid-
rise coming out of the r e-
ings to pianos to tea trays, died V ienna. After studying civil enT hursday in his native Vienna. g i n eeringthere, he earned a diHe was 80. Ploma from Vienna's Academy Hollein died after a long ill- o f Fine Arts. ness, his daughter, Lilli Hollein, In the late 1950s, he studied
Volunteerand Bendresident owndoghasdeposited. gross task. "Imagine if this were all Chris Voeller said he regularly Mike Vigue and Wanda Continued from B1 brings his dog, Kona, to Pine Hennesay of Bend said they gold," he said. "I don't know if people ac- Nursery. The park stays rela- wantedtohelpdeanup aplace Hennesay laughed. "There'd be a lot more peotually realize how great this tively clean most of the time, they frequent with their dogs. is, when you live in the city to he said, with many visitors Vigue said he found a way ple out here!" she said. have a place for your dog to go making a point of packing out to stay motivated through the — Reporter: 541-383-0387, play," she said. a few more dog piles than their otherwise grim and somewhat shammers@bendbulletin.com
FEATURED OBITUARY
commissioners likely won't have to decide on any cuts next fiscal year's budget together in May. But a 2014 revenue fore-
al' chitecture and urban plan-
sald.
H ollein's buildings, which m n g at the Illinois Institute of have been erected around the T echnology in Chicago, where world, were, by design, be- h e trained with Ludwig Mies yond category, commingling v an der Rohe. Hollein also travmodernist and traditional aes- e led to Wisconsin to study with t hetics in sculptural, almost Frank Lloyd Wright and to painterly ways. In 1985, California to study with he was named the sevRichard Neutra. enth winner of the EYitzDuring this period, ker Architecture Prize, Hollein, enamored of the widely regarded as the fact that at least a dozen field's Nobel. cities and towns in the Where some archi- H o iiein tects a r e co n cerned
United States bear the name Vienna, visited
largely with line, Hollein was all (or very nearly all) of them also captivated by surface: He in his secondhand Chevrolet. odyssey, he lato ften combined contemporary T l n' American s materials like plastics and alu- e r said, helped give him a sense minum with storied ones like o f the vast scale on which armarble. chitecture was possible. He adored columns, and Hollein earned a master's while there are few things d egree in architecture from m ore classical than a column, t he University of California, i n his hands they could take
Berkeley, in 1960; he estab-
on an almost surrealist aspect, I ished his own practice in Viena s in his Vienna branch office of the Austrian State Travel
na four years later. His first commission, the
Agency. There, as if to conjure R etti Candle Shop in Vienna, faraway places, he turned a c ompleted in 1966, brought him cluster of them into a stand of w orldwide acclaim. Sleek and brass-sheathedpalmtrees. spare, the store was wrapped T hough Hollein was re- m side and out in aluminum. In nowned for large projects 'ts coolly elegant display cas— among his most notable e s, candles were arrayed with a re the Museum Abteiberg in v ertical dignity, like ranks of Monchengladbach,Germany, o rgan pipes in a cathedral. and the Museum of Modern For his innovative use of aluA rt in Frankfurt — he, unlike
m inum, Hollein won the R.S.
many architects of his stature, R eynolds Memorial Award, an did not disdain small ones. ar chitecture prize presented O ver the years he took on the a nnually by the Reynolds Metdesign of tiny boutiques, muse- al s Co. His winnings, $25,000 um exhibitions, home furnish- ( over $180,000 in today's dolings and accessories. Iars), were widely reported as His sly humor was perhaps e xceedingthe cost of designing n owhere more evident than t he store. in his deliberate distortions
Not all of Hollein's work was
of scale. In a series of collages as warmly received. In Vienh e made in the 1960s, famil- na, his Haas Haus, a glass-eni ar objects, gridded up until c losed retail and dining comthey loomed like skyscrapers, p lex completed in 1990, has became imaginary edifices: b een criticized ever since for its 'ssonance with the city's aua spark plug amid a country landscape, a Rolls-Royce grille gus t Old World buildings. in lower Manhattan. Though In Cambridge, Mass., a proHollein maintained that th e posal by Hollein for an office designs were viable, none, per- b uilding in Harvard Square haps unsurprisingly, were ever e ntailed a facade in the form built. 0 f a billowing metal screen He also shrankimmense ob- t hree stories high. The buildjects to tabletop size, as in the 'ng, to have been set among s treamlined silver tea set he t he neighborhood's Georgian created for Alessi, the Italian an d Regency Revival architecdesign concern, in which an t ure, was vetoed by the Camaircraftcarrier was reimag- b ridge Historical Commission ined as a tea tray, with the serving pieces as the craft on its deck.
'n2001. Hollein's wife, Helene, died
w as entirely in character that
M ax; a sister, Anneliese Reiser;
Park
Priest
C ary's letter d oes n o t make it clear whether he's
Continued from B1
preparedto restore Radloff
Last week, Radloff an-
nounced he was leaving the
to a leadership position with St. Francis. A call to the di-
Roman Catholic Church to
oceseoffices Saturday was
serve as pastor of the Holy Communion E v angelical
not returned. In an email sent to friends
Catholic Church, a s m all sect that adheres to most
and supporters Saturday,
traditional Catholic doc-
Radloff compared his situation to a woman that left an
trine but takes a more lib-
abusive relationship, who
eral approach on a number of social issues. The new
learns through others that her former partner wants
church is scheduled tomake
her back. Radloff said his decision to jump to the Evangelical Catholic Church was the
its debut with an inaugural Mass in early June at the Riverhouse Hotel 8z Convention Center in Bend. In a letter posted to the diocese website on Friday,
suade Cary to allow him to return to the priesthood.
in person, professional consultation
p~ WillametteValleyaank HOME LOAN DIVISION
541-382-4189
The Doctor wil l s ee you n o w .
from serving as a priest on Cary's orders since his re-
the comfort and convenience of
moval, a position other bish-
your own home. Dr. Visser has
back. "Out of concern for the
ops around the world are news has brought to Roman bound to respect. Catholics, I h av e w r i t ten Lacking Cary's OK, RadFather Radloff to encour- loff said he was unable to age him to reconsider his assist his f ellow priests decision in light of the det- during Christmas in the rimental effects it will have Chicago parish where he on him personally and on spent much of the past six t he Catholic faithful h e months, or d u ring Easter has served so long," Cary week at a Boise parish that wrote. had requested his help. "The doors of the Church Radloff said he eventualare open to his return. I am ly concluded Cary was not hopeful that he will choose going to change his mind. "I think I've been incredito walk through them into reconciliation and peace." bly patient. I'd just foreseen Radloff said Saturday a it wouldn't go anywhere," friend alerted him to the he said. letter posted on the website Radloff said he's sticking late Friday, and he's unsure with his decision to estabwhat to make of Cary's lish his new church for now, offer. but would still like to hear "I have no idea what from Cary. they're offering; I'm con"I would still like reconfused by the whole thing; ciliation, but at this point, it I'm just so confused," he may be between brothers, said. "I haven't heard any- not necessarily me coming thing; that letter he refers back to the Roman Catholic to,Ichecked my box today, Church," he said. confusion and sorrow this
and I still don't have a letter
from the bishop."
— Reporter: 541-383-0387, shammers@bendbulletin.com
Dr. Randy Visser will seeyou in
been an internist in Redmond
since 1999. His practice is now a
housecall-based Internal Medicine practice. Enjoy the personalized attention of up to a I hour regular patient visit without the travel and wait time.
Practicebeyi~ June 1,2014 • Currentlyopen for rei7 ittration Only tafciny 200 patien~ Please email Dr. Visser for more information at:
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541-719-8598 Servingalt of Central Oregon inctuBiny BenB, ReikmonB, Sutera, cVaikrm anri Prinevilk
Our Beloved "Gigi' Billie Glee Bryant April 7, 1932- January 30, 2014
MeTeChth Mane
C.Tomell
Meredith is survived by h er parents, James L. and Judith M. Crowell of Bend. She is also survived by atwin sister,Mary
FEBRUARY 14, 1961 - A P RI L I O , 20 14
l
17 years reverse mortgage experience
He said he's been barred
Meredith Marie Crowell, 46, a Bend native and a 1985 graduate of Mountain View High School died in B oulder, Colorado on April 15, 2014.
18 from 1:30to 4:00 p.m. AII ot her friends are invited to join us then.Kunersl arrangements (cremation)were made through Autumn Funerals of Bend.~er ) wiEnot be a public burial service or other memorial service in Oregon. In lieu Of '
Call Jerry Gilmaur ~NMLS¹ 124521)
Radloff to ask him to come
Hollein made his worldwide an d four grandchildren.
~ewers it is requestedthat donations in her memory be madeto the Am~
result of his inability to per-
Low Cost Reverse Mortgage
Cary said he had written to
nl 1999. Besides his daughter, Given these propensities, it L illi, he is survived by a son,
Valeta McEachron died in Bend on the morning of April 10,2014, with her husband at her side, foHowing a nearly two and a half year battle with sarcoma cancer. Valeta was born on Valentine's Day inEverett, Washington, and her beautiful first name was theresult of that birth date, reflecting a clever compromise between herparents,Gerald and Clara Bakeng. Valeta grew up in Everett graduating &om Mariner High SchooL Following graduation shemoved to the Methow Vailey of Washington State to pursue her career as a dental assistant, work at which she excelled andloved. After many years east of the Cascades, shereturned to the Seattleareato continue her career. In 2004 she met Brian McEachron and theywere married on September 14, 2006, on the Hawaiian island of Kauai with hisparentsin attendance (it was his parents' sixtiethwedding anniversary). With that marriage she yined two stepchildren, Scott and Betsy,whom she loved deeply and who loved her in return. Brian and Valetamoved to Bend in January 2007, into the home they had planned and built together. In addition to her husband, Brian, and her step-children, Scott and Lauren McEachron of Denver, Colorado, and Bryce and BetsyAnderson of Kirkland, Washington, she issurvived by her father, Gerald and stepmother, Shirlee Bakeng of Clackamas, Oregon, herbrothers, Gerald Jr. and Russell Bakeng of ColviHe, Washington. The cousins, nieces,nephews, aunts, and uncles who wiU miss her deeply aretoo numerousto mention. Her mother, Clarapredeceasedher. Anyone whoevermet Valeta would enthusiastically agreethat she was anextraordinarily kind and gentlepersonwho was a wonderful friend and a good Christian. She was also a very enthusiastic and talentedtennis player and made many friends on the court. Her smile lit up anyroom sheentered. Her sense ofhumor was second to none and her hand-madedesserts werethe best. She considered herselfblessed to have the many fine friends that she did. They and her familywere asource of much strength and love during her battle withcancer.She was bold, brave,and beautiful to the end. To celebrateValeta's extraordinary life, there will be an open houseat the McEachron home, 1843Northwest Wild Rye Circle in Bend, on Sunday, May
eglucklich@bendbulletin.com
Ann Kortge (Rich) of The Daiies, and a brother, Clark A. Crowell (Jacqueline) of Portland; two nieces, Allison Kortge of The Lalles, and Adeline Crowell of Portland; and a nephew, Jake Kortge of The Dalles. She is also survived by an aunt in Bend, Bonnie Voyles, an aunt and uncle in Bullhead City, Arizona, Jerry and Marlene Baker, pius numerous cousins. She was born May 18, 1967 at St. Charles Hospital (on the "Hill") in Bend and attended Kingston, Kenwood, and Cascade Middle Schools before entering Mountain View High School where she was a varsity cheerleader. Meredith was a 1989 graduate of the University of Oregon and a member of Delta Gamma Sorority. After graduation, she worked in Seattle at the Downtown Seattle Association. She moved to Boulder in 1994. For the past 15 years, she was the Property and Operations Manager, Boulder Valley Real Estate and Nomad Theatre. Boulder Valley is a holder of commercial property throughout the Boulder area. Meredith loved the outdoors. She enjoyed skiing at various Colorado resorts, hiking, climbing, and running. She was also a certified yoga instructor in Boulder for many years. She was truly loved and cherished by ail. Her radiant smile and magnetic personality made her shine. Meredith will be forever missed. A memorial gathering has been scheduled for 11 a.m. to 1:30 p.m.on Sunday, May 4, at the Bend Riverhouse Convention Center. In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions can be made to the Bend Boys and Girls Club (500 NW Wall Street, Bend,
97701).
Billie was welcomed into the loving arms of her heavenly Father on January 30, 2014 with family by her side at her Redmond home of over 35 years. Born April 7, 1932 in Berryville, Arkansas, she was the youngest daughter of Charles Marcus Vanover & Daisy Evlena (Ferguson) Vanover. She spent her early childhood years on their Arkansas family farm with her ten siblings before they moved to Hood River, Oregon In the 1940s. She married her childhood sweetheart David Bryant in 1948. They began their life together working in the fruit orchards of The Dalles and Hood River areas, while also starting their family. They later moved Io Portland and then to Gresham to continue raising their family. After their children were grown, Billie and David moved to Redmond, Oregon in 1978 and operated their family business, Redmond Radiator 8 Muffler for several years. Also during this time, Billie attained a lifelong dream of a college education, earning a degree as a Registered Nurse in 1988. She was a wonderful example of ambition & commitment to those around her, graduating in the top of her class at Central Oregon Community College. Billie was very passionate about nursing, giving the same care Io her patients that she'd always given her family. She worked in Central Oregon hospitals for some years until her own health prevented her from being able to continue caring for others. BIllie had a real joy for life and her family. She enjoyed gardening, sewing and especially cooking & baking for others. She was always ready to offer a meal to anyone who visIted. She also loved Io fIsh, hunt and camp with family, friends and her little pug Willie. She was a loving & devoted wife to David for 65 years, mother to
Stephanie (Paul), Skip (Darla) & Sieve (Mary), grandmother to Ericka (Tony), Rich (Rose), Somer (Gary), Kara, Kyle, Brock8 Hailey, Jaci, Scott (Heather), great-grandmother "Gigi" to Kristen (Chris), Erin (Tim), Emma, Brooke, Mason, Ava, Cash & Cole and a thoughtful caring friend to many others. She was truly the matriarch of our family and will be greatly missed. We will cherish the memories of her generous love, her contagious laughter and abundant compassion. We would like to express our sincere gratitude to Hospice
of Redmond nurses, caregivers and physicians for their wonderful care & support.
B6
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, APRIL 27, 2014
W EAT H E R Maps and national forecast provided by WSI©2014
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WEST NEWS
Tj jbe to PefegSe COndoIS jn CgfjfoInjg By Jeff Barnard
of each other, primarily south
condors far from the five exist-
The Associated Press
of the Klamath River.
ing sites in Southern and cen-
With federal funding in short tral California, Arizona, and Californiacondors as sacred, supply, the tribes will work to Mexico's Baja California would with ancient stories saying the develop private funding to cov- reduce the risks associated giantbirds fly closest to the sun er the estimated annual cost of withthe giantbird's recovery. and are the best messengers to about$400,000,West said. Condors once flew the Pacifcarry prayers. The return of the condor is ic Coast from Mexico to CanNow, after five years of part of Yurok environmental ada. There are just over 400 research, the f a r n o r thern work, along with efforts to re- California condors in the world California-based tribe has re- store salmon numbers and im- now, and only about 230 in the ceived permission to release prove forest health. wild, said John McCamman, captive-bred condors into the Condor feathers are part condor coordinator for Fish and Redwood Coast, where they of traditional regalia used in Wildlife ir2 Sacramento, Calif. haven't soared form ore than a ceremonial dances, said tribal That's up from just 22 birds in century. microbiologist Tiana Williams. 1982, he said. Yurok officials signed a With no condors flying over Condors face threats to their memorandum of understand- tribal lands, there are no new recovery, the top danger being ing last month with state and feathers to replace old plumes ingesting lead shot or bullet federal agencies, and a condor worn out from Use. fragments in an animal car"When aspecieslike condor cass, McCamman said. conservation group, allowing for test releases as a final as- or eagle gives you material for West would like to see a sessment of whether the region your regalia, it is considered new format for releasing birds, can support the endangered their spirit is in that, too. They starting with a pair of mature birds. are singing with you, and pray- adults, and gradually adding The fi rstreleasescouldcome ing with you," she said. "We youngerbirds for atotal of six. in the next one to three years, can get feathers from the U.S. All the birds would be fitted tribal biologist Chris West said. Fish and Wildlife Service, but with tiny radio transmitters on Meetings will begin in July to it's not the same thing as being their wings and tails, allowing work out protocols and select able to go out there and col- biologists in the field to track asite. lect the feathers we need from them, and some with GPS satSeven locations are under condors flying over our own ellite tmckers, which send a poconsideration on Redwood Na- skies." sition to a biologist's desk comtional and State Parks and priFor Fish and Wildlife, estab- puter. That makes monitoring vate land within about 50 miles lishing another population of for lead poisoning easier.
Yestenlay Sunday Monday Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/WHi/Lo/Iy City
93/68 88/52 pc 83/4l pc 6M9 59/46 pc 64I50 tc Albany, NY 59I43 0.49 5$38 sh 62/43 pc Albuquerque,NM 73/53 6439 pc 64/36 pc Anchorage,AK 45/34 53/37 pc 5436 pc
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YesterdaySunday Monday Hi/Lo/Pcp Hilto/yy Hilto/yy
53/38 ts 47/32 r Svaulu Wa 59/42 5 4 /41 sh 6$45 pc Renu NV 55 / 39 0.19 57/34 pc 63/36 pc Sioux Falls,SD 68/46 6 0 /45 u 6$41 sh Richmond, VA 80/57 1.23 7049 pc 66/51 sh 5pokane,WA 54/38 5 8 /32 sn 5436 pc Rochestex NY 50/40 0.20 53/35 pc 5$43 pc Sprinulield, MO 81/500.01 76/58 ts 74/41 ls sacramenuxCA 64/45 0.02 67/47 sh 7$50 pc st louis, Mo 8$50 81 I 66 ls 79I55 ls SaltlakeCity, UT 4842 0.69 52/39 8 5$38 8 Tampa,FL 8467 86 / 70 Cs 85/72 pc San Antonio, TX 90/68 96I65 ts 9459 pc Tcxson AZ 72/61O.OZ 7$52 s 87/55 s san Diego,CA 65/56 0.17 64/58 pc 6$59 I Tulsa, OK 87/60 82 / 53 ls 77/50 pc san Francisco, CA62/50 59/49 sh 6050 pc Washln u/m, OC 7$500.39 67/50 pc 64/50 r San Jose, CA 62/48 66/48 sh 7ZI51 pc Wichua, KS 88/59 8$ 5 0 t s 73/45 pc 5aola Fu NM 69/33 0.06 58/Za pc 59/26 pc Yauma, wA 63/32 5 9 /34 pc 65/37 pc Savannah 64 87/59 85/64 pc 87/65 pc Yuma,AZ + 82/ 59 pc 90/63 s
8$52 83/58 Cs 82/63 ls 71/48 0.36 65/48 pc 61/44 pc 86/68 92/63 Cs9$59 pc 76/49 0.63 66/45 pc 6449 pc 63/49 0.06 5437 sh 52/35 sh 84/53 SV65 ls 8967 ls 6439 0.07 4tl39 ts 4487 r Boise, Iu 55/37 55I33 u 55/36 pc eoslon MA 47/43 O.ZO 51/43 sh 56/45 pc Bcdralo, NY 47/37 0.43 56/37 pc 58/44 pc Buriimr, Vr 4V42 0.21 5M6 sh 55/41 pc Caribou, ME 50/28 44/35 8 49/32 sh Casper,wv 63/38 0.03 47/32 sh 4681 8 Charleston,sc 81/58 84/63 pc 85/66 pc Charlotte, NC 79/44 8460 pc 7$63 ls Czuuanooga,TN 83/47 85/62 ts BOI67 ls louisville, KV 81/49 82/64 ls 79/63 ls cheyenne,wv 69/39 39/31 sn 4429 sn Madison, Wl 54/36 53/44 ls 55/44 ls Chicago, IL 57/45 5$46 sh 56I45 ts Memphis,TN 83/52 8$69 ts 80/64 ls Cindnnati, OH 8548 73/57 pc 74/60 tc Idiami, PL 83/IO 85/74 pc 8475 pc Clevelanri OH 59/42 55/41 pc 61I51 ls Milwaukee,Wl 45/38 4il38 sh 45/41 cs Colo. SPBs,CO 73/48 5431 cs 54/31 pc Minneapolis, Mu55/37 49/42 u 5$41 cs Columbia, MO 77/52 0.02 77I61 ts 75/50 ls Nashville, Tu 83/45 83/63 ls 8$64 ts Columbia,sc 84/51 8$61 pc 85I64 u New Orleans,IA 87/69 83/70 pc 83/71 Cs Columbus,GA 83/54 83/64 6 84/66 ts Newvoricuv 67/46 0.89 64/44 pc 6445 pc Columbus,OH 7446 O.OZ 65/52 pc 72/60 u Newark, ul 68/47 0.66 63/44 pc 6445 pc Concord, NC 49/410.12 52/34 sh 59/39 pc Norhlk, VA 77/57 0.57 65/53 pc 63/54 sh CorpusChristi, IX 98/73 8$73 pc 92/68 pc Okla. City, OK 9$61 8451 ts 75/49 pc Oaxac IX 8461 8$58 ls 86/57 pc Omaha NE 83/45 72/51 ls 65/44 pc Oaylon, OH 75/51 68I51 pc 67/60 ls Orlando, FL 89/68 89/67 ls 9$69 pc Denver, CO 78/46 52/33 r 53/33 pc PalmSprings,CA 7555 0.05 81/60 pc 88/64 s Ocs Moines,IA 75/53 68I54 ls 69/46 ls Peoria, IL 78/51 74/61 ls 76I54 ls Detroit tul 58/41 56/43 pc 56/49 sh Philadelphia, PA 71/48 0.50 6445 pc 63/47 sh Dvlvlh, MN 41/30 39/33 3884 Phoenix, AZ 76/59 7961 pc 88/63 pc Zl Paso,IX 84/66 75/53 pc 79/56 s Pittsburgh, PA 7$42 0.15 63/44 pc 67/50 u rairumks,AK 58/29 57/37 pc 5$33 pc Porllanri Mz 4$41 0.08 47/37 sh 55/40 cd Fargo, uo 55/31 46/41 ls 4686 r Providence,al 47/43 0.36 5441 cs 59/43 pc Flagstaff, Az 49/28 0.90 52/30 pc 56/Za pc Raleigh, NC 7$49 0.26 81/56 pc 74/59 u
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GrandRapids, Ml 59/40 57/41 cd 57/45 sh Green Bay,Wl 48/33 49/38 r 4S/38 r Greensboro,NC 8$47 83/58 pc 7u59 ls Harrisburg, PA 73/46 0.02 63/41 pc 63/46 sh uarircvctCT 55/41 0.75 5789 pc 61/43 pc Helena,MT 4$39 0.55 56/32 pc 52/31 8 Honolulu, ul 8473 8472 pc 84/72 pc Houston,TX 82/68 86/72 pc 89/70 pc Huntsville, AL 8$42 81/62 ls 79/64 u IndianapolicIu 78/50 7057 ts 74/59 u Iackwn,145 88I50 83/70 Cs 85/70 u Iacksonv814 rt 8464 88/66 pc 89/67 pc Juneau,Ax 52/36 55/39 pc 54/39 r KansasCity, MO 79/54 0.01 75/54 ls 70/47 pc lansing, tul 55/39 55/39 cd 5445 sh Las VegacNV 69I51 76/57 pc 80/58 s lexington, KV 77/49 81/63 pc 79/64 ls lincoln, NE 82/45 7449 Cs 64/44 pc uuk Rock,AR 83/50 81/65 Cs 82/58 u Ios Angeles,CA 66I54 0.09 67/56 s 7ZI61 s
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Ski report from around the state, representing conditions at 5 p.m. yesterday: Snow accumulati ons in inches Ski area Last 24 hours B ase Depth Anthony Lakes.............Closed Hoodoo.........„„„„„„„,Closed M t. Ashland...............„Closed
Oosed Aspen CO Mammoth Mtn, CA 7 41 75 Hwy. 26 a t Gove r nment Camp.. . . . Car r y c hai ns / T T . Park City, UT................ Closed 6 2 /47 f S q uaw Valley, CA...............I8"...............26- 78" 5 $ 3 1 pc Hwy. 26 at OchocoDivide.............Carry chains/T T. 62' 5 9/33 pc Hwy. 58 at Wigamette Pass.......... Carry chains / T.T. S u n Valley, ID...............Closed 65/43 pc Hwy. 138 a t Di amond L ak e. . . . . . . . . . . Car r y c hai ns / T T . Taos, NM.....................Closed Hermiston 6 2/47 f Hwy.242 atMcKenziepass. .........Closedforseason Vail, CO-......................Closed 19o 5 8/34 pc For up-to-minute conditions turn to: For links to the latest ski conditions visit: 6 442 pc Klamath Falls www.tripcheck.com or call 511 www.onthesnow.com Lcgend:W-weather,Pcp-precipitation,s-sun,pc-partial clouds,c-clouds, h-haze, shehowers,r-rain, t-thunderstorms,sf-snowflurries,sn-snow, i-ice, rs-rain-snowmix,w-wind, f-fog, dr-drizzle, tr-trace
NATIONAL WEATHER SYSTEMS 4P5 ~35 ~2 5
ULTRAVIOLET INDEX E KI REPORT
Astoria Baker City Brookings Bums
A 40 percent chance of rain and snow showers. Highs 48 to 55.
47/27
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Tomorrow Ris e Set Yesterday through 4 p.m. at BendMunicipal Airport Mercury..... 8:59P.m....11:11 a.m. High/Low..............SO'/24' 24hoursendingdp.m.*.. O.OO" sunrisetoday...... 6:02 a.m.MOOh phaSeS Venus......... 7:20 P.m..... 7:06 a.m. Remrdhlgh 0,27" 84 I n 2004 Monthtodate Sunsettoday...... 8:04 p.m. Mars.......... 8:25 a.m..... 8:05 p.m. Remrdlow.........20' in1984 Averagemonthtodale... 0.62" F i m t Ful l Sunrizet,me~" ' 6'00a'm' New Jupiter.......12:54a.m.....4:12p.m. Averagehigh.............. 62' Yeariodate............ 3.81" Sunsettomorrow... 8:05 p.m. ~ Saturn.......11:46a.m..... 9:45p.m. Averagelow............... 31' Averageyeartodate..... 2.90" Moonrisetoday....5;10 a.m. Uranus....... 8:OOp.m..... 8:49a.m. Barometricpressure4p.m.29.77" Remrd24hours ..0.38in1970 Moonsettoday....6:40 pmm Apr29 May6 May14 May 21 *Melted liquid equivalent
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PREMIUM HEARING AIDS '+P aau
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Friday. "They've probably got 30 people there and 25 are in
Both companies received large property tax breaks to
Continued from B1
security."
set up in Prineville, and the
data centers need fewer than 100 employees to operate ter plans in P r ineville. The them, so the job impact isn't as fees to increase a half-time company built a large wall big as a large manufacturing building inspector to full time. around the facility to block its company mightbe. But that position was elimi- view from the public during But Fahlgren said the data nated entirely this year, with construction. centerprojects have off ered no new, high-value permits Apple officials didn't return Crook County a private-seccoming in for more than six several requests for comment tor partner for major public months, county building offi- this week. The terms of a 15- projects in the pipeline, like a cial Lou Haehnlen said Friday. year tax break the company new hospital and elementary And while Facebook em- signed with Crook County de- school. ployees can be seen eating pend onthe company hiri ng Those are expected to be up at restaurants and shopping at least 35 people. and running late next year. "We've been working so downtown, Crook County ofThe companies' data cenficials said there are few Ap- ters are designed to store hard for so long to get these ple employees to be seen in the massive amount of data projects people t ogether," Prineville, nearly a year after each companies' users inter- he said. "Just by adding the the company's first data cen- act with each day. Each data school and the hospital, we ter became partly operational. center stores billions of mega- think we can get a much more "A lot of people that have b ytes of i n f o rmation, l i k e affluent level of people to been working there are in se- Facebook photos and music come to Prineville." curity," Crook County Com- downloads through Apple's — Reporter: 541-617-7820, missioner Ken Fahlgren said iIt2nesstore. egluci'zlichibendbulletin.com Last year, Crook County's
community development department tapped into permit
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Apple has long been tightlipped about its data cen-
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Ameriea Hears HEARING AIDS Helpiny People Hear Better
5 41-213-22 9 4 Monday through Friday 9:00 am to 6:00 pm Saturday by appointment 547 NE Bellevue Drive Suite ¹10 5 B e nd, Oregon
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IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Milestones, C2 Travel, C4-6 Puzzles, C6 THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, APRIL 27, 2014
O www.bendbulletin.com/community
SPOTLIGHT
TRAVEL
CENTENNIAL CELEBRATIONS
Rodeoparade
Northwest Travel returns next week with a cross-country drive
deadline is near Entryforms for the 2014 Sisters Rodeo Parade can bepicked up through the rodeo's website at www.sisters rodeo.com or from its office at 220 W.Cascade Ave. in Sisters. Each form must be returned to the parade office by May15. Parade officials will send out information letting participants know where they will be positioned in this year's parade after the deadline has passed. This year's parade will take place in downtown Sisters at 9:30 a.m. June14. A copyof the parade route will be included with the entry form as well as information about the parade's general rules and places where people canspend
Massaging Ir'OLII' SOLI
in Arizona By Jeremy W.Peters New York Times News Service
I felt a nap coming on, but I was late for class. I should be totally upfront here and confess that the class was on
sleeping. For $75 and an hour and a half of my day, a registered nurse named Sheryl
went through a few pro tips on how to get the most restful seven hours possible. We all need a sleep plan, she told the class of about
This photo of Madras dates to1914, the year Jefferson County was born. Photo courtesy Jefferson County Historical Society
eight of us, guests at a desert
oasis outside Tucson, Ariz., called Miraval, most of them
the night.
women in their 50s and 60s.
Project Connect seeks volunteers
We make plans for eating, exercise and our workdays. So why not for something we spend a third of our lives
Volunteers are needed for Project Connect, a one-day event scheduled for Sept. 13 at the Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center in Redmond. During the event, free services will be offered to those who are struggling to make ends meet or those who are homeless in Central Oregon, according to the event's website. Services include medical care, housing assistance, financial and legal advice and children's services. Details on volunteer positions will be available in July. For more information, visit www. projectconnectco.org. Contact: info© projectconnectco.org
dolng?
As Sheryl was going through a checklist of things we needed to do and not do to ensure better rest — do
expose yourself to natural sunlight; do not look at any lighted screens like iPads, smartphones or television sets less than an hour before bedtime — I started to realize
that I had spent much of the last week on my vacation to
Arizona in a state of repose. Rest wasn't something I was in need of, and the same was
probably true for most of the people I encountered that week. There was the Restorative
Yoga class I took at the Mii amo spa in Sedona that basi-
cally consisted of lying on the floor for an hour. There was the two-hour
or 541-385-8977.
Desert Gemstone Ritual
Seven Peaks garage sale
that I had at the Ritz-Carlton Dove Mountain outside Tuc-
Jefferson County celebrates its centennial with a "Centennial Trailer" that
Students at Seven Peaks School are hosting a garagesale to benefit ayoung child with cerebral palsy at the school, 19660 Mountaineer Way inBend,from 8 a.m. to1 p.m. May 3.For more information call
will visit locations around the county May through September. It will feature
6
Warm Springs IndianReservation
Contact us! Community events: Email event information to events©bendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. Allow at least10 days before the desired date of publication. Contact: 541-383-0351. — From staff reports
0
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JEFFERS@N
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Camp herman
Oeschutes River —Crooired River
6
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Crooked River Ran h. L
Deschutes County
1
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Madras
Lake Billy Chinook
By David Jasper •The Bulletin
Traveling centennial exhibits O 6 Q 0
Ashwood, May10 Camp Sherman, May24 Museum at Warm Springs, June 28 Madras,July4
Q Gateway, July 4 (afternoon) 6 Crooked River Ranch, July 5 9 Jefferson County Fair, Madras, July 23-26 0 Culver, Aug.15 6 Metolius, Sept.13 Greg Cross i The Bulletin
t's really fascinating. It's full of folklore
the Old Mill District.
Apply and upload a photo at www.bend bulletin.com/lookalike by noon May 5. Winners will be notified by the endof the day Tuesday,May 6. Winners will be published in the All Ages section May 9. Questions? Contact Alandra Johnson at 541617-7860 or ajohnson@ bendbulletin.com.
bathwater.
MILES
. ateway
6
I
er-Daughter Look-alike contest. Just in time for Mother's Day, the winning pair will receive a portrait photo shoot with one of The Bulletin's professional photographers. Runners-up willreceive $25 gift certificates to
soak in warm, lavender-oiled Then there was Floating
Mother-daughter look-alike contest
The Bulletin's Moth-
massage and a 20-minute
historical displays, audio-visual displays, skits and more.
541-382-7755.
Do you have your mom's smile? Do your daughter's eyes look just like yours? If you and your mom look alike, you could win
son, which included a foot rub, an hourlong full-body
and myths," said
ture vintage photos, antique vehicles, artifacts, activities and more. It will make its first stop May 10 in Ashwood, located about I t/~ hours northeast of Madras. It will then visit Camp Sherman, Warm
and other western Crook communities.
Springs, Gateway, Crook-
population in the Deschutes
traveling exhibit that will visit
ed River Ranch and other communities. "This is the first time anyone
communities peppering the countyoverthenextseveral
really looked at this whole story," said Ramsey, who has also
Basin, the county seat of Prineville was a long trip away on poorly constructed roads, furthering the percep-
months.
written a detailed, two-part
is to use the centennial celebration as a way of reconnect-
account of the county's birth for the magazine Sageland, celebrating Jefferson County.
Jefferson County
Historical Society President Jarold "Jerry" Ramsey, discussing the birth of his home county 100 years ago. To celebrate the centennial,
Ramsey and other area historybuffs have assembled a
"What we're trying to do ...
ing with the components of the county. Jefferson County is a
really far-flung county," Ramsey said. "If you think that it stretches from Ashwood all
theway to Camp Sherman, what connecti ons arethere?
Separating fromCrook Prior to 1914, what would
become Jefferson County was but the northwest corner of Crook County, Ramsey explained. With the arriv-
al of the railroad in 1911, things were booming around a tent at each stop and will fea- Madras, Culver, Metolius There haven't been many." The exhibit will be set up in
Meditation at Miraval, a sublime experience that involved
lying in a silk hammock while the instructor rocked me like a baby and played sonorous harmonies on crystal singing bowls. "It's OK if you fall asleep," she told the class. sBut if you start snoring, I will have to
wake you up," she added, upholding what seemed to be one of Miraval's most sacred tenets: No one's relaxation
should disturb anyone else's. Arizonans like to brag of the state's five C's, copper, cotton, cattle, citrus and cli-
mate. There should be a sixth: convalescence. The state has
a booming economy of resorts and spas that cater to people seeking relaxation, resto-
ration and a little Zen reassurance that everything will be just fine. SeeArizona/C4
By 1914, Madras and other burgs in the corner of that large county were getting "uppity," as Ramsey puts it. For the western county's
tion that Prineville lacked
connection — physically and psychologically — with its western population.
Eventually, through the use of a 1913 state law that came up with a plan for how new countiescould becarved out, the matter would be put to a vote. (A similar independence movement was afoot in the
southwest corner of Crook County, which became De-
schutes County in 1916.) SeeJefferson/C3
John Burcham i New York Times
A labyrinth, used for meditation, at the Miraval spa in
Tucson, Ariz.
C2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, APRIL 27, 2014
M II ESTON~+ ~
L7
Formsforengagementw,eddinga,nniversary orbirthday announcements areavailableat TheBulletlnI,777sttr chandlerdve v Bendo,r by emai l i ng milestones®bendbulletin com. Forms and photos must be submitted within on month of the celebration. Contact: 541-383 0358.
ENGAGEMENTS
Pro tips ontaking pics through aphone'slens
BIRTHDAYS
By James Hill
available for Apple- and Win-
New York Times News Service
dows- and
A n d roid-based
Every family has its des- systems, although the choice ignated vacation photogra- is wider for Apple's iPhone.
Caba — Cheatum
Awbrey Glen Golf Club. T he future groom i s t h e
Janna Caba and Michael son of Vernon Pride and Cheatum, both of Bend, plan Tessa Cheatum, of Tacoma, to marry Aug. 15 at Mission Church in Bend.
Wash. He is a 2006 graduate
of Wilson High School in TaThe future bride is t he coma and a 2013 graduate of daughter of Mike and Kathy Central Oregon CommuniCaba, of Bend. She is a 2008 ty College, where he studied graduate of Mountain View criminal justice. He works High School. She works as a as a painter for Mike Huitt server at The Restaurant at
Construction.
For me,the best apps are the ones that are easiest to use.
when I arrived at the Naples
The technical capabilities
airport last summer with my wife and two children for
are more than most of us will
forgotten my camera.
Nelda Jane Stanphill
Janna Cabaand Michael Cheatum
ly, a moment of sheer horror
a brief stay on the Amalfi Coast and realized that I had
e
I
pher, so it was, to put it mild-
need, so the important point is to find the interface you find the simplest and most fun to work with.
Here are a few suggestions:
It wasn't the f irst t ime.
Nelda Jane Stanphill, of
of Bend, Donna (and Jack)
Bend, will celebrate her 100th
'Ibrner, of O ntario, Calif.,
birthday with a luncheon and the late Ray Stanphill; hosted by family members six grandchildren; and 15 at I p.m. May 3 at the Black great-grandchildren. Bear Diner in Bend. Mrs. Stanphill made a taMrs. Stanphill was born
ble quilt for Katharine Hep-
May 2, 1914, in Springdale, burn while the actress was Ark. She married Budy filming "Rooster Cogburn" Stanphill, who died in 1971. in Central Oregon. She has three children, She has lived in Central Conard (and Beth) Stanphill, Oregon for 44 years.
t | )
Many years ago, a friend asked me to photograph his wedding. I packed film but for some reason left my usual camera, a Nikon single-lens reflex, behind and found myself left with a simple Ricoh point-and-shoot camera. I
Hipstamatic Available for Apple- and Windows-based systems, this app is a personal favorite. It's square — great for an
Instagrammer or if, like me, you have spent years shootheard the bride's mother say, ing on medium-format cam"I thought you told me he eras. In fact, I used this app was a professional." for the Amalfi photos. Two But as it turns out, there is
tips: Set the file size regula-
a savior: your smartphone. tor to maximum to ensure Much t o my chi l d r en's the sharpest photo. Second, embarrassment, I have a make sure the viewfinder is cracked first-generation iP- full-frame so you see what hone 4. Things have come you are getting in the picture. a long way since I bought that phone more than three Camera+ and 645 Pro years ago. The cameras on Both apps are for iPhones cellphones today have be- and offer clear, improved come sophisticated instru- controls for making 35-mmments, with between 8 and style photographs, including 16 megapixel sensors, which easy zooming and exposure allow you to make extremely control. These apps are dedetailed and sharp images. signed to give you the feeling However, there are manyoth- that you are holding a real er aspects, such as actual pix- camera. el size and aperture size, that
affect the quality of a phone's Camera Zoom FX camera. But even an older
s*,;
v
IJ
Kyle Collier and Rebecca Frame
Frame — Collier
1%
ceived a master's degree in education. She works as a school
Rebecca Frame and Kyle counselor for Metro Nashville Collier, both o f N a s hville, Public School in Nashville.
Tenn., plan to marry May 24 at West End United Methodist
The future groom is the son of Tammy Collier, of Bend. He is a 2000 graduate of Crook County High School and a
Church in Nashville. The future bride is t he daughter of Ellis and Cathy 2008 graduate of University Frame, o f S u m mersville,of the Arts in Philadelphia, WVa. She is a 1996 gradu- where he received a degree ate of Nicholas County High in vocal performance. He is a School in Summersville, a manager of NTransit and is a 2000 graduate of West Virgin- vocalist for West End United ia Wesleyan College and 2007 Methodist Church and Vine graduate of Middle Tennessee Street Christian Church, in State University, where she re- Nashville.
\
Betty O'Neal
Betty O'Neal, of Albany, iel, of Bend, and Tommy (and Amable), of Bend; four day with a luncheon hosted g randchildren; and f o u r by Shirley McCart at noon great-grandchildren. May 3 at Chan's Chinese During World War II, Mrs. O'Neal worked at Douglas Restaurant in Bend. will celebrate her 90th birth-
M rs. O'Neal wa s
born
Aircraft in Long Beach, Ca-
May 19, 1924, in Los Ange- lif., putting riveters in the les. She married Thomas wings of C-47 cargo planes. O'Neal, who died in 2007. She was active in the Old She has four children, Shir- Time Fiddlers Association
ley (and Tom) McCart, of
and enjoys gardening. She has lived in Central Oregon for 42 years.
Albany, Kathleen Bradshaw, of Pleasant Hill, Calif, Dan-
Theater: Forautistic audiences,afew changeslet the showgo on By Beth Whitehouse
which is April. "We work with experts. They go • What does it mean when a ven- in and see the show, and they tell us u • ue offers an "autism-friendly" what would be disturbing to the chilperformance? dren," says David LeShay, director of Take, for instance, the "Disney marketing and public relations for the • Junior Live on Tour! Pirate & nonprofit Theatre Development Fund,
strobe lights and reducing jarring
Newsday
sounds or lights focused into the au-
dience. It might mean lowering sound and light levels by a percentage, LeShay says. Designated quiet and activity areas are staffed with autism specialists in case families need to leave
theater, only 2,000 seats will be sold to help make the outing manageable. "This is our first foray into a production for children of a younger age," LeShay says. Previous autism-friendly Broadway performances have included "Wicked" and "The Lion King."
Princess Adventure" autism-friendly
which is sponsoring the event as part of its Autism Theatre Initiative.
their seats during the performance.
A Theatre Development Fund video
For this show, even though the fund
about autism-friendly performances is
Adjustments include eliminating
purchased the entire 5,000-plus-seat
available online at bit.ly/IslhfEr.
B
A•
performance at Madison Square Garden, during Autism Awareness Month,
SOLUTION TO TODAY'S SUDOKU
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•
TheBulletin
T Y P E S I N S T E E D F I G U R E D
R E C A P S M A R M N E V A D A
R I C H E A P L A N J O I Ihi T D E lhi I NA C K E T H E A N R R I S M S O D I E N O T I N GWA S E S H E W S O E E T H E L A O G G R E R S T A A L E S D I A N T E N S L R T S A
CROSSW ORD IS ON
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MAY 9- I 3
T W P E W E H E I R E S I T
L L M E O U G S Y P E P A S T Y O B O L A C A D O A M A T E R T E S H E A U R C R O S
T E N S E
FILM scHEDULE
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RECITAL HALL • The Shedd institute '
Fri7:30 pm - I0 pm Sat I 0:20 am - I I pm .- Sun I 0:20 am - 7 Pm
Free festiva') event S E N O R
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Monday 8r TUesday IOam-5 O 5 pm
Awards
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4/2 7 / 1 4
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F TI C KETS:
at Baker Downtown Center!
P'" $5
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INES
If you would like toreceiveforms to announce your engagement, wedding, or anniversary, plus helpful information to plan the perfect Central Oregon wedding, pick up your Book of Loveat The Bulletin (1777 SW Chandler Ave.,Bend)or from any of these valued advertisers: AAA Travel Awbrey GlenGolf Club Bend Metro Park & Recreation District The BendTrolley
$ee /8 juried fi/ms from a/i around the world! Keynote address Friday evening by Dr. JeanClottes,leading researcher. on world rock art!
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•
TheWorld's Top P Heritage Films Compete
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P ROMPT E N T IC E AFR A ID EXEMPT G A R LIC N O T ION Working with plutonium is so tricky because of the-
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Weekly Arts Sr Entertainment In
The Bulletin
Answer:
5 9 2 4 1 8 3 6 7 1
6 84 3 7 9 1 2 5
Get ATaste For Food. Home Sr Garden
and Vignette
phone like mine, which has a There are limited choices 5-megapixel sensor, can take for upgrading an Android great shots. camera, but these apps, Of course, cellphones have which offer easier control for their limitations, and it's im- framing and zooming, are portant to understand what two of the more useful ones. they do well: landscapes and portraits in good, even light. Snapseed It is equally important to A well-designed editing know what they do less well: program to make up for the any shot with poor or overly sometimes frustrating simcontrasted light, and scenes plicity of cellphone lenses. in which there are several It uses swipe-style controls, light sources. Flash is also which makes editing simple rarely satisfying, mostly be- and fast. cause it is too weak to richThese are handy apps, ly illuminate a dim scene. It but the best thing about a works much better in situa- cellphone is that it's in your tions when it is used as fill-in pocket — at least you hope flash, to pop a bit of bright- it is. Even my kids admitted ness into faces and eyes. the Amalfi pictures weren't There is also a host of apps bad.
Reserve Now 54 I -434-7000
tilrn package:
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$I 2-$20 Mo m s freeon Sunday!
Bend WeddingB Formal Black Butte Ranch The DD Ranch Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center Faith Hope Charity Vinyards B Events Ida's Cupcake Cafe Lake Creek Lodge M.Jacobs McMenamins Old St.Francis School Northwest Medi Spa Salon Je Danae Socailly Yours Taps Mobile Pub The Dress The Soap Box Widgi Creek Golf Club
SUNDAY, APRIL 27, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
C3
Opponents from Prineville made efforts to be on hand at the meetings (which would determine the fate of a new Jefferson County), although the muddy road conditions they met en route forced the loyal opposition to return home. It was "a sweet moral victory" to the west Crook County residents whose concerns about the county's road situation had long fallen on deaf Prinevillian ears.
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This photo shows the town of Warm Springs during the early 20th century. An exhibit celebrating Jefferson County's centennial will visit the Museum at Warm Springs on June 28.
Jefferson Continued from C1 Prior to any voting came the difficult task of drawing
up county boundaries. In part
N(g [flI
one of his history of the coun-
ty's birth, Ramsey tells of a rancher named J.H. Haner
who had timber holdings in Crook County, and Ramsey speculates that Haner's role in drawing up boundariesand the desire to keep valuable fir and pine stands in Crook
Q '.4
County — may be the reason
for the stair-step pattern of the border between Crook and
el
Jefferson counties that exists
Photos courtesy Jefferson County Historical Society
today. A petition to separate was craftedper the state' s young
'll
initiative and referendum process, created a decade earlier,
The Jefferson County Courthouse in Culver was short-lived, as Madras residents seized county records from the building in 1917,
j•
three years after the county seat wasestablished in Madras.
" .*
This street scene shows the town of Metolius circa 1911 — before Metolius was in a "Jefferson Coun-
and by July 1914, more than ty." The traveling centennial exhibit will visit Metolius in September. 800 registered voters around northern and western Crook
County had signed it. To ensure victory on Nov. 3, 1914, a series of weekend com-
munity meetings were held around the area that October. Ramsey tells of opponents
;ctI
.' 1Y
"If you were to go to the old-timers in Culver right now, they would go, Yeah, (they) stole the county seat.' But legally, Madras was in its rights. Pretty unmistakable, but high-handed, tactless, pushy — all things the people of Culver have probably thought about Madras ever since." — Jarold "Jerry" Ramsey, Jefferson County Historical Society president
from Prineville making efforts
to be on hand at the meetings, although the muddy road
'4a
conditions they met en route
st
forced the loyal opposition to return home. As Ramsey wrote, it was "a sweet mor-
c
al victory" to the west Crook
i]I
County residents whose con-
cerns about the county's road situation had long fallen on
lIPPS
deaf Prinevillian ears.
Battle forcounty seat Yet it's not any old disputes between Jefferson and Crook counties Ramsey frets about
stirring up with the centennial project. Rather, it's the
100-year-old battle for the Jefferson County seat he worries This photo, likely taken around1912, captures a basketball game between Madras High School and a about. team of girls fromWarmSprings. It comes from a collection of salvaged glass photo negatives shot by "Whether it further stirs up
Ed Mason (1885-1960), who worked as an undertaker and became coroner of Jefferson County.
the centurylong ill will between Madras and Culver, I hope not," he told The Bulletin. The ill will
telegram to the governor in Sa-
dates back to the battle for the lem requesting the state militia Jefferson County seat. be sent to Jefferson County to When independence was deal with the mob, which made gainedand thecounty created, more than one trip back to Cul"the temporary courthouse, ver for county materials. "If you were to go to the the county seat, was established at Culver," Ramsey said. old-timers in Culver right now, "It was understood at the start, they would go, 'Yeah, (they) 1914, that it was to be tempo- stole the county seat.' But lerary, until the next general gally, Madras was in its rights. election, and the county would Pretty u n mistakable, but vote" on a permanent location. high-handed, tactless, pushysSo that's what happened, all things the people of Culver and for some reason that I have probably thought about have never discovered, Cul- Madras ever since," he said. ver did not get itself on the ballot," Ramsey continued."I
guess they felt it wasn't necessary, even though they understood that it was a temporary solution." In 1916, "Madras won hand-
ily," Ramsey said. "Culver responded by throwing up a series of injunctions and appeals." With the legal wrangling, "countybusiness just stopped."
The singing moonshiner
He hopes he's been able to ren- the plan is to tack the Jefferder the raid on Culver humor- son County Centennial exhibit ous, he said. Another skit that
onto existing events, includ-
will be acted out tells the story of a moonshiner in the Camp Sherman area whose singing to combat boredom fooled Jefferson County law enforcement into thinking they might be facing an entire gang.
ing at the Museum at Warm Springs on June 28 during
Ramsey credits Joe Krenowicz, executive director of
to celebrate what we have in
the Madras-Jefferson County Chamber of Commerce, for
the idea of the traveling centennial exhibit. According t o
the Pi-Ume-Sha Treaty Days
event, and in Culver during the Aug. 15 Crawdad Festival. Said Ramsey, "The idea is to have fun, obviously, and common — including this interesting history."
~ Sully's Italian Restaurant will be saying goodbye to Redmond on Wednesday, April80. We want to thank the people of Central Oregon for their support and patronage. Redmond has been good to us and wehave had a great29 years!W e'd been thinking of retirement and were waiting for the time to be right. Opportunity knocked when we found someone that wanted to lease our building. There will be a new restaurant opening in our location that we think will be a great addition to Redmond. We hope that you will come in and say goodbye and enjoy your favorite Sully's dinner one more time. Thank you again to our customers for your loyalty over the years. You're the best! Looking forward to our retirement and more time for family, fishing and horseback riding. Here's to our next chapter ... Cheersl
— Reporter: 541-383-0349, djasperibendbul!etin.com
- Peter and Carlye Seitz
K r e nowicz,
"A community group of peoThe trove of historical pho- ple said, ' Let's make i t a tographs included in the cen- celebration.'" "We elected to put our retennial exhibit includes a shot of vehides raiding the Culver sources into adding to or encourthouse. Ramsey has also hancing the various events that built sets and written a number we have, so we're not generating of entertaining, informative another event," Krenowicz said. skits in time for the celebration. When and where possible,
• Lain Or ECCENTRICITY, EROTICISM & ENIIM A
The Madras entry in the Or-
egon Encyclopedia puts it succinctly. "g)n the early morning hours of January 1, 1917, Madras area residents went to Culver and secured — stole, according to Culver versions
— the county records." The legal adviser to the Madras group had given them the go-aheadto move the county records, and on New Year's Day, "a task force from Ma-
dras with Model-T trucks and cars, haywagons, and even a sleigh, went to Culver, went into the courthouse and took all the stuff." The county sheriff, Ira Black,
/l f
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A visually stunning presentation with National Geographic author, photographer and expedition leader, Christopher Baker
All Remaining
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temporarily parked himself
Until Further Notice
on the safe that held pertinent
541.317.0700 More information:
county records and tax payments. It was later removed by the Madras contingent, and
Ramsey says that someone also made off with the "county sheriff' sign from Black's office. Black would later send a
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www.cocc.edu/ foundatlon/vsp
Sponsoredby
O UNIVERSITY O F OREGO N Sshool of fournsllsm • hd Cellllllehlsstleh
ETHICS. INNOVATION.
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Central OregonCommunity College 2600NW CollegeWay,Bend
C4
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, APRIL 27, 2014
At the same time that
these Arizona spas are spending fortunes on their own exteriors, they have thoroughly embraced treatments thatfocus as much
on your inner wellbeing as your outer blemishes.Spa and activities menus are
v
I v @'
*
studded with bizarre-
sounding services like Past-life Regression, Interactive Aura Photography and the Equine Experience.
Photos by John Burcham / New York Times News Service
Outdoor treatment areas, called wickiups and based on Native American structures,
are located outside of the main area of the Mii amospa in Sedona, Ariz.
Arizona Continued from C1 Hundreds of millions of dol-
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lars have gone into resort and spa construction in A r izona
.
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place where Oprah and Ellen
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treat him as akind of therapist.
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about dealing with anxiety,
We were skeptical of the abilities of a horse to teach us much tension or resolving conflicts.
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Mountain property opened in 2009 with a price tag that approached $300 million. (You may recognize it as the spot where NBC's "Today" co-host
first of two days and nights there with the famed Equine
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CALIF
2012. The Ritz-Carlton's Dove
go to recharge. We started our Experience. The point was not to learn to ride the horse but to
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ongoing expansion, Miraval opened a sleek new spa in
But it ended up being quite a revealing two hours. The biggest indulgence for me at Miraval was actuallythe
tns MILES
The outdoor pool at Mii amospa in Sedona offers a great view of the Arizona desert.
married.) Enchantment Resort, which
ble, given its reputation as the
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ties that feel far more Four Seasons than Betty Ford. In the most recent phase of its
houses Mii amo, finished up a $25 million face-lift in 2012.
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in the last few years, and the results are high-end proper-
Savannah Guthrie was just
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ness." I still have no idea what
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that meant. But the massage was enough to put me in a
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At the same time that these
state of delirium. Later that night, our last in Arizona for the week, we met an older couple from Ohio at the
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Arizona spas are spending fortunes on their own exteriors, they have thoroughly embraced
$265 Mindful Massage, which was billed as a way "to align bodywork with visualization for a deepening body aware-
treatments that focus as much
bar as we were waiting forour table. They had been coming to
y
on your inner well-being as your outer blemishes. Spa and
Miraval almost everyyear since
it opened and had watched it evolve. They said they could
activities menus are studded
with bizarre-sounding services like Past-life Regression, a form of hypnosis; Interactive Aura Photography, an analysis of your energy field; and the Equine Experience, a group session in which you learn to manage anxiety and tension by cieaning a horse's hoof. These days you don't go to an Arizona spa to emerge with a glow, unless it's a spiritual one. My partner, Brendan, and I spent a week dipping into these resorts, sampling the newest and most intriguingoptions we could find
remember the days when there
was no bar, and no $18 glasses of wine because, first, the resort didn'teven serve alcohol and,
second, there was no need for a place to wait for a table because it never got that crowded.
The bar and the dining room were packed. The table
of free hors d'oeuvres hadbeen picked clean. And judging by the number of people drinking $20 cocktails, the relaxation
would go on well after the spa closed for the day.
— some wonderfully decadent,
some genuinely revelatory on a personal level, and others that we should have skipped. Our first stop was at Enchantment, which was probably the most physically beautiful of the three properties we The Miraval spa and resort in Tucson, Ariz., is swanky enough toattract the likes of Oprah Winfrey and Ellen DeGeneres.
The biggest indulgence for me at Miraval was actually the $265 Mindful
visited. The resort occupies 70 meticulously maintained acres
when I asked him to elaborate emy." He reassured me I was ably the most elegant we vison what supernatural powers just sensitive. ited that week. It's just a few of ayurvedic medicine, an an- he mightpossess. He was more Our next stop was a3t//J-hour years old and is so well kept cient science developed on the like a $250-an-hour life coach drive south to the Tucson area, that it still looks brand-new. Enchantment, with its own ho- Indian subcontinent. who happened to have good where we checked into the The spa is so idyllic, so retel, pool and restaurant that all I was less impressed with hands, which he ran light- Ritz-Carlton Dove Mountain. moved from the bustle of the guestsofthe resortare freeto my next treatment, the Psy- ly over my arms, legs, lower It was less of a true spa get- main resort that it feels like a use — as long as they purchase chic Massage. back and abdomen. He said he away than the Miraval or Mii little boutique within the vast, one of the priceytreatments. It was neither psychic nor did this to get a better read of amo and more of a full-service 850-acre Ritz compound. M y f i rs t t r e atment w a s much of a massage. "I don't my energy. And when he was resort with country club trapWe saved Miraval for our something called the Dosha see into the future or anything done, he reported, "There's pings like golf and swimming. last stop, knowing it would Balancing Wrap, a detoxi- like that," my therapist told me nothing wrong with you, JerBut the Ritz's spa was prob- probably be the most memorainsideone ofthe red rock canyons for which Sedona is so famous. The Mii amo spa is actually its own oasis within
fying and cleansing therapy that drew from the traditions
Massage, which was billed as a way 'to align bodywork with visualization for
a deepening body awareness.' I still have no idea what that meant. But the
massage was enough to put me in a state of delirium.
TravelQ8A A little bit of Quebec,andold France traveling to Quebec Q •• I'm City this summer and
weather, and has a broad ar-
would like to plan several days catch a Cardinalsgame or of travel outside the city. I'm spend the day in Forest Park, thinking of
t h e L a urentian home of the 1904 World's Fair.
Mountains or traveling along It has gardens, bike trails, the the St. Lawrence River. Any famous zoo, an art museum, suggestions? a science center and much • Either sounds g ood. m ore. For other art/garden at• Along the r iver, you tractions: Laumeier Sculpture could visit the scenic Cote-de- Park and Citygarden. You can Beaupreregion. Farther north also take a brew tour at Anis Baie-St.-Paul. You could heuser-Busch or at a local mi-
A
also stay near the city and visit
crobrewery. For unusual mu-
the gorgeous Ile d'Orleans.
seums, check out the Museum of Contemporary Religious
• We're off to France next • month and are thinking
of renting a car to drive from
Art, the Museum of Trans-
portation or the Kemp Auto Museum.
Paris to Provence. What are
some don't-miss stops between Paris and Aix, and must-sees in the Provence area? I did this drive many
A •• y ears ago a n d
My husband and I are
Q •• traveling to Vienna and
would like to use our iPhones to text each other, call home
we and access the map. We have stopped in Lyon, which was AT&T. What are the best opgreat, as most French cities tions for keeping costs down? are. In Provence, see Avignon, • You might want to actiGordes, St.-Tropez and St. Paul-
• vate an international plan
de-Vence. There are so many with AT8 T, assuming that your beautiful towns in Provence, it's phones are compatible with hard to see them all!
European networks. You can
do a calling plan, a data plan Hubby and I are plan- or both. There are also apps • ning to go to St. Louis in that let you make calls (or video May for anengagement cer- calls, as with Skype) over Wiemony. Is it worth adding an Fi. You can access your maps
Q•
extra day to take in the sights?
A
data plan or the Internet.
ray of attractions. You can
via a Wi-Fi connection, or look
• St. Louis is a great town, into offline map apps that you • especially in w a r mer can use without tapping into a
family reunions in July — one in Jamaica and one in the Do-
My husband's family minican Republic — and the • is planning an August older and heavier people in our get-together — n i n e a d ults family struggled with the heat. from 21 to 80. My brother-in- In Canada, look into staying at law wants to do something in a ski resort, which will have
Q•
the Caribbean. Wouldn't that
many amenities. Take note of
be miserably hot in August? the elevation to make sure that Would British Columbia/Van- it won't be too much for the couver be a better choice? older family members.
A• August. I've done two • The Caribbean is hot in
— From The Washington Post's travel writers
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SUNDAY, APRIL 27, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
• This island's exotic yet elusivewildlife is a sight to seewhen youseeit
C5
If yougo:Sumatra, Indonesia WHERE TO STAYAHDEAT Satwa Elephant Eco-lodge Way KambasNational Park
By Hugh Biggar
011-62-361-74-74-205
Special to The Washington Post
satwaecolodge.com Basic butcomfortable rooms. No air conditioning. Rates are negotiable depending on the type of tour you want to arrange. Fora two-night stay, plus airport pickup and aguide, we paid about $300 apiece. Breakfast, dinner and beverages are provided in an open-air dining room. There are several small kiosks within walking distance in the neighboring village where youcanpurchase snacksanddrinks. WHAT TO DO Way KambasNational Park offers numerous options for hiking, bird-watching and wildlife viewing. Somewildlife, such as tigers, is especially hard to see. Be sure to visit the Sumatra Rhino Sanctuaryand the Elephant Conservation Center. IHFORMATION www.indonesia.travel
W hen a man with a m a chete silently joins us at the
edge of the rainforest, my sister and I aren't sure whether
to be alarmed or comforted. We already have a guide and a park ranger accompanying us as we set off into Sumatra's Way Kambas National Park. The mysterious machete man
makes five. The Indonesian island of
The Associated Press file photos
A Sumatran tiger refreshes itself at the Frankfurt Zoo in 2006. Zoos are about the best place to see these rare cats — don't count on
coming across one in the Indonesian jungle (and, maybe, that's a es left in the world where ele- good thing). phants, rhinos and — of parSumatra is one of the few plac-
A 10-month-old, 750-pound Sumatran rhino calf lies on its mother at the Cincinnati Zoo in 2002. The male was later transferred to
Sumatra to breed in hopes of saving the species, one of the most threatened large mammals today.
ticular interest to Heather and
me — tigers live together in the wild. Critically endangered, wild tigers are fighting to survive in the face of widespread poaching and f orest-clearing. With this in mind, we've decided to travel to Sumatra to see what we can, while we
can. Before the trip, the ecolodge arranging it warns us that it's
e x tremely u n l ike-
ly that we'll see any tigers. There are roughly 30 Sumatran tigers remaining in the 502-square-mile Way Kambas
through high bushes. "Maybe in the past you see droppings," he says, pointing to the ground, "but now not too much."
park, in southern Sumatra,
and they mostly prefer to stay in the deep interior. Across Sumatra, there are fewer than 400 tigers left; they're extinct
on the nearby islands of Java
After an hour, somewhat
I 'Ig
and Bali. Sumatra's tigers are
saddle-sorefrom the ride, we head back to the elephant
gwr
smaller than their cousins elsewhere and have thicker
c enter, where th e
c all t o
black stripes.
prayer from the mosque fills
Though getting a glimpse is a long shot, Heather and I are ready to try, hoping at the very least to spy a tiger paw print or claw marks on tree bark — any signs of the jungle cats will do. From the clearing, we hike single-file into the park with the mysterious machete man
the air.
at the rear, the ranger at the f ront. Following a t r ail n ot
That night at the eco-lodge, my sister and I drink warm beer and toast our good fortune at seeing the elephants,
rhino and other rare wildlife. A small cat wanders from table to table hustling scraps, Hugh Biggar/For The Washington Post
At Way Kambas National Park on the Indonesian island of Sumatra, Satwa Elephant Eco-lodge — occasionally visited by Sumatra hens — puts guests in prime wildlife viewing position.
much wider than a machete shoe-sucking mud and kick up finger-size leeches, which slow our pace, as we keep stopping to shake them off. We also stop often to look at macaques, a well-named slow
0 MILES
1 000
Sea PHiltilPPINES
loris (a lemurlike primate that
we're told has a toxic bite),
i jiAEAYSilA.
small deer known as munt-
jacs and blue-banded kingfishers. Some ofthe trees are
Pacific Ocean
"Overhead, we hear monkey and wild-bird calls. As we'd been forewarned, despite the machete man at our backs, there are no traces of any tigers, the very thing we most hope to see. 'Perhaps the tiger cams are the best way to see the tigers,' says our guide, Hari, once we're back at the ranger station, offering the thought as a sort of consolation prize."
room. A long list of local wildlife covers one. On the other is a rough map of the area on which visitors have written
in the animals they spotted. Some I wished I had seen, such as the colorful sun bear;
others, like the spitting cobra, I'm glad to have avoided. And then I see tt.
Near the eco-lodge, someone had written: "At 6 p.m., a
tiger crossed the road 3m in front of motor bike."
rare tropical hardwoods that
there are no traces of any ti-
I head to the kitchen for
more beer and stop in front of two white boards in the dining
blade, we cross patches of
are highly valued by loggers. Overhead, we hear monkey and wild-bird calls. As we'd been forewarned, despite the machete man atour backs,
and we agree that it will have to do for our tiger of Sumatra.
SVMATRA
va
farmers use these platforms
Jakarta
to keep watch over the fields at night to make sure that the
Indian Ocean gers, the very thing we most AUSTRALIA hope to see. "Perhaps the tiger cams The Washington Post are the best way to see the tigers," says our guide, Hari, matran rhinos and elephants to breed Sumatran rhinos in once we're back at the ranger today. We follow a bumpy dirt captivity have failed. station, offering the thought road into the park, driving The rhino h a s r e t urned as a sort of consolation prize. past more muntjacs, monkeys from a night in the forest to eat Removing leeches from our and crested fireback pheas- mounds of leafy branches. She clothes, hats and shoes as the ants on our way to the Suma- chews her food slowly while a machete man grills fresh fish tran Rhino Sanctuary. sanctuary staff member tells on an open fire, we're inclined The sanctuary aids Su- a German documentary film to agree. matra's endangered rhinos, crew and us that rhinos eat 10 After lunch, we try a differ- which are considered one of percent of their weight each ent route into the park. The the most threatened large day, which is certainly food five of us set off in a small mammals in the world. They for thought. Curious about boat that cruises slowly along are the smallest rhinoceros the gathered crowd, the rhithe Way Kambas River, on species — and considered the no ambles over closer to us. glassy water the color of milky most vocal — and are also Up close, her leathery skin is tea. Our wake barely rouses a known as hairy rhinos be- indeed marked by patches of mostlysubmerged freshwater cause of the hair on their bod- dark hair. Her eyes are lively, crocodile. There are no mud- ies. Less fortunately, Suma- and she's surprisingly light on dy tiger footprints along the tra's rhinos are the only spe- her feet. She cautiously invesbank, but gibbons and long- cies in Asia with two horns, tigates our small group and, tailed macaques spot us and making them p articularly fortunately for us, decides not move higher up into the trees. attractive to poachers. They're to mark her territory with exWith the help of a small la- hunted for their horns, which crement (another Sumatran ser pointer, Hari points out are ground into a power that's rhino characteristic). Instead, a gray python tucked into used in traditional medicines a sanctuary staffer briefly the hollow of a tree branch. and that some believe to be mists her with w ater; then, Farther along, he spots two an aphrodisiac. Once found her curiosity satisfied, she lies black-and-yellow mangrove across Southeast Asia, Su- down for a nap. snakes well hidden in dark un- matran rhinos today number In the sweltering heat, the dergrowth. The machete man, about 100, with only 25 to 35 misting looks inviting, but we who's manning the motor, ma- at Way Kambas. have elephants to see, and still We're fortunate enough hold out hope for tigers. neuvers the boat so close that the branches whack us in the to see one of them, a young face. 1,500-pound female that has Conservation efforts "Very bad, very poisonous," come to the sanctuary for A t eeth-rattling r i d e i n Hari says of the snakes, while breakfast. Like other rhinos the SUV lands us at the Eleagain highlighting them with here, she's being reintroduced phant Conservation Center. the laser pointer. We don't into the wild following a peri- Along the way we encounter need much convincing. Wish- od in captivity. Mostly solitary a few motorscootersthatare ing that we had machetes of creatures, the sanctuary's rhi- nearly obscured by piles of our own, we head back to the nos each receive a large wedge branches, presumably used lodge, agreeing that it's best to of rainforest to roam in, with to feed the rhinos, heaped belet sleeping snakes lie. the wedges radiating from hind the drivers. We also pass a large circle, at the center lush forest and small patches Bigger animals,better luck of which is the sanctuary it- of land cleared for farming, In the morning, Hari picks self. This rhino is particularly some marked by tall wooden us up and promises that we'll prized as a young female that platforms. have better luck seeing Su- can produce offspring. Efforts H ari informs us that t he
elephants don't trample their
crops. Like the rhinos and the tigers, Sumatra's elephants have had their troubles. They
are critically endangered, with fewer than 3,000 Suma-
tran elephants remaining, about 200 of them in the Way Kambas park. The clearing of forests for palm oil, illegal coffee culti-
Then we climb aboard two
Finally, there it was. A Su-
matran tiger sighting, one small sign of an all-but-gone drivers, or mahouts, guide us ghost cat, tellingly written in along ared dirt track, across not-so-permanent marker. swampy water and onto a grassy plain. In the distance, www.AgateBeachMotel.com we can see pockets of grazing Private,vintage,oceanfront getaway wild elephants. ewport, O tR "Any tigers here?" I ask the 1- 0~0~-7SS-S674 resident elephants to explore farther afield. Our elephant
elephant driver, our elephants'
ears flapping as we push
A...ateBeachmotel
vation and timber has dramatically shrunk the amount
of open space available to the elephants, making them more likely to run into people who see them as a threat,par-
I i
ticularly to crops. Poachers
in search of elephant tusks, which are valued in the ivory trade, also use the crude roads cut into the forest to
support the illicit farming and logging. The elephant center aims to mitigate some of these issues and help elephants that have
been injured by run-ins with humans. This year, it expects to open Indonesia's first ele-
phant hospital. Heather and I tour the center's low-slung bungalows and let a baby elephant reach into our backpacks and pockets with its long trunk to consume our
stash ofbananas.
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, APRIL 27, 2014
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D.C.:A aceto in o ossis — an a ew inosaurs,too
MEPETX
By Joe Bruns Special to The Washington Post
CITEEN
7
On Monday, the Smithso-
I
nian's Natural History Museum will close the dinosaur hall
)
RIGCAL
for a major renovation. When
27
FARDIA
WORKIN& WITH PLUTONIUM l5 5O TRICKY BECAU5E OF THE —-
INTOON
Now arrange the circled lettern
to form the surprise answer, an
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DIFFICULTYRATING:*** *
it reopens in 2019, the new exhibit will include the Wankel
5;
Tyrannosaurus rex, one of the most complete T. rex skeletons
discovered. But what if you're on a trip to the nation's capital, you tire
of the historical relics and you need to entertain your inner
* JUMBLE SOLUTION IS ON C2
SUDOKU SOLUTION IS ON C2
DAILY BRIDGECLUB
paleontologist'? By the t i me the new exhibit opens, that
magical period of fascination with all things prehistoric may have passed. While the Smithsonian will continue to display
Sunday, April 27, 2014
and a Tyrannosaurus rex, at the Maryland Science Center.
other dinosaurfossils,some-
Showing a singleton By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency
Cue-bidding i s a pref e r red approach to trying for slam. Once a trump suit is agreed, a new-suit bid s hows a " c ontrol" t here. I f t h e auction begins on e s p ade-three spades, four clubs, opener suggests the ace of clubs and slam interest. The opponents may double a cue bid to ask for the lead of the suit. Then most players treat a redouble by either player as showing secondr ound control — t h e k i n g o r a singleton. I wouldn't try this (especially if p laying f o r mon e y ) wit h o ut discussing it w ith m y p artner in advance. I might find myself playing at four clubs redoubled with A-x of trumps opposite a singleton. When t oday's W est d o u bled South's cue bid of four clubs, North's redouble promised second-round control. North-South then continued with more cue bids that showed controls in both red suits, and South bid a grand slam. West led the king of clubs, and South took the ace and counted 12 tricks: five tnunps in his hand, a club, t wo club r u ff s i n d u m my, t w o diamonds and two hearts. He needed a trick from dummy's long diamond. South ruffed a club at Trick Two, led a diamond to his king and ruffed a club. He cashed the ten of trumps, tooktheace of diamonds and ruffed a
Maryland Science Center/The Washington Post
Just up the road from Washington, D.C., Baltimore has a collection of about s dozen full dinosaur specimens, including a ceratops
CD
diamond high. When West discarded, declarer went back to the queen of trumps and ruffed a folnth thamond, He could then draw the last trump, take the A-K of hearts and win the 13th trick with the good diamond. North dealer Both sides vulnerable NORTH
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saurs. Many children develop an interest in dinosaurs between ages 5 and 7. They're becoming awareof,and interested in, the natural world around them, and the idea of
big, lumbering beasts roaming the world and creating havoc — well, what's not to like?
Even better, they really existed, unlike the monsters from the fairy tales. So while the Smithsonian explore beyond the national
Mall. Just up the road in Baltimore, the Maryland Science Center offers a small but in-
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interest to introduce him or her to the broader world of
exhibit is under construction,
SOUTH 4bAK J6 2
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take advantage of your child's
But let's start with d i no-
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science.
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times your imaginative child just needs to experience big ing these fossils. Like a lot of andbad. smaller exhibits, what the cenFortunately, the D.C. region ter lacks in size, it makes up for offers a number of good op- in intimacy.
South 1 4I 44 49 6 0 7 4I
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teresting collection of about a dozenfulldinosaurspecimens, induding a 40-foot T. rex. The center makes the most of its collection and includes a work-
ing field lab demonstrating the effort involved in unearth-
A little farther up Interstate 95 is the Delaware Museum of Natural History in Wilm-
ral Sciences, known locally as the Dinosaur Museum, is the oldest natural history museum
in the country and displayed the w orld's f i rs t
m o u nted
dinosaur. Look for bargains. Some of
ington. This collection, too, is the museums listed here have modest, but it does have nice reciprocal arrangements for examples. And b eginning those who are members of Sept. 27, the museum will other museums. Others offer have on exhibit the prehis- discounts on certain days or toric snake fossil Titanoboa, reduced admissionfor orgameasuring in at a whopping nized groups. If your budget 48 feet — longer than a school is tight, consider packing your bus. This creature from the lunch. And before you go, Paleocene epoch will definite- check online to avoid any nasly impress even the most dino- ty surprises, like additional saur-savvy kid. fees, exhibit closings or days Still farther up I-95 is Drexel the museums areclosed. University's Academy of NatFinally, use this window of ural Sciences in Philadelphia. opportunity when a child's On display there is an impres- imagination an d c u r iosisive 42-foot skeletal display of ty about nature combine to a T. rex along with more than broadenthe learning experi30 other dinosaur species, in- ence. Visit the National Aquarcluding many full skeletons. ium in B altimore, nearby Of particular interest is the science museums or Calvert life-size model of a Stegosau- Cliffs State Park in Maryland, rus showing its internal anat- where you and your kids can omy. The academy also has a dig up fossils. You will be regreen-screen display that al- warded as your child experilows children to walk among ences both engaging displays the dinosaurs, a trick sure to of nature and a wide assortamaze. The Academy of Natu-
ment of hands-on activities.
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Opening lead — 4 K (C) 2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
Colors of Summer ... let the Fun begin!
LOS ANGELESTIMES SUNDAY CROSSWORD Edited by Rich Norris an d Joyce Nichols Lewis "FEATURED 89 Stand Upto ARTICLE" By GAIL 9I "That's !": GRABOWSKI director's cry
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SUNDAY, APRIL 27, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
C7
ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT
o n iver: owna erin on isown TV SPOTLIGHT
taste of what he might do, but
7 seconds when that music
it may take time to fall into the
plays at the top of the show, 7 seconds for your heart to burst
Felicitous timing has powered the steeply ascendant
rhythm of a weekly show. "We can't repeat what the other shows have done during the week," Oliver said. "We do get a free shot at the Sunday morning shows." Looking ahead, he spotted the elections
television career of John Oliver
in India, which continue until
"Last Week Tonight" 11tonight, HBO
By Bill Carter New Yorh Times News Service
2006 — and, just 24 hours later,
sweaty and jet-lagged, found himself mocking Tony Blair in an exchange with Jon Stewart
on "The Daily Show." "George Bush had said this
ical Comedy Central newscast, playing the role of "Senior British Correspondent." "I was thinking: 'OK I 'm tired, it's hot here, I'm sure
they'll just let me get my feet on the ground," he said. "Instead they said: 'Write a piece; it's on the air tonight.' It all
went by in a blur." After that blur came popu-
larity and admiring reviews, and now Oliver, 36, catapulted into the top rank of late-night comics, is about to kick off his
own late-night satirical news show tonight on HBO. But about that timing ... The show, "Last Week To-
night" at 11 p.m., begins only
Among the highlights of his ensuing career at "The Daily Show, probably the most mem-
orable for him was covering the 2008 Republican Conven-
8 p.m. on DIS, "2014 Radio Disney Music Awards" — R5, BeckyG,Zendayaand Fifth
Harmony areamongthe artists
f ormat dent, he was at risk because he would routinelyinclude a guest. could not afford to get arrested
for anything — deportation loomed. So when he wandered
("Austin & Ally") and Olivia Holt ("I Didn't Do It") are expected to
usual obnoxious correspon-
into a restricted area and was
pursued by security, he sought John Oliver, known for his appearances on "The Daily Show," He had the shoe experience refuge among some veterans debutshisown comedic news-commentary show, "Last Week during Stewart's sabbatical invited by pro-military politiTonight," tonight on HBO. from anchoring "The Daily cians. The one who helped OlShow," a role that had vaulted iver hide out was a female vet, the host to the status of cham- Kate Norley. He was grateful, weeks after a sweeping up- 12:35 a.m. slot following Let- pion of truth-telling about the took down her email and marheaval in late-night television terman. Had he accepted, Ol- news and media. ried her three years later. (He that opened up some of the ivermight have already been Stewart, who took the time is still a British citizen.) most prominent host chairs in in position to slide up to the off to direct a film, said he Notably, as Oliver gets his the business, including David big chair. More logically, had looked to Oliver and his "real shot to score, the playing field Letterman's at CBS and, sub- the late-night earthquake hit dexterity" to keep "The Daily is surprisingly open. On Sunsequently, Stephen Colbert's at a few months earlier, with Col- Show" running with the least day night at 11, he will be the Comedy Central. "It's like tec- bert signing with CBS, Oliver disruption. "Put a guy in to only late-night comic at work. tonics," Oliver said. "It looks would have been thepresumed do exactly what I would doOliver will do 25 shows in a like everything is still, and heir on Comedy Central. with a much better accent so shortened season, then move to "Last Week Tonight" will be that there would be a Dicken- 35 (the same number Bill Maher then everything moves and there's an earthquake." a comedic commentary on the sian quality, a show hosted by does for HBO). Another bout of Before he accepted the HBO news of the week, not the day. a very smart orphan." terror may set in when Oliver job, Oliver, riding the wave of It will not be a faux newscast, The experience turned into tapes the show for the first time. a three-month stint subbing Oliver said, and will not con- far more fun than Oliver antic- But he will be seeking help in for Stewart last summer, had sistently skewer cable news, ipated, although it began with the bestplace he knows. "I ask Jon for advice regularfielded a surge of offers. CBS as "The Daily Show" does. exactly the level of terror he dangled a possible shot at the Two test shows gave him a had feared. "There are about ly," he said. Chad Batka/New YorkTimes News Service
8 p.m. on10, "The Simpsons" — Bart gets his art teacher pregnant — no, not in the traditional way — in this new episode. He tries to cast a voodoo spell on her, but it goes awry, and she ends up in the family way. Nowall the infertile couples in Springfield want him to do the samefor them — and some unsavory characters want his help conceiving a racehorse — in "What to Expect When Bart's Expecting."
scheduled to perform during this special, which honors young fans' favorite musical performers. Disney stars Dove Cameron
tion in St. Paul, Minn. As his
"I like the idea of carving out my own space, rather than having to step into some diffi-
conversation with food in his
joust with Stewart on his satir-
Nobody noticed. Instead, reviews bordered on rapturous.
unsure whether the
'Yo, Blair'thing at the G-8 Summit and then had this whole
sole British writer on the show's staff, he was thrust onstage to
visible'? Can you see a heart in a chest? No, that's a cartoon.'"
mid-May. "No one else is racing to do that story," he said. The show will be a half-hour, but a legit half-hour — no commercials. That will allow for longer pieces. Oliver was still
since the day he landed in New York from London — July 16,
mouth," Oliver recalled. As the
out ofyour chest,"he recalled. "I sat there thinking: 'Is this
TV TODAY
cult shoes," he said.
("Liv & Maddie"), LauraMarano make cameo appearances.
9 p.m. on 29, "Resurrection" — Tom (Mark Hildreth) leads the search for Rachael (Kathleen
Munroe), whosecaptors arebe-
coming desperate. An epidemic disrupts Maggie and Dr. Ward's
(Devin Kelley,JamesTupper) research on the resurrected subjects just as they're on the verge of a major find. Omar Epps and Matt Craven also star in the new episode "Schemes of the Devil." 9:30 p.m. onSHD, "Californication" —Hank (David Duchovny) sits in on a casting session, then gets his first episode assignment, to the dismay of newcolleagues Terry and Hugh (John Madison Tye, Chris Titone). Levon (Oliver Cooper) tries to get closer to Melanie (Tara Holt), Rath's (Michael
Imperioli) assistant. Karen(Natascha McElhone) considers calling it quits with Hank in the new episode "Like Father Like Son." 10 p.m. on 58, "Crisis" —Finley
Travel headaches worsewithout meds Dear Abby: I have worked in a pharmacy for 30 years, and every summer it's the same story. People forget their medication and leave it
with your "phrustration," so I'm ing paperless, will penmanship beprinting your heartfelt letter, hop- come unnecessary? ing it will help you to lower YOUR
— Mary in Huntsville, Ala.
blood pressure. I don't think the Dear Mary:Years ago, penmanpeople you describe are irrespon- ship was routinely taught in public Why do people not realize that sible as much as they may be schools, and students spent neartheir meds should be one of the disorganized. ly an hour a day practicing how to FIRST things they pack? Yes, we The way I h a v e s olved this write legibly. Today, I am told that can call their pharproblem is to keep 10 minutes is devoted to teaching macists back home multiple copies of a students to PRINT. If the emails I reto get a transfer, but printed list of items ceive are any indication, capitalizaDFP,R if the prescription I must have when I tion and punctuation are also being ABBY was just filled, their travel. As I pack, I jettisoned. And if the electric grid i nsurance wil l n o t check them off my ever goes down and battery powgo through, or they'll list — and before I er runs out, we'll have to start over have to wait while we call for a va- close my travel bag, I double-check with stone tablets and chisels. at home.
cation override.
to make sure nothing has been
Please, people— remember your medications, and if you don't plan on spending awhile sitting around our pharmacy waiting for us to call your hometown pharmacy, and possibly your insurance company, then don't get angry at us when it
forgotten. Perhaps others will find this helpfuL Dear Abby:What's up with penmanship these days? A few years ago, mymother gave me some old
ask workers how much money they make, but does that also apply to asking a student what his or her grades are? Aside from par-
letters written by my grandfather
anybody's business how I'm doing academically. In my opinion, asking, "How are your grades?" is as rude as asking, "How much money do you make?" What do you think?
you expected. I love my job. But I'm beginning to dread irresponsible, crabby
to my grandmother. Some of them are treasures because the written words are not only loving and endearing, but the penmanship is beautiful. The script writings are
tourists who know they need their
actually examples of "art" in this
takes longer than the 15 minutes
Dear Abby: I know it's rude to
ents and teachers, I don't think it's
— Matt in Eugene
blood pressure meds every day and modern age. Dear Matt: I'm with you. How expect us to drop whatever we're I work at a bank, Abby, and about coming back with, "I'll fordoing to take care of them. many of the signatures I see every give you for asking if you'll forgive — Phrustrated Pharmacist day are illegible. Is written commu- me for not answering." in Montana nication becoming obsolete'? With — Write to Dear Abbyat dearabbycom Dear Pharmacist:I sympathize the electronic age and schools go- or P.o. Box 69440, LosAngeles, CA90069
HAPPY BIRTHDAYFOR SUNDAY, APRIL 27, 2014:This year you head down a newpath, as you are determined to fulfill a goal that could affect your life. You transform, and your desires transform as well. You will discover the importance of staying true to yourself. If you are single, you could meet people who are not authentic and who can't offer you what you deStars showthe kind sire. Don't worry; sf dsy you'll have someone who is ** * * * D ynarnlc true to him- or ** * * Positive herself is likely to
*** Average ** So-so * Difficult
appear. If youare
attached, your sweetie will need to catch up to you. Know that that might not happen until the new year. ARIES is anatural healer for you.
SCORPIO (Dct. 23-Nov.21)
YOURHOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar
curiosity. Go off and watch a game, but do not push too hard. Fatigue could be high. Tonight: Forget the idea of "early to bed."
CANCER (June21-July 22)
** * * You might be hard-pressed to follow through on a project and also get to a game on time. Know that you will manage to do both, if you want to. However, don't hesitate to adjust your plans. You need to let go of stress. Tonight: Take the dog for a walk.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dsc. 21)
** * * Let your imagination color your ** * * I f you are not going on a mini plans. You will have a great time, as will day excursion, plan on going on one very others. Curb any frustration you have soon. A changeof pacealways grounds toward a loved one who seem to playing youandhelpsyougainanew perspective. out a mock war. Do not feed this person's Whatever you do, you'll do it intensely. hostilities. Tonight: So what if tomorrow Tonight: Start thinking "Monday." is Monday?
LEO (July23-Aug.22)
** * * Deal with one person at a time. You might be easily distracted, as a phone call or news from a distance could put you on high alert. A change seems to be flying ARIES (March21-April 19) ** * * You'll smile a lot, as if you have your way. Are you ready for some diversity in the near future? Tonight: Catch up on a secret you have not yet shared. Others will try to find out what is going on as they a favorite show. discover that your lips are sealed on this VIRGO (Aug.23-Sspt. 22) topic. Be spontaneouswhen making a ** * * You might want to seriously purchase. Tonight: You are not ready to consider a partner's request. This person end the weekend. needs a change of pace. Friends are likely to call you to head out and join them. TAURUS (April 20-May20) ** * Tryasyoumay, nooneseemstobe Making a point to get some exercise, whether it is mental or physical, could letting the cat out of the bag. The smart move would be to ignore the situation, as reduce stress. Tonight: Enjoy a leisurely someone is likely to spill the beans. Make dinner. plans for yourself right now. You need LIBRA (Sept. 23-Dct. 22) some much-needed downtime. Tonight: ** * Just let others do their thing. DeStay in and watch a movie. cide when you would like to join in and when you would prefer to do something GEMINI (May 21-June 20) ** * * You seem to have a secret else. You often give in for the sake of keeping the peace, which is one of the or something you would prefer not to share. You seem to beam with this inreasons whyyour anger is soclose to the formation, which could trigger a friend's surface, Tonight: Enjoy a fun night out.
GAPRICORN (Dec.22-Jan. 19) ** * Stay close to home and handle a personal matter. An older parent or relative could seem out of sorts. Asking this person what is wrong might be a mistake. Invite him or her along if you have plans, but do not create more pressure. Tonight: Order in. Make it easy.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.18) ** * * Make some phone calls that you have been putting off. Your ability to read between the lines is an important skill, especially as someone is vested in not sharing. Do not push. Run some errands or meet up with friends. Tonight: Swap jokes or gossip with a friend.
PISCES (Feb.19-March20) ** * Be aware of the cost of proceeding as youhavebeen.You could pretendthat your actions have no effect on others, and you actually might believe that. Revise your thinking. Make calls to a neighbor or dear friend to get together. Tonight: Do what you want to do. © King Features Syndicate
MOVIE TIMESTODAY • There may be an additional fee for 3-0and IMAXmovies. • I/fovie times are subject to change after press time. f
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Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680S.W. Powerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • BEARS(G)12:30, 2:45, 6, 8:30 • BRICK MANSIONS (PG-13) 1:30, 3:55, 6:55, 9:15 • CAPTAINAMERICA:THEWINTERSOLDIER (PG-l3) 11:45 a.m., 2:50, 6:10, 9:25 • CAPTAINAMERICA: THEWINTER SOLDIER IMAX3-D (PG-13) 12:40, 6:45 • DIVERGENT(PG-13) 11:50 a.m., 3, 6:30, 9:40 • DRAFT DAY (PG-13) 12:10, 3:40, 7,9:45 • GOD'SNOT DEAD (PG)Noon,3:25,6: 40,9:20 • THE GRAND BUDAPESTHOTEL(R) 1:15, 4:25, 7:40, 10:05 • A HAUNTEDHOUSE2 (R) 1:40, 4:35, 7:50, 10:05 • HEAVEN ISFORREAL(PG)12:45, 3:15, 6:20, 9:10 • NOAH(PG-13)1:25, 4:45, 8 • OCULUS(R) 12:55, 4:05, 7:20, 9:55 • THEOTHER WOMAN (R)12:25,3:45,7:10,9:50 • THE QUIETONES(PG-13) 1:05, 4:15, 7:30, 10 • RIO 2(G)11:45 a.m., 2:55, 6:05 • RI023-D (G) 9 • TRANSCENDENCE (PG-13) l2:15,3:05, 6:15, 9:05 • TRANSCENDENCE IMAX (PG-13) 3:50, 9:50 • A private viewing of "Rio 2" willscreenat foa.m. today for families of children with specialsensory needs. For moreinfom/ation, visit M/wi/i/j.mplfmhNIGSb.
• Accessibility devices are available forsome movies. •
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McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 N.W.Bond St., 541-330-8562 • 8AD WORDS(R) 9 • THEMONUMENTS MEN (PG-13)6 • MR.PEABODY & SHERMAN(PG) Noon,3 • After 7 p.m., shows are 21and older only. Younger than 21 may attend screenings befo/e 7p.m. ifaccompanied by a legal guardian. Tin Pan Theater, 869 N.W.Tin PanAlley, 541-241-2271 • ERNEST &CELESTINE(PG) Noon • ISTHE MAN WHO ISTALLHAPPY?: AN ANIMATED CONVERSATIONWITH NOAM CHOMSKY (noM PAA rating) 2 • LE WEEK-END(R) 4 • PARTICLEFEVER(no MPAArating) 6:15 I
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Redmond Cinemas,1535S.W.OdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777 • BRICK MANSIONS (PG-13) 11:15 a.m., 1:15, 3:15, 5:15, 7:15, 9:15 • CAPTAINAMERICA:THEWINTERSOLDIER (PG-l3) 12:45, 3:45, 6:45, 9:30 • RIO2(G) 11:45 a.m., 2, 4:15, 6:30, 8:45 • TRANSCENDENCE (PG-13) 11:30 a.m., 2, 4:30, 7, 9:30 Sisters Movie House,720 DesperadoCourt, 541-549-8800 • DRAFT DAY (PG-13) 2:30, 4:45, 7 • THE GRAND BUDAPESTHOTEL(R) 2:15, 6:15 • THEOTHER WOMAN (R)2:I5,4:30,6:45 • RI02(G) 2,4 • TRANSCENDENCE (PG-13) 4:30, 7 Madras Cinema5,1101 S.W.U.S.Highway 97, 541-475-3505 • BRICK MANSIONS (PG-13) 1:15, 3:15, 5:15,7:20 • A HAUNTEDHOUSE2 (R) 1:10, 3:10, 5:20, 7:30 • HEAVEN ISFORREAL(PG)1:50, 4:20, 6:50 • RI02 (G) 12:20, 2:40,5,7:10 • TRANSCENDENCE (PG-13) I:40, 4:15,7 •
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Pine Theater, 214 N.MainSt., 541-416-1014 • THE GRANDBUDAPESTHOTEL(R) 1:10, 4:10, 7: I5 • RIO 2(Upstairs — G) 1,4, 7 • Theupstairsscreening room has limitedaccessibility.
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Find a week'sworth of movie times plus film reviews in Friday's 0 GD! Magazine
•
and Dunn(LanceCross, Rachael Taylor) become one of the parent missions in hopes of speaking directly to the kidnapper. Widener and TJS (Mark Valley, Fred Dryer) continue with their plan to take out former associate Gibson (Dermot Mulroney) in the new episode "Homecoming." 10 p.m. on CDM, "JimGaffigan: Obsessed" —Jim Gaffigan may be the only malecomedianwho cansegueso seamlesslyfrom ice cream to weddings. That's one of the highlights of his fourth special, in which he also takes on such topics as doughnuts — are you sensing a pattern here?and underwear. Gaffigan works clean, so don't worry about the kids catching his act. © Zap2it
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CS THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, APRIL 27, 2014
ASK A CENTRAL OREGON HEALTH PROFESSIONAL
QUESTION: I suspect I have a yeast problem. Could you explain the symptoms and treatments available for Candida albicans?
Q UEsTIDN: I'm g etting o l der. H o w can I best protect my skin from the
signs of aging? A NswER: There are m any w ay s t o
reduce the signs of aging. Botox, F illers, Peels, the list goes on, b u t Adam P Angeles, t he mOSt impOrtant iS SunSCreenM.D.
R d c it'f' d »asuc s«g«n
S u n screen — Sunscreen. The daily use
of sunscreen should be nonnegotiable.
S unscreen should p r o tect th e s k i n from the h a rmful e ffects of u l t r aviolet r adiation
(UVR), but all sunscreens are not created equally. A sunscreen should offerbroad spectrum coverage for
UV/UVB/HEV radiation. When in doubt look for the Skin Cancer Seal and be wary of over the counter
products. This applies to men, too!
ANSWER: Candida albicans is a fungus (yeast) that is normally present in small amounts on the skin and in rnucous membranes such as the vagina, mouth, or intestines. The fungus can also travel through the intestines. It becomes an infectious agent when Dr.Kene Raym end t here is some change in the body enviromnent (such Naturopathic a sthe pH or normal flora) that allows it to grow out Physician of control. A common cause of infection may be the use of antibiotics that destroy beneficial, as well as harmful, rnicroorganisms in the body, permitting yeast to multiply in their place. Symptoms of Candida can range frorn skin infections to other non-specific symptoms such as gas, indigestion, insomnia, sweats, cravings, allergies, sinus congestion, tired/fatigued, depressed, memory problems, vision disturbances, and rectal or nasal itching.
If the number of friendly bacteria is decreased in relation to a number of Candida, the immune systems is weakened. Candida will shift from yeast to mycelial fungal form and start to invade the body. In fungal state it is invasive and can produce rhizoids, which can penetrate mucosa or intestinal walls, leaving microscopic holes and allowing toxins, undigested food particles and bacteria and yeast to enter the bloodstream.
BEN D P LASTI C SURGERY
Treatment can be challenging and is multi dimensional to include removing the food source (sugar), changing terrain and pH, and killing the Candida. Call our office today for a consult and personalized treatment plan.
QUESTIoN: As he has gotten older, my
husband's upper eyelids have become so droopy that I think it is affecting
his vision. He says the surgery is just cosmetic. Is there anything that can be done about this? Ida Alul, ANswER: The sagging of skin and fatty tissue of the upper eyelids is a progressive process that is quite common as we age. The treatment of the condition is a blepharoplasty where the excess skin and fat is removed in a simple 40 minute procedure that is done as an outpatient. What most people do not know is that the blepharoplasty can be covered by insurance if the drooping lids start to affect the peripheral vision. Your eye doctor should be able to tell you if you would benefit from this procedure.
m
Infocus
HAWTHORN A dam P. A n g e l e s , M . D .
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d o e s a t o o t hache get started? ANswER: What actually causes the pain of a toothache is your body's reaction to an infection. A toothache certainly is one of life's more unpleasant experiences. It can start as a dull throb and escalate to the point of excruciating pain. A couple of things are Carlo Arredondo~ certain: a toothache is a sign of a problem D.D.S. and that p r oblem should get p r ompt professional attention. Generally, a toothache is the result of decay in the tooth. When a cavity reaches the nerve of the tooth it can let in bacteria that cause infection. The body fights the infection by increasing blood flow to the infected area. But since the tooth's nerve is encased in enamel, the pressure of the increased blood flow causes the swelling and pain that are the trademarks of the toothache. Pulpitis, incidentally, is the name for the acute state of nerve infection. As the infection spreads to the periodontal ligament, the membrane that holds the tooth in its socket, you will experience pain when the affected tooth comes in contact with another tooth. Anti-inflammatory drugs like aspirin or ibuprofen may ease the pain of a toothache. One caution, though, is to not put aspirin directly on the gum. The acid in aspirin can burn or irritate the gum. Call the dentist at the first sign of a toothache.
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Qt/ESTioN:Why a COlOnOSCOpy?
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Ask one of ottr Health Professionals on the following categories Dentistry • Urology • Eye Care • Plastic Surgery • General and Specialty Surgery Dermatology • Holistic Medicine • PhysicalTherapy • Pain Management Chiropractic • Health 6 Beauty Send your questions to: Ask A Health Professional The Bulletin
By fax: 541-385-5802 Email: kclark@bendbulletin.com Mail:P.O. Box 6020, Bend, Oregon 97708 My question is:
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THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, APRIL 27, 2014
RUNNING
PREP BASEBALL
Redmondman wins 'Better Half' SISTERS — Red-
mond's Rob Russell took top honors in the featured raceSaturday at the 2014 Sisters "Better Half" Marathon. Russell finished the half-marathon in 1 hour, 16 minutes, 11 seconds. Second overall was Jason Gulley, of Bend, in1:20:51. Thefirst female finisher wasKatie Steele, of Springfield, who was fourth overall in 1:33:10.
The event, a benefit forthe Sisters High School swim team, included a quarter marathon and arelay division. Onehundred and 46 individual runners and 25 relay teamstook part in the races. For results, seeD2.
eaisou as avensin o- a cones Bulletin staff report The game took nearly 24 hours to complete, but one swing of the bat in the bottom of the eighth
inninggave Bend High awin on Saturday afternoon. In an Intermountain Hybridbase-
viously that didn't happen," Bend coach Bret Bailey said. "Ridgeview isavery good baseballteam. To comeback and be successful against them, that helps us with our confidencein the future,forsure."
because of inclement weather. a three-run homer to end the game "After Friday, which was just a and give the Lava Bears their 11th mud bog," Bailey said, "I think the win in the past 13 contests. kids were just happy to be walking Hurd finished 2 for 5 with a on dry ground." double to go along with his home On Saturday, Bend (12-5 overrun. Elliot Willy was 2 for 4 with all) scored three runs in the sixth a double for Bend, while both J.J. to take a 7-6 lead before Ridgeview Spitler and Creighton Simmonds
ball contest that began on Friday
The Ravens scored five runs over the first two innings to grab
but was postponed in the fourth
an early lead Friday, but the Lava
scored in the seventh to force ex-
went 2 for 4.
inning due to weather, the Lava Bears avoided a three-game sweep
Bears responded with a three-run inning in the bottom of the third
tra innings. After the Ravens (13-2) could not
For Ridgeview, which had its nine-game winning streak
by Ridgeview thanks to a three-run
to narrow the deficit to 5-4. With a
runner on first base and one out in the fourth, the game was delayed
push a run across in the top of the eighth, Bend put runners on first
snapped, Kahl Malott went 3 for 4
home run by Dalton Hurd that gave Bend a 10-7 home victory.
and second with one out. And on
was 2 for 3 with two runs, and
the first pitch he saw, Hurd belted
Mitch Springer finished 2 for 4.
"We want to win them all. Ob-
and then postponed to Saturday
Inside • Ridgeview boys, girls do well at OITtrack meet. Prep roundup, D6
and scored two runs. Collin Runge
• Prep scoreboard,D6
PREP TRACK & FIELD
— Bulletin staffreport
GOLF Bend team leads C.O. Shootout Teammates from Bend are leading the gross division after the second round of the Central Oregon Shootout. Harry Paikand Bob Gorham shot anevenpar 72 Saturday in a round of best ball at the
Resort Course atEagle Crest Resort to post an 8-under136 through two days. The vast majority of the more than 300golfers at the three-day amateur team tournament being staged atAspen Lakes Golf Course in Sisters, Black Butte Ranch's Big Meadows course, and EagleCrest Resort's Resort Course in Redmond arefrom outside of Central Oregon. Paik and Gorhamare the only local leaders in any of the tournament's six flights. David Clement and Bret Mackay, teammates from Valencia, Calif., shot a second-round 64 to take a three-stroke lead of the tournament's first net flight at18-under126. Salem teammates Mark Schumock and Steve Judson have a two-stroke lead in the second net flight. Newberg's KenWinderand Eugene'sGene Dellinger hold a threestroke lead in the third net division, and Matt Hoover, of Silverton, and WayneSmith, of Salem, lead the fourth net flight. In the ladies division, Portland teammates Vonnie Coreand Chris Mascal hold a fivestrokelead. The three-day tournamentconcludestoday with a Chapmanevent. Each flight plays a different course eachday. For results,D2.
Bulletin staff report The only Class 5A girls state champion Oregon has ever known put on a show
Saturday. With seven athletes win-
ning eight events, seven-time defending 5A champ Summit racked up 217.5 points to run away from the rest of the 14team field and win the Summit Invitational at Summit High.
Miranda Brown logged the top mark in 5A with a leap of 36 feet, 6 inches in the triple jump to win the event. Brown
paired that with a victory in the 300-meterhurdles and
placed second in the long jump for the Storm, who
),<,7 4( 'I'Q I .
.
. ) I "
bested runner-up Hood River L
Photos by Joe Kline/The Bulletin
Summit's Claire Christensen lands in the sand after a triple jump attempt in the Summit Invitational track and field meet on Saturday. Christensen finished 11th, but the Storm girls won the meet.
Valley by 131.5 points. Hannah Cochran won the high jump and was second in (800), Kaely Gordon (1,500), Piper McDonald (2,000 steeplechase), M ercedesMingus (javelin) and Emma Stevenson gong jump) each won their respective events. Summit's 1,600 relay team won with the fastest time in 5A at 4 minutes, 3.24 seconds.
10th with 29 points, while
Brittnie Haigler (triple jump) and McKenna Boen (100 hurdles) each placed third. Kiersten Ochsner took third in the 100 to lead Redmond, which finished 11th, and Hannah Lewis' third-
and fourth-place showings in the 400and 800,respectively, paced Culver, which was 12th with 13.5 points. For the boys, Marist of
Eugene won with 123 points, followed by Capital of Boise, Idaho (109 points), Mountain View (92) and Summit (91.5). Dantly Wilcox won the 300 hurdles and was third in the 110 hurdles to lead the
Cougars, whose 1,600 relay team won in 3:25.95 — the top
mark in the state in all classes. Gabe Wyllie placed second in both the 200 and 400,
and Chris Adamo was second in the 100. In the 800, Summit's Matthew Maton finished in 1:52.89, the fastest time in the state at any classification. Mi-
chael Menefee won the high jump for the Storm, while Jill Roshak placed second 7yler Jones (1,500), Riley in the javelin to pace MounShelton (discus) and Calvin tain View, which was fourth Aylward (javelin) each placed with 69.5 points. Sage Hassell second. Redmond's, which was (3,000) and Sidney Doyle (pole vault) each took third. Crook sixth with 57.5 points, Kyle County, which was fifth with Tinnell posted the third-fast42 points, was led by Kathryn est time in 5A to win the
Bend High's
Camden Stoddard clears the
bar on a pole vault attempt. Stoddard fin-
ished second.
Kaonis' win in the shot put.
100. Alec Carter won the
Her throw of 40-10 topped the
3,000 steeplechase, followed by teammate Remington Williams.
Class 4A marks. Ashton Mor-
gan was second in the discus for the Cowgirls, and Danielle
NBA PLAYOFFS
avenc s Spurs
•
the 200, while Sarah Reeves
— Bulletin staff report
Pacer Hawks
.
vault for La Pine, which was
1
Zach Smith was third in
Michael was third in the pole vault. Sisters, which took ninth with 29.5 points, was paced
both the shot put and the
by Tessa O'Hern's second-place finish in the pole vault, and Katelyn Meeter
were Jesse Santiago in the 400, Luis Rivera in the 800 and Zane Abrams m the 300
finished third in the javelin.
hurdles.
Chloee Sazama won thepole
discus to pace Crook County,
which finished eighth with 44 points. Also taking third
SeeTrack/D6
88 0 108
SWIMMING
H
Bobcats
85
hunder Grizzlies
89
Unrelenting will toward victory drivesLedecky By Karen Crouse
Inside • Clippers owner Donald Sterling under fire for alleged racist comments. • Trail Blazers feel the pressure after Game 3 loss. • Mavericks beat Spurs on buzzer beater,05
New York Times News Service
BETHESDA, Md. — The 25yard freestyle taxed Katie Le-
Samantha Sais/The New YorkTimes
Katie Ledecky peaks to reporters after winning the women's 400 freestyle during this week's USA Swimming Grand Prix. The world record holder in the 800 and1,500 freestyle has raised
the performance level in women's swimming.
decky,who stopped threetimes during the 8-and-under girls' race, clutching the lane line to catch her breath and wipe her nose. After finishing, Ledecky, then 6, climbed out of the pool and conducted an on-deck interview with her father, Dave.
The home-videofootage,which made Ledecky laugh when she
have grown. But through it all, Ledecky has been consistent: The
harder the race, the more she relowed the women's distance swimishes it. ming renaissance she spearheaded Since qualifying for the 2012 less than 10 years later. Olympic team at the age of 15, LeAsked about the one-lap race, decky hasraised the performance Ledecky said, it was "so hard." ceiling in the women's 400-, 800With a grin, she added, "I feel and 1,500-meter freestyles like no great." American since Janet Evans in the That was 11 years ago, and over late 1980s. time, the distances and the stakes SeeLedecky/D6 watched it last week, foreshad-
D2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, APRIL 27, 2014
ON THE AIR
CORKBOARD
TODAY SOCCER EPL, Liverpool vs Chelsea EPL, Crystal Palace vsManchester City
Time TV/Radio 8 a.m. N BCSN 8 a.m. NBCSN
TENNIS
Pac-12
Women's College, Pac-12Championships, singles10 a.m. HOCKEY
NHL Playoffs, Philadelphiaat NewYork Rangers 9a.m. NHL Playoffs, St. Louis at Chicago noon NHL Playoffs, Anaheim atDallas 5 p.m.
NBC NBC NBCSN
BASEBALL
College, Alabama atSouth Carolina MLB, Cincinnati at Atlanta College, Oregon atOregonState
10 a.m. ESPN 10:30 a.m MLB 1 p.m. ESPNU,
MLB, Texas atSeattle College, Washington State atWashington College, Arizona State at Arizona MLB, Los AngelesAngels at NewYork Yankees College, Hawaii at CalState Fullerton
1 p.m. Root Pac-12 2 p.m. 4:30 p.m ESPNU 5 p.m. ESPN 7:30 p.m ESPNU
940-AM
BASKETBALL
NBA Playoffs, Chicago atWashington NBA Playoffs, L.A. Clippers at GoldenState NBA Playoffs, Toronto at Brooklyn NBA Playoffs, Houston at Portland GOLF PGA Tour,Zurich Classic of NewOrleans PGA Tour,Zurich Classic of NewOrleans LPGATour, Swinging Skirts Classic
1 0 a.m. AB C 12:30 p.m. ABC 4 p.m. TNT 8:30 p.m. T NT 1 0 a.m. noon 4 p.m.
Go l f CBS Golf
AUTO RACING
IndyCar, HondaGrand Prix of Alabama NHRA, NHRA Springnationals
11:30a.m. NBCSN 4 p.m. E SPN2
SOFTBALL
College, Washington at OregonState
noon
Pac-12
1p.m.
E SPN2
FOOTBALL
Arena, lowa at Philadelphia
MONDAY SOCCER EPL, Arsenal vs Newcastle United
Time TV/Radio noon N B CSN
BASEBALL
MLB, Oakland atTexas College, California at Stanford
5 p.m. 6 p.m.
E S PN P a c-12
BASKETBALL
NBA Playoffs, Miami at Charlotte NBA Playoffs, Atlanta at Indiana NBA Playoffs, SanAntonio at Dallas
5 p.m. TNT 5 p.m. N BATV 8:30 p.m. T NT
BOXING
Michael Perezvs. Jorge Romero
6 p.m.
FS1
HOCKEY
NHL Playoffs, Pittsburgh at Columbus NHL Pla yoffs,SanJoseatLosAngeles
4 p.m. NBCSN 7 p.m. NBCSN
Listings are the most accurate available. TheBulletin is not responsible for late changesmadeby TV or radio stations.
SPORTS IN BRIEF MIXED MARTIAL ARTS JOneS defendS light heavyweight title — Jon Jonespunished GloverTeixeira for five rounds andwon aunanimous decision Saturday night at UFC172, successfully defending his light heavyweight championship for the seventh straight time. Jones (20-1 j won 50-45 on all three scorecards and rolled to his 11th straight victory, the longest streakamong active UFC fighters. Jones had the Baltimore crowd roaring when heopened his pre-fight walk with the "squirrel" dance RayLewis madefamous. Theformer Baltimore Ravens linebacker had a cageside seat and stood several times to root on Jones. Chandler JonesandArthur Jones, his NFL-playing brothers, also attended andsat near Lewis. Teixeira (22-3j ended a20-bout winning streak that dates nineyears.
BOXING KlitSChko KOSLeaPai in fifth — Wladimir Klitschko toyed with Alex Leapai andknocked him out in the fifth round to retain his four heavyweight belts on Saturday in Oberhausen,Germany. Klitschko, taller with a longer reach, controlled the fight at will, scoring with left jabs and straight rights with hardly any opposition from the Samoan-born Australian. Leapai went downwhen hewas hit with a left-right combination. Hegot up but Klitschko put him awayfor good with 58 seconds left in the fifth.
FOOTBALL NCAA PenaliZOS IdahO —TheNCAAhaslevied penalties, including a ban onpost-season play next season, against the Idaho football team for failing to meetacademic standards for the 2009 through 2012 seasons. The Vandals will be ineligible for postseason bowl games or theCollege Football Playoff during the 2014football season. In addition, they will lose four hours of practice time perweek and must use that time for study hall. Idaho athletics director Rob Spear said in a statement Saturday that the university respects the NCAA's rules andtakes full responsibility.
126. 2 (tie),JonFranks/RichardCarlson, 128;Chris Siebers/BrianHale,128; ReidHellbusch/Justin Martin,128;EricRobertson/CaseyDockstader,128. Monday Third Net — 1,KenWinder/GeneDilinger,120. Baseball :Bend atRedmond,4:30 p.m.;Mountain View atSummit, 4:30p.m.; Sistersat Sweet Home, 2, JohnStoffel/Jeff Weiss,123. 3, BrianThompson/ 4:30 p.mcCrookCountyatRidgeview,4:30p.m.; BruceThompson,124. 4, Dennis Gorley/Dave Clark, MadrasatMolala, 5p.mcSt. Paulat Culver, 4:30 126. 5,LanceHunter/TimVeley,127. Fourlh Net —1, MattHoover/WayneSmith,123. p.m. 2 (tie),KenVanDuzer/Matt Codino, 127;AaronDunn/ Softball: Gladstone atMadras,5 p.m.;Toledoat CulKen Tannler,127;Scott Kissel/SigurdBauer,127. 5 ver,4:30p.m. Girls golf: Bend,Mountain View,Summit, Redmond, (tie), Bill Poppie/StevenBrous, 130;DarrenPierce/ Ridgeview,CrookCounty, Trinity Lutheranat Bend DanaPierce,130;Robert Bodine/WiliamBodine,130. Ladies Net—1,VonnieCore/Chris Mascal,223. Golf andCountry Club,noon 2, Holly Nelson/MonicaMcLaughlin, 228.3, Nancy Boys lacrosse:HarneyatSummit, 6p.m. Mills/TriciaBoggess, 230. 4 (tie), AnnetteVanDaam/ MicheleRostron,240; MissySmith/Carrie Blank,240; Tuesday eSimons/MaureenBeaudry,240. Baseball: SweetHomeat Sisters, 4:30p.m.; LaPine Debbi at CottageGrove, 4:30 p.m.;Culver at Kennedy, 3:30p.m. PGA Tour Softball: SistersatSweet Home(DH),3 p.m.;LaPine Zurich Classic at Cottage Grove, 4:30 p.mcLaSalle at Madras,4 PGA-ZurichClassic p.m4CulveratKennedy,3: 30p.m. Saturday Boys tennis: CrookCountyat Bend, 4 p.m.;Summit At TPCLouisiana at Ridgeview, 4 p.m.; Mountain Viewat Redmond,4 Avondale, La. p.mcStaytonat Madras,4 p.m. Purse: 56.8million Girls tennis:BendatCrookCounty 4pm.;Ridgeview Yardage: 7,425;Par: 72 at Summit, 4p.mcRedmondat Mountain View,4 Third Roundleaders p.mcMadrasat Stayton,4 p.m. Seung-YulNoh 65-68-65—198 Boys lacrosse:Bendat Sisters, 7:30p.m. 69-66-65—200 Keegan Bradley 67-66-68—201 RobertStreb RUNNING 67-68-67—202 Jeff Overton 62-67-73—202 BenMartin 64-68-70—202 AndrewSvoboda Local 71-68-64—203 PaulCase y 2814 Sisters "Better Half" Marathon 68-67-68—203 Charl eyHoff man Saturday inSisters 71-66-67—204 T ommy G aine y Half Marathon 70-70-65—205 Wilkinson 1, Rob Russell, Redm ond, 1 hour, 16minutes, Tim 71-69-65—205 Lee 11 seconds.2, JasonGulley, Bend, 1:20:51. 3, Nick Danny 71-68-66—205 Cauley Harsell, Bend,1:26:42. 4, KatieSteele, Springfield, Bud 72-65-68—205 R etief Goo s en 1:33:10. 5, Eric Liddell, Sisters, 1:34.13. 6, Cesar J.B. Holmes 71-65-69—205 Flores,Talent,1:35;06. 7, LukeWalker, Prinevile, PeterHanson 65-69-71—205 1:35:18. 8,MichaelFrede,Eugene,1:35:39. 9, Clint BrooksKoepka 71-68-67—206 Prevett,Madras,1:37:02. 10,Gregory Stevens, Bend, DanielSummerhays 72-66-68—206 1:38:55. 69-68-69—206 Kisner 11, JoeBenevento, Bend, 1:40:10. 12,DavidAn- Kevin Comp ton 66-68-72—206 derson,Beaverton, 1:40:25. 13,Amber Dean, Sisters, Erik Duran t 69-71-67—207 1;41;05.14, AngelaSitz, Sisters, 1:41;42. 15,Jane Joe Freddi e Jacobson 72-69-66—207 Cleavenger, Bend,1:42:35.16, PeterIdema,Corvallis, RobertAllenby 71-68-68—207 1:43:00. 17,StephanieSerpico, Bend,1:45:33. 18, JustinRose 71-67-69—207 AmyBennete, Sisters,1:46:04. 19,TianaCamarilo, Anderson 72-65-70—207 Boise ,Idaho,1:46:32.20,Wendy McGrane,Bend, Mark F abian G om e z 72-69-66—207 1:46:50. David Duval 68-69-70—207 21, MeganBanks, Eugene, 1:48:23. 22, Laurel Will Wilcox 68-68-71—207 Mathiesen,Eugene, 1:51:48. 23, RogerButenschoe, KevinChapel 72-67-69—208 Eugene,1:55:03. 24,Adrian Reyes,Bend,1:55:05. Bronson La C ' a ss i e 70-69-69—208 25, RandyKing, Sisters, 1:55:49.26, RachelFrede, DavidToms 73-68-67—208 Eugene ,1:56:44.27,CambrieNelson,GrantsPass, Alex Prugh 70-68-70—208 1:56:54.28,MichaelBalmer,Beaverton,1:57:40. 29, Morgan Hoff mann 70-68-70—208 Ami Angell, Fresno,Calif., 1:58:11.30, MeganWilGrahamDeLaet 69-68-71—208 liams,Madras,1:59:14. Cameron Tringale 73-69-66—208 31, AmyKestek, Redmond,1:59:15. 32,Courtney Martin Flores 72-68-69—209 Jensen,Portland,2:00:47.33, DavitaEichner, Boise, JohnSenden 70-70-69—209 Idaho,2:01:41.34,BreanneYasi, Bend,2;02;21. 35, TroyMatteson 72-68-69—209 Alisa Allen, Bend,2:03:18. 36, April Ratliff, Bend, StuartAppleby 67-72-70—209 2:03:56.37, CalebRatliff, Bend, 2:03:56.38, Lacey Vijay Singh 70-71-68—209 Ashley,Bend,2;04;30.39, Staci Cles,MapleValey, KyleStanley 71-67-71—209 Wash., 2:05:26.40,BruceSlayden,Sisters,2:05:53. 41, Kalie Whitcomb,Bend, 2:05:57. 42, Lucie Pronold,Sisters,2:06:07. 43,SuzanneAkins, Bend, LPGA Tour 2:06:37.44,BrianneOttem,Connell, Wash., 2:06:55. Swinging Skirts Classic 45, ChristinaZacarias,Sisters, 2:07:35.46, Kristen Saturday Wehrman, Bend,2:08:31.47,Cindy Cowmeadow, At Lake Merced Golf Club Bend, 2:10:11. 48, Brittney Rasm ussen, Lyons, Daly City, Calif. 2:11:02.49,CoreySpencer, Lyons,2:11:03. 50, Lisa Purse: $1.8mioion Wold, Portland,2:11:33. Yardage:6,507; Par: 72 51, Rob Cowan, Lebanon, 2:14:49. 52, Devin MilThird Roundleaders er, Bend,2:15:14. 53, PeggyFrede,Bend,2:15:31. StacyLew 69-69-68—206 54, Kerry Witterschein, Bend,2:19:27. 55, Cheri LydiaKo is 68-71-68—207 Miller,Sisters,2:20;52.56,Saly Taylor-Pilar, Sisters, JennyShin 68-74-68—210 2:21:05.57,Roberta Marta, Bend,2:23:54. 58,Tere- HeeYoungPark 70-73-68—211 sa Trimboli,Eugene,2:24:58. 59,KeithFrede,Bend, ShanshanFeng 74-70-68—212 2:26: 32.60,CateLyon,WallaWalla,Wash.,2:27:39. P.K.Kongkraphan 74-68-70—212 61, RonellePartlow,Wala Walla, Wash., 2:28:29. KarineIcher 66-73-73—212 62, Sarah Sperry, Springfield,2:29:16. 63,Traci Smith, 72-71-70—213 Vedel Appling,Ga.,2:29:38. 64,ShannonBeutler, Sisters, Line 72-70-72—214 Kang 2:30:25.65,AngelaCheeney,Bend, 2:31:59.66, Sar- Haeji 69-73-72 —214 JooKim ah Smith,Sisters, 2:32:21.67, Denise Garcia,Madras, Hyo 71-71-72 —214 Lang 2:35: 31.68,JaniceRamirez,Redmond,2:35:31.69, Brittany 73-68-73—214 InbeePark JeanStronach,Dexter, 2:39:37.70,JamieMccright, 72-72-71—215 Pornanong P h at l u m Bend,2:40:19. 72-72-71 —215 Wie 71, Angela Lovell Maas, Idaho Falls, Idaho, Michelle 72-71-72—215 Kim 2;42;13.72,AlisonSachs,Bend,2;49;01.73, Charity I.K. 70-72-73—215 arlotaCiganda Creech,Bend,2:49:02. 74,DonHildebrand, Sisters, C 73-70-73—216 Simon 2:51:31.75, ClaudiaWiliams, Sisters, 2:55:10.76, Ashleigh 73-69-74—216 Catriona Mathew MarianAnderson,Corvallis, 3:17;04.77,DeannaWil- SunYoung 72-76-69—217 Yoo son, Philomath, 3:17:05. 78,AnnZweber, Corvallis, 69-74-74—217 Martin 3:17:07.79,JulieGulden,GrantsPass, 3:21:30. 80, Mo l hee Lee 68-73-76—217 AlyceDawes, Bend,3:22:54. Kerr 73-75-70—218 81, DawnHill, Camas,Wash., 3:24:01.82, Mo- Cristie LingHsu 70-77-71—218 niqueKohler,Camas,Wash.,3:24:01.83, LisaLoucks, Wei 73-72-73—218 Camas,Wash., 3:24:01. 84, JenniferButenschoen, JodiEwartShadoff A zahara M uno z 76-69-73—218 Eugene,3:29;12. 85,ReneeWilson,Sisters, 3:29;13. Eun-HeeJi 73-71-74—218 Quarter Marathon Nordqvist 72-72-74—218 1, RigoRam irez, Redmond,44 minutes, 11 sec- Anna Boeljon 69-74-75—218 onds. 2,ScottAbrams,Bend, 47:37.3, Scott Kramer, Christel Mika Mi y aza t o 72-69-77—218 Bend,49:06.4, JoshNewton,Bend,51:59. 5, Andrew DanielleKang 73-75-71 —219 Carter, Portland,52:43. 6, JamesTrimboli, Eugene, HaruNomura 75-73-71—219 54;45. 7, MattMathiesen,Eugene, 54:51. 8, Jesse So YeonRyu 76-72-71—219 Atki nson,Longview,Wash.,55:57.9,MaeganKuntz, KarrieWebb 74-73-72—219 Bend,56:02.10, Katie Richards,Bend, 57:46. Alison Wa l s he 74-69-76—219 11, Jacoby Allen, Bend,59:29. 12,Jeanine Faria, PaolaMoreno 71-71-77—219 Bend, 1:01:43.13, CarrieErickson,Bend,1:02:23. SandraGal 73-76-71—220 14, DonnaKestek, WestLinn, 1:02:45. 15,Daniele SandraChangkija 73-74-73—220 Rudloff, Bend,1:04:30. 16,Camile Fetzer-Lockhart, Katherine Kirk 74-73-73—220 Bend,1:05:55.17,EdwinnaParker,Lebanon,1:08:04. AriyaJutanugarn 73-73-74—220 18, DougMohr, Sisters,1:08:38. 19,JanniceRichardson,Madras,1:10:23. 20,Jennifer Hubel,Oregon City, 1:11:55. BASKETBALL 21, PamBierce, Sacramento, Calif.,1:12:40.22, SommerMoore, Sisters, 1:12:40. 23, Maryclaire NBA Playoffs Jones,Sisters, 1:16:22. 24,Stephanie Peck, Salem, NATIONALBASKETBALLASSOCIATION 1:17:04.25,Christine Grim,Salem,1:17:05.26, Lisa All Times PDT Berg,Bend,1:20:15. 27,SaraYoung, Bend, 1:20:15. 28, Nancy Whitlatch, Sisters, 1;20:41.29,Traci James, Saturday'sGames Lynden ,Wash.,1:20:49.30,LewHollander,Redmond, Indiana91,Atlanta88, seriestied 2-2 1:21:06. 31, AngelaBixler, Beaverton, 1;22;46. 32,Robin Dallas109,SanAntonio108, Dallasleadsseries2-1 Legg, Sisters, 1:24:52.33, Marti Bowles, Tualatin, Miami98,Charlotte85, Miamileadsseries 2-1 City 92,Memphis 89(OT), seriestied 2-2 1:27:15. 34, MarciaTripiano, Sisters, 1:28:15.35, Oklahoma Today'sGames Celina Verceles,Bend,1:28:42. 36,AmberJepsen, LakeOswego,1:29:15.37,LenaVogelgesang,Sisters, Chicagoat Washington, 10 a.m., Washington leads series2-1 1:31:24. 38,Rebecca Womack, Sisters, 1:31:24.39, Lori Platt,Tigard,1:31:32.40,JessicaMohr, Sisters, LA. Clippersat GoldenState, 12:30 p.m., LA. Clippers lead series2-1 1:31:43. 41, Amanda Keley, Sisters, 1:31:44.42, AnnNora Torontoat Brooklyn,4p.m., Brooklynleadsseries2-1 Kruger,Sisters,1:34:06. 43,WendieVermilion, Sis- Houstonat Portland, 6:30p.m., Portland leadsseries 2-1 ters, 1:34:08.44,JanWiliams, WestLinn, 1:37:03. Monday'sGames 45, Randy Gilen, Seward, Alaska,1:38:07. 46, Rachel James, Seward,Alaska,1:38:07.47,RebekahGould, Miami atCharlotte,4 p.m. Tigard, 1:40;51.48, NicoleLyman, Tigard, 1;40;53. AtlantaatIndiana,5p.m. 49,LoriBarin,Bend,1:44:06.50,DaneeMolan,Bend, SanAntonioat Dalas, 6:30p.m.
ON DECK
1:44:06.
51r Bobbi Cardiff, Salem,1;49;18. 52, Roanna Gingrich,Salem,1:49:19. 53,CamiSummers, Salem, 1:49:21. 54, GlennBarker, Silverton, 1:49:43. 55, Kim Dem archi, Tualatin,1:50:36.56,MaryDemedde, Tualatin, 1:50:38.57, HeatherMagnuson, Tualatin, 1:50:38.58, NoraSlayden, Sisters,1:53:03. 59, Shelly Stark, Sisters,1:58:48. 60,Margaret Doke,Sisters, 1:58:49. 61, Robin Tawney, Sisters,1:58:50. Half MarathonRelay 1, DynamicDuo,Lebanon, 1 hour, 7 minu
HOCKEY CaPitalS letCOaCh,GMgo after miSSing PlayoffSGeneral managerGeorgeMcPheeand coach AdamOates lost their jobs with the Washington Capitals on Saturday after the teamfailed to make the playoffs for the first time since 2007.McPhee's contract was up and theteamannounced it will not give him a newoneafter his 17 years astheGM,which included drafting Alex Ovechkin and Nicklas Backstrom in the first round. Oateswas fired with one season left on his three-year contract. A former star player for the Capitals, he was in his first job as anNHLheadcoach. This season, Washington finished with the ninth-most points in the Eastern Conference, one spot out of a playoff berth.
FOrmer NBAOWner MiChael HeiSley dieS at 77 — Michael Heisley, the billionaire businessmanwho bought the Vancouver Grizzlies and movedthe NBAteam to Memphis, died Saturday. Hewas 77. The Grizzlies said Saturday night that a family memberconfirmed Heisley's death. TheCommercial Appeal reported that Heisley died in lllinois of complications from a massive stroke hesuffered nearly15 months ago. Heisley sold the team toRobert Perabefore the start of the 2012-13season. — From wire reports
27 32 18 32 — 109
Heat 98, Bobcats 85 MIAMI (98) James10-189-1030,Haslem2-50-04, Bosh3-7 0-0 8, Chalmers 3-71-2 8, Wade 7-16 3-417, Lewis 010 00, Andersen 4 74 412, Allen3 60 08, Cole 3-70-08, Jones1-60-03,Douglas0-30-00, Battier 0-00-00. Totals 36-8317-2098. CHARLDTTE (85) Kidd-Gilchrist 1-61-4 3, McRoberts 3-9 5-6 13, Jeff erson8-134-520,Walker4-74-513,Henderson 2-6 2-4 6,Zeller0-30-0 0, Neal2-84-4 9, Ridnour 1-5 0-0 3,Douglas-Roberts 6-8 3-3 17,Tolliver 0-0 0-00, Biyombo 0-01-21, Pargo0-00-00, White0-0 0-00. Totals 27-6524-3385. Miami 23 35 28 12 — 98 Charlotle 27 19 19 20 — 85
HOCKEY NHL Playoffs NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE AN TimesPDT
Saturday'sGames Boston 4, Detroit 2, Bostonwins series4-1 Pittsburgh3, Columbus1,Pittsburgh leadsseries3-2 Colorado4, Minnesota3 (DT), Coloradoleadsseries 3-2
Los Angele3, s SanJose0, SanJoseleads series3-2 Today'sGames Philadelphiat a N.Y. Rangers,9a.m., seriestied 2-2 St. Louisat Chicago,noon,Chicago leadsseries 3-2 Anaheim at Dallas, 5p.m., Anaheimleadsseries 3-2 Monday'sGames PittsburghatColumbus, 4p.m. Colorado at Minnesota,6 p.m. x-SanJoseat LosAngeles,7p.m.
TENNIS Professional PorscheGrandPrix Saturday At Porsche-Arena Stutlgarl, Germany Purse: 5710,008 (Premier) Surface: Clay-Indoor Singles Semifinals MariaSharapova(6), Russia, def. SaraErrani (8),
Italy, 6-1,6-2.
Ana Ivanovi(9), c Serbia, def.JelenaJankovic (5),
Serbia,6-3, 7-5.
BarcelonaOpen Saturday At Real ClubdeTemsBarcelona Barcelona,Spain Purse: $2.94million (WT588) Surface:Clay-Outdoor Singles Semifinals Kei Nishikori (4),Japan,def. Ernests Gulbis(9), Latvia,6-2, 6-4. SantiagoGiraldo,Colombia, def.NicolasAlmagro (6), Spain7-5, , 6-3. La PrincesseLaNaMeryem Saturday At Le RoyalTennis ClubdeMarrakech Marrakech,Morocco Purse: 8258,088 (Intl.) Surface:Clay-Outdoor Singles Semifinals RominaDprandi, Switzerland,def. Daniela Hantuchova (1), Slovakia, 7-5,3-6, 6-3. Maria-TeresaTorro-Ftor, Spain,def.GarbineMuguruza(5),Spain,6-0, 6-3. NastaseTiriac Trophy Saturday At Progresul BNR Arenas Bucharest, Romania Purse: 5670,500(WT250) Surlace: Clay-Outdoor Singles Semifinals GrigorDimitrov(1), Bulgaria,def.Gael Monfils (3) France, 5-1, retired. Lukas Rosol,Czech Republic,def.RobinHaase Netherlands,3-6,6-3, 6-2.
MO TOR SPORTS
Saturday's Summaries
Thunder 92, Grizzlies 89 (OT) OKLAHOMA CITY (92) Durant5-214-6 15,Ibaka6-11 0-0 12,Perkins 1-4 2-2 4,Westbrook 6-242-215, Sefolosha1-40-0 3, Collison1-10-03, Jackson11-168-8 32,Adams 0-00-0 0,Butler2-60-06, Fisher0-32-22. Totals 33-90 18-2092. MEMPHIS (89) Prince1-2 0-0 2,Randolph5-141-511, Gasol 1021 3423, Conley5164514, Lee3101-29, Allen 6-142-314, Davis1-20-0 2, Udrih2-60-06, Miller 2-72-48, Koufos0-1 0-00, Johnson0-10-0 0. Totals 35-9413-2389. OklahomaCity 15 27 22 16 12 — 92 Memphis 18 1 717 28 9 — 89
Pacers 91, Hawks88 INDIANA(91) George1018 0 224, West 7-133 618, Hibbert 3-50-06,G.Hill5-83-4 15,Stephenson2-9 0-05, Turner4-82-211, Mahinmi1-10-02, Scola2-70-0 4,Watson 3-80-06.Totals37-77 8-1491.
ATUINTA (88)
GOLF Local CENTRALOREGON SHOOTOUT April 25-27 Saturday,Besl Ball;
BASKETBALL
Dallas
Carroll 1-6 0-0 3, Millsap10-186-6 29,Antic 1-6 0-0 2,Teague5-152-2 14, Korver 4-9 4-4 15, Brand0-1 0-0 0, Wiliams2-7 2-26, Mack3-6 0-0 7, Martin0-10-00, Scott4-153-312. Totals 38-84 17-17 88. Indiana 29 13 24 25 — 91 Atlanta 22 26 17 23 — 88
Race Statistics Mavericks 109, Spurs108 Ayerage SpeedofRaceWinner:93.369mph. Friday, Two-PersonScramble Time of Race: 3hours,12minutes, 47seconds. At AspenLakes(Sisters), Black Butte Ranch SANANTDNIO(108) Margin of Victory: 0.946 seconds. Big Meadow,EagleCrest Resort Course Leonard7-81-317, Duncan8-14 6-622, Splitter Caution Flags: 9 for66laps. 6-82-214, Parker 9-18 0-019, Green 1-50-0 3, Gi (Redmond) Lead Changes:20among8drivers. Top five after secondround nobili 4-144-412, Diaw3-5 0-07, Belinelli 3-3 0-0 Lap Leaders: B.Keselowski 1-31; K.Harvick Gross Flight — 1,Harry Paik/Bob Gorham,136. 7, Mills 2-51-2 5,Bonner1-10-0 2,Joseph0-00-0 32-42; T.Kvapil43;K.Harvick44-55;B.Keselowski 2, Shane Wal/Allen Foster, 139.3, Robert Kumpula/ 0. Totals 44-8114-17108. 56-101; L.cassill 102; J.Gordon103-165; B.KeselMatt Duval,142. 4,JohnPennington/Jack PenningDALLAS (189) owski166;J.Gordon167-172; B.Keselowski173-208; ton,143. 5,RandyReid/Gary Logsdon,144. Marion3-111-2 9, Nowitzki7-134-618r Dalem- J.Gordon 209-227; J.Logano228;J.Gordon 229-242; Firsl Net Flight — 1,David Clement/Bret Mack- bert 4-8 5-513, Calderon7-10 0-016, Ellis12-22 J.Logano243-251; J.Gordon252-298; D.Earnhardt ay,126. 2 (tie), DougFranke/Brent Griffiths,129; Brian 2-229, Carter3-84-411, Blair1-1 0-02, Harris1-5 Jr. 299-305;J.Logano306-337; J.Gordon338-361; Johnston/Nate Scharer,129. 4(tie), Bil Davisson/Dan 0-03, Wright2-2 0-04, Crowder2-2 0-04. Totals M.Kenseth362-396;J.Logano397-400. Satern,130;TrentThompson/JackDimatteo,130. 42-82 16-19109. LeadersSummary(Driver, TimesLed, Laps SecondNet— 1,MarkSchumock/SteveJudson, San Antonio 34 2 0 28 34 — 188 Led): J.Gordon,6timesfor 173laps; B.Keselowski,
4 timesfor 114laps;J.Logano,4timesfor 46laps; M.Kenseth,1time for35laps; K.Harvick, 2 timesfor 23 laps;D.Earnhardt Jr.,1 timefor7 laps; L.cassil,1 timefor1lap;T.Kyapit,1timefort lap. Wins: K.Harvick, 2; J.Logano,2; Ku.Busch, 1; Ky.susch, 1;D.Earnhardt Jr., 1; C.Ed wards, 1; Bra. Keselowski,1. Top 12 in Points: 1. J.Gordon, 341; 2. M.Kenseth,336;3. C.Edwards, 313;4. Ky.Busch,310; 5. D.Earnhardt Jr., 309;6. J.Logano,292; 7. Bra.Keselowski,287;8. J.Johnson,282; 9. R.Newman, 272; 10. B.Vickers,256;11.G.Biffle,256;12.A.Dillon, 252.
tndyCar Honda IndyGrandPrix of AlabamaLineup After Saturdayqualifying; racetoday At Barber Motorsports Park Birmingham,Ala. Lap length: 2.38miles (Car numberin parentheses) 1. (12)Wil Power, Dallara-Chevrolet,121.209. 2. (27)Jame sHinchcliffe, Dalara-Honda,121.157. 3. (28)RyanHunter-Reay, Dallara-Honda,121.006. 4. (67)JosefNewgarden, Dallara-Honda,120.929. 5. (9)ScottDixon,Dalara-chevrolet,120.849. 6. (3)HelioCastroneves,Dallara-chevrolet, 120.654. 7. (34)CarlosMunoz, Dallara-Honda,120.631. 8. (2)JuanPablo Montoya,Dallara-chevrolet,120.62. 9. (25)MarcoAndretti, Dallara-Honda,120.588. 10. (77)SimonPagenaud,Dallara-Honda,120.23. 11. (7)MikhailAleshin,Dallara-Honda,119.704. 12. (11) Sebastien Bourdais, Dallara-chevrolet, 118.238. 13. (17) Sebastian Saave dra, Dallara-chevrolet, 120.057. 14.(14)TakumaSato, Dallara-Honda,119.748. 15.(18)CarlosHuertas, Dalara-Honda,119.954. 16. (19)Justin Wilson,Dalara-Honda,119.65. 17. (83)CharlieKimball, Dallara-chevrolet,119.663. 18. (15)GrahamRahal, Dallara-Honda,119.614. 19. (16)Driol Servia,Dalara-Honda,119.492. 20. (8)RyanBriscoe, Dallara-chevrolet,119.528. 21. (20)MikeConway, Dallara-chevrolet,118.526. 22. (98)JackHawksworth, Dallara-Honda,119.274. 23. (10)TonyKanaan, Dallara-chevrolet,118.995.
SOCCER MLS MAJORLEAGUESOCCER All TimesPDT
EasternConference W L T Pts GF GA Columbus 3 1 3 1 2 10 7 S porting KansasCity 3 2 2 11 9 6 D.C. 3 2 2 1 1 10 8 NewEngland 3 3 2 11 7 9 NewYork 2 2 5 1 1 13 12 TorontoFC 3 3 0 9 6 7 Philadelphia 1 3 5 8 9 11 Houston 2 4 1 7 7 12 Montreal 1 4 3 6 7 14 Chicago 0 1 6 6 10 11 WesternConference W L T Pts GF GA Seattle 5 2 1 1 6 18 12 FC Dallas 5 2 1 1 6 18 14 RealSaltLake 3 0 5 14 13 8 Colorado 3 2 2 11 9 9 Vancouver 2 2 4 1 0 12 10 Los Angele s 2 1 2 8 7 4 SanJose 1 2 3 6 6 7 ChivasUSA 1 4 3 6 8 14 Portland 0 3 4 4 8 12 NOTE: Threepoints forvictory, onepoint for tie. Saturday'sGames Montreal1, Philadelphia0 Seattle FC 4, Colorado1 D.C.United4, FCDallas 1 Columbus 1, NewYork1, tie NewEngland2, Sporting KansasCity 0 RealSaltLake2, Vancouver 2, tie SanJose1,ChivasUSA0
Today'sGame Portlandat Houston, noon
BASEBALL College Pac-12Standings All TimesPDT Washington OregonState ArizonaState Oregon USC UCLA WashingtonState Stanford California Arizona Utah
Conference Overall 14-5 12-4 12-8 10-7 11-9 9-9 8-8 6-10 6-10 6-14 3-15
27-10 30-8 24-16 31-12 24-17 22-19 18-20 17-18 17-20 17-25 13-24
Saturday'sGames Nevada atutah,canceled California7,Stanford4 (10innings)
usc 7,ucLA4
WashingtonStateatWashington, ppd., rain OregonState4, Oregon2 ArizonaState7, Arizona0
Today'sGames Nevadaatutah,11 a.m. OregonatOregonState,1 p.m. WashingtonStateatWashington (DH),2p.m. CaliforniaatStanford, 2p.m. ArizonaStateatArizona, 4:30p.m.
DEALS Transactions BASEBALL
AmericanLeague
CHICAGO WHITESOX —Placed38 Conor Gillaspie onthe15-day DL,retroactiveto April 22.ActivatedRHPHector Noesi. NEWYORKYANKEES — SignedRHPChrisLeroux
andselectedhimfromScranton/Wilkes-Barre(IL). OptionedRHPShane Greeneto Scranton/Wilkes-Barre. Released LHPNikTurley. National League ATLANTA BRAVES—Released18 ErnestoMejia. CHICAGOCUBS— PlacedRHPJoseVerasonthe 15-dayDL.Recalled RHPBrian Schlitter fromlowa (PCL). CINCINN ATI REDS— PlacedCDevin Mesoraco on the 15-dayDL.Recaled CTucker Barnhart from Louisville(IL). PITTSBU RGHPIRATES—PlacedRHPJasonGrili on the15-dayDL,retroactiveto April 21,andCRussell Martinonthe15-day DL.RecalledCTonySanchez andRHPJaredHughesfromIndianapolis (IL). BASKETBALL
National Basketball Association NBA —Suspended Washington F-CNeneone gamefor head-butting andgrabbing ChicagoG-F Jimmy Butler aroundthe neckwith bothhandsandattempting tothrowhimdownduringanApril 25game. FOOTBALL National Football League DALLASCOWBOYS — Re-signed DEAnthony Spencerto a one-yearcontract. HOCKEY National HockeyLeague NHL —FinedDallas FRyanGarbutt $1,474.36for spearingAnaheimFCorey Perry during andApril 25 game. WASHINGTONCAPITALS— FiredcoachAdam Dates.Announcedthe contract of generalmanager GeorgeMcPheewil notberenewed. COLLEGE FLORIDA —Juniormen'sbasketball FJonHorford is transferringto theschool Florida. WISCON SIN—Announcedtheapproval of aoneyearcontractextensionsformen'sbasketball coachBo Ryan, men' sicehockeycoachMikeEavesandwomen'sicehockeycoachMarkJohnson.
FISH COUNT Upstream daily movem ent of adult chinook,jack chinook,steelheadandwild steelheadat selected ColumbiaRiver damslast updated on Friday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wsllhd Bonneville 4355 54 53 8 The Dalles 1,907 11 5 1 John Day 1,647 26 8 7 McNary 49 9 0 14 3
upstream year-to-date movement ofadult chinook,
jack chinook,steelheadand wild steelheadat selected ColumbiaRiverdamslast updatedonFriday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wsllhd Bonneville 33,981 249 3 ,650 1,130 The Dalles 14,334 11 2 3 1 0 128 John Day 9,116 12 6 2 ,722 1,077 McNary 2,786 32 474 295
SUNDAY, APRIL 27, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
D3
OR LEAGUE BASEBALL Standings AH TimesPDT AMERICANLEAGUE
East Division
NewYork Baltimore Boston TampaBay Toronto
W L 14 10 12 11 12 13 11 13 11 13
Central Division Detroit Minnesota Chicago Kansas City Cleveland
Oakland Texas LosAngeles Seattle Houston
W 12 12 12 11 11
L 9 11 13 12 13 West Division W L 15 9 15 9 11 12 9 14 8 17
Pct GB .583
.522 1'/z .480 2'/z .458 3 .458 3
Pct GB .571 .522 1 .480 2 .478 2 .458 2'/r
Pct GB .625 .625 .478 3'/r .391 5'/r
.320 7'/z
Saturday'sGames
N.Y.Yankees4, L.A.Angels3 Boston7,Toronto6 Minnesota 5, Detroit 3 SanFrancisco5, Cleveland3 Baltimore 3, KansasCity 2,10 innings Houston7,Oakland6 TampaBay4,ChicagoWhiteSox0 Texas 6, Seattle 3
Seattle F.Hernandez 6 5 3 3 3 4 Wilhelmsen 1 1 0 0 0 2 FurbushL,0-2 0 0 1 1 0 0 Medina 1 1 0 0 0 0 Beimel 2-3 4 2 2 0 0 Farquhar 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Furbushpitchedto 1batterin the8th. Lewispitchedto1 baterin the6th. HBP—byLewis(Zunino), byFurbush(Fielder). WPBeimel. T—3:13. A—30,038(47,476).
Yankees 4, Angels 3 NEW YORK — John Ryan Murphy hit his first big league homer and drove in three runs, Dellin Betances earned his first win in the majors and theNewYork Yankees bouncedback to beat the Los Angeles Angels. David Robertson posted his first save since coming off the disabled list. Mike Trout singled with one out in a nervy ninth and stole second, but Robertson retired Albert Pujols on a flyball and struck out Howie Kendrick to end it.
IP H R Boston BuchholzW,1-2 7 6 3 Tazawa 1 -3 4 2 CapuanoH,3 1 - 3 0 0 U ehara S,5-5 11 - 3 3 1 Toronto M orrow L,1-2 2 2 -3 0 4 Jenkins 1 2-3 5 3 Loup 1 2-3 0 0 Cecil 1 0 0 Delabar 1 0 0 Santos 1 0 0 WP — Buchholz. PB—Navarro. T—3:23.A—40,322(49,282).
Twins 5, Tigers 3
ER BBSO City11, Baltimore8. 28—Hosmer (7), S.Perez (8) Howard1b 5 1 0 0 Monterc 4 1 1 0 A.Escobar (7). 3B—J.Weeks(1). S—Infante, Dyson Byrdrf 4 1 1 0 H>112b 3 1 2 0 3 3 3 J.Weeks. DBrwnlf 5 1 2 0 C.Rosslf 4 0 2 3 2 0 0 IP H R E R BBSO Ruiz c 4 2 3 1 GParra rf 3 0 0 0 0 1 1 KansasCity Galvi s3b 5 0 0 0 Owingsss 3 1 1 0 1 0 2 Guthrie 7 6 2 2 1 3 CI.Lee p 2 0 1 0 Arroyo p 2 0 0 0 W.Davis 1 0 0 0 0 2 GwynJ ph 1 1 1 1 Thtchr p 0000 4 8 Crow 1 1 0 0 0 0 Manshp p 0 0 0 0 Cahillp 0000 3 0 2 DuffyL,1-1 0 0 1 0 0 0 Asche ph 1 0 1 2 Pnngtn ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 Coleman 1-3 1 0 0 0 1 Bastrdp 0 0 0 0 Putzp 0000 0 1 2 Baltimore MAdmsp 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 W.chen 7 9 2 2 2 6 Papelnp 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 Meek 1-3 1 0 0 0 0 Totals 41 6 136 Totals 3 3 5 105 Matusz 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Philadelphia OBB OBB 240 — 6 O'Day 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Arizona 212 OBB 000 — 6 Tom.Hunter 12-3 1 0 0 0 0 E—Rogins(2), C.Ross(1), Prado(6),Owings(3). Arizona 1. LOB —Philadelphia 11, Arizona8. BrittonW,3-0 1 3- 0 0 0 0 1 DP — Duffypitchedto 3 batters inthe10th. 28 — Gwynn Jr. (2), Asche(3), Pollock(6), Hill (9).
MINNEAPOLIS — Phil Hughes
threw seven strong innings and Josmil Pinto hit his fifth homer of the seasonand Minnesota beat Detroit. Hughes (2-1) had six strikeouts with no walks. He retired 16 straight at one point and has wontwo straight — a welcome sight for a Twins rotation that had produced only six quality starts this season.
HBP —byDuffy(Schoop). T—3:09. A—34,941(45,971).
National League
Dodgers 6, Rockies 3 LOS ANGELES — Adrian Gonzalez homered for the third straight game and Matt Kempalso went deep, leading PaulMaholm and the Los Angeles Dodgers to a victory over Colorado. Maholm (1-2) threw 84 pitches over seven innings, allowing two runs andsix hits in his fourth start with the defending NLWest champions. Chris Withrow struck out Carlos Gonzalez andTroy Tulowitzki with the bases loaded in theeighth inning to help preserve the win.
Lirianopitchedto 2batters inthe3rd. PB—T.San chez. T—3:02.A—46,254(45,399).
Brewers 5, Cubs3 MILWAUKEE — Jeff Bianchi had a
two-run single, and MarcoEstrada threw 7N strong innings to lead Milwaukee past the ChicagoCubs. Bianchi went 2 for 4, entering the game as apinch-hitter in the first for Jean Segura, whowashit in the head in the dugout by abat.
38 — Pollock (1). SB—Revere(8). CS—Pollock(1), Prado(1). S—Arroyo.SF—Goldschmidt. Chicago Milwaukee IP H R E R BBBO ab r hbi ab r hbi Philadelphia Bonifaccf 4 0 0 0 CGomzcf 2 1 0 1 CI.Lee 6 8 5 3 2 2 Valuen2b 4 1 1 1 Segurass 0 0 0 0 ManshipW,1-0 1 1 0 0 2 0 Rizzo1b 4 0 0 0 Bianchiph-ss 4 0 2 2 BastardoH,3 2 - 3 0 0 0 1 1 Scastross 4 0 1 0 Braunrf 4 0 1 0 Mi.AdamsH,1 1- 3 0 0 0 0 0 S chrhltrf 3 0 0 0 EHerrrrf 0 0 0 0 PapelbonS,7-8 1 1 0 0 0 1 Olt3b 3 1 1 0 ArRmr3b 3 0 0 1 Anzona Sweenylf 3 0 0 0 Lucroyc 4 0 0 0 Arroyo 61-3 7 2 2 1 2 Castilloc 3 1 1 2 KDavislf 4 2 2 1 Thatcher 2-3 1 1 0 0 0 TWoodp 2 0 0 0 MrRynl1b 4 1 2 0 Cahill L,1-5BS,1-2 1 4 3 3 2 2 Schlittrp 0 0 0 0 RWeks2b 3 1 1 0 Putz 1 1 0 0 0 1 Lakeph 1 0 0 0 FrRdrgp 0 0 0 0 Thatcherpitchedto1 batter inthe8th. Stropp 0 0 0 0 Estradp 2 0 0 0 T—3:05.A—35,462 (48,633). WSmithp 0 0 0 0 Gennett2b 0 0 0 0
3 1 3 4 3 Totals 3 05 8 5 Minnesota Marlins 7, Mets 6 (10 innings) Totals Chicago 000 100 820 — 3 ab r hbi ab r hbi — 5 Milwaukee 1 2 0 1 0 1 Bgx Kinsler 2b 4 0 0 0 Dozier 2b 2 1 0 0 NEW YORK — Jarrod SaltalamacDP — Chicago1. LOB —Chicago1, Milwaukee6. TrHntrrf 4 1 3 0 Mauerdh 2 0 0 1 HR — V albuen a (1), Casti l lo (4), K.Davi s (3). SFchia homered leading off the10th Micarr1b 4 1 1 1 Plouffe3b 2 0 1 2 Ar.Ramirez. VMrtnzdh 3 1 1 2 Flormnss 1 0 0 0 inning, Giancarlo Stanton also IP H R E R BBBO AJcksncf 4 0 2 0 Colaeff1b 3 0 0 0 11:10a.m. went deep andMiami rallied from Chicago C stllns3b 4 0 0 0 Kubellf 4 0 0 0 Oakland(Milone0-1) at Houston (McHugh 1-0), TWoodL,1-3 52 - 3 7 5 5 3 3 A nRmnss 3 0 0 0 Pintoc 3 1 1 1 four runs down to beat theNew 11:10a.m. lannettc 4 0 2 1 Teixeir1b 3 1 0 0 11-3 1 0 0 0 0 Schlitter J Mrtnz ph 1 0 0 0 Fuld rf 3 1 1 0 Tampa Bay(Price3-1) at ChicagoWhite Sox(Carroll Boeschpr-lf 0 0 0 0 Gardnrlf 3 1 2 0 York Mets. Stanton hit a two-run Strop 1 0 0 0 0 2 Holady c 2 0 0 0 A.Hicks cf 3 1 1 0 0-0),11:10a.m. IStewrt1b 3 0 1 0 BRorts2b 3 1 0 0 Milwaukee Avilaph-c 1 0 0 0 EEscorss-3b 3 1 0 0 Colorado shot and Miami climbed out of Cleveland (Salazar 0-3) at SanFrancisco (Vogelsong Freese 3b 4 0 1 0 KJhnsn 3b 3 0 0 0 Los Angeles EstradaW,2-1 7 2 - 3 43 3 0 9 RDavislf 3 0 1 0 0-1),1:05p.m. Shucklf 3 0 0 0 JMrphyc 3 1 2 3 ab r hbi ab r hbi a 5-1 hole with a five-run sixth W.SmithH,7 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 Totals 33 3 8 3 Totals 2 6 5 4 4 Texas(Harrison0-0)at Seattle(Maurer0 0),1:10 pm. Ibanezph 1 0 0 0 Barnesrf 4 0 1 1 DGordn2b 5 1 2 0 F r.Rodri g uez S, 1 1-11 1 0 0 0 0 1 capped by pinch-hitter Reed JohnDetroit 2 00 800 881 — 3 L.A. Angels(Richards2-0) at N.Y.Yankees (Tanaka Congerc 0 0 0 0 A renad3b 2 0 1 0 Puigrf 4 1 2 2 HBP—byTWood(R.Weeks). Minnesota 8 0 0 8 4 0 81x— 6 son's two-run double. 3-0), 5:05 p.m. T otals 36 3 9 2 Totals 3 14 7 3 CGnzl z lf 4 0 1 0 HRmrzss 2 0 1 1 T — 2: 5 1. A — 40,008 (41 , 9 00). E—Holaday(2), Fuld(1). DP—Detroit1, Minne- Tlwlzkss 4 0 0 0 Uribe3b 3 0 0 0 Monday'sGames Los Angeles 10 0 200 800 4 sota1. LOB 3 —Detroit 5,Mrnnesota7.28—Tor Hunter Rosarioc 3 1 1 0 AdGnzl1b 3 1 2 2 Oaklan datTexas,5:05p.m. New york 030 0 1 0 Bgx Miami New york Mi.cabrera (7), A.Jackson(6), Fuld(4), A.Hicks TampaBayatChicagoWhiteSox,5:10p.m. E—B.Roberts (3). LOB —Los Angeles 10, New 6 Braves 4, Reds1 lckmnph 0 1 0 0 Kempcf 4 1 2 1 I, ab r hbi ab r hbi 3. HR — V .Martinez (4), Pinto(5). SB—A.Jackson B Cleve landatLA.Angels,7:05p.m. York 6. 2B —lanneta (5). HR—Trout (6), J.Murphy M ornea1b 3 0 1 1 Ethierlf 3 0 2 0 Y elichlf 4 0 0 0 EYonglf 4 1 1 0 ( 2), Ful d (2). CS — D ozie r (1). S — E .E s c ob ar . S F — V . (1). SB —Trout (3), Gardner(6). Stubbscf 4 0 0 0 JuTrnr3b-ss 3 0 1 0 Ozunacf 3 1 1 0 Matszkp 0 0 0 0 ATLANTA —Rookie right-hander NATIONALLEAGUE I P H R E RBB SO Martinez. L eMahi2b 2 1 1 0 Buterac 3 1 0 0 Stanton rf 5 1 1 2 Recker ph 1 0 0 0 IP H R E R BBBO Kahnlep 0 0 0 0Mahlmp 2 0 0 0 East Division David Hale allowed only two hits Los Angeles McGeh 3b 5 2 3 0 Frnswr p 0 0 0 0 W L Pct GB H .Santiago L,0-4 41-3 6 4 4 1 3 Detroit CMartnp 0 0 0 0 Withrwp 0 0 0 0 Sltlmchc 4 1 1 1 Grndrscf 4 1 0 0 over eight innings andAtlanta 2 2-3 0 0 0 2 2 A.Sanchez Atlanta 16 7 2 -3 0 0 0 .696 Jepsen 0 1 0 0 0 0 Crwfrdph 0 1 0 0 GJones1b 5 0 1 0 DWrght3b 3 0 0 1 11 - 3 0 4 4 4 1 Rutledgph beat Cincinnati. Freddie Freeman, Washington 14 11 .560 3 2 -3 1 0 0 0 1 OrtegaL,0-1 Maronde Dietrch2b 4 1 1 1 DnMrp2b 4 2 1 0 22-3 2 0 0 2 2 Belislep 0 0 0 0 BWilsnp 0 0 0 0 1 1-3 0 0 0 NewYork 13 11 .542 3'/z Kohn 0 1 Coke Dickrsn ph 1 0 1 0 Jansen p 0 0 0 0 Justin Upton andEvan Gattis each M Dunnp 0 0 0 0 BAreurf 5 1 1 2 Alburquerque 1 1 -3 2 1 1 0 4 Philadelphia 12 12 500 4'/2 Frieri 1 0 0 0 0 0 Nicasiop 0 0 0 0 JeBakrph 1 0 0 0 Duda1b 4 0 1 2 homered off Cincinnati's Mike Minnesota Miami 11 13 .458 5H New york 3001 Cishekp 0 0 0 0 dArnadc 3 1 1 0 W,2-1 7 4 2 1 0 6 Culersn2b Central Division 4 1-3 5 3 3 2 4 PHughes Nuno Leake (2-2). Totals 30 3 7 3 Totals 3 2 6 126 Hchvrrss 5 1 1 1 Quntnllss 3 0 1 0 1 2 0 0 1 0 C olorado W L Pct GB Betances W,1-0 2 1 0 0 1 3 BurtonH,4 8 1 8 0 81 — 3 Sloweyp 1 0 0 0 Teiadaph-ss 1 0 0 0 2 1 1 0 2 Los Angeles 88881 Milwaukee 18 6 .750 1 1-3 2 0 0 1 1 PerkinsS,6-7 1 KelleyH,3 3 118 01x— 6 D obbsph 1 0 0 0 Meiiap 2 0 0 0 Cincinnati Atlanta Ortega pi t ched to 4 ba tt e rs i n the 5t h . St. Louis 13 12 .520 5'/z ThorntonH,7 1 3- 0 0 0 0 0 DP— Colorado 2,Los Angeles 2.LOB— Col- Handp 0 0 0 0 CTorrsp 0 0 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi BP—byOrtega(Plouffe). WP—Coke. Cincinnati 11 13 .458 7 Dav.RobertsonS,3-3 1 1 0 0 0 2 TH— orado 7,LosAngeles 9. 28—Rosario (5), Puig(4), RJhnsnph 1 0 1 2 Satinph 1 0 0 0 BHmltncf 4 0 0 0 Heywrdrf 4 0 0 0 3:13.A—28,122(39,021). Pittsburgh 10 15 .400 BH HBP —by Frieri (Gardner), byH.Santiago (Teixeira). H.Ramirez (11), Kemp(6). 3B—D.Gordon(2). HR DJnngsp 0 0 00 Familip 0 0 0 0 Votto1b 3 0 0 0 BUptoncf 4 1 1 0 Chicago 7 1 6 .304 10'/r Balk—H.Santiago,Betances. Ad.Gonza lez(8), Kemp(4). SB—Kemp(3).S—Nica- S olano2b 0 0 0 0 Ricep 0 0 0 0 Phillips2b 4 1 1 0 Fremn1b 4 1 1 2 T—3:05. A—40,908(49,642). West Division sio, MaholmSF . —Ad.Gonzalez. Rays 4, White Sox 0 CYounglf 0 0 0 0 Brucerf 2 0 0 0 J.uptonlf 3 1 3 1 W L Pct GB IP H R E R BBBO Totals 3 9 7 107 Totals 3 5 6 6 5 L udwcklf 3 0 1 1 Gattisc 4 1 1 1 SanFrancisco 14 10 .583 Colorado Miami 818 005 OOB 1 — 7 B.Penac 3 0 0 0 Uggla2b 3 0 0 0 CHICAGO— CesarRamos and Los Angeles 14 11 .560 '/r Aslros 7, Athletics 6 NicasioL,2-1 41 - 3 85 5 2 4 Newyork 3 8 2 0 0 1 OOB 8 — 6 N.Soto3b 3 0 0 0 CJhnsn3b 3 0 1 0 Colorado 13 12 ,520 1H 12-3 1 0 0 0 2 two relievers combined to five-hit Kahnle E—Saltalamacchia (4), Hechavarria (3). LOB Cozartss 3 0 0 0 Smmnsss 3 0 1 0 SanDiego 11 14 440 31/2 HOUSTON — Dexter Fowler hit 1 1 0 0 1 0 Miami 7,NewYork5. 28—Ozuna(5), R.Johnson(2), L eakep 2 0 0 0 Halep 3000 the Chicago White Sox in awin by C.Martin Arizona 8 19 .296 7R atiebreaking RBI single in HousBelisle 1 2 1 1 1 1 d'Arnaud(3). HR—Stanton (7), Saltalamacchia (4), Berndnph 1 0 0 0 Kimrelp 0 0 0 0 Tampa Bay. Ramos (1-1) gave up Los Angel e s B .Abreu (1). SB — E .Y oun g (12). S — Y elich. SF — D . MParrp 0 0 0 0 ton's four-run eighth inning, and Saturday'sGames W,1-2 7 6 2 2 1 3 Wright. Christnp 0 0 0 0 all five hits over five innings in his Maholm Washi ngton4,SanDiego0 ithrowH,3 1 0 0 0 3 2 the Astros beat Oakland. Fowler IP H R E R BBSO Totals 28 1 2 1 Totals 3 1 4 8 4 SanFrancisco5, Cleveland3 first scoreless start of the season. W B.Wil s on 0 0 1 1 2 0 Miami C incinnati 100 0 0 0 800 — 1 alsohadasolo homerasHouston He started in place of Matt Moore, JansenS,9-11 1 Pittsburgh 6,St. Louis1 1 0 0 0 2 Slowey 4 5 5 5 2 4 Atlanta 202 000 Bgx — 4 Milwa ukee5,ChicagoCubs3 snapped a three-game losing B.Wilson pi t ched to 2 ba tt e rs i n the 9t h . DP — C inc i n nati 1, Atlanta1. LOB—Cincinnati 3, Hand 1 0 0 0 0 1 who had TommyJohn surgery on Atlanta 4, Cincinnati 1 H BP — by N ic asi o (Pui g ). WP — W ithr ow . Da.JenningsBS,1-1 2 1 1 0 1 1 Atlanta4.28—Ludwick (3). HR —Freeman(6), J.Upstreak. Chris Carter connected for Tuesday. Miami 7,N.Y.Mets6,10 innings T—3:38. A—45,241(56,000). M.DunnW,2-3 2 0 0 0 0 4 ton (7),Ga tis (6).SB—J.Upton (3). Philadelphia 6, Arizona5 a two-run shot in the second. C ishek S,5-6 1 0 0 0 1 1 IP H R E R BBBO L.A. Dodgers 6, Colorado3 New york Cincinnati TampaBay Chicago Nationals 4, Padres 0 Today'sGam es 52-3 8 6 6 1 6 LeakeL,2-2 Meiia 7 8 4 4 0 4 ab r hbi ab r hbi Miami (Koehle2-1) r at N.Y.Mets(Gee1-1), 10:10 Oakland ab r hbi Houslon ab r hbi 2-3 0 0 0 1 1 C.TorresBS,1-2 1- 3 1 0 0 0 0 M.Parra Z obrist2b 3 1 0 0 Eatoncf 4 0 0 0 a.m. WASHINGTON — Tanner Roark 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Crispdh 4 1 1 1 Altuve2b 4 1 1 0 Familia 1 0 0 0 1 1 Christiani DJnngscf 5 0 1 1 Semien3b 3 0 0 0 Cincinnati(Cueto2-2) atAtlanta(Teheran2-1),10:35 DNorrsc 3 1 2 0 Fowlercf 4 2 2 2 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 Atlanta Rice Myersrf 5 1 1 0 JAreu1b 4 0 0 0 pitched a three-hitter for the first a.m. 11-3 0 0 0 2 2 HaleW,1-0 Jasoph-c 2 0 0 0 Jcastroc 4 1 1 1 Matsuzaka 8 2 1 1 2 4 Longori 3b 5 0 0 0 Viciedo rf 3 0 1 0 SanDiego(Kennedy1-3) at Washington(Jordan0-3), complete game of his career as Lowriess 5 0 1 1 Springrrf 4 0 1 1 FarnsworthL,0-1 1 1 1 1 0 1 KimbrelS,8-9 1 0 0 0 1 2 SRdrgzlf 2 0 0 0 Konerkdh 4 0 2 0 10:35a.m. HBP — by M .D unn ( C .Y oung). PB — Sa ltal a m ac chi a . T — 2:17. A — 33,702 (49, 586). Dnldsn3b 4 0 1 0 Krauss1b 3 1 0 1 Joyceph -I f 2 0 0 0 AIRmrzss 4 0 0 0 Washington beat San Diego. ChicagoCubs(Hammel 3-1) at Milwaukee(W.Peralta Call T—3:35.A—21,492 (41,922). asp1b 3 0 0 0 Guzmn1b 0 0 0 0 Loney 1b 4 1 3 1 De Azalf 3 0 0 0 Roark set down the first16 batters 3-0),11:10a.m. Barton1b 0 0 0 0 Carterdh 3 1 1 2 Forsythdh 2 1 0 0 GBckh2b 3 0 2 0 Pittsburgh(Volquez1-1) atSt. Louis(Wainwright4-1), Interleague Reddckrf 4 1 2 0 Presleylf 3 0 1 0 before San Diegocatcher Rene D eJessph-dh1 0 0 0 Nietoc 2 0 0 0 11:15a.m. Pirates 6, Cardinals 1 ycf 2 2 0 0 MDmn3b 3 0 0 0 YEscorss 4 0 2 0 Rivera, an.074 batter entering the Cleveland (Salazar 0-3) at SanFrancisco (Vogelsong Gentr Giants 5, indians 3 Mosslf 4 1 2 3 MGnzlzss 3 1 1 0 Hanignc 4 0 2 2 0-1),1:05p.m. game, hit a solid single to center Punto2b 4 0 2 0 ST. LOUIS —Gaby Sanchezhad Totals 37 4 9 4 Totals 3 0 0 5 0 Colorado(J.DeLaRosa 1-3) at LA. Dodgers(Ryu Totals 3 5 6 115 Totals 3 1 7 8 7 Tampa Bay 8 2 1 8 0 1 BBB — 4 field with one out in the sixth SAN FRANCISCO — Hunter two RBls in a four-run fourth 3-1),1:10p.m. Oakland 200 000 103 — 6 Chicago 800 800 BBB — 0 Pence hit a two-run single in San Philadelphia(Burnett0-1)atArizona(Mccarthy 0-4), Houslon inning. — 7 inning and Pittsburgh's bullpen 120 000 84x E — V i c i e d o ( 2 ) . D P — T a mp a Ba y1 . L OB — T a mp a 1:10 p.m. DP— Oakland 1,Houston 2.LOB— Oakland 6, Bay10,Chicago7.28—Myers(4), Hanigan2(4), G. Francisco's four-run fifth inning, worked sevenstrong innings after Monday'sGames Houston 2. 28—Crisp (2), D.Norris (3), Springer(2). Beckham Ban Diego Washington (1). 38—De.Jennings (1). S—Nieto. leading the Giants to a victory over Chicago CubsatCincinnati,4:10 p.m. starter Francisco Liriano left with HR—Moss(4), Fowler (2), Carter(3). SB—Crisp(7). ab r hbi ab r hbi IP H R E R BBSO Milwaukee atSt.Louis, 5:15p.m. SF — Crisp. Cleveland. Buster Poseyadded E carerss 4 0 0 0 Spancf 5 0 1 1 flu-like symptoms and di z ziness Tampa Bay ColoradoatArizona, 6:40p.m. IP H R E R BBSO C.Ramos W,1-1 5 5 0 0 2 0 Denorfilf 4 0 1 0 Rendon3b 4 1 1 0 a solo homer in the sixth as San in a victory over St. Louis. Matt SanDiegoatSanFrancisco, 7:15p.m. Oakland B.Gomes 3 0 0 0 0 1 V enalerf 4 0 0 0 Werthrf 4 1 2 0 Francisco earned its third consec61-3 4 3 3 2 7 Oviedo Straily Gyorko2b 4 0 1 0 LaRoch1b 3 1 1 1 Holliday had an RBI double for the 1 0 0 0 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 Chicago Cook Alonso1b 3 0 0 0 Dsmndss 4 0 3 1 utivewin.Posey,whowontheNL American Lea ue Cardinals, who have mustered Doolittle L,0-2 0 4 4 4 0 0 Joh.Danks L,2-1 52-3 7 4 4 4 4 Amarstcf 3 0 0 0 Espinos2b 3 0 0 1 MVP award in 2012,went1 for 3 five runs in their past six games. Gregerson 1 0 0 0 0 1 Noesi 11-3 1 0 0 0 1 Petersn3b 3 0 0 0 Frndsnlf 3 1 1 0 Rangers 6, Mariners 3 Houston 4000 and is batting .103 (4 for 39) over Downs 2 1 0 0 0 3 R iverac 2 0 1 0 Leonc They got three hits and a run in 61-3 6 3 3 2 6 C.Ramos Keuchel Grandlph-c 0 0 0 0 Roarkp 3 0 1 0 pitchedto1batter inthe6th. his past13 games. SEATTLE — Mitch Moreland seven innings off five Pittsburgh WilliamsW,1-1 BS,1-1 2 5 3 3 1 1 WP — Oviedo, Joh.Danks. Cashnrp 1 0 0 0 ValdesS,1-1 2 3- 0 0 0 0 2 T—3:11.A—22,412(40,615). Roachp 0 0 0 0 relievers. drove in Prince Fielder with a tieCleveland Ban Francisco pitchedto4 baters inthe8th. Nadyph 1 0 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi breaking sacrifice fly in the eighth Doolittle WP—Greg erson. PB—Jaso. Thayer p 0 0 0 0 Pittsburgh St. Louis Bourncf 5 2 2 0 Pagancf 3 0 1 1 Drioles 3, Royals 2 (10 innings) T—3:13. A—17,850(42,060). inning, and Texasheld off Seattle. Totals 2 9 0 3 0 Totals 3 34 10 4 ab r hbi S wisher1b 5 1 2 1 Pencerl 4 0 1 2 Ban Diego B B BBBB OBB — 8 M arte If 3ab1r hbi 0 0 Mcrpnt3b 3 1 0 0 Aaron Poreda (1-0) pitched two K ipnis2b 5 0 1 2 Belt1b 4 0 0 0 ton 388 881 Ogx — 4 BALTIMORE — Nick Markakis sin- Washing JHrrsn 3b 4 1 1 0 JhPerltss 3 0 1 0 Red Sox 7, Blue Jays 6 E—E.cabrera(3), Alonso(1), Gyorko(3), LaRoche AMcct cf 4 1 1 1 Hollidylf 4 0 1 1 C Santn3b 3 0 0 0 Poseyc 3 1 1 1 scoreless innings to earn his first gled in the winning run in the10th B rantlylf 3 0 0 0 Morself 3 1 1 0 (2). DP —Washington 1. LOB—San Diego 4, Wash- GSnchz1b 3 1 1 2 MAdms1b 402 0 victory since June25, 2009, with Acarerss 3 0 0 0 J.Perezlf 1 0 0 0 TORONTO — A.J. Pierzynski hit inning after two throwing errors ington 9. 28—Desmond(4). SB—Desmond(1). SI.Davi s ph-1b 0 1 0 0 YMolinc 4 0 0 0 YGomsc 4 0 1 0 Sandovl3b 3 0 0 0 the Chicago White Sox. Joakim Cashner,Roark. SF—Espinosa. his eighth career grand slam, Will by pitcher DannyDuffy laid the NWal k r2b 4 0 0 0 Craigrf 4 0 1 0 D vMrprf 4 0 2 0 Affeldtp 0 0 0 0 IP H R E R BBBO Tabata Soria got three outs for his sixth rf 4 1 3 1 Bourioscf 3 0 0 0 McAlstp 2 0 1 0Romop 0 0 0 0 Middlebr ooks added a sol o home groundwork for Baltimore's victoBan Di e go 3 0 0 0 M.Ellis2b 4 0 0 0 save in six chances. Chsnhllph 1 0 0 0 Bcrwfrss 3 1 1 0 CashnerL,2-3 6 9 4 4 1 5 Mercerss run and Boston held on to beat ry over KansasCity. The Orioles TSnchzc 4 0 1 2Lyonsp 1 0 0 0 C.Lee p 0 0 0 0 B.Hicks 2b 2 1 0 0 Roach 1 1 0 0 0 1 Lirianop 1 0 0 0 Jay ph 1 0 0 0 Outmnp 0 0 0 0Li nccmp 1 0 0 0 Toronto. Jose Bautista andJuan went eight straight innings without Thayer Texas Seattle 1 0 0 0 0 1 Pimntlp 1 0 0 0 Manessp 0 0 0 0 Shawp 0 0 0 0 JGutrrzp 0 0 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi Washington Francisco hit solo home runs for scoring before facing Duffy, who p 0 0 0 0 Fornatrp 0 0 0 0 Giambiph 0 0 0 0 Blancoph 1 1 1 1 Choicelf 5 0 1 1 MSndrsrf 3 1 1 1 oarkW,2-0 9 3 0 0 1 8 JHughs Snider ph 1 0 0 0 Choatep 0 0 0 0 theBlueJays,whohavelostasea- had pitched 8/s scoreless innings R K luberpr 0 0 0 0 Machip 0 0 0 0 Andrus ss 3 1 1 1 Romerph-rf 2 0 1 0 HBP —byThayer(Frandsen). JuWlsn p 0 0 0 0 Descal s ph 1 0 0 0 Arias3b 1 0 0 0 Fielderdh 4 1 1 1 Almontcf 5 0 0 0 son-high four straight games. T—2:19. A—31,590(41,408). on the season. Watsonp 0 0 0 0 Totals 35 3 9 3 Totals 2 9 5 6 5 ABeltre3b 4 0 2 0 Cano2b 3 0 1 0 PAlvrzph 1 0 0 0 C leveland 101 0 1 0 800 — 3 R iosrf 5 0 1 0 Hartdh 3 0 0 0 Boston Toronto KansasCity Baltimore Melncn p 0 0 0 0 Phillies 6, Diamondbacks5 San Francisco 000 041 Bgx — 6 Morlnd1b 3 1 1 1 Seager3b 4 2 2 1 ab r hbi ab r hbi ab r hbi ab r hbi Totals 33 6 7 6 Totals 3 2 1 5 1 E — M c Al l i s ter (2). DP—San Francisco 1. LOBDMrph2b 4 1 1 0 Smoak1b 3 0 1 0 Pedroia 2b 4 0 1 0 Reyes ss 3 1 0 0 Aokirf 5 0 2 0 JWeeksdh 4 1 2 0 Pittsburgh OBB 488 002 — 6 Cleveland 9, SanFrancisco 3.28—Bourn(1), SwishL Martncf 4 2 2 0 Ackleylf 3 0 0 0 Victornrf 4 1 0 0 Mecarrlf 5 1 1 0 PHOENIX —Pinch hitter Cody Infante2b 4 0 0 0 N.cruzrf 4 1 0 0 St. Louis OBB 018 000 — 1 er 2 (6),Pagan(6). HR —Posey(5). SB—Blanco(1). Chirinsc 2 0 1 1 Zuninoc 2 0 0 1 D.Ortizdh 1 1 0 0 Bautistdh 5 2 3 2 Hosmer1b 4 0 1 1 Markks1b 5 0 2 2 LOB —Pittsburgh 3, St. Louis 9.28—G.Sanchez SF — Asche hit a two-run double in Pagan. BMifferss 4 0 0 0 Carp1b 3 2 1 0 Frncsc1b-3b 4 1 1 1 BButlerdh 4 0 1 0 A.Jonescf 4 0 1 1 3), Jh.Peral t a (5), Holliday (7). SB—B o uri o s (2). IP H R E R BBBO Totals 34 6 115 Totals 3 2 3 6 3 Philadelphia's four-run eighth GSizmrlf 2 1 1 2 Navarrc 4 1 3 1 AGordnlf 5 1 1 0 Wietersc 4 0 0 0 —Mercer. Cleveland Texas OBB 038 012 — 6 Przynsc 3 1 1 4 Rasmscf 5 0 1 0 S.Perezc 5 0 3 0 Hardyss 4 0 1 0 inning and the Phillies rallied after IP H R E R BBBO McAffisterL,3-1 5 5 4 4 1 6 Seattle 118 1BB 000 — 3 Mdlrks3b 4 1 1 1 Lawrie3b-2b 5 0 2 0 Paredspr 0 0 0 0 Flahrty3b 4 0 1 0 Pittsburgh C.Lee 1-3 1 1 1 0 1 a shaky start by Cliff Lee to beat E—Andrus(5).DP—Seattle 1.LOB—Texas8,Se- J Herrrss 4 0 0 0 Sierrarf 3 0 0 0 Hayesc 0 0 0 0 Schoop2b 3 1 1 0 Liriano 2 2 0 0 2 2 Outman 2-3 0 0 0 0 2 attle 8.28—Andrus(5).HR —M.Saunders(1),Seager BrdlyJrcf 4 0 0 0 Encrncph-1b 2 0 1 1 V alenci3b 3 0 1 0 Loughlf 4 0 0 0 Arizona. ThePhillies fell behind 22-3 2 1 1 2 3 Shaw PimentelW2-0 2 0 0 0 0 1 (3). SB —Rios (5), Cano (1). S—Chirinos. SF—AnGoins2b 3 0 1 0 Dyson ph-cf 1 0 0 0 1 1-3 0 0 0 1 1 5-0 in the first three innings asLee J.Hughes Ban Francisco drus,Moreland,Zunino. Diaz ph-rf 1 0 0 0 Maxwllcf 3 0 1 1 Ju.Wilson H, 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 Lincecum 42-3 9 3 2 2 3 IP H R E R BBBO Totals 29 7 5 7 Totals 4 0 6 13 5 Mostksph-3b1 0 0 0 struggled. WatsonH,5 1 0 0 0 0 1 J.Gutierrez W,1-1 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 Texas Boston 0 06 010 800 — 7 AEscor ss 4 1 1 0 Melancon 1 0 0 0 0 1 Machi H,2 12-3 0 0 0 1 1 Lewis 5 5 3 3 3 6 Toronto Totals 39 2 112 Totals 3 6 3 8 3 Philadelphia Arizona 300 000 821 — 6 St. Louis Affeldt H,2 11-3 0 0 0 0 0 PoredaW,1-0 2 1 0 0 1 2 DP — Toronto 2. LOB—Boston 4, Toronto 11. Kansas City 001 BB1 BBB 0 — 2 ab r hbi ab r hbi Lyons L,0-2 6 4 4 4 1 4 RomoS,6-6 1 0 0 0 0 0 Cotts H,2 2-3 0 0 0 0 2 2B — Carp (3), G.Sizemore(3), Bautista(4). HRBaltimore 2 0 0BBB BBB 1 — 3 Reverecf 5 0 2 1 Poffockcf 5 1 3 1 Maness 2 1 0 0 0 1 HBP — by S ha w (Po se y), by Rom o (G i a m bi ) . PBOgandoH,5 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 Pierzynski(2), Middlebrooks(2), Bautista (7), FranOneoutwhenwinningrunscored. Roffinsss 5 0 1 1 Prado3b 5 0 1 0 2-3 2 2 2 1 0 Posey. Fornataro SoriaS,6-6 1 0 0 0 0 1 cisco(2).CS—Pedroia(2). E—Duffy2(2). DP—KansasCity 1.LOB—Kansas Utley2b 4 0 1 0 Gldsch1b 3 1 0 1 1 -3 0 0 0 0 0 Choate T—2:47. A—42,088(41,915).
Today'sGames Boston(Lester2-3) at Toronto(Dickey1-3), 10:07 a.m. KansasCity (Shields2-2)at Baltimore(Mi.Gonzalez 1-1),10:35a.m. Detroit (Verlander3-1) at Minnesota(Gibson3-1),
Detroit
Los Angeles New york ab r hbi ah r hbi Cowgill rf 5 0 1 0 Ellsury cf 4 0 1 0 Troutcf 3 1 2 1 Jeterss 4 0 1 0 Puiolsdh 5 1 2 0 Beltrandh 4 0 0 0 HKndrc2b 4 0 0 0 ASorinrf 4 0 1 0 Aybarss 4 1 0 0 ISuzukirf 0 0 0 0
COLLEGE BASEBALL
Beavers rally in eighth inning to take 4-2 victory over Ducks From wire reports
two-out, two-rkm single to plate two
CORVALLIS — Oregon State rallied for four runs in the bottom of
insurance runs that proved decisive
the eighth inning on Saturday night to defeat Oregon 4-2 at Goss Stadium, clinching the Civil War baseball series for the third year in a row and for the fifth time in the past six seasons.
Right fielder Dylan Davis smashed a bases-loaded, two-run double to right-center field with n o
o u ts
to erase a 1-0 Oregon lead.Third baseman Caleb Hamilton added a
conference champions.
be stopped again by reliever Scott Schultz, who earned his second save when the Ducks mounted a come- pitched eight-plus innings and eighth to delight the crowd of 3,307, in as many nights and his fourth of back in the ninth. earned his second win over the the second-largest regular-season the season. The Beavers' (30-8 overall, 13-4 Ducks (31-12, 10-7) in the past two gathering in school history. LeadThe victory was the 700th at OSU Pac-12 Conference) fourth consec- seasons. He struck out seven, did off batter Jeff Hendrix walked and for head coach Pat Casey, now in his utive win in the series over the past not give up a hit between the third advanced to second on Andy Pe- 20th seasonleading the Beavers. Catwo seasons moved them further and eighth innings, and allowed terson's single; Cleavenger then sey is 700-397-4 (.638) at OSU and ahead of idle Washington in the Pa- two runs on four hits before being walked Michael Conforto to load 871-510-5 (.679) in 27 seasons overall. cific-12 Conference title race. OSU relieved after a leadoff single in the the bases for Davis, who was 1-for-3 The series concludes at 1:03 p.m. leads the Huskies, whose Saturday ninth. to that point. today (ESPNU). Junior lefty Jace Fry game with Washington State was Stymied on four singles through Those final two runs proved cru- (7-1, 1.95) is the projected starter for rainedout,by .028 percentage points seven innings by undefeated Or- ciaL Oregon rallied in the ninth for the Beavers, opposed by the Ducks' (.765-.737) in its quest to repeat as egon starter Andrew Gold (9-0), the second night in a row, only to Trent Paddon (1-1, 1.65). S ophomore
A nd r e w
the Beavers rocked reliever Gar-
Moor e
rett Cleavenger for four runs in the
D4
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, APRIL 27, 2014
GOLF ROUNDUP
NFL COMMENTARY
o o es,no ro ems or o atZuric Home-ie a vanta e un air or Sea aw s?
The Associated Press AVONDALE, La. — If SuengYul Noh can hold on to the lead
65 to reach 18-under 198. No player has completed all four rounds
in the Zurich Classic, he will do it
der, the score Billy Horschel posted last year, when he became the sixth player in the last nine years
on the course at better than 20 un-
front of fans who can appreciate how much bigger Noh's mission is than simply winning his first PGA
to secure his maiden PGA Tour tri-
umph in New Orleans.
Tour event.
Wearing yellow and
b lack
Also on Saturday:
Lewis leads Swinging Skirts
ribbons on his hat to honor victims of the April 16 South Ko-
LPGA Classic: DALY CITY, Calif.
rean ferry accident, Noh used a string of birdies late in his round Saturday to surge two strokes ahead of Keegan Bradley atop the
— Stacy Lewis matched 17-yearold playing partner Lydia Ko with birdies on Nos. 15 and 16 and
By Larry Stone
leaderboard.
added another on the 17th to take a one-stroke lead Saturday in
It is Noh's first career lead through three rounds on the tour,
the Swinging Skirts LPGA Classic. The third-ranked Lewis and
whelming dominance of the NFL that the unveiling of its schedule has become an annual day of breathless anticipation and nonstop debate. All for the thrilling payoff of learning
fourth-ranked Ko each shot 4-un-
on what days, and at what times, your favor-
der 68 at Lake Merced. Levy maintains lead in China:
ite team will be playing opponents that had already been revealed months earlier.
and comes in a city where sports
— particularly the success of the
JonathanBachman/The AssociatedPress
New Orleans Saints — became
Seung-Yul Noh, of South Korea, hits his second shot on the second hole an uplifting force after Hurricane during the third round of the PGA Zurich Classic on Saturday. Katrina.
Noh finds himself representing — and captivating — a nation "Hopefully, I'll make all the mourningthe more than 300 dead Korean people happy," Noh said. or missing — many of them stu- "It was very sad news for the Kodents — from the sinking of a ferry rean ship, so hopefully anothin the waters off his home country. er bogey-free round tomorrow,
NHL ROUNDUP
And for the Seattle Seahawks, the sched-
Alexander Levy followed his ca-
ule revealedWednesday is apparently a tribute to their overwhelming dominance at CenturyLink Field.
reer-best62 with a 2-under 70 in
pelting rain and gusting wind to
Noh is the first player to complete 54holes at the TPC Louisiana
final round of the China Open. Spain's Alvaro Quiros was second after a 68.
take a three-stroke lead into the
MOTOR SPORTS ROUNDUP
h or-
four p r i me-time games at h ome. According to Curtis Crabtree's report in Pro Football Talk, th e r esult
of the NFL's fear that the Seahawks playing in Seattle is likely to produce a blowout, thus causing an a udience exodus. In some quarters, this is being p erceived as a n inexcusable slight
beat Red Wings to advance
to the Super Bowl
champions. How dare the league deprive the nation the
exhilarating sights t
'
g
and sounds of Se-
•
The Associated Press -
H orror o f
rors, the Seahawks
this is
Bruins
BOSTON
SEATTLE — It is a tribute to the over-
SHENZHEN, China — France's
and hopefully good news for the Koreans." without a bogey. He shot a 7-under
The Seattle Times
ahawks f a natics
IIgggl
$eggg Th e 2014 NFL sc h edule seemed to show the le a gue is notfond of vi s itingtheEm-
era ldCity.Alook a twhich teams wi l l host the mo s t prime-time g a mes: Q Denver 0 Broncos, Pallas Cowboys, Green Bay Packers, Philadelphia Eagles ~ f 5 more C teams host two prime-time 1 Defending-
Tuukka
Rask made 31 saves to help
get one at home.
the defending Eastern Con-
ference champion Boston Bruins beat the Red Wings
But it leaves the fans with a weird dilemma. On the one hand,
4-2 in Game 5 of their first-
there's nothing us perpetually aggrieved
round playoff series on Saturday and eliminate Detroit
folks out here in the Pacific Northwest like
from the postseason.
tion over such injustices as lack of respect,
The Bruins, who finished the regular season with the
geographic isolation, and East Coast bias. This schedule provides the trifecta, and many fans have been vocal in displaying their displeasure. They have, after all, been indoctrinated into the realm of shoulder chips by the Seahawks' players themselves. From Russell Wilson to Richard Sherman to Doug Baldwin and beyond, the Seahawks have been fueled by the seemingly perpetual belief that they have not gotten the proper respect. It's not surprising that fans want to
more than venting with righteous indigna-
b est record in th e N H L ,
advance to the conference s emifinals against t h e Montreal Canadiens.
Loui Eriksson opened the scoring for Boston, and Zdeno Chara snapped a second-period tie to give the Bruins the lead for good. Milan Lucic also scored,
and Jarome Iginla added an empty-netter. Pavel Datsyuk and Hen-
rik Zetterberg scored and Jonas Gustavsson stopped 29 shots for Detroit.
In other games Saturday: Penguins 3, Blue Jackets 1: PITTSBURGH — Jus-
si Jokinen scored the goahead goal in the third period as Pittsburgh took a 3-2 lead in their Eastern Conference playoff series. Chris Kunitz and K r i s
L e tang
Photos by Steve Helber/ The Associated Press
Joey Logano does a burnout after winning a NASCAR Sprint Cup race at Richmond on Saturday.
0 ano'S ae aS es im s i c mon win The Associated Press RICHMOND, Va. — Joey Logano
Joey Logano cele-
tap into that energy as well.
The problem is that the very notion, if accurate, of denying Seahawks home games because they'll win them too handily is, perversely, the ultimate sign of respect. It's hard to get too hot and bothered as a Seattle fan when their ability to influence the outcome
of a game is being validated by the league. But it's not as if the league is taking home
games away from Seattle. They'll still get eight of them, just like always. It's just that, for now, seven will be played in the afternoon — which, when you get down to it, is much more convenient for all involved. Rest assured that the television audience for attractive Seahawks game at the Clink will
also scored for Pittsburgh.
took advantage of a three-car duel by sneaking below the trio to take the
lead Saturday night, outrunning for-
brates In
still be vast, even outside of prime time. Un-
Boone Jenner scored the
lone goal for Columbus, which played its first Game 5 in franchise history. Kings 3, Sharks 0: SAN
mer champions Matt Kenseth, Jeff
victory
Gordon and Brad Keselowski to win
lane.
JOSE, Calif. — Jonathan
the 0.75-mile oval came seemingly
Quick made 30 saves to shut out San Jose for the fourth time in his career
from nowhere after a restart with nine laps to go. He sat fourth and on the outside with Kenseth lead-
in the postseason and Los
ing, Dale Earnhardt Jr. alongside
Angeles staved off elimination for a second straight game. Tyler Toffoli, Anze Kopitar and Jeff Carter
in second and Gordon on the inside
scored for the Kings. Antti
Instead, when Gordon, Kenseth and Keselowski raced in a triangle Kenseth hadcome from nowhere jockeying for position, Logano went after lurking in the back of the top underneath all three with three laps 10 all race long, suddenly charging to goand then held offGordon for through the field and passing Gorhis fifth career NASCAR Sprint don to grab the lead with 38 laps to Cup victory. go. It was his first lead. "That's the best drive I've ever Gordon, who led 173 laps, and had here. What a crazy finish," Lo- teammate Earnhardt both seemed gano said. poised to challenge at the end, but
I say, for now, because by virtue of the league's new "flex scheduling" policy, games can switched into Sunday Night Footballas early asW eek 5,asopposed to Week 11 in previous years. That means Seahawks home dates against the Cowboys (Oct. 6), Raiders (Nov. 2) and Giants (Nov. 9), as well as three after that, could become prime-time home games, making this discussion moot. Besides, the Seahawks have more to worry about than the number of prime-time home games. They were saddled with an unusually early bye (Week 4), leaving them with a finishing stretch of 13 straight weeks
Niemi allowed three goals on 19 shots and got pulled for th e
s econd s t raight
game for the Sharks. Perhaps more importantly, San Jose also lost star de-
fenseman Marc-Edouard Vlasic to an undisclosed injury after he was roughed by Jarret Stoll late in the
first period. Avalanche 4, Wild 3: DENVER
-
Nathan
MacKinnon scored 3:27 into overtime after P.A.
Parenteau tied the game late in regulation, helping Colorado take a 3-2 series
lead. MacKinnon poked the puck past Darcy Kuemper's glove with two defenders all over him. The rookie also had two assists. Parenteau scored with 1:14
left after Avalanche coach Patrick Roy pulled goaltender Semyon Varlamov
with 2:22 remaining. Nick Holden and Cody McLeod also added goals for the Avalanche.
at Richmond International Raceway. Logano's first career victory on
in third, in prime position to move underneath the leader and grab the vlctory.
He also joined Kevin Harvick as the only drivers with more than one
teammates Logano and Keselowski
after the final restart, Team Penske
victory this season.
became the ones to watch.
All night long, their cars had easily been the fastest on fresh rubber. "All night long, I just had to let the lowed by Keselowski and Kenseth. K enseth and K e selowski h a d 2 and the 22 go right by me because words post-race, with the fuming they were so fast" on fresh tires, Keselowski saying Kenseth ran him Gordon said about Keselowski and off the track. Logano. "I had a shot at winning the race Signs of the wild ending may and he ran me off the track," Kesel- have come very early. owski said. "It was just a mind-bogClint Bowyer started third and gling move to me.... I thought it was hoped a return to one of his best uncalled for." tracks would allow him to put last Gordon said Kenseth was doing September behind him. That was what he needed to do to hang on. when Bowyer's intentional spin late Kyle Busch, never in contention all night, rose to finish third, fol-
"I think Matt did what he thought he had to do to win," Gordon said.
less a blowout develops, of course.
rookie pole-sitter Kyle Larson on the opening lap, sending Larson spinning. He also twice pitted under a green flag, right before a caution flag came out, and was bat-
without a break. They open with t hree
tling Danica Patrick for 38th place
last year's records — and it's a potentially brutal slate.
when a fire in his engine ultimately caused him to park for the night. Also on Saturday:
Power wins 3rd pole for Alabama lndyCar race: BIRMINGHAM, Ala.
straight games against 2013 playoff teams, and close with five division games over the
final six weeks. Through in the quality of opponents — sixth toughest, according to But itcould have been worse, as Peter King's fascinating look into the machinations of making a schedule reveals. Writing in Sports Illustrated's Monday Morning
— Will Power won the pole position for the third time at Barber Motorsports Park. The two-time Barber
Quarterback, King reported that the NFL's
winner posted the time to beat fairly early in Fast Six qualifying for IndyCar's Indy Grand Prix of Alabama. James Hinchdiffe starts second after sitting out the final few minutes, followed by defending champion Ryan Hunter-Reay, Josef Newgarden, Scott Dixon and Helio
three-game road trip. And not only that: One
Castroneves.
Torrence qualifies No. 1 in NHRA: BAYTOWN, Texas — Steve Torrence was the fastest Top Fuel quali-
in the last race before the playoffs fier in the NHRA SpringNationals at jumbled the finishing order, and the Royal Purple Raceway. Del Worsh"He started making his car real drivers who made the Chase, lead- am topped the Funny Car field, and wide. He probably didn't make the ing to a NASCAR investigation. Allen Johnson was the fastest in Pro guys behind him real happy." Instead of a clean run, Bowyer hit Stock.
runner-up schedule, which very nearly became reality, had the Seahawks playing a of those trips would have occurred after a Monday night game, something the league tries to avoid at all coasts.
Scheduling maven Howard Katz told King he could have reluctantly lived with that schedule. If commissioner Roger Good-
ell had approved it — and Katz told King, "I think we would have had an interesting discussion with Roger about it" — then any and
all howling by the Seahawks and their fans wouldhave been fairgame. But as it is, I think it's far more pertinent
for Seahawks' fans to focus their attention on navigating toward a prime-time game that can't be denied by anyone: the Super Bowl on Feb. 1, 2015, in Arizona.
SUNDAY, APRIL 27, 2014• THE BULLETIN
D5
NBA PLAYOFFS
ressures i sto rai Bazersa er ame o ss By Anne M. Peterson
to get all of those."
The Associated Press
Portland's LaMarcus Aldridge re-
PORTLAND — Houston's James
Harden says the pressure has shifted to the Portland Trail Blazers in their
spectfully disagrees.
"We're still in control, the pressure
is still on them," said Aldridge, who had more than 40 points in each of
first-round playoff series. Portland won the first two games the first two games before the Rockin Houston before the Rockets won the third, 121-116 in overtime on Fri-
day night at the Moda Center. Game 4 is tonight. " The pressure is on them," Harden said. "Sunday is going to be a great game and we have to do a great job of beingready,being focused.We have to quiet runs to a minimum and just
ets held him to 23. "They lost two at
home sothey're trying to come here and they have to take two. They came
out and played as they should, they playedlike they were desperate and needed a win, like they didn't want their season to end."
Only three teams have come back to win after losing the first two games
be out there for four quarters. The
of aseven-game series athome: The hustle plays, the loose balls, we have last was the 2004-05 Mavericks, who
TRAIL BLAZERS 2, ROCKETS1 Houston coach Kevin McHale adNo team has ever come back from dressed Portland's All-Star forward 0-3, which made the Rockets' victory by tinkering with his lineup, startcrucial. ing Omer Asik in place of Terrence The Blazers seemed unfazed by Jones. Asik and Dwight Howard the loss, still brimming with confi- were able to keep Aldridge off baldence over their 2-1 advantage. anceformuch ofGame 3. "It would be a problem if we lost McHale also found success with Game1: Trail Blazers122, Rockets120, OT the game becauseof eff ort or be- a small lineup of Harden, Daniels, Game 2: Trail Blazers112, Rockets105 cause we weren't focused on taking Jeremy Lin and Pat Beverley with Game 3: Rockets121, Trail Blazers116, OT care of business, but we were," said Howard. Today at P o rtland 6 : 30 p.m. "For us to win this series we have point guard Damian Lillard, who led Wednesda at Houston 6:30 .m. the Blazers with 30 points. "It's the to stay composed," Howard said. x -May 2 at Portland T BA playoffs and nobody said we were "You can't relax against this team x-May 4~ a t Houston • TB A going to come out and sweep them. You have to attack their bigs, attack came back against the Rockets.
We're lucky we were able to win two
their smalls and put them on their
+
x-ifnecessary
games in Houston and be in the posi- heels. That's the only way we're gotion we're in right now. "
ing to win this series."
NBAROUNDUP
Mavs win onCarter's buzzer-beating 3-pointer The Associated Press
was fouled in the corner and knocked down three free hit a double-pump 3-point- throws. But George pulled er at the buzzer to give the down an offensive rebound Dallas Mavericks a 109-108 to set up George Hill's drivDALLAS — Vince Carter
f;.xix'
v ictory in G ame 3 an d a
ing shot with 5 6
first -round series lead over the top-seeded San Antonio Spurs on Saturday. Carter took an inbound pass from Jose Calderon
left. Pero Antic missed a
seconds
with 1.7 seconds left in the
with29.
3-pointer at the buzzer that would have forced overtime.
George scored 24 points. Paul Millsap led the Hawks
left corner. After a quick Heat 98, Bobcats 85: pump fake in front of Manu CHARLOTTE, N.C. — LeBGinobili, Carter released the
ball just before the buzzer. The winning shot was held up on review. Ginobili had given the Spurs a 108-106 lead on a layup before Dallas called timeout to set up the play for
ron James had 30 points and 1 0 rebounds, and M i a m i
took a 3-0 series lead. Dwyane Wade added 17 points for the Heat. Al Jefferson had 20
points for the Bobcats, who are still searching for the
first postseason win in franchise history. k ept t h e Thunder 92, Grizzlies 89: eight-seeded Ma v ericks MEMPHIS, Tenn. — Reserve close in the fourth quarter Reggie Jackson scored a and finished with 29 points. playoff-best 32 points, leadTim Duncan led the Spurs ing Oklahoma City to an with 22 points. overtime win and tying up In other games Saturday: their series at two apiece. Pacers 91, Hawks 88: AT- Jackson had only scored LANTA — Paul George and 15 points combined in this Carter. M onta E l li s
David West hit key 3-point-
series, but the guard shook
ers down the stretch, and top-seeded Indiana evened the opening-round series at two wins apiece. George put
off his shooting woes by hitting 11 of 16. He outscored
the Pacers ahead 86-85 with
Kevin Durant and Russell
Westbrook, who struggled through their worst scoring
a jumper beyond the arc, and game of the series. Durant West hit another trey with was 5 of 21 for 15 points, 1:33 remaining. Atlanta had while Westbrook was 6 of 24 The Associated Press file photo
a chance after Kyle Korver
for 15 points.
The NBA is investigating a report of an audio recording in which a man purported to be Los Angeles Clippers owner Donald Sterling makes racist remarks while speaking to his girlfriend. NBA spokesman Mike Bass said in a statement that the league is in the process of authenticating the validity of the recording posted on TMZ's website. Bass called the comments "disturbing and offensive."
• TMZ says Clippers owner askedfriend not to post pictures 'with black people' By Antonio Gonzalez The Associated Press
SAN FRANCISCO — An-
ger, frustration and calls for a ction echoed around t h e
NBA on Saturday after an audio recording surfaced of a man identified as Los An-
geles Clippers owner Donald Sterling telling his girlfriend not to bring black people to games. Everybody except for the embattled C l ippers o w ner,
who has a decades-long history of alleged discrimination and offensive behavior,
seemed to have a response. The league said it was investigating th e r e cording posted on TMZ's website, calling the comments "disturbing and offensive." Lakers Hall of
Famer Magic Johnson, a target of Sterling's remarks, said he wouldn't attend Clippers' games as long as Sterling was the owner. Miami Heat star LeBron James asked new
What they're saying "There is no room for Donald Sterling in our league.There is no room for him." — LeBron James, Miami Heat forward "The reported comments made by Clippers owner Donald Sterling are reprehensible andunacceptable. The National Basketball Players Association must and will play avery active role in determining how this issue is addressed. Thereneeds to be animmediate investigation and if the reports are true, there needs to be strong and swift action taken." — Sacramento Mayor Kevin Johnson, a former NBA player "This is the first test for AdamSilver, becauseyou can't have this guy making statements like that ... (if it's Sterling on the recording), he has to suspendandfine him immediately." — Charles Barkley, TNT analyst "These statements are offensive anddespicable and haveno place in LosAngeles. I urge the NBAto act swiftly. L.A. fans deserve and demandbetter." — Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti "I would say it's probably disappointing to a lot of people, you know what I mean?Butyou lookat what's kind of gone on inthe past, it's very unfortunate, but I think it kind of tells the same story as what's been told if you pull up the record." — Shaun Livingston, Nets and former Clippers guard "I'm so angry that I just don't want to sayanything. I don't want to add validity to anything that he said bybeing out of character. But the NBAowners need to handle their own. They needto take him out to the shedand handle him. Not only is being ajerk not good, but it's not good for the business of basketball." — Chris Webber, TNT analyst "(Wife Cookie) and I will never go to aClippers game again as long as Donald Sterling is the owner." — Magic Johnson, Hall of Famer who was mentioned in the recording "The NBAmust investigate L.A. Clippers owner Donald Sterling's recent racial comments that were caught on tapeand discipline him. No oneshould be allowed to own a team if they have in fact engaged in this kind of racial language. Weare prepared at National Action Network to rally in front of the NBA headquarters if this matter is not immediately dealt with." — Rev. Al Sharpton
NBA Commissioner Adam Silver to t ak e a ggressive measures, saying "there is no room for Donald Sterling in our league." "Obviously, if the reports this month, telling a female people." "Don't put him on an Instaare true it's unacceptable in friend, identified as V. Stiviaour league," James said. "It no, that he was upset she post- gram for the world to have to doesn't matter, white, black ed a picture on her Instagram see so they have to call me," or Hispanic — all across the account of herself next to Los he says. "And don't bring him races it's unacceptable. As the Angeles Lakers legend Magic to my games." commissioner of our league Johnson. Silver spoke Saturday night "It bothers me a lot that you in Memphis, Tenn., before the they have to make a stand. They have to be very aggres- want to broadcast that you're Grizzlies' game against Oklasive with it. I don't know what associating with black peo- homa City, saying the league it will be, but we can't have ple," the man in the recording finds the audio tape "disturbthat in our league." says, later adding: "I'm just ing and offensive" and that A person identified by TMZ saying, in your ... Instagrams, Sterling agreed to not attend as Sterling can be heard in you don't have to have your- the Clippers' game Sunday at the recording, said to be made self with, walking with black Golden State.
Silver
s a i d th e
NBA
w ill move quickly i n i t s investigation. "We do hope to have this wrapped up in the next few days," Silver said. Clippers President Andy
NBA NOTEBOOK
Roeser said in a statement that
Wizards' Nenehit with one-gamesuspension
the team did not know if the tape is legitimate or has been
From wire reports
Clippers just want to play
the tape, identified by TMZ as
Los Angeles Clippers already rough-and-tumble coach Doc Rivers would
V. Stiviano, "is the defendant
playoff series between the
prefer to be talking about
in a lawsuit brought by the Sterling family alleging that she embezzled more than $1.8
Washington Wizards and Chicago Bulls now has a
how well B lake Griffin
full-blown fracas, an ejection
played against the Golden
million, who told Mr. Sterling
and a Game 4 suspension for Nene.
State Warriors. Or how his
altered. He said the woman on
that she would 'get even.'" Roeser also said the record-
ing does not reflect Sterling's beliefs. He added that Sterling is "upset and apologizes for sentiments attributed to
him" about Johnson,whom he called Sterling's friend. "I will never go to a Clippers game again as long as Donald Sterling is the owner,"
Johnson responded on Twitter. He also said the alleged comments are "a black eye for the NBA" and said he felt
bad that friends such as Rivers and Clippers point guard Chris Paul had to work for Sterling. Paul and Clippers AllStar forward Blake Griffin declined further comment
WASHINGTON —
An
and DeAndre Jordan have
team has defended Stephen W hat everyone will b e Curry and Klay Thompson. watching when these clubs Or just about anything that meet today, with Washing- has happened on the court. ton leading the Eastern Con-
ference series 2-1, is just how physical the play will getand whether things will escalate again. "We've had scuffle s all three g ames, b asically. You've got to make sure we don't lose our composure, where we get thrown out of
I nstead, Rivers and h i s
players spent S aturday talking about how t h ey would respond to an audio
recording of a man identified as Clippers owner Donald Sterling telling his girlfriend not to bring black people to games. " The fact that I
had to
the game like that. It doesn't
spend 45 minutes in a meetmatter who it is, we can't ing instead of watching film afford t h at," W a shington did not make me happy," coach Randy Wittman said Rivers said. after the Wizards' loss Fri-
Chasing a title is the rea-
about 8t/z minutes left in the
son Rivers said players decided against protesting or even boycotting the game. They want to win for each other, he said, and not for Sterling or anyone else.
Rivers said he would speak
fourth quarter after wrapping both hands around
on my guys. I came here for
for the team.
the back of Jimmy Butler's
them. They came here for
Sterling has been frequently criticized for his frugal operation of th e Clippers, although in r ecent years he has spent heavily to add
head and neck as they stood each other. Our goals have so close their foreheads not changed," Rivers said
on the issue after the team's
practice at the University of San Francisco. Other players were not made available as
day night. "So we've just got to do a better job. Hey, it's very emotional. Emotional
game, tough game." Nene was tossed with
"For me, I want to focus
t ouched. Rod T h orn, t h e
passionately after the Clip-
suits over the years, including ones with accusations of
NBA's president of basket- pers' practice at the Univerball operations, announced sity of San Francisco. "It's like one of the playSaturday that Nene had been suspended one game with- ers said, 'Hey, when I was out pay for head-butting and a kid, I had a goal to win a grabbing Butler "around the world championship. It was neck with both hands and to do that. It wasn't to win attempting to throw him a world championship for
discrimination.
down."
someone.'"
stars such as Paul and Riv-
ers, who is in his first year as coach. Sterling also has been involved in several law-
D6
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, APRIL 27, 2014
PREP SCOREBOARD Baseball Continuedfrom Friday IntermountainHybrid (0 innings) Ridgeview 3 2 0 001 10 — 7 11 Bend 013 003 03 — 10 12 1
Track and field Summit Invitational At Summit BOYS Teamscores—Marist123, Capital (Idaho)109, MountainView92, Summit 91.5, HoodRiverValley 62,Redmond57.5,CentralLinn47,CrookCounty44, Molalla36.5,Burns24.5,Sisters18, Bend16, LaPine 9, Culver8.
40.21. 2,SamBrixey,Cap,41.60. 3,ZaneAbrams,CC, 41.64. 2,000steeplechase —1, MatthewBorowczak,Mol,7:11.57.2,CalebJohnson, Sis, 7:16.94.3, SamSchullz,Cap,7:20.46.3,000steeplechase1, AlecCarter,Red,11:42.23. 2, Remington Wiliams, 2 Red,11:42.34.3, SamDrutman,MV,12:01.05. 1,600 relay — 1, MountainView(GabeWyllie, Christian VanSise,Dantly Wilcox,SamKing), 3:25.95. 2,Crook County,3:28.37. 3, Marist, 3:30.78. HJ — 1, MichaelMene fee, Sum,6-2. 2, Oliver Meyr,CL,6-2. 3,JoshCherry, Sum,6-2.Discus1, SebastianBara)as, HRV,155-10. 2, RileyShelton, Sum, 136-7. 3, Zach Smith, CC,132-4. PV — 1, LiamHenshaw,Mar,15-6.2,Camden Stoddard, B, 14-6. 3,JustinPelz, LP,14-6. Shot—1, Jacob Hubbard,Mar,47-0. 2, Sebastian Bara)as, HRV,4610.5. 3,ZachSmith, CC,45-3.5. Javelin —1, Seth Nonnenm acher, Bur,172-7. 2, CalvinAylward,Sum, 170-7. 3,UriahsSmith, MV,152-4. TJ—1, DiSean Hernandez, CL,45-3.5. 2, MarcegKing, Cap,44-0. 3, SamBrixey,Cap,42-10.5. IJ — 1, LiamHenshaw, Mar 223. 2,DiSeanHernandez,CL,21-025. 3,Wyatt Webber,HRV,20-11.75.
Ledecky 2, OliviaBrooks,Sum,4:55.02. 3, KariTaylor, Cap, 5:04.40.3,000—1,SaschaBockius, HRV,10;48.09. 2, MaryHadley Schoderbek,Sum,10:59.67. 3, Sage Hasseg,MV,11:37.27. 100 — 1, JestenaMattson, HRV,12.32.2, AlexaThomas,Sum,12.77. 3, Kiersten Ochsner ,Red,12.83.400— 1,MadelynGunderson, Bur, 59.33.2,EmilyViuhkola,HRV,60.74.3,Hannah Lewis,Cul,61.15. 100h —1, AadryanHammond, Cap, 15.22. 2,Bri Kempf, Mar,16.34. 3, McKenna Boen, LP,16.91. 000 — 1, SarahReeves, Sum, 2:17.56. 2,NatalieHakala, Mar,2:25.98. 3, maison Winn,Bur,2:26.57. 200—1, JestenaMattson, HRV, 25.27. 2, HannahCochran, Sum, 26.07. 3, Alexa Thomas, Sum,26.20.300h— 1,MirandaBrown, Sum,46.53.2,BriKempf,Mar,48.60.3,Megan Cornett, Sum, 49.55.2,000 steeplechase — 1, PiperMcDonald, Sum,7:53.21. 2,Audrey Bever, Mol, 8:42. 83.3,JessicaCornett,Sum,8:53.64.1,600relay — 1,Summit (HannahCochran, LibbyMorgan, SarahReeves, kaely Gordon), 4:03.24.2, HoodRiver Valley,4:07.03.3, Mountain View,4:10.82. HJ —1, HannahCochran, Sum,5-2. 2, Kara Meeuwsen, Sum,5-0. 3, Bri Kempf, Mar,5-0. Discus — 1, NicoleWhite, Cap,115-0. 2,AshtonMorgan, CC, 107-1. 3,RachelBring, Mol, 100-8. PV— 1, Chloee Sazama,LP,9-6.2,TessaO'Hern,Sis,9-6. T3, DanielleMichael,CC,9-0. T3,SidneyDoyle, MV, 9-0. Shot —1, Kathryn Kaonis, CC,40-10. 2,Nicole White C, ap,36-5.5.3,SydneyBelcastro,CL,35-7.5. Javelin —1, MercedesMingus,Sum,113-3. 2,Jil Roshak, MV,105-7. 3, KatelynMeeter, Sis, 98-5. TJ — 1, MirandaBrown,Sum,36-6. 2, HannahKopp, Cap, 34-5. 3, Brittnie Haigler,LP,32-11. LJ — 1, EmmaStevenson, Sum, 16-11. 2, MirandaBrown, Sum,16-10.75.3,Catherine Clemens, Bur,16-9.
Continued from 01 "I really think Katie has
changed people's perceptions worldwide about the way that the distance events can be
swum," said Bruce Gemmell, who coaches Ledecky at ¹ tion's Capital Aquatics.
'csmpr-" *
Show Ledecky a pool, any pool — 25 yards, 50 meters, kidney-shaped — and she will manage to get to the other end fast, and first, and with a
Track
wake-eating grin on her face. Her older brother, Michael, Matt York/The Associated Press whom she followed into swim- Katie Ledecky competes in a 200-meter freestyle preliminary ming, is reluctant to race her heat during the Arena Grand Prix onFriday. anymore. "She's so mentally tough," said Michael, a sophomore at grandfather, Edward Hagan, ed in playing in a coed softHarvard, "she can break the earned a Purple Heart, a Sil- ball league. She told him she wills of everyone else in her ver Star and two Bronze Stars could not squeeze it into her races." as a combat surgeon during schedule. "From an early age, she At the London Games in World War II. 2012, Ledecky won the gold Her father's brother, Jon enjoyed the process as much medal in the 800 freestyle by Ledecky, used to own a stake as the end result," said Yuri attacking it as if it were an in Washington's Capitals and Suguiyama, who oversaw Leeight-minute sprint, upsetting Wizards, which is how Katie decky's rise from age-group a field that included the de- Ledecky crossed paths with star to Olympic champion befending champion,Rebecca professional athletes like bas- fore he became an assistant Adlington of Britain. At last ketball's Michael Jordan and coach at the University of Calsummer's world champion- hockey's Adam Oates. ifornia, Berkeley, in 2012. ships in Barcelona, Spain, in Dave Ledecky removed the Suguiyama added, "The what amounted toa London disc with Katie Ledecky's 25- one thing that worked with curtain call, Ledecky broke yard freestyle race from the Katie is we never put expecthe world records in the 800 DVD player in the cozy front tations on her because she and 1,500 freestyles and be- room of the family's two-sto- usually blew those out of the came the first American wom- ry home and slipped in one water." an to break 4 minutes in the showing her as a toddler, in a In the women's 400 free400 freestyle. suite at a Wizards game. She style, Ledecky is the only Returning home for her ju- n onchalantly m u nches o n swimmer with a top-seven nioryear here atStone Ridge popcorn while Jordan, then time who did not record it School of the Sacred Heart, the team's president for bas- while wearing a high-tech Ledecky, 17, capped her scho- ketball operations, palms her suit. Ledecky, Denmark's lastic season in February by facein agame ofpeekaboo. Lotte Friis and Evans are the "I don't know if I remember only swimmers with top-10 breaking Katie Hoff's U.S. recordinthe 500-yard freestyle, that or remember it from see- performances in the 800 free which had stood since 2008. ing the video so many times," who were not helped by the Ledecky said she had an Ledecky said. outlawed suits. "Now the yardstick is so epiphany at 9 while warming She can remember meeting up for her second 500-yard oates, who played forthe Cap- much higher, and the stanfreestyle. itals from 1997 to 2002, in the dards and what people be"I remember pretty clearly locker room. So enamored of lieve is possible is different," thinking, 'It's a race, why do oates was Ledecky, she col- Bowman said. "The suit era I have to pace myself?'" she lected enough of his hockey put those marks up there that said. "It's kind of the same cards to fill two scrapbook were so far out there, you have mindset I have now." sleeves. to think of a different way to It is the same mindset LeLedecky is less meticulous getthere." decky's mother, Mary Gen about her swimming memThinking of a d i fferent (short for Genevieve), had orabilia. For several weeks way to get there has been Lewhen she competed for the after she returned home from decky's trademark since her U niversity o f N e w Me x i - the London Games, an Olym- lane-line-hugging first race. "Katie has a great aerobic co, specializing in the 200 pic duffel bag gathered dust freestyle. in a little-used bathtub. When engine built inside of her," Su"I liked breathing and see- Ledecky and her mother got guiyama said. "But what realing flat water," Mary Gen Le- around to emptying it, they ly sets her apart is her competdecky said. "I didn't want to found aheartfelt congratulato- itiveness. She is as ferocious a
Continued from 01
have to worry about wave tur-
For Sisters, w h i ch was 11th with 18 points, Caleb Johnson was sec-
bulence. When my kidswere Olympic teammates made afswimming and doing summer ter her 800 freestyle victory. league, we had this joke. I'd Ledecky's mother was the say,'Just go out and take the one who insisted on slipping lead and try to keep it.'" the note in a plastic sleeve for Katie Ledecky has spent posterity. The spoils of victory her life in the company of oth- do not excite Katie as much as ers who are not wired to be the struggle.
Top threeplacers 400-meter relay —1,Central Linn(TateBarnes, Josue Avilez,Austin Hoyer, DiSeanHernandez),43.40. 2, Marist,43.64.3, Summit,43.67.1,500 — 1, Zach Wiberg,Cap,4:08.49. 2,TylerJones, Sum,4:11.47. 3, DrewSchultz, Cap,412 91.3,000 —1,ZachWiberg, GIRLS Cap, 9:27.18.2,JoeMugener, Cap, 9:35.59. 3, Luke Teamscores —Summit 217.5, HoodRiver ValLittleton,Mar,9:37.43. 100— 1, KyleTinnell, Red, Capital (Idaho)77, Mountain View69.5,Crook 11.09. 2,ChrisAdamo,MV, 11.30. 3, Wyatt Webber, ley 86, HRV, 11.39. 400— 1, Dustin Jones, Mar,50.25. 2, County42,Burns37, Marist 35.5, Molaga31, Sistesr 29.5, La Pine29, Redmond17, Culver13.5, Central GabeWygie,MV,50.31.3,JesseSantiago,CC,51.32. 110h — 1,SamBrixey,Cap,15.21.2,LiamHenshaw, Linn 6,Paisley1.5. Top threeplacers Mar, 15.31. 3, DantlyWilcox, MV,15.72. 800— 1, 400-meter relay —1, HoodRiverValley (Maya Matthe w Maton,Sum,1:52.89.2,CalebHoff mann,B, Anderson, Anna Schlosser, JestenaMatson, Emily 1:53.29.3, LuisRivera,CC,1:58.51. 200—1,Parker Irusta,HRV,23.16. 2, GabeWyllie, MV,23.17. 3, Viuhkola),48.83.2, Summit 48.99. 3, Mountain View, Nick Dow,Cap,23.20.300h—1, Dantly Wilcox, MV, 50.53.1,500 — 1, KaelyGordon,Sum,4:51.65.
PREP ROUNDUP
Ridgeview girls, boysfare well at OIT Bulletin staff report
team sweep with 159 points in 200-meter dash. Hosanna the 21-team meet. competition was quality, Rid- Wilder added a second-place In other Saturday action: geview coach Rachel Hinze finish in the high jump. BOYSLACROSSE said. But the Ravens proved McQueen (Nev) was first Tuaietin 12, Bend 9: Th e they belonged on Saturday. in the 24-team field with 115 Lava Bears opened up a 2-0 and Brianna Yeakey took the
KLAMATH FALLS — The
With three athletes claiming
points.
lead to be answered by seven
victories (two girls, one boy), The top finisher for Madras, consecutive goals by Tualathe Ridgeview girls and boys which did not finish with a tin. Bend evened things up 8-8 eachplacedsecond as a team at team score, was Cheyenne midway through the fourth the Sterling/Lithia Invitational Duncan, who was ninth in the quarter, but the Timberwolves track and field meet at Oregon pole vault. scored three straight goals to Institute of Technology.
For the boys, Seth Andres
"When we go and compete, placed first in the 110 hurdles, the expectation is to go out while Caleb Ronhaar (high there and just do the very best jump) and Chris Steffey (shot that they can," Hinze said. put) posted third-place finish"They really take that to heart. es in their respective events. We work together as a team. Drake Anderson was seceond Everybody helps everybody. in the high jump for Madras, Our field events support our track events and vice versa."
seize control and secure a nonconference win at 15th Street
Field. Eli Pite had three goals and an assist for the Bears,
whose seven-game winning streak was snapped to drop to 9-2 overall. Cade Hinder-
lider had three goals for Bend,
1 4 .5 James Rocket had a goal and points, and Isaac Fisher placed three assists, Chance Beutler which was 14th w it h
McKenzie Hidalgo won the sixth in the pole vault. discus for the Ridgeview girls, McQueen completed the
had a goal and an assist, and Andrew Joyce scored once.
ond in the 2,000 steeplechase. Caleb Hoffmann was second in the 800 for Bend, which was 12th,
despite logging a time that would have been the fastest in the state had
ry note that two of Ledecky's
content with treading water.
Maton not competed. Camden Stoddard added
a second-place showing in the pole vault. Justin Petz was third
in the pole vault and sixth in the javelin for
her accomplishments have
Caleb Johnson, of Sisters, lands in the water during the 2,000-meter
lead Culver.
steeplechase.
//
mother, who is from North Dakota, worked in hospital
decky can still walk around unrecognized, as was made
administration before having the first of her two children
clear last week when she was
TEAN
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corralled at her gymby a man who asked if she was interest-
CHEVROLETop BEND Klm OF HEND Itv ss Healrv.'Il
P
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not raised her profile. Le-
La Pine, which was 13th,
while Corey Sledge (pole vault) and Christopher Munoz (3,000 steeplechase) each took sixth to
I
She is little bothered that
Her father, who grew up in Queens, N.Y., is a lawyer. Her
at age 39. Ledecky's maternal
competitor as they come."
P
•
/
P
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Joe Kline/The Bulletin
DUCKS FOOTBALL NOTEBOOK
Helfrich promises'real' ball for spring game By Ryan Thomburn The (Eugene) Register-Guard
Springgames
Mark Helfrich apologized to the defense after his first spring game as Oregon's head coach for implementing an "inept scoring system."
Griffinhas a'desire to win'
er draft. "I'm not sure how
showcase and then the two and Hroniss Grasu selected one team with Ifo Ekpre-Olo-
t he Pac-12 Networks a n d ESPN8," but the rosters are
not going to be made available until Monday.
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jury and sitting out the second
half of several lopsided victo-
choosing the other.
ries. The 5-10, 175-pounder is
Mariota's appearance in next week, there should be considered the No. 1 all-purthe spring game figures to be a healthy competition on the pose running back in the 2015 brief. scoreboard this year. class.
Expo
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1 , 194
yards and 14 touchdowns last season as a junior, despite playing through an ankle in-
mu and Tony Washington rash of key injuries during the two remaining practices
e
zero to 60 mph in a flash. He's
much Marcus is going to play, strong, and one of those guys The Ducks began looking so that might be a little bit of who has a desire to win. He ahead to the public showcase fool's gold to take him and believes he's going to win, no after completing the 12th of only get a series out of him." matter what the circumstanc15 spring practices on Friday. H elfrich joked that t h e es are. The bigger the moment Players divided the coach- draft for the spring game and thebigger the game, he's ing staff up for the annual would b e t e l evised "on able to make things happen."
teams were drafted by four captains — Marcus Mariota
CENTRAL OREGON
Per NCAA r u les, Oregon
coaches are not allowed to comment on Taj Griffin, the Injuries forced the Ducks highly touted running back When:1p.m. to scrap the traditional split- When:11a.m. who verbally committed to the Saturday squad format, and the offense Saturday program this week, until signTV: Pac-12 TV: Pac-12 prevailed 65-10. ing day next February. This time, Helfrich promisGriffin's coach at McEaches some "real" football during One of the undetermined ern High in Powder Springs, next Saturday's spring game position battles for the coach- G a., talked about how t h e at Autzen Stadium. es going into the fall is backup five-star prospect fits into the "I think the competition quarterback, with Jeff Lockie Ducks' offense. "He's one of the most exis more fun when you play a and Jake Rodrigues still comreal game," offensive coordi- peting for the No. 2 spot. plosive players in America, "You never know in these and (Oregon) want to get him nator Scott Frost said. "I also think it's educational for guys games," Frost said when in space," McEachern coach to be in some of those situ- asked if Mariota was the ob- Kyle Hockman told the Atlanations. We have some guys vious No. 1 pick for the play- ta Journal-Constitution. "He's that haven't played a whole lot on the field in Autzen."
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"It will be a recognizable football game," Helfrich said.
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of manure; their manure acts as a food for beneficial microbes and delivers more of those microbes to the soil. Additionally, their hooves 'work" the land, pressing dead matter into the soil to decompose and helping seeds to spread and germinate, all of which makes the soil healthier and encourages grass growth. Healthier soil leads to more plantgrowth, which absorbs andstores greenhouse gases from the atmosphere. Together soil and plant cover work like the earth's air conditioning system and can help restore weather patterns. No major breakthroughs in technology or billions of dollars in research is necessary — just a return to the model laid out by nature.
Opp~ eRt N ATURA L S R Q C E R S
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But then there's the issue of the methane (a potent greenhouse gas) that cattle expel. Because of their unique digestive systems and the array of microorganisms living there, cows convert grasses, which are non-digestible to most animals, into useable energy. However, in this process the bacteria that help break down the grass excrete their own waste in the form of methane gas, which cows then belch into the atmosphere. But grassfed cattle have actually been found to emit nearly 20 percent less methane gas compared to their conventional counterparts. Additionally, through their manure, ruminants contribute microbes to the soil that have the ability to absorb methane from the air and break it down, thus offsetting their methane "emissions." CAFO cattle and cows in confinement dairles don't have the same methane offset When scientists and researchers talk about greenhouse gases and climate change, they are with the soil, making their "gas" a much bigger problem. mostly referring to carbon dioxide, although other gases, such as methane and nitrous oxide, also it isn't until between six and 12 months that most contribute. These gases create a greenhouse effect that traps the sun's heat in the atmosphere. To All cattle start their lives on pasture — some extent this is good because it warms the earth enough to sustain life; however, when there is are moved to feedlots. To be sure that you are buying 100 percent grassfed meat, an excess of these gases in the atmosphere, too much heat is trapped and this excess heat alters there are three leading certiTied grassfed labels to look for: Food Alliance Certified the weather patterns of the planet. Of course we know that the burning of fossil fuels in the form of Grassfed, the American Grassfed Association, or USDAverlfied grassfed, all of which gas, oil, and coal contribute massive amounts of these gases to the atmosphere, but that is only half require that the cattle eat a diet exclusively of forage their entire lives. Also look for of the equation. You see, plants have the ability to pull carbon dioxide out of the atmosphere and "100% grassfed" or "grass finished." And for those who don't eat beef, you're not olf store it in a stable form in the soil, where it promotes fertility, helps maintain beneficial microbes, and the hook. improves the soil's ability to hold water, making it more resistant to both flood and drought. When in balanix., the release of gases into the atmosphere is countered by gases being absorbed and Conventionally raised dairy cows contribute just as much environmental damage stored in the soil. But because we have lost so much topsoil and plant life to modern building and as beef cows, so look for grassfed butter, cheese, milk, and yogurt. By choosing agricultural practices (a process called desertification), that important balance has been lost. Barren grassfed beef and dairy products, you will enjoy healthy and delicious food while also soil is not able to store carbon, and in fact leaches more of it into the environment. The focus on supporting an environmental movement that goes beyond slowing climate change reducing the amount of gases released into the atmosphere is certainly important to slowing climate to actually reversing it. While it sounds extraordinary, when put back on the pasture change, but some experts believe that restoring the balance between the soil and the atmosphere is where they belong, cows really might just help save the world.4 our best hope of actually reversing climate change. And this is where the cows come in... grassfed S cows, that is. I ' ~ I I I hether you believe that climate change is a natural process or one that is driven by humans, the fact is that theice caps are melting at unprecedented rates, sea levels are rising, and severe weather pattems, including more devastating tornadoes, hurricanes, tsunamis, droughts, and floods, are becoming the norm. We make small changes that we hope will add up — bike to work, drive a fuel efficient car, swap incandescent light bulbs for energy saving LED, and recycle — but there is one change that you may not have thought about, one that may actually make the most profound difference of all. What's that change, you ask? Eat more grassfed beef and dairy. It may sound strange, but pastured cows may just turn out to be our surprise environmental superheroes.
Organic Abate Fetel Pears Natural Grocers Produce Department
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All cows Are Not created Equal Cows can positively affect climate change. But not just any cow. This solution is dependent on grassfed cattle,not beef or dairy cows raised in conventional feedlots. Beef raised in feedlotswhich accounts for 97 percent of the beef eaten in this country — significantly adds to the problem. Consider this: raising just one pound of conventional beef is the carbon dioxide equivalent of driving a small car 20 miles. Raising conventional beef and dairy cows in Concentrated Animal Feeding Operations (CAFOs) puts a significant burden on the environment. In CAFOs cows are fattened quickly on a steady diet of grains, most of which is corn; in fact, sixty percent of the corn grown in the United States is grown for livestock feed. This corn requires large amounts of synthetic nitrogenbased fertilizers, which are produced using large amounts of fossil fuels. It takes approximately 100 gallons of oil to grow enough corn to raise a single cow. Corn farming in the United States has also converted large swaths of what were once fertile grasslands into virtual deserts that lie barren outside of the growing season, and aren't much better in regard to soil health even when crops are growing. And then there's the waste. All of that feed must eventually come out, and when thousands of cattle are raised in tight quarters there is a lot of manure to deal with. CAFOs and confinement dairles rely on manmade ponds or other structures for storlng manure, which can pollute rivers and underground drlnking water when not properly managed. Stored in this liquid form, manure also contffbutes greenhouse gases to the atmosphere. This method of raising cattle is not only unsustainable; it is also a major contributor to environmental damage.
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How can raising cattle on pasture be so different? For starters, pastured cattle don't require much supplemental feed because they spend their time grazing. Removing the production and transport of grains like corn from the equation is a hugebenefit. And because thousands ofcows are not crowded into one small space, manure is naturally absorbed by the soil and doesn't require management like in CAFOs, which means less water and air pollution. But raising cattle on pasture goes even further and actually helpsrestore theland, which in turn helps restore the soil's ability to absorb and store greenhouse gases. Cows, and other types of ruminants like sheep, goats, bison, elk, and deer, have a unique symbiotic relationship with the land. Ruminants, including cattle, tend to move as they graze, most likely to avoid predators, which prevents overgrazing. This pattern of movement is also what encourages the restoration of the soil. Ruminants contribute fertilizer to the soil in the form
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Taking a modest amount of supplemental vitamin C eases feelings of fatigue after exercise and reduces heart rate. Carol S. Johnston, PhD, of Arizona State University, Phoenix, and her colleagues asked 20 obese men and women to take either 500 mg of vitamin C or placebos daily for four weeks. At the beginning and end of the study, the researchers assessed the subjects' feelings of fatigue after walking for 60 minutes on a treadmill.
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After four weeks, feelings of post-exercise fatigue decreased substantially among people taking vitamin C, but increased among those taking placebos. In addition, people taking vitamin C had an 11-beat-per-minute decrease in their heart ratt. a sign that their hearts were working more efficiently. Meanwhile, heart rates decreased by only three beats per minute in the placebo group.
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People in both groups lost about the same amount of weight, almost nine pounds.
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Vitamin C is a cofactor in the body's production of carnitine, which isneeded to help burn fats for energy. Refctsmn: Hnck CI Ioknctcn C6,BAAYRDMBL. St si. Vitcmin C ststns snd pmcsption of etfott during cxmniss in obeseindividuals adhering tn s csioric redncsd dist. ¹l r lnnn, 2912: cpcrt ahead Df pnnc
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Isabelle Romieu, MD, of the International Agency for Research on Cancer, Lyon, France, and her colleagues studied data collected from 334,849 women, ages 34 to 66 years when the study began. Over an averagefollow up of 11.5 years, 11,576 women were diagnosed with breast cancer.
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© www.bendbulletin.com/business
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, APRIL 27, 2014
Families that
Economist is taking on Adam Smith (and Karl Marx)
RANCHING
talk money togetherstay together-
rich or poor By Paul Sullivan
By Steven Erlanger
New York Times News Service
New York Times News Service
Marvin Blum, a lawyer from Fort Worth, Texas, flew to New York recently
Thomas Piketty turned 18 in 1989, when the Berlin
to visit his daughter, sonin-law and young granddaughter. Staying close to his family is crucial to him. The same goes for seeing
Severedrought in Crook County andelsewhere in the American West mayprove costly — for ranchersand consumers both. Just look at the price of beef.
his son, who lives in Austin, Texas.
about the virtues and vices
of communism. Even more telling, he remembers, was a trip he took with a close
I
friend to Romania in early 1990, after the collapse of
+ Mk4
"I'm at a point in my life
where the things I want
Wall fell, so he was spared the tortured, decadeslong French intellectual debate
the Soviet empire.
tu
I can't buy with money,"
"This sort of vaccinated
said Blum, 59. "I want relationships and memorable moments."
me for hfe against lazy, anti-capitalist rhetoric, be-
sound, like a sentiment
cause when you see these empty shops, you see these people queuing for nothing
scribbled on a Hallmark
in the street," he said, "it
card, Blum takes it seriously. He has worked with
became clear to me that we need private property
his son, 31, and daughter,
and market institutions, not just for economic ef-
As hokey as this might
28, on the family's three-
fold mission: "We value relationships. We value
ficiency but for personal freedom."
t+
productive work. We value
But his disenchantment with communism doesn't
f'44„,.
meaning in our life, from spirituality or whatever
mean that Piketty has
elsecan offeryou some-
turned his back on the
thing in terms of meaning."
intellectual heritage of Karl Marx, who sought
In New York, Blum, who runs a large trusts and
to explain the "iron laws" of capitalism. Like Marx,
.L
estates law practice in four cities in Texas, attended a
he is fiercely critical of
symposium called "Successful Multigenerational Families," hosted by Tiger
the economic and social inequalities that untram-
21, an investment club for
— and, he concludes, will
meled capitalism produces
people with more than $10 million to invest. The room
Photos by Andy Tullis/The Bulletin
was packed with dozens
Ray Sessler of MS Ranch, with part of his herd Tuesday east of Prineville, talked about the impact of drought on ranching in Crook
of very wealthy men and women, all focused on how
County. Ranchers like Sessler, says Julie Koeberle, with the U.S. National Resources Conservation Service, "are gonna have the
so it would not divide their
families. One Tiger 21 member
0
flies on a private plane for vacations while their friends fly commerciaL This may seem like a high-class problem, but
See Wealth /E3
hay to feed his 800 head of cattle
Ochoco Creek
Prinevills Ochoco Reservoir
N$ Ranch
Drought this year in Crook County means Ochoco Creekmay soon run dry,shortening the growing season for Sessler and other ranchers in the high country. Last year was a Sessler may have to buy more hay to bolster his
it's easier in a way to reopen these big issues about capitalism and inequality with a fresh eye, because I was too young for that fight. I don't have to justify myself as being pro-communist or pro-capitalist."
In his new book, "Cap-
I
in winter.
low yield, and if this year disappoints again,
U.S., Canada to tighten oil shipping rules
2
seven fields where he cultivates
the thrust of the question is cannot'?
School of Economics. "So
42
Tuesday for the summer and the
his children that the family
the same: Why can we afford something my friends
OCHOCO NATIONAL FOREST
2
ay Sessler sized up the prospects
asked how to explain to
private plane and "old Toyota" for commercial and
I
PRINEVILLE-
in the closed-door session
substitute "new Toyota" for
MILES
By Joseph Ditzler• The Bulletin
dreds of millions of dollars
never had any temptation with the Communist Party;
I was too young for that," Piketty said, in a long interview in his small, airless office here at the Paris
hardest time."
to deal with wealth from tens of millions to hun-
continue to worsen. "I belong to a generation that
"So the bottom line is, if we have another poor hay crop, then that's going to be really expensive" he said. Drought, ~ c t l n g broad
parts of the West, contributes in part to ranchers' costs. Those costs add to the price
consumers pay for beef now
reserve. Already in demand and selling for $160
at an all fline high The price of corn — which is fed to cattle
to $240 a ton depending on the variety, hay is a
infeedlots — as weII as the demand for U.S. beef in other
ital in the Twenty-First
Century" (Harvard University Press), Piketty, 42, has written a blockbuster, at least in the world of
g ggf $ Qggg Ray Sessler's Crook County ranch includes about16,000 acres ofhls ownland and about 64,000 acres of federal land, leased from the Bureau ofLandManagement and U.S. Forest Service. Heis one of about 500 ranchers whose livestock graze in the BLM Prineville District, which includes CrookCounty.
economics. His book punctures earlier assumptions about the benevolence of
advanced capitalism and forecasts sharply increasing inequality of wealth in industrialized countries,
with deep and deleterious impact on democratic val-
ues of justice and fairness. Branko Milanovic, a former economist at the
By Jad Mouawad
Department of Agriculture choice-grade beef climbed to
World Bank, called it "one of the watershed books in economic thinking." Remarkably for a book on such a weighty topic, it has
New York Times News Service
$5.36apound in March. The same grade cost$4.91apound
already entered The New
in March 2013. Drought also impacts the environment on which cattle
York Times' best-seller list. See Economist/E3
countries and the smallest
rancher's single biggest expense.
U.S. beef herd in 60 years also contribute to the high cost of beef. The retail value of U.S.
A day after Canada issued stringent new rules for the transportation of oil
Map by Greg Cross /The Bulletin
. ry
graze. The U.S. Bureau ofLand Management and theU.S.
by rail last week, federal
Forest Service asked ranchers this year to keep an eye on
regulators in the United
conditions on their leased public grazing lands. No formal action to reduce the number of livestock on public lands is
States say they will push forward their own tank standards, potentially re-
solving a critical safety issue that has been mired in regulatory limbo for years. The Department of Transportation said its
under consideration. However, ranchers could be asked to
u.
@st„). s "y" " %+X.;;,t 4„:i,,tt t
t
delay their grazing or remove their cattle early if the drought inhibits the growth of grass on those lands. "We're hoping we can work with permitees on a case-bycase basis, based on what's best for the land and what their needs are," said Michelle McSwain, assistant field manager RancherslikeSessler,who operateshisMS Ranch above the Ochoco Reservoir and irrigates his hay crop with water
stated Kevin Thompson, a
the Crooked River drainage is nonexistent in places, meaning the water in Ochoco Creek could disappear sometime around July. See Ranches/E5
rules by summer, after re-
view by the White House's regulations office. Since a train carrying crude oil derailed and exploded in Canada last July, devastating a small town about 10 miles from the border with the United States, authorities in both
countries have come under strong pressure to toughen regulations and improve the oversight of these hazardous shipments. See Rail /E5
@h~P ~
~
t.,
•
for the BLM Prineville District.
proposed rules would include "options for enhancing tank car standards," spokesman. Analysts said the agency could release its
s
from Ochoco Creek, will feel the drought first. Snowpack in
Ed Alcock/New YorkTimes
<Lowflow Ochoco Creek,east of Prineville, was about 50 percent its normal flow Tuesday,according to the OregonWater Resources Department. Creekwater helps irrigate ranch land, including RaySessler's. Ranches like his probably will be amongthe first to feel the pain from the drought. Still, Sessler, who's being doing this job for decades, is hopeful the creek will hold up. Watch a videoexplaining how drought reduces hayoperations, which is critical to raising cattle: bendbiilletin.cem//dryranch
"If we are able to send 1 million troops to Kuwait ina few months to return the otl,
presumably we can do something about tax havens." — Thomas Piketty, a French economist and author
E2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, APRIL 27, 2014
B USINESS
END A R
centraloregon.org.
TODAY HEALTHCAREITTECHNICIAN COURSE: This class prepares you to take and pass the CompTIA HIT001 Certification exam, registration required; $449; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; COCC Chandler Building,1027 N.W. Trenton Ave., Bend; 541-383-7270.
MONDAY BUILDYOUR WEBSITE WITH DREAMWEAVERCOURSE: Learn how to create a website using Dreamweaver, learn what to do from an experienced webmaster, registration required; $89; 9 a.m.noon; COCC Chandler Building, 1027 N.W. Trenton Ave., Bend; 541-383-7270. COMMUNICATINGWITH COLOR COURSE:Learn how color impacts
WINDOWS 7ENTERPRISE DESKTOPSUPPORT:Course for IT professionals, learn to pass the Microsoft Certification Exam 70685 which demonstrates expertise in resolving desktop application 8 networking issues, supporting mobile users, and identifying and resolving security issues, registration required; $329; 6-8 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270.
WEDNESDAY
consumer behavior, perceptions and sales so you can better promote your business and brand, registration required; $89; 6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W. CollegeWay, Bend; 541-383-7270.
TUESDAY GOVERNMENT CONTRACTING WORKSHOP WITHGCAP: The Government Contract Assistance Program and the Small Business Development Center are offering this free class on "Simplifying
Government Procurement through the General Services Administration's (GSA) Federal Supply Schedules Program," registration required; 1-3 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Redmond campus, 2030 S.E. College Loop, Redmond; 541-7361088 or www.gcap.org. TURN WEBSITETRAFFIC INTO INCOME COURSE:Learnhow to setup and understand Google Analytics to see which pages hinder your site, use tools to run on your site to dig deeper and uncover why those pages hinder conversions, registration required; $89; 1-4 p.m.; COCCChandler Building, 1027 N.W. Trenton Ave., Bend; 541-383-7270. SCORE -SMALLBUSINESS COUNSELING: Thosewhooperate or wish to start a small business candiscussbusiness planning, organization and start-up, finance, marketing and other issues, no
appointment necessary; free;
OPPORTUNITYKNOCKS: BEST PRACTICESWORKSHOP: Workshop will be presented by Moe Carrickand Jim Morris of Moementum Inc; $35 for members, $45 for non-members; 11:30 a.m.1 p.m.; The Double Tree, 300 N.W. Franklin Ave., Bend; 541-317-9292. COACHINGSERIESFOR LEADERS AND SUPERVISORS:Understand the connection between personality and emotional intelligence and practice coaching techniques to improve your overall effectiveness as a leader in this series of three interactive workshops, registration required; $195; 3-6 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Madras Campus, 1170 E.Ashwood Road, Madras; 541-383-7270. LAUNCHYOURBUSINESS: Course designed to help local start-ups get off to a good beginning and develop a working plan, course starts with 1-hour coaching sessions the week of April 21, preregistration is required; $119 includes workbook; 6-9 p.m.; COCC Chandler Building, 1027 N.W. Trenton Ave., Bend; 541-383-7290.
THURSDAY OREGON ADVERTISINGAWARDS AND SHOW:Showfor American Advertising Awards or the Central Oregon AdFedCommunity Awards, registration required; $35 for members, $40 for non-
members; May1, 7p.m., doors open and dinner starts at 6 p.m.; Silver Moon Brewing & Taproom, 24 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-388-8331 or www.events. r20.constantcontact.com/register/ eventReg? Ilr=wjiggocab8 oeidk =a07e93x2zpg826ac9f8.
FRIDAY
5:30-7:30 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W.Wall St.; 541-617-7050 or www.score
COBA HOME ANDGARDEN SHOW:
DEEDS DeschutesCounty •DonnaJ.NowaktoBenjaminB.and Kathryn M. Thompson,Township17, Range11, Section 14, $383,000 • Floyd C. Antonsen andElizabeth Aguilar-Antonsen to Michael S.and Deborah L. Blanco, 27th St. Crossing, Lot14, $239,947 • ML Bend U.S.A. Limited Partnership to Pahlisch HomesInc., McCall Landing, Phase1, Lot 88-91, $172,000 • Ashley E. Ball to Eric D. Weybright, Terrebonne Estates, Phase1B, Lot45, $165,000 • Pandie D. Anderson to Patricia W. Delozier, First Addition to BendPark, Lot 21, Block109, $279,900 • Cale J. Pearson to Jimickie Investments LLC,Stonehedge South, Phase1, Lot 8, $170,000 • Tom and Michele Douglass to Dennis M. McDonnell andDanette Robinson, River CanyonEstates, Lot 46, $259,999 • Rebecca K. andCarolyn K. Stinnette to Jennifer L. Mounts, Northpointe, Phase1, Lot12, $200,000 • Hendrickson Homesof Oregon LLC to Allen L. andSharon L. Anderson, RiverRim RU.D., Phase 9,Lot 295, $425,000 • Barry J. and Julie A. Branaugh to Cassandra K.Jacobsen andTimothy R. Kelly II, CanyonPoint Estates, Phase 5, Lot 94, $265,000 • Randall G. andDeborah L. Johnson, trustees for the JohnsonRevocable Living Trust, to Gary A.andJenifer A. Weyhrich, River Village 3, Lot 20, Lot 15, $705,000 • Carolyn L. McAlear, trustee for the Carolyn McAlear Family Trust, to Phillip C. andDebra L.Ashenfelter, Golden Butte, Phase 3,Lot 57, $575,000 • Loren C. andCandy L Rasmussen to Barry J. andJulie A. Branaugh, Tetherow Crossing, Phase 5,Lot13, Block 2, $310,000 • Arthur J. Williamson to Marilyn J. Massey, WestBendVillage,Phases 3-5, Lot 68, $380,000 • Darcy L. Amick to Kenneth I. and Debra K. Miltenberger, Township17, Range14, Section 15, $175,000 • RD Building and Design LLC to Darien R.and Radawna K.Spencer, trustees for the Spencer Living Trust, Breckenridge, Lot16, $299,400 • Martin C. Spalingerto SquirrelHouse Inc., SecondAddition to Bend Park, Lots18 and 19,Block154, $152,600 • Pahlisch HomesInc. to Pandie Anderson, AwbreyWoods, Phase2, Lot16, $261,500 • Dennis P. Murphy to Sheri D. and
Mark D. Dumond,AspenRimNo. 2, Lot 202, $334,000 • James F.Twyman to Michael C. and TracyR.Thompson, RidgeatEagle Crest 54, Lot 40, $200,000 • David K. andDawnZ. Ulrickson to Craig R. andSusan J. O'Connor, Bluffs at River Bend, Phase1, Lot16, $275,000 • Bruce C. andMartha H. Rhine to Donald M. andKim E.Wilson, Vandevert Ranch, Phase1,Lot 12, $1,575,000 • Jiri and Jana Novotnyto Kenneth A. HashagenandAnn N.Kruger, BuckRun,Second Addition,Lot36, $200,000 • Bayley Coblentz, now known as Bayley Killpack, to Danand Sarah Guilfoy, Chestnut Park, Phase1, Lot 23, $255,000 Jefferson County • Drummond Family Partnership LP to BEACEnterprises LLC,Township13, Range13, Section 29, $322,500 • Randy S. Gross to James L. Melhberg Jr.,CanyonView Subdivision, Lot13, $215,000 • Mary McNevins to Gerald D. and Juanice Schram, Partition Plat 200502, Parcel 2, $310,000 • James H. andSharon K. Wiliams and Michael R.Taylor and DianeG.ElliotTaylor to Terry L. Whitted andLynn Del Newbold, CrookedRiver Ranch No. 12, Lot 35, $299,900 • Robert L. Stevens andMary C. Verwolf to Levi D.andAwbrey P. Rowe, CrookedRiver Ranch, Phase2, Lot 23, Block40, $170,000 • TDH LLC toThomas Acquisitions LLC, Township11, Range13, Section 13, $928,861.57 • Sheri N. Davisto Wendy M. andJohn C. Hansen, CrookedRiver Ranch,No. 9, Lot 7, $168,000 • William D. andDeborah L. White to Jeffrey A. Fehr,CrookedRiver Ranch No.3, Lot94, $410,000 Crook County •FannieMae,also knownasFederal National Mortgage Association, to Daniel A. andKathleen A.Valverde, Prineville LakeAcres, Unit 2, Lot10, Block 40, $182,300 • Pahlisch Homes Inc. to Austin Goodwin, OchocoPointeP.U.D.,Phase 2, Lot 104, $197,475 • Willis E. Bates, as anindividual and trustee for the Willis E. BatesLiving Trust, and Linda M.Bates, asan individual and trustee for the Linda M. Bates Living Trust, to Raymond G. HannaJr. andCynthia A. Hanna, Partition Plat1994-27, Parcel 2, $282,200
Find Your Dream Home In Real Estate •
••
TheB u lletin
Email events at least 10days before publication date to businessibendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0323.
Featuring more than 200 companies and vendors; free; noon-6 p.m.; Deschutes County Fair 8 Expo Center, 3800 S.W. Airport Way, Redmond; 541-389-1058 or www. connectiondepot.com/oregon/bendredmond-sunriver/coba-spring-
Deschutes County Fair 8 Expo Center, 3800 S.W. Airport Way, Redmond; 541-389-1058 or www. connectiondepot.com/oregon/bendredmond-sunriver/coba-springhome-and-garden-show/.
business, how to reach your customer base, funding options for
your business, howmuchmoney
become la icensed contractor in Oregon, registration required; $305 includes required edition of Oregon Contractor's Reference Manual; 8:30 a.m.-6 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-383-7290
home-and-garden-show.
TUESDAY
you need to get started and legalities involved, registration required; $29; 11 a.m.-1 p.m.; COCC Chandler Building, 1027 N.W.Trenton Ave., Bend; 541-383-7290.
SATURDAY
May 6
THURSDAY
COBA HOME ANDGARDEN SHOW: Featuring more than 200 companies and vendors; free; 10 a.m.-6 p.m.; Deschutes County Fair 8 Expo Center, 3800 S.W. Airport Way, Redmond; 541-389-1058 or www. connectiondepot.com/oregon/bendredmond-sunriver/coba-springhome-and-garden-show/.
WHAT'S BREWING:BEND'S TOWN HALL: "Economic Growth in Outdoor Recreation: Are We Ready?"discussion moderated by Todd Davidson, CEOof Travel Oregon, registration required; $15
May 8
SUNDAY
for members,$20for non-members; 5 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W. Century Drive; 541-323-1881 or www.bendchamber.org.
WEDNESDAY
May 4 COBA HOME ANDGARDEN SHOW: Featuring more than 200 companies and vendors; free; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.;
May 7 BUSINESSSTART-UP CLASS: Learn what it takes to run a
Board and satisfies the educational requirement to take the test to
or ccb@cocc.edu.
SATURDAY
BEND BUSINESSGROUP: Local businesses meet to network, registration requested; free; 7-8:30 a.m.; The Double Tree, 300 N.W. Franklin Ave.; 541-362-1389, everist. irrigation©gmail.com or www. everistirrigation.com/.
FRIDAY May 9 CCB LICENSE TEST PREPARATION COURSE: Course is approved by the Oregon Construction Contractors
•
-
•
May 10 WOMEN'S BUSINESSEXPO: Networkwith other women and attend a seminar covering business, marketing and lifestyle; $125 for ConnectW members, $150 for non-members, $4 admission; 10 a.m.-4:30 p.m.; The Riverhouse Convention Center, 2850 N.W. Rippling River Court, Bend; 541848-8598, events©connectw.
org or www.connectw.org/ whats-happening/business-expo/.
•
Our Bend West Side Location To our community:
Building a four-year university for Central Oregon required careful evaluation in choosing exactly where to build. Over a 17-month site
selection process, we collaborated with government, business and community partners and considered locations across Bend. We also Studied the CamPuS-COmmunity relatiOnShiP atPaCifiCNOrthWeSt universities of similar size and enrollment. It has always been Our intention that OSU-Cascades be integrated into the community, with an inviting campus all Central Oregonians can use and enjoy. The site along Chandler Avenue on Bend's west side is close to businesses, recreation, transit and other amenities our students, faculty and visitors will use every day. It will allow us to offer a convenient shuttle service to Central Oregon Community College, and the close-in location means more people can walk or bike to campus rather than travel by car. In addition, there is existing infrastructure at this site. Juniper Ridge, by contrast, would require tens of millions of dollars in water, sewer and road improvements. Without those additional costs, we can invest in academic
and student life programs, economic development and community partnerships. A four-year university for Central Oregon — a vision three decades in the making — is now within sight. We're conhdent the new home for OSU-Cascades will become a community asset for all of our citizens.
Sincerely,
Becky Johnson Vice President
OSU-Cascades 3,000-5,000 students 56-acre campus
IIIJI
:r Seattle University 7,400students I 50-acre campus
Willamette University — Salem 2,725students I 60-acre campus
University of Washington Tacoma 4,309 studentsI 46-acre campus
Pacific University — Forest Grove 3,607students I 55-acre campus
Learnmore at OSUCaSCadeS.edu/4FA
Q
SUNDAY, APRIL 27, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
Wealth Continued from E1 For thecurious,James Grub-
man, apsychologist and founder of FamilyWealth Consulting, said the question provided an
opportunity to discuss how the family makes money, choos-
heritance, Edwards-Pitt said.
James Grubman, a psychologist and consultant, said one of his tests to see what kind of example people are setting is to ask them if they have taught their children how to tip. "They all say, 'Yes, of course,'" he said. "Ithen say 'Show me how you tip someone.' There is a big difference between, 'Here's your tip,' and, 'Thank you very much.' Kids know the difference."
Grubman said that one father he worked with decid-
ed he was going to change how he talked to his children about the family's values and
responsibilities. The father's goal was to change his children's view of the meaning of the money their father made and broaden their identity be-
es to spend it and rationalizes
why it is important, for security or convenience. Keeping families together is the goal of every parent, rich or not. And while most people
got to make it on your own.'" Blum said he had seen clients wait too long to give their
children anything. "I think it's
lowing the younger generation a 2-year-old car for half the list to have a say in their lives. price? They can see you saw He said the challenge for the
the value in your decision."
Kids know the difference."
yond their inheritance.
Repairing badexamples
Blum said he had always Thechallengeofexamples put an emphasis on keeping important to build into a plan a do not have the wealth of Tiger way to prefund your children's dren to have a voice at family Gregory Rogers, whose fa- his family close from an early 21 members, they face similar- inheritance so they don't have meetings, if not a vote. ther founded the investment age and working hard to inly complicated issues when it to wait until you die to inherit," Moreover, he said the fam- consultancy RogersCasey, was corporate his in-laws into the comes to planning and talking he said. "I think it's wrong for ilies who save most start in- chief operating officer of John family. "You have to be intento their children. a child to wait until their 60s cluding children as young as A. Levin & Co., an asset man- tional about it," he said. to inherit. By that point, they 15 in family meetings so they ager,before founding Raylor But most people who are go-
Relying onplanning
don't need it." Putting together a will is imAs for what is left over when portant for someone of modest the mother and father die, it means, just as creating a de- should always be split 50-50,
older generation was to allow their children and grandchil-
en states, said he had always
wifehave focused onthe examples they set for their children. "They watch you and they see every move you make," he said. "That opens up conversations. Why have you decided to take a car into the city? Why are we taking this vaca-
make a decision, be it to buy a
dren have borne the brunt of this. Coventry Edwards-Pitt, chief wealth advisory officer at Bal-
the business would disinte-
reers andmake itontheirown,"
G rubman said one of hi s tests to see what kind of exam-
said Edwards-Pitt, who was
grate," Levine, 68, said. So he hired coaches and consultants, had family meetings and set up a family foundation — all with the goal of keeping his family together after he died. "It's not perfect; it's an evolving process." "I worry about everything," he said. That is something any family can identify with.
not at the Tiger 21 symposium. "The kids who are derailed, this is when they start to fail."
The longer parents go withsay, 'Yes, of course,'" he said. "I out addressing this, the more 120-page trusts that are unin- dren, perhaps by telling them buff and often talked to his then say 'Show me how you tip they have to be content with telligible to me and canbe chal- what to do with their careers children about the value of someone.' There is a big differ- redirecting them into somelenged by anyone. There is not or bailing them out of trouble, buying a sports car. "Do I buy a encebetween, 'Here's your tip,' thing productive or keep them enough emphasis on, 'You've cause family discord by not al- new one?" he said. "Or do I buy and, 'Thank you very much.' from blowing through their in-
Economist
"Trickle-down economics could have been true. Itjust happened to be wrong."
on pure economic forces for
— Thomas Piketty
sumed that the rate of return
a young assistant professor doing economic theory," he political e c onomy, w r i t ten said. "I was young and sucby predecessors like Marx cessful at doing this, so it was and Adam Smith. It is noth- an easy way. But very quickly meant to be a return to the
kind of economic history, of
children how to tip. "They all
harmony or justice to prevail," he said. While Marx pre-
Americans now take a larger
ity that recently moved both
slice of the pie than in 1913, at the close of the Gilded Age,
Pope Francis and President
the questions they examine
Barack Obama to warn of its
to those they can answer, "but Thomas Piketty's book mirrors sometimes the questions are works by Karl Marx (pictured) not that interesting," he said.
"Trying to write a real book
Piketty — pronounced pee- that could speak to everyone ket-ee — grew up in a political meant I could not choose my home, with left-wing parents questions. I had to take the
The Associated Press
— even its title, "Capital in the Twenty-First Century," echoes Marx's "Das Kapitai" — but the book challenges both Marxism
owning more than 70 percent
of the nation's wealth. And half of that is owned by the top 1 percent. P iketty, f ather o f
important issues in a frontal
which "both count on pure
is no revolutionary. He is a
economic forces for harmony
traditional France u pside
m anner —Icould notescape." He hated the insularity of
member of no political party, and says he never served as an
down. Later, they went off to
the economics department.
or justice to prevail," Piketty sald.
the Aude, deep in southern So he decided to write large, France, to raise goats. His par- a book he considers as much
where economic ideas had such bad consequences. As for the Gulf War, it showed
him that "governments can do a lot in terms of redistribution of wealth when they want." The rapid intervention to force Saddam Hussein to unhand Kuwait and its oil was
history as economics, and one that is constructed to lead the
general reader by the hand. He is also not afraid of lit-
erature, finding inspiration in the descriptions of society in the realist novels of Jane Austen and Balzac. Wealth was
"If we are able to send 1 million troops to Kuwait in a few months to return the oil, pre-
data.
But he accepts that his work is essentially political, and he is highly critical of the huge management salaries now in vogue, saying that "the idea that you need people making 10 million in compensation to work is pure ideology." Inequality by itself is acceptable, he says, to the extent it
increase faster than overall
ent — that inequality fell -
changed. huge accumulations of priAs he extended his work on vate capital, especially in Eu-
m akes everyone in societ y better off. "I have no problem with inequality as long as it
France to the United States in
is in the common interest," he
a s sumption h a d and World War II destroyed rope. What the French call
Berkeley, he saw that the patterns of the early 20th century
a rebound. The
s e n d al income, dividend income,
1990s, "there was no way this
Superieure at 18. His doctor- could be understood so clearly al dissertation on the theory — having 20 additional years of redistribution of w e alth, of data makes a big difference completed at 22, won prizes. to understanding the postwar He then decamped to teach period." economics at the Massachu-
tion and other measures, helps
"les trentes glorieuses" — the sard. roughly 30 postwar years of But like the Columbia Unirapid economic growth and versity economist Joseph Stishrinking inequality — were glitz, he argues that extreme A m erican inequality"threatens our dem-
curve, of course, is less sharp, ocratic institutions." Democragiven that the fighting was cy is not just one citizen, one elsewhere.
troops to Guernsey, the light- interest income" — seemed A higher than normal rate ly populated tax haven in the less prevalent from the 1970s of population and economic English Channel? Piketty, through the early 1990s. growth helped reduce inequal"It took me a long time to soft-spoken, barely laughed. ity, along with higher taxes on "We don't even have to do that realize that in effect we were the wealthy. But the profes— just simple basic trade pol- returning slowly in the direc- sional and political assumpicy, trade sanctions, would do tion of the previous equilibri- tion of the 1950s and 1960s, the trick right away," he said. um, and that we were part of that inequality would stabiA top student, Piketty took a a long transitory process," he lize and diminish on its own, conventional path toward the said. When he started work- proved to be an illusion. We French elite, being admitted ing on the issue in the late are now back to a traditional to the rarefied Ecole Normale
wealth-generation that, with
h ow that
sumably we can do something — "the top 10 percent of the about tax havens." distribution was full of rentW ould he w an t t o
income from capital is several
times larger than the rate of economic growth, meaning a comparatively shrinking share going to income earned from wages, which rarely
the aid of progressive taxa-
at the University of California,
setts Institute of Technology Centuries of statistics before returning two years His findings, aided by the later to France, disappointed power of modern computers, with the study of economics in are based on centuries of sta-
SINCE 19SO
70 SW Century Dr., Ste. 145 Bend, OR 97702• 541-322-7337 complementshomeinteriors.com
•J
•
•
cian. He calls himself a pragmatist, who simply follows the
alone would not produce suf- was historical catastrophe. ficient income. He wondered World War I, the Depression
a remarkableshow ofconcert- collaboration with Emmanuel ed political will, Piketty said. Saez,a professor ofeconomics
TOUCHMARK
economic adviser to any politi-
economic activity. Inequality best achieved in these stories surges when population and through a clever marriage; the economy grow slowly. everyone knew that inherited The reason that postwar land and capital was the only economies looked d i ffer- spurs individual initiative and way to live well, since labor
mplements 'Htae '3n,I e~le~J
th r e e
daughters — 11, 13 and 16-
dation of Eastern Europe and the first Gulf War, in 1991. Those events motivated him to try to understand a world
More criticism is sure to
come, and Piketty says he welcomes it. "I'm certainly look-
Revolutionary thinking?
and laissez-faire economics,
ents are not a topic he wants
Net wealth is a better indicator of ability to pay than income alone, he said. "All
ed 22.5 percent of the nation's
t h e s t atistical
the big questions." American economists too often narrow
to discuss. More relevant and important, he said, are his generation's "founding experiences": the collapse of Communism, the economic degra-
out that some of the increase
metrics and
think, you don't dare to ask
who were part of th e 1968 demonstrations that t u r ned
r e distributed to
Academic economics is so focused on getting the econo-
wealth, so that's what I started dolng.
income, the highest total since 1928. The richest 10 percent of
Ideas andconsequences
ments but
bigger than the growth rate I'm proposing is to reduce ing forward to the debate." forever — this is actually what the property tax on half or we've had for most of human three-quarters of the popuhistory, and there are good lation who have very l i ttle reasons tobelieve we will have wealth," he said. Published a it in the future." year ago in French, the book is In 2012 the top 1 percent of not without critics, especially American households collect- of Piketty's policy prescrip-
I realized that there was little serious effort at collecting
interpolation technique correct, he said, "you don't really
consequences.
debt), with the proceeds not tions, which have been called handed to inefficient govern- politically naive. Others point
those with less capital. "We in capital is because of aging on capital ,because ofthe sys- just want a way to share the populations and postwar pentem's contradictions, would tax burden that is fair and sion plans, which are not necfall close to zero, bringing col- practical," he said. essarily inherited. lapse and revolution, Piketty is saying the opposite. "The rate of return to capital can be
eties and the economic rules historical data on income and
down a challengeto democratic governments to deal with an increasing gap between the rich and the poor — the very theme of inequal-
and father to stay in his family.
lentine Partners, said many of His three sons went into the the problems that could tear a business; his two daughters family apart began manifest- did not. "I had this fear that wealth ing themselves in children in their 20s. "This is when they could dissolve the family and leave the home, start their ca-
plicated," he said. "I've seen
Century," with its title echoing Marx's "Das Kapital," is
wanted the real estate company started by his grandfather
decisions you're making."
Dennis Jaffe, a consultant
"Capital in the Twenty-First
For the wealthiest families,
tion? You have to justify the
patriarchs an d m a t r i archs their children the process. who try to control their chilGrubman said he was a car
all boats," Piketty has thrown
The rules of communication
in the middle dass. He and his
"If you start at 18, that's
second home or to fly on a pri- ple people are setting is to ask to large, wealthy families, said vate plane. They need to show them if they have taught their
the process, by debunking the idea that "wealth raises
ship around. They were grateful for it afterwards."
the goal is to keep the family together as an economic entity for generations. Robert Levine, whose company owns 92 buildings in sev-
to the Bancroft family, which
that underpin them. And in
He talked about turning the
$15 billion, and RayLign Ad- beginacquiring much money visory, which offers consulting until their 50s, after what may services for large families. have been decades of devoting While he has been financial- themselves almost entirely to ly successful, Rogers grew up their work. Often their chil-
The risk of paternalism
ing less than a broad effort to understand Western soci-
genuine. He shared his values.
are made while they're still living at home.
21 event, has been an adviser
Continued from E1
it up and they saw that it was
Investments, which manages
he said, even if one child is a when they're gone and on their schoolteacher and the other a journey," he said. hedgefundmanager. "If you were going to do Disabling entitlement something other than equal, Rich or not, no parent wants you want to have a clear un- a child to grow up spoiled. derstanding up front and you Grubman said he stressed two which works with 100 famiwant to get buy-in from your antidotes to entitlement for evlies with up to $25 million to children," he said. "If you ery family. First, parents need $30 million in wealth, said too don't, you're going to tear a to show appreciation and gratmany families fixate on taxes family apart. No matter how itude for what they have in life, and planning, to the detriment much a family has, if it's not so their children appreciate it, of future generations. Low- equal there is resentment." too. Second, parents need to ell, who was not at the Tiger show their children how they
ing to become wealthy do not
"The first reaction was skepticism," he said. "But he kept
can understand how decisions
tailed estate plan is essential for a wealthier family. The focus is often on the planning and, by extension, the tax savings and investment choices. James Lowell, a principal at Lowell Blake & Associates,
once owned Dow Jones & Co. "People make it more com-
E3
vote, but a promise of equal
opportunity. "It's very difficult to make a democratic system work
when you have such extreme inequality" in income, he said, "and such extreme inequality
in terms of political influence and the production of knowledge and information. One of the big lessons of the 20th century is that we don't need
pattern of returns on capital
1 9th-century
of 4percentto 5 percentayear and rates of economic growth
grow." But that's just where the capitalist world is heading again, he concludes. Saez, his collaborator, said
of around 1.5 percent a year.
i n e quality t o
So inequality has been quickly gathering pace, aided that "Thomas combines great to some degree by the Reagan perfectionism with great imand Thatcher doctrines of tax patience — he both wants to cuts for the wealthy. "Trick- do things well and do things l e-down
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e c onomics c o u ld fast." He added that Piketty
have been true," Piketty said has "incredible intuition for America. tistics on wealth accumulation simply. "It just happened to be economics." "My Ph.D. is mostly about and economicgrowth in ad- wrong." The last part of the book pure economic theory because vanced industrial countries. His work is a challenge both presents Piketty's policy ideas. that was the easiest thing to They are also rather simply to Marxism and laissez-faire He favors a progressive globdo, and I was hired at MIT as stated: The rate of growth of economics, which "both count al tax on real wealth (minus
•
Kemple NEMORIAL
Children's i enhl Clinic
SUNDAY, APRIL 27, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
Rail
Ranches
safety officials for more than
20 years that those tank cars were prone to rupture in a
Continued from E1 B ut w h il e
Continued from E1 "Those folks are gonna
C a n ada h a s derailment.
moved quickly after the acciNew standards have landent, which killed 47 people guished in a slow rule-makin Lac Megantic, Quebec, reg- ing process since 2011, when ulators in the United States railroads requested that reguhave been much slower to act. lators toughen tank car stanThe lag has angered members dards. The National Transporof Congress, as well as local tation Safety Board, in 2009, and state officials, who have said defectson these cars called for stronger action to
have the hardest time," said
Julie Koeberle, a snow hydrologist for the National Resources Conservation Service. "If people don't have access to reservoir water, if we don't have a lot of snow to feed those
minimize the impact on public — Ray Sessler, rancher, on staying profitable lands. The Forest Service has asked the same, Lair said. "BLM has not taken any ac-
tion on permits with respect to ed 38,000 cattle and calves
Sessler said.
McSwain said the drought
said Lisa Raitt, the country's transportation minister, after
in December, Transportation Secretary Anthony Foxx said
announcing the measures, many of which had been recommended by the Transportation Safety Board of Canada.
Thursday that tank cars needed to be retrofitted with better
Canada also took a decisive
proposed new standards. "Our
sixth, Wheeler County, has
stepto force shippers to use a stronger model of tank car
rule-makingprocess requires that we go through several
asked the governor to do
within the next three years.
steps, and that's what we're
The new model is based on a standard developed by the
going through," he said. The rules will be published
railroad industry in 2011. It
in the Federal Register once
tation professor at the Asper ed States, they have generally School of Business at the Uni- done so far from populated areas, though the derailment
peg, said that the horrors of the Lac Megantic resonated throughout Canada, forcing the federal government to act. "This is an issue that every-
outside of Casselton happened right outside of town
2013 Oregon Agripedia, which includes data com-
piled by the state Agriculture Department, count-
Beltone
and prompted the voluntary
evacuation of hundreds of residents. There are more than 94,000
body across the country has
Find It All
"The government needs to feel
crude oil and ethanol in service in Canada and the United States. About 14,000 of them were built after 2011 based on the new industry standard,
like it's doing something."
1960s-era designs Updating the design of the
TRIAL
Online
become sensitized to," he said. tank cars used to transport
bendbulletin.com
referred to as CPC-1232, and
tank cars — DOT-llls, dating from the 1960s — has been
comply with the new Canadian rules. A further 55,000
a far more vexing question
of those have been ordered through 2015.
for regulators in the United
States despite warnings by
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0.21
42.6
48.8
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3.20 2.74 0.49 8.03 5.69 1.13 2.00 1.70 6.05 2.68 0.79 3.49 4.59 2.36
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UAL
39.41
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UA
48.42
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47. 8 0
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49. 5 1
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s&p 500 Frankfurt DAX London FTSE100 Hong KongHangseng Paris CAC-40 Tokyo Mikkei 225
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21.5
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0.0
173
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The Iearnin s'der Title:CEO, Alhambra Investment Partners
What he suggests: There's a gap between expected corporate earnings and actual profits.
The U.S. stock market has basically moved sideways this year after a bullish stampede in 2013. On the whole, companies have been reporting mediocre earnings for the fIrst three months of 2014. But investors have yet to downgrade their projections for the market, says Joe Calhoun, CEO of Alhambra Investment Partners, which has $165 million In assets under management.
LAST FRI. CHG 1863.40 -1 5.21 9401.55 -147.13 6685.69 -1 7.31 22223.53 -339.27 4443.63 -35.91 14429.26 +24.27
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392.85 -4.25 3105.90 -23.41 1054.48 -1 6.20 8374.47 -34.66 21441.57 -377.91 4891 0.90 -23.61 -4.92 1360.35
-2.53% X
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ASIA
-1.97% Seoul Composite 1971.66 -26.68 -1.34% T T V Singapore Straits Times 3267.57 -16.36 -0.50% +3.16% 3587.1 Sydney All Ordinaries 5 5 15.50 + 13.30 +0.24% 3 03% -51.1 Taipei Taiex 8774.12 -171.33 V 4 + 1.89 % 1 92% 149.5 Shanghai Composite 2036.52 -20.51 -1 00% v v v -3.76% 0.0 Quotable 81.9 20a6 "The market is in a precarious position at the moment, and 0.0
overreacts to bad news far more than it did last year." — Scott Clemons,chief investment strategist at Brown Brothers Harriman
Note: Stocks classified by market capitalization, the product of the current stock price and total shares outstanding. Ranges are$100 million to $1 billion (small); $1 billion to $8 billion (mid); greater than $8billion (large).
Joe Calhoun
would cover his boots. "I think
the Oregon State University Extension Service. The
oil have derailed in the Unit-
versity of Manitoba in Winni-
to produce it are also climb-
ing, Deboodt said, so profits has already produced small or it is." the same. remain about the same as in stunted grasses on BLM lands. — Reporter: 541-617-7815, Livestock is a top eco- previous years. Until the drought eases, she jditzler@bendbuIIetin.com "In my opinion, if you have nomic activity in Crook County, accounting for zero debt, and you and your more than half of farm gate wife and your children do all receipts. Of its 1.9 million the work, 100 percent of the acres, approximately 1.4 work, you'd be hard-pressed million acres consist of to make a living on anything rangeland, according to less than 300 to 500 cows,"
effectively sets a new bench- they have been reviewed and mark in the United States as will then be opened for public well given how much traf- comments for a period of 60 fic crosses through both days. countries. While many trains carrying
Intuitive surgical C ore Laboratories VMware Inc Linkedln Corp TripAdvisor Inc United Contl Hldgs Under Armour Inc Xilinx Inc Cerner Corp Sprint Corp
the drought," McSwain said. If
protections or replaced, but he provided no details about the
Visiting C asselton, N .D.,
model of world-class safety," where an oil train exploded
Allergan Inc AGN N ewmont Mining NEM Weatherford Intl W FT Mylan Inc M YL Zimmer Holdings ZMH Charter Commun CH T R Valeant Pharma VRX Cabot Oil & Gas C OG H CA Holdings Inc HCA Apple Inc AAPL Enable Midstream EN B L AstraZeneca PLC A Z N Harley Davidson H QG L am Research Corp L RC X Delta Air Lines D AL
manage their herds in order to
conditions worsen, the agency ings, about 16,000 acres, Ses- could reduce the number of sler leases another 64,000 animals permitted to graze on acres from the BLM and For- a particular parcel. est Service. About 500 ranchThe drought in Central Orers in the BLM Prineville Dis- egon alone may not drive any trict, which includes Crook ranchers out of business, but it County, graze more than could add to a season of anx18,000 livestock on more than iety while they juggle costs, 1 million acres, according to grazing schedules and hay McSwain and BLM public af- supplies for the coming year. fairs officer Lisa Clark. Sessler, who's run cattle in ment. Gov. John Kitzhaber Deboodt, an OSU extension The Forest Service also per- Crook County for 30 years, declared a drought emer- agent in Crook County. mits 12,000 cattle to graze in said the summer ahead won't gency March 20 in Crook To stay profitable, a ranch the Ochoco National Forest, be the first rough season he's County. I n Fe b r uary, needs to run 200 to 250 pairs, said public affairs officer Pat- weathered. "You don't know if the water Kitzhaber also s i gned minimum, without debt and rick Lair. Some ranchers, indrought declarations for with low overhead. Beef may cluding Sessler, hold permits in this creek is gonna hold up," Harney, Klamath, Lake command record prices,but to graze on both BLM and For- he said, standing creekside and Malheur counties. A the costs of most everything est Service lands. where, in a good year, water
ethanol. Canada seeks to be "a
T ICKER
their grazing allotments for next year. The agency in February wrote its leaseholders asking them to voluntarily
In addition to his own hold-
enhance rail safety, including of an ethanol train that killed bolstering the tank cars used one person in Cherry Valley, to transport crude oil. IIL The Pipeline and HazardOn Wednesday, Canadian ous Materials Safety Adminregulators said they would re- istration formally initiated the quire emergency plans from process in September 2013, the railroads on responding but has been under pressure to catastrophic explosions, to release its new rules quickand would quickly retire older ly after a string of accidents models of tank cars common- and derailments involving oil ly used to carry crude oil and trains.
COMPANY
expects ranchers to safeguard
streams naturally, there's in Crook County, putting it nothing to really boost mid-rank among the state's those stream flows in the livestock producers. Malheur summer." County, by comparison, countDrought in Central Or- ed 200,000 head, the most in egon ranges from severe Oregon. in southern Deschutes and About 50 to 60 ranchers opCrook counties to moder- erate in the high country, said ate in their northern reach- Sessler, president ofthe Orees and in Jefferson County, gon Cattlemen's Association. according to the Oregon The average ranch runs about Water Resources Depart- 800 cow-calf pairs, said Tim
contributed to the explosion
Barry Prentice, a transpor-
"In my opinion, if you have zero debt, and you and your wife and your children do all the work, 100 percent of the work, you'd be hard-pressed to make a living on anything less than 300 to 500 cows."
E5
year, I don't think the 10-year Treasury note would be trading at 2.7 percent. That low interest rate tells us about expectations for modest growth, even If stock analysts are saying something else. Who are we going to believe? I'm going to go with the bond market for now. The weather thing is interesting. Real estate didn't perform well In Arizona and And that creates what you call the California. They didn't have that tough "expectations gap"? of a winter. So is it weather? Or, is it just You say corporate earnings for the People have expectations that things are that the economy Is not performing? first quarter have been weak. What's going to accelerate. I don't see where behind the disappointing reports? the acceleration comes from. Many So what should Investors do? Most of the economic growth rates are at economists thInk winter weather hurt Nobody In the world Is arguing that levels that you don't see except prior to a the economy at the start of the year and stocks are cheap. There's an argument re:ession. That includes personal incomes that growth will rebound with warmer about whether they're fairly valued or and the factors behind Gross Domestic weather. If the economy was going to overvalued. And If they're overvalued, Product. ThIs was basically the thIrd year perform so much better at the end of this how much? If you've got a normal
whereevepone said abouteconomic growth, "It's going to accelerate." But It never seems to get there. Most analysts initially expected a 10 percent year-over-year rise In profits during the first quarter. The consensus has now been downgraded for the first quarter. But analysts have yet to revise their projections for the whole year.
allocation of 60 percent stocks and 40 percentbonds, maybe you oughtto be 50/50 or 50/40 and 10 percent in cash. If there Is a bubble In this market, it's In indexing with Exchange Traded Funds. The proliferation of ETF's is just absurd. An S&P 500 fund Is a core holding for just about everybody. Since 2006, everyone is indexing with ETF's. When something works, It will work until everyone starts doing It and then It'll stop working.
Any stocks you recommend? One we did well with last year was Genworth. It's not as cheap as It was. But it's probably still a buy. Interviewed by Josh Boak. Answers edited for clarity and length. AP
Index closing andweekly net changesfor the week ending Friday, April 25, 2014
NASDaa ~ 1 4,075.56
< >6
S&P500
+
1,863.40
1 45
RUssELL 2000 I,123.03
+
14 87
WILSHIRE 5000 ~ - 6 8 . 91 19,763.25
E6
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, APRIL 27, 2014
UNDAY D
R
US Ihe, Ih Wl e-O eA S BCeS Tirepressuresensors, RAV4sandconfusion
By Warren Brown Special to The Washington Post
By Paul Brand
N EW YORK — I t w a s a
beast, too large for the city. We
(Minneapolis) Star Tribune
dared not drive it anywhere
Q
• We have a 2010 Toy• ota RAV4 that had
close to this place, having already enraged so many mo-
the same tire pressure light problem noted in your
torists on Interstate 95 and the
New Jersey 'Drrnpike just by our very presence in the 2015 C hevrolet S u burban
engine, 4WD and automatic t ransmission. W h e n dr i v -
ing down the highway, occasionally the engine RPM will shoot up, then drop back down. There is no slip in the
recent column. Took the transmission or loss of speed.
car to the dealer as I was Would this be a sensor or mystified — all four tires module for the transmission?
LTZ,
among the largest of an increasingly hated genre of full-
were within 1 to 2 pounds
Or is the transmission getting
of each other in pressure. ready to quit? Final solution — the spare • If there actually is no tire was low on air. • s udden slippage o r • I received a number change of gear in the trans• of similar respons- mission, the issue is likely with
size SUVs.
P eople b u y
REVIEW compact wagons
A
A
and smaller ve-
hicles because they fit easily into urban spaces, are more compatible with urban bank
es to the question regard-
the instrument cluster and/or
ing the low tire warning
tachometer. But if you hear the engine actually rise in RPM,
light on th e 2005 RAV4 — thank all of you for tak-
accounts that are often bat-
tered by higher urban living
t he tr ansmission must
costs and are less likely to pro-
voke the kind of you're-blockThe Washington Post ing-my-view road rage that so The 2015 Chevrolet Suburban is huge, even by full-size SUV standards. It's not for the city dweller, but it's great if you want to seat nine people or haul lots of stuff.
often greeted the Suburban
on our journey north from Virginia.
2015 Chevrolet Suhurhan
There is enough space in the foot pedals. But girth is girth, new Suburban to keep every- and mass is mass. And the body out of everybody's way. girth and mass of the SuburBase price:$47,300 Peace. Blessed peace. ban simply gets in the way General Motors, maker of of everything else, especially As tested:$68,595 all things Chevrolet, has giv- in urban traffic. The size of Type:Full-size, front-enen the new Suburban a base the thing also requires very gine, body-on-frame 5.3-liter, direct-injection, gas- careful maneuvering and SUV largely based onthe oline V-8 (355 horsepower, mental measuring, which can Chevrolet Silverado pickup; 383 pound-feet of torque). It is become tiresome on a long available with all-wheel or a smart engine, designed to drive. Ah, and stopping! You rear-wheel drive. run on eight cylinders at high- have to really allow for longer Engine:Standard engine is way speed and in carrying or stopping distances with the a direct-injection, 16-valve, pulling heavy loads. At low- Suburban. No speeding and 5.3-liter V-8 with cylinder er speeds and carrying light tailgating with this one! deactivation technology. loads, it uses four cylinders. But if you have to haul lots Mileage:16mpg city, The upshot is fuel efficiency of of people and stuff, and if you 23 mpg highway about 16 mpg in the city and 23 regularly do that kind of work on the highway — not bad for over long distances, the new a vehicle with a factory weight Suburban is hard to beat. It for a b a r k-free, whine-free (weight minus o c cupants is comfortable, commodious drive. She loved it. We loved the and cargo) of 5,546 pounds, and equipped with all of the peace of it. stretching nearly 19 feet with a advanced electronic safety With new-for-2015 third-row width of almost 7 feet. equipment (blind-spot moniseating in the Suburban, there The base engine is more toring, lane-departure warnis butt-room for nine people. than adequate to move that ing, and a h i gh-definition Ever take a road trip with five hulking vehicle body, the backup camera) in the top-ofto nine people? It can be messy driving ease of which is fa- the line Suburban LTZ driven if you have no demilitarized cilitated by some neat tech- for this column. Just keep it zone in your passenger cabin. nology, such as adjustable out of the city.
But not everybody lives in
a city, certainly not in one as crowded and prickly as New York. Many people live in rural, family-and-neighbor-centric areas, where transporting large groups and all of their stuff is the rule rather than
the exception. The Chevrolet Suburban, in one iteration or
another, has been doing that work since 1936. It has been redesigned for 2015, largely based on the body-on-frame platform of the Chevrolet Silverado pickup truck, to con-
tinue meeting those needs. It does that — and then some. Our dog, Miss Parks — Rosa Parks Brown, her full nameloves the thing. She was never fond of being confined to the rear seats of passenger cars, especially not those in compact and subcompact automobiles.
In the Suburban, she had the fullrun of a rather generous middle lane, which she used to snooze on the floor near the front of the vehicle. That made
downshifting, unlocking the torque converter or slipping. In the case of the 2005 Try depressing the brake RAV4, however, the spare pedal slightly and/or manually tire cannot be the culprit downshifting from overdrive for the simple reason that
back to drive — do either of
the spare does not have a tire pressure sensor in-
these actions replicate what you're experiencing? If so, the
stalled. In fact, none of the
powertrain control model, or
tires have an internal pres- PCM, may be sensing a need sure sensor. for more power and comThis vehicle has an indi- manding these actions. rect tire pressure sensing system that does not rely on I bought a 2005 GMC individual tire pressure sensors. Rather, it utilizes ABS wheel-speed sensors to rec-
Q •• Canyon in 2 0 06 w i t h
31,000 miles on it. The Han-
kook tires on it when I bought ognize differences in rota- it still look new and I can't see tional speed of the wheels any checking. I have driven while the vehicle is in mo- only 6,000 more miles it since tion. Assuming all four tires
I bought it. Do you think I can
are the same make, size still put more miles on them and circumference, signifi- without problems? cantly low tire pressure • In my o p i nion, yes. could cause a tire to have • Whiletires do deteriorate an effectively shorter radius over time, it sounds like the — distance between wheel tires on your vehicle are still centerline to pavement sur- entirely serviceable. To make face — and thus rotate at a sure, have them inspected by different speed. At a certain a tire shop annually. Unless threshold of d i fferential there's an identifiable problem, speed and resonance, the they should remain serviceable low tire warning light will at least 10 years with your low be triggered. annualmileage.
A
I have a 2001 Dodge
Q •• Dakota w i t h
V- 8
— Brand is an automotive troubleshooter. Email questions to paulbrand@startribune.corn.
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INSIDE BOOKS W Editorials, F2 Commentary, F3
© www.bendbulletin.com/opinion
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, APRIL 27, 2014
SUNDAY READER
JOHN COSTA
Documents don't paint full picture
w
e are in the final few weeks of a hot political race, in-
volvingJohn Hummel and
Patrick Flaherty. Hummel, the former Bend city
Lg
councilman, is running against incumbent Deschutes District Attor-
ney Flaherty. A week and a half ago, the Hummel campaign announced that for 17 days it would be releasing selected documents from Flaherty's early tenure, now nearly four years ago. This from the campaign: "Beginning Itresday, April 15, the campaign of Deschutes County District Attorney candidate John Hummel
will release 17 documents in 17 days illustrating the need for a change in leadership at the Deschutes County District Attorney's Office. "The documents and records
chronicle the poor decision-making, bad judgmentand improper behavior of incumbent district attorney Patrick Flaherty."
Accordingto theannouncement, the documents "will be drawn from
a massive file collected by Oregon State Police during an investigation of Flaherty, from The Bulletin, and
from the Vote Hummel campaign's own research." The documents, depicting the
tempestuous days of Flaherty's start as district attorney, are real enough, and the decisions cost taxpayers a lot
of money. No doubt, Flaherty gave new meaning to the term "rocky start."
Illustration by James Best Jr. New York Times News Service
In his campaign, Flaherty has regretted the price tag attached to his decisions but said he believes his
decisions were in the best interests of the district attorney's office and citizens of Central Oregon.
Several aspects of the 17-day campaign are troubling. First, these documents are frag-
mentary, though purporting to paint a complete portrait. What's left out of the picture is the full documentation
of a series of contentious arguments that include Flaherty's assertions. The Bulletin covered all of this
extensively, and fought legally with Flaherty when he sought to drag one of ourreportersbeforeagrandjury. But we presented the full story, all sides, and responses when we could secure them. That's quite different from Hummel's 17 days of
t e 0 en sourceo t e ro em
documents.
Second, the use of the 17 days is clever, though not very attractive. It is the period before the ballots
are mailed and, just as importantly, after the last person-to-person debate between Hummel and Flaherty.
• Much of the underlying structure of major websites relieon s open-source software maintained by acommunity of volunteers, andthe recent security flaw raisesquestions: Is it an adequatesystem?And are companies contributing their fair share?
Would it not have been fairer to bring this up in open debate? Would it not have been more informative to voters to reveal ideas that
contrast with the current operations of the district attorney's office'? What are the details behind Hum-
mel's rather sweeping implication of no cooperation between law enforce-
ment agencies now in Deschutes?
By Nicole Perlroth
which has its roots in efforts in
New York Times News Service
the 1990s to make the Internet
SAN FRANCISCOhe Heartbleed bug that
made news last week
safe from eavesdropping. "SSL" refersto "securesocketslayer," a kind of encryption. Those
drew attention to one of
who use this code do not have
the least understood elements of the Internet: Much of
to pay for it as long as they credit the OpenSSL Project.
What are the crime statistics that led him to imply that we are not as
the invisible backbone of web-
sites from Google to Amazon to
has been picked up by compa-
safe as we could be? Not including those cases that Fla-
the FBI was built by volunteer
nies like Amazon, Facebook, Netflix and Yahoo and used
herty inherited from his predecessor,
what are the charging inconsistencies of Flaherty on his watch? This is politics and, as often said,
politics is not beanbag. But the essential argument that Hummel makes is that, given the
early days' turmoil and costs, Fla-
Over time,OpenSSL code
programmers in what is known as the open-source community. Heartbleed originated in this
to secure the websites of government agencies like the FBI
and Canada's tax agency. It is baked into Pentagon weapons
community, in which these
volunteers, connected over the Internet, work together to build free software, to maintain
and improve it and to look for bugs. Ideally, they check one
systems, devices like Android Caura Pedrick/ New York Times News Service
Eric Raymond is one of the elders of the open-source movement.
herty is not personally fit to be the district attorney. Does Hummel's ap-
another's work in a peer review
"Given enougheyeballs, all bugs are shallow," Raymondwrote in his
system similar to that found in
proach suggest a fit individual?
science, or at least on the non-
1997 book, "The Cathedral & the Bazaar." In the case of Heartbleed, though, "there weren't any eyeballs."
One thing is certain: Elected officials make decisions that cost tax-
profit Wikipedia, where motivated volunteers regularly add
payers money. Flaherty has to explain his decisions, but so should Hummel explain his as a city councilman whenwisely or not, depending on your view — a lot of taxpayer money was foolishly spent, if not wasted.
new information and fix others'
science professor at Columbia
mistakes. This process, advocates say,
University. "Everybody's job is not anybody's job."
ensures trustworthy computer
them a free and, at least in theo-
Once Heartbleed was re-
vealed, nearly two weeks ago, companies raced to put patches
angry former employees, which is an undeniable part of his legacy. Hummel has suggested that dissension remains and is rife in the DA's office. If so, demonstrate it in-
cocle. But since the Heartbleed flaw got through, causing fears — as yet unproved — of widespread damage, members of that world are questioning whether the system is working the way it should. "This bug was introduced two years ago, and yet nobody
stead of releasing old documents.
took the time to notice it," said
Heartbleed to breach a major
Steven Bellovin, a computer
corporation's computer system,
Yes, Flaherty created some very
— John Costais editor-in-chief of The Bulletin. Contact: 541-383-0337, jcostaibendbulletin.com.
smartphones, Cisco desktop phones and home Wi-Fi routers. Companies and government agencies could have used proprietary schemes to secure their systems, but OpenSSL gave
in place to fix it. But security re-
searchers say more than 1 million Web servers could still be vulnerable to attack. Mandiant,
a cyberattack response firm, said Friday that it had found evidence that attackers used
although it was still assessing whether damage was done.
Relying onOpenSSL What makes Heartbleed so
dangerous, security experts say, is the so-called OpenSSL code it compromised. That code
is just one of many maintained by the open-source community. But it plays a critical role in
making our computers and mobile devices safe to use. OpenSSL code was devel-
oped bytheOpenSSL Project,
ry, more secure option. Unlike proprietary software, which is built and maintained
by only a few employees, opensource code like OpenSSL can
be vetted by programmers the world over, advocates say. "Given enough eyeballs, all bugs are shallow" is how Eric Raymond, one of the elders of the open-source movement, put it in his 1997 book, "The Cathedral & the Bazaar," a kind of manifesto for open-source
philosophy. See Heartbleed /F6
F2
TH E BULLETINâ&#x20AC;˘ SUNDAY, APRIL 27, 2014
EDj To
The Bulletin
s
OOSe I eF OF IKLll
OLl
he two active candidates for Deschutes Circuit Court
~ s NE ~>o~
have many similarities. Both are Oregon natives, mil-
g~
gt4 S
itary veterans, active community members, accomplished lawyers, husbands and fathers. They differ, however, in the focus of their legal careers. Randy Miller, 43, is a civil litigator, experienced in commercial, construction, real estate, land use andindividualrights, amongothers. Thomas "T.J." Spear, 52, has spent most of his career in criminal law, as a prosecutor and defense attorney, handling a wide variety of cases ranging from murder to child abuse. He is also a patent attorney and has served as a pro-tem judge. It's a tribute to Central Oregon's legal community that it has fielded two such strong candidates. We think both would serve the court well, and choosing between them isn't easy. Each would need to learn some of what the other knows to serve effectively as a Circuit Court
judge. Our endorsement goes to Miller, in part because the last two judges to join our Circuit Court came from the criminal side, and we believe the court would benefit from adding Miller's expertise to its body of knowledge. While all judges must handle both criminal and civil cases, there's value in having a colleague with complementary knowl-
edge and experience. (A third name appears on the ballot for this race, but Steven Kurzer had withdrawn. Please see the editorialbelow) Millerwas born in Eugene and raised in Lake Oswego. He spent six years in the Marine Corps with combat experience in Kuwait during Operation Desert Storm. He servedasapoliceofficerin Sunriver beforeearning his undergraduate
We'vebeen impressed by Miller's energy and drive, as well as his enthusiasm for the connections he's made with people through campaigning. degree in business management from Linfield College and going to work as an internal auditor for Les Schwab Tire Co. After graduating from Willamette University College of Law,he worked forSchwabe Williamson and Wyatt in Portland and then Bend. In 2012, he started his own lawpractice in Bend. Miller says he wants tobe ajudge because he cares about people and public service. Before deciding to run for retiring judge Barbara Haslinger's seat, he visited each of the sitting judges to discuss his experience and the court's needs. Although his focus on civil litigation means hehasn'thandled many jury trials, he has sought to understand how he can contribute to making the courthouse more efficient. We've been impressed by Miller's energy and drive, as well as his enthusiasm for the connections he's made with people through campaigning. This is a man who does everything at full throttle, but thoughtfully. He'll learn fast and apply careful analysis to allhe encounters, which will serve the Deschutes Circuit Court well.
M 1Vickel's Worth Support fire levy
up-to-date technology and equip- allowed in our residential neighment all result in quick response borhood? They are a business, not The May 20 election will offer and savelives. a residence. My neighborhood is folks an opportunity to approve Vote yes on 9-97 and 9-98. changing so quickly. I felt more at critical funding measures for the HarrIett HeIsey home in the one of 21 years ago. Bend Fire D epartment. Nothing Bend Neighbors, I miss you. overshadows the necessity of keepMadelle Friess ing and improving crucial lifesaving Vacation rentals Bend services. destroy neighborhoods The Bend Fire Department proID makes sense vides emergency medical services, Your March 23 editorial missed f orpurchase,notvoting fire prevention, fire suppression the negative aspects of vacation and rescue in over 132 square miles rentals. It is not just noise and parkIf I were to use a credit card for and 1,450 square miles for ambu-
For 100 years, the Bend Fire De-
w
will get 50 percent of the vote. That would mean that one could not be declared the winner and could not be appointed to the bench to replace Haslinger. For months, then, the Deschutes County Circuit Court could operate a judge short. Based on the population and growth of Deschutes County, the county is already short one judge and one judicial referee. The state does have a system of substitute judges. They rotate through communities that need them. But they are in high demand. There's no guarantee Deschutes County would get one for the entire period. Fewer judges almost inevitably means that criminal and civil cases will take longer. That's not good for anyone. As we wrote in th e editorial above, we endorse Miller. But please, just don't vote for Kurzer.
other. We loved the sense of com-
partment has operated within the
a purchase, I'd expect to have the
clerk check my ID. Why? Because, unlike the claims of voter fraud, identity theft is an actual problem,
not a made-up excuse to disproportionately affect the demographic most unlikely to vote Republican.
Rather than evolve their message to attract the electorate they desperately need to achieve victory
in national elections, Republicans look to blame it on voter fraud. That ID you want to require costs time
munity and camaraderie that exist- and money, which can be viewed ed where we lived. as what some might call a poll tax. Our home is now surrounded by Yes, we've all heard the stories, but vacation rentals, an absentee own- upon close scrutiny and several iner whose home is dark most of the vestigations, voter fraud has been year, and a park. Although there are found to be less than 1 percent. So homes next door on three sides, we keep blaming it on everything but have no immediate neighbors. Side- the ideology, keep obstructing and walks aren't shoveled in the winter. distracting, vote for the Ryan budget Unfamiliar cars come and go. Are and to repeal the Affordable Care they renting? Did someone break Act another 50 times, don't vote to in? Why are the lights on all night'? generate new jobs for the ones lost There is no one to ask to bring in our to the Great Recession.
city's permanent tax rate, but that is no longer sufficient to meet annual
Vote for a candidate who is actually running e'd like to remind readers again. Vote for either Randy Miller or Thomas "T.J."Spear in the race for judge of the Deschutes County Circuit Court. The worst possible outcome would be thatenough votes are cast for Steven Kurzer that neither Miller nor Spear could be declared the clear winner. Kurzer withdrew from the race, so voting for him does not make any sense. He withdrew after it was too late to remove his name from the ballot. And there is an additional complication. Deschutes County Circuit Judge Barbara Haslinger is retiring after the May primary. If Miller or Spear don't get more than 50 percent of the vote, that means they will have a runoff in November. Votes cast for Kurzer make it more likely that neither candidate
ing as you mentioned. It is more an
lance service. Today, these services issue of what a neighborhood has are struggling, with less personnel been and how that sense of commuthan six years ago, to meet essential nity and livability is being destroyed emergency services of Bend's grow- by vacation rentals in true residening population. Staffing levels have tial neighborhoods. fallen below comparable-size OreWhen we moved to Bend in 1993, gon cities, and response times are we were surrounded by wonderful below national standards. Increased neighbors. We talked in the yard, funding is necessary for personnel, watered plants for on e a nother, training and equipment to keep brought in newspapers and mail, Bend's residents safe. and generally looked out for each
costs of the department's essential services. The city proposes a fiveyear operating levy of 20 cents per $1,000 assessed value. Levies for the Deschutes County Sheriff's Office
and Deschutes Public Library system are expiring, making the proposed levy almost cost-neutral for
taxpayers. Our family has turned to 911 for emergency help a number of times paper, no one to wave to as the cars and the arrival of EMT personnel go by. immediately relieves anxiety, as we Neighborhoods are a commu-
proud Independent just tired of the do-nothings who can only complain
know they are well trained to take
and offer no real ideas to move these
nity of people who live next to one
No, I'm not a Democrat; I'm a
charge. Theybring expertise to han- another, know each others' names issues forward and work for the madle the situation and calm the family and care. Vacation rentals are jority of the American people and during stressful events. destroying the very basis of our the betterment of our great nation. Whether medical or fire, ade- neighborhood. David Giordanengo quate staffing, excellent training, Why are vacationrentals even Bend
Letters policy
In My Viewpolicy How to submit
We welcomeyour letters. Letters should be limited to one issue, contain no more than 250words and include the writer's signature, phonenumber and address for verification. Weedit letters for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. Wereject poetry, personal attacks, form letters, letters submitted elsewhereandthose appropriate for other sections of TheBulletin. Writers are limited to one letter or Op-Ed pieceevery 30 days.
In My View submissions should be between 550and 650 words, signed and include the writer's phone number and address for verification. Weedit submissions for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. Wereject those published elsewhere. In My View pieces run routinely in the space below, alternating withnational columnists. Writers are limited to one letter or Op-Ed pieceevery 30 days.
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Bend, OR97708 Fax: 541-385-5804
Spearist erig t c oice orCircuitCourtju ge By Tom Howes m casting my vote for Thom-
t'
are law school graduates and mem-
bers in good standing with the Oreas "T.J." Spear for Circuit Court gon State Bar. Spear has been an atjudgeon May 20.Letm etryto ex- torney for 19 years and Randy Miller plain why I've reached this decision. for nine years. Both have families and I practiced law in Oregon for 40 probably a dog they presumably love. So what separates these appliyears, 35 in Deschutes County, as district attorney, criminal defense, civil
plaintiffs and defense counsel, Bend municipal judge, pro-tem circuit judge and pro-tem tribal judge. I've hired and fired a few attorneys. I oftentimes find myself evaluating attorneys and candidates by asking myself: Would I hire this person? I think that's a fair question when a person is asking me to vote him or
her into a public job which takes specific training and carries a great deal of responsibility. The two applicants for this job are both basically qualified because they
IN MY VIEW will probably see Spear in one of the courtrooms acting as an attorney or
"Iwant ajudge who has an abundance of experience in a variety of cases so that the people who appear before him get a fair, objective decision based on the law and the facts."
a judge. Spear was duly appointed by the Oregon Supreme Court seven years ago as a Circuit Court judge cants'? We need to look at their rele- pro-tem, which means he has all the vant experience because I prefer to same powers and duties as any cir- you that there is a vast difference hire people with a track record that cuit judge. That appointment is for between a policeofficerand aproseI can check. My experience tells me three years, which means he has cutor; neither can do what the other that the past performance usual- been reappointed twice. The local can. ly predicts the future better than a presiding judge wouldn't allow a reI know that you probably won't see blank slate. You might get lucky with appointment if Spear was not doing Miller in any courtroom as an attoran inexperiencedcandidate,butw hy a good job. ney, and he's never been appointed as take that chance if you don't have to? Miller has worked for a large law a judge. I've heard from colleagues I know that Spear has 19 years firm from Portland, which has a that Miller has very limited courtlegal experience in both criminal branch office in Bend, doing business room experience. I've defended criminal cases that prosecution and defense, family law. He's never prosecuted a criminal law, general civil litigation and pat- case that I know of. Miller says he Spear prosecuted and I was iment law. I know that if you go to our was a police officer for a year in Sun- pressed by his work, his demeanor courthouse on any given day you river, which is fine, but let me assure and his objectivity. I've seen Spear
in court on many occasions and have
always been impressed by his temperament; he never seems to getrattled, excited or frustrated.
In summary, I want a judge who has an abundance of experience in a variety of cases so that the people
who appear before him get a fair, objective decision based on the law and the facts.
Based on the above, I'm going to vote for Spear for circuit judge and I hope you do also. â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Tom Howes lives in Bend.
SUNDAY, APRIL 27, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
F3
OMMENTARY
Rei e m m i n w
e should ask Senate Major-
ity Harry Reid (D-Nev) the same question once posed
to Sen. Joseph McCarthy by U.S.
Army head counsel Robert Welch: "Have you no sense of decency, sir? At long last, have you left no sense of
decency?" Reid is back in the news for denigrating the peaceful supporters of Nevada rancher Cliven Bundy, a popular critic of the Bureau of Land Management policy, as "domestic terrorists."
McCarthy in the 1950s became infamous for smearing his opponents with lurid allegations that he could not prove while questioning their
m o e r n Mc art John McCain." Of
VICTOR
dent Bush is a liar." Reid daimed that fellow Mormon Mitt Romney had
"sullied" his religion.
fectly: "Theburden shouldbe on him. He's the one I've alleged has not paid any taxes."
When the Koch brothers donated money that was used for political ads — just as liberal political donors
George Soros and the Steyer brothers have done — Reid rushed to the Senate floor to question their patri-
otism: "These two brothers ... are about as un-American as anyone that I can imagine." The charge of being patriotism. Reid has brought back to "un-American" is also vintage McCathe Senate that exact same McCar- rthyite slander. thy style of six decades ago — and Reid also has a bad habit of racial trumped it. bigotry. He once praised fellow Sen. During the 2012 presidential cam- Barack Obama because he was, in paign, Reid libeled candidate Mitt Reid's words, a "light-skinned" AfriRomney with the unsubstantiated can-American "with no Negro diaand later-refuted charge that Rom- lect, unless he wanted to have one." ney was a tax cheat. "The word's out
When Reid was worried that he
that (Romney) hasn't paid any taxes would not get enough Hispanic votfor 10 years," Reid said. ers, he condescendingly lectured the Later, when asked for proof, Reid
Latino community: "I don't know
FRIEDMAN
t h en-President daughter thousands of dollars from
George W. Bush, Reid said: "Presi-
DAVIS HANSON
THOMAS
his campaign war chest to make jewelry gifts for his donors and friends. Only after a storm of criticism did he
reimbursehiscampaign fund. When G en . D a v i d P e t raeus So how does Reid's reckless cabrought proof to Congress that the reer continue with the Senate leader surge in Iraq was beginning to work avoiding the sort of congressional by late 2007, Reid declared, "No, I censure that finally did in McCarthy? don't believe him, because it's not Why is there is no progressive muckhappening." raker to take on Reid the way that He elaborated on that charge by Edward R. Murrow once exposed labeling Petraeus — at thetimethe se- McCarthy? nior ground commander of U.S. forcFor the left, Reid's utility as an ates fighting in Iraq — a veritable liar. tack dog (like McCarthy's utility to Reid alleged that Petraeus "has made Republicans) outweighs the downa number ofstatements over theyears sideofhiscrudebombast. that have notprovento be factual." His lurid, unsubstantiated charges When an African-American and against Romney were helpful in deDemocratic appointee to the Nucle- monizing Romney as a rich grandee. ar Regulatory Commission, William His untruths about Petraeus helped Magwood, opposed Reid on the Yuc- shoreup Democrats'antiwar credenca Mountain nuclear waste disposal tials. Environmentalists did not obsite controversy, Reid called him a ject to his character assassination of "firstclass rat,""treacherous,miseranudear power advocate Magwood. Reid's viciousness also serves as a ble liar," and "one of the most unethical, prevaricating, incompetent peo- deterrent. Why tangle with the anyple I've ever dealt with." thing-goes Reid when it means endLike a pre-reform-era politician, lessly replying to a litany of smears? Reid entered public service relatively P art Tammany H a ll-style f i xpoor and will leave it as a multimiler, part pre-civil rights Democrat lionaire. He has granted lucrative and part demagogicJoe McCarfavors to casinos and rich investors thy, Harry Reid is a throwback to a who hired his sons' legal firm. While type of American politics better left in office he made considerable profits forgotten. on private business and real estate — Victor Davis Hansonis aclassicist and
offered a pathetic rejoinder: "I have how anyone of Hispanic heritage had a number of people tell me that." couldbe a Republican,OK. DoIneed One wonders how many names were to say more?" on Reid's McCarthyite "tell" list Reid has also brought back McCawere there, as McCarthyused toblus- rthy's custom of vicious and someter, 205 names, or perhaps just 57? times profane insults. When asked againto document During the 2008 presidential cam- deals. the slur, Reid echoed McCarthy per- paign, Reid announced: "I can't stand Reid recently paid his grand-
historian at the Hooverlnstitution and Stanford University.
All about May 25 KIEV, Ukraine-
T
he word "maidan" means "square" in Ukrainian and in Arabic. And the "Indepen-
dence Maidan" of Kiev, like the "Tahrir Maidan" of Cairo, has been the scene of an awe-inspiringburst of democratic aspirations. The barricades of piled cobblestones, tires, wood beams and
burned cars erected by Ukrainian revolutionaries are still there. Walking through it, though, I tried to explain to my host that, while I was incredibly impressed, a lot of Americans today have "Maidan fatigue"too many dashed hopes for democracy in too many squares — from Afghanistan to Iran, Iraq to Egypt, Syria to Libya. Get over it, Ukrainians tell me. Our revolution is different. There are
real democratic roots here, real civil society institutions and the magnet of the European Union next door.
With a little help, we can do this. It would have been nice if we could
have forged a compromise with President Vladimir Putin of Russia that would have allowed Ukraine to
gradually join the European Union
Autism and the fear of vaccination By FrankBrunl
and pressed on and on.
New York Times News Service
at do you call someone who sows misinformation,
I n 2007, she wa s
"Oprah" and said that when she
to overcome our fatigue, and Ukrai-
took Evan to the doctor for the combined measles-mumps-rubella vac-
nians will have to unite more than ever. The first test will come on May
25 when Ukraine holds presidential elections. Putin is working to prevent or discredit those elections by
bombarding the more pro-Russian eastern Ukraine with propaganda that the Maidan movement was led
by "fascists" and using his agents and hooded local thugs to keep the region in turmoil so people won't vote. Our job is to back Putin off so the elections can happen. The Ukraini-
ans' job is to make sure elections are relevant by electing a decent, inclusive person, who will work to ensure
Ukraine's unity and clean up its corruption. If a majority here votes in a
explores and explodes the myth that vaccines cause autism, noted
that McCarthy had a relatively new gig on ABC's "The View" that could be jeopardized by continued fearmongering. What once raised her profile, he said, could now cut her down.
ling than public health and truth? Her exposure proves how readily television bookers and much of the news media will let famous people or pretty people or (best of all!) people who are both famous and pretty hold forth on subjects to which they bring no actual expertise. Whether
As she does her convenient pivot, the topic is autism or presidential the rest of us should look at ques- politics, celebrity trumps authority tions raised by her misadventures. and obviates erudition. When did it become OK to presThere's also this: How much time ent gut feelings like hers as some- did physicians and public officials thing in l egitimate competition waste trying to neutralize the junk with real science'? That's what in- in which McCarthy trafficked'? As terviewers who gave her airtime Fred Volkmar, a professor at Yale did, also letting her tell the tale of University's medical school, said to supposedly curing Evan's autism me, "It diverts people from what's with a combination of her "Mommy really important, which is to focus instinct" and a gluten-free diet, and on the science of really helping kids I'd love to know how they justify it. with autism." Are the eyeballs drawn by some— FrankBruniis acolumnist one like McCarthy more compelfor TheNew York Times.
Keystone Pipeline progress slow and unsteady By Jay Ambrose
That's not Fox News speculating, I myself was convinced at a meeting carbon taxes, cap-and-trade, renewe've celebrated Earth Day but The New York Times, which of dozens of geologists that the oil ables and the Kyoto global warming this past week, and may- points out in an analytical piece and gas industry is exercising cau- treaty were embraced, the 28 membe that's what the White that it's not just Steyer afraid that tion as meticulously as meticulously ber nations are in retreat because House hoped people would think it Keystone will contribute to global gets. of the costs. Continued full enforce"Fracking" is a relatively new ment of some of the rules could lead was doing when it earlier delayed warming through greenhouse carMcClatchy-Yrnhune News Service
w
t h e j o b-creating, bon emissions from the oil it trans-
energy-boosting, science-endorsed, K eystone XL p ipeline. It w a s more nearly a means of bringing in bribes. A real way to celebrate would be to cheer on fracking, an environmental as well as an eco-
nomic blessing. An initial government-sponsored study of the proposed pipeline from Canada to Texas took three years during which scientists filled eight volumes with data verifying it was safe. Environmental activists said
Ukraine and Russia. That won't be a c akewalk. We and our European allies will have
i n v ited o n
stokes fear, abets behavior that endangers people's health, ex- cine, she had "a very bad feeling" tracts enormous visibility from do- about what she recklessly termed ing so and then says the equivalent "the autism shot." She added that of "Who? Me?" after the vaccination, "Boom! Soul, I'm not aware of any common gone from his eyes." noun for a bad actor of this sort. In an online Q%A after the show, But there's a proper noun: Jenny she wrote: "If I had another child, I McCarthy. would not vaccinate." For much of the past decade, McShe also appeared on CNN in Carthy has been the panicked face 2007 and said that when concerned and intemperate voice of a move- pregnant women asked her what ment that posits a link between to do, "I am surely not going to tell autism and childhood vaccinations anyone to vaccinate." and that badmouths vaccines in Two years later, in Time magageneral, saying that they have tox- zine, she said, "If you ask a parent ins in them and that children get too of an autistic child if they want the many of them at once. measles or the autism, we will stand Because she posed nude for Play- in line for the measles." I've deleted boy, dated Jim Carrey and is blond the expletive she used before the and bellicose, she has received second "measles." I don't know how she can claim a platforms for this message that her fellow nonsense peddlers might not pro-vaccine record. But I know why have. She has spread the twisted she'd want to. word more efficiently than the rest. Over the last few years, measles And then, earlier this month, she outbreaks linked to parents' refussaid the craziest thing of all, in a als to vaccinate children have been column for The Chicago Sun-Times. laid at McCarthy's feet. The British "I am n o t ' a n ti-vaccine,'" she study that opponents like her long wrote, going on to add, "For years, cited has been revealed asfraudI have repeatedly stated that I am, ulent. And she and her tribe have in fact, 'pro-vaccine' and for years I gone from seeming like pitifully have been wrongly branded." misguided dissidents to indefatigaYou can call this revisionism. Or bly senseless quacks, a changed cliyou can call it "a complete and utter mate and mood suggested by what lie," as the writer Michael Specter h appened last month w hen s he said to me. asked her Twitter followers to name McCarthy waded into the sub- "the most i mportant personality ject after her son, Evan, was given trait" in a mate. She got a bevy of a diagnosis of autism in 2005. She blistering responses along the lines was initially motivated, it seems, by of "someone who vaccinates" and "critical thinking skills." heartache and genuine concern. She proceeded to hysteria and Seth Mnookin, the author of the wild hypothesis. She got traction, 2011 book "The Panic Virus," which
construction of
and not t h reaten him. P resident Barack Obama tried to find such a win-win formula. But Putin is not into win-win here. He is into winlose. So he must lose, for the sake of
word in common discourse. It refers
to "deindustrialization" of his coun-
ports, but still other liberals whose to hydraulic fracturing of under- try, one German official was quoted donations are coveted. ground rocks by means of liquids as saying, and fracking has come to The Times, which figures the de- pushing powerfully to create escape have increased appeal. lay will last at least until the mid- routes for natural gas or oil. A verIn a way, it is almost incredible term electionshave come and gone, points out that the Keystone contri-
bution to greenhouse gases would be a meaningless smidgen. Obama should know that and either (1) has joined the flat-earth society he once said is the home of warming skeptics or (2) is willing to sacrifice the good of unemployed workers and phooey on that, President Barack Americans in general for the sake of Obama agreed,the route was re- campaignmoola. vised, and there was another study My guess is that the latter is more saying not to worry. Obama still nearly true. Yes, the administration
tical version has been around for 60 years,but there's a more recent
there could have been this fracking
development meeting environmenhorizontal version permitting easy talist objectives even as it spurs access tovast deposits of gas and oil. This means that, in meeting our
economic growth to the extent of
an emerging, nation-lifting energy energy needs and environmental boom. As you might expect, some goals, we are relying more on cheap radicals aren't satisfied and are natural gas, a fossil fuel that emits sparing no exaggeration or techfar less carbon dioxide than the nique to either shut up or denigrate others.
Already, owing largely to this gift from the free market, an ever largerpercentage of electric generworried to the point of this recent has bent some as activist groups ators are using natural gas instead delay. The issue was that, if the proj- have dished out unsupportable of coal and that's a big reason we're ect took off, liberal California bil- propaganda. But two leaders ofthe seeing the lowest carbon-dioxide lionaire Tom Steyer might not give Environmental Protection Agency emissions in this country since the millions to Democrats in Novem- under Obama have insisted the en- mid-1990s. In the European Union, ber's congressional elections. vironmental concerns are minimaL where fracking was frowned on and
the other side in an effort to end
use of all fossil fuels. It is people of this ideological ilk who also oppose the Keystone pipeline successfully enough to have a president at least
free election to move toward Europe and away from Moscow, Putin has a real problem. Daria Marchak, a young business reporter here, explained to me why young Ukrainians are so desperate to join the EU. "Up to 2011, there was
a sense of improvement here," she said. But the last government was so
corrupt, at an industrial scale, people felt "we were going backward." And then when that old government
said it was abandoning the idea of joining the EU to join Putin's bogus Eurasian Union, it was the last straw.
"People felt that if we joined Putin's customs union the corrupt system here will be cemented forever,"
said Marchak, and young people would have no future. Their desperation to join the European Union is
in the hope that it will lead to what I call "globalution" — revolution from beyond — that the EU will force on
Ukraine's politicians standards of transparency that the young people here simply can't. The EU "will be the instrument of change," she said. But for Ukraine to unite and join the EU will require a president with
an inclusive vision for integrating the East and West of this country,
saidOleh Levchenko, a Maidan political activist.
"The biggest problem we have today is the absence of the right message — a message that can unite East and West," he said. "So this is not a problem of Putin. It is our fail-
ure. Nobody draws a unifying vision of the future."
Indeed, Ukraine has some "Tahrir Square disease." The Kiev revolutionaries have been incredibly brave.
But, like in Egypt, they have not yet translated their aspirations — for an inclusive, noncorrupt, pro-EU future
— into their own political parties or n ational candidates who can w i n
elections and govern. In sum, it was courageous Ukrainians who gave birth to their own clean democracy movement, be-
cause they were fed up. But Putin can't live with a successful, Westward-looking democracy here, and young Ukrainians can't live without it. So, for it to thrive, we have to make sure Putin doesn't kill it in
temporarily cheat America out of
the crib, and they have to make sure
something beneficial. But happy Earth Day, everyone.
their old-line politicians don't kill it before it learns to walk.
— Jay Ambrose is anop-ed columnist for McClatchy-Tribune.
— Thomas Friedman is a columnist for The New Yori'z Times.
© www.bendbulletin.com/books
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, APRIL 27, 2014
BEST-SELLERS Publishers Weekly ranks the best-sellers for weekending April13. HARDCOVERFICTION 1. "The Collector" by Nora Roberts (Putnam) 2. "I've Got YouUnder My Skin" by Mary Higgins Clark (Simon 8 Schuster) 3."TheGoldfinch"byDonna Tartt (Little, Brown) 4. "NYPD Red 2" by Patterson/Karp (Little, Brown) 5. "Carnal Curiosity" by Stuart Woods (Putnam) 6. "Keep Quiet" by Lisa Scottoline (St. Martin's) 7. "Missing You" by Harlan Coben (Dutton) 8. "The Invention of Wings" by Sue MonkKidd (Viking) 9. "Power Play" by Danielle Steel (Delacorte) 10. "Blossom Street Brides" by Debbie Macomber (Ballantine) HARDCOVER NONFICTION 1. "Flash Boys" by Michael Lewis (Norton) 2. "The Doctor's Diet" by Travis Stork (Bird Street Books) 3. "Killing Jesus" by O'Reilly/Dugard (Henry Holt) 4. "The Women of Duck Commander" by Kay Robertson (Howard Books) 5. "Grain Brain" by David Perlmutter (Little, Brown) 6. "Players First" by John Calipari (Penguin Press) 7. "Thrive" by Arianna Huffington (Harmony) 8. "The Confidence Code" by Katty Kay (HarperBusi-
ness)
9. "Blood Sugar Solution 10Day Detox Diet" by Mark Hyman (Little, Brown) 10. "10% Happier" by Dan Harris (It Books) — iI//cClatchy-TribuneNewsService
'REBEL MUSIC'
s amic s iritua i an By Janet Maslin New York Times News Service
T he subject matter o f "Rebel Music: Race, Empire and the New Muslim Youth
Culture" could not be more far-reaching unless its aut hor, Hisham D. A i di , h a d
unearthed data about youth culture and musical influenc-
combative world. After connecting the present-day experience of young European Muslims (especially in France) with that of African-Americans a century ago during the first Great Migration, as stigmatized groups feeling pressure to find new homes, "Rebel Music" moves
es on other planets. As far as on to Brazil, a country known Earth goes, his highly origi- for sensuality, tolerance and a nal and ambitious book has Muslim population of roughgot it covered. ly 1 million people. Here, as "Rebel Music" exhibits a t hroughout the b ook, A i d i breathtaking familiarity with delves far beneath the surface different forms of radicaliz- of stereotypes, even when the ing music and the widely dif- stereotypes themselves aren't ferent ways it is understood widely known. in different cultures, with a He examines the figure of special emphasis on Islamic the Enchanted Mooress, a hot youth. Aidi starts his book number who first appeared simply in the South Bronx, an in Portuguese and Spanish epicenter of young Muslims' folklore in the 1500s, when hip-hop obsession. the Inquisition was banishing Aidi goes there, in part, be- Muslim women to the New cause he hopes to talk to the World, where many served in French rap crew 3eme Oeil brothels. Since then, she has (Third Eye) from Marseille. morphed into a mixed-blood They are equally glad to meet feature of Brazil's warm, welhim when he tells them he's coming samba culture: a treat from Columbia, mistaking for tourists during Carnival the university (where he is a (which the book describes in lecturer) with the record com- graphic detail) but a horror pany. No matter. He has the for contemporary M u slims illuminating experience of trying to uphold the mores of finding a French DJ who says their religion in a culture that he has dreamed of visiting the flaunts the sexual availability Bronx his whole life, because of its women. his role model is the Bronx In addition to schisms beDJ Afrika Bambaataa. Aidi tween highly observant and meets others there who are more moderate Muslims in simply searching for a Mus- Brazil, the country also has lim-friendly e n v i ronment. Christian Arabs of Lebanese If this book has a unifying descent to add to other Bratheme, it is the eagerness of zilians' confused view of the young Muslims in every cul- Middle East. Brazil's soap ture to find musical expres- operas combine A r abian sion that feels honest and a exotica with Brazilian suds safe haven in an endlessly and their depictions of Mus-
HI8:HAM D. AIDvl
o i tica rotest If this book has a unifying theme, it is the
eagerness of young Muslims in every culture to find musical expression that feels honest
and asafe haven in an endlessly combatative world.
' 'lG
Much of "Rebel Music"
seem to have no idea what
is about tougher and more substantial issues. He writes
messages they are sending, and their obliviousness infuri-
about the conundrum faced by governments of principally
ates clerics and scholars. Aidi
drops in on a Muslim gathersss. r~e~s, sndXhr.'ijs~ non-Muslim countries: wheth- ing of hip-hop fans in the Belssr'~Wo~ C u'Its er tosupport more moderate gian city of Antwerp - Morocfactions (whose members, cans, Tunisians, Turks, Conof course, bristle at being golese - being set straight by lim characters spark argu- thought of that way) or more the headliner,Napoleon, once ments even while they draw stringent ones with less toler- a member of 'Itrpac Shakur's huge audiences. And Brazil's ance for popular culture. It's crew and now dressed in a growing Muslim p opula- an easy segue fromthis debate brown robe, white skullcap tion includes more and more to the religious beliefs of great and combat boots, about what blacks, catching the attention American jazz musicians of the audience's favorite rapof international politicians the 1940s and early '50s, who pers are really saying. Did since 9/11. "It is rather ironic converted to Islam so univer- they know that Biggie Smalls that American diplomats are sally that Ebony magazine said, "When I die, I wanna go worried about the rise of Is- published an article in 1953 to hell"'? Or that "Nas said, lam among African-descend- with the headline "Ancient Re- 'There's heaven for atheists'"? "Napoleon shook his head. ed communities in Brazil and ligion Attracts Moderns." the Caribbean," Aidi writes, Aidi provides not only a 'Muslims be repeatin' these "when it's American cultural full history of this develop- lyrics — and the angels are exports" — hip-hop and its ment, going back to the 1920s recording.'" " Rebel Music" ha s n o occasional black-power af- and Muslim missionaries in fectations — "that are trigger- the American Midwest, but chance of ending on a note ing that interest." also describes the still-con- of peaceful resolution. But Though his book is filled tinuing debate as to whether it does lay out an array of with v a l u able o v e r views, John Coltrane, on his 1965 fascinating conflicts, taking Aidi is always willing to stop album "A Love Supreme," is on a subject that has rarely to describe incidents like a actually saying "Allah Su- been addressed in book form. scandalizing World Cup per- preme." It's not unusual, Aidi Its most tender chapter def ormance by S h akira, t h e says, to see young American scribes Judeo-Arabic music, Lebanese-Colombian singer Muslims huddled around an which flowered in Algeria in - to whom he also gives shout- iPod dock trying to make out the 1960s but later became a outs for her 5-ounce bel- the words. lightning rod for controverly-dancing costumes and her Whatever Coltrane said, he sy. Like every topic brought ability "to bring a pop tropi- knew his own mind. But this up by Aidi's jampacked comcalist-Orientalist syncretism" book argues that some of to- pendium, itdeserves a closer day's biggest hip-hop stars look. into the mainstream.
'You Must Remember This'
'AmericanSaint' givesreadersreal Seton
recalls Hollywoodgolden era
By Sarah Bryan Miller
vived her, and who became a
St. Louis Post-Dispatch
nun herself.
By Susan King Los Angeles Times
LOS ANGELES — Robert
have closed because of changing times and tastes. The book gives us an in-
Wagner is in a reflective mood. timate look at such famed "Movies last forever," not- movie industry locales as ed the veteran actor ("Broken the Beverly Hills Hotel and Lance," "The Pink Panther," shows how the stars mainthe "Austin Powers" series), tained their high style in but the Hollywood he once everything they did, from knew has all but disappeared. their hobbies to their clothes "I turned around, and it was (Wagner always favored all gone," Wagner, 84, said re- Italian tailors). cently in Beverly Hills. Wagner, who began at Known as R.J. to his friends 20th Century Fox at age 18, and colleagues, he's dapper, got to know Hollywood's charming, handsome and elite, including Fred Astaire, very much cut from the same
I
The book has numerous factual errors, and Barthel gives short shrift to the Angli-
Seton was an A m erican
original. Born into New
BOBERT J. O'AGXER ~ SCOTT EYMAN
York's upper crust in 1774,
she was the daughter of a prominent doctor, raised a
YOUMUST REMEM BERt)lig, L IF E „ H S T Y L E H QLLYWQQ D 5 Q OLDE N A Q E
-AMERICAN
devout Episcopalian, mar-
ried a well-to-do businessman, William Seton, had five children and worked with others from her parish to assist needy wid-
']';.7'H'E
5AINT
LIFE oj'ELIZABETH
I']ioAN BARTHEL
I
ments and the traditional lit-
urgy. Seton would have been unlikely to move so easily to the Roman Catholic Church without her solid Episcopalian background. Still, using Seton's own
When Seton's longtime
a c t ors
and actresses were thought of as royalty, and to be taken into that fold and to be nur-
tured by those people was wonderful." It was Astaire who men-
tored him from a young age. He later became Wagner's golfing buddy and played his father on "It Takes a Thief."
W agner was i n
g r a de
school when he first met the
legendary star of such musicals as "Top Hat" and "Swing Time." He had never even
seen any of Astaire's films. "I went to the Hollywood
Military Academy and Fred's stepson Peter went there," said Wagner. "I was a boarder. Boarders would go to families' houses for the weekend.
attracted. She converted formally in 1805 and was ostracized; she was persuaded to start a religious school in Maryland, took
vows and founded the Sisters of Charity of St. Joseph, the first American
order of nuns, as its mother superior. She died in 1821, at the age of 46, was beati-
fied in 1963 and canonized in 1975. "American
S a i nt " i s
eated. Despite her piety, Elizabeth Seton was never
a plaster saint: she could ed suici de,she was attrac-
so kind to me." And that kindness contin-
she was generally strict and she could be cold and unsympathetic. She was at least indirectly responsible for the deaths of two
under contract at Fox," said
of the book is the strongest;
f r o m curiously, it loses momentum E lizabeth S e ton's o w n when she gets to the most writings. Although this is, interesting part: Seton's constrictly speaking, a hagi- version and journey to Maryography - the biography of land. More exploration of the a saint - it focuses on the effects (and wisdom) of taking woman, her faults as well her daughters with her to a reas strengths clearly delin- ligious community devoid of
be volatile, she contemplat-
Bel-Air Country Club and I told him I got a chance to be
words, Barthel has created an
intriguing portrait of a strong woman with a strong faith who made a lasting difference for good. Before tuberculosis claimed her, Seton wrote, "I beth woke in darkness, to am sick, but not dying; trouthe ringing of church bells. A bled on every side, but not wind gusted through crevic- distressed; perplexed, but not es in the brick wall; the room despairing; afflicted, but not was clenched in cold. Waves forsaken; cast down, but not crashed on the rocks below destroyed; knowing the afflicas white foam splashed high tion of this life is but for a moand hard against the little ment, while the glory in the barred window, blotting out life to come will be eternal." the moonlight." Those are saintly w ords Barthel's material is fasci- indeed. nating, but she hasn't organized it well. The first half
d rawn primarily
came, pickedme up and put me in his car. He was always
"I remember being at the
male clerics who had authority over the sisters when they
tuberculosis wor s ened, overstepped what she regardthey went to Italy, where ed as appropriate. he died; when introduced As with many nonfiction to R oman C a t holicism, books, there are some novElizabeth wa s i n stantly elistic imaginings: "Eliza-
I r emember F re d A s t aire
ued forfivem oredecades.
Anglican Communion has retained the Apostolic Succession,the three orders ofclergy, the primacy of the sacra-
the Napoleonic Wars took several of his ships,
and do without.
ed. M o t ion-picture
religious faith. Known as the "Via Media" (Middle Way) for its combination of Cathol-
ows and children. When
bankruptcy, and Elizabeth learned to make do
view, carrying flowers and chocolates as gifts. "You played the game," he said. "You were a property. You were someone they were grooming.You were protect-
canism that nurtured Seton's
icism and Protestantism, the
esrON
William Seton suffered
Frank Sinatra, Clark Gable
cloth as the suave characters and David Niven. "It was the era," said the he played in the TV series "It Takes a Thief' and "Hart to grandfather of two, who has Hart," in which he and Ste- a recurring role as Michael fanie Powers played a wealthy Weatherly's ne'er-do-well dad crime-solving couple. on CBS' most popular series, "I was so shocked one day "NCIS." when I went by Jimmy StewYoung actors he's worked art's house and it was knocked with recently as well as friends down and (a new house) was of his daughters are always built right up to the curb," he asking him about the old said. "The thing is, if some- Hollywood. "They don't know anything body buys a house, they can do anything that they want." about it," said Wagner, who Including doing nothing at lives in L.A. and Aspen with all. St. John and their German Seven years ago, he and shepherd, Max. "They don't his wife, actress Jill St. John, know Fox had a young talsold their Cliff May-designed ent group of 40 young actors. house in Mandeville Canyon. There was a school there to "And nobody has been in since educate people, a place where the day I sold it," said Wag- you could go and study with ner, who moved there with his coaches and do scenes." three daughters soon after the Though some actors chafed drowning death of his then- under the studio contract syswife, Natalie Wood, in Novem- tem, preferring to pick their ber 1981. "It's just been sitting own parts instead of having there." their bosses select their roles, In his new book, "You Must Wagner found it satisfying. "It was such a wonderful Remember This: Life and Style in Hollywood's Golden Age," time," he said. "Those people Wagner and his collaborator at Fox were like family to me. Scott Eyman offer a humor- I was signed there when I was ous, poignant and sometimes 18 and I left when I was 30. juicy view of a vanished era. They really cared for me." His book talks about the legHe played his roles well, endary stars' grandiose man- both on screen and off, folsions — the majority of which lowing the studio's guidehave suffered the same fate lines. He went to premieres as Stewart's — and takes us and parties to promote films, insidethe era's famed restau- often on the arm of an ingerants such as Chasen's (where nue chosen to be his date for Bob Hope once rode through the event. He would dutifully the dining room on a horse) show up at the house of gosand the Brown Derby and the sip columnist Hedda Hopper, glittery nightclubs such as the who could make or break an Cocoanut Grove, all of which actor'scareer, for an inter-
Elizabeth Ann Bayley
material comforts would have
been helpful, as would more about her daughter Catherine, the only daughter who sur-
tive and attracted to men,
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man couldn't have been more encouraging."
keepers to p r i ests; she more often stood up to the
Seton was also respon-
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SUNDAY, APRIL 27, 2014• THE BULLETIN
'THE SOUND BOOK'
How anIllinoismobgot away with murdering areligiousleader "American Crucifixion" by Alex Beam (PublicAffairs, 336 pgs., $26.99)
ion" masters its setting and era, the book's greatest contri-
Benjamin Norman/New YorkTimes NewsService
The Oyster Bar at Grand Central Terminal in New York, where sound is guided along tiled archways, is one ofthe many places mentioned in Trevor Cox's "The Sound Book,"a book about the extreme and
historically venerated phenomena ofoursonic universe.
By Mark Jacob
many memorable characters.
Chicago Tribune
There was, of course, Smith an excuse to settle the dispute — described as "prophet, seer, for good.
mon to run for president will be surprised that Smith was
O Ile 5
controversial than the founder of the Church of Jesus
New Yorh Times News Service
Have you planned your summer vacation yet? Any thoughts as to w hat places
you'd like to hear this year? lists we are so fond of — those 1,000 Places to See Before You Die — all focus on the visual.
l01" ' a,
itn
A pity, according to British acoustic engineer Trevor Cox. In "The Sound Book: The Sci-
ence of the Sonic Wonders of the World" (WW. Norton & Andrew Testa/New YorkTimes NewsService Co.), he argues that you could work your way through all Big Ben in London is known for its chimes, as well as its impres1,000 items on such a list and sive view of the city. still miss out on some of the
w orld's greatmarvels. I nstead, he lets h i s ears Daily Sun, of Maine, in 1893, guide him on an adventure "transforming his crescen-
to track down quirky , ex- d o s entences into comical treme and historically v ener- squeals, or causing his pianisated phenomena of our sonic simo phrases, his stage whisuniverse. In the process, he p ers, to shriek and wail as he makes a lucid and passionate m o ved to and fro." casefora more mindful way Bur r owing further back in of listening to and engaging time,Cox introduces research with m usical, natural and i nto archeo-acoustics. Visitors man-made sounds. to the Mayan ruins at Chichen Not every reader I tza in M e x ico c an will want to follow observe a squawking Cox as he splashes f ' '"' echo produced by the around a V i c toristairs leading up the an sewer, noting Pyramid of Kukulhow the sound of kan, which seem to his speech spins turn the sound of around th e i n side hands clapping into of the curved walls the chirp of the quet"like a motorcyclist zal bird. Design or performing i n a accident? Wall of Death." Nor
will they be able to squeeze through a pipe,a she does, into an abandonedstorage tank deep inside a Scottish hillside that once h eld 7
many of us live in cities that are so loud that the birds have
was once one of us" and that Law, who started a newspahumans can perfectthem- per called the Nauvoo Exselves to reach the status of positor to denounce polygagods. Such radical views cre- my and other perceived exated deep and lasting rifts in cesses of Smith's leadership. Smith's flock. The prophet was enraged Beam also does a fine job by the first and only edition of depicting the lawlessness and incited his followers to common along the Mississip- burn Law's offices, destroy pi River, where Smith and his his $2,000 press and scatter followers established Nauvoo, his lead type in the muddy
many of us shut out the sound
street.
tinkling of an ice cream truck
bigger than another boom-
in summer. Try to imagine that bucket
town across the state, a place
This action bolstered anti-Mormon arguments that
list of travel destinations with
your eyesclosed.Imagine the muezzin's call to prayer in Cairo, the sputter of Vespas on
an Italian piazza or the roar of Niagara Falls. What do you
Is it a coincidence want to hear this year? that in t h e c aves of F ontd e - Gaume and L a scaux i n
Rod Blagojevich. With allout war looming between the Mormons and their enemies,
Gov. Ford stepped in to make peace. Smith was persuaded to
face the charges in the county seat, Carthage, and Ford vouched for his safety there.
Thatpromise was engraved on the wind. As the gover-
called Chicago. The Mormons Smith was trying to form a were consideredinterlopers nation of his own, and the auin the Nauvoo area, but Bean thorities filed charges against rightly notes that many of the Smith. "old sett lers" who opposed I t's not s o c o mmon i n them had been there for only American history for peoa fewyears longer. ple totake up arms because While "American Crucifix- someoneelse' srightsto a free
ty to th e Smiths was not
given upon my individual responsibility." At a trial of some of the suspected killers, the prosecution
performed i n competently, and all were acquitted. Soon Brigham Young was chosen to lead the Mormons, and he guided them away from Nauvoo, to a new life in Utah.
Beam, who received scholarly cooperation from both
Mormon and secular sources, delivers the right mix of quoting from archival material and describing events in his own words. A weak spot is the very beginning of the book, which jumps around in setting and chronology in a way that may stall some read-
ers. Which would be a shame, considering how well written this history is overall.
While the prose is engaging, it does come with a quirk. Some of Beam's words - such
as irenic, autarky, ambit, uxorious and intermontanelive outside the vocabulary
of many readers.But these words appear with enough context to allow the reader to
guess correctly. And if we're not going to learn new words in books like this, where are
we going to learn them? B eam's book is full of lessons but never feels like schoolwork. In fact, "Amer-
ican Crucifixion" paints a brilliant picture of religious experimentation, public intoleranceand the making of a martyr.
France, prehistoric drawings of loud animals like horses, b u l l s and bison are clustered
IMPO
c a t s adorn the quieter ones? Is
tank has entered the Guinness there anoverlooked acoustic book of records as the world's dimension to the structures of most reverberant space. Stonehenge? But you do not need tobe an C o x steers a cautious course acoustic engineer armed with b etween wide-eyed wonder a stun gun and sophisticated and sober science. What's measuring tools to be awed by sure, he writes, is that"to overthe singing sands of the Kelso look sound is to render the Dunes in the Californi an Mo-
Mormon dissident, William
an Illinois town that was once
million gallons of shi pping i n pockets of high sound reoil. With 75 seconds of broad- flection while drawings of band reverberation tim e, the
precincts of the United States.
manipulative and even mesAnother stirring character sianic style of leadership can was Smith's first wife, Emma, shock the modern reader, as a strong intellectual helpmate it once shocked mainstream who was unable to reconcile American C h ristians. B ut herself to the polygamy of her the author also makes dear husband, estimated to have that Smith's opponents were had 33 to 48wives. driven by their own extreme Two newspaper editors also impulses and that, in essence, played prominent roles. a nation that had guaranteed One was Thomas Sharp religious liberty allowed the of the Warsaw Signal, who Mormon leaderto be mur- spit fire onto the page in dederedforhisbeliefs. nouncing Mormonism. Sharp Those beliefs get a clear whipped up the fury of the and concise examination "old settlers," d e scribing here, especially the introduc- Smith's religion as "a powtion of polygamy and how the er in league with the Prince church practiced it in secrecy, of Darkness, not inferior to deliberately misleading some the Spanish Inquisition in of its own members. The book itscapacit y for secrecy and also explains the "doctrine of intrigue." eternalprogression,"based on The other editor was a Smith's assertion that "God
world altogether with earbuds and headphones. And yet, Cox argues, sounds powerfully enrich our sense of time and place, whether they are the chimes of Big Ben, the warbled platform announcement at a foreign train station or the
embarrassments long before
nor visited Nauvoo to lecture
could signal a threat. Now adapted their song, and too
nois governors could be utter
but Beam avoids either lionizing or demonizing the prophet, taking a historical Nauvoo at the time because Afterward, Ford explained tone that is both skeptical and they were campaigning for away his neglect, insisting fair-minded. him in the more established that "the pledge of securiSmith's s elf-promotional,
By Corinna da Fonseca-Wollheim
Enter Thomas Ford, whose story demonstrates that Illi-
a declared candidate for the the Mormons on behaving White House when he was peacefully, a mob attacked the murdered. In fact, many of his Carthage jail and fatally shot chiefadvisers were far from Smith and hisbrother Hyrum.
Christ of Latter-day Saints,
earscan emarveouS
used the Expositor incident as
the wild, wild west, an armed and revelator, the president mob stormed a jailhouse and of the High Priesthood, canassassinated an American re- didatefor the presidency of ligious leader. the United States, king of the And got away with it. Kingdom of God, commandT he story o f Mo r m o n er in chief of the armies of Isfounder Joseph Smith's death rael, judge, mayor, architect, 170 years ago receives a fas- recorder of deeds, postmascinating retelling in A l ex ter, hotel operator, steamboat Beam's "American Crucifix- owner, and husband, many ion: The Murder of Joseph times over." Smith and the Fate of the MorAnyone wh o th o ught mon Church." that Mitt R omney's father, This is no simple subject. George, was the first MorFew Americans were more
eelA wl
press have been violated. But in this case, a growing group
bution is its dramatic account of anti-Mormon settlers of the events, as acted out by part militia and part mob-
In 1844, when Illinois was
Oh, right. We do not travel with our ears. The bucket
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s t or y o f a ncient monuments
jave Desert (caused by an ava- incomplete." lanche of very dry sanddown Mus i cally i nclined reada steep slope) orbythe cascad- ers scanning Cox's book for ing roar of the sea inside Fin- discussions of concert hall gal's Cave in Scotland,which acoustics and the sound propinspired Mendelssohn to com-
debunks echoing ma rvels described by 1 7th-ce ntury polymaths Marin Mersenne and A t h a nasius K ircher, or in m any a
1 9th-ce ntury
a r e written to make maximum u s e of church acoustics. But
SUPPORTIN G SPONSORS
C o x a s h e c a lculates what
Bach's work would sound like on Mars: The thin, cold atmo-
ADMISSION FREE PARKIlÃG
SimpliCityHomes
s p h ere would move sound at
w o u l d turn tenors into "Barr y W h i t e sound-alikes." But
Grand Central Terminal, in o n Venus, with its very dense which sound is guided along atmosphere that would sithe tiled archway. He m ourns
P'
i t's much more fun to follow
two-thirds the speed it moves guidebook. Cox also plays with, and ex- on Earth, transposing the Tocplains, the acoustics of whis- cata to roughly G sharp minor. pering galleries like thatofSt. By t h e same logic, Mars Paul's Cathedral in London or the one by the Oyster B ar in
Plg
.IIIIH
e r t ies of instruments may be
pose his "Hebrides" overture. d i sappointed to find relatively A nyone who h as ever l i t t le that is new or surprising: clapped, hollered or yodeled Sure, organ works like Bach's at an echo will delight in the Toccata and Fugue in D minor zestful curiosity with which Cox appraises and sometimes
F5
m u l t aneously lower the pitch
the loss of the ceiling echo in and increase the resonances the Capitol in W a shington, of mouth and throat, "the aswhich, before a bout of ren- t r o naut's voice would sound ovation in the 19th ce ntury, squeaky," Cox writes — "like created a whispering dome a bass Smurf," he quotes Tim that was once a great drawfor L e ighton of the University of tourists — and an occasional Southampton. source of embarrassment for But t h e most lasting effect politicians. of Cox's book is a gentle re"The orator who wa s not m i nder to pay attention tocautious enough to remain in and value — everyday sounds. one spot during the delivery of For our prehistoricancestors, his address found the acous- a finely tuned sense of heartics of the hall taking str ange ing was a key tool for ensuring liberties with his elocution," s u r v ival. according to The Lewiston A s u dden pause in birdsong
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F6 THE BULLETIN• SUNDAY, APRIL 27, 2014
Heartbleed
the years. A Google engineer,Neel
Continued from F1
Mehta, discovered the Heart-
In the case of Heartbleed, though, "there weren't any
bleed bug earlier this month, and two other Google engi-
eyeballs," Raymond said in an neers came up with the fix. interview this week. Likewise, Microsoft and Although any programmer Facebook created the Internet may work on OpenSSL code, Bug Bounty initiative, which only a few regularly do, said pays engineers who responBen Laurie, a Google engineer sibly disclose bugs in widely based in Britain who donates used systems like OpenSSL. time to OpenSSL on nights The group paid Mehta $15,000 and weekends. This is a prob- for his discovery — a windfall lem, he said, adding that the he donated to the Freedom of companies and government the Press Foundation. agencies that use OpenSSL But open-source advocates code have benefited from it but say organizations that rely on give back little in return. the code should do more to "OpenSSL is completely un- help. "Open source is not magic funded," Laurie said. "It's used by companies who make a lot fairy dust," said Tim O'Reilof money, but almost none of ly, an early advocate of open the companies who use it con- source and the founder of O'Reilly Media. "It happens tribute anything at all." According to the project's because people work at it." website, OpenSSL has one
At the least, security ex-
full-time developer — Stephen perts say, companies and govHenson, a British program- ernments should pay for regmer — and three so-called ular code audits, particularly core volunteerprogrammers, when the security of their own including Laurie, in Europe. products depends on the trustL ogged records on t h e worthiness of the code. "They should be taking OpenSSL site show that Henson vetted the code containing more responsibility for everythe Heartbleed bug after it was thing they ship in their prodmistakenly included in a grad- uct," said Edward Felten, a uate student's code update on professorof computer science New Year's Eve 2011, and the
at Princeton University.
bug was inadvertently included in an OpenSSL software
Mismatched incentives
release three months later. Neither Henson nor the oth-
a freelancer,performed an
Ten years ago, Laurie, then audit of OpenSSL for the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, known as
ertwo volunteersresponded to requests for an interview.
Open-source coders hardly blame Henson, considering
DARPA. It took an entire year.
Today, Laurie said, volunteers operated on a shoestring an- simply do not have the time to nual budget of $2,000 in dona- run that kind of audit. tions — most from individuals The problem, Raymond — which is just enough for vol- and other open-source advounteers to cover their electric cates say, boils down to misbills. matched incentives. Raymond that the OpenSSL project has
said companies don't main-
Fundingthe community
tain OpenSSL code because Five years ago, Steve Mar- they don't profit directly from quess, then a technology con- it, even though it is integratsultant for the Defense De- ed into their products, and partment, was struck by the governments don't feel politcontradiction that OpenSSL
ical pain when the code has
was "ubiquitous," yet no one working on the code was making anymoney. When he met Henson, Marquess said, Henson was working on OpenSSL
problems.
T eo ices acewe oveto ate • 'Cubed'takes ahard yet witty look at the workplace's 'flimsy,fabric-wrapped' stalls "Cubed: A Secret History of the Workplace" by Nikil Saval (Doubleday, 352 pgs., $26.95)
arine Gibbs, who ran finishing schools foryoung women(Gibson Girls) who wanted to enter the workplace; Willis Carrier, who invented modern air-con-
By Dwight Garner
ditioning; and Robert Propst,
New Yorh Times News Service
who developed the rudiments
"The white-collar people slipped quietly into modern society," C. Wright Mills writes in "White Collar" (1951), his classic sociology text, as if he were describing a race of w termites. Nikil Saval's exc el-
of what would become known as ergonomics and inadvertently gave us what would be-
come the modern cubide. Thinkstock
The cubicle's beginnings
Behold: The typical cubed world of a modern workplace, the topIn 1 964 Propst introducedic of Nikil Saval's "Cubed: A Secret History of the Workplace." lent new book, "Cubed: A Se- w h at he called the Action Ofc ret History of t h e fice, a flexible, semi-enWorkplace," was inclosed workspace that those bathrooms spend so edge the upsides of office life
spired by Mills' book, and it's a fresh and intellectually omniv-
had some style and
for many. Offices got people out of dangerous factories. liberate workers. But class. Who are these office Clerical jobs paid better than d orous extension of its the Action Office nev- workers, exactly? Somehow blue-collar work. They helped g themes. er caught on. Compa- they are "neither of the work- many women dimb into the I've spent about nies saw the benefit of ing dass nor of the elite hold- workplace, and out of poverty. half my working life small, one-size-fits-all ers of capital." They dress well; The 1987 stock crash, which sitting in, and loathwork spaces, however, they're clean and pale, as aris- set loose increasingly rapaing, cubicles. You've proba- and they quickly bastardized tocrats once were. cious corporate raiders, began bly spent years in one, t oo. P r opst's idea. The modern cuCan we refer to office work- to change something about the About 60 percent of us work b icle was born. ers, as some do, as knowledge nature of office work. Downin cubicles, and 93 percent Sa v al describes the imageworkers? Perhaps not. Saval sizing was the euphemism of of us dislike them. You m ay we have of the cubicle today: quotes Peter Drucker, the the era. ask yourself, as David Byrne "the flimsy, fabric-wrapped, management consultant, who By the end of "Cubed," the sings, well, how did I get here? half-exposed stall where the said: "They expect to be 'in- author is dropping in on Sil"Cubed" will supply answers. w h i te-collar worker waited out tellectuals.' And they find that icon Valley offices, where Most of them will not ma ke his days until, at long last, he they are just 'staff.'" The au- companies like Google cayou happier. was laid off." Standard 6-by-6 thor says it out loud: "The Unit- ter to their employees' every Saval is a young editor at s ets of them became known ed States is a nation of clerks." need, almost eliminating the n+1, the literary magazine.So as six-packs. In the 1991 novel S aval is w e l l r e ad . I n distinction between work and many good writers have come "Generation X," Saval notes, "Cubed" he moves with curi- leisure. Saval savors the fact t umbling out of t hat small D ouglas Coupland coined the osity and ease among writers that so many well-known Silijournal in the past few years term"veal-fatteningpen." as disparate as John Dos Pas- con Valley figures dropped out that it's begun to resemble an Sa v al is a vigorous writer,sos and Helen Gurley Brown, of college yet want their offices intellectual down car. and a thoughtful one. What Lewis Mumford and Thomas to resemble college campuses. If you are sitting in a cubicle puts him above the rank of Pynchon, Aldous Huxley and Saval closes by observing right now, push back in your m o st nonfiction authors, even Studs Terkel. He is often dark- that, with the rise of freelancknockoff Aeron chair and al- s ome of the better ones, is that ly witty, too. Putting a spin ing and other forms of what low Saval, a shrewd and h' he doesn't merely present in- on Rousseau, he says, "Man he calls "precarious employtory-minded docent, to speak f o r mation. He turns each new is born free, but he is every- ment," work "appears to be about your surroundings. In f a ct over in his mind, right in where in cubides." moving not forward but back: "Cubed" he walks us through f ront of you, holding it to the back to an earlier era of inAchangingworkplace the invention of a few of o ur l i ght. security." Many of the career favorite things: the vertical fde ' Wh e n he discovers that half If this book has a downside, paths once taken for granted cabinet, the suspended ce' timg, of Americans report that their it's that reading about mostly are vanishing. "A new sort of the fluorescent light bulb, the b a t hrooms are l arger than unhappy people doing vaguely work, as yet unformed, is takelevator, the Dictaphone, the their cubides, for example, he unhappy work isn't always an ing its place." human-resources department. w r i t es: "One wonders to what invigorating experience. It's I no longer work in a cubide. He introduces us to m any e x t ent the extravagant growth not like reading about lumber- I've exchanged my short leash of the major figures in thede- of the American bathroom, jacks and crop-dusting pilots. for a somewhat longer one, velopment of modern offi ce and of the suburban home in It's hard to make monotony and work from home. But you culture, induding Frederick general, is partly a reaction fascinating. never know, in America, when Taylor, the first widely influ- against the shrinking of cuIt would be wrong to think a cubide might again be your ential efficiency expert; Kath- bicles, where the owners of that Saval doesn't acknowl- future. wit to it. He meant to
much of their time." He lingers on notions of
'
"For those that do work on this, there's no financial sup-
port, no salaries, no health insurance," Raymond said.
code full time and "starving."
"They either have to live like
So Marquess started the OpenSSL Software Foundation to help programmers like Henson make money by consulting for government agen-
monks or work nights and weekends. That is a r e cipe for serious trouble down the
road." He and other elders of the
open-source movement say using the code. It also takes in they want to create a nonprofit some minimal donations, he group to solicit donations from sard. governments and companies Over the past five years, the and on Kickstarter that will ciesand companies that were
foundation has never made
be used to pay for audits of
more than $1 million in commercial contracting revenue a year. This does not go very far in paying for the programmers'work, Marquess said.
OpenSSL and other crucial open-source projects. There was some good news this week. Marquess said that after Heartbleed helped exMost corporate OpenSSL pose the OpenSSL project's users do not contribute money meager resources, the group to the group, Marquess said. received $17,000 in donations, Google and Cisco say they almost entirely from individucontribute by e ncouraging als outside the United States. their own engineers to look The highest individual donafor bugs in the code while they tion was $300; the lowest was are on the clock. The OpenS- 2 cents. SL website shows that a Cisco But there was a hitch, he engineer and several Google said: " Unfortunately, the 2 engineers have discovered cents were donated through bugs and created fixes over PayPal, and PayPal tookboth."
'Otherwise Engaged'
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If you're looking for an historical romance with charac-
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writing under the pseudonym of Amanda Quick, knows there is nothing normal about hercharacters. "Otherwise Engaged" is definitely not your normal ';li,
•
And that's good. Amity is th e heroine,
, „;-~~E' GED+
who in 19th century England considers herself a m odern
woman who doesn't feel con-
don to find Amity in trouble times two.
strained by s ociety's rules. First, gossip has spread that S he's a g l o b etrotter, a n d she and Benedict had an af-
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writes about her world travels.
fair on the ship that brought
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of her adventures, she finds Benedict dying from a gun-
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shot wound in a C aribbean
alley. Amity also has some doctoring knowledge (gleaned from her father) and saves Benedict's life. After completing a mission for his spy uncle (even though Benedict is an engineer, not a spy) Benedict returns to Lon-
tried to murder her.
Benedict steps in to help with both problems.
With the help of a few others, they set out to solve the mysteries that have barged
into their lives. And of course, while doing so, manage to find love as well.
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ON PAGE 2: NYT CROSSWORD M The Bulletin
Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.com THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, APRIL 27, 2014 • •
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264- Snow Removal Equipment 265 - Building Materials 266- Heating and Stoves 267- Fuel and Wood 268- Trees, Plants & Flowers 269- Gardening Supplies & Equipment 270- Lost and Found GARAGESALES 275 - Auction Sales 280 - Estate Sales 281 - Fundraiser Sales 282- Sales Norlhwest Bend 284- Sales Southwest Bend 286- Sales Norlheast Bend 288- Sales Southeast Bend 290- Sales RedmondArea 292 - Sales Other Areas FARM MARKET 308- Farm Equipment andMachinery 316- Irrigation Equipment 325- Hay, Grain and Feed 333- Poultry, Rabbits and Supplies 341 - Horses andEquipment 345-Livestockand Equipment 347 - Llamas/Exotic Animals 350 - Horseshoeing/Farriers 358- Farmer's Column 375 - Meat andAnimal Processing 383- Produce andFood
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Furniture & Appliances
Golf Equipment
TV, Stereo 8 Video
Computers
Musical Instruments
Misc. Items
a ITEMS FORSALE 201 - NewToday 202- Want to buy or rent 203- Holiday Bazaar & Craft Shows 204- Santa's Gift Basket 205- Free Items 208- Pets and Supplies 210 - Furniture & Appliances 211- Children's Items 212 - Antiques & Collectibles 215- Coins & Stamps 240- Crafts and Hobbies 241 - Bicycles andAccessories 242 - Exercise Equipment 243 - Ski Equipment 244 - Snowboards 245 - Golf Equipment 246-Guns,Huntingand Fishing 247- Sporting Goods - Misc. 248- Health and Beauty Items 249 - Art, Jewelry and Furs 251 - Hot TubsandSpas 253 - TV, Stereo andVideo 255 - Computers 256 - Photography 257 - Musical Instruments 258 - Travel/Tickets 259 - Memberships 260- Misc. Items 261 - Medical Equipment 262 - Commercial/Office Equip. 263- Tools
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Golf travel bag w i th DirectTV 2 Year Sav- T HE B U LLETIN r e The Bulletin wheels, hard case, used ings Event! Over 140 quires computer adrecommends extra ' 1x, $25. 541-647-1247 channels only $29.99 vertisers with multiple
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Buylng Dlamonds DRUM SETS: iGofd for Cash Ludwig drum set, Fine Jewelers d rums only, n o Saxon's 541-389-6655 hardware, 26" base drum, 13", 16", and BUYING 18n toms, 14 n snare, Lionel/American Flyer $500. REMO Mastrains, accessories. ter Touch drum set, 541-408-219'I. drums o nl y no BUyfNG Jfr SE LLING hardware, 22" base gold jewelry, silver drum, 8", 10", 12", Alland gold coins, bars, 13", 16 n and 18" n snare rounds, wedding sets, t oms, 1 4 class rings, sterling sildrum, $800. Both in ver, coin collect, vinexcellent condition. tage watches, dental 541-410-4983 gold. Bill Fl e ming, 541-382-9419.
ad schedules or those selling multiple systems/ software, to dist the area. Sending t 12'. Calloway RazrX close the name of the irons, 6-9 PWSW, ' cash, checks, o r ' business or the term Sr. shafts. 3 hybrid l credit i n formation "dealer" in their ads. 1-800-259-5140. and a 5 hy b rid, (PNDC) may be subjected to Private party advertis$499. 541-647-0311 l FRAVD. For more ers are defined as information about an c DISH T V Ret a iler. those who sell one advertiser, you may I Starting 246 at computer. l call t h e Ore g onl $19.99/month (for 12 Guns, Hunting ' State Atto r ney ' mos.) & High Speed Call The Bulletin At & Fishing l General's O f f ice Internet starting at 541-385-5809 Consumer Protec- • $14.95/month (where 1100 rounds of .223 t ion ho t l in e at I available.) SAVE! Ask Place Your Ad Or E-Mail factory ammo, $500. i 1-877-877-9392. About SAME DAY In- At: www.bendbulletin.com 256 541-647-7950 stallation! CALL Now! Cuisinart electric ice I TheBulletin I Travel/Tickets 1-800-308-1563 cream maker, $45.00 Serving Cenrrnr Oregon sincerggg 257 500 rds .45 acp, $250. (PNDC) jjknowles73©gmail.com 300 rds of .308, $250 Musical Instruments U of 0 2014 football sea541-647-7950 212 s on tickets, 7 h o me TURN THE PAGE games, 48-yd line, sunny Antiques & Bend local pays CASH!! For More Ads side, row 44, seats 5 & 6. for all firearms & Collectibles MusfcNofce Studio Call 541-493-2567 The Bulletin ammo. 541-526-0617 Includes: 'j 260 Dark o a k 2- d rawer • Pro Tools 8 software FAST TREES Need to get an • Mbox 2 mini version 8.0 dresser, curved front, Misc. Items Grow 6-10 feet yearly! • Behringer B1 mic $250. White wicker 2006 Gibson Stanad in ASAP? $16-$21 delivered • Sony headphones d ard L e s Pa u l e baby crib, u n ique You can place it www.fasttrees.com • Samson USB studio $250. Large dark oak Electric Guitar, one 2012 Si m p l icity or 509-447-4181 mic w/stand; roll top desk, $800. online at: owner, dual bridge Gusto Hepa canisSurveryor'9 tr a n sit www.bendbulletin.com • Training books and dual controls, fer va c u um with How to avoid scam • Corrugated foam 1930-1940, orig. box great con d i tion. attachments, extra and fraud attempts padding $ 350. CAS H Fantastic s o u nd. filter and bags, exc. 541-385-5809 Packaqe price new, 541-923-5960 Blue tone c o lor. cond. Retail $1500, VBe aware of interna$1200+Comes with original tional fraud. Deal loA sking $700 . The Bulletin reserves Offered at $550. CASH!! case. $1200 firm cally whenever pos971-221-8278 (cell) 208 206 the right to publish all For Guns, Ammo & (All reasonable offers cash only, no trades. sible. ads from The Bulletin Reloading Supplies considered) 541-322-9619 V Watch for buyers Pete & Supplies • Pe ts & Supplies 541-408-6900. newspaper onto The Call 541-639-3222 Are you in BIG trouble who offer more than 0 Yorkie pups AKCJ 2 boys, Bulletin Internet webwith the IRS? Stop your asking price and REDUCE YOUR 2 girls, potty training, UTD site. wage 8 bank levies, who ask to have CABLE BILL! * Get a shots, health guar., $450 liens 8 audits, unfiled money wired or The Bulletin whole-home Satellite & up. 541-777-7743 tax returns, payroll is- handed back to them. Serving CentralOregon since Sgca system installed at DO YOU HAVE sues, & resolve tax Fake cashier checks 210 NO COST and pro240 debt FAST. Seen on and money orders SOMETHING TO ramming starting at Cavalier King Charles Furniture & Appliances SELL CNN. A B BB . C a ll are common. Crafts & Hobbies 1 9.99/mo. FRE E Spaniel male 7 mo. 1-800-989-1278. s/Never give out perFOR $500 OR 205 Beautiful Lowrey HD/DVR Upgrade to old. Crate trained and 2013 Tempur-Pedic twin LESS? (PNDC) sonal financial inforAdventurer II Organ Items for Free new callers, SO CALL house broken. Very mattress, barelv used, AGATE HUNTERS Non-commercial mation. Absolutely perfect NOW Auto Accident Attorney: sweet, socialized and $499. 541-593-5256 Poushers • Saws YTrust your instincts advertisers may condition, not a Beautiful Hammond Or- raised in a h o me. n n 1-866-984-8515. INJURED I N AN place an ad scratch on it, about and be wary of an 2100 series, built-in $1500. 541-639-7541 44 x64 ornately framed (PNDC) AUTO A C CIDENT? Repair & Supplies with our 4-feet wide, does someone using an eslie, f oo t p e d als, beveled mirror, $100. Call InjuryFone for a s g s "QUICK CASH everything! Includes escrow service or matching bench, free, Donate deposit bottles/ 541-388-5696 free case evaluation. Check out the cans to local all vol., SPECIAL" agent to pick up your a nice bench, too. you haul; 541-480-1052 Never a cost to you. classifieds online non-profit rescue, for 1 week3linee 12 merchandise. $1 600obo. Don't wait, call now, Kegerator, older Hot- feral cat spay/neuter. A1 Washers&Dryers Serger Bernette 234, OI' www.bendbullefln.com 541-385-5685 $150 ea. Full war1-800-539-9913. accessories, manual, point, runs good, tap, Cans for Cats trailer The Bulletin ~eweeke ein Updated daily Sernng Central Oregon srnce190S ranty. Free Del. Also $225. 541-550-7215 (PNDC) pull, all lines 8 hoses; at Bend Pet Express Ad must wanted, used W/D's return CO2 bottle, return E; or donate M-F at include price of 541-280-7355 241 keg. Free! 541-480-1052 Smith Sign, 1515 NE in le item of Seon n~ Bicycles & 2nd; or a t C RAFT, or less, or multiple Find exactly what Accessories Tumalo. Lv. msg. for items whose total • Chandelier, n you are looking for in the p ick up o f la r g e 22" diameter x 17 does not exceed amounts, 389-8420. Electra pink cruiser 3 $500. CLASSIFIEDS high, 12 lights, www.craftcats.org spd, 26" as new, $200 bronze 8 crystal, Call Classifieds at has 6 arms (2 lights jjknowles73Ogmail.com Free to good home! 206 Clean out the cluttered 541-385-5809 on each arm), Purebred Boston TerTrek 2120 bicycles, (2) www.bendbulletin.com Pets & Supplies rier males, 1-yr-old & $300 obo. closets and overstuffed 54cm and 58cm, car1 /2 yr-old. Nice dogs 541-923-7491 bon fiber, Shimano storage shed! 541-420-1048 105, SP D p e dals, SOM E $400 each. Miyata Labradors - 1 purebred G ENERATE EXCITEMENT in your kids Triathalon bike, l Largest 3-Day l chocolate male left! 2nd neighborhood! Plan a $125. 541-410-7034 shots, vet-checked, GUN & KNIFE garage sale and don't $250. 541-416-1175 SHOW 242 forget to advertise in HAVANESE PUPPIES, April 25-26-27 AKC. Dewclawed, UTD classified! Exercise Equipment Portland Expo shots/wormer non-shed, 541-385-5809. Center hypoallergenic $1,000 2-in-1 Stepper & ElliptiFri. 12-6, Sat. 9-5, 541-549-3838 cal Trainer $50. Sun.10-4 jjknowles73Ogmail.com 1-5 exit ¹306B The Bulletin recom- Miniature Pugs, AKC Admission $10 mends extra caution reg. 9 wks, $800, deNautilus NS 200 I 1 - 800-659-3440 I when purc has- livered. 541-573-5300 like new! Pulley i CollectorsWest.com~ ing products or serLEATHER CHAIR system with extra *Ad runs until SOLD vices from out of the Espresso brown weights, $600! area. Sending cash, Ruger 9mm P95DC or up to 8 weeks in very good condiWill deliver! checks, or credit in& 550 rounds ammo, 541-388-2809 (whichever comes first!) tion, lessthan2 f ormation may be away are advised to $500 for all. years old. $250. be selective about the subjected to fraud. 541-390-4214 In SE Bend For more i nformanew owners. For the Weight Bench Gold 541-508-8784 protection of the aniRuger Mini-14 223 w/artion about an adverGym XR 17, $50. mal, a personal visit to tiser, you may call jjknowles73Ogmail.com restor,3x9 Leupold CenNEED TO CANCEL the O regon State the home is recomtury Ed. scope, 1 of 4000 LADIESWEDDING BAND YOUR AD? mended. 245 w/walnut stock, many Attorney General'9 Bright polished 24-kt The Bulletin Ruger mags, lots of Office C o n sumer The Bulletin Golf Equipment white gold band with Classifieds has an ammo, tactical case, Protection hotline at Serving Central Oregon sinceSgsg "After Hours" Line m int, pri c e n e g . 1-877-877-9392. 1.66 carat Princess ItemPriced af: Your Tofrzl Ad Cost on CHECK yOUR AD 541-405-5119 POODLE pups, toy. Call 541-383-2371 cut diamond, Sl-1 • Under $500.......................................................................$29 Also adoptable older 24 hrs. to cancel The Bulletin Serving Central Oregon since Sggg Clarity, F color. S&W M&P 340, .357 also pup. 541-475-3889 • $500 to $999...................................................................$39 your ad! shoots .38 spl, 5-rnd cap. Appraised at $1,000. • $1000 fo $2499.............................................................. $49 Queensfand Heelers New: Amish desk, $400; revolver. Tritium night Adopt a rescued cat or Standard & Mini, $150 new Amish coat rack, sight, hammerless, syn• $2500 and over............................................................... $59 kitten! Fixed, shots, ID 8 up. 541-280-1537 $75. 602-703-8392, Bend Asking $499 OB Crimson Trace grip, chip, tested, more! www.rightwayranch.wor on the first day it runs thetic Includes: 2" in length, with border, full color photo, bold 541-000-000 to make sure it is cor- alloy frame, matte black, 65480 78th, Tumalo, dpress.com headline and price. Sat/Sun 1-5,389-8420 Sleep Number rect. nSpellcheckn and $975. 541-604-4203 www.craftcats.org Seniors & v e t erans, human errors do oc- Wanted: Collector seeks King a great adult cur. If this happens to high quality fishing items your ad will also appearin: bed 8 box,bought AKC Mini Aussie, blue adopt companion cat, fee your ad, please con2010 for Serving Central Oregon since 1903 & upscale bamboo fly merle male 16 weeks waived! Fixed, shots, in October, • The Bulletin, • The Central Oregon Nickel Ads tact us ASAP so that rods. Call 541-678-5753, $2199; $250. 541-598-5314 541-385-580fsl ID chip, tested, more! excellent condition, corrections and any or 503-351-2746 • Central Oregon Marketplace • bendbulletin.com asking $750. adjustments can be Aussie Mini puppies, 5 Sanctuary at 65480 Some restrictions apply made to your ad. Call 541-678-5436 Winchester Mod. 1886 purebred, born 3/13/14, 78th St., Bend, Sat/ 541 -385-5809 cal 45-70, manuf'd 1887, ready 5/8. 541-693-4888 Sun. 1-5. 389-8420. (in Bend) 'Private parly merchandise only - excludes pets & livestock, autos, Rvs, motorcycles, airplanes, and garage sale categories. www.mlnlausaieabend.com www.craftcats.org. The Bulletin Classified $2500. 541-480-2236 products or • I chasing services from out of I
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G2 SUNDAY, APRIL 27, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
To PLAGE AN AD cALL CLAssIFIED• 541-385-5809
T HE N E W
YO R K TIMES CR O S SW O R D 1
ON WHEELS BY ELIZABETH C. GORSKI / EDITED BY WILL SHORTZ
ACROSS I Healing cover 5 Instants 9 Ancient symbols of royalty 13Checks 18 " and Louis," 1956 jazz album 19The Sun, The Moon or The Star 21 Best-selling novelist whom Time called "Bard of the Litigious Age" 23 Attribute of Elks or Lions Club members 25 Recital piece for a wind player 26 Toast words after "Here's" 27 Relative of turquoise 29 Proceeds 30 Within earshot 32 Anthem preposition 33 Mobile home seeker? 34 1966 Wilson Pickett R8 B hit 40 Abbr. on sale garment tags 41 Short open jackets 42 Commandment word 43 Pipe valves 49 "I've got half to ..." 50 '50s political inits. 51 Year, to Casals Online subscriptionrc Today's puzzle and more than 4,000 past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords
($39.95a year).
52 Greeting that includes a Spanish greeting in reverse? 53 Andean tuber 54 Opera based on a playby Pierre Beaumarchais, with "The" 58 Complete shutout? 61 Postletters 62 Hammer 63 Stockholm-bound carrier 65 Yale Bowl fan 66 Roisterous 68 Bond yield: Abbr. 69 These, to Thierry 70 Ruler known as "Big Daddy" 72 TV's Cousin 73 Urban renewal target 76 Qualcomm Stadium athlete 79 P aris's d u Carrou~se Sl Writer Chekhov 82 Pet Shop Boys, e.g. 83 Stella D' (cookie ~ran ) 84 Jermaine of the N.B.A. 86 They're steeped in strainers 89 Mrs. abroad 90 Vocabulary 92 Reversal, of sorts 93 Walker's strip 95 Govt. promissory notes 99 Former Chevrolet division 100 Suffix with narc101 Dirty rats 102 Like equinoxes 105 Fine hosiery material
110 Visa alternative 112 "The African Queen" novelist 114 Makeup removal item 115 Classic theater name 116 Stain 117 Designer Anne 118 Leonard a.k.a. Roy Rogers 119 Covenant keepers 120 All alternative DOWN I Breakaway group 2 Renault model with a mythological name 3 Woody's "Annie Hall" role 4 "Joanie Loves Chachi" co-star 5 500, a n n ual race in Ridgeway, Va. 6 Wildlife IDs 7 Ones who are the talk of the town? 8 Baking 9 Actress Judd 10 Use elbow grease on 11 Opening for a dermatologist 12 Common newsstand locale: Abbr. 13 Seat at the counter 14 Ready to be played, say 15 De-file? 16 Tr end 17 Graceful trumpeter 20 A vi v
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PUZZLE ANSWER ON PAGE G3
5 41-3 8 5 - 5 8 0 9 AD PLACEINENT DEADLINES
PRIVATE PARTY RATES
Monday.. . . . . . . . . . ... 5:00 pm Fri. Tuesday... . . . . . . . ... . Noon Mon. Wednesday.. . . . . . . ... Noon Tues. Thursday.. . . . . . . . . ... Noon Wed. Friday.. . . . . . . . . . . Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate .. ... 11:00am Fri. Saturday.. . . . . . . . . ... 3:00 pm Fri. Sunday.. . . . . . . . . . ... 5:00 pm Fri.
Starting at 3 lines *UNDER '500in total merchandise
or go to w w w . b e n dbulletin.com
Placea photo in your private party ad for only $15.00 perweek.
OVER '500in total merchandise 7 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 0 .00 4 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 8 .50 14 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 6.00 7 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 2 4 .00 *Must state prices in ad 14 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 3 3 .50 28 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 6 1 .50
Garage Sale Special
4 lines for 4 days .. . . . . . . . . . $ 2 0.00 (call for commercial line ad rates)
A Payment Drop Box i s CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: available at Bend City Hall. MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. CLASSIFICATIONS BELOW MARKED WITH AN*() REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin ServingCentralOregon since 1903 reserves the right to reject any ad is located at: at any time. 1 777 S.W. Chandler Ave., Bend, Oregon 97702
The Bulletin
PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour ad for accuracythefirst day it appears. Pleasecall us immediately if a correction is needed. Wewill gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reservesthe right to accept or reject any adat anytime, classify and index anyadvertising basedon the policies of these newspapers. Thepublisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for anyreason. Private Party Classified adsrunning 7 or moredayswill publish in the Central OregonMarketplace eachTuesday. 260
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Misc. Items
Tools
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Lost & Found
Estate Sales
Item found in s outh E state Sale, Lots o f WHEN BUYING Bend with the name misc; tools, hardware, FIREWOOD... Ted Royalty. Please clothing, knickknacks, call to iden t i fy tarps, picture frames, To avoid fraud, 541 -639-1 746. appliances, antiques, The Bulletin wood slabs, logging recommends payLOST 4/16:Andre', Irge hardware and w ire ment for Firewood male ginger short hair fencing, etc. Fisher 308 only upon delivery cat, Shevlin Pk Rd. shop stove, rototiller, and inspection. Farm Equipment and N W M o nterey 200 gallon tank with • Acordis 128cu. ft. Pines area. Call Su- pump, extensive irri& Machinery 4' x 4' x 8' 541 -408-321 5 san, 503-699-7763 gation system. Saf 8, • Receipts should Leather sewing 9am Spm f4740 21 0-gallon water tank include name, LOST LOVEBIRD: peach- Sun machine, $400. Power Washer (comCambium Way, for a p ickup, $75. faced, green body, 4/8/14 phone, price and 541 -480-1 052 541-548-6181 mercial) new in crate, La Pine (OffPonde at Larch Grove in Shevkind of wood Honda 13 hp - 4000 lin Park. Has blue band rosa) 81 8-91 5-6355 or purchased. *REDUCE Y OUR psi, 4 gpm. Retails Farm sale...Everyon leg with e¹3." $100 541-876-7426 CABLE BILL! Get an $1 849, Sell $ 1349. • Firewood ads thing must go, MaREWARD. 541-771-f 31 f MUST include All-Digital Sa t e llite Steve 541-771-7007. chinery, Tools and species & cost per system installed for male cat: tortoise 8 Get your Materials. Sat. and cord to better serve Lost FREE and programwhite with yellow eyes, Sunday, 10-4 both business our customers. ming s t arting a t s hort hair, mic r o days, 21295 Back $ 24.99/mo. FRE E chipped, no collar. DeAlley Rd., Bend HD/DVR upgrade for The Bulletin schutes Mkt. & Yeo(541-280-4816) Sevine Central Caeeon sinceSale a ROW I N G new callers, SO CALL man 541 -389-9861 NOW (877)366-4508. Total Shop - Sheet with an ad in Kubota L3800, 1 yr old, (PNDC) Need help fixing stuff? Metal Equipment with bucket & d r a g, The Bulletin's Call A Service Professional 4' air shear; 6'xf sga Reduce Your Past Tax $19,500. 61 9-733-8472 REMEMBER: If you "Call A Service find the help you need. Hand Brake; Pinspotter; Bill by as much as 75 have lost an animal, 325 Percent. Stop Levies, Pittsburgh 20ga w/Acme www.bendbulletin.com Professional" don't forget to check CleatLiens and Wage Gar- Rolls'; Manual Hay, Grain & Feed Directory ex20ga; Spot The Humane Society nishments. Call The bender 24 e arms; Slip All Year Dependable Bend w/24 Firewood: Seasoned; Tax DR Now to see if Welder 541-382-3537 roll (manual) 3'x2v dia; Look What I Found! Looking for your Qualify Box Lodgepole f for $195 you 8 Pan Brake 48" x16 or 2 for $365. Cedar, Redmond You'll find a little bit of 1 -800-791 -2099. next employee? 541 -923-0882 ga; Easy Edger (Bench everything in (PNDC) del. Bend: 1 for Place a Bulletin type)... will sell complete split, Prineville The Bulletin's daily $175 or 2 for $325. help wanted ad or by the piece. 541-447-7178; 541 -420-3484. garage and yard sale today and Call 541-771-1958 or craft oats Call a Pro section. From clothes reach over 541-389-8420. to collectibles, from Log truck loads of green Whether you need a Wildland 60,000 readers Fi r e fighting lodgepole f irewood, housewares to hardfence fixed, hedges each week. equip., new & used, delivered. 275 ware, classified is hose, nozzles, wyes, trimmed or a house Call 541 -81 5-41 77 Auction Sales always the first stop for Your classified ad reducers, bladder bags. will also cost-conscious built, you'll find Steve 541-771-7007. appear on No Minimumsconsumers. And if professional help in Pine & juniper Split bendbulletin.com No Reserves you're planning your The Bulletin'6 "Call a Wilmar break down Enwhich currently own garage or yard ine Hoist, good cond. PROMPT DELIVERY PUBLIC AUCTION receives over sale, look to the clasService Professional" 1 0 a.m.- TUESDAY1 95. 541 -408-321 5 542-389-9663 sifieds to bring in the 1.5 million page APRIL 29. Preview Directory buyers. You won't find views every 8-4, Monday, April 28 265 541 -385-5809 a better place month at no 269 ROCKY MOUNTAIN for bargains! Building Materials extra cost. Gardening Supplie PRODUCTS Call Classifieds: The Bulletin Offers Bulletin 1601 NE Hemlock, 541-385-5809 or Bend Habitat • & Eq u i pment Free Private Party Ads Classifieds RESTORE Redmond, OR email • 3 lines - 3 days Get Results! Rotisserie Sm o kers; claseified@bendbulletin.com Call Building Supply Resale • Private Party Only 541-385-5809 BarkTurfSoil.com Quality at LOW Brine f i lter; Q u ick • Total of items adveror place your ad Freeze system; Form/ 282 PRICES tised must equal $200 on-line at Fill/Seal m a c hines;Sales Northwest Bend 740 NE 1st or Less PROMPT D ELIVERY bendbulletin.com 54f -3f 2-6709 Vacuum c hambers; FOR DETAILS or to 542-389-9663 Filler lines; Mixers; Moving Sale, 9:30-3:30 Open to the public. PLACE AN AD, Blenders; Packaging Sat-Sun, 515 NW Kan- FIND IT! Call 541-385-5809 O v e ns;sas Ave. Snow plow, Cadet Lawn Tractor, 42" machines; Fax 541-385-5802 266 BUY IT! deck, 19hp, 25 hrs, $925 Refers; SS Tables & snow blower, BBQ, wind SELL IT! Heating & Stoves Sinks; Kitchen Equip.; obo. 54f -815-2042 patio & house- The Bulletin Claeeifiede Wanted- paying cash Product In v entory;surfer, hold furniture, stereo for Hi-fi audio 8 stuNOTICE TO Lathe; Ban d saw;system, power amps, dio equip. Mclntosh, Fornewspaper ADVERTISER 333 Compressors; Welder; mixer board, speakers. JBL, Marantz, Dydelivery, call the Since September 29, Shop Equip. & Tools; Poultry, Rabbits, naco, Heathkit, San- 1991, advertising for Circulation Dept. at Forklifts; Pallet Jacks; MOVING SALE Sat. & & Supplies sui, Carver, NAD, etc. used woodstoves has 541 -385-5800 Office Furniture & Sun, 8:30 a.m. Call 541 -261-1 808 To place an ad, call been limited to modEquip.; More! Household, barn, Want to buy 54f -385-5809 els which have been BID LIVE ONLINE!! horse items priced to female African Goose. 261 or email certified by the OrCheck our website for sell! In Tumalo at cleeeitied@bendbulletin.com 54f -388-3535 Medical Equipment egon Department of MurphyLIVE! bidding 64931 Highland Rd. Environmental Qualinformation. The Bulletin 341 ity (DEQ) and the fed10% Buyers Premium Sat. & Sun., 7-3, 63220 Horses & Equipment Wheelchairseral E n v ironmental Terms: Cash, Cashier's OB Riley Rd, appli(2) Pronto Protection A g e ncy Check, MCNisa. ances, bicycle parts 8 Darling little chestnut (by Invacare®) (EPA) as having met INSTANT GREEN Persons Under 12 Not access., mens clothing, mare, f 3 yrs, well-trained smoke emission stan- McPheeters Turf powered Admitted yard tools, skis, etc. for f00-Ib rider. $175. dards. A cer t ified Lawn Fertilizer wheelchairs, ILLUSTRATED 541 -318-4829 w oodstove may b e in good condition, BROCHURE Where can you find a identified by its certifi$450 each. James G. Murphy Co. 358 cation label, which is helping hand? 542-389-9663 1 800-426-3008 541-633-7824 Farmers Column permanently attached From contractors to murphyauction.com to the stove. The Bulyard care, it's all here W ANT T O letin will not know- Rototiller, 24/1 3", front REN T / Look at: The Bulletin ingly accept advertis- tine, Craftsman, 208cc/ in The Bulletin'8 LEASE pasture for Bendhomee.com To Subscribe call ing for the sale of 2014 irrigation sea6hp. Like new, used 5 "Call A Service for Complete Listings of uncertified t imes. $ 3 50. C a l l 541 -385-5800 or go to s on 4 0 a c re s o r Area Real Estate for Sale woodstoves. 503-936-f 778 (in CRR) www.bendbulletin.com Professional" Directory larger. 541-923-5005
Time to declutter? Need someextra cash?
Is Your Identity Pro20 Ton Press, tected? I t is our $1 00. 54f -408-32f 5 promise to provide the most comprehensive identity theft preven- Belt/disk sander, $60. tion an d r e sponse f 2" drum sander, $400. products a v ailable! Bench grinder/buffer, Call Today for 30-Day $40. Call 54f-548-sf8f FREE TRIAL Central Mac h inery 1 -800-395-701 2. small drill press. $75. (PNDC)
•
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And sell it locally. ', ()
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In 13
List one Item* in The Bulletin's Classifieds for three days for FREE. PLUS, your ad appears in P RINT and ON -LIN E
at bendbulletin.com
B SSl I '
S
To receive your FREECLASSIFIEDAD, call 541-385-5809or visit
The Bulletinofficeat:1777SWChandler Ave. (onBejid's westside) *Offer allows for 3 linesoftext only. Excludesall service, hay,wood, pets/animals, plants, tickets, weapons, rentalsandemploymentadvertising, andall commercial accounts. Mustbeanindividual item under$200.00 and priceofindividual itemmust beincluded in thead. Askyour Bulletin Sales Representative aboutspecial pricing, longerrun schedulesandadditional features. Limit I ad petitemper30 daysto besold.
THE BULLETIN• SUNDAY, APRIL 27, 2014 G3 THE NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD PUZZLE ANSWER
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
Jr>t~f~~J~I:,-Can~l~fgkr)f be found on these pages: EMPLOYMENT 410 - Private Instruction 421 - Schools andTraining 454- Looking for Employment 470- Domestic & In-HomePositions 476 - EmploymentOpportunities 486- Independent Positions
476
Employment Opportunities CAUTION: Ads published in "Employment O p portunities" include employee and independent positions. Ads for p o sitions that require a fee or upfront investment must be stated. With any independentjob opportunity, please i nvestigate tho r oughly. Use extra caution when applying for jobs online and never provide personal information to any source you may not have researched and deemed to be reputable. Use extreme c aution when r e s ponding to A N Y online employment ad from out-of-state. We suggest you call the State of Oregon Consumer H otline at 1-503-378-4320
For Equal Opportunity Laws contact Oregon Bureau of Labor & I n dustry, Civil Rights Division, 971-673- 0764.
The BuHetin 541-385-5809
Add your web address to your ad and readers on The Bulletin's web site, www.bendbulletin.com, will be able to click through automatically to your website. Bend area WE ARE HIRING! Apply online at
employee.cardinalservices.com Full Time
Job Openings eApprentice RV
Service Tech $12- $14 •Cabinet Installer $13- $18 •Exterior Detailer $10- $12 •RV House Tech $15- $18 •Upholsterer $11-$13
c4.'... Delivery Parcel delivery
person needed immediately, no special license required, must have
clean driving record, good appearance, personable, good with tools. Mon.-Fri., approx. hours, 7-4 daily. Starting wage $12/hour. Reply to Box 20491785 c/o The Bulletin, PO Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708
If it's under$500 you can place it in The Bulletin Classifieds for:
476
476
Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
BRIGHT WOOD CORPORATION
We are accepting applications for experienced millworkers to fill positions in our Moulding and Fingerjoint departments. Looking for Moulder Operators and Set Up people, Fingerjoint Operators and feeders as well as entry level stacker positions at our headquarters facility in Madras. We are in need of people with bonafied experience, good attendance and a positive work attitude. If this sounds like you please come to our Personnel Department in the Madras Industrial Park at the address below to apply.
Employment Opportunities
General Mana er LaPine Park Recreation District Complete description and application requirements available at www.sdao.com Closing Date May 15, 2014
S E C T
C L I O
A L V Y
M U S B O L A M I O C E S A S I D I S A N A N T L O O
Heavy Equipment Experienced Knuckle Boom Operator C lass A CDL, 2 y r s verifiable experience. able to pass drug/alcohol/background test. Personal vehicle and traveling required. Daily Salary, housing, meal and mileage allowances, Health Insurance and 4 01K. Contact G re g at 678-576-8151, 9a.m. L -4p.m. MST O Pioneer Sand Co. Colorado Springs, CO C
B S A T I CP O U N E T A N E R O N D A M B A E L A M I D I E O N S E T U I L L S E S I M A T O N I N
E A R T A G S
C R I E R S
D B A R G I N G O D E A E Y S B C A B A S L
S O T D E A L B O A L L N O T D E R B E O V N O I I T T C H A U O S M B E G E O I A N R D L L Y E
A S H L E Y A R F S
S C O U R S N O W Y E G R E T
P S S T O T T T U R N S O N E G O E C A L D I R R T O P C O O A L F S E V I P O U N I N T Y E S O R E R A O O N W O R D L E B A I O T I C A L L I F O R E S E O N B R K S N
E R A S E
M O T O R
S W A N
C O L D C E R E A L
K H L O E
S A E N S
Starting wage is dependent on your experience, entry level positions start at $10.00 plus Driver FIREFIGHTERS per hour. Benefits after 90 days as a full time Night Driver needed associate include medical, dental and life R C Apply at Owl Taxi, GFP Fire: $32.00/hr, insurance. 1919 NE 2nd St., DOE. Hiring qualified O A L Wildland Fire Engine & Vision and Aflac are available for optional Bend, OR 97701 Crew Bosses.Applicant purchase. Accrued vacation time is available M G E must provide all required after 6 months of employment. We are an Facilities E E Y docs for proof of quals & equal opportunity employer and require passSupervisor exp. Must be profes- ing an on-site drug test. T B Culver School Dis- s ional, d e tailed & trict has a Facilities team-oriented with comO U N U S L E Bright Wood Corporation, Supervisor Position puter skills 8 safety-first P T C S T E R 335 NW Hess St. Opening. This per- attitude. B a c kground Madras, Or 97741 son is responsible check required. Call Dan O T O D L O T 541-475-7799 for overall program at 541-549-8167 for an K L E A O N E planning, execution interview. Vets encourFind It in and direction of all aqed. Drug-free workmaintenance, custo- place. EOE PUZZLE IS ON PAGE G2 The Bulletin Ciassigeds! dial and g r ounds www.gfpemergency.com 541-385-5809 Serving CentralOregon since I903 services f o r all Food Service - Bruno's schools and school Grocery/U-bake On'Es 8 is taking Home Delivery Advisor facilities in the General 0 for Cashier & Pizza 8 school district. Visit apps The Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our Satur"z DESCHUTES COUNTY Maker. Apply: 1709 NE OUI' website 6th, Bend. No phone calls The Bulletin Circulation Department is seeking day night shift and other shifts as needed. We a Home Delivery Advisor. This is a full-time www.culver.k1 2.or.us currently have openings all nights of the week, CAREER OPPORTUNITIES position and consists of managing an adult or call 541-546-2541 everyone must work Saturday night. Shifts Advertise your car! carrier force to ensure our customers receive for further details. start between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and Add APrcture! Application deadline Reach thousands of readers! superior service. Must be able to create and end between2:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m. AllpoBEHAVIORAL HEALTH SPECILIST I, Adult perform strategic plans to meet department Call 541-385-5809 5/9/2014. EOE sitions we are hiring for work Saturday nights. Treatment-Bridge Program (2014-00045). The Bulletin Classifieds objectives such as increasing market share Starting pay is $9.10 per hour, and we pay a and penetration. Ideal candidate will be a Full-time position. Deadline: THURSDAY, minimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shifts self-starter who can work both in the office are short (11:30 - 1:30). The work consists of 05/01/14. and in their assigned territory with minimal Facility Administrator loading inserting machines or stitcher, stacksupervision. Early a.m. hours are necessary ing product onto palletsl bundling, cleanup BEHAVIORAL HEALTH SPECIALIST II, Adult with company vehicle provided. S t rong and other tasks. For qualifying employees we Community Counseling Solutions is Treatment, Redmond (2014-00044). Two customer service skills and management skills offer benefits i ncluding life i n surance, recruiting for a fu l l t i m e F a cility are necessary. C o mputer experience is full-time, limited duration, grant-funded short-term 8 long-term disability, 401(k), paid Administrator. required. You must pass a drug screening vacation and sick time. Drug test is required positions. Deadline:MOIIQAY,04/28/14. and be able to be insured by company to drive prior to employment. The facility is located in John Day, Oregon vehicles. This is an entry-level position, but COMMUNICATION DIRECTOR,9-1-1 Service and is a 9 bed acute care treatment facility we believe in promoting from within, so Please submit a completed application attenDistrict (2014-00050). Full-time position. advancement within company is available to working with mentally ill adults who are in tion Kevin Eldred. Applications are available the right person. If you enjoy dealing with Deadline: OPEN UNTIL FILLEQ, WITH FIRST an acute phase of their illness. at The Bulletin front desk (1777 S.W. Chanpeople from diverse backgrounds and you are dler Blvd.), or an electronic application may be REVIEW OF APPLICATIONS Oii MONDAY, energetic, have great organizational skills and This individual will be responsible for the obtained upon request by contacting Kevin 06/02/14. interpersonal communication skills, please day to day operation of the facility. The Eldred via email (keldred@bendbulletin.com). send your resume to: administrator will be responsible for hiring No phone calls please. Only completed appliLANDFILL SITE ATTEIIQANT,(2014-00049). The Bulletin cations will be considered for this position. No of facility staff, training, and day to day One full-time and one half-time position. c/o Kurt Muller resumes will be accepted. Drug test is reoperations. The administrator will assist the PO Box 6020 quired prior to employment. EOE. Deadline:WEDNESD AY, 04/80/14. Executive Director in meeting the needs of Bend, OR 97708-6020 the community, and will report directly to or e-mail resume to: PEER SIIPPORTSPECIALIST, (2014-00011). The Bulletin the Executive Director. kmuller@bendbulletin.com Serene CenrrarOregon since 1903 Full-time, limited duration grant funded No phone calls, please. Applicants should have experience in position. Deadline:THIIRSDAY,05/08/14. The Bulletinis a drug-free workplace. EOE human resources, staff recruitment and retention, working with the mentally ill, PROGRAM MANAGER, Behavioral Health ability to supervise 20+ individuals with (2013-00098). Full-time position. Extended varying levels of education, ability to assist Ad Services Admin General Deadline:OPENUNTIL FILLED. the Executive Director in managing a large The Bulletin is seeking an individual to play a CROOK COUNTY vital role on the Ad Services team. The Ad Serand complex budget, facility and program EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES PROGRAMMANAGER, Public Health (2014vices Admin position is 32 hours per week and development and community relations. A 00008). Full-time position. Extended is eligible for benefits. An Ad Services Admin bachelor's degree in psychology, sociology Crook County/Wellness & Education works closely with others on the Ad Services Deadline:OPENUNTIL FILLED. or other human services field is preferred. Board of Central Oregon team to coordinate and track ads though our T his individual will b e re q uired t o (WEBCO) roduction system; at times, taking corrections PSYCHIATRIC NURSEPRACTITIONER —Adult participate in an on call rotation at the Clinical Quality Coordinator rom customers via phone, faxing ads to cusfacility. $70,553- $74,883 DOE tomers, and ensuring all corrections have been Treatment Program (2014-00001 j. Will Full time w/benefits made prior to printing. In addition, this position consider any full or part-time equivalent. The salary range is $51,200-$76,800 per Closes: April 30, 2014 at 5:00 p.m. will include training for a path to page composDeadline:OPENUNTIL FILLED. year. Excellent benefits. ing responsibilities. The ideal candidate will be computer literate, have outstanding customer WEBCO is a newer entity and serves as the PSYCHIATRICNURSEI OR II (PHIIII) (2014regional Mental and Public Health Authority for service skills, above average grammar skills, Please contact Nina Bisson at 00040). Will consider full or part-time the ability to multi-task and a desire to work at a Crook, Deschutes and Jeff er son Counties. 541-676-9161 or nina.bisson@gobhi.net successful company. This position will oversee the behavioral health equivalent, two positions available. Deadline: with questions or to request an application. contract deliverables and coordinate the qualOPEN UNTIL FILLED. To apply,submit a resume by Wednesday ity and continuum of care operations for April 30th, with qualifications, skills, experience WEBCO. Requires Master's degree and prior RESERVEDEPUTYSHERIFF (2013-00013). Automotive Sales and a past employment history to The Bulletin, work experience as a Licensed Clinical Social On-call positions. Deadline:THIS IS AN ONattention: James Baisinger, PO Box 6020, Worker. Work is performed in our Redmond Bend, OR 97708-6020.Pre-employment drug office and frequent tri-county travel is required. GOING RECRUITMENT. ASTART YOUR NEW CAREERN screening is required prior to hiring. The Bulletin is an equal opportunity employer. Applications and full job description can be SENIOR ACCOUNTINGTECHNICIAN (2014Central Oregon's Largest Auto Group of New found at www.co.crook.or.us. and Pre-owned automobiles, the Smolich of 00051). Full-time position. Deadline:SUNDAY , Redmond Store is looking to fill positions 05/04/14. Please apply at the within our expanding auto network. Smolich Serving Central Oregon since t903 Crook County Treasurer's/Tax Office Motors is an industry leader with 7 new car SUMMERINTERN(2014-00048). Temporary, 200 NE2 St. franchises and Central Oregon's finest choice Prineville, OR 97754 hourly position, not to exceed 3.5 months. of pre-owned vehicles. We offer the opportu541-447-6554 nity for you to achieve the levels of success Deadline:THURSDA Y, 5/01/14. EOE and job satisfaction. We are looking for highly Supervisormotivated individuals to join our team of COMINGSOON: Downtown Bend Library professionals. You must have excellent verbal BUILDING SAFETY INSPECTORIII skills, display a professional and positive demeanor, sales experience is helpful, but not Exciting opportunity! Supervisor is DESCHUTES COUNTY ONLY ACCEPTS necessary. We provide all of the tools you APPLICATIONSONLINE. TO APPLY FOR THE key leader of cohesive team providneed to succeed, including a professional Credit Union ABOVE LISTED POSITIONS, PLEASE VISIT t raining program that will give you t he ing progressive services. Supervisor knowledge and confidence to maximize your Contact Center Member Service OUR WEBSITE AT www.deschutes.or obs. needs proven efFectiveness with potential. Representative
The Bulletin
Career Opportunity!
The Bulletin
Midaregon
We Provide: • Guaranteed Income While Training • Paid Medical Insurance • 401K Retirement Plan • Drug Free Work Environment • Central Oregon's Largest New& Pre-Owned Inventory • $75,000 Annual Earning Potential
Sell an Item
FAST!
FINANCEANDBUSINESS 507 - Real Estate Contracts 514 -Insurance 528 - Loans andMortgagas 543 - StocksandBonds 558 - Business Investments 573 - BusinessOpportunities
476
Mill Workers
At Smolich of Redmond we are looking for sales professionals from all career fields. Previous automotive sales experience is not required. What is required is a willingness to commit yourself to a rapidly growing industry, start your new career now!
Part-time, 25 hours per week position requires prompt, ac c u rate, and cour t eous over-the-telephone service to members while processing routine f inancial transactions, researching issues and answering questions. The Contact Center MSR cross-sells Mid Oregon Credit Union products and services and makes referrals as needed. Qualified candidates will possess excellent customer service and communication skills. Must be able to work in a team environment and be PC-proficient. Competitive salary based on experience. See our web site at www.midoregon.com for application.
We will be holding interviews for 2 days only from 1pm —3pm on Tuesday and Wednesday,
Please send resume, application, and cover letter to: Mid Oregon FCU Attn: Human Resources P.O. Box 6749, Bend, OR 97706
April 29th and 30th at:
$10 • 3 lines, 7 days $16 • 3 lines, 14 days
Smolich of Redmond 2987 Hwy 97 Redmond, OR 97756 541-548-1488
(Private Party ads only)
diverse customer service situations and successful leadership and management skills. Deadline: z:oo on Thursday, May i5.
http://www.deschuteslibrary.org/ employment.asp for more details, application, and supplemental questionnaire. Or call (~) 3tz-io2S forassistance. EOE
D ESCH U T E S
i
PUBLIC
Aii candidates will receive an email response regarding their application status after the recruitment has closed and applications have been reviewed. Notifications to candidates are sent via email only. if you need assistance, please contact the Deschutes County Personnel Dept., 1300 NW Wall Street, Suite 201, Bend, OR 97701 (541) 617-4722. Deschutes County encourages qualified persons with disabilities to participate in its programs and activities. To request information in an alternate format, please call (541) 6174747, fax to (541) 385-3202 or send email to accessibilityildeschutes.org.
LI BRARY
Nid Oregon Credit union iss drug-free eeorrtplsce
EQIIAL OPPORTIIIIITY EMPLOYER
Women, minorities, and the disabled are encouraged to apply.
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"Ad runs until it sells or up to 8 weeks (whichever comes first!)
Item Priced at: • Under $500 • $500 to $999 • $1000 to $2499 • $2500 and over
FOR AOLITRf AO
00+
Includes up to 40 words of text, 2" in length, with border, full color photo, bold headline and price.
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• 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 15,000 in Central and Eastern Oregon • Continuous Listing online, with photo, on bendbulletin.com
541-385-5809 Private party merchandise only - excludes pets & livestock, autos, Rvs, motorcycles, boats, airplanes, and garage sale categories. s
G4 SUNDAY, APRIL 27, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 634
573
Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
Housekeeping The path to your dream Cleaning team m em- RESORT job begins with a colber needed for private lege degree. Educahomes weekdays only, tion Quarters offers a no weekends, eves or Black Butte free college matching holidays. 541-815-0015 service. CALL Ranch 1-800-901-2241. Just bought a new boat? (PNDC) MAINTENANCE Sell your old one in the MANAGER classifieds! Ask about our Super Seller rates! We ar e c u rrently Looking for your next seeking a Manager 541-385-5809 employee? to oversee MaintePlace a Bulletin help nance operations. RESORT wanted ad today and Ideal candidate reach over 60,000 qualifications: readers each week. • 5 yrs exp. in maint. Your classified ad & equip. ops. Black Butte will also appear on • 2 yrs managerial & bendbulletin.com Ranch hospitality exp. which currently • Post High School receives over 1.5 Current Job education & Commillion page views Oppottunities! puter Competency every month at •Class B ODL pref. no extra cost. Maintenance Professional Salary Bulletin Classifieds • Manager & Excellent benefits! Get Results! • Grounds Maint. Apply today: Call 385-5809 • Maint. Tech www.BlackButte or place Ranch.com your ad on-line at Food &Beverage or contact bendbulletin.com • Line Cooks -$250 HR at 541-595-1523. Sign on Bonus! We offer a Drug-free • Servers Workplace / EOE • Bussers • Dishwashers • Grill Cooks Golf • Assistant Mechanic • Greens Keepers
Recreation • Life Guards • Activity Leaders
Rental Operations • Night Audit • Vacation Sales • Guest Services Spa ISports Shop • Nail Techs • Sales Associate Visit our website at www. BlackButte Ranch.com or contact Human resources at 541-595-1523 & BBR is a drug free workplace/ EOE
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products or 8 I chasing services from out of • i the area. Sendingi c ash, checks, o r i credit i n f ormationi • may be subjected to i I FRAUD. more informaI For tion about an adver-i i tiser, you may calli the Oregon State I Attorney General'si C o nsumer c I Office Protection hotline at I I 1-877-877-9392. I
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People Lookfor Information About Products and Services Every Daythrough The Sulletin Classifieds
Business Opportunities AptJMultiplex NE Bend
I
(PNDC)
DID YOU KNOW that
526
Loans8 Mortgages WARNING
The Bulletin recommends you use caution when you provide personal information to companies offering loans or credit, especially those asking for advance loan fees or companies from out of state. If you have concerns or questions, we suggest you consult your attorney or call CONSUMER HOTLINE,
GAGED AUDIENCE. Discover the Power of
Newspaper Advertising in six states - AK, ID, MT, OR, UT,WA. For a free rate brochure call 916-288-6011 or email cecelia©cnpa.com (PNDC)
. 0 0
Jefferson Coun Job 0 o rtunities
BANK TURNED YOU 616 DOWN? Private party Want To Rent Staff Assistant III — Assessor's Officewill loan on real es$2,173.56to $2,520.22 month DOQ tate equity. Credit, no Want to rent an apt., Closes May 6th, 2014 problem, good equity duplex or small home, is all you need. Call floor, Bend For complete job description and applicaOregon Land Mort- ground area, single senior. tion form go to www.co.jefferson.or.us; click gage 541-388-4200. 971-263-3359 on Human Resources, then Job Opportuni627 ties; or call 541-325-5002. Mail completed LOCAL MONEY:Webuy secured trust deeds & Jefferson County Application forms to: Vacation Rentals note,some hard money & Exchanges loans. Call Pat Kellev Jefferson County Human Resources, 541-382-3099 ext.13. 66 SE D Street, Suite E, Ocean front house, Madras, OR97741. Real estate investor loan walk from town, needed. Investor will 2each bdrm/2 bath, TV, Jefferson County is an Equal Employment pay 7% on a $40,000 Fireplace, BBQ. $95 to $60,000 loan secured by First Trust per night, 3 night MIN. 208-369-3144 deed. 541-771-4414
Pressman
The Bulletin, located in beautiful Bend, Oregon is seeking a night time pressman. We are part of Western Communications, Inc. which is a small, family owned group consisting of 7 newspapers, 5 in Oregon and 2 in California. Our ideal candidate will have prior web press experience and be able to learn our equipment (3 r/gtower KBA Comet press) and processes quickly. In addition to our 7-day a week newspaper, we have numerous commercial print clients as well. In addition to a competitive wage, we also provide potential opportunity for advancement. If you provide dependability combined with a positive attitude and are a team player, we would like to hear from you. If you seek a stable work environment that provides a great place to live, let us hear from you. Contact James Baisinger, Operations Manager
648
not only does newspaper media reach a HUGE Audience, they also reach an EN-
1-877-877-9392.
General
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630
573
Business Opportunities
Rooms for Rent
Houses for Rent General
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IRF ©KI19 DID YOU KNOW 7 IN Call for Specials! 10 Americans or 158 Limited numbers avail. million U.S. A d ults 1, 2 & 3 bdrms read content f r om w/d hookups, n ewspaper m e d i a patios or decks. each week? Discover Mountain Glen the Power of the Pa541-383-9313 cific Northwest News- Professionally managed by 744 paper Advertising. For Norris & Stevens, Inc. Open Houses a free brochure call 916-288-6011 or Check out the email classifieds online Open 12-3 cecelia@cnpa.com www.bendbulletin.com 1472 NW Portland (PNDC) Ave. Updated daily West Side Classic DID YO U KNO W Fully Renovated Newspaper-gener642 Miller, Broker a ted content is s o Apt./Multiplex Redmond Lauri 541-480-8958 valuable it's taken and repeated, condensed, broadcast, t weeted, Redmond-Rental discussed, p o sted, Assistance copied, edited, and Available! emailed c o u ntless times throughout the Wintergreen thegarnergroup day by others? DisApartments • R e al orurr ulo • cover the Power of 2050 SW Timber 541 383 4360 Newspaper AdvertisAve., Redmond. umutrogomorgroup.oom ing in SIX STATES 1, 2 & 3 Bdrms, with just one phone Rent based on call. For free Pacific income,income Call The tbuttettn At Northwest Newsparestrictions apply. 541-385-5809 per Association NetCall 541.548.7816 Place Your Ad Or E-Mail work brochures call TDD 1.800.735.2900 At: www.bendbulletin.com 916-288-6011 or email ceceliaocnpa.com Open 12-3 62938 Fresca St. New & Beautiful
Near O.B. Riley Rd. Rob Davis Broker 541-280-9589
PUBLISHER'S NOTICE All real estate adver-
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NOTICE
Redmond Homes
Lots
$282,900. 2189 sq.ft., One acre year-round
home o r v a cation building sites $34,500 o wner terms. O n paved road, pwr & wtr. 6 mi. to Prineville 541-350-4077 775
Manufacturedl Mobile Homes
FACTORY SPECIAL New Home, 3 bdrm, $46,500 finished on your site. J and M Homes 541-548-5511
USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! Door-to-door selling with fast results! It's the easiest way in the world to sell. The Bulletin Classified 541-385-5809 •
u
$
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Meet singles right now! No paid o perators, just real people like you. Browse greetings, exchange messages and connect live. Try it free. Call now: 8 77-955-5505.
(PNDC)
1-800-927-9275.
bedroom and WARNING The Bulletin Master 656 bath, in CRR home, recommends that you owner smokes. No I • Houses for Rent i nvestigate ever y pets $275/mo. 1st & Redmond phase of investment last, yg DISH & utiliopportunities, espe- ties. 541-923-8341 CRR 4 ac, 3 bdrm 2 bath c ially t h ose f r o m Coll 54I-385-5809 to promote your service• Advertise for 28 doyg starting at 'I40 Ittris speciapackag l eir noravala i ble onour wobrgo) $750/mo., 1st/last + out-of-state or offered Room in beautiful golf M/H. Steady income, by a person doing course home, all furn., dep's. business out of a loowner absent 90% of good credit, refs req'd; no cal motel or hotel. In- time. $600, share util. pets/smkg. 503-679-4495 Building/Contracting Handyman LandscapingNard Care Landscaping/Yard Care vestment o ff e rings 541-279-9538. 659 must be r egistered NOTICE: Oregon state Houses for Rent with the Oregon DeJust too many ERIC REEVE law requires anyone 0 I partment of Finance. collectibles? Sunriver who con t racts for HANDY
+ee
Will Haul Away
Get 7 consecutive days F OR ONLY ~2 1 .4 3 A D A Y ! ~ And get 631 in ad upgradeS fOr FREE! BASED ONA 2" AD SPACE
Part-Time Instructor Positions Looking for talented individuals to teach part-time in a variety of disciplines. Check our employment Web site at https://jobs.cocc.edu. Positions pay $525 per load unit (1 LU = 1 class credit), with additional perks.
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682 - Farms, RanchesandAcreage 687 - Commercial for Rent/Lease 693 - Office/Retail Space for Rent REALESTATE 705 - Real Estate Services 713 - Real Estate Wanted 719 - Real Estate Trades 726- Timeshares for Sale 730- New Listings 732- Commercial Properties for Sale 738- Multiplexes for Sale 740- Condos &Townhomes for Sale 744- Open Houses 745- Homes for Sale 746- Northwest BendHomes 747- Southwest BendHomes 748-Northeast Bend Homes 749 - Southeast BendHomes 750- RedmondHomes 753 - Sisters Homes 755 - Sunriver/La Pine Homes 756- Jefferson CountyHomes 757 -Crook County Homes 762 - Homeswith Acreage 763- Recreational Homesand Property 764- Farms andRanches 771 - Lots 773 - Acreages 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes 780 - Mfd. /Mobile Homeswith Land
All real estate advertised here in is subject to th e F ederal Fair Housing 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 mitations or discrimination. We will not knowingly accept any advertising for r eal 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
is reading The Bulletin
til Filled.
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single level, 3/2, family room w/ gas firetising in this newspaplace, formal dining per is subject to the thegarnergroup room, den, sunroom, F air H ousing A c t • oou oruro Llo • upgrades galore. Forwhich makes it illegal 541gg34360 SaleByOwner.com ID wwwthogamorgroup.oom to a d vertise "any ¹ 23975895. Call preference, limitation 541-526-1206 for info. or disc r imination based on race, color, Open 12-3 religion, sex, handi845 NW Fort Looking for your next cap, familial status, Clatsop St. emp/oyee? marital status or naPlace a Bulletin help tional origin, or an in- NorthWest Crossing Sparkles Like New wanted ad today and tention to make any reach over 60,000 such pre f erence, Shelley Griffin, Broker readers each week. limitation or discrimi541-280-3804 Your classified ad nation." Familial stawill also appear on tus includes children bendbulletin.com under the age of 18 which currently reliving with parents or ceives over legal cus t odians, 1 5 milkon page pregnant women, and views every month people securing cus- thegarnergroup at no extra cost. tody of children under • o I o m u Llc • Bulletin Classifieds 18. This newspaper 541 g834360 Get Results! will not knowingly acwwwthogomorgroup.oom Call 385-5809 or cept any advertising place your ad on-line for real estate which is 746 at in violation of the law. Good classified ads tell bendbulletin.com O ur r e aders a r e the essential facts in an Northwest Bend Homes hereby informed that interesting Manner. Write all dwellings adver- from the readers view -not Westside! 3/2 on a quiet hillside lot. G ranite, tised in this newspa- the seller's. Convert the 762 per are available on facts into benefits. Show slate, stainless steel. an equal opportunity the reader howthe item will View the city lights. Homes with Acreage Private, quiet, convebasis. To complain of nient. $398,000. 5780 NW 66th Lane d iscrimination cal l help them insomeway. This Call Glenn Oseland, Redmond. 4 bdrm on 5 H UD t o l l-free a t advertising tip Principal Broker, acres, 40x50 shop, 1-800-877-0246. The brought toyou by (541) 350-7829 fenced, borders BLM. toll free t e lephone Holiday Realty $285,000. 541-815-1216 number for the hearThe Bulletin ing i m paired is SerrinpCerurotOregon rrnre rotu
y Q+I g g g g e f I l p l o
Assistant Professor 1 of Non-Destructive Testing and Inspection Provide instruction in the Non-Destructive Testing and Inspection (NDTI) program at the Manufacturing and Applied Technology Center (MATC) in Redmond. Provide small group discussion, lectures, hands-on demonstration, student advising and assistance. 10-yrs NDTI exp. + 5-yrs using NDTI techniques req. $41,449-$46,309 for 9mo. contract. Open Un-
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i s
750
• H omes for Sale
We suggest you conconstruction work to sult your attorney or VILLAGE PROPERTIES be licensed with the 4 SERVICES. Sell them in call CON S U MER Construction ContracSunriver, Three Rivers, The Bulletin Classifieds HOTLINE, La Pine. Great tors Board (CCB). An AnHome Ik 1-503-378-4320, license Selection. Prices range active Commercial Repairs 8:30-noon, Mon.-Fri. means the contractor $425 - $2000/mo. Carpentry-Painting 541-385-5809 is bonded & insured. View our full Honey Do's. The Bulletin Verify the contractor's inventory online at Serung Central Oregon since lolB Find exactly what Small or largejobs, 632 CCB l i c ense at no problem. Equal Opportunity Employer you are looking for in the AplJMuiliplex General Village-Properties.com www.hirealicensed1-866-931-1061 Senior Discount CLASSIFIEDS contractor.com All work gugranteed. CHECKYOUR AD or call 503-378-4621. 675 General The Bulletin recom541-389-3361 DID YOU KNOW 144 RV Parking mends checking with 541-771-4463 million U.S. A dults the CCB prior to conBonded - Insguet read a N e wspaper RV space for rent, NE tracting with anyone. CCIN149468 print copy each week? Redmond, $350/mo., Some other t rades Discover the Power of i ncludes w ate r & also re q uire addiCentral Oregon Community College has PRINT N e wspaper on the first day it runs sewer. 541-419-1917 tional licenses and Just bought a new boat? openings li s te d bel o w . Go to Advertising in Alaska, to make sure it is corSell your old one in the certifications. https://jobs.cocc.edu to view details 8 apply Idaho, Montana, Orrect."Spellcheck" and classifieds! Ask about our 693 online. Human Resources, Newberry Hall, egon, U t a h and human errors do ocSuper Seller rates! 2600 NW College Way, Bend OR 97701; Washington with just cur. If this happens to Office/Retail Space 541-385-5809 (541)383 7216. For hearing/speech impaired, one phone call. For a for Rent your ad, please conOregon Relay Services number is 7-1-1. FREE ad v ertising tact us ASAP so that COCC is an AA/EO employer. Landscapin~ard Care network brochure call ice Space on corrections and any 670 sqftOff Highland Ave. in Red916-288-6011 or adjustments can be T. SCHELLWORTH Part-Time Custodian (First Shift) mond. High visibility. email made to your ad. General Contractor/ Responsible for cleaning and maintenance of $600/mo + deposit. cecelia Cbcnpa.com 541-385-5809 College buildings. Assist in the security of 541-419-1917 Builderp (PNDC) The Bulletin Classified ZerfeI'rgau/rtp campus buildings and event setup. 20hr/wk Custom Building, between 1:00pm-5:00pm Mon-Fri. $11.30Za~<0e $13.05/hr. Closes April 30. Remodelsand More Than Service tile work Peace of Mind Test Coordinator, Deer Ridge Correctional Facility 541-588-0958 Spring CleanUp This position is Iocated at the Deer Ridge Corthomasschellworlh@gm ail.com •Leaves rectional Facility, Madras OR. Responsible for website coming soon! •Cones administering computer-based exams and o) •Needles "- cc e¹ i sssst= classroom progress exams. Associates+ 1-yr. •Debris Hauling exp. $ 13.47-$16.04/hr. 20hr/wk. C loses April 30. Weed Free Bark 8 Flower Beds Payroll Specialist Debris Removal Provide support with ali phases of payroll proLawn Renovation cess. Reconcile and submit tax deposits, Aeration - Dethatching quarterly workers comp, and reconcile and pay The Bulletin deliVerS yOur "HELP WANTED" ad to Overseed monthly health insurance, life insurance, and Compost disability insurance policies. Associate's De70,000 print readers and20,000 online visitors a day. Top Dressing gree + 2-yr. exp. $2,549-$3,034/mo. Closes The Bulletin, local, hassle-free, worry-free advertising. May 4.
Adjunct Instructor of Early Childhood Education Provide instruction in early childhood education courses at the Branch Campuses (Redmond, Madras, and Prineville) to include online, evening and weekend classroom courses. Master's Degree + 2-yr. college level teaching exp. Closes April 28.
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RENTALS 603 - Rental Alternatives 604 - Storage Rentals 605 - RoommateWanted 616 - Want ToRent 627-Vacation Rentals& Exchanges 630- Rooms for Rent 631 - Condos &Townhomesfor Rent 632 - Apt./MultiplexGeneral 634 - Apt./Multiplex NEBend 636 - Apt./Multiplex NW Bend 638 - Apt./Multiplex SE Bend 640 - Apt./Multiplex SWBend 642 - Apt./Multiplex Redmond 646 - Apt./Multiplex Furnished 648- Houses for RentGeneral 650- Houses for RentNEBend 652- Houses for Rent NWBend 654- Houses for Rent SEBend 656- Houses for Rent SW Bend 658- Houses for Rent Redmond 659- Houses for Rent Sunriver 660- Houses for Rent LaPine 661 - Houses for Rent Prineville 662- Houses for Rent Sisters 663- Houses for Rent Madras 664 - Houses for Rent Furnished 671 - Mobile/Mfd. for Rent 675 - RVParking 676 - Mobile/Mfd. Space
'baisin erowescom a ers.com with your complete resume, references and salary history/requirements. No phone calls please. Drug test is required prior to employ-
Accountant,COCC Foundation Responsible for managing all financial and accounting systems, such as reporting and budgeting, general ledger, cash receipts and disbursements, and analytical support for the College Foundation. Bachelor's Degree+ 3-yr. exp.$3,558-$4,235/mo. Closes May 25.
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" FREE~ . For Salvage lfpj Any Loctvtton ' .,:4, Removal Ateo Cteanwpe A8 Cteancwts i
NHL> •
Classifjeds
In print and On-line at bendbuljetjn.com
5 41 -38 5 - 5 8 0 9
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Handyman
I DO THAT!
S
The Bulletin offers both print adanddaily online accessfor our emPIOymentneedShere at COCC. ThiSreaCheSalarge audience at agreat price. Data proves employment seekers lOOk to The Bulletin fOr aVailable OPPOrtunitieS.In 2013 recruitment stats showed 51% of the online applications had identified The Bulletin as their source of advertisement notification." Chrjsta Gunnejl, Human Resources Central OregonCommunity College
SERVINe CENTRAL ORESON
Slnce 2003 Resldenual ao commerclal
Sprfnkler Activation/Repair Back Flow Testing
oeneis 541.317 9768 cceo1 5r573Borrrtortrrusurod
Yard Maintenance
& Clean-up,
MAINnlvAIVCE
Mowing, Thatching,
• Thatch 4 Aerate • Sprtng Clean up • Weekly Mowlng
& much more!
8 Edging
• Bi-Monthly & Monthly Maintenance • Bark, Rock, Etc.
LANDSCAPIIVG • Landscape Construction • Water Feature InstaffationiMaint. • Pavers • Renovations • Irrigations Installation Senlor Dlscounts Bonded and Insured
541%15<458 LCIN s75e
Plugging Cogntact Allen,
541-536-1294 541-815-SN Painting/Wall Covering
MARTIN JAMES European Professional Painter Repaint Specialist! Oregon License
v186147 LLC NOTICE: Oregon Landscape Contractors Law 541-815-2888 (ORS 671) requires all businesses that advertise t o p e r formPeople Lookfor Information Landscape ConstrucAbout Products snd tion which includes: SeMces Every Daythrough l anting, deck s , The Bvlletin Classlfleds ences, arbors, water-features, and installation, repair of irrigation systems to be licensed w i t h the Landscape Contractors Board. This 4-digit Landscape number is to be inMaintenance cluded in all adverFull or Partial Service Western tisements which indi•Mowing oEdging cate the business has Painting Co. •Pruning oWeeding a bond,insurance and —Richard HaymanSprinkler Adjustments workers compensa- a semi-retired painting tion for their employFertilizer included For your protec- contractor of 45 years. with monthly program ees. tion call 503-378-5909 Small jobs welcome. or use our website: Interior & Exterior Weekly, monthly www.lcb.state.or.us to or one time service. check license status 541-388-6910 Fax: 5414884737 before contracting with ccnssxs4 EXPERIENCED the business. Persons doing land scape Commercial maintenance do not & Residential Tree Services require an LCB cense. Senior Discounts u"" "oo
541-390-1466 Same Day Response
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COLLINS
BULLETINCLASSIFIEOS Aeratien/Ilethatching Search the area's most Ask aboutFREEadded listing of Handyman/Remodeling comprehensive services with seasonal classified advertising... contract! Residential/Commercial real estate to automotive, • Spring Clean-up merchandise to sporting Small Jobs to • Mogrrtrgg 'Edging goods. Bulletin Classifieds • Pruning Ewttre Room Reloodgtg oWeedeating appear every day in the Garage Oraaroixrguorp • F rtiTiximg oHauling print or on line. Home Igspeclion Repairs • Gmrmds Keeping gurgtity, Hogest Work
AEEEN REINSCH — Providing-
Call 541-385-5809 www.bendbugetin.com
The Bulletin Serving CmoalOregonsincerpur
OrroSrrroor awNy oorrrioooglrtiorr FREE ESTIMATES Call rrorp to scbedutol
j41-4$0BONDED a IN $714 URED
GOTSTUPS? Mr. StttmpBttster Professional Stump 8r Tree Removal We'll Megt rpr Seat any Writlen Eotimatel • 24 Years experience • Insured • Free Estimates
54I -213-9103 mrgtumtgbgggter.com
THE BULLETIN• SUNDAY, APRIL 27 2014 G5
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
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880
880
881
882
882
882
Motorhomes
Motorhomes
Travel Trailers
Fifth Wheels
Fifth Wheels
Fifth Wheels
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BOATS 8 RVs 805- Misc. Items 850 - Suowmobilas 860 - Motorcycles Aod Accessories 865 - ATVs 870 - Boats & Accessories 875 - Watercraft 880 - Motorhomas 881 - Travel Trailers 882 - Fifth Wheels 885- Canopies aod Campers 890- RVs for Rent
®
: I.
00 850
AUTOS8ETRANSPORTATION 908 - Aircraft, Parts aod Service 916 - Trucks aud Heavy Equipmeut 925 - Utility Trailers 927 - Automotive Trades 929 - Automotive Wanted 931 - Automotive Parts, Service and Accessories 932 - Antique aud Classic Autos 933 - Pickups 935 - Sport Utility Vehicles 940 - Vans 975 - Automobiles 865
875
ATVs
Watercraft
A rcticcat AT V 7 0 0 Ads published in "Wa 2008 t w o-rider ve- tercraft" include: Kay hicle, EFI LE. L ow ks, rafts and motor hours, high p erfor- zed personal mance. Nice wheels, watercrafts. Fo winch, extra equip., 'boats" please se $5000. Moving causes lass 870. sale. 541-447-3342. 541-365-5809
Snowmobiles
870
Arctic Cat 580 1994, EXT, in good condition, $1000.
Boats & Accessories
12'1969 Searsaluminum fishing boat, Located in La Pine. low hours on new 6 Call 541-408-6149. hp engine, with trailer and extras. Good 860 shape!$1600. Motorcycles & Accessories 541-382-2599 15'
2005 HD Super Glide custom, fuel injected 7k mi, new tires, like new cond. $6500 541-639-9857
1971 Fishing
boat, full top cover, 35 H P Ev i n rude motor, trailer and spare tire, accessories, good condition. $1100 obo. 541-406-3611
15' fiberglas miles, exc. cond, lots Sportsman, of e x t ras, $5,600. 75HP motor, trailer, 541-771-6585 good condition, $950.
CBR 1000RR 2004, 15k
The Bulletin 880
Motorhomes
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Alfa See Ya 2006 Excellent condition, 1 owner, 350 Cat diesel, 51,000 miles, 4-dr frig, icemaker, gas stove, oven, washer/dryer, non-smoker, 3 slides, generator, invertor, leather interior, satellite, 7'4" ceiling. Clean!$77,500. 541-233-6520
KOUNTRY AIRE 1994 37.5' motorhome, with awning, and one slide-out, Only47k miles and good condition.
$25,000.
541-548-0318 (photo above is of a
similar model & not the actual vehicle)
<>BIIS Monaco Lapalma, 2002, 34'10" -Workhorse 8.1i Less than 18,000 mi, 5.5 Onan
gen., 2 slides, 4 dr. refrig wficemaker, micro/convection oven, water purifier, hydraulic jacks, power pilot seat+ more options. Exceptionally clean.$59,900/make offer.541-504-1008
G R E AT
R U V X
National RV Tropical, 1997,
35-ft, Chevy Vortec engine, new tires, new awnings, 12-ft slide-out, queen bed, Italian leather couch and recliner, excellent condition. Ready to travel„ towing hitch included. $19,900. 541-815-4811
541-369-1066 541-419-8034
FXSTD Harley Davidson 2001,twin cam 88, fuel injected, Vance & Hines short shot exhaust, Stage I with Vance & Hines fuel management system, custom paris, extra seat. $10,500 OBO. Call Today 541-516-8684
Harley Davidson 2009 Super Glide Custom, Stage 1 Screaming Eagle performance, too many options to list, $8900. 541-388-8939
Harley Davidson 2011 Classic Limited, Loaded! 9500 miles, custom paint "Broken Glass" by Nicholas Del Drago, new condition, heated handgrips, auto cruise control. $32k in bike, only $20,000 or best offer. 541-318-6049
HDFatBo 1996
I
Completely
Rebuilt/Customized 2012/2013 Award
Winner Showroom Condition Many Extras Low Miles.
$17,000
541-548-4807
Triumph Da ytona 2004, 15K m i l es, perfect bike, needs nothing. Vin tf201536.
$4995 DreamCar Auto Sales 1801 Division, Bend DreamCarsBend.com 541-678-0240 Dlr 3665
18'Maxum skiboat,2000, inboard motor, g reat cond, well maintained, $8995 obo. 541-350-7755
Beaver Marquis, 1993 40-ft, Brunswick floor plan. Many extras, well maintained, fire suppression behind refrig, Stow Master 5000 tow bar, $24,995.
541-383-3503
19'/2' Starcraft Fisherman, 115hp Merc, 15hp electric start
Evinrude, loaded, very good cond. $13,500 541-536-7482
2007 Winnebago Outlook Class "C" 31', solar panel, Cat. heater, excellent condition, more extras. Asking $58K. Ph. 541<47-9268 Can be viewed at Western Recreation (top of hill) in Prineville.
Pre-Owned To Choose From! On the spot financing, low monthly payments. Over 350 RVs in Inventory! Best Selection! Best Value! Visit us online at www.bigcrv.com Bend: 541-330-2495
Redmond:
541-546-5254
Servin Central Ore on since 1903
Dodge Brougham 1978, 15', 1-ton, clean, 69,000 miles. $4500. In La Pine, call 541-602-8652
541-460-6900
Garage Sales
Garage Sales Garage Sales
WINNEBAGO BRAVE 2003
Find them
• 34D, 2 slides • Tires 80% • Just completely serviced • 39,000 miles • No trades • $48,000 firm 541-815-3150
Providence 2005 Fully loaded, 35,000 miles, 350 Cat, Very clean, non-smoker, 3 slides, side-by-side refrigerator with ice maker, Washer/Dryer, Flat screen TV's, In motion satellite. $95,000 541-480-2019
We Do The Work ... You Keep The Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! Free Advertising. BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond:
541-548-5254
TIFFIN ALLEGRO BUS 2010 - FULLY LOADED 40QXP Powerglide Chassis / 425HP Cummings Engine / Allison 6 Spd Automatic Trans / Less than 40K miles / Offered at $199K.
Too many options to list here! For more information go to ~ mne a~lle rob a.com or email trainwater157iN mail.com or ca 858-527-8627
$10,999, 0 Down, $112 per month, 132 months, 5.75% apr,
overall length is 35' has 2 slides, Arctic package, A/C, table & chairs, satellite, Arctic pkg., power awning, in excellent condition! More pix at bendbulletin.com
...don't let time get away. Hire a professional out of The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory today!
Holiday Rambler 37' 541-419-3301 Presidential model 2003, all factory options, 3 slides, 2 A/C units, 4 door fridge, fireplace, generator, electric jacks front and rear, flat screen TV, e n t ertainment center, bay window, MONTANA 3585 2008, exc. cond., 3 slides, exc. cond., MUST king bed, Irg LR, SEE! Sacr i fice Arctic insulation, all $24,500 OBO. options $35,000 obo. 541-223-2218 541-420-3250
Time to declutter? Need someextra cash?
Tier One credit score, on approved credit.
Over 350 RVs in Inventory! Best Selection! Best Value! Visit us online at www.bigcrv.com Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond: 541-548-5254
Fleetwood Wilderness NW Edition 2002, 26' 1 slide, electric tongue jack, stabilizers, new brakes, waste tank heaters, ducted heat/AC, micro/stove/oven, tub/shower, couch, elec/gas hot water tank. Sleeps 6. Includes Eaz Lift hitch, storage cover and accessories. $10,500.
And sell it locally. ' gg
I'
Wind River 201127ORLDS (Four Seasons) 28' by Outdoor RV 541 -447-3425 in LaGrande, OR. 2 Slides in living room, separate bdrm, power jack,elect awning, solar panel, flat screen, surround sound, micro, air cond, day/night shades, ext speakers,ext shower. Like new!$25,500. Forest River 27' by Wild541-548-2109 wood 2004, winter pkg, slide, AC, oven, tub-shower, outside shower, micro, awning, Looking for your always stored. $12,500. next employee? Prineville, 541-447-9199 Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently reKeystoneLaredo 31' ceives over 1.5 million page views evRV 20 06 w i th 1 2' slide-out. Sleeps 6, ery month at no queen walk-around extra cost. Bulletin bed w/stora~e underClassifieds Get Reneath. Tub shower. sults! Call 385-5809 2 swivel rockers. TV. or place your ad Air cond. Gas stove & on-line at refrigerator/freezer. bendbulletin.com Microwave. Awning. Outside sho w er. Slide through stor882 a ge, E a s y Lif t . Fifth Wheels $29,000 new;
s
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List one Item" in The Bulletin's Classifieds for three days for FREE. PLUS, your ad appears in
Asking$18,600 541- 7-4605
P RINT and ON -LIN E
at bendbulletin.com Alpenlite 29' 1993, with goo s eneck. $3500 OBO. Needs new ref r igerator 541-306-1961.
541-419-9510
Victory TC 2002, 4 0K r n . , ru n s great, stage 1 kit, n ew tires, r e a r brakes 8 m o r e. H ealth for c e s s ale. $5,0 0 0 . 541-771-0665
0 W,,"
I ii
541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classified
Look at: Bendhomes.com for Complete Listings of Area Real Estate for Sale
Tioga 24' Class C Fleetwood Discovery Motorhome 40' 2003, diesel, w/all Bought new in 2000, - 3 slide outs, Enclosed raft t r ailer, options currently under 20K 12'x7', pulley system satellite, 2 TV's, W/D, miles, excellent 32,000 m iles. to help load, wired for etc., shape, new tires, Wintered in h eated 12 volt a i r p u mp. shop. $64,900 O.B.O. professionaly winterized every year, cut$750. 541-593-6053 541-447-6664 off switch to battery, plus new RV batterTake care of Generator Kubota 3500 ies. Oven, hot water gas, 60 h rs, $ 1000 heater 8 air condiyour investments CASH. 541-923-5960 tioning have never with the help from been used! $24,000 obo. Serious The Bulletin's TURN THE PAGE inquiries, please. "Call A Service For More Ads Stored in Terrebonne. 541-548-5174 Professional" Directory The Bulletin
Laredo 30'2009
on the first day it runs to make sure it is cor'10 - 3 lines, 7 days rect. "Spellcheck" and '16 - 3 lines, 14 days human errors do occur. If this happens to (Private Party ads only) your ad, please contact us ASAP so that corrections and any adjustments can be made to your ad.
TiCk, TOCk...
Salem Cruise Lite 18', 2014 Only $10,999! Zero Down! $112 Per Month!
with living r oom slide, 48,000 miles, in good condition. Has newer Michelin tires, awning, blinds, carpet, new coach battery and HD TV. $31,000 Call Dick at 541-408-2387
'500you can place it in The Bulletin Classifieds for:
Tick, Tock
541-385-5809
For Sale
I
Fleetwood Prowler 32' - 2001 2 slides, ducted heat 8 air, great condition, snowbird ready, Many upgrade options, financing available! $14,500 obo.
$28,000
in The Bulletin Classifieds
Winnebago Sightseer 30' 2004
Over 45 New & Preowned To Choose From! On the spot financing, low monthly payments. Over 350 RVs In Inventory! Best Selection! Best Value
Keystone Cougar 2010 326MKS. Like new. S tored indoors. 4 slideouts, queen bed, mirrored w a rdrobe, skylights in bath and bedroom. DVD, TV, Visit us online at AM/FM CD p l ayer www.bigcrv.com with i n terior/exterior Bend: 541-330-2495 speakers, retractible Redmond: awning, etc. M a ny Call Dick, 541-548-5254 e xtras. So l d w i t h 541-480-1687. h ousehold and R V extras and R e ese Full-timers or Snow Bird Hitch. $29,950IOBO) RV Ron - 541-549-1089 Special! 2006 Holiday CONSIGNMENTS Rambler Presidentiai, WANTED M -36RLQ,37',4 slides, We Do The Work ... Say "goodbuy" lots of extras. No kids, You Keep The Cash! Cameo LXI 2003 35' 3 smoking or pets. to that unused On-site credit slides, 3600 O n an Must see! $32,000. approval team, item by placing it in generator, very nice 541-615-8391 web site presence. and clean. $16,950. The Bulletin Classifieds We Take Trade-Ins! 541-548-0625. Free Advertising. Have an item to BIG COUNTRY RV 5 41-385-580 9 sell quick? CHECK YOURAD Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond: If it's under
Pacific Ridge by Komfort 2011 Mdl P 27RL 31', 'I 5' Super slide, power jack, electric awning, solar panel, 6-volt batteries, LED lighting, always stored inside. Must see to appreciate.Asking $28,000. Call Bill, 541-480-7930
Winnebago Aspect 2009 - 32', 3 slideouts, Leather interior, Power s e at, locks, win d ows, Aluminum wheels. 17" Flat Screen, Surround s o u nd, camera, Queen bed, 541-548-5254 Foam mattress, Awning, Generator, Inverter, Auto Jacks, RV Mattresses Air leveling, Moon $275 to $799 roof, no smoking or Spring-Latex-Memory p ets. L ik e n e w , The Mattress Factory $74,900 541-362-9091
Travel Trailers
RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED
DLR ¹3447
„s
881
Over 40 New &
The Bulletin
Chaparral 2130SS Clean, well m aintained 21 ' f a m ily ski/wakeboard open-bow runabout with new Barewest tower/Bimini. Great sound system, new dual battery system. Stored under cover, fresh water use only, 2nd owner. J u st b ought a lar g e r Chaparral! $16,000.
541-382-2430
Best Motor Home Selection In C.O.!
i2) 10' Kayaks; Old Town Otter, Ocean Frenzy Si t - on-top, both with p a ddies, Bigfoot Diesel 32' 2006, Su per C $225/ea. Duramax d i e sel, 541-593-6053 Allison trans., only 37K mi., do u ble Ads published in the slide, 5500 Onan "Boats" classification diesel gen., to many include: Speed, fishoptions to list. Vin¹ ing, drift, canoe, house and sail boats. 534032, $79,995. Beaver Coach For all other types of Sales &Service, watercraft, please go Bend 541-914-8438 to Class 875. 541-365-5809
Navion IQ Sprinter chassis RV 2008, 25' Mercedes Benz diesel, only 24k miles, excellent condition, automatic rear slide-out w/queen bed, full bath w/shower, deluxe captain swivel front seats, diesel generator, awning, no pets/ no smoking.$69,500.
Winnebago A dventurer 2005 35ys', gas, less than 20,000 miles, excellent condition, 2 slide-outs, work horse chassis, Banks power brake system, sleeps 5, with al l o p tions, $62,000 / negotiable. Call 5 4 1-306-6711or email a i kistuebendcable.com
Best 5th Wheel Selection in C.O.!
Orbit 21' 2007, used only 8 times, A/C, oven, tub shower, micro, load leveler hitch, awning, dual batteries, sleeps 4-5, EXCELLENT CONDITION. All accessories are included. $13,900 OBO. 541-382-9441
assi ie s
Leave message.
To receivyour e FREECLASSIFIEDAD,cal 541-385-5809or visit
Arctic Fox 29' 2003, covered storage, slideNeed help fixing stuff? out, exc. cond inside 8 outside 2016 tags, Call A Service Professional find the help you need. $14,900. 541-678-1449 or 541-410-8849 www.bendbulletin.com •
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The Bulletin OffiCat:1777 e SWChandler Ave.(OnBeijd'S WeStSide) *Offer allowsfor 3 linesoi text only. Excludesall service, hay,wood, pets/animals, plants, tickets,weapons, rentals andemploymentadvertising, andailcommercial accounts. Must beanindividual itemunder $200.00and price oi individualitemmust beincludedin thead. Askyour Bulletin SalesRepresentativeabout special pricing, longer runschedulesandadditional features. Limit i ad peritemper30 daysio besold.
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I THUR - SUN 12PM - 4PM
THURS. - SAT. 12PM - 4PM Beautiful Pah!isch Homes community featuring amazing neighborhood amenities: pool, hot tub, clubhouse, sports center, gym, game room 20878SEGoldenGatePlace,Bend and more! Come tour a Directiottstfrorti the parkway, east variety of single level and on Reed Narltet, south on 15th, then 2-story floor plans. follow stgns.
Hosted & Listed by:
TEAM DELAY
HOmeS Stardng Mid-$300s
I ss
Homes starting in the Iow
$200,000s. Brand new homes m Bend with the quality
Pahlisch is known for stainless steel appliances, laminate wood floors, solid surface Chroma quartz counters (even in baths) with
20781 NE Comet I,ane
under-mount stainless steel sink in kitchen, extra attention DirectfottsiNorth on Boyd Acres,
given to allow for tons of Right on Sierra, te f( on Black Pottider, natural light & much more. Right on Cometlane.Lookfor signs. Come by the model home for starting in the low more information and plans.
Principal Broker
Hosted & Listed by:
EDIE DEI AY
RHIANNA KUNKLER
$200,000s
Broker
541-420-2950 R E A L T 0
R 8
541-306-0939
a E A 1. T o
R s
G6 SUNDAY, APRIL 27, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
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908
933
935
935
975
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975
Fifth Wheels
Aircraft, Parts & Service
Pickups
Sport Utility Vehicles
Sport Utility Vehicles
Automobiles
Automobiles
Automobiles
Automobiles
VolvoS60T5 2013
WHEN YOU SEE THIS
Porsche 911 Carrera 993 cou
Mercedes Benz
C300 S ort2012
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OPEN ROAD 36' 2005 - $25,500
King bed, hide-a-bed sofa, 3 slides, glass shower, 10 gal. water heater, 10 cu.ft. fridge, central vac, s atellite dish, 2 7 " TV/stereo syst., front front power leveling jacks and s cissor stabilizer jacks, 16' awning. Like new! 541-419-0566
'
•
D odge R a m 15 0 0 Mega Cab 2006, V8 Save money. Learn HEMI, 4WD, pw, pdl, to fly or build hours tilt wheel, tow pkg. with your own airVin ¹146717 c raft. 1 96 8 A e r o Stock ¹8291 8 Commander, 4 seat, $22,479 150 HP, low time, full panel. $23,000 obo. Contact Paul at 541-447-5184. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354 T-Hangar for rent at Bend airport. Call 541-382-8998. Dodge Ram 1500 SLT uadcab 1999 916
AWD, less than 11k mi., auto, 6 spd. vin ¹202364 $31,977
CORVETTE COUPE Glasstop 2010
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Nissan Murano SL 2011
Trucks & Heavy Equipment
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Grand Sport - 4 LT loaded, clear bra hood & fenders. New Michelin Super Sports, G.S. floor mats, 17,000 miles, Crystal red. $42,000.
Less than 14k mil, AWD, 7 spd, leather vin ¹700716 $31,977
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 $29,700 541-322-9647
On a classified ad go to Subaru Legacy 2.5 GT www.bendbulletin.com Limited2005, loaded, to view additional leather, roof, a l loy photos of the item. wheels. VIN ¹210360 Stock ¹42935A Looking for your
$12,979 SUBA R Ll euomuovuaIo oou
next employee?
Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 503-358-1164. readers each week. 877-266-3821 Your classified ad Dlr ¹0354 will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1 5 million page views every month at Fiat 500 Pop 2012, 2 no extra cost. BulleFind It in dr, hatchback, pw, tin Classifieds Subaru Legacy 3.0 R CD, moonroof. Get Results! Call The Bulletin Classileds! Limited 2008, 6 Cyl., Vin ¹366167 385-5809 or place 541 N385 N5809 auto, AWD, leather, Stock ¹44028A m oon r o of , re a r your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com SOLD! spoiler, alloy wheels. Porsche 911 Turbo Vin ¹207281 ® s u sARu OIIRCRUUUIRRD.ODU Stock ¹82547 Need to get an 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. $23,979 877-266-3821 ad in ASAP? S UBA RU Dlr ¹0354 NIRLRUDRRRRD.UDR You can place it 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. online at: 877-266-3821 Ford Fusion SPorf www.bendbulletin.com 2003 6 speed, X50 Dlr ¹0354 added power pkg., 530 HP! Under 10k 541 N385 N5809 miles, Arctic silver, gray leather interior, new quality t ires, I The Bulletin recoml 2011 - 2. 5 L 4 cyl., and battery, Bose mends extra caution I p remium sou n d FWD, auto., 64k when p u rchasing stereo, moon/sunmiles, Bordeaux ReFX4 2008, pw, I products or services roof, car and seat Suzuki serve vin¹324193 from out of the area. pdl, A/C, and CD. covers. Many extras. $20,997 I S ending c ash , Vin ¹112357 Garaged, p e r fect checks, or credit in- q Stock ¹44267A ROBBERSON i condition, $59,700. formation may be I $10,479 541-322-9647 I subject toFRAUD. For more informaSUSAau 541-312-3986 I tion about an adverDLR ¹0205 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Porsche Carrera 911 tiser, you may call 877-266-3821 2003 convertible with I the Oregon StateI Dlr ¹0354 hardtop. 50K miles, Attorney General's I new factory Porsche Office C o nsumer I motor 6 mos ago with Just bought a new boat? I Protection hotline at 18 mo factory war'I -877-877-9392. Sell your old one in the ranty remaining. classifieds! Ask about our $37,500. Super Seller rates! serving Central Oregon sinces9la 541-322-6928 Ford Mustang 2004, 541-385-5809 V8, manual, RWD, power seats, r e ar spoiler, leather. VIN ¹232501 Stock ¹82459A
BIIW X 3 2 0 07, 99 K Hyster forklift, H30E miles, premium packpropane, 2 stage, 672 age, heated lumbar Recreation by Design hours, $1900 o b o. 5 .2L V8 auto . , supported seats, pan2013 Monte Carlo, 1 43,659 mi. R W D oramic moo n roof, black w/ leather seat 38-ft. Top living room, 2 541-389-7596 Vin ¹ 628726 BarBluetooth, ski bag, Xe- trim, 3.4L V6, 27,709 bdrm, has 3 slideouts, 2 gain Corral. $5,977 non headlights, tan & miles. vin¹362484 A/Cs, entertainment black leather interior, 26,977 center, fireplace, W/D, ROBBERSON n ew front & re a r ROBBERSON garden tub/shower, in LlucNLN ~ mmm a brakes @ 76K miles, LlucNLN ~ mmm a great condition.$36,000 one owner, all records, obo. Call Peter, 541-312-3986 very clean, $1 6,900. 541-312-3986 307-22'I -2422, Kenworth 1991 DLR¹0205 541-388-4360 dlr ¹0205 T800 Water Truck ( in La Pine ) 914 350hp diesel WILL DELIVER eng, 9-spd trans, Hendrickson cab RV suspension, double CONSIGNMENTS framed, self-conWANTED tained John Deere We Do the Work, pony motor, 4000 BMW X3 2011 black You Keep the Cash! Dodge Ram 2500 gallon water tank, on black, sport/prem fPhoto tor illuatration only) On-site credit new battery, 902,832 2008 Diesel, packs, leather, 3.5i Subaru lmpreza IyRX approval team, miles.$22,500 obo. exc. towing vehicle, 2012, Limited! AWD, turbo, nav., 20k web site presence. 541-589-2209 N 2WD, 55,000 5-Speed Manual. miles, 19 wheels, We Take Trade-Ins! miles. New batterVin¹ 213631 cold weather pkg, Free Advertising. Stock ¹44202A ies, rear air bags, Xenons, warranteed BIG COUNTRY RV Come in and Roll-n-lock bed to 9/2015. $38,000 Bend: 541-330-2495 TEST DRIVE! cover, spray-in One owner, Redmond: 503-789-9401 liner. 5th wheel 541-548-5254 S US A R u (Portland) hitch available, too. Peterbilt 359 p otable 2060 NE Hwy 20• Bend $19,000. water truck, 1 990, 885 877-266-3821 541-604-1285 3200 gal. tank, 5hp Dlr ¹0354 Canopies & Campers N p ump, 4 - 3 hoses, camlocks, $ 25,000. FIND ITr 541-820-3724 BIIY IT'l ToyotaLendcruiser VX 1999 SELL ITr The Bulletin The Bulletin Classifieds Chevrolet Trailblazer To Subscribe call 2008 4x4 „4KZLih 541-385-5800 or go to Ford 3/4 ton F250 1993 Automatic, 6-cylinder, Power Stroke diesel, www.bendbulletin.com Lance camper Model tilt wheel, power winturbocharged, 5-spd, 1130 loaded, 3800w dows, power brakes, 925 good runner & work gen. very good cond., air conditioning, key4.7L V8, 4WD, auto., truck. $4500 obo. Call less Utility Trailers $9,979 $10,500. entry, 69K miles. 16 mpg Hwy, Vin¹ 541-389-5353 or 541-536-7482 Excellent condition; 66902 Bargain Cor541-647-8176 tires have 90% tread. ral $9,977 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Ford 360 2013, stake $12,995. 877-266-3821 bed, 12 ft, 2 K m iles, Call 541-598-5111 O ROBBERSON Dlr ¹0354 $36,500. 619-733-8472 co mama
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Aircraft, Parts & Service
The Bulletin's Flatbed tandem axle "Call A Service trailer deck length 18, 7' wide, elec. brakes, Professional" Directory 2015 tags, good cond. is all about meeting $2900. 541-678-1449 your needs. 541-410-8849 Call on one of the 931 professionals today! Automotive Parts, Service & Accessories N rims with tires 5-lug p attern, $6 0 o b o , 541-279-8908 Summer tires like new 4 Ford F150 LIGHTNING a ll s e a son VH P 1993, 500 miles on re255/60r 17-1 0 6V. built engine. Clean inte$350. 541-317-0502 rior & new tires. $7000, OBO. 541-647-8723 932 Ford F250 4x4 1991 Antique & Super Cab, 460 ci,69K, Classic Autos $8500. 541-383-7603
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Chev Trailblazer LS 2004, AWD, V6, remote entry, clean title, 12/15 tags, $5995. 541-610-6150
Vans
Ford Thunderbird 2002 c o nvertible with brand new tonneau cover, white with grey i nterior, loaded, 88,600 low miles, choice condition, everything works. Great fun car to d r ive. I l l ness forces sale. price reduced to $12,500. Call Bill
14
1/3interestin
Columbia400,
Financing available.
$150,000
(located O Bend) 541-288-3333
Ford Bronco II 4x4, 1989Automatic, power steer!ng, stereo upgrade, set-up to tow, runs good. $1700. 541-633-6662
Chrysler Town & Country LXI 1997, beautiful inside 8 out, one owner, nonsmoker,. loaded with options! 197,892 mi. Service rec o rds available. $4 , 950. Call Mike, (541) 8158176 after 3:30 p.m.
Ford T-Bird, 1966, 390
1/5th interest in 1973
Cessna 150 LLC 150hp conversion, low time on air frame and engine, hangared in Bend. Excellent per/ormance & affordable flying! $6,000. 541-410-6007
172 Cessna Share IFR equipped, new avionics, Garmin 750 touchscreen, center stack, 180hp. Exceptionally clean 8 economical! $13,500. Hangared in KBDN Call 541-728-0773
1974 Bellanca 1730A
975
Fax it te 541-322-7253 engine, power everything, new paint, 54K The Bulletin Classifieds orig. miles, runs great, exc. cond.in/out. $7500 obo. 541-480-3179 Ford F-350 2010 Cabela's Crew Cab
Automobiles Ford Escape Ltd 2012 Exc. cond! Sil- BBuick Park Avenue Ulver gray m e tallic, tra 1999 white, 4 dr loaded, flex f u el, with 165k, runs great, Bluetooth, l e ather $2500. 541-420-3344 int., ski rack, keyless entry, back-up sensors. new all season CHECK YOUR AD tires, Ext. warranty. Please check your ad Great all weather veon the first day it runs hicle! $22,000 Plymouth B a rracuda to make sure it is cor- Ford Thunderbird Call or text Sandy at 1966, original car! 300 rect. Sometimes inV8 diesel, 4 wheel 2004 541-480-4778 hp, 360 V8, centers tructions over t h e drive. ¹A74567 Convertible lines, 541-593-2597 phone are misunder- with hard & soft top, stood and an error $39,777 silver with black Hummer H3 X 2007 can occur in your ad. interior, ROBBERSON If this happens to your all original, LlucCLN ~ maaaa ad, please contact us very low mileage, the first day your ad in premium condition. 541-312-3986 appears and we will $19,900. DLR¹0205 be happy to fix it as 702-249-2567 Rolls Royce 1992 Sils oon as w e c a n . (car is in Bend) ver Spur II, excellent! 3.7L 5 cyls, 4WD, Deadlines are: WeekMidnight Blue exterior, auto., 104k mi, 20 Ford F-350 4x4, days 12:00 noon for Parchment leather inteMPG, vin¹103344 next day, Sat. 11:00 rior, 15-inch chrome RR $15,977 a.m. for Sunday; Sat. wheels, Alpine Sirius DVD/CD/AM/FM/GPS 12:00 for Monday. If ROBBERSON navigation system, we can assist you, n vooLN~ ~aeuosm 77,200 miles, dealerplease call us: ship maintained, al541-385-5809 541-312-3986 lphoto for illustration only) 2006 XLT 4-door ways garaged. New, The Bulletin Classified Honda Civic Coupe LX dlr ¹0205 Crew Cab about $250,000; sell 2005, 5 spd, pw, pl, $19,500. 541-480-3348 A/C. 6.0L Turbo diesel, full BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS Vin ¹564343 WHEN ONLY THE power, a u tomatic, Search the area's most Stock ¹44125A BEST WILL DO! 6-disc CD, cruise, fog comprehensive listing of lights, running boards, $11,979 classified advertising... tow pkg, bedliner, grill real estate to automotive, (photo forillustration only) S US A R U . guard, folding rear merchandise to sporting Chevrolet TrailBlazer seat. Tan cloth inteBulletin Classifieds 2003, auto, 4.2 liter, 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. rior, metallic tan exte- goods. 877-266-3821 appear every day in the rior. 91,400 miles. alloy wheels. Dlr ¹0354 print or on line. Buick Skylark 1972 Vin ¹103029 17K orig. miles. Please Priced to sell $21,500 Call 541-385-5809 Stock ¹44183A see hemmings.com for 541-350-6925 www.bendbulletin.com Mercedes SLK350 $5,979 details. $18,900. 2005 conv., silver541-323-1898 The Bulletin S US A R U . blue, like new, AMG scning central orcgon sinceiau low mi, $20K. 933 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. pkq, 5401-312-2328 877-266-3821 Pickups Dlr ¹0354
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2180 TT, 440 SMO, 180 mph, excellent condition, always hangared, 1 owner
FORD XLT 1992 3/4 ton 4x4
for 35 years. $60K. In Madras, call 541-475-6302
Call a Pro Whether you need a fencefixed,hedges trimmed or a house built, you'll find professional help in The Bulletin's "Call a Service Professional" Directory 541-385 N5809
Ford E150 1997 van, runs, tows, looks great. 150K, good work riq. $3000 obo. 541-978-0168
Need to get an ad in ASAP?
1/3 interest in wellequipped IFR Beech Bonanza A36, new 10-550/ prop, located KBDN. $85,000. 541-41 9-95i0 www.N4972M.com
541-604-9307
2005 Diesel 4X4 Chev Crewcab dually, Allison tranny, tow pkg., brake controller, cloth split front bench seat, only 66k miles. Very good condition, Original owner, $34,000 or best offer. 541-408-7826
1976 Cessna 150M Just oyer 3000hrs, 600 hrs since out of frame major, Horton Stol Kit. Avionics: Apollo 65 GPS Chevy Ext. Cab 1991 & additional radio (4 fre- with camper s hell, quencies can be moniood cond., $1500 tored at once). TranBO. 541-447-5504. sponder w/mode C, JPI Fuel Flow Monitor, digiWhat are you tal density, temp & amp monitor. Nice paint & uplooking for? holstery w/memory foam seat bottoms. Oil filter & You'll find it in block htr. 1 owner past 14 yrs; always hangared, The Bulletin Classifieds no damage historv. N9475U.$26,000. 541-385-5809 541-480-4375
matching canopy, 30k original miles, possible trade for classic car, pickup, motorcycle, RV $13,500. In La Pine, call 928-581-9190
GMC New Sierra 1500 4x4 pickup, 2000, 1/2 ton, V8, wide side, low (only 16,109) miles, AT, leather seats, SLT pkg, has canopy, all in GREAT condition. $10,000.541-548-2554 or 541-788-3006
I nternational Fla t Bed Pickup 1963, 1
ton dually, 4 spd. trans., great MPG, could be exc. wood hauler, runs great, new brakes, $1950. 541-419-5480.
Advertise your car! Add A Picture!
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Reach thousands of readers!
Jeep Compass Lati- Call 541 N385 N5809 fude 2012, roof rack, The Bulletin Classifieds spoiler, keyless entry. l Vin ¹508927 Stock ¹44165A
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$18,779
Mazda CX-7i S orf
2011 - 2 .5L 4 cyl., auto., 23k miles, 28 MPG, Black Cherry Mica, vin¹362484 $16,977
ROBBERSON n ucoLN~
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A s k about our "Whee/ Deal"!
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Chevy Monte Carlo LS 1998, V6, 114K mi., A BS , c r u ise, p dl/pw/ps, $21 5 0 Pontiac Grand AM OBO. 541-312-9319 SE1 2003
Corvette 1979
L82- 4speed. 85,000 miles Garaged since new. I've owned it 25 years. Never damaged or abused.
$12,900.
Dave, 541-350-4077
l
f o r private party l advertisers
s u a a au
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354
Vehicle? Call The Bulletin
FWD, V6 auto., 90k mi., 29 mpg Hwy, Vin¹572987 Bar ain Corral 6,977 ROBBERSON y LINCOLN ~
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541-312-3986 DLR ¹0205
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Legal Notices
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
ning document for a LEGAL NOTICE specific area of the NOTICE TO INTERcommunity. The ESTED P ERSONS. Southwest Area Plan JANET J. SCHWARZ examinesland uses in has been appointed Notice is hereby given the area surrounding Personal Representathat a public hearing the newly o pened tive of the ESTATE High O F D OUGLAS B . before the Redmond Ridgeview Th i s in - SCHWARZ, Urban Area Planning S chool. DeCommission has been cludes land (primarily ceased, by the Circuit u n developed Court, State of Orscheduled for Mon- large parcels) located within egon, day, May 5, 2014, at Des c hutes 7:00 p.m. in the Red- the existing City limit, County, under Case land outside the City mond City C o uncil Number 1 4 PB0030. limit but within the ac- All persons having a Chambers, 777 SW knowledged U r ban claim against the esDeschutes Avenue. Growth Bo u ndary tate must present the The purpose of the ( UGB), an d la n d c laim w i t hin fo u r hearing is to consider: within the Urban Re- months of th e f i rst An amendment to the serve Area (URA). publication date of this City of Redmond De- The overall intent of notice t o H e n drix, the SWAP is to dev elopment Code t o Brinich & B e rtalan, velop a comprehenamend the minimum LLP, at 716 NW Hard evelopment s t a n - sive and integrated riman Street, Bend, land use plan for the Oregon 97701, ATTN: dards applicable to Commercial z o n es project area that takes Ken Brinich, or they (Section 8.01 9 5, into account all pri- may be barred. AddiTable D) . The mary elements of land tional information may use planning (i.e. in- be obtained from the amendment will i ncrease the density al- frastructure develop- c ourt records, t h e l owed in t h e C - 2 , ment, land use types, Personal Representapubl i c tive or the followingCentral Business Dis- d ensities, etc.). named attorney for trict Comm ercial amenities, Zone, and will not im- Once completedand the Personal Reprepose a m a x imum adopted, the Plan will sentative. Date of first density requirement. further implement the publication: April 13, The density limitation Great Neighborhood 2 014. HEND R IX Principles which were BRINICH & BERTAwill be regulated by adopted by the City of the designs s tanLAN, LLP, 716 NW HARRIMAN, B END, dards (i.e. height limit, Redmond as part of lot coverage, etc.) im- the C omprehensive OR 97701, p osed for th e C - 2 Plan when the UGB 541-382-4980. Zone and the Down- w as e xpanded i n town Overlay Distnct. 2006. While taking all USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! City of Redmond File the land use planning factors into consider¹TA-14-4. ation to encourage the Door-to-door selling with Staff Cont a c t: development of com- fast results! It's the easiest Heather Ri c hards, piete neighborhoods, way in the world to sell. Community Develop- the Great NeighborThe Bulletin Classified ment Director at (541) hood Principles will allow the project area 923-7756. 541-3854809 to develop in a manner where the practiInterested p e rsons LEGAL NOTICE cal combination of all are encouraged to NOTICE TO appear at the public elements will result in INTERESTED hearing, o r s u b mit an area that generPERSONS ates the highest dewritten comments to undersigned has the City of Redmond gree of livability to a The appointed PerPlanning Division, 716 variety of future resi- been dents. City of Red- sonal Representative SW Evergreen Avof the Estate of Sheila enue, Redmond, Or- mond File ¹ PA-14-2. M. Hickey, Deceased, e gon 97756, on o r Conta c t : by the Circuit Court, before May 5, 2014, S taff State o f Or e gon, at 5:00 PM. Anyone Heather Richards at County of Deschutes, needing accommoda- (541) 923-7756. Probate No. tion to participate in 14-PB-0037. All perthe meeting must no- Interested p e rsons sons having claims tify Mike Viegas, ADA are encouraged to the estate are Coordinator, 48 hours appear at the public against i n advance of t h e hearing, o r s u bmit required to present with vouchers meeting at written comments to them, the City of Redmond attached, to the Per541-504-3032. sonal Representative Planning Division, 716 at the address below, SW Evergreen AvPublish: enue, Redmond, Or- within four m o nths April 27, 2014, after the date of first e gon 97756, on o r Bend Bulletin before May 5, 2014, publication of this noApril 30, 2014, at 5:00 PM. Anyone tice, or the claims may The Spokesman needing accommoda- be barred. All perwhose r ights The City of Redmond tion to participate in sons be affected by does not discriminate the meeting must no- may the proceedings on the basis of dis- tify Mike Viegas, ADA obtain additionalmay inCoordinator, 48 hours ability status in t he from t h e admission or access i n advance of t h e fcormation ourt records, t h e meeting at to, or treatment, or Personal Representae mployment in, i t s 541-504-3032. tive, or the attorneys programs or activities. for the Personal RepPublish: LEGAL NOTICE resentative n a m ed April 27, 2014, CITY OF REDMOND: below. Dated and first Bend Bulletin NOTICE OF PUBLIC published: April 20, April 30, 2014, HEARING 2 014. T AMMIE J . The Spokesman LEGAL NOTICE CITY OF REDMOND: NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
HICKEY REID. Per-
Notice is hereby given that a public hearing before the Redmond Urban Area Planning Commission has been continued to Monday, May 5, 2014, at 7:00 p.m. in the Redmond City Council Chambers, 777 SW Deschutes Avenue.
The City of Redmond does not discriminate on the basis of disability status in t he admission or access to, or treatment, or e mployment in, i t s programs or activities.
Want to impress the The purpose of the relatives? Remodel hearing is to consider: your home with the An amendment to the City o f Re d mond help of a professional from The Bulletin's Comprehensive Plan to add the Southwest "Call A Service Area Plan a s a Professional" Directory supplemental p lan-
sonal Representative c/o C.E. F RANCIS, OSB ¹77006, FRANCIS H A N SE N & MARTIN LLP, 1148 NW Hill Street, Bend, OR 97701.
LEGAL NOTICE Warm Springs Housi ng Authonty is r e questing a quote for Hardware, Software, Labor and A n nual Service Agreement. For more information please contact Marceline Smith 541-553-3250, marceline.smithowstribes.org