Bulletin Daily Paper 05-27-14

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Serving Central Oregon since1903 75

TUESDAY May 27,2014

QCB e Sll FQm WQ BC <Wateringadvice SPORTS • C1

AT HOME• D1

bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD

CITY FEES

ROADWORK UPDATE

Bend's

'Smaft plllS' — Ingestible and implantable technology that tracks the conditions of our bodies is on the rise.A3

planning

College dasedaii — osu

structure

will be hosting while Oregon will travel to Nashville for regionals.C1

mayshift

lmw

9 I

Andy Tuiiis/The Bulletin

By Hillary Borrud

Pine Theater — Fund-

A new section of Murphy Road will connect to s round-

The Bulletin

raising horseshoes for the Prineville movie spot were installed earlier this month.B1

about at Third Street. More photos, Page A5.

The city of Bend is poised to change how it paysfortheemployees who answer questions from the public about land use and planning applications. The city currently pays

Odituary — Herb Jeffries made movie history as first black singing cowboy.B5

for these workers and oth-

in natiOnal neWS —Warning signs in the California killing spree.A2

And a WedexclusiveIn China, renaming dementia. beudbulletiu.com/extrus

EDITOR'5CHOICE

Researchers map genes of craft beer

r

( ]e

Nurphy Roadproject takes shape The OregonDepartment of Transportation continues work on the Murphy Roadproject. A light at Third Street was removed, and rampsfrom U.S.Highway97onto Third Street at the southern end of town wereclosed. Detours at Pinebrook Boulevard andBadger Roadare marked. Parts of the project are scheduled for comple-

~ m m

Clo s ures ~

pany'stastingroom bar with four half-pints of beer.

He describes each between thoughtful sips. The first has a malty

backbone and acrisp body of raspberry, rosemary and banana, he says; the second, awaft of white raisin and

final bite of olive brine; the third flows thick and smooth

like adassic English ale; and the fourthis perfumedwith a dry and subtle blend of nutmegandfreshstraw. The beers' colors are

Powers Road is Reed Market Roarl tothe north.

0 uorthbouud>trafffc on U.S.

Highway 97>wantingtoaccess Third Street is directed to Badger Road~although Pinebrook Boulevard is also anoption.

Det ours

m Ne w construction

New overpass

~b' O

gO OO

btook Blvd

New Yorh Times News Service

California yeast distributor White Labs, sits at his com-

Third Streetvia Powers Road. Analternat'ive to

LEGEND

By William Herkewitz SAN DIEGO — Troels

Southbound traffic on U.S. Highway97 wanting toaccess Third Streejtfs directed to

tion in the fall, while others will not be done until 2015.

qk

Prahl, abrewer and microbiologist at the Southern

.b ~4

Powers Rd.

Stoplight removed, four-way stop installed, road reconfigured Murp tr e 4 II W W s xu, ' eNension m MurphyRoadconstruction will M continuetinto 2015. The4

loundabou~tat Murphy <Road and Third Street, as well as~th'e section of Murphy )Road eastof ThirdfStree't, are sfated [for~ compledontinfall 2Ded )Murphy

Overpass Planned opening:

Road west of Third Street,

Fall 2014

w ~i ncludfng the newoverpass, and the roundabout at Murphy Road and Parrell Roadwon't be completed uritll'late 2015~

Fall 2014

Newramp Planned opening: — • Existing ramp closed during construction Planned reopening: Fall 2014

as varied as their flavors,

Badger Rd

Southbouud traffic on Third Street wanting to,go south on U.S.,Highway 97 is directed totPtnebrook Boulevard andthen onto 97. Thetraffic light at+Pinebrook and 97 has bee~nreconfigured'to include protected turn arrows. Whenthe project is completed, this interesection will become limite'd access, with a median in thecenter of 97 and only right turns on andoff Pinebrook allowed. Angadditional stoplight at Pinebrook and Third will aid traffic flow. Murphy Rd.

In preparation for adding an overpass, the light at the intersection of Third Street and Third U.S. Highway 97has been elosed south removed. Thelefthand turn lane will ofhere be permanently closed. Theramp Planned from northbound 97 to Third is reopening: temporarily closed until fall 2014. These Fali 2O1/4 closures effectively turn Third Street into a temporary deadendjust south of the Les Schwab Tires andSubaauru entrances. Eventually, southbound traffic on Third will

access 97 via anewramp, and northbound traffic on 97 will access Third via a reconfigured ramp.

ranging from cloudy gold

City Council is expected to

vote on the new planning fee structure June 18. Developers and other

people in the business community have complained for years that city planning fees were too high and they were paying for services that applicants

never used. Recently, the city conducted a study of its planning fees and found that 28 percent of services provided by the

planning division were not related to land use applications, Planning Manager Colin Stephens said at

a May 21 City Council meeting. See Fees/A4

String of legal wins bolstersgay marriage The Associated Press

Soufth.t ODOT

Andy Zeigert/The Bulletin

After thousands of years of unwitting domestication,

By Hillary Borrud

brewingyeasts — the microorganisms that ferment abrewer'stepid slop of grain, water and hops into beer — are as diverse as the beertheymake. See Brewing /A4

The Bulletin

A new east-west corridor in south Bend is starting to

Take a closer look at the construction in a videoat: beudbuuetl u.com/murphyroud

O

take shape, as the Oregon Department of Transportation works to extend Mur-

Third Street, and open them

phy Road from the Bend Parkway to Brookswood

by mid-October. ODOT also expects to finish on- and offramps to connect the highway and Third Streetbythe fall. Ryan Oster, a city engineer working on the project, said it will provide a direct

Boulevard.

Sunny High 67, Low35 Page B6

the entire community. The

By Mark Sherman und Nicholas Riccsrdi

are all the exact same brew.

TODAY'S WEATHER

ning services that benefit

Les chwab SubaGuru

to clear amber. Yet with the single exception of the

yeasts used to ferment them, Prahl explains, they

er general planning services by including the cost in fees for land use applications. Planners recently proposed that the city begin using property taxes and other general fund revenue to pay for plan-

The agency expects to complete the firstphase of the project, indudingtwo bridges over U.S. Highway 97 and a new roundabout on

crosstownroutefordrivers

WASHINGTON — One

after another and in sometimes evocative language, judges appointed by Republican and Democratic presidents are declaringit's

the city is going to get out of

phy Road project coordinator, said on Thursday that he

this is a major east-west connection on the south end of

expects to wrap up construction of this roundabout by the

town," Oster said. ODOT is currently buildingthe western half of a new roundabout at Third

middle of August.

Street and Murphy Road. Roundabout construction

and the other to take southbound traffic from Third

was divided into two phases,

Street onto U.S. Highway

rulings in support of gay and lesbian unions takes in every region of the country, including states of the Confederacy, and brings to 26

to allow customers access to Les Schwab Tire Center and

97 — and Luckman expects

states where same-sex cou-

to begin pouring concrete in

SubaGuru, Oster said. Wade

mid-June.

ples can get married or a judge has ruled they ought to be allowed. See Guy marriage/A4

in the area. "The main thing

Luckman, the ODOT Mur-

Construction workers have

built forms for the two bridges — one at Murphy Road

See Murphy Road /A5

too late to turn back on the

topic of same-sexmarriage. The unbroken string of state and federal court

INDEX At Home D1-6 Crosswords E4 Business C6 Local/State B1-6 Classified E1-6 Obituaries B5 Comics/ Sports C1-4 Puzzles E3-4 TV/Movies D6

A Raider reflects on joy, loneliness By Antonio Olivo The Washington Post

The Bulletin

An Independent Newspaper

ARLINGTON NATIONAL CEMETERY, Va. — The weather over Arlington Na-

inside • Obama at the Tomb of the Unknowns, A2 • Local remembrance,B1

Cole flew in from his home

in Texas to be the grand marshal in Monday's Memorial Day Parade in Washington and to accept a Congressional

Vol. 112, No. 147,

tional Cemetery was sunny

30 pages, 5sections

and clear, similar to the day

Q I/I/e use recycienewspri d nt

in 1942 when Richard Cole helped change the course of

grave of his former commander, the 98-year-old ex-pilot who helped stage a

American history as one of

daring attack on Japan that

18, 1942, inspired Americans

James Doolittle's "Raiders" during World War II.

lifted American spirits at a crucial time said the memory

reeling over the Pearl Harbor

'I : IIIIIIIIII o

88 267 02329

Melina Mara 7 rhe Washington Post

Lt. Col. Richard Cole visits the graves of Lt. Col. James Doolittle und other "Doolittle Raiders" last week at Arlington National Cemetery.

As he stood before the

Gold Medal on behalf of the

isbittersweet.

Doolittle Raiders — a group of 80 U.S. airmen whose mission into Japan on April attack. See Doolittle /A5


A2

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OR LD

CALIFORNIA KILLING SPREE

Clergy Sex aduSe —Pope Francis announced Mondayhewould meet soon with a group of sexabusevictims at the Vatican and declared "zero tolerance" for any member of the clergy whowould violate a child. Francis also revealed that three bishops arecurrently under investigation by theVatican for abuse-related reasons, though it wasn't clear if they wereaccused of committing abuse itself or of having covered it up. "There are noprivileges," he told reporters en route back to Romefrom Jerusalem. The meeting with a half-dozen victims will mark the first such encounter for the pope,who hasbeen criticized by victims for not expressing personal solidarity with them when he hasreached out to other people whosuffer.

an warnin si ns, imi s o e a o ions By Adam Nagoumey and Erica Gcede

an extremely disturbed young erally people who have infor-

New York Times News Service

his parents, who had alerted the police, but they found that

LOS ANGELES — E l liot

man. His behavior alarmed

Rodger was a young college he did not meet the legal critestudent who had few friends, ria for involuntary psychiatric detested his roommates and hospitalization. He stopped spent much of his time alone, attending classes at Santa Barreveling in the isolation of a lo- bara City College before his calgolfcourse orthe beaches behavior might have caught the

killing inevitably focuses on shortfalls in gun regulations

near Isla Vista, where he lived. But a review of the three

attention of behavior therapists there.

years leading up to Friday night, when Rodger killed six people and injured 13 others before shooting himself near the campus of the University

ing to law enforcement and mental health experts, would be to improve the sharing of information about potentially violent people among the police,

In the end, for all these early warning signs, it is hardly clear that much couldhave been done to stop this tragedy. Rod- schools, mental health profesger, like so many mass killers sionals and relatives. beforehim, stands as evidence Kevin Cameron, executive

of California, Santa Barbara,

Ukrainian eSCalatiOn —Ukraine's president-elect said Monday he wants to begin talks with Moscowandenda pro-Russia insurgency in the east, but the rebels escalated theconflict by occupying amajor airport, and the government in Kiev responded with an airstrike. As darkness fell in Donetsk, a city of about1 million in eastern Ukraine, it was unclear whowas in control of the airport. Hundreds of fighters of the separatist Donetsk People's Republic hadbeenbrought by trucks to a woodedarea onthe fringes of the airport, many of them armed with rocket-propelled grenadelaunchers and automatic rifles. At least one warplane streakedover thecity, firing flares, and explosions were heard from the direction of the airport. Early today, theDPRsaid on its Twitter account that a truck carrying woundedfrom the airport area came under fire andthat the driver was killed.

mation, but they don't know what to do with it," Fein said. Public debate after a mass or state laws that govern when

someone can be involuntarily held for psychiatric reasons. But no less important, accord-

Thai COuP —Bolstered by an endorsement from Thailand's king, the nation's new military ruler issued astark warning Monday to anyone opposed to last week's coup: Don't cause trouble, don't criticize, don't protest — or else thenation could revert to the "old days" of turmoil and street violence. Speaking in his first public appearance since thecoup,Gen.PrayuthChan-ochadefendedthearmy'stakeover, saying hehad to restore order after seven months of increasingly violent confrontations between thenow-ousted government and demonstrators who hadlong urged thearmy to intervene.

suggests a series of flashpoints to limits in the laws and reg- director of the Canadian Cenwhere his often bizarre and ulations — and the network ter for Threat Assessment, unsettling behavior might have of communications between who is a consultant to law endrawn the attention of the au-

police authorities and schools

thorities and, potentially, sig- — intended to flag potentially naled his violent plans. dangerous figures. Rodger, 22, had been planRobert Fein, a psychologist ning his "Day of Retribution," whose specialty is targeted viashecalledit, for allthreeyears olence and an author of a 2002 he was in Isla Vista, a period in reportby the Secret Service on which he had been under the school shootings, said warning treatment of therapists, gotten signs about disturbed individbeaten up after trying to shove uals preparing for some kind women off a ledge atlocalbar, of mass attack are almost aldrawing a visit by the local po- ways present but often do not lice, and posted videos that — if come to the attention of the not as explicitly threatening as

authorities.

forcement and mental health

agencies and schools in the U.S., said legislation governing professional practice contains provisions that "make it clear, if

Nigerian abduCtiOnS —Nigeria's military has located nearly 300 schoolgirls abducted by Islamic extremists but fears using force to try to free themcould get them killed, the country's chief of defense said Monday.Air Marshal Alex Badeh told demonstrators supporting the much criticized military that Nigerian troops cansave the girls. But headded, "we can't go andkill our girls in the nameof trying to get them back." Hespoke to thousands of demonstrators who marched to DefenseMinistry headquarters in Abuja, the capital. Many were brought in on buses, indicating it was anorganized event.

we have reasonable grounds to

believe an individual may pose a significant threat to their own safety or to others, that we have

an obligation to share the information without consent."

"Many professionals have let the pendulum swing so far that they believe their primary

CIA officer revealed —In anembarrassing flub, the Obama

"If you look back at any kind mandate is to protect privacy at the one he posted the day of the attack — nonetheless showed of bad situation, there are gen- all costs," he said.

administration accidentally revealed the name of the CIA'stop official in Afghanistan in anemail to thousands of journalists during the president's surprise Memorial Dayweekendtrip to Bagram Air Field. The officer's name —identified as "chief of station" in Kabul — was included by U.S.embassy staff on a list of 15 senior American officials who met with President BarackObamaduring the Saturday visit. The list was sent to aWashington Post reporter who was representing the news media, who thensent it out to the White House"press pool" list, which contains as many as6,000 recipients. The Associated Press is withholding the officer's name atthe request of the Obama administration, who said its publication could put his life and thoseof his family members in danger.

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EgyPtian vOte —Egypt's presidential election on Mondayturned into a nationalist celebration at manypolls with voters singing and dancing for the almost certain winner — former military chief Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi, who last year ousted the first freely elected president. But the first day of voting in the two-day election also illustrated the bitter divisions that haveriven Egypt since themilitary's removal of Islamist leader MohammedMorsi. In towns where Islamists dominate, voting was often thin or nonexistent. The59-year-old retired Field Marshal el-Sissi is hoping for a strong turnout to show international critics that his July 3 ouster of Morsi reflected the will of the people. — From wire reports

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

MEGABUCKS

EQIB

President BarackObamalays awreath Monday at the Tomb of the Unknowns atArlington National Cemetery in Arlington, Va. Obama, who returned just hours earlier from a surprise visit with U.S. troops at BagramAir Field in Afghanistan, paid tribute to those lost in battle there and elsewhere over history. Hecalled them "patriots who made the ultimate sacrifice" for their country. "Early this morning, I returned from Afghanistan,"

Obama told the audience of several thousand people. "Yesterday, I visited with some of our menand women serving there — 7,000 miles from home. For more than12 years, men andwomen like those I met with have borne the burden of our nation's security. Now, because of their profound sacrifice, because of the progress they havemade, we're at a pivotal moment."

ClassI,ieds

By JonathanWeisman

tee, who is preparing legislation for Senate consideration in the

An open letter from a se-

nior Republican senator to the

coming weeks. The open letter, from Sen.

nation's veterans in which he castigates the leadership of vet-

Richard Burr of North Caro-

erans organizations prompted a brutalwar ofwords overthe Memorial Day weekend, induding a promise from the Veterans of Foreign Wars that its

on the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee — and the groups'

"hat in hand" approach to Con-

541-382-6223

responses — pushed the conflict into the open. Burr, angry that only the American Legionhas called for

Wars, the Disabled American

publicans because they could Veterans and the Paralyzed Vetbe left with a politically difficult erans of Americahitbackhard. effort to privatize at least some

t a Oaa O soO saO ss OsO

more money into a system cov-

veterans'healt hcareortopump

"For years, the VFW h as come to Congress with hat in

hand, andforyearswe'veheard ering about 2.8 million veterans the same old story," the heads of the wars in Iraq and Afghan- of the veterans group wrote to istan, an option veterans gmups Burr."You canbe assured, Senhavedemanded butRepublican ator, that you've done a superb leaders have resisted. job in showing us the error in "What we need to establish our ways. You can also be asnow is how we can provide sured that in the future, we will high-quality, timely health care spend a substantial percentage to all of our veterans, period," of our time seeking to inform said Sen. Bernard Sanders, our membersand our constitI-Vt., the chairman of the Senate Veterans Affairs Commit-

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TUESDAY, MAY 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 Tuesday, May27, the147th day of 2014. Thereare218 days left in the year.

HAPPENINGS EduCatich —President Barack Obamahosts a White House science fair.

Remembrance —University of California, Santa Barbara, plans a memorial at UCSB's Harder Stadium for the six people killed Friday.A2

BREAKTHROUGH

STUDY

ma is' a seea

For many,stress is less at work than at home

With ever-shrinking technology, ingestible or implantable chips are on the rise. These chips track the condition of our bodies in real time.

in1997.

In1994, Nobel Prize-winning author Alexander Solzhenitsyn returned to Russia to the emotional cheers of thousands after spending two decades in exile. Ten years ago:Mustafa Kamel Mustafa, a Muslim cleric, was arrested in Londonand accused of trying to build a terrorist training camp inOregon. (Mustafa, also known asAbu Hamza al-Masri, was extradited to the United States in the fall of 2012; his trial began in New York in April 2014.) Five years ago:President Barack Obamaannounced more spending for renewable energy after touring a large field of solar panels at Nellis Air Force Base,near LasVegas. Gunmendetonatedacarbomb in Lahore, Pakistan, killing about 30 people andwounding at least 250. One yearago:TheEuropean Union decided to lift an arms embargo ontheSyrian opposition while maintaining all other sanctions against President Bashar Assad's regimeafter June1, 2013.Sen.John McCain, a proponent of arming Syrian rebels, quietly slipped into Syria for ameeting with anti-government fighters. A coordinated wave ofcar bombings tore through mostly Shiite areas of Baghdad, killing dozens.

BIRTHDAYS Actor Christopher Lee is92. Former Secretary of StateHenry Kissinger is 91.Actor Louis Gossett Jr. is 78. Singer Bruce Cockburn is 69.Actor Richard Schiff is 59. Actress PeriGilpin is 53. ComedianAdamCarolla is 50. Actor Paul Bettany is 43.

Rapper Andre3000 (Outkast) is 39. TV chefJamieOliver is 39. — From wire reports

wore beepers to report on their

The Washington Post

moods when contacted by re-

In her 1997 book, "The

searchers — support earlier

Time Bind," the sociologist research that people who work Arlie H o chschild s hook have better mental and physiup conventional notions of cal health than those who don't. family life when she argued And mothers who work steadithat work was becoming ly full time in their 20s and 30s

HISTORY Highlight:In1937, the newly completed GoldenGate Bridge connecting SanFrancisco and Marin County, Calif., was opened to pedestrian traffic (vehicles begancrossing the next day). In1896, 255 people werekilled when a tornado struck St. Louis, Mo., and EastSt. Louis, III. In1929, Charles Lindbergh married Anne Morrow in Englewood, N.J. In1933,the Chicago World's Fair, celebrating "A Century of Progress," officially opened. WaltDisney'sAcademy Award-winning animated short "The Three Little Pigs" was first released. In1935, the SupremeCourt struck down theNational Industrial Recovery Act. In1936, the Cunard liner RMS Queen Mary left England on its maiden voyage toNewYork. In1941, the British Royal Navy sank the Germanbattleship Bismarck off France, with a loss of some 2,000 lives, three days after the Bismarck sank the HMS Hood. In1942, Navy Cook3rd Class Doris "Dorie" Miller became the first African-American to receive the NavyCross for his "extraordinary courage and disregard for his own personal safety" during Japan's attack on Pearl Harbor. In1944, Jean-Paul Sartre's existentialist play "Huis clos" (known in English as "No Exit") was first performed in Paris. In1962, a dump fire in Centralia, Pa., ignited a blazein underground coal deposits, continuing to burn this day. In1964, independent India's first prime minister, Jawaharlal Nehru, died. In1985,inBeijing,representatives of Britain andChina exchanged instruments of ratification for an accord returning Hong Kong to Chinesecontrol

By Brigid Schulte

more like home for many parents, a place of order

and belonging where they ers who work part-time, stay willingly put in long hours. home with children, or who "I come to work to relax," have beenunemployed. "At work, people are potenone person told her. Home, Hochschild said, was be- tially completing tasks. They're coming more like work, able to focus their attention and with sullen children, resent- accomplish things, both those ful spouses, endless chores, with low and high incomes. They're not multitasking," she stress and chaos. Hochschild blew every- said. "We tend to think that jobs one's mind by arguing that are rewarding if they're prohome, that once-sacred hav- fessional, but actually people en of rest and renewal, was with lower incomes have more in fact more stressful for stress reduction at work." people than work. Those with high incomes, And now, researchers she said, were the only outlihave the data to prove she er: Both men and women had was right. much higher levels of cortisol In a newly released study at work, and both felt happier in the Journal of Science athome. and Medicine, researchers But why do most people feel carefully examined the lev- more stressedathome? "Well, you just have a lot els of the stress hormone, cortisol, of a variety of work- more going on," Damaske said. ers throughout the day. The "Trying to get anything done is data clearly showed that a challenge." both men and women are The findings are particularly significantly less stressed disturbing. Stress and elevated out at work than they are at levels of hormones like cortihome. sol have been associated with And the women they high blood pressure, diabetes, studied said they were hap- cardiovasculardisease, obesipier at work — while the ty, inflammation and cancer, to men said they felt happier at name afew diseases.Previous home. research has found that cor"We found a big gen- tisol can act like a contagion der difference," said Sarah and spread like a virus through Damaske, a sociologist and a family. It can even alter the women'sstudies professor DNA in children.

• ggg~'

Nick Otto / For The Washington Post

Mary Ellen Snodgrass describes how the smart pills that she takes daily send information that she can see on her tablet, such as the number of steps she takes in a day or how much time she spends sitting.

By Ariana Eunjung Cha

numerous uncharted scientific, legal and ethical ques-

The Washington Post

REDWOOD CITY,

C alif. tions that need to be thought

— Each morning around 6, Mary Ellen Snodgrass swal-

through. What kind of

lows a computer chip. It's em-

should users receive about

can increase compliance with prescribed medication. Swiss

pharmaceutical giant Novartis has said it would seek FDA

w arnings clearance to use the Proteus chips in the medications it bedded in one of her pills and the risks of implanting chip makes for transplant patients roughly the size of a grain of technology inside a body, for to minimize the chance of orsand. When it hits her stom- instance'? How will patients gan rejection. ach, it transmits a signal to be assured that the technology In the United States, the foher tablet computer indicat- won't be used to compel them cus has been the elderly. ing that she has successfully to take medications they don't Made entirely of edible intaken her heart and thyroid really want to take? Could law gredients, the 1-square-milmedications. enforcement obtain data that limeter chip has copper on "See," said S n odgrass,would reveal which individ- one side and magnesium on checking her online profile uals abuse drugs or sell them the other, and it is activated page. With a few swipes she on the black market? Could when it comes into contact brings up an hourly timeline what started as a voluntary with stomach acids. It's used of her day with images of experiment be turned into a in conjunction with a patch, white pills marking the times compulsory government iden- which is shaped like a large she ingested a chip. "I can see tification program that could Band-Aid and worn on the torit go in. The pill just jumped erode civil liberties? so. For five minutes after being onto the screen." In 2002, when silicon chips swallowed, the chip sends out Snodgrass — a 91-year-old containing their medical re- a unique 16-digit code that is retired schoolteacher who cords were injected into some picked up by the patch, which has been trying out the smart Alzheimer's patients, it was in turn beams the informapills at the behest of her son, deeply unsettling to privacy tion to a nearby smartphone an employeeatthe company advocates. Severalstates sub- or tablet — where it can be that makes the technology sequently passed legislation shared via the Internet with — is at the forefront of what outlawing the forced implan- family members, doctors and many predict will be a revo- tations, and the technology the company. lution in medicine powered never took off. The patch contains addiby miniature chips, sensors, Marc Rotenberg, execu- tional sensors that tracks cameras and robots with the tive director of the Washing- things such as temperature, ability to access, analyze and ton-based Electronic Privacy heart rate, movement (whethmanipulate your body from Information Center, said he er someone is standing, sitting the inside. worries about the coercive or lying flat) and sleep. As the size and cost of chip

technology has fallen dramatically over the past few years, dozens of companies and academicresearch teams are rushing to make ingestible or implantable chips that

will help patients track the condition of their bodies in real time and in a level of de-

tail that they have never seen before. Several have been approved by the Food and Drug Administration, including a transponder containing a person's medical history that is injected under the skin, a camera pill that can search the colon

for tumors, and the technology, made by Proteus Digital Health, that Snodgrass is using. That system is being used

are swallowed and last in the

body only about a day. "There's something very troubling about a chip being placed in a person that they

were onlymoderately happier at home than at work." The results, D amaske

said, are m ind-blowing. Most people blame work as the sourceof stress in their

lives. Yet their findings study subjects took saliva

swipes five times a day to measure cortisol levels and

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Proponents of the technol-

ogy, however, say the devices could save countless lives and

billions of dollars in unnecessary medical bills. Eric Topol is the director

of the Scripps Translational Science Institute in La Jolla, Calif., and has written a book

mercial use within the next

a patch, which some patients

five years.

might find challenging. Scientists are working on

"The way a car works is that it has sensors and it tells

you what's wrong. Why not Nanosensors, for example, put the same type of technolowould live in the bloodstream gy in the body'? It could warn and send messages to smart- you weeks or months or even phones whenever they saw years before something hapsigns of an infection, an im- pens," Topol said. pending heart attack or anothThe ingestible chip that er issue — essentially serving Snodgrass is using — it was as early-warning beacons for the first smart pill to be apdisease. Armies of tiny robots proved by the FDA and the with legs, propellers, cameras European Union, in 2012 and and wireless guidance sys- 2010, respectively — is still tems are being developed to being tested by a handful of diagnose diseases, administer doctors and hospitals, as the drugs in a targeted manner company continues to refine and even perform surgery. its software. Proteus officials more advanced prototypes.

say they hope to make it more

widely available within the next year. Britain's National H ealth

Service has begun using the the human bodymakes some technology with heart pauncomfortable, and there are tients to figure out whether it of putting little machines into

than at home. And men

Lifesaving potential

gating a tablet and wearing

But while the technology

were much happier at work

can't remove," he said.

to make sure older people take their pills; it i n volves navi-

may be within reach, the idea

at Penn State and one of the report's authors. Women

use of the chips — whether

they are implanted for a few months or permanently, or

about the digital revolution in health care. He said he believes the science is moving so quickly that many of these gadgets will be ready for com-

Ethical questions

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A4 T H E BULLETIN • TUESDAY, MAY 27, 2014

Fees

imately $200,000. They also we have some needs we're not recommended the city pay for meeting completely in many

entire community. Chudowsky said he recently had cof-

Continued from A1

city-initiated changes to the development code out of the

areas of the city," Russell said.

fee with interim Police Chief

For example, the city is trying to improve its transportation planning, Russell said. Stephens said he checked with the city Finance Department

Jim Porter, and based on

The unrelated services in-

cluded answering questions from the public about land use and building regulations, either over the phone or in person at the Community

generalfund. Stephens and Oberst said

the city already uses the general fund to pay for preapplication meetings between Development D e p artment's developersand city planners. front counter. The meetings are free for the Stephens, City Business developers, and they have reAdvocate Carolyn Eagan and sulted in developers submitCommunity D e v elopmentting better applications to the Director Mel Oberst recom- city, Oberst said. mended the city begin payCity Councilor Sally Rusing for half the annual cost of sell said during the May 21 general planning servicesmeeting that she was consuch as answering residents' cerned about the impact to land use questions — from the general fund, most of the city general fund, which is which the city uses to pay for mostly property tax revenue, policeand fire services."The at an annual cost of approx- general fund is so tight, and

their conversation, it did not

appear necessary to use the general fund to hire additional police officers at the moment.

to make sure there is enough

money in the general fund to pay for planning services. City Councilor Mark Capell also said officials should t hink

Capell said that in the end,

Israelis, Palestinians in Holy Land visit

he supports the plan to use

general fund money to pay for certain planning services.

a b ou t t h e i r p r i o r i -

"Since the downturn, we've

ties, and the city could use the $200,000 to hire police

pretty much beat the daylights out of you in terms of officers. your budget," he told employC ity Co u n cilor V ic t o r ees of the Community DevelChudowsky said the decision opment Department. "It is our on how to pay for planning face to a lot of people doing services should be based on business in our community." who benefits, and there are — Reporter: 541-617-7829, certain services that help the

hborrud@bendbulletin.com

Brewing Continued from A1 And no w t w o re s earch teams, from White Labs and

and Ruth Eglash

a proposal for diplomatic dialogue. This is not his mission.

The Washington Post

This is not what he desires."

By William Booth

In a m arathon schedule himself to be a shrewd diplo- that saw the 77-year-old ponJERUSALEM — Proving

mat, PopeFrancis on Mon-

tiff attend more than 30 events

day reached out to Jewish Israelis by kissing the hands of elderly Holocaust survivors at a memorial, praying

in 55 hours, the pope seemed willing to acknowledge the often-conflicting narratives of suffering fromboth Israelis and

at the holiest Jewish site in

Palestinians.

Jerusalem — the Western He also was a gracious guest Wall — and later placing a in Jordan, showering Jordan's wreath at the grave of the ruling monarch, King Abdullah founder of Zionism. II, himself a direct descendant And at the invitation of of the Prophet Muhammad, Prime Minister Benjamin with praise for his people's genNetanyahu, the pontiff add- erosity. There are about 600,000 ed an unplanned stop at an regist ered Syrian refugees and Israeli monument to com-

250,000 Iraqis who live in Jor-

memorate the civilian and dan after fleeing war and chaos military victims of terror in their homelands. attacks. On Sunday, the pontiff The pope's unscheduled prayed in Bethlehem at a sec-

a Belgian genetics laboratory, are mapping out their sprawling genealogy, creatingthe first genetic family tree for brewing yeasts and thebeers theymake.

The laboratories have sequenced the DNA of more than 240 strains of brewing

yeasts from around the world. Alongside samples from brew-

trip to the terror victims

tion of the high cement wall that

memorial was added by the Vatican after Israeli authorities privately complained about the pontiff's photo op Sundayatacontroversialse-

recentlyhad been spray-painted with graffN reading "Free Palestine" and comparing Bethlehem, surrounded by barriers on three sides in the Israeli-oc-

curity barrier in Bethlehem

cupied West Bank, to the Jew-

separating Israel and the ish ghetto in Warsaw during West Bank, according to an the reign of the Nazis. account from a Western dipThe photograph of the pope lomatin Jerusalem. at the wall was published wideThe new pope, 15 months ly in news reports and social

eries like Sierra Nevada, Duvel

Moortgat and Stone, "we've thrown in a few wine, bakers, bio-ethanol and sake yeasts

to compare,"said Kevin Versttepen, director of the lab in Belgium. By getting a l ine-by-line reading of the 12 million mol-

into his job, demonstrated a

ecules that make up the DNA

of eachyeast,Verstrepen said, the researchers will be able

Pope balances

Sandy Huffaker/New York Times News Service

Troels Prahl, head of research and development at White Labs, works on yeast strains in San Diego.

not only to tell how dosely re- Prahl ls working on a project to compare genetic data from yeasts with brewing data from more than lated two yeasts are (is Sam 2,000 batches of beer. Adams' doser to Stone's, or Si-

Francis on Sunday se-

erra Nevada's'?) but to answer other important questions:

For brewers today, there are there's a yeast that produces an few options for generating new amazing fruity aroma in beer, the same strains of yeasts, how yeasts. Simplybreeding strains but can't ferment past 3 percent these organisms evolved over t ogether rarely results in a alcohol," said Chris Baugh, a time and, of course, how all of it usable brew — because most microbiologist at Sierra Nevatranslates to taste. brewingyeastsarehighly spe- da Brewing Co. in Chico, Calif., "Yeasts can make over 500 cialized, the results are often who is not involved in the projflavor and aroma compounds," the genetic equivalent of com- ect A scientist who understood said Chris White,the founderof bining a bicyde with in-line the genetics, he c ontinued, White Labs, affecting a beer's skates. Each serves the same "could thenbreed it with a more alcohol level, clarity and tex- purpose, but applying parts alcohol-tolerant strain." ture. But while brewing yeast from one to the other yields litNovel yeasts are unlikely to is one of the best-studied or- tle more than a mess. end up in the beer of brewing ganisms in molecular and cell And while the genetic tools giants like Budweiser, which biology, exactly how its genes already exist to create new for decades had protected its translate to brewing properties yeasts artificially — by splicing flagship lager yeast under is still poorly understood. genes from one to anotherarmed guard. "Where this is By comparing the DNA of because of the long-standing really going to take off is in the hundreds of yeasts, along with stigma associated with geneti- craft brewing scene," Baugh information on how they act cally modified foods, there is no said. The number of craft brewand brew differently, "we'll market for them. eriesand microbreweries has "Right now we have a few explodedinrecent decades,to have a unique window into the genetic code," said Prahl, who hundred genetically modified roughly2,500today from fewer is leading the experiment at yeast strains patiently waiting than a dozen in 1980; they now White Labs. He is comparing in our laboratory's freezer," accountfor 14 percent ofbeer each yeast's sequencing infor- said Jan Steensels, a microbi- sales nationwide. "And there is a big push for mation with brewing data on ologist with the Belgian lab, more than2,000batches ofbeer "but most brewers and con- something new and interesting — induding the four he was sumers don't want anything to all the time," Baugh said. tasting. do with them." The data from Only within the last few The researchers in the Bel- the genomic project could al- years has a DNA-sequencing gian lab — a joint venture of the low researchers to design and project of this scale been posFlanders Institute for Biotech- breed new brewing yeasts sible. The project to sequence nology and the University of without resorting to genetic the first human genome, comLeuven, Belgium — have even modification. pleted in 2000, took nearly a bigger plans."With this inforBy knowing which genes to decade and cost almost $3 mation, we'll be able to select track, andusing computers and billion; new technologies and different properties in yeasts robotics to speed the process,a laboratory equipment have and breed them together to researchercould mate two dif- rapidly lowered the cost and generate new ones," Verstrepen ferent yeast strains thousands accelerated the process. Today, said. "In a few years we might of times until, by chance, they the researchers can sequence a be drinking beers that are far produced an offspring with the single yeast, which is much less different and more interesting perfect combination of genet- complex, in a matter of days, thanthose that currentlyexist." ic characteristics. "So let's say for only a few thousand dollars. which breweries started with

The technology is so inexpensive that the first 96 strains

at WhiteLabs were sequenced free of charge by the biotechnology company Illumina, to assess one of its new sequencing machines. Rather than cost,

the experiment's true hurdle lies in sorting through the huge trove of newly acquired genetic data, said Prahl, who has partnered with the bioinformatics company Synthetic Genomics to parse his project's data set. Many researchers believe

next month to pray together Francis at least has gotten

of bitter recriminations in

April. Askedwhat thethreemen spokesman said: "The pope does not have a political agenda and does not have

yeast geneticist at the Universi-

ing is almost trivial at t h is point."

was about to sacrifice his son

the two sides to start talking Isaac and by Muslims as the again afterSecretary of place where the Prophet MuState John Kerry's negoti- hammad began his night jourations collapsed in a round neytoheaven.

ly sequence yeast strains. "This

ty of California, Berkeley, who shared the 2013 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine. With the falling costs and rising speed, he added,"the sequenc-

of the Rock, believed by Jews to

and talk peace. While his be the place where Abraham's efforts may lead to nothing, hand was stopped by God as he

might discuss, a Vatican

do," said Randy Schekman, a

creation of the state of Israel.

cureda promise from Israeli Francis also visited with the President Shimon Peres and grand mufti of Jerusalem, the Palestinian Authority Pres- caretaker of Islam's holy placident Mahmoud Abbas to es here, and a guardian of the meet with him at the Vatican Al-Aqsa mosque and the Dome

that brewers will soon routineproject strikes me as sort of an inevitable thing that one can

media around the world, and

canny ability to calm emo- Vatican and Israeli officials actions in a region beset by re- knowledged that Netanyahu ligious and political frictions was troubled by the stop. on a three-day trip to the Pope Frands on Monday Holy Landthatended Mon- made historyas the firstpope to day. The pontiff had said his visit the tomb of Theodor Herzl, visit would be "strictly reli- one of the founders of Zionism and a leading advocate for the gious," but it was not.

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But Schekman sees this type ofresearch as an important prod to an industry that

fjQj ANiNiUAE.

has longbeen wary ofgenetic techniques.

"Until recently, the brewing industry has been remarkably resistant to using the tech-

I" ~

niques of genetics and molecular biology to improve their brewing strains," Schekman said. "It's long overdue that someone has actually delved

r ~I

into the molecular basis be-

tween the differences in brew111g strallls.

SINCE 1940

Gay marriage

the notion that U.S. public opinion has shifted as dramatically

Continued from A1 as manypolls show. It also may have pushed Allthe rulings came afterthe gay marriage to a legal tipping Supreme Court decision last point, where the cause has won June that struck down part of such wide-ranging approval a federal anti-gay marriage law that it will be hard for the Su- but did not apply to bans that preme Court to rule against it. were then in place in roughThe court rulings and the mea- ly three dozen states. Judges, sured response of even elected though, have had no trouble officials who oppose same-sex extending the high court's rulmarriage may be especial - ing in U.S. v. Windsor to proly important for justices who hibit states from discriminating have worried about acting too against same-sex couples who quickly to impose same-sex want to wed. "Judges can read the tea marriage nationwide. The latest ruling, in Penn- leaves," UCLA law professor sylvania, was followed quickly Adam Winkler said. "They by word from Republican Gov. know w here t h e S u preme Tom Corbett that he would not Court is going. They know appeal and instead let the de- where society is going. Do they cision take effect. Corbett, who want their grandkids knowing opposes gay and lesbian mar- they wrote an opinion stopping riage, is facing a tough cam- gay marriage?" paign for re-election this year. In some respects,the se"We are a better people than ries of rulings is just the latest what these laws represent, manifestation of the extraordiand it is time to discard them nary change in attitudes about into the ash heap of history," same-sex marriage. U.S. District Judge John Jones In 1972, it took the Supreme w rote last week about t h e Court one sentence to dispose Pennsylvaniamarriage law. of an appeal asserting a sameGay marriage opponents say sex couple's constitutional right they expect more of a mixed record in the courts by the time

to marry. In 2003, the Massa-

the Supreme Court gets in-

clared the state's marriage ban unconstitutional. When Pres-

volved, and theytake issue with

chusetts Supreme Court de-

ident Barack Obama decided sue,Brian Brown, president of that his administration no lon- the National Organization for ger wouldenforce the federal Marriage, said, "You have alDefense of Marriage Act in most every avenue of elite pow2011, there were five states that er saying it's inevitable, might

allowed same-sex couples to

as well give up the fight. Why would you not expect some had jumped to 13, after the high shift? What I'm surprised by court paved the way for gay is, given the massive amount of and lesbian couples in Califor- capital and power that's been nia to get married. exerted on this issue, a majority No appeals court has yet of Americans still support traweighed in, although that ditional marriage." could change any day, and it is Brownpointed to arecent Ponot clear when the high court liticopolloflikelyvotersinhotly will jump back into the same- contested congressional and sex marriagedebate.Appeals Senate races, which are taking could start arriving at the court place mainly in more conservaby late summer or early fall. tive states. That survey found 52 "The countryis ready, but the percent of respondents opposed wed. By late June, the number

Supreme Courtneeds to do the

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to same-sex marriage. The lat-

tipping," said Evan Wolfson, est Gallup poll says 55 percent founderand president ofFree- of Americans support it. dom to Marry, a national coaliRyan Anderson, a Heritage tion of advocacy groups work- Foundation fellow and co-auingforsame-gender marriage. thor of a book defending the Gay rights advocates argue definition of marriage as bethat the mushrooming list of tween a man and a woman, rulings has created such an said Supreme Court justices air of inevitability that, were ultimately will have to wresthe Supreme Courtto reverse tle with whether they want to them, "a majority of the coun- impose same-sex marriage try would find that shocking," throughout the country. "Why said Mary Bonauto, the direc- rush in to put i n a 5 0-state tor of the Civil Rights Project solution, when we can let the at Gay and Lesbian Advocates laboratories of democracy, the and Defenders. states, work things out?" AnOn the other side of the is- derson said.

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TUESDAY, MAY 27, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

A5

Eite U.S.troops e ping A ricans ight terror groups By Eric Schmitt

those in A f ghanistan and Iraq, and instead stress the

New York Times News Service

P

W ASHINGTON — U . S . training of allied and partner Special Operations troops nations to battle militants on are forming elite counterter- their ownsoil. rorism units in four countries Since the attacks on Sept. 5

in North and West Africa

11,2001, the United Stateshas

that American officials say are pivotal in the widening war against al-Qaida's affiliates and associates on the

slowly built a multipronged counterterrorism s t rategy in Africa: It has carried out armed drone strikes in So-

Murphy Road

malia from its only permaknowledge the difficulties of nent base on the continent, working withweakallies. in Djibouti; backed African The secretive program, fi- proxies and French commannanced in part with millions dos fighting Islamist extremof dollars in classified Penta- ists in Somalia and Mali; and gon spending and carried out increasingly trained African by trainers, including mem- troops to combat insurgents. bers of the Army's Green Underthe new Africaplan, Berets and Delta Force, was the Pentagon is spending begun last year to instruct nearly $70 million on trainand equip hundreds of hand- ing, i n telligence-gathering picked commandos in Libya, equipment and other support Niger, Mauritania and Mali. to build a counterterrorism The goal over the next few battalion in Niger and a simiyears is to build homegrown lar unit in nearby Mauritania

Continued fromA1 Another dramatic change

teams capable of combating

continent, even as they ac-

III

• ~o •

. •

4

PhotosbyAndyTullis/The Bulletin

Construction workers work on a new roundabout last week at the intersection of Third Street and Murphy Road in Bend.

African

a t the construction site i s

In a cautionary note about

operating in that part of Africa, troubled by a chronic

ly 300 Nigerian schoolgirls last month.U.S. military spe- shortage of resources and cialists are helping Nigerian weak regional partners, the

up for the new northbound exit ramp onto south Third

Street. The ramp will require 60,000 cubic yards of fill material, the equivalent of 6,000 dump truckloads,Luckman sa~d. In 2015, ODOT will build

a roundabout east of Third Street, at Murphy and Par-

rell roads. Oster said this is an important part of the proj-

officers in their efforts to res-

effortin Malihasyet togetoff

cuethe girls. "Training indigenous forces togo afterthreats in their own countryis what we need to be doing," said Michael Sheehan, who advocated the counterterrorism program

the ground as a new civilian government recoversfrom a military coup last year. In Libya, the most ambitious

initial training ended ignominiously last August after a

group of armed militia fighters overpowered a small Libsenior Pentagon official in yan guard force at a training charge of Special Operations base outside Tripoli and stole policy. Sheehan now holds hundreds of U.S.-supplied the distinguished chair at the automatic weapons, night-viCombating Terrorism Center sion goggles, vehicles and at the U.S. Military Academy. other equipment. As the U.S. military seeks As a result, the training to extend its counterterror- was halted and the AmerismreachinAfrica, President ican instructors were sent Barack Obama isexpected home.Libyan and American to appear at West Point on officials havebeen searching Wednesday to emphasize for a more secure training a foreign policy that would site in Libya to restart the avoid large land wars, like program. last year when he was the

ect because the intersection

ranks among the highest in Bend for the number of car crashes.Oster said excessive

speed is a factor in many of t he collisions, despite t h e

25 mph speed limit. ODOT Cars travel past the MurphyRoadconstruction project last week in south Bend. The Oregon Departalso will e xtend Murphy ment of Transportation plans to pour concrete for two new overpass bridges in June. R oad next y e a r w e s t t o Brookswood Bou le v ard,

where a new roundabout will

fundedby ODOT, withmost of had been 24 cents per gallon

join the two streets.

closure is necessary because a highway on-ramp will cross Rex Holloway, community through that area. ODOT will relations representative for install a gate so that emerODOT in Central Oregon, gency personnel can still acsaid that late in the summer, cess Romaine Village Way, ODOT will permanently close said ODOT spokesman Peter the Romaine Village Way con- Murphy. nection to the highway. The The $27 million project is

the money raised as a result of

Doolittle

stages," a senior Defense Departmentofficial said.

fighters like those in Boko Haram, the Islamist extremist group that abducted near-

+gP.E'E

the large amount of fill material that ODOT is building

co u n terterrorism that are in their "formative

that sought volunteers for "a dangerous mission."

a 2009 bill known as the Oregon Jobs and Transportation Act. It increased Oregon's gas taxby 6cents per gallonto pay for improvements to Oregon's

since 1993. — Reporter: 541-617-7829, hborrud@bertdbulIetin.com

I

roads and transportation in-

I

frastructure. The state fuel tax

ers how he jumped without knowing whether he would

Continued fromA1 He an d ot h er s v o l u n- wind up on land or in the As part of the dwindling t eered,notknowingwhatwas South China Sea. "I pulled the (parachute) ranks of surviving World War planned until they were at sea II veterans, and one of only a b o ard the USS Hornet air- ripcord so hard, and looking four surviving Raiders,he craftcarrier,Colesaid. down, that I gave myself a said the honor was joyful but The p i l ot h e h a d been blackeye," he said. also a bit lonely. teamed with for the mission Landing in a pine tree, Cole "You're here to pay your re- becameillandhadtodrop out. spent the night dangling 12 spects to him, but at In stepped Doo- feet above ground until some the same time, you little, taking a seat Chinese villagers sympathetwish they were all "YOu're here w ith Cole i n t h e ic to the Americans rescued s till here," Cole said, ta pgy yOUy coc k pi t i n wh a t him and helped reunite him after saluting Doowould be the lead with Doolittle and some of the little's t o mbstone reS . ~eCtS t plane in the mis- others. Fridayandthoseof hi m , b u t a t sion kno w n t h e n Sixof the Raiders died while some other Raiders gHe Same as Spec i al Project trying to reach safety, includburied nearby. No. 1." ing three who were captured Im6 QOU "It was s t r ict- by the Japanese and executed Of h 1 6 II Americans w h o Wi S h t h ey ly by luck , " C ole afterbeing accused of shootfought in W o r ld Mt'gf g gll Sgtll said about being ing at Japanese citizens. War II, about 1.5 teamed up with the The graves of two of those m illion ar e s t i l l commander hi s men — William Farrow and — Richard Cole squadron already Dean Hallmark — are in Arthe Arlington-based idolized. lington National Cemetery. American Veterans On the day of the Visiting them, Cole salutCenter. attack, the weather ed silently and stared into the The80U.S. airmenwhovol- was clear enough for a Japa- distance as the team of docuunteered for the Doolittle Raid nese fishing boat to spot the mentary filmmakers recorded are giants among that genera- USS Hornet. The Americans his every move. Others who tion of veterans, even though d e stroyed the boat and, out of survived have also since gone, the popular memory of their w orry over having been found falling victim to disease and exploits is fading as the drama out, launched their mission other infirmities of age that of morerecent wars eclipses about 200 miles farther from struck where bullets missed their significance. the Japan coast thanplanned. longbefore. "It's not a well-known story Aboard his plane, Cole said, Last November, the Raiders any more," said James Rob- the crew was silent, with Doo- ended a tradition of reunions erts, president of the American little relaying technical orders when the four remaining surVeterans Center, which is help- about the flight and a naviga- vivors toasted the memory ing to coordinate a documen- torwarningeveryonethat they of their fallen comrades with tary film about the Raiders. might not reach China after a drink of cognac bottled in "That'ssomethingwe'retrying t heirbombwasdropped. 1896, the year Doolittle was to address." Nervous, Cole began tap- born. Cole's recollections remain ping out the rhythm to "The But, as Cole sat inside the in tight formation, their wings Wabash Cannonball," a folk Mayflower Hotel in Washglistening inthe sun. song about a mythical train ington awaiting his trip to the In retaliation for the attack speeding along in safety to its White House, he said the mison Pearl Harbor, the Doolittle d e stination. sionof keepingthe raid'smemRaidersflewin 16B-25planes Dool i t tle shot him a l o ok ory alive isn't over. "Ifpeople are serious and toward Japan without enough withoutsayingaword,hesaid. "I think maybe he thought want to listen and ask good fuel to make it back — what was essentially a suicide mis- I'd gone off the deep end," Cole questions, I don't mind talking sion that prompted Japan to said. about it," he said. l aunch the Battle of Midway, a A fte r the bo m b s w e r e Sharing war stories is therturningpointthatledtoAmer- d ropped on Tokyo and sur- apeutic, Cole said, and someican victory on the Pacific r ounding cities, the planes ran thing that veterans normally front. into stormy weather over Chi- avoid. Cole recalled how angry n a . Doolittleorderedeveryone With that, he left the hotel and fearful Americans were to bail out at 9,000 feet above to make his White House apafter Pearl Harbor and how, a sealevel. Bythen, itwasnight. pointment and walked into "For me, that was the scari- Washington's crowded sidefew months later, he saw a notice inside the Columbia, S.C., est time," Cole said, recalling walks, where nobody recogtent camp where he was based for the documentary filmmak- nized him.

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TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, MAY 27, 2014

IN FOCUS:ENERGY

LOOKING AHEAD:FROM AQUARIUMS TO ZOOS I

na uariums o in ues ion an an anima we are

By Yvonne Wenger The Baltimore Sun

BALTIMORE — The big question facing Baltimore's National Aquarium — whether to keep Atlantic Dominion Resources via The Associated Press

A spent fuel storage container is offloaded from a trailer into a horizontal storage module at the Millstone Power Station in

twist in the decadeslong evolution of American zoos and aquatic attractions from circuslike menageries

Waterford, Conn. With the collapse of a proposal for nuclear waste storage at Nevada's Yucca Mountain, Millstone and other

plants across the country are building or expanding on-site storage for waste.

intellect of marine mammals

compared to species such as sharks and puffins. That has

long-termnudear waste storage The Associated Press

with "high burnup," or longer-burning fuels that are Con n . now widely used by Ameri-

W ATERFORD, Nuclear power p l ants across the United States are

can plants. "Now that we've shown

building or expanding stor-

that the national policy is shifting, we're having to spent fuel — r adioactive relook at these systems to waste that by now was sup- make sure they still meet posed to be on its way to a the regulations for longer national dump. and longer periods of time," The steel and concrete said Eric Benner, an NRC age facilities to hold their

containers used to store the

official who has served as

waste on-site were envisioned as only a short-term

the inspections branch chief

with its spent fuel storage i n t roduced dtvtston. in the 1980s. Now they are At M i llstone, 19 canisthe subject of reviews by ters loaded with spent fuel industry and government to are arrayed on a concrete solution when

determine how they might hold up — if needed — for decades or longer. With nowhere else to put

pad, which was expanded

its nuclear waste, the Millstone Power Station over-

looking Long Island Sound is sealing it up in massive steel canisters on what used to be a parking lot. The storage pad, first built

timore. The aquarium, where adult tickets run upwards of are moved. An d

B a ltimore

would be hurt by any drop-

"our roots as a catalyst for the off at the aquarium, whose Institution. 1.3 million a nnual v i sitors Aquarium officials have Inner Harbor." make it one of the city's biggest not determined potential locaRacanelli said he would nevtourist destinations. tions for a dolphin sanctuary, er envision an aquarium devoid Pikesville, Md., resident Bun- but Racanelli said one would of live animals. "We try to balny Bernstein said that when have to be created in a warm- ance the needs of the animals she took her grandchildren to er climate to suit the marine with the need for the public to the aquariumfiveyears ago her mammals. be able to build emotional re"stomach got upset" by the ac-

ble. It's like the elephants at the

ner chamber and are themselves loaded into concrete

clrcus.

m odules. Workers regularly

In recent years, documentaries such as "Blackfish," a CNN

low-level nuclear

e aS a

man in W a ter- COmm Unity." ford, which hosts

waste is shipped to a disposal facility in Barnwell,

s.c.

The spent fuel i s piling up a t d,conn. a rate of about 2,200 tons a year at U . S . pow -

C on-

Wider debate

inspect tempera-

M il l s t o n e ' s

c o n gressional er-plant sites. The industry and government decline to say how much waste is

film about orcas in captivity and the 2010 killing of a Sea World trainer, and "Keiko: The

"What I am really worried

about is, kids are getting total-

The government is pursuing a new plan for nuclear waste storage, hoping to break an impasse left by the collapse of a proposal for

uranium waste as of May 2013, with 49,620 tons in

world," said Temple Grandin, a renowned animal science pro-

pools and 20,100 in dry storage, according to the Nucle-

fessor at Colorado State University and the subject of a 2010

ar Energy Institute industry

Nevada's Yucca Mountain.

group. S pent nuclear fuel

HBO biopic. "Kids get interested in things they get exposed to. I am worried that if people don't get exposed to dolphins, they are just not going to care about them." The National Aquarium's

The Energy Department says it expects other states

will compete for a repository, and the accompanying

is

about 95 percent uranium. About 1 p ercent is o t her

heavy elements such as

economic benefits, and it's

c urium,

already heard from poten-

plutonium-239. Each has an extremely long half-

tial hosts in New M exico,

a m e ricium a n d

Texas and Mississippi. But life — some take hundreds the plan faces hurdles in- of thousands of years to cluding a need for new leg- lose all of their radioactive islation that has stalled in potency. Congress. Watchdog groups say So plants are preparing the dry storage poses fewto keep the high-level nu- er safety concerns than the clear waste in their back- reactors themselves, and yards indefinitely. Most of many have pushed for spent it remains in pools, which

fuel tobe transferred more

cool the spent fuel for sev- quickly from th e p ools. eral years once it comes out Heavy security is in place to of the reactors. But with the

pools at or nearing capacity, the majority is expected

deter sabotage by terrorists. The admi n i s tration's strategy calls for an inter-

im storage facility by 2025 in dry casks, or canisters, and a geologic repository by which are used in 34 states. 2048. Only three of the 62 comPeter Lyons, an assistant mercial nuclear sites in the secretary for nuclear energy U.S. have yet to announce at the U.S. Energy Departwithin a decade to be held

plans to build their own.

In the past few years since the Yucca Mountain plan was abandoned, the

government and industry have opened studies to ad-

dress unanswered questions about the long-term performance of dry cask storage. The Nuclear Regulatory Commission in 2011 began offering 40-year license renewals for casks, up from 20-year intervals.

ment, said it cannot make

plans for individual sites until the passage of legislation creating a new framework for waste policy. But he said the groups in southeastern New Mexico, western Tex-

as and Mississippi are only the most public of potential

hosts to express interest in taking in high-level waste. The idea for t h e

i n ter-

im facility is to take spent fuel left behind from reac-

The tests are focusing on

tors that have already shut

how to monitor degradation inside the canisters, envi-

down, as is the case at sites in California, Maine, Mas-

ronmental

r eq u i r ements sachusetts, Michigan, Wis-

for storage sites, and how well the canisters hold up

consin, Connecticut, Colorado and Oregon.

Earth."

"Captivity can't even begin to replicate the natural environment," said Jared Goodman,

director of animal law for the PETA Foundation. "Zoos and aquariums daim to promote

education. The only thing they teach is it's OK to have these animals locked up in these en-

dosures where they are bored, lonely and deprived of all control of their own lives."

Alfred Beulig, a biology professor at New College of Florida, said there's no scientific

reason dolphins shouldn't be held in captivity. But there are

reasons why aquariums must take extra care if they do keep them. As mammals, dolphins' brains work differently than

those of other animals, and that requires a different environ-

ment than is provided for, say, "That's why there is a strong sharks. "They're a social animal. debate around the life and times of dolphins and whales," If you deprive them of social Racanelli said. stimulation you have to comPeople for the Ethical Treat- pensate for it somehow," Beulig ment of Animals, known as said. "The key question here is: institution to take such a step. overall experience, Racanelli PETA, says the public should When you keep dolphins are Many still believe, however, said. The key to the BLUEprint view animals in their natu- you adhering to their specific that putting animals on display process, he said, is ensuring ral habitat or on documenta- requirements and predilections in zoos and aquariums brings a that the aquarium maintains ries such as the series "Planet ornot?" significant societal value, especially for inspiring children.

ual plants. The U.S. nuclear industry had 69,720 tons of

sard.

No timeline has been set for lationships with animals, in a their decisions. time when increasingly fewer The aquarium eliminated and fewer people have any natits 20-minute dolphin perfor- ural contact with animals." mance show about two years Still, he noted that marine ago. Officials said at the time mammals, including dolphins that they wanted the exhibit and whales, are large-brained, to offer something new and cognitively advanced species. different, while increasing the Other species, such as some number of visitors who could exotic birds and octopuses, show "remarkable flashes of engage with the dolphins. Now, the eight Atlantic bot- cognitive capacity," but nothtlenose dolphins in its careing compared to higher-order including 5-year-old Bayley mammals, he said. Sharks, and 42-year-old Nani — can be meanwhile, don't exhibit play observed continuously in the behavior or appear to have ab-

Untold Story of the Star of Free Willy," have given the debate amphitheater, where the public more prominenceamong the can also interact withtrainers. public. Scientists and activists say Seeking abalance that if the National Aquarium The dolphins have always movedthe dolphins to a sanctu- been a big draw, but many ary, it would be the first major aquarium visitors come for the

currently stored at individ-

come a nuclear waste site as a community," Steward

Lloyd Fox/ Baltimore Sun

$30, risks losing visitors and A dolphin plays in the tank before a training session at the National Aquarium in Baltimore. Officials revenue if the popular dolphins are rethinking the display with an eye to emphasizing conservation.

with inert gas inside an in-

seven times as many c anisters t0 58 C O filled with spent a nu C lea fuel. waste Dan Steward' S i t

"We do not want to be-

It's also a high-stakes issue

for the aquarium — and Bal-

circulation, seal the waste

shovel snow off the vents.

necticut's members.

members of the public who see

the consequences of containing dolphins — which sometimes show signs of chronic stress and self-mutilation — as a crisis of conscience.

"I couldn't stand to watch it," the 71-year-old said. "I've never been back. I just think it's terri-

fI pt yygfI t

c an w i t h

The debate resonates among scientists, activists and some

robatic stunts the animals were

"We dO

raises the issue every chance he

size conservation.

performing.

cently expanded

Miiistone, said he

display as they seek to empha-

for as many as 135 canisters by 2045. The canisters, which are cooled by air

to make room for

the first select-

led officials at the 33-year-old facility to rethink the dolphin

in October to make room

ture gauges and, during the winter,

in 2005, was re-

to portals into the natural environment. Much of the change is driven by emerging scientific evidence that shows the advanced

U.S. plantsready By Michael Melia

bottlenose dolphins in the amphitheater pool or release them to an ocean-side sanctuary — is the latest

ly separated from the natural

move comes even as attrac-

tions in other cities have spent millions of dollars in recent years to develop bigger dolphin shows. The Georgia Aquarium in Atlanta, for example, touts its AT&T Dolphin Tales show's ac-

tors, costumes and an original score "performed and recorded

stract thinking.

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show the connection between

humans and the environment, "We're trying to open peo-

ple's eyes to the ocean and the

aquatic places in their lives," Racanelli said. "That's our life support system." BLUEprint will also assess the aquarium's presence in Washington, perhaps with the creation ofan"oceanembassy," and reimagine the aquarium

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The Bulletin will publish multiple pages listing all 2014 Graduates from Central Oregon High Schools

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Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B5 Weather, B6

© www.bendbulletin.com/local

THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, MAY 27, 2014

BEND

BRIEFING Missing angler sought on Metolius Rescuers were searching theMetolius River on Mondayafternoon forafishermanbelieved to havebeenswept into the waters in the Camp Shermanarea. The 62-year-old man was fishing nearBridge 99 in midafternoonwhen he slippedandfell into the river, according toa news releasefrom the Jefferson CountySheriff's Office. Teams searched by footalong theshore, in rafts andbyaLifeFlight helicopter. Onlythe man's fishing gearhasbeen found, according tothe Sheriff's Office. The searchwill resume today.

Car theft leads to pursuit Police andsheriff's deputies arrested a 23-year-old transient Monday morningafter the man ledpolice ona chase south from Bend on U.S. Highway97. The incident began justafter10a.m. when someonecalled to report that a manhadstolen a white Subarustation wagon fromin front ofa home onRaintree Drive in southeast Bend, according to theOregon State Policeandthe Bend Police Department. Afew minuteslater, a Bendpolice officer located thecar, driven by AndrewDeanPray, police say,at Riverwoods Country StorenearKnott Road andU.S.Highway 97. Prayeludedthe police officerand drovesouthon the highway,reaching95 mph, according topolice; there washeavytraffic, so the officer stoppedpursuing thecar south ofthe High Desert Museum. Oregon StatePolice troopers hadset up spike strips just north of Lava Butte,but Pray swerved toavoid them and sideswipedanother car, according toBend police. Thedriverand passengers inthe other car werenot injured, but Pray lostcontrol of the Subaru androlled off the highway. Heran into a wooded areawest of the highway.Astate trooper ran after Prayandheld him at gunpoint until Bend police andDeschutes County sheriff's deputies arrived. Theyarrested Prayand tookhim tothe countyjail on suspicion of unauthorizeduseof a motor vehicle, eludinglaw enforcement inavehicle and on foot, recklessdriving, four counts ofreckless endangering, driving under the influenceof intoxicants andsecond-degreeanimal abuse, according to theBend police. Lawenforcement personnel tookPray's dog to an emergencyveterinary clinic for treatment because theanimalwas injured in thecrash.

Following up onCentral Oregon's most interesting stories, even if they've been out of the headlines for a while. Email ideas to news@bendbulletin.com. Q»To follow the series, visit beudbulletiu.cum/updates

HAPPENED TO ... •

PRINEVILLE'S PINE THEATER

l

Police get tbeir ownlie detector By Shelby R. King The Bulletin

You can lie, but you probably won't get away with it, thanks to the addition of a lie detector at the Bend Police Department.

By Shelby R. King The Bulletin

LEFT: The owners of the Pine Theater sold

Prineville's Pine Theater made the switch from

engraved horseshoes

35mm to digital films in

for a "walk of fame"

t'

September thanks, in part,

to raise money to

to community donations during a "horseshoe campaign" held last summer. "The horseshoes are in the ground," owner Oniko Mehrabi said Friday. Mehrabi and her husband, Ali Mehrabi, last

convert the theater to digital projection. BELOW: Owners Oniko and Ali Mehrabi purchased the theater ln 2007 after lt sat vacant for 25 years.

year went on a fundrais-

't»r

ing campaign to raise $80,000tobuy equipment

Photos by Ryan Brennecke The Bulletin

The department last spring purchased its first in-house poly@aP"IO graph machine. On B2 Det e ctive Pat Hartley spent two months training to conduct the tests, and, since

then, Bend police have been able to add that tool to their investigative efforts.

"It's been such a force multiplier and helps us to get to an immediate direc-

tion in investigations," said interim Chief Jim Porter. "We often use it in sexual

that would allow the the-

ater to begin showing digital movies. Hollywood studios and distribution companies are phasing out 35 mm films in favor of digital. That means if theaters

offense crimes to eliminate possible suspects and fact check. It allows us to move

forward in an investigation in a much shorter time."

Though local law enforcementhas been using polygraph tests in criminal investigations for many years, before purchasing the polygraph machine the

want to continue showing first-run films, they've

got to come up with the cash to upgrade their equipment. "We didn't exactly

Bend department had to

contract out for services. See Detector /B2

know when studios would pull film entirely," Ali

Mehrabi said. "So we wanted to start getting

ready." The Mehrabis couldn't afford to pony up the cash themselves, so they decided to put on a Western-themed fundraising

Officials warn on boat safety

effort that fit with the flavor of their town. A

$400 minimum donation was recognized with an engraved horseshoe set

By Dylan J. Darling

in concrete in front of the entrance to the theater. "It was just a brainstorm idea between my wife and I," Ali Mehrabi said. "We didn't want to

The Bulletin

Boating and floating season is upon us in Central Oregon, prompting tips on water safety from state officials.

do just another engraved brick, and this fit the

Tip No. I is to wear a life

town's Western appeal."

jacket, not justhave one in the boat, said Robert Smith in visitor safety training with the Oregon State Parks in Salem."It is justbetter

Ali Mehrabi said they sold 243 horseshoes, receiving contributions from

individuals and groups. Dan Johnson, a Central

and safer to wear a life jack-

Oregon concrete contractor, installed the horse-

et in, on or around the water — especially for the young

shoes May 4. "When you do some-

ones," said Smith, who also

warnedboaters to be ready for chilly waters. Memorial Day weekend is typicallythe start of boating and floating sea-

thing like this you're not

sure whether it's going to look good," Ali Mehrabi said. "But people are saying it looks great." See Horseshoe/B2

son around the state, said

Ashley Massey, with the Oregon State Marine Board

in Salem. See Safety/B2 Paid Advertisement

Stubborn fat has met itsmatch.

MEMORIAL DAY REMEMBRANCE

Fire rnop-upnear Billy Chinook Firefighters continued working Monday tocontain a 40-acre brushfire west of the Deschutes River arm of LakeBily Chinook. Thefire, reported at 3:34 p.m.Sunday, started on private property near theintersection of Jordan andGraham roads andmovedonto federal land,according to a news releasefrom Lake Chinook Fire 8 Rescue. Twentyflrefighters from thePrineville InteragencyHotshot Crewand afive-personU.S.Forest Service crewfromSisters were helpingLakeChinook Fire & Rescuetosecure the perimeterofthefire and extinguishhotspots. — Bulletin staffrepon's

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Tracy Miller reads the names and hometowns of fallen soldiers as Philip Randall, hidden behind Miller, strikes a drum once after each name, during the Lost Soldier Remembrance at Troy Field in Bend on

Monday afternoon.

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TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, MAY 27, 2014

E VENT TODAY CLASSIC BOOK CLUB:Read and discuss "The Cossacks" and "Hadji M urad" by Leo Tolstoy;6 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-312-1046. MR. CENTRALOREGON PAGEANT: High school pageant winners compete for the first title of Mr. Central Oregon, benefiting the The Center Foundation, audience support will be factored in judging; $5 for students, $7 for adults; 7-9 p.m.; Bend High School, 230 N.E. Sixth St.; 541-322-2399 or www. centerfoundation.org. SPIRIT, SOUL & SONGS TOUR: Featuring Cas Haley, Mike Love, KimieandTubby Love;$10 plus fees in advance, $13 at the door; 8 p.m., doors openat7 p.m .;Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W.Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 or www. volcanictheatrepub.com. TECH N9NE: The underground rapper performs, with Freddie Gibbs, Krizz Kaliko, Jarren Benton,

CoolNutzandmore;$29inadvance plus fees, $35 at the door; 8 p.m., doors open at 7 p.m.; Midtown Ballroom, 51 N.W.Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-408-4329 or www.

randompresents.com.

WEDNESDAY OREGON'SLAST COMEDIAN STANDINGSHOWCASE: $10;9 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881.

THURSDAY AUTHORPRESENTATION:Jenny Milchram presents her book"Ruin Falls," with refreshments and prize drawings; free, reservation requested; 5:30-7 p.m.; Sunriver Books 8 Music, Sunriver Village Building 25C; 541-593-2525 or www.sunriverbooks.com. COCC LATINOPROGRAM SCHOLARSHIP FUNDRAISER: Featuring Latin dance performances

ENDA R and silent auction; $30 includes small plates and beer; 6-9 p.m.; Aspen Hall,18920 N.W. Shevlin Park Road, Bend; 541-318-3726. BLACK FLAG: The legendary hardcore punk band performs, with Cinema Cinemaand High

theater in 2007 after the building sat vacant for 25 years.

Burns Paiute, Aztec and Polynesia tribes, on the COCC Athletic fields; free, donations accepted;10 a.m.-4 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-318-3782. SUNRIVERBREWFEST: Including 12 tokens and a Brewfest mug; $25; noon-6 p.m.; Sunriver Resort, 17600 Center Drive; 541-593-1000 or www.centraloregonbeerweek.

FRIDAY

com.

CRESCENDO BENDO:Students of the Cascade School of Music perform in five different Submitted photo concerts; free; 1-8:30 p.m.; Rapper Tech N9ne performs tonight at Midtown Ballroom in Bend. Tower Theatre, 835 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541-382-6866 or www. cascadeschoolofmusic.org. music from Lerner & Loewe S.W. Airport Way, Redmond; 541-699-8844. and Rodgers & Hart, with guest CASCADECHORALESPRING CONCERT: The group performs conductor Trish Sewell and the Central Oregon Community College music from Lerner & Loewe Chorus; free, donationsaccepted; and Rodgers 8 Hart, with guest SATURDAY conductor Trish Sewell and the 7 p.m.; First Presbyterian Church, Central Oregon Community College 230 N.E. Ninth St., Bend; www. duggan©ddranch.net orwww. CENTRAL OREGONFLEA MARKET: Chorus; free, donations accepted; cascadechorale.org. ddranch.net. Freeadmission;8 a.m.-4 p.m .; 2 p.m.; First Presbyterian Church, DESCHUTESBREWERY Deschutes County Fair & Expo OPEN 'TIL DARK:The museum 230 N.E. Ninth St., Bend; www. BEER-LESQUE: TASTINGS AND Center, 3800 S.W. Airport Way, will be open late, featuring music cascadechorale.org. TASSELS:Featuring Portland's Redmond;541-385-3364, info@ by Grit & Grizzle; $8 adults, $5 CASCADE HORIZONBAND SPRING burlesque stars, Deschutes beer and centraloregonfleamarket.com or students with ID, free for 4 and The band plays marches, Naughty Pierre from Colorado; $5; www.centraloregonfleamarket.com. CONCERT: younger; 5-8 p.m.; High Desert music of Broadway, popularand 7-10 p.m.; The Old Stone, 157 N.W. Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway GARAGESALE FUNDRAISER: patriotic tunes; free, donations Franklin Ave., Bend; 541-322-7273 or Benefitting the Vima Lupwa Home 97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or http:// accepted; 2 p.m.; Sisters High www.centraloregonbeerweek.com. for disadvantaged children in www.highdesertmuseum.org/ School,1700 W. McKinney Butte open-til-dark. BEND IMPROVGROUP:The Zambia, Africa; free; 8:30 a.m.-3:30 Road, Sisters; cascadehorizonband. comedy groupperforms; adult p.m.; Private Residence, 440 N.W. AARON MEYER:The Portland org; 541-549-4045. themes; $8 in advance, $10 at Congress St., Bend; 541-388-3671 classical-rock violinist performs, LOVE, THEBITTER ANDTHE the door; 7:30 p.m., doors at 7 or www.lupwahomes.org. with special guests Tim Ellis, JeanSWEET:The University of Oregon p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. Pierre Garau and Jamin Swenson; BAKE, BOOK AND PLANT SALE: OperaEnsembleand theOperaBend Lafayette Ave.; 541-312-9626 or $5-$15 in advance;7-9 p.m.; A fundraiser for the Crooked River Ensembleperform piecesfrom www.2ndstreettheater.com. Cascades Academy, 19860 Tumalo Ranch Senior Center; free admission; aselection of operas;$7,COCC Reservoir Road, Bend; 541-382COMEDY IMPROVSHOW: Featuring 9a.m.-5 p.m.; Crooked River Ranch students free; 7 p.m.; Central 0699 or www.cascadesacademy. Triage and the Reality Benders, Senior Center, 6710 S.W.Ranch Oregon Community College, org. supporting BendTheatrefor Young House Road; 541-504-8236. Pinckney Center for the Arts, 2600 People's scholarship program;$5; AMERICANA PROJECTCONCERT: N.W.CollegeWay, Bend;541-383BEND VEGFEST:A daylong 7:30 p.m.; Greenwood Playhouse, Celebrate the release of the Sisters 7510 or www.operabend.org. celebration of plant-based foods 148 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; High School Americana Project and other animal-free products, with BROADWAYBOUNDTALENT 541-389-0803 or www.bendimprov. vendors, speakers and tastings and EXTRAVAGANZA:Family friendly 2014 CD "Under The Sun"; $10 com/. suggesteddonation;7 p.m .;The a film screening; free; 9 a.m.-5:30 eveningofm usic,dance,comedy Barn in Sisters, 68467 Three Creeks DRIVE-IN MOVIE NIGHT: The p.m.; Cascade Culinary Institute, and variety; $20, available in Road; 541-549-4979 or info© Ridgeview Boosters host a 2555 N.W. Campus Village Way; advance; 7:30 p.m.; 2nd Street sistersfolkfestival.org. screening the 2011 film version 541-325-1972, bendvegfesttI Theater, 220 N.E. Lafayette "Footloose"; $5;9 p.m.;Deschutes CASCADECHORALESPRING bendbroadband.com or www. Ave., Bend; 541-312-9626, CONCERT:The group performs County Fair & Expo Center, 3800 bendvegfest.org. 2ndstreettheatertwgmail.com or BAKE, BOOKANDPLANT SALE: A fundraiser for the Crooked River Ranch Senior Center; free admission; 9 a.m .-5 p.m.;Crooked River Ranch Senior Center, 6710 S.W. Ranch House Road; 541-504-8236. FUN FRIDAYS:Featuring a petting zoo, hay rides and other kids' events; $5; 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; DD Ranch, 3836 N.E. Smith Rock Way, Terrebonne; 541-548-1432,

es," he said. "We had acouple mistakes when we first started and had to issue a couple

refunds." He said without the help of Prineville residents, they

In 2011 they added a second wouldn't have been able to purscreen. Ali Mehrabi said the chase the equipment. "We really appreciate the switch to digital has been a learningexperience with a few town and all th e support glitches along the way, but said they've shown us during this overall it's been worth it. campaign," Ali Mehrabi said. "The quality is great, the pic— Reporter: 541-383-0376, ture is clear and it self-focussking®bendbulletin.com

Detector

p.m., doorsopen8p.m.;Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W.Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 or www. volcanictheatrepub.com.

SUNDAY CENTRAL OREGONFLEA MARKET: Freeadmission;8 a.m.-4 p.m.; Deschutes County Fair 8 Expo Center, 3800 S.W. Airport Way, Redmond; 541-385-3364, info© centraloregonfleamarket.com or www.centraloregonfleamarket.com. HEAVENCANWAIT: 5Kwalk and run to benefit Sara's Project, a breast cancer health education and outreach partnership; $25; 9 a.m., registration at 7 a.m., activities begin at 8 a.m.; Drake Park, 777 N.W. Riverside Blvd., Bend; 541-706-6996 or www.heavencanwait.org. CASCADE HORIZONBAND SPRING CONCERT:The band plays marches, music of Broadway, popular and patriotic tunes; free, donations accepted; 2 p.m.; Mountain View High School, 2755 N.E. 27th St., Bend;cascadehorizonband.org; 541-383-6360. SCOTT COSSU:The Seattle-based pianist performs, with flutist John Croarkin; $15 donation, reservations

requested; 7p.m., doors openat 6 p.m. for potluck; The Glen at Newport Hills, 1019 N.W. Stannium Drive, Bend; 541-480-8830 or houseconcertsintheglen@ bendbroadband.com.

How polygraphs work

Continued from B1

Polygraph or "lie detector" exams continue to beused bylaw enforcement andgovernment agencies for various screenings eventhough most criminal courts ban polygraph evidence.

"It was such an a vail-

ability issue, specifically in instances where there had been a homicide or serious

How reliable? Supportersclaim an 85-95 percent accuracy rate Criticssay there is not enough scientific evidence to say whether it detects lies or not

incident where we needed

it immediately and for long periods of time," Porter said. "The closest law enforcement agency that had one was in Klamath Coun-

ty, and it was impossible to control the availability

when using polygraphers

How it wortts

What a polygraph

measures

Sensors measure body changesas subject answers yes-no questions; data recorded on computer 0 Blood pressure cuff records pulse, blood pressure Q Rubber tubes placed over chest and abdomen record breathing / Q Two metal plates attached to Subject fingers witli record sensors sweating

• Body movements • Breathing (diaphragm) • Breathing (chest) • Perspiration • Pulse, blood pressure

from the private sector."

Bend police partnered with Central Oregon Community Co llege, wh ere Hartley is a part-time instructor, to purchase the equipment and get Hartley the training he needed. Por-

attached

Sources: World Book Science and Invention Encyclopedia, American Polygraph

ter said it's not unusual for the two entities to collab-

Safety

river, people should take the

Continued from B1 "This is when people are primed and ready to hit the

water," she said. Like Smith, Massey started her list of tips with a life

time to inspect their equipment, Smith said. And Massey said theyshould pass on information to someone else not headed to the water. "Have a f l oat plan," she

said. "Tell people where you are going and when you ex-

jacket. "We really advocate everyone wear a life jacket," pect to come back." Massey said. Massey recommended peoShe also re commended ple visit an online map mainpeople bring a whistle — it's tained by the Marine Board small, and its sound carries showing where boaters can well over water — to put out put in andpull out, where they an alarm i n

kids crafts anddancersfrom Wasco,

Desert Hooligans;$25 plusfees in

— Aii Mehrabi, Pine Theater co-owner

Continued from B1 The Mehrabis purchasedthe

www.2ndstreettheater.com. COMEDY IMPROVSHOW: Featuring Triage and the Reality Benders, supporting Bend Theatre for Young People's scholarship program; $5; 7:30 p.m.; Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-389-0803 or www.bendimprov. com/. BURN BURNBURN: The Seattle pop-punk band performs, with Tuck and Roll; free; 9 p.m.; Cinnabar Lounge, 121 N.E Third St., Prineville; 541-447-1333. SAM COOPER ANDCO.:The Portland-based Americana band performs, with Second Son; $5; 9

SALMON BAKE: Featuring a traditionally cooked salmon lunch,

advance; 8 p.m., doors open at 7 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881.

"We really appreciate the town and all the support they've shown us during this campaign."

Horseshoe

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

c ase they fall

overboard. There weren't any drownings in Central Oregon wa-

can find marinas and other information.

People driving boatsshould also avoid drinking alcohol, ters in 2013, according to data cautioned Chris Havel, Orefrom the Oregon State Marine gon State Parks spokesman in Board, but there were three Salem. "Don't do anything in a in 2012 — two at Lake Billy Chinook and one at Lava Island Falls along the Deschutes River.

Before heading to a lake or

boat that you wouldn't do in a

car," he said.

— Reporter: 541-617-7812, ddarling@bendbulletin.com

orate. In this case, COCC put up the $5,000 tuition for Hartley's training and Bend police bought the $5,000 polygraph equipment using money from the general polygraph machine is to estabfund. lish a baseline read for those To b e come c e r tified, three components. "At first we ask questions Hartley completed the training, which was held in that don't evoke any emotions," Fort Myers, Fla., and must he said. "We use those type of conduct 200 tests with a cer-

questions to help determine if

tain number of them quality someone is lying or not when controlledby a more experi- we ask questions about the enced polygrapher, he said. investigation." Until he's completed the 200 To get people to feel relaxed, tests, he's considered an Hartley asks questions with "intern." He said he's done obvious answers, he said. Such as, "Are the lights on?" more than 80testssofar. The polygraph works Hartley explained that, by taking readings of a when a person is lying, the subject's respiration, heart body often reacts internally rhythm and galvanic skin with increased or decreased response — the amount heart rate, changes in breaththey sweat, Hartley said. ing or increased perspiration. T he first step w ith

any

round of questions using a

"It's very accurate, about 85 to 95percent accurate," he said.

Ct 20t4 MCT

"But it's not infallible."

The results of polygraph

they didn't do, I want them to pass the test. But if they're not

as evidencebecause of a lack of consensus within the sci-

tellingthe truth, we'reprobably going to know."

entific community about their reliability, Hartley said. But

saawrasne

AlTRACTION S! I

BROUGHTTOYOU BY THE BEND BULLETIN

'll

I I

I

— Reporter: 541-383-0376, sking@bendbulletin.com

even though theresults aren't allowed in court, they still aid

in the investigationprocess. "The results can add incremental reliability to a person's

account of events," Hartley said. "As an investigative tool it's important because if some-

~+ccoolsculpting LE F F E L GEN T E R R

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one is accused of something

tests aren't admissible in court

8

Danvs ettlefaranyone but a plastic surgean for Coolsculp6ng'

www.leffelcenter.com '541-388-3006

'II I

Association, federal polygraphers

Laptop connects to polygraph

See us for retractable awnings, exterior solar screens, shadestructures. Sun I/I/hen you wantit,

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CALL YOUR BULLETINSALES REPRESENTA TIVE FOR DEADLINES AND 2014 RATES

541-382-1811

The Bulletin

Serving Central Oregon since 1903


TUESDAY, MAY 27, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

B3

RKGON COLUMBIA RIVER

rain ooms ar s ears

Authorities: 2ndbody ID'd in ranchslayings The Associated Press

By Gosia Wozniacka

Still, the spike in shipments

The Associated Press

has led to concerns among

VANCOUVER, Wash. Residents along the scenic

officials in the Pacific North-

Columbia River are hoping to persuade regulators to reject

~ER%>P yg5-PIU otI(oy~

plans for what would be the

5(0QP A>>g

Pacific Northwest's largest crude oil train terminal — the proposed destination for at

least four trains a day, each more than a mile long. The increasing numbers of trains, each carrying tens of thousands of barrels of po-

SAY "NO!" TO

west over rail safety and oil spill responsiveness — and to opponents lashing out at

rail companies for not disclosing how much oil is being shipped and where. Railroad companies aren't required to disclose such information. In some cases, oil-by-rail transports on the West Coast started without the k n owl-

SNNE OlLECONOWCS

edge of local communities or emergency responders.

tentially volatile crude from the Bakken oil fields in North

A t e rminal n ea r C l a t skanie, 62 miles northwest of Portland, was permitted to

Dakota, have raised concerns around the country after nine

accidents in the past year, including one last month in Virginia. In Vancouver, Wash., just

move oil two years ago by

across the C olumbia f r om Portland the oil c ompanies

the state fined the facility for

say their proposed terminal

than allowed.

will create at least 80 perma-

The disclosure caused public protests, but the company,

Oregon's Department of En-

vironmental Quality without a public process. This year, moving six times more crude

nent jobs and will bring an economic windfall to the re-

Global Partners, says it's fol-

gion. But area residents and others in nearby communities

lowing the law. In the San Francisco Bay

are worried about the risks to people, wildlife, businesses and to their way of life. "We depend onthe Columbia for moving freight, generating power, irrigating farms,

Area, where the local air dis-

fishing," said Eric LaBrant, president of the Fruit Valley

trict in February issued a permit to operate a crude-by-rail project in Richmond without notice to the public or an enTroy Wayrynen I The Columbian filephoto

Protesters hold signs outside Hudson's Bay High School in

Neighborhood Association, Vancouver, Wash., last year before the start of a public meeting which represents about 2,000 of a proposed transfer facility to handle raiicars carrying North residents who live next to the

American crude oil.

proposed site. "Anywhere on the Columbia, an oil spill would cripple — including along the iconic our economy," he said. Columbia. The river is, in a way, the soul of the Pacific Northwest.

Another tw o

d ozen new

rail refining facilities and terminals have been built in California, Oregon and Washington in the past three years. As a result, long oil trains are already rolling through rural and urban areas alike

W oman sues yogastudio, glass makerafter mirror falls on herduring class in the Army — t ook shifts

over five weeks to be with her woman is suing her yoga stu- during her initial recovery, dio and a glass company af- when she wasn't allowed to ter she suffered serious injudrive because of the medicaries when a mirror fell on her tions she took. during class. She was on painkillers for Lindsey Eltinge said she about four months. had her eyes closed when the She is back to work now, mirror fell in January and and to yoga — which has couldn't understand why she helped in her recovery, she was in such pain. says. Eltinge said a plastic The m i r ro r s h a ttered surgeon told her he could not across her body, sending a help repair the serious scarshard of glass through one ring on her legs. of her ankles that severed a Eltinge is suing the studio, nerve and required emergen- CorePower, and DT Glass, cy surgery. Her medical bills the company that apparently ran up to $40,000. acquired the business that inT he suit claims that t h e stalled the mirror. heavy mirror w a s p o or- A message seeking comly glued onto the wall and ment from the glass shop lacked critical safety features wasn't immediately returned. such as screws or braces to A woman at the yoga studio keep it in place. referred a call from The As"They slapped a little glue sociated Press on Monday on the wall and that was it," to CorePower Yoga's corpoPORTLAND — A Portland

carried on 63 tank cars in 2009 to more than 6 million barrels on 8,608 tank cars

nies, Union Pacific and Bur-

The Associated Press SALEM — Oregon's ru-

officials hope the hub will be able to offer low-income fam-

ilies resources they may not ty reaching social services have known were available. "In Polk County this is the centered in urban areas. It's ral poor often have difficul-

first time this many social

serviceagencies are coming

Andres Soto, the Richmond

organizer for Communities

So a Polk County initiative

for a Better Environment, an

environmental justice group that's a plaintiff in the case. "The delivery of this product right next to schools, to

neighborhoods, where literally you can throw a rock and hitthese railcars,presents a clear danger to literally thousands ofresidents,"Soto said.

The fears are shared by many in Vancouver, Wash., where offici als received more

than 33,000 public comments about the project — detailing feared impacts to air quality, wildlife, recreation, tribal treaty rights and home values, among others.

His car, a 1990 Toyota Camry, drifted across the centerline

and crashed head-on with a caused a three-car crash when FordExplorer. he fainted while holding his Both vehides struck the breath as he drove through a tunnel walls before a pickup tunnel northwest of Portland, Oregon State Police said.

Daniel J. Calhon, of Snohomish, Wash., told investigators he fainted Sunday after-

noon while holding his breath in the Highway 26 tunnel near the community of Manning, according to a news release.

aims to bring multiple disparate social services to one place. Polk County opened a social services hub in Dallas

together in one spot to serve

families in our area," DeMoe said. Melissa Baurer with The

Salvation Army said she believes it will eliminate a lot of running around both for where low-income families families and for those who can find everything from help them. "Instead of calling a partrental assistance to help with ner," she said, "I can walk the Oregon Health Plan. Other services include im- down the hall and say, 'I have munizations and disability this need; how can we partservices. ner together to help them?'" "All the services that serve A family might come in our most at-risk families are needing emergency diapers, spread all over," said Brent for example, but the nonprofDeMoe, manager of Polk it might discover they don't County Family & Communi- have health insurance and ty Outreach. they qualify for the Oregon The family resource cen- Health Plan, she said. "Those are the successes ter is based on several others that have popped up in that make us think this is goOregon. ing to be awesome," DeMoe At its best, Polk County sard.

hit the Camry.

of a game or superstition. The two people in the pickThe tunnel, called the Denup were not hurt. nis L. Edwards Tunnel, was taken to hospitals.

Calhon was cited for reck-

completed in 1940 and car-

less driving, three counts of reckless endangerment

ries the highway through the Northern Oregon Coast

and fourth-degreeassault in

Range mountains. It's 772 feet

Calhon and his passenger, Washington County Circuit 19-year-old Bradley Meyring, Court. It was not clear ifhe had of Edmonds, Wash., suffered alawyer. non-life-threatening injuries, State Police Lt. Gregg Hastas did the two people in the ings said Monday he's not sure Explorer: Thomas Hatch Jr., why Calhon was holding his 67, and Candace Hatch, 61, breath, but some people hold from Astoria. All four were their breaths in tunnels as part

long, meaning that a car traveling at the posted speed limit of 55 mph would get through it in about 10 seconds. Hastings told The Oregonian newspaper investigators do not believe drugs or alcohol played a role in the crash.

In I(lamath Falls,troops get readyto deploy By Tristan Hiegier

two sons, ages 1 and 4. While

The Herald and News

the reality has not sunk in for them that their father might

KLAMATH FALLS — To

many of the men and women of Klamath Falls' Charlie Troop, their upcoming deployment to Afghanistan is going to be their first combat operation overseas.

While the heat and possible enemy attacksare no doubt worrisome, the hardest part

about shipping out might be more personaL

respond to an email.

I need to do, what's expected

device."

of me," Pfc. Aaron Jowell said.

and husband — who flew home to be with her from

Her suit seeks $40,000 for p ast m e dical c o sts, $10,000 for future medical costs, $5,000 for lost wages and $400,000 for pain and suffering. Eltinge's lawyer says no one has been willing to accept responsibility for t he

Korea, where he is stationed

incident.

Her mother, mother-in-law

Socialservicesoffered n one stopfor rural poor provide outreach in many far-fl ung places.

MANNING — A 19-yearold man told investigators he

which did not immediately

weeks.

rate headquarters, in Denver,

Oregon State Police Crime search for additional victims; Lab has identified the re- investigators dug more than mains of the second person 50 holes but did not find any. found on a ranch in SouthP rosecutors s a y b ot h ern Oregon, months after the men were shot in the head ranch's owner was charged and dismembered, and that in the death. Monica made incriminating They were those of Ste- statements that were supphen Frank Delicino, 59, ported by physical evidence. who worked as a handyman Pigs Monica kept on the on the 20-acre property, the farm have been euthanized. Jackson County Sheriff's Of- A former resident of the fice said. property has said he saw Ranch owner Susan Mon- Monica feed dead house pets ica is already charged with and livestock to the pigs. killing Delicino in 2 012, M onica, a w e l der, h a s though he was listed as an pleaded not guilty to charges unidentified victim in court of murder, abuse of a corpse papers pending positive a nd identity theft. She i s identification. She i s a l so being held in the Jackson charged with killing another County jail, and she has sent handyman, 56-year-old Rob- letters to the Mail Tribune ert Haney, last year. newspaper c o m plaining Investigators found the about the food and living men's remains when they conditions. went to M onica's Rogue The case is scheduled for a River ranch in January to pretrial hearing Sept. 8.

expensive and inefficient to

The Associated Press

screws. No other restraining

She used a wheelchair or a walker to get around for two

"We feel that we were deliberately deceived by the permitting authority," said

investigate the improper use of Haney's food stamp card. The discovery prompted a

Man holding breath in tunnel causes crash

said Eltinge's Portland attorney, Sean D u Bois. "No

Eltinge said she was in the hospital for four days.

They are seeking a preliminary injunction and a suspension of the air permit, pending a full environmental

lington Northern Santa Fe, 11 million barrels on 19,065 say they work hard to pretank cars in 2013, according vent accidents by inspecting to annual railroad company tracks and bridges, investing reports. in trailers with firefighting After a review, WashingIn California, the volume of foam and providing hazmat ton officials will make a reccrude imported by rail sky- training to eme r gency ommendation to Gov. Jay Insrocketedfrom 45,500 barrels responders. lee, who has the final say.

PORTLAND

The Associated Press

filed a lawsuit.

review.

projects or expansions are in 2013, according to data It is cherished for its beauty, planned or in the works in by the California Energy for its recreational offerings those three states. Commission. like wind surfing, and for the While t r aditionally m o st The state estimates its oilsalmon and steelhead caught crude has moved to Gulf by-rail shipments will rise to by sport fishermen, commer- Coast and th e E ast C oast 150 million barrels per year cial fishermen and N a t ive terminals an d r e f ineries, in 2016. Americans. experts say there's a West And in Washington state, The fight over the terminal Coast boom because of cheap crude oil shipments went underscores a new reality on rail transport prices and its from zero barrels in 2011 to the West Coast: The region proximity to Asian markets 17 million barrels in 2 013, is receiving unprecedent- should Congress lift a ban on according to the Washington ed amounts of crude oil by U.S. oil exports. State Department of Ecology, Oil-by-rail ship m ents though officials said those rail shipments, mostly from the oil boom in N o rth D athrough Oregon ballooned numbers are rough estimates. kota, Montana and parts of from about 1.6 million barrels The two main rail compaCanada. of crude carried on 2,789 tank More than a dozen oil-by- cars in 2009 to more than

vironmental review, residents and environmental groups

CENTRAL POINT — Authorities said Monday the

"I'm prepared to do what

"The hard part is leaving the family behind, leaving the kids and wondering what they will be thinking when I'm gone." Jowell, while getting ready at Kingsley Field earlier this month for three weeks of training in Idaho, said he has

is currently estimated to last nine months.

The mission they are un-

be goneforayear,Jowellsaid, dertaking is the protection of he plans on staying in touch the Shindand Air Base, a U.S. with whatever video chat or Air Force facility currently social media tool he can use. being used to train pilots for "Anything you have access the Afghanistan national air to, use it," he said."I heard (the force. Internet connection is) not the Capt. Sergio Soto, Charlie Troop's commander for the best, but it works." Jowell is one of 78 mem- mission, said patrols around bers of Charlie Troop (First and in Shindand are going to Squadron, 82nd Cavalry Reg- be the primary task. "The environment o v er iment, Oregon Army National Guard) set to deploy later this there is changing. There's summer. The troop is training probably a few missions we'll in Idaho before coming back be doing. We'll be training to

training will prepare us even better." The 78 men and women

being deployed are all volunteers, according to Soto. He noted about 20 extended their enlistment so they could par-

ticipate in the mission. "All of them are volunteers.

I think that's really a good thing to have. We're not forcing anyone to go. We actually have people on a waiting list that want to go. About 20 of them, they re-enlisted just to

go, extended their commitment just to go," he said. Soto said he's been de-

ployed to Iraq twice. His last main mission is force protec- assignment also i nvolved tion and securing the base." base security.

to Klamath Falls in mid-June.

patrol outside the base. Our

From here,they're moving on to Texas for about three months of training, and then to Afghanistan by early August, with nearly 200 members of their squadron. Their deployment in Afghanistan

is looking forward to getting to the mission, getting it done and getting home. "We're prepared, and the

Jowell, for his part, said he

"It's a great unit; within our

squadron, it's the premiere unit in the squadron and pos-

sibly in the state," he said of Charlie Troop.


B4 T H E BULLETIN • TUESDAY, MAY 27, 2014

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contribution to Central Oregon. That was clear the other day in the announcement that Onboard Dynamics Inc. likely will receive a $3.6 million federal grant to help it go commercial with a new natural-gas refueling system aimed at pickup trucks. The system is the creation of Chris Hagen, an assistant professor at OSU-Cascades. Hagen found a way to modify cylinders of a vehicle's engine so they can convert low-pressure natural gas into acompressed fuel and send it to the tank and also power the vehicle. Vehicles that burn natural gas are cheaper to fill and cleaner to operate than their standard counterparts. But compressed natural gas is not as readily available as gasoline is, making its use limited to areas in whichthe fuel can be found. Enter Hagen. His engine-modification design allows the natural gas found in many homes forheating and cooking to be pumped into a vehicle, compressed and burned. The sys-

tem would greatly expand the range for natural-gas-fueled vehicles. C entral Oregonians are t h e immediate, if l a r gely i n direct, beneficiaries of Hagen's creation. The company beingdeveloped to commercialize his design will rent space andhire people as it moves forward, adding local jobs in the process. And while Onboard Dynamics may be a first in Central Oregon, it's just one of more than 30 such spinoffs powered by OSU research in recent years. New businesses are not the only way a university enriches a community, of course — think free lunchtime lectures and after-hours science pubs, among opportunities available to the public — but they're an important one with implications far beyond the immediate benefits. They help create the sort of vibrant atmosphere that makes the region attractive to similar, nonuniversity efforts, resulting in a stronger economy for all.

2007 bill a sweet deal for House's chief derk

F

ormer Chief Clerk of the Oregon House Ramona Line was the only person who benefited from a 2007 bill that tweaked Oregon's Public Employees Retirement System. S he also helped w r ite t h e legislation. Does that smell funny to you'? Thanks to the reporting of The Oregonian, we know all that and more. In 2007, legislators added an amendment to a bill revising the state's pension system. Like most things having to do with PERS, it's complicated. But, basically, Line benefited financially. Line had cashed out her PERS account in 1981, when she was let go from the state. Eventually she returned and served as chief clerk for 30 years. The amendment set up a short window for "Line to buy back pension account balances she had previously cashed out with money she rolled over from the state's deferred compensation plan," the story said. The legislative change could have netted her at least another $130,000 in PERS benefits. What's doubly troubling is that some 126 other PERS members

could have benefited from the amendment's narrow language. PERS never notified any of them. So Line was the only one who benefited. Line was a fixture in the House, monitoring bills and parliamentary proceedings and arbitrating disputes. She had r etired last year but stayed on as chief parliamentarian. She needed to be above reproach. In this case, she should be reproached. House Speaker Tina K otek asked Lineto resign as The Oregonian was investigating the matter. Line did. But compelling a retired employee to resign with a $130,000 bonus doesn'tseem like much punishment. Line's excuses are laughable. Line claims if she had known she would have been the only beneficiary, "I probably would not have done it." She says she didn't meet the technical definition of a lobbyist. "I did not lobby," she said. Helping to write the language when you stand to benefit is not

lobbying'? Oh, please. Oregonians do not want that kind of weaseling from their state employees.

~-„-,)~IIIe.

Q~

M 1Vickel's Worth Purse returnreflects kindness, integrity

not discriminate. Big or small, black Earth is w a r ming, so w h at? A or white, gay or straight, parent or warmer, wetter Earth means more sibling, all brain injuries are perma- water for all living things: forests, I would like to extend my heart- nent and have significant effects on bugs, birds and animals; fuller rivfelt thanks and gratitude to the indi- each and every person involved to ers,lakes, reservoirs and aquifers; viduals who found and returned my varying degrees. a longer growing season for agripurse on May 7. Brent D. Yonkovich culture; and for Alaska, Siberia, IceOn that Wednesday, I made a hurBend land and Greenland, more fishable ried stop to pick up a few groceries waters and more farmable land. All at Fred Meyer in Bend. I bought my Disappointing reporting good news. items and paid for them, then rushed John Shepherd on climate report out to my car and unloaded them Sisters into the back seat. I then pushed The Bulletin's May 11 front-page the cart back onto the sidewalk and spin on Obama's dire global warm- Thanks for Eagle Scout headedhome. Upon arrival Iheard ing report was very disappointing. coverage my telephone ringing. It was Joe First, we know that nothing comfrom my office at The Sacred Art ing out of the White House is reliThank you for covering the stoof Living Center just south of Fred able. As The New York Times said ry about Boy Scout Emmitt SamMeyer. Joe told me that I had left my regarding the NSA cover-up, "The Smith's Eagle Scout project and espurse in the shopping cart outside Obama administration has lost all pecially for making it a front-page the Wanderlust Adventure office lo- credibility." story in the May 19 Bulletin. cated in the Fred Meyer complex and Second, the computer modelCongratulations to Emmitt for someone walking by, saw the purse ing on which this dire prediction taking on an Eagle project this large and took it in inside. Then an em- is based has completely failed. The and for ensuring that our soldiers ployee at Wanderlust Adventures, Earth has not warmed in the last 15 will receive stars from these Ameriafter checking my business card in years. can flags — a symbol of our country my wallet and calling my place of Third, even the modeling itself is and the sacrifice each and every solwork, walked the two blocks to my full of good news, which The Bulle- dier who serves is making on behalf office and dropped off my purse to tin chose to ignore. The good news of America. return to me. Within a few minutes is that there will be more precipitaMy son, now 53 years of age, is of the phone call from my office, I ar- tion nationwide. (BTW, California's an Eagle Scout. I use present tense rived back at my office and retrieved recent drought was caused by ocean because no one can ever take away my purse and valuables. cooling, not warming.) Warmer that award presented to him at the Sadly, we live in a time of exces- oceans produce more evaporation, age of 13. sive busyness, when kindness and thus more rain and snow. NOAA's The lessons and skills my son honesty is sometimes forgotten. graph illustrated this. Thus a heavi- learned not only as a Cub Scout but However, I will never forget the two

er snowpack in the winter and fuller

also as a Boy Scout remain with

individuals, whose names I don't

lakes, rivers and reservoirs in the summer. Good news, right'? Not

him today, and we will forever be grateful for the opportunities, life

know, who reminded me thatthe

beauty of kindness and integrity according to The Bulletin, which lessons and skills he learned and can still be found in Bend. somehow concluded that this sce- still uses today, while being a part of Leslie Miller nario will "put additional strain on the Scouting program. Bend

Brain injuries don't discriminate The cartoon in the May 16 Bulle-

a much-in-demand resource." Wait. What?

Finally, even if

Congratulations to Emmitt, and we know that the life lessons and

t h i s c l imate skills he is implementing today in the Scouting program will serve

change is more than a centuries-old return from the last Little Ice Age

him for a lifetime.

(which ended in 1850), even if the

Ann Anderson

tin was very true: Brain injuries do Chicken Littles are right that the

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 OfThe Bulletin. 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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P.O. Box6020 Bend, OR 97708 Fax: 541-385-5804

Juniper Ri gea ettersite ornewOSU campus IN MY VIEW pete for students across the country. are also being told that 300 parking The obvious site for OSU-Casspaces will be adequate for phase require more acreage to fulfill the cades is Juniper Ridge, which boasts one and that traffic will not be impromise of a great university expe- an area of some 1,200 to 1,500 acres. pacted in an already busy area of rience. There would be a need for While there may be other adequate town. These vacuous assurances dorms, classrooms, administration parcels, it has long been the vision of an already vibrant residentiaVcom- from committees with a dog in the buildings, parking, athletic fields, Bend leaders to place a university at mercial district of west Bend. The fight serve little purpose other than aquatic facilities, gymnasiums and that site. While there are infrastrucwest side of Bend is already nearing to inflame people who have genuine possibly a theater for the performing ture and connectivity challenges at short-term capacity w it h m u ltiple questions about the proposed siting arts. Of course there would be great Juniper Ridge, it would represent a new housing projects (NorthWest of the university. demand for apartments, housing, "blank canvas" on which to create a Crossing and Tetherow) and severWhile many west-side residents and commercial enterprises just off world-class university. Moreover, it al existing grade schools as well as feel the proposed site to be totally campus. In essence, by choosing a would allow the university to think a junior college and Summit High inadequate, a larger question is why site with more acreage, Bend could in terms of 7,000 to 10,000 students School. Placing a university in the the OSU vision is so small. Does develop an entire new district, the (or more) when functioning at full middle of existing residential and Bend really want a "satellite" cam- university district, which would rep- capacity. commercial harmony is a bad idea pus of OSU-Corvallis or do we want resent a huge economic benefit to Oregon State University President for the city. a unique university that will pique the city. The city, and the many busi- Ed Ray has stated unequivocally that The basic plan for OSU-Cascades the interests of students both locally nesses which flourish here, could the OSU-Cascades campus will be callsfor 56 acres, which we are and nationally? easily adapt to create an atmosphere built on the west side. He has further told is an optimal size for a campus Certainly a grander vision would for college students that would com- stated that any opposition to the projBy Bill Eddie

fficials in charge of planning the Oregon State University-Cascades campus are playing serious "small ball" as they endeavor to shoehorn a university into

O

serving 3,000-5,000 students. We

ect is basically irrelevant because "I grew up in New York City" and "I don't scare." That kind of reasoning should set off alarms for all Bend residents and is surprisingly immature for a university president. Ray should know that some concerned residents of Bend are not trying to

"scare" him but do feel strongly that the chosen site is neither beneficial to Bend nor OSU.

Many west-side Bend citizens hope that the city and OSU will take another look at this building site and

adopt a grand vision of a truly great university where space is unlimited, impacts to existing residents are

minimal and a view of the Cascade Range can actually be seen from a dormitory room. — Bill Eddie lives in Bend.


TUESDAY, MAY 27, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

B5

WEST NEWS

BITUARIES DEATH NOTICES Teresa Ann Iskra, of Bend June 26, 1950 - May 19, 2014 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals of Bend 541-318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.net Services: No services will be held at this time.

Vivienne Jarvis January 2, 1920- April 21, 2014 Vivienne Jarvis, 94, died peacefully o n A p r i l 2 1, 2014 at the Hospice House in Bend, Oregon. A celebration of he r l i f e w ill b e h e l d a t t h e H o l y Trinity Catholic Church in Sunriver, O re g o n , o n Thursday, May 29, at 2 pm. V ivienne w a s bo r n i n Fresno, Cal i f o r n ia , o n January 2, 1920, to Julius and Ina Hansen. Vivienne g raduated fr o m Fr e s n o High School and r eceived her teaching degree fr om Fresno S t at e U n i v e r sity. S he taught i n b o t h C a l i fornia and Washington. In 1941, she met Conrad " Connie" J a r vi s i n Ha n f ord, California, and t h ey w ere married th e f o l l o w i nfr year b e f or e h e w a s shipped out in July of 1942 t o serve during W W I I a s an aviation medical tech. In addition to V i v i enne's t eaching e x p erience, s h e worked for 10 years as the office manager at the Palo A lto R e t i n a l Cl i n i c i n Menlo P a r k , Ca l i f o r n i a, p ioneers i n r e t i n a l l a s e r

surgery.

I n 1 9 89, V i v i e nn e a n d Connie moved to Sunriver, Oregon. She was active in t he S u n r i v e r Chr i s t i a n Fellowship choir, a reader for the S M AR T P r o gram, an active volunteer for the Sunriver M u s i c Fe s t i v al from w h o m s h e r e c eived the "Volunteer of the Year" award i n 1 9 93, an d a n ever-present participant in women's golf in Sunriver. Vivienne was preceded in d eath b y h er h u s b a n d , Connie; tw o s i sters, Julie and Vera, V i v i enne's fr at ernal t w i n s i s t er, an d a b rother, B i ll . S h e i s s u r vived b y a n o t h e r s i s t er, B onnie, h e r tw o so ns , Steve of Healdsburg, Calif ornia, T o m of N ava t o , California, tw o g r a n dchildren and two great grandchildren.

Obituary policy Death Notices are freeand will be run for oneday, but specific guidelines must be followed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeral homes. Theymay be submitted by phone, mail, email or fax. TheBulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information on anyof these services or about the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825.

Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and by 4:30 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication. Obituaries mustbereceived by5 p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the second day after submission, by1 p.m. Fridayfor Sunday publication, and by 9a.m. Monday for Tuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; pleasecall for details. Phone: 541-617-7825

Email: obits©bendbulletin.com Fax: 541-322-7254

Mail:Obituaries P.O. Box6020 Bend, OR 97708

DEATHS ELSEWHERE Deaths of note from around theworld:

Wojciech Jaruzelski, 90: Polish general who imposed martial law in 1981 to crush the independent trade union Sol-

idarity and nearly eight years later participated in the negotiated revolution that led to the

fall of communism in Poland. Died Sunday at a military hospital in Warsaw.

Manuel Uribe, 48: A man once listed as the world's heaviest by the Guinness book of World Records in 2006, at

1,230 pounds; he had since slimmed down to 867 pounds.

Died Monday in Monterrey, Mexico.

t oora o m o n un raiser, it's rin — our-own-mari uana By Jack Healy

Shawn

New York Times News Service

Coleman, president of

DENVER — The musi-

cians stuck to the classics at the Colorado Symphony's first-ever "Classically Cannabis" fundraiser last week. They played Strauss and Wagner,not Marley and Garcia. Their only concessions to the evening's marijuana theme, it seemed, were the bright green ties they wore with

36 Solutions, which

their black suits.

concert, sponsored by

represents marijuana companies, smokes before the

Colorado Symphony's "Classically Cannabis"

"This is not some big ganja fest," said Justin Bar-

the marijuana industry.

tels, the principal trumpet-

er for the Denver-based symphony. "This is very

Kevin Moloney New York Times News Service

respectable."

As attendees swirled through an ar t g allery tual marijuana plants on the Note Series"? here just south of down- premises. (Oregano will have At first, the symphony sold town, clinking glasses of to suffice for a joint-rolling tickets, but it was forced to wine and ducking through contest.) refund thosesales and recast an open door to a rainy paFriday's event was orga- the fundraiser as a private, intio to light up a joint, the nized by a marijuana-themed vitation-only affair after Denbrass quintet ran through event promoter and spon- ver officials raised objections, popular selections by Puc- sored by a c a n nabis-soil saying the performance could cini and Debussy, playing company and a handfulof violate laws against the public on in a corner as the un- marijuana sellers. For the Col- consumption of marijuana. mistakable smell of mar- orado Symphony Orchestra, Despite the drug's legality, ijuana smoke filled the the bring-your-own-marijua- it is illegal to consume mariechoing space. na event offered a novel way juana on the street or in pubThe symphony's event to raise $50,000 at a moment lic parks, bars, restaurants was one more sign that when it i s contending with or any other public spaces, marijuana ha s b e g un financial struggles and a bat- and the police in cities like slipping into the cultur- tle over rent at its city-owned Denver and Boulder have al mainstream here, five concertvenue. cracked down on public con"For us, it's just another sumption in recent months. months a f te r C o l orado became the first state to fundraiser," said Evan Lasky, Denver officials warned that allow recreational sales of the symphony's chief operat- they could try to halt the symthe drug to adults 21 and ing officer. "Performing arts phony's cannabis event and older. are struggling." hold its organizers and sponIn addition to hundreds Some board members ob- sors responsible for v i olatof m a r i juana r e t a ilers jected to a fundraiser spon- ing any public-consumption and growers across the sored by an industry that prohibitions. state, several companies sells a drug still outlawed by In response, the symphony o ffer m a r i j uana t o u r s the federal government and a stripped information about through Denver and into majority of states, and Lasky the cannabis concert from its the mountains. The Den- said he had received a few website, refunded ticket sales ver Post runs a bustling outraged emails, though none and agreed to limit attendees website, The Cannabist, from patrons. But Lasky said to a closed list of guests set devoted to all things mar- the sponsors had a straight- by the organizer. The outdoor ijuana. There are marijua- forward pitch: They operated patio where guests smoked na-friendly speed-dating legal businesses in Colorado, marijuana was sheathed in events and cooking class- had money and wanted to plastic to shield guests from es devoted to marijua- support the arts. street view. na-themed recipes. And "We were very careful," If the symphony's chamber this spring, the Denver ensemble could perform a Lasky said. County Fair will feature an Beethoven and beer fundraisThere are two more canadults-only Pot Pavilion, er, Lasky said, why not "Clas- nabis-sponsored fundraisers albeit one without any ac- sically Cannabis: The High scheduled for the summer,

LOS ANGELES — H e rb

The idea to m ake movie Westerns with all-black casts

O r c hestra was Jeffries'. " Little c hildren o f

dark

during the Swing Era and made movie history in the

skin — not just Negroes, but

1930s as the "Bronze Bucka-

Puerto Ricans, Mexicans, ev-

roo," the silver screen's first black singing cowboy, has died. He was 100.

erybody of color — had no heroes in the movies," he told the Times in 1998. "I was so

Jeffries died of heart failure glad to give them something Sunday at West Hills Hospital to identify with." and Medical Center in the San

Fernando Valley, said Raymond Strait, who had been working with Jeffries on his autobiography. Jeffries had been in declining health for some time.

Known for his rich baritone and sensitive phrasing, Jeffries was a member of the

Duke Ellington Orchestra in the early 1940s when he

Herb Jeffrles sang with the Duke Elltngton Orchestra during the Swing Era and

made movie

He was born Umberto Valentino in Detroit on Sept. 24, 1913.

history in the1930s as the "Bronze

father was Sicilian, and one

Buckaroo," a singing

"My mother was Irish, my

many concertgoers would testify that the prohibition is loosely enforced. As the

c h amber q uintet

performed, the guests many of them connected to

the marijuana industry — inspected the art, pinned marijuana-leaf pins to their dress-

es and suit lapels, and talked about business in this new frontier of commerce.

Leslie Bryant, 23, a law student who emphasized that she and her fiance had planned ahead for a cab ride home, surveyed the scene from an upstairs balcony. She said the

evening was a good excuse to dress up and add a grace note of culture to a r ecreational

undertaking usually associated with someone's basement or concert-hall bathrooms.

"It can be sophisticated," she said. "It doesn't have to be about stoners."

A few tables away, Phil Cherner, a criminal-defense

lawyer, said the evening was about as mainstream as you could get. "The goal of the project was to make marijuana boring," said. "They've succeeded. It's classical music, a glass of wine, a toke."

Jeffries, who began singing Angeles area, and made guest appearances on a number of as a luscious tenor, followed television series over the next the advice of Ellington's com- two decades. poser-arranger Billy StrayIn 1992, a tribute to the singhorn and lowered his range to ing cowboys at the Gene Auwhat music critic Jonny Whiteside later called a "silken,

lusty baritone." In addition to recording with Ellington, Jeffries appeared in Ellington's legendary all-black musical revue "Jump for Joy" in 1941. The show, featuring a 60-member cast that also included Ivie Anderson, Joe Turner

try Western Heritage Museum

— along with the discovery of copiesof several of Jeffries' long-lost cowboy pictures in a cellar in Texas — triggered a resurgence of interest in his movie career.

In addition to being rediscovered by the mainstream

media for his role in breaking Hollywood race barriers

of my great-grandparents was Ethiopian," Jeffries, who took

cowboy in the

and newcomer Dorothy Dandridge, ran for12 weeks atthe

vein of Gene

Mayan Theater in downtown

was featured in a segment of Turner Broadcasting's "The

his stepfather's last name, told

Autry and

Los Angeles.

Untold West" and scenes from

the Oklahoman in2004. "So I'm an Italian-looking mongrel with a percentage of Ethiopian blood, which enabled me to get work with black

scored his biggest hit with "Flamingo," which sold in the orchestras." millions and became his sigHe began singing locally nature tune. as a teenager before heading "Jeffri es' version of 'Fla- to Chicago, where he started mingo' with Duke Ellington touring as a singer with Earl was, and is, a jazz classic," "Fatha" Hines. In the Deep music critic Don Heckman South, he was struck by the told the Los Angeles Times number of black movie audiin 2010. "Jeffries' rich-toned ences viewing white cowboy ballad style resonated in the pictures. work of such male jazz singRealizing the size of the poers as Johnny Hartman, Joe tential market, he talked Jed Williams and even Sammy Buell, a w h ite, independent D avis Jr. for decades afterthe B-movie producer in Hollychart-breaking success of his wood, into helping out. 'Flamingo.'" But f i n d in g an A fr i can-American who could ride, As the A f r ican-American answer to Gene Autry, Roy sing, and act was difficult Rogers and other white sing- — until the tall, broad-shouling cowboys, Jeffries made a dered Jeffries, who learned handful of low-budget West- to ride on his grandfather's erns in the '30s. dairy farm in Michigan, nomT hey had t i tles such a s inated himself. "Harlem Rides the Range" "No way. They'll never buy and "The Bronze Buckaroo" you; you're not black enough," and featured the tall, hand- the light-skinned Jeffries resome, wavy-haired singer membered Buell saying. Jefwith a Gable-esque mustache fries said Buell finally agreed as a d ashing, white-hatted to let him play the part but good guy in a black Western insisted that J effries wear outfit and riding a white horse makeup to darken his skin. named Stardusk.

banned at that venue, though

with what has been described

Jeffries, who sang with the Duke E l l ington

Marijuana consumption is

sin in co

FEATUREDOBITUARY

Los Angeles Times

at Red Rocks amphitheater in the foothills west of Denver.

— From wire reports

Je rieswas Ho 00 's1st By Dennis McLellan

including an outdoor concert

"Harlem on t h e

P r airie,"

Roy Rogers.

on screen in the '30s, Jeffries

his Westerns appeared in Maduring World War II, Jeffries rio Van Peebles' 1993 movie sang in a Special Services "Posse." company entertaining troops. The renewed interest led After the war, he had a num- him to Nashville, where he ber of hit records, including recorded "The Bronze Buckbilled as "the first all-Negro of "Toms, Coons, Mulattoes, "When the Swallows Come aroo (Rides Again)" for the m usical Western," was r e - Mammies & Bucks," a history Back to Capistrano" and "Ba- Warner Western label in 1995. leased in 1937. Among the of black films, told the Times sin Street Blues." Jeffries, whose marriagall-black cast members were in 2003. "With his wavy hair By the early '50s, he had es includedone to burlesque Spencer Williams, who later and Clark Gable mustache, he moved to France and opened legend Tempest Storm, is surportrayed Andy on "Amos 'n' might have been a different a popular jazz club in Paris vived by his fifth wife, SavanAndy" on television, and co- kind of star had America been called the Flamingo and an- nah; three daughters; and two median M antan M o r eland, a different kind of place." otherclub in southern France. sons. who provided comic relief. Three more musical West- He continued to perform both Jeffriesearned $5,000 for erns starring Jeffries were in Europe and th e U n ited the film, which was shot at a released over the next two States and played the title role dude ranch near Victorville in years, "Two-Gun Man from in the 1957 film "Calypso Joe," 541-548-2066 five days. Harlem," "The Bronze Buck- co-starring Angie Dickinson. Each of the films that fol- aroo" and "Harlem Rides the He returned to the U.S. in Adjustablc lowed was produced just as Range." the 1960s, settling in the Los Beds fast. In later years, Jeffries J effries cashed in on h i s would jokingly refer to them fame by making stage appearas "C-movies." But he took ances with the Four Tones, his great pride in them. movie backup singers. "To say I was the first black Touring in a Cadillac with IjV&TRESS singing cowboy on the face of steer horns on the front and 716 SW 11ttl St. G allery - B e n d this earth is a great satisfac- his name in gold rope on the Redmond . 541.923.4732 541-3$0-50$4 tion," he told American Viside, he'd do rope tricks, spin sions in 1997. his six-shooters and sing. In an era when black actors While promoting his final Urolo typically played subservient film in Detroit in 1939, Jeffries roleson screen, Jeffries stood showed up at a performance i"i «J u n e 15th,2014 out. by the Duke Ellington Orches"Herb was a sex symbol," tra and was invited to sing. ElNew York University film pro- lington later asked Jeffries to www.be n d d a s h.com fessor Donald Bogle, author join his orchestra on tour. D rafted i nt o

the A r my

Con Keyes Los Angeles Times file photo

WILSONSof Redmond

q~~

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B6

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, MAY 27, 2014

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

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TODAY

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TONIGHT

HIGH 67'

Partly cloudy with a passing shower

ALMANAC TEMPERATURE Yesterday Normal Record 67 39'

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89' in 1902 22'in 1908

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Yesterday Today Wednesday

city

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UV INDEX TODAY

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Yesterday Today Wednesday Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W HiRo/W 67/39/0.00 64/42/s 62/46/pc 81/64/0.22 83/66/t 83/63/I 85/56/0.00 83/62/I 76/54/pc 104/76/Tr 102/83/s 101/80/pc 87/58/0.00 85/65/I 84/64/I 86/65/1.08 86/63/I 89/62/t

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Juneau Kansas City Lansing Lss Vegss Lexington Lincoln Litiie Rock Lcs Angeles Louisville Madison, Wl Memphis Miami

69/61/I 85/65/I 77/62/t

89/60/pc 85/65/I

90/60/c 79/47/s 59/47/c

88/67/0.00 83/66/I

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

61/54/sh

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OklahomaCity

Omaha Orlando Palm Springs Pucris Philadelphia Phoenix

72/58/t 84/65/I 74/60/I 86/53/pc 84/64/I 93/67/I

Pittsburgh Portland, ME

Providence Raleigh

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Rapid City Renn Richmond Rochester, NY

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Sacramento St. Louis Snlt Lake City Snn Antonio ssn Diego Snn Francisco Snn Jose

santa re

Savannah Seattle Sioux Falls Spokane Springfield, Mo Tampa Tucson Tulsa W ashingt on,OC

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85/68/I 85/65/I 81/66/I 79/66/I 87/67/pc

Wichita

Ynkimn Yumn o

1

81/67/I 79/61/0.00 80/62/pc 80/60/pc 89/62/0.00 88/68/I 84/68/I 84/68/0.43 81/56/I 77/54/I sgno/o.oo 88/69/pc 84/69/I ssn5/o.oo 87n6/s 86/76/pc 85/60/0.67 73/52/I 67/53/pc 82/66/0.00 85/64/t 85/64/pc 90/63/0.30 88/66/pc 86/65/I 89/69/0.00 85n1/t 83/69/I 86/66/0.00 84/60/I 66/53/sh 88/60/0.00 84/64/t 68/57/sh 87/61/0.00 86/69/I 87/69/I 79/63/1.11 79/64/r 85/65/I 86/65/0.10 86/64/I 87/63/I 91/74/0.11 90/69/I gonon to5n5/o.oo103/80/s 102/78/pc 90/65/0.11 85/65/I 80/63/I 87/62/0.00 85/68/I 73/56/I 104/76/0.00 106/84/s 107/82/pc 83/52/0.00 79/64/I 79/61/I 77/51/0.03 59/48/c 56/45/c 78/50/0.01 76/52/sh 62/49/c 87/61/0.00 88/66/t 90/67/I 80/53/0.00 86/57/s 95/60/pc 89/53/0.00 86/54/s 81/50/s 88/59/0.00 90/68/I 89/67/I 82/58/0.00 78/62/t 75/58/pc 93/59/0.00 85/49/s 84/51/s 88/69/0.02 89/68/I 86/69/I 86/54/0.00 87/64/s 95/64/s 77/66/2.06 87//1/t 89/69/I 74/65/0.00 73/66/pc 72/65/pc 72/56/0.00 65/51/pc 68/50/pc 82/54/0.00 76/51/s 79/53/s 69/40/0.01 83/53/pc 86/57/pc 84/68/0.52 88/69/pc 90/68/pc 65/52/0.03 67/49/c 62/49/t 77/62/0.01 85/58/I 87/62/pc 70/53/Tr 71/49/pc 65/42/c 82/67/0.95 80/62/I 82/64/t sgn4/0.04 gon4/t 88/72/t 97/67/0.00 100/74/s 102/78/pc 77/65/1.61 78/65/r 84/66/I 88/64/0.00 87no/t 80/63/I 82/63/0.00 80/63/I 85/65/pc 74/44/0.01 75/44/pc 71/42/pc 103/74/0.00 1O5ns/s 104/81/pc

I

Mecca Mexico City

63/52/c 86/65/s 61/50/s 103/80/s 95/80/I 95/66/s 85/69/s 65/45/r 63/49/r 72/53/t 64/48/pc

ssn4/pc 95nO/s 52/42/t

sgn7/pc 58/48/r 55/49/r 70/49/c 76/46/s 89/82/pc 79/66/s 83/60/pc 68/44/s 73/62/pc 70/57/pc 63/49/sh 73/50/pc 92/79/t

106/86/0.00 110/84/s 109/85/s 74/58/0.32 75/57/I 78/57/t Montreal 72/63/0.05 63/50/c 70/50/pc Moscow 82/57/0.00 79/55/sh 73/55/pc Nairobi 79/58/0.00 80/61/pc 79/58/pc Nassau 86nr/o'.o7 87/76/s 86/76/pc New Delhi 97/73/0.00 104n5/pc 108/75/pc Osaka 72/65/0.84 77/57/pc 82/58/pc Oslo 68/52/0.00 66/43/c 68/47/s Ottawa 82/61/0.05 73/53/pc 72/50/s Paris 63/55/0.23 64/48/sh 69/50/pc Riu de Janeiro 81/71/0.16 77/68/sh 75/66/pc Rome 72/55/0.00 70/54/pc 71/56/c Santiago 67/32/0.00 73/39/s 68/41/s Snu Paulo 70/61/0.02 66/56/c 65/55/sh Snppcrc 57/46/0.49 70/52/pc 73/54/pc Seoul 75/61/0.00 80/58/s 83/60/s Shanghai 88/73/0.00 94/74/pc 95/67/pc Singapore 90/81/0.02 88n9/t gongn Stockholm 70/54/0.00 53/41/pc 57/38/s Sydney 77/59/0.00 81/61/pc 73/54/s Taipei 95nr/o'.17 86/75/t 86nTA Tel Aviv 80/62/0.00 90n2/s 85/67/pc Tokyo 73/66/0.58 76/66/r 81/64/pc Toronto 84/64/0.01 80/54/I 73/49/s Vancouver 64/52/0.13 64/51/pc 62/53/t Vienna 77/57/0.11 75/58/I 69/58/sh Warsaw 77/61/0.14 80/56/I 68/41/I

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44

Clouds giving way tosome sun

Mostly sunny

Abilene Akron • W co7 50 74/43 Enterprlse Albany dlh, 65/3 PRECIPITATION e n • he Daa • 72/43 Albuquerque Tdlamo • • 74/ 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.00" CENTRAL:Rather andy • Anchorage 74/50 61/44 Mc innvia 0.77"in 1945 Joseph Atlanta Record /49 Goven n t • u p i • He ppner Grande • sunny and nice wi t h o o Condon 2/43 42 n N 73 41 Atlantic City 75/61/0.00 78/68/I Cam Month to date (normal) 0.1 9 (0.73 ) plenty of sunshine, union Lincoln o o Austin 77/65/1.27 83/67/I 56/ Year to date (normal ) 4.02 (4.86 ) with seasonable Sale 59/47 Baltimore 86/57/0.00 86/66/I • pray Graniten Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 30 . 1 1" warmth. 68/4 • 3/44 Billings 84/56/0.00 77/53/pc N/36 ' 'Baker C Newpo • 71/40 Birmingham 89no/0.00 89/67/pc SUN ANDMOON 44 58/45 • Mitch 6 74/37 Bismarck 80/61/0.00 85/52/t Camp Ser an Red WEST:A mixture of 68/39 Today Wed. n g Boise 81/53/0.00 83/57/pc 66/36 • John uu Sunrise 5:28 a.m. 5: 2 8 a.m. clouds andsunshine Yach 71/45 Boston 67/49/sh 58/48 • Prineville Oay 4/40 tario Bridgeport, CT 79/55/0.01 Sunset 8:37 p.m. 8: 3 8 p.m. and slightly cool, with 83/57/0.00 79/58/I 70/37 • Pa lina 72/41 8 55 Buffalo 72/55/0.00 75/62/t Moonrise 4 :58 a.m. 5:40 a.m. a few showers in the Floren e • Eugeile • Se d Brothers 6 38 Valen 59/48 Burlington, VT 74/59/0.15 75/55/sh Moonset 7:4 2 p.m. 8:3 9 p.m. northwest. Su iVern 67/35 83/53 Caribou, ME 72/49/0.32 60/37/c Nyssa • 65/ Ham ton MOONPHASES Charleston, SC 88no/0.05 87/69/pc La pjne untura 84/ 5 4 Grove Oakridge New F i r s t Full Last Charlotte 85/58/0.02 88/64/pc • Burns J81/46 OREGON EXTREMES 68/43 41 Chattanooga 87/65/0.00 86/64/pc • FortRock Riley 75/41 YESTERDAY Cresce t • 70/34 Cheyenne 68/45/0.05 79/53/pc 75/41 64/34 Chicago 87/61/0.00 81/58/I High: 84' n Ros eburg • C h ristmas alley Cincinnati 85/56/0.00 85/65/I May 28 Jun 5 J u n1 2 J u n 19 at Ontario Jordan V Hey Beaver Silver Frenchglen 71/46 Cleveland 83/54/0.00 79/62/t Low: 34' 79/48 Marsh Lake 79/42 THE PLANETS ColoradoSprings 71/51/0.25 84/52/pc 64/33 at Lakeview Po 0 71/35 Gra • Burns Jun tion Columbia, Mo 83/65/0.08 85/65/I T he Planets R i se Set • Paisley a Columbia, SC 89/63/0.37 91/68/pc • 83/48 Mercury 6:47 a.m. 1 0 :31 p.m. • Chiloquin Columbus, GA 90/66/0.00 88/66/pc MedfO d Gold ach Rome • 1 Venus 3:54 a.m. 5: 1 2 p.m. 0 ' Columbus,OH 87/56/0.00 84/66/I 7»4 59/ 85/49 Mars 3:31 p.m. 3 : 1 3 a.m. Klamath Concord, NH 79/48/0.02 68/50/sh Fields • • Ashl nd Falls Jupiter 8:31 a.m. 1 1:46 p.m. • Lakeview McDermi Corpus Christi 90n6/0.02 87/73/pc Bro ings 82/49 74/ Saturn 6:52 p.m. 4: 5 8 a.m. 61/ 70/35 74/37 81/50 Dallas 82/71/0.16 80/66/r Dayton 85/59/0.00 83/65/I uranus 3:18 a.m. 4 : 0 6 p.m. Denver 75/51/Tr 82/56/pc Yesterday Today Wednesday Yesterday Today Wednesday Yesterday Today Wednesday nes Moines 80/65/0.07 84/66/I city H i/Lu/Prec. Hi/Lu/W Hi/Ln/W C i ty Hi/Ln/Prec. Hi/Ln/W Hi/Lu/W City Hi/Lu/Prec. Hi/Ln/W Hi/Ln/W Detroit 86/59/0.00 80/63/I Portland 71/5 6/0.0170/50/c 64/50/t 10 a.m. Noon 2 p.m. 4 p.m. Astcrin 63/53/0.24 62/46/c 60/48/t Ln Grande 72/54/0.00 73/41/pc64/37/pc Duluth 85/63/0.00 72/48/pc Baker City 71/47/0.00 74/37/pc 65/34/pc Ls Pine 63/45/0.00 65/34/s 58/32/pc Prineville 59/ 5 0/0.0070/37/s 58/33/pc El Paso 88/61/0.00 93/72/s 5 NI~ B ~ S~ N 5 Srcckings 65/55/0.00 61/48/pc61/46/pc Medicrd 8 0 /58/0.00 75/47/s 69/44/pcRedmond 69/ 50/0.0070/34/s 62/33/pc Fairbanks 70/42/0.00 68/46/pc The highertheAccuWenuter.txrmIV Index number, sums 75/39/0.00 75/41/pc 64/34/s N e w port 6 1/54 / 0.09 58/45/c 58/45/t Roseburg 75 / 59/Tr 71/46/s 67/45/t Fargo 84/57/Tr 87/57/pc the greatertheneedfor eyenndskin protecgcn.0-2 Low, Eugene 72/55/0.01 67/44/pc 64/40/t N o r th Bend 6 3 / 54/0.06 60/47/pc 58/46/t Salem 71/55/0.00 68/45/c 64/45/t Flagstaff 80/35/0.00 80/49/s 35 Moderate; 6-7 High;8-10 VeryHigh; 11+ Exlreme. Klnmnth Falls 74/38/0.00 70/35/s 61/32/s O n tario 84/55/0.00 84/55/pc 80/47/s Sisters 63/49/0.00 68/34/s 61/33/pc Grand Rapids 84/57/0.00 82/61/t Lnkeview 75/34/0.0074/37/pc 62/34/s Pendleton 75/56/Tr 74/45/pc 68/43/p c The Onlles 7 5 / 56/0.00 74/50/s 68/49/pc Green sny 85/59/0.49 76/50/I Greensboro 86/61/0.02 87/66/pc Wenther(W):s-sunny,pc-pnrtlycloudy, c-clcudy, sh-shcwers,t-thunderstcrms,r-rnin, sf-sncwflurries, sn-sncwt-ice,Tr-trnce,Yesterday data nsci 5 p.m. yesterday Harrisburg 84/55/0.00 82/66/t G rasses T r ee s Wee d s Hsrffcrd, CT 88/55/0.01 83/56/I • Hi g~h M od e rate A bs ent Helena 80/51/0.00 77/50/pc Source: OregonAllergyAssccintes 541-683-1577 Honolulu 83/73/0.73 86n5/s ~ o s ~ f o s ~ 208 ~ 30s ~ 40s ~ 50s ~ 608 ~ 706 ~a os ~g os ~toos ~ffos ~ fcs ~os Houston 80/69/2.69 84/70/t Huntsville 89/67/0.00 89/66/pc cnlgn NATIONAL Indianapolis 84/60/0.00 84/65/pc As of 7 n.m.yesterday Quno 66/Os nioeg o nonroony Jackson, MS 88/66/0.00 88/67/pc Reservoir Ac r e feet Ca pacity EXTREMES 5 7 Jacksonville 82/69/0.03 88/67/pc (for the C rane Prairie 518 0 5 94% YESTERDAY nnodi ennngnn pon 82'yo 48 contiguousstates) Wickiup 163290 4/42 TN50 "da)52 'n Crescent Lake 7 6 5 85 88% National high: 116 nIO Mn Amsterdam 70/57/0.55 66/54/r eni i 'enntnn Ochoco Reservoir 33746 76% at Death Valley,CA 8 Athens 86/64/0.00 86/65/s nln • 83/57 uk Auckland 57/54/0.01 57/41/s Prineville 145416 98% National low: 26 ,4xx Baghdad 104/77/0.00 107/77/s npid City River flow St a tion Cu. ft.lsec. at Leadville, CO ctv Bangkok 97/82/0.02 96/81/I 87/6 Deschutes R.below CranePrairie 362 Precipitation: 3.85" seijing 96/62/0.00 93/67/s h nnnn ilndelphin Deschutes R.below Wickiup 709 at Victoria TX Beirut 77/68/0.00 80/70/s n n cmcn sl Berlin 77/57/0.04 75/53/r Deschutes R.below Bend 115 65/51 Ington Denver Lnnv nn Bogota 66/46/0.00 67/48/t Deschutes R. atBenhamFalls 1860 67 * * * 62/56 10 tfnn Qny st. nu Budapest 79/59/0.05 80/55/c Little Deschutes near LaPine * * 203 Nxsa Buenos Ai r es 61/42/0.00 61/45/pc .*. Crescent Ck. belowCrescent Lake 59 • nshxi Lnn An len Cnbc Snn Lucns 93/69/0.00 93/72/pc +t 6 Crooked R.above Prineville Res. 60 1/64 n Cairo 91/70/0.00 103/72/s \ Albuque ue I dn itnina + 6 6 • Att Crooked R.below Prineville Res. 201 Calgary 66/45/0.05 66/39/sh Phoenix Cnncun 88n7/0.00 88/76/pc 117 Crooked R.nearTerrebonne 7 6N4 Ei Pnn Dublin 57/45/0.18 61/46/s Ochoco Ck.below OchocoRes. 0 ..Wxx>N x x xnoa Edinburgh 61/50/0.08 61/49/c Geneva 64/55/0.16 58/42/sh Ju u ~ • rlnndu Hsrnre 76/47/0.00 76/49/s ' '9 9 In inches as of 5 p.m.yesterday Orlnnnn 4ne Hong Kong 90/80/0.10 89/81/I Honolulu ssnt Chihuahua Ski resort New snow Base ;c ~ . I Istanbul 77/64/0.00 75/59/I 86/75 95/59 Miami Jerusalem 76/58/0.00 84/67/s 0 61- 1 30 Monter ey. Mt. Bachelor S rns- I~ . erno Johannesburg 71/47/0.00 71/47/s 4 Limn 74/66/0.00 74/63/pc Mt. HoodMeadows 0 96-1 1 0 Lisbon 66/47/0.00 67/59/c Shown are today's noonpositions of weather systemsand precipitation. Temperature bandsare highs for the day. London 55/48/0.56 65/54/sh 0 80- 1 27 T-storms Rain S h owers S now F l urries Ice Warm Front Sta t ionary Front Madrid Timberline Lodge Cold Front 72/48/0.00 76/52/pc Manila 97/81/0.01 95/82/t Source: OnTheSncw.ccm •

-~

TRAVEL WEATHER

Shown is today's weather.Temperatures are today's highs andtonight's lows. umatiaa Hood 78/51 RiVer Rufus • ermiston /48 lington 77/49 Portland 71/45 Meac am Losti ne

ria

EAST: A mix of clouds, sunshine andwarmon Tuesday, with at most 59/49 a spotty shower or Cannon thunderstorm.

77'

0

33.

3 3'

Intervals of cloudsand sunshine

Timesofclouds andsun

SATURDAY

74

OREGON WEATHER

Bend through 5 p.m.yesterday 66 48'

FRIDAY

THU R SDAY

LGW I~ o- o 6 0 ' 35' ~ 32'

Plenty of sunshine

I f' I

W EDN E SDAY

Olive Garden

Instant Credit! ApplyonlineNt: WWW.WilSOn SOfRedmORd.net

G alle r y - B e n d


IN THE BACK BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NEWS W Scoreboard, C2 M LB, C3 Sports in brief, C2 Preps, C4-5 NHL, C2 NBA, C5

© www.bendbulletin.com/sports

THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, MAY 27, 2014

GOLF

PREP SPORTS THIS WEEK

COLLEGE BASEBALL

Annika set to tee it up against men

r

STATELINE, Nev. -

Annika Sorenstam is ready to tee it up again with the guys. Eleven years to the week since Sorenstam played at Colonial on the PGATour, sheannounced Mondayshe will compete in July at the American Century Celebrity golf championship at LakeTahoe. The 43-year-old LPGA hall of famer says she will play from the sameteesasthemen in the field full of sports legends andentertainers, including defending champion Billy Tolliver, eight-time winner Rick Rhoden and five-time champ DanQuinn. Sorenstam, the mother of two, has a home on LakeTahoe's north shore. Shesays she has not played alot of golf since she retired five years ago but is working on her game now to try to win the 54hole tourney July18-20 at EdgewoodTahoe.

eavs

" J

L

c aim 0

see • OSU hoststhe Corvallis Regional while Oregon travels to Nashvile By Eric Olson The Associated Press

OMAHA, Neb. — Oregon State has proved itself as the best in the West. The NCAA Division I Baseball Committee thinks the Beavers

are also the best in the

—TheAssociated Press

nation. The committee on Monday made the Pac-12 champions the top seed for the NCAA tournament over Southeastern

~( "l"'

BASEBALL

rf

Dodger hurt celedrating

Conference regular-season winner Florida and a Virginia team that has

LOS ANGELES-

Dodgers catcher A.J. Ellis went on the 15-day disabled list with a sprained right ankle Monday, a dayafter getting hurt while celebrating Josh Beckett's no-hitter. Ellis rushed to join his teammates in the celebration on Sunday in Philadelphia. Around home pl ate,hestepped on the discarded mask of backup DrewButera, who caught the majors' first no-hitter of the season. "I wanted to be apart of it. It's a great day, a great experience to be a part of. I quickly lost my thrill for what happened," Ellis said. "Rolled it pretty good. I'm beyond frustrated, still kind of shocked." Ellis was scheduled to see the teamphysician lateMonday. Hehadhis ankle treated throughout the flight home, alternating ice andcompression. "Getting off the plane I was feeling really good, but this morning, as they predicted, it was hard moving around once I got up," he said. It is the second DL stint for Ellis. Hewas out April 8-May13 after left knee surgery. — The Associated Press

c, -i'

.s )H

4

"I thought if you took Florida and Oregon State and Virginia, you

a+ .. . ,) •

'

could find a reason for

any of them to be the (No. I) seed," Beavers coach Pat Casey said. Joe Kline/The Bulletin

An Art Tuck photograph from a scrapbook at the Des Chutes Historical Museum in Bend.

• 95 years ago, a Redmond Hightrack andfield star did the seemingly impossible: Hewon the state meetall by himself

r

superlatives suitable for Arthur Tuck.

NS5 I

GRANT

self was a descriptor, at least for the Morning Oregonian newspaper. From May 17, 1919, in a story previewing a seven-team track meet — one not involving

Inside • A complete roundup of the NCAA Division I Baseball Regionals in Scoreboard,C2

TENNIS

Redmond — the paper reported: "Unless some of the other schools furnish an Arthur Tuck

A shift from

for the meet, Lebanon high school is confidently expected to carry off the honors."

domination

when he ran and jumped himself into fame on May 10 by winning, single handed, an interscholastic meet for his institution. Arthur Tuck is his name and he hails from Redmond, Oregon."

That was the impact Tuck had on athletics in this

exhibition of a one-man track and field team ever shown." At the State High

III-VEA R -Olll OREGO N I f AISICIWO I'uaat) • or r %lay SS \ tt year o ld twr. hRaht • t ~ t , I tnr h a a «nu «nlaltlna Illa eeaatla i)eoaate Iae talrwt attttnllr aNaaallon o r Iha I'aoltlr mwat whett tt • ran aad tatat)att

became "the greatest athlete ever de-

ntne. alattla aaa)loe. ae lat tarttetaaII< alrat fOr III» laalllatloll. srtbat Twtt t» ttla ea)ae aad he halls treat ttvittanarh on aea. Ilen I • ttte teat whlra b n ) attht tarit uut «t oaaearily talo nallaaal t)rr)mlar arl, I'lre In tnh rare )ta~h--llnto. 10

not far from where Hayward Field now

stands, Tuck won seven and placed secBosh (1) celebrates a

ond in another. When all was said and done, when the cinder dust settled back

point during the first half of Game 4 in the

onto the track surface, Tuck had racked up 38 points for Redmond High, which

Eastem Conference fi-

went on to win the team state title-

nels Monday in Miami.

with 38 points. From the Grants Pass Daily Cou- ~ rier on May 22, 1919: "A 17-year-

old boy, height 6 feet, 1/ inches, and weighing 185 pounds became the latest athletic sensation of the Pacific coast

tutaaalt loto t«tne oa alas Ie ar eln.

Nl'rnnlth rtal

t 'ln) l a a h u

to desolation for U.S.men

At that meet, Tuck set state records in

School Track Meet, as it was printed in University of Oregon green on his No. 30 yellow bib, the 6-foot-l-inch, 185-pound 17-year-old from Redmond

per described him. Of the 12 events staged at the old Kincaid Field at the University of Oregon,

Miami beats Indiana 102-90 to take a3-1 lead in the Eastern Conference finals,CS

ana, Florida State, Louisiana-Lafayette, TCU and LSU.

justice for the Redmond High track and field star. Tuck was much more than that. He him-

Northwest," another Portland newspa-

Heat take control, eye finals return

The other five national

seeds, in order, are: Indi-

tionai," "phenom" and "athletic wonder" did not do

veloped in the high school circles of the

Miami center Chris

swing it our way."

See Beavs/C5

He was Herculean, a titan among boys. "Sensa-

what the Oregonian called the "greatest r

ifiers, I thought that might

) here were not — and possibly still aren't — enough

est athlete" for winning the decathlon at the Stockholm Olympics, Tuck put on I

"When it came down to the fact neither Florida or Vir-

ginia were automatic qual-

state 95 years ago, after he accomplished what likely no Oregon prep athlete had done before — and what none almost certainly will ever do again. On May 10, 1919, seven years after Jim Thorpe was dubbed "the world's great-

NBA

been one of the most consistent in the nation but failed to win an Atlantic Coast Conference title.

tn)t

s lstaa.a t a

ir~t, t t aettte, flrat to I'JO rard ttursl~l t a e . 1R S eatee4L trtrtu tn Sbrua thraa S l ataaea, t a r~t. 10 tnc'aea. k'trat In S e rare la ih I lnw ra a

iu ~rada k'trat ia ta),illa

thrna ehtanr) 1st teel. S Inrhre I'trtu Ia htah inmn- helaltl. 6's'n s tarhra. i4read la bread h)me aea wllh i ta Cmt. t Ierhea 'rn a thui ararre as tmlatatnr hla

!

• ettnal. Vht) arhoel

e hlrh

aeaaadarereseatr Ie aolata

slaral I h h)%' H e ev ' aewa ttta net,

By Christopher Clarey

the 100-yard dash, which he ran in 10

New Yorlz Times News Service

seconds flat. "But I got chiseled by the timers," Tuck

or not, American men's

recalled in a 1977 interview with The

Bulletin, two years before his death at age 77. "Fourofthem had me in 9.8(seconds) and one had me in 10.3. So they rounded it off to 10.0 after debating for half an hour. I still got the record but ..." Dozens of photos that capture — or

attempt to capture — the splender of Art Tuck. Sepia stills that show him stretching his arms out wide as he flew

PARIS — Believe it tennis may not have struck bottom. Look at the

once-dominant Australians, who have no men in the top 40 of the ATP rank-

ings. Look, if you can bear it, at the once-dominant

Swedes, who have no men in the top 300.

through the finishing tape of the dashes.

But, for a tennis nation that has sustained excel-

Pictures that display his catapult arm

lence across decades and

torquing his body after hurling the javelin. Photos that capture Tuck clearing sawhorse-style hurdles and churning

cultural shifts, one glance

up the primitive dirt track as he pulled

away from the field. He was "the Redmond phenom" to the

Morning Oregonian, an "eastern Oregon phenomenon" to another clipping from an unidentified newspaper, which, along with other articles and photos, line

at the rankings as the French Open began Sunday was more than enough to elicit a wince. U.S. men have won 51 Grand Slam singles titles

in the Open era, more than twice as many as any other nation.

the pages of a Tuck family scrapbook

p l ar»

z Tartk htta rae the ath rar )t rtaat t» aa Npl'llhda haa tulapre a teel II lartt)e. hrnad ietape4 t a t~er t • tarhaa, aad tnada tst teat wlttt thr

the dkscus, the lavelm (by 30 feet) and

dedicated to Art's track and field feats. SeeTuck/C4 l

~ae at Ilrrlarlna he ran an aa t nah

I

SeeU.S. men/C5

Inside • Australian Openchamp stunned in Paris,CS


C2 T H E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, MAY 27, 2014

ON THE AIR

COREBOARD

TODAY TENNis French Open, first round French Open,second round GOLF College, NCAA Men'sChampionship

Time TV/Radio 6 a.m. E SPN2 2 a.m.

ES P N2

2 p.m.

Golf

MLB, Boston at Atlanta MLB, Cincinnati at Los Angeles Dodgers MLB, Los AngelesAngels at Seattle SOCCER MLS, NewYorkat Sporting Kansas City International Friendly, U.S.Vs.Azerbajjan

4 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m.

E S PN E S PN Roo t

4:45 p.m. ESPN2 6:55 p.m. ESPN2

HOCKEY

NHL Playoffs, NewYork Rangers at Montreal

5 p.m. NBCSN

BASKETBALL

NBA Playoffs, SanAntonio at OklahomaCity

6 p.m.

TNT

WEDNESDAY TENNis French Open,second round French Open,second round

Time TV/Radio 6 a.m.

ES P N2

2 a.m. E SPN2

GOLF

College, NCAA Men'sChampionship EuropeanTour, NordeaMasters

2 p.m. 2 a.m.

Golf Golf

BASKETBALL

NBA Playoffs, Miami at Indiana HOCKEY NHL Playoffs, Los Angeles atChicago SOCCER InternationalFriendly, Mexico vs. Israel

5:30 p.m. ESPN 5 p.m. NBCSN 6:25 p.m. ESPN2

BASEBALL

MLB, Pittsburgh at NewYork Mets MLB,New YorkYankeesatSt.Louis MLB, Los AngelesAngels at Seattle

10 a.m.

MLB

5 p.m. 7 p.m.

MLB Roo t

Listingsarethe mostaccurate available. TheBulletin is not responsible for latechangesmadeby TI7'or radio stations.

SPORTS IN BRIEF LACROSSE Duke take NCAA title Over NOtre Dame — Dukewon its second straight NCAAmen's lacrosse championship, holding off Notre Dame's comebackwith a goal by Kyle Keenanwith 2:39 left to clinch an11-9victory Monday in Baltimore. The top-seeded Blue Devils (17-3j limited the Irish to onegoal over the first 35 minutes, built a sjx-goal lead in the third quarter and held on tocapture their third national championship in the past five years. It sure wasn't easy. The sixth-seeded Irish (12-6) closed to 9-8 with 5 minutes left and had the ball with a chance to tie. But after Dukegoalie LukeAaron stopped a shot by Jim Marlatt, Keenanscored onthe other end for a two-goal cushion.

MOTOR SPORTS Hunter-Reay gets $2.4 million forwinning Indy500

— Ryan Hunter-Reay's narrow Indianapolis 500 win brought him a $2.49 million payday. Theoverall purse was $14.23 million. The winnings were announcedMonday night. Hunter-Reayedged Helio Castroneves by0.060secondsSundayinthesecond-closestmargin of victory in the history of the race. Hebecamethe first American to win the Indy 500 sinceSamHornish Jr. in 2006.

CYCLING POWerSdoudleS BPat U.S. CyCling ChamPiOnShiPSAlison Powers becamethe first rider in eight years to sweep the U.S. cycling championships, pulling away from the field in the final stretch Monday to win the women's road race inChattanooga, Tenn. Eric Marcotte held off teammateTravis McCabeto becomethe surprise men's champion. Alex Howesfinished third in a racethat was marked by a serious crash involving time trial champion Taylor Phinney, who was transported to a hospital with a fractured bone in his leg.

HOCKEY CaPitalS tad MBCLellan aSGM, hire Trotz aS COaCh

— The Washington Capitals promoted Brian MacLellan to general manager and hired former Nashville Predators coach Barry Trotz. The team announced themoves Monday. MacLellan, who also gets the title of senior vice president, replacesGeorge McPhee,whosecontract was not renewedafter17 seasons with the Capitals. Trotz was the Predators' coach for15 seasons before being dropped from the job in April. In Washington, he takesover for Adam Oates, whowas fired with a season left on his three-year deal. — From wire reports

I(ings take3-1series lead overBlackhawks NHL PLAYOFFS

LOS ANGELES — Jake Muzzin, Ma r ian G a b orik and captain Dustin Brown scored in a dominant first

trailed 4-0 late in the second period. One year after Los Angeperiod, and the Los Ange- les lost the conference finals ies Kings beat the Chicago in five games to Chicago, the Blackhawks 5-2 Monday Kings have their own chance night to take a 3-1 lead in the to close it out in five. Western Conference final. Game 5 is Wednesday in Muzzin and Drew Dough- Chicago. ty each had a goal and an Tanner Pearson added an assist, and Jonathan Quick empty-net goal for the Kings, made 22 saves as the Kings moved to the brink of their

second trip to the Stanley

Today Boyslacrosse:OHSLAstatepl ayoff s,secondround: BendatSunset,6p m.;Summitat Clackamas,7p m.

IN THE BLEACHERS

Wednesday

BASEBALL

The Associated Press

ON DECK

who have been to the NHL

finals just twice in franchise history, winning their only

Cup Final in three seasons with their third straight win

title in 2012.

Crawford stopped 16 shots

shots in the first 16 minutes,

for the Blackhawks, who didn't get rolling until they

capping an incredible threegame offensive performance.

Two days after the Kings over the defending champion gritted out a 4-3 victory over Blackhawks. Chicago in Game 3, they won Brandon Saad and Bry- again at Staples Center by an Bickell scored and Corey scoring three goals on six

In the Bleachers O2014 Steve Moore. Dist. by Universal Ucuck www uocomics com/inthebteachers

Baseball:5A stateplayoffs, first round: Maristat Bend,4:30p.mc4Astateplayoffs, first round:MazamaatSisters, 4:30p.mcCascade at Ridgeview, TBD Soltbaff: 5Astate playoffs, first round:Wilametteat Bend,4;30p.mc4Astateplayoffs, first round;Elmira atRidgeview, TBD Boys lacrosse: OHSLA Cascade Cup, first round: SouthSalematSisters, TBD

VABLE

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BASEBALL

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College NCAADivision I Baseball Regionals All TimesPDT DoubleElimination;x-if necessary Charlottesville, Ve. Friday,May30 Game1— Virginia (44-13) vs. Buckneg(30-19-1), 11a.m. Game 2—Liberty(41-16) vs.Arkansas(38-23),4p m. Saturday,May31 Game 3—Game1loservs. Game2loser,11a m. Game4—Game1winnervs. Game2winner,5 p.m. Sunday,June 1 Game5—Game3winnervs. Game4 loser,11a.m. Game6—Game4winnervs. Game5winner,5p.m. Monday,June2 x-Game 7—Game4winnervs.Game5winner,4 p.m. Columbia,S.C. Friday,May30 Game 1 —Old Dominion (36-24) vs. Maryland(3621),10a.m. Game 2—South Carolina (42-16) vs.Campbell (4019),4p.m. Saturday,May31 Game 3—Game1loser vs.Game2loser,10a.m. Game 4—Game1winnervs. Game2winner,4p.m. Sunday,June 1 Game5— Game3winnervs.Game4loser,10a.m. Game6—Game4winner vs. Game5winner, 4p.m. Monday,June2 x-Game 7—Game4winnervs.Game5winner,4 p.m. Gainesville, Fla. Friday,May30 Game1—North Carolina(34-25) vs. LongBeachState (32-24),10a.m. Game 2— Florida (40-21)vs. Collegeof Charleston (41-17),4p.m. Saturday,May31 Game 3—Game1loser vs.Game2loser,10a.m. Game 4—Game1winnervs. Game2winner,4p.m. Sunday,June 1 Game5— Game3winnervs.Game4loser,10a.m. Game6—Game4winner vs. Game5winner, 4p.m. Monday,June2 x Game7 —Game4winnervs.Game5winner10am. Coral Gables,Fla. Friday,May3B Game 1— Columbia(29-18) vs.TexasTech(40-18), 11a.m. Game2—Miami(41-17) vs. Bethune-Cookman(2631),4p.m. Saturday,May31 Game3—Game1loservs. Game2loser,11a.m. Game 4—Game1winner vs. Game2winner,4p.m. Sunday,June 1 Game 5—Game3winner vs. Game4loser,11a.m. Game6—Game4winnervs. Game5winner, 4p.m. Monday,June2 x-Game 7—Game4winner vs.Game5winner,4 p.m. Tallahassee,Fla. Friday, Mey3B Game1— KennesawState (37-21) vs.Alabama(3422),9a.m. Game 2—FloridaState (43-15)vs. GeorgiaSouthern (39-21),3p.m. Saturday,Mey31 Game 3—Game1loser vs.Game2loser,10a.m. Game 4—Game1winnervs. Game2winner,2p.m. Sunday,June 1 Game5— Game3winnervs.Game4loser,9a.m. Game6—Game4winnervs. Game5winner, 2p.m. Monday,June2 x-Game 7—Game4winner vs.Game5winner,4 p.m. Louisville, Ky. Friday,Mey30 Game 1 —Kansas (34-24) vs.Kentucky(35-23), 11 a.m. Game 2 —Louisville (45-15)vs.KentState(36-21), 3 p.m. Saturday,Mey31 Game 3—Game1loservs. Game2loser,10 a.m. Game 4—Game1winner vs. Game2winner,2p.m. Sunday,June 1 Game5— Game3winnervs.Game4loser,9a.m. Game6—Game4winner vs. Game5winner, 2p.m. Monday,June2 x-Game 7—Game4winner vs.Game5winner,4 p.m. Bloomington,Ind. Friday,Mey30 Game 1—Stanford (30-23)vs. IndianaState(35-16), 11a.m. Game2—Indiana(42-13) vs.YoungstownState(1636),4p.m. Saturday,Mey31 Game 3—Game1loservs. Game2loser,11 a.m. Game4—Game1winner vs. Game2winner, 3p.m. Sunday,June1 Game5— Game3winnervs.Game4loser,10a.m. Game 6—Game4win nervs. Game5winner,3 p.m. Monday,June2 x-Game 7— Game 4winner vs. Game5winner,2:30 p.m. Nashville, Tenn. Friday,May30 Game 1 —Clemson (36-23) vs.Oregon(42-18), 10 a.m. Game 2—Vanderbilt(41-18) vs.Xavier(29-27),5p m. Saturday,May31 Game3—Game1loservs. Game2loser,11a.m. Game4—Game1winner vs. Game2winner, 5p.m. Sunday,June1 Game5— Game3winnervs.Game4loser,10a.m. Game 6—Game4win nervs. Game5winner,5 p.m. Monday,June2 x-Game 7—Game4winnervs.Game5winner,4 p.m. Oxford,Miss. Friday,May30 Game1—GeorgiaTech(36-25) vs.Washington (3915-1), 1 p.m. Game 2— Mississippi (41-18)vs.Jacksonvile State (36-25),5p.m. Saturday,May31 Game3—Game1loservs. Game2loser,11a.m. Game4—Game1winnervs. Game2winner, 3p.m. Sunday,June1 Game 5—Game3winner vs. Game4loser,11 a.m. Game6—Game4winner vs. Game5winner, 3p.m. Monday,June2 x-Game 7—Game4winnervs.Game5winner, 5p.m. BatonRouge,La. Friday,May3B Game1 —LSU(44-14-1) vs.SoutheasternLouisiana (37-23),noon Game2 —Bryant(42-14) vs.Houston(44-15),5p.m. Saturday,May31 Game3— Game1loservs.Game2loser,noon Game4—Game1winnervs. Game2winner,5 p.m. Sunday,June1 Game5— Game3winnervs.Game4loser,noon Game 6—Game4winnervs. Game5winner,5 p.m. Monday,June2 x-Game 7—Game4winnervs.Game5winner, 5p.m. Lafayetle, La. Friday, May30 Game1— San DiegoState(42-19) vs. Mississippi State(37-22),11a.m. Game2—Louisiana-Lafayette(53-7) vs.JacksonState (31-23), 4p.m. Saturday,May31 Game3—Game1loservs. Game2loser,11a.m. Game4—Game1winnervs. Game2winner,4 p.m. Sunday,June1 Game 5—Game3winner vs. Game4loser,11 a.m. Game 6—Game4winnervs. Game5winner,4 p.m. Monday,June2 x-Game 7—Game4winner vs.Game5winner,4 p.m. Stillwater,Okla. Friday,May3B Game1— CalStateFullerton(32-22) vs. Nebraska (40-19),10a.m. Game2 — Oklahoma State (45-16) vs. Binghamton (25-25),4p.m. Saturday,May31 Game 3—Game1loservs.Game2loser,10a.m. Game 4—Game1winner vs. Game2winner,4 p.m. Sunday,June1 Game5— Game3winnervs.Game4loser,10a.m. Game 6—Game4winnervs. Game5winner,4 p.m. Monday,June2 x-Game 7—Game4winner vs. Game5winner,TBA Fort Worlh,Texas Friday, Mey3B Game1—SamHoustonState(41-17)vs. Dallas Baptist (40-19),12:30 p.m. Game2—TCU(42-15)vs. Siena(26-31), 5p.m.

-i , FDF(CE

Saturday,May31 Game 3—Game1loservs. Game2loser,12:30 p.m. Game4—Game1winnervs. Game2winner,5 p.m.

Sunday,June 1

Game5— Game3winnervs.Game4loser,12:30p.m. Game6—Game4winner vs. Game5winner,5 p.m.

Monday,June2 x-Game 7—Game4 winner vs. Game5winner, 5p.m. Houston Friday,May30 Game 1— Texas A&M(33-24) vs.Texas (38-18), 1 p.m. Game2— Rice (41-18) vs.GeorgeMason (34-20), 5p.m. Saturday,May31 Game 3—Game1loservs. Game2 loser,1 p.m. Game4—Game1winner vs. Game2winner,5 p.m. Sunday,June 1 Game5— Game3winnervs.Game4loser,1p.m. Game6—Game4winnervs. Game5winner,5 p.m. Monday,June2 x-Game 7—Game4 winner vs. Game5winner, 4p.m. Corvellis Friday,May30 Game1—UcIrvine(35-22) vs.UNLV(35-23), 2p.m. Game2—OregonState(42-12) vs.North DakotaState (25-24), p. 8m. Saturday,May31 Game3— Game1loservs.Game2loser,2p.m. Game4—Game1winnervs. Game2winner,8 p.m. Sunday,June 1 Game5— Game3winnervs.Game4loser,2p.m. Game6—Game4winner vs. Game5winner,8 p.m. Monday,June2 x-Game 7—Game4 winner vs. Game5winner, 8p.m. Sen LuisObispo,Calif. Friday,May30 Game1—Pepperdine(39-16) vs.ArizonaState(3322),1p.m. Game2—Cal Poly (45-10) vs. SacramentoState(3922),6p.m. Saturday,May31 Game 3—Game1loservs. Game2 loser,1 p.m. Game4—Game1winner vs. Game2winner,6 p.m. Sunday,June 1 Game5— Game3winnervs.Game4loser,1p.m. Game6—Game4winnervs. Game5winner,6 p.m. Monday,June2 x-Game 7—Game4 winner vs. Game5winner, 6p.m.

SOFTBALL College Women'sCollegeWorld Series At ASA Hall of FameStadium Oklahoma City All TimesPDT DoubleElimination;x-if necessary Thursday'sGames Game1 —Florida(50-12) vs.Baylor (47-14),9a.m. Game2 — FloridaState(55-7) vs. Oregon(54-7), 11:30a.m. Game3 — Louisiana-Lafayette (49-8) vs. Kentucky (48-14), p. 4m. Game4 — Oklahoma (50-11) vs. Alabama (50-11), 6:30p.m. Friday'sGames Game5—Game1winnervs.Game2winner,4 p.m. Game6—Game3winnervs. Game4winner630pm. Saturday'sGames Game7— Game1loservs.Game2loser,Qam. Game 8—Game3loser vs. Game4 loser,11:30a.m. Game9—Game5loservs. Game7winner, 4p.m. Game10—Game6 loser vs.Game8winner,6:30p.m. Sunday'sGames Game11 —Game5winnervs. Game9winner,10a.m. Game12 —Game6winner vs.Game10winner, 12:30 p.m. x-Game13 —Game5winnervs.Game9loser,4 p.m. x-Game14 —Game6winner vs. Game10loser, 6:30 p.m. NOTE:If onlyonegameis necessary, it wil be played at4p.m. Championship Series (Besl-of-3) Monday,June2: TeamsTBD, 5p.m. Tuesday, June3: TeamsTBD,5 p.m. x-Wednesday, June4: TeamsTBD,5 p.m.

BASKETBALL NBA Playoffs NATIONALBASKETBALL ASSOCIATION

All TimesPDT CONFERENCE FINALS

(Best-of-seven;x-if necessary) Mondey'sGame Miami102,Indiana90, Miami leadsseries3-1 Today'sGame San Antonioat Oklahoma City, 6 p.m.,SanAntonio leadsseries2-1 Wednesday'sGame Miami atIndiana,5:30p.m. Tbursday's Game x-Oklahoma City atSanAntonio,6 p.m. Friday'sGame x-Indianaat Miami,5:30p.m. Saturday'sGame x-SanAntonioatOklahomaCity, 5:30p.m. Sundey'sGame x-Miamiat Indiana,5:30p.m. Monday,June2 x-Oklahoma City atSanAntonio,6 p.m.

Monday'sSummary

Heal102, Pacers90 INDIANA (90)

George8-16 4-7 23,West9-18 2-2 20, Hibbert 0-4 0-0 0, G.Hill 5-101-2 15,Stephenson3-7 3-5 9, Scola6-8 0-012, Butler1-30-03, Watson1-2 0-0 3, Mahinmi2-3 1-1 5, Copeland0-0 0-0 0. Totals 35-71 11-1790. MIAMI (102) James13-214-432, Lewisg-50-00, Bosh7-12 8-10 25, Chalmers2-2 0-0 4,Wade4-12 7-7 15, Haslem1-33 45, RAgen 2 8449, Cole2 42 27, Battier1-22-35.Totals32-6930-34102. Indiana 19 25 2B 26 — 9B Miami 27 22 31 22 — 102 3-PointGoals—Indiana9-21(G.Hil 4-7, George 3-9, Butler1-2,Watson 1-2, Scola0-1), Miami8-24

(Bosh3-5, Jame s 2-3, Batier 1-2, Cole1-2, R.Alen 1-5, Wade0-2,Lewis0-5).FouledOut— None.Rebounds —Indiana 44(West 12), Miami39 (James 10). Assists —Indiana18 (West, G.Hil, Stephenson 4), Miami 16(James5). Total Fouls—Indiana 27,

AlejandroGonzalez, Colombia, def. MichaelRussell, United States,6-2, 6-4,6-7 (6)r6-1. RobertoBautistaAgut(27), Spain,def. PaoloLorenzi, Italy,6-3,7-5, 6-2. FelicianoLopez(26), Spain,def. Damir Dzumhur, Bosnia-Herze govina, 6-3,7-6 (8), 6-3. RafaelNadal(1), Spain, def.RobbyGinepri, United States,6-0, 6-3,6-0. Teymuraz Gabashvili, Russia,def. VasekPospisil (30), Cana da,6-4,6-2, 6-3. ThomazBellucci, Brazil, def.Benjamin Becker,Germany,6-2,6-4,3-6, 4-6, 6-2. FabioFognini(14), Italy,def.AndreasBeck, Germany,6-4,6-4,6-1. AdrianMannarino,France,def.Yen-hsun Lu,Taiwan,6-2, 6-1,6-1. TobiasKamke, Germany,def. Miloslav Mecir, Slovakia,7-5, 7-6(2), 7-6(1). FacundoBagnis, Argentina,def.Julien Benneteau, France,6-1,6-2, 1-6,3-6, 18-16. ErnestsGulbis (18), Latvia,def.LukaszKubot, Poland, 4-6,6-4,7-5,6-1. DominicThiem,Austria, def. Paul-HenriMathieu, France,6-4,7-6(3), 6-2. DonaldYoung,UnitedStates, def. DudiSela, Israel, 6-1,2-6,6-1, 6-0. Mikhail Kukushkin,Kazakhstan, def. NicolasMahut, France, 6-3,6-7(4),6-3, 6-4. Leonardo Mayer,Argentina,def.JamesDuckworth, Austraha 5762 64 76(2) Guigermo Garcia-Lopez, Spain, def.StanWawrinka (3), Switzerland,6-4,5-7,6-2, 6-0.

Women Firsl Round MariaSharapova(7), Russia,def. KseniaPervak, Russia,6-1,6-2. DominikaCibulkova (9), Slovakia, def. Virginie Razzano,France,7-5, 6-0. MonaBarthel, Germ any,def. Karin Knapp, Italy, 6-4, 6-0. SabineLisicki (16), Germ any, def. FionaFerro, France,6-1,7-5. TamiraPaszek,Austria, def.AlisonVanUytvanck, Belgium,6-2, 7-6(5). Timea Bacsinszky, Switzerland, def. Maryna Zanevska, Ukraine, 6-1,6-4. Flavia Pennetta (12), Italy, def. Patricia Mayr-Achleitner, Austria, 6-2,6-2. YaroslavaShvedova,Kazakhstan, def. LaurenDavis, UnitedStates,3-6,7-5, 6-4. EugenieBouchard(18), Canada, def. Shahar Peer, Miami17.Technicals—Hibbert, IndianaCoachVogel. Israel,6-0,6-2. PaulineParmentier, France,def. RobertaVinci(17), A—19,874(19,600). Italy, 3-6,6-3,6-2. SamStosur(19), Australia,def.MonicaPuig, PuerWNBA to Rico,6-1,6-1. PaulaOrmaechea, Argentina,def. RominaOprandi, WOMEN'SNATIONAL BASKETBALL Switzerland,7-5, 6-2. ASSOCIATION ElenaVesnina(32), Russia, def. Christina McHale, All TimesPDT UnitedStates,7-6(0), 4-6, 6-3. Stefanie Voegele,Switzerland, def. Anna-Lena EasternConference Germany,6-7(3), W L P c t G B Friedsam, AlizeCornet(20), France,def. Ashleigh Barly, AusChicago 4 1 .8 0 0 tralia, 6-2, 6-1. Atlanta 2 2 .5 0 0 1t/t KarolinaPliskova,CzechRepublic, def.Mathilde NewYork 1 2 .3 3 3 2 Johansson,France,6-1, 7-6(5). Washington 1 2 .3 3 3 2 Julia Goerges, Germany, def. MichegeLarcherde Connecticut 1 3 .2 5 0 Zt/t Brito, Portugal6-2, , 6-3. Indiana 1 3 .2 5 0 2tat Taylor Town s end, UnitedStates, def. VaniaKing, WesternConference States,7-5,6-1. W L P c t G B United Marina Erakovic, New Zealand, def. Nadiya Minnesota 5 0 1 . 000 Ukraine, 6-2,6-1. LosAngeles 2 1 .6 6 7 2 Kichenok, KurumiNara,Japan, def. AnnaTatishvili, United Phoenix 2 1 .6 6 7 2 States,6-1, 6-4. SanAntonio 2 2 .5 0 0 2t/t AndreaPetkovic (28), Germany, def. Misaki Doi, Seattle 1 3 .2 5 0 3t/t Japan,6-3,6-3. Tulsa 0 2 .0 0 0 3t/t PetraKvitova(5), CzechRepublic, def.ZarinaDiyas, Kaza khstan, 7-5,6-2. Monday'sGames SharonFichman,Canada,leadsJelenaJankovic Minnes ota75,Chicago72 (6), Serbia7-5, , 1-5,susp.,darkness. Today'sGam es Seattle atNewYork,4 p.m. Wednesday'sGames MO TOR SPORTS Tulsa atSanAntonio,5 p.m.

NASCAR

HOCKEY

SOCCER

SprintCupLeaders ThroughMay25 Points 1,Jeff Gordon,432. 2, MattKenseth, 421.3, Kyle Busch,408.4, Carl Edwards, 408. 5, DaleEarnhardt Jr., 394.6,JimmieJohnson,388.7,JoeyLogano, 378. 8,BrianVickers, 365.9, BradKeselowski, 361. 10,RyanNewman,361. 11, GregBiffle, 351.12,Kevin Harvick, 345.13, Kyle Larson,344. 14, DennyHamlin, 340. 15, Austin Dillon, 334.16,PaulMenard, 328.17, Kasey Kahne, 324.18, A JAllmendinger,314.19, AricAlmirola,312. 20, ClintBowyer,309. Money 1, DaleEarnhardt Jr., $3,155,674.2, BradKeselowski ,32,971,705.3,JamieMcMurray,32,907,065. 4,Jeff Gordon,$2,879,056.5,Jimmie Johnson, $2,81 7,43L 6,Denny Hamlin,$2,700,486.7,Kevin Harvick,$2,686,110.8, JoeyLogano, $2,684,341.9, Matt Kenseth,$2,565,120.10,KyleBusch,32,497,233. 11 Greg Biffle, $2,174619. 12 Paul Menard $2,094,323.13,BrianVickers, $2,039,684.14, Austin Dillon, $2,028,917.15, Carl Edwards,$2,010,329. 16, Clint Bowyer,$1,984,788. 17, TonyStewart, $1,961,850.18, Ricky StenhouseJr., $1,936,600. 19, Kyle Larson, $1,898,485. 20, Aric Almirola, $1,838,072.

MLS

IndyCar

MAJORLEAGUESOCCER All TimesPDT

PointsLeaders ThroughMay26 1. RyanHunter-Reay, 274. 2. Wil Power,234.3. Helio Castrone yes, 220.4. SimonPagenaud, 211.5. MarcoAndretti, 192. 6.Carlos Munoz,160. 7. Juan Pablo Montoya,152. 8. Sebastien Bourdais, 143.9. Scott Dixon,132.10.Justin Wilson,123. 11. RyanBriscoe,121. 12. TakumaSato, 113. 13. JackHawksworth, 113.14.JosefNewgarden,109.15. James Hinchcliffe,105.16. TonyKanaan,104.17. Oriol Servia,98. 18.Mikhail Aleshin,96.19.Sebastian Saavedra,95.20. MikeConway, 93. 21. CarlosHuertas, 93.22.Charlie Kimball,92. 23. Kurt Busch,80.24.Graham Rahal,79.25.JR.Hildebrand, 66.26.SageKaram, 57. 27. EdCarpenter, 53. 28. Jacques Vileneuve, 39. 29. AlexTagliani, 38.30. JamesDavison, 34. 31. Martin Plowm an, 28. 32.Townsend Bel, 22. 33. PippaMann, 21.34. BuddyLazier, 11.35. Franck Montagny,8.

NHL Playoffs NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE

All TimesPDT CONFERN ECEFINALS

(Besl-of-seven;x-ifnecessary) Monday'sGame LosAngeles5,Chicago2,LosAngelesl eadsseries3-1 Today'sGame NY Rangersat Montreal, 5 p.m., N.Y.Rangers lead series 3-1 Wednesday'sGame LosAngelesatChicago,5p.m. Thursday'sGame x-Montrealat NYRangers, 5p.m. Fridey'sGame x-Chi cagoatLosAngeles,6p.m. Saturday'sGame x-NYRangersat Montreal, 5p.m. Sunday'sGame x-Los AngelesatChicago,5p.m.

EasternConference

W NewEngland 7 S porting KansasCily 5 4 D.C. 5 Houston 5 Columbus 4 NewYork 3 TorontoFc 4 Chicago 2 Philadelphia 2 Montreal 1

L 3 3 4 7 4 5 4 3 7 6

T P l sGF GA 2 23 21 14 1 8 18 12 3 18 17 14 2 17 16 24 4 16 15 14 5 14 19 21 1 13 11 11 6 12 19 21 5 11 16 24 4 7 9 22

WesternConference W L T P l sOF BA

Seattle RealSaltLake 6 Colorado FC Dallas Vancouver Los Angele s 4

8 3 0 5 4 5 6 4 2 3 3 4 2 3 5

2 6 3 3 5 3 4 7 4

26 24 18 18 17 15 13 13 10

25 21 23 13 16 15 22 22 18 14 14 9 SanJose 13 12 Portland 18 20 ChivasUSA 2 13 20 NOTE: Threepoints forvictory,onepointfor tie.

Today'sGame

NewYorkatSporting Kansas City, 5p.m. Wednesdey'sGame Portlandat Chivas USA, 7:30p.m.

Saturday'sGames RealSaltLakeat Seattle Fc,1 p.m. ColumbusatTorontoFC,2 p.m. SportingKansasCityat D.C.United,4 p.m. NewEnglandatMontreal, 4 p.m. SanJoseatFCDallas,5:30p.m. Philadelphiaat ChivasUSA, 7:30p.m. Sunday'sGames Los Angeleat sChicago,1 p.m. Houstonat Colorado 5p.m. Vancouverat Portland, 6p.m.

TENNIS Professional FrenchOpen Monday At StadeRolandGarros Paris Purse:$34.12 million(GrandSlam) Surface:Clay-Outdoor Singles Men First Round Martin Klizan, Slovakia, def. KeiNishikori (9),Japan,7-6(4),6-1,6-2. KennydeSchepper, France,def. Albert Montanes, Spain 3-1 retired. BenoitPaire,France,def. AlejandroFalla, Colombia, 6-3,6-4,7-6 (4). Jiri Vesely, CzechRepublic, def. Lukas Rosol, Czech Republic,6-2,7-6 (6),7-5. RobinHaase,Netherlands, def.NikolayDavydenko, Russia,7-5r6-4,6-2. MarinCilic(25),Croatia,def.PabloAndujar, Spain, 6-0, 6-3,7-6(6). MarcelGranollers,Spain,def.IvanDodig, Croatia, 2-2, retired. NovakDjokovic(2), Serbia,def.JoaoSousa, Portugal, 6-1,6-2,6-4. GillesSimon(29),France,def.AntePavic, Croatia, 6-1, 6-1,6-3. Jurgen Melzer,Austria, def.David Goffin, Belgium, 6-4, 5-7, 7-5,6-4.

TommyRobredo(17), Spain,def. JamesWard,

Bntaln, 4-6,6-4, 6-2,6-4.

DEALS Transactions BASEBAL L

AmericanLeague BOSTONREDSOX— RecalledCRyanLavarnway from Pawtucket(IL). OptionedRHPAlex Wilson to Pawtucket. KANSAS CITYROYALS—Activated 28 Omar Infante off the15-dayDLOptioned RHPCaseyColeman

to Omaha (PCL). MILWAU KEEBREWERS — Called up INFIrving Falu fromNashvile (PCL).Optioned RHPJimmyNelson toNashvile. TAMPABAY RAYS— PlacedOFBrandonGuyer on the 15-dayDL.Recalled RHPAlex Colomefrom Charlotte(FSL). NationalLeague CHICAG OCUBS—ActivatedOFJustin Ruggiano from the15-dayDL.Optioned OFRyanKalish to lowa (PCL). NEWYOR K METS— Fired hitting coach Dave Hudgens .ReleasedRHP JoseValverde.PlacedOF Eric YoungJr.onthe15-day DL,retroactiveto May25. RecalledOFMatt denDekker fromLasVegas(PCL). FOOTBALL

NationalFootballLeague WASHIN GTONREDSKINS—Promoted BruceAllen topresidentandgeneral manager. HOCKEY NationalHockeyLeague BUFFALO SABRES— Signed FNicolas Deslauriers to tawo-year contract. WASHIN GTONCAPITALS— Promoted Brian MacLellan to senior vicepresidentandgeneral manager. NamedBarry Trotzcoach.

FISH COUNT Upstreamdaily movementof adult chinook, jack chinook, steelheadand wild steelhead at selected ColumbiaRiver damslast updated on Saturday. Chnk Jchnk StlhdWsff hd Bonneville 2,069 4 3 0 79 17 The Daffes 1,693 37 8 8 1 John Day 1,442 4 4 0 23 0 McNary 9 7 1 486 19 0 Upstreamyear-to-date movement of adult chinook, jackchinook, steelheadandwild steelhead at selectedColumbiaRiver damslast updatedon Saturday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wsllhd Bonneville 174,923 23,318 5,213 1,366 T he Daffes 129,919 18,156 806 19 7 John Day 109,989 16,054 3,073 1,123 M cNary 92,277 12,163 77 1 33 3



C4

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, MAY 27, 2014

"They said no man who was six-foot and 200 pounds could run that fast."

PREP NOTEBOOK

— Arthur Tuck

IM announces a -ea ue ase a teams Bulletin staff report

Sophomore Jasmyn Reese

The Intermountain Con-

was a second-team selec-

ference baseball all-league teams have been announced, and Bend High and Ridgeview combine for 11 of 17 players named to the first

tion as a pitcher for Madras, junior Elysia Moran was

team in the six-team league. Bend's Dalton Hurd, who

tion as an i n fielder. Glad-

named a second-team in-

fielder, and senior Elyse Bagleyreceived honorable men-

stone's Megan Kirchem was batted .596 on the season named the league's pitcher with 14 extra-base hits and of the year, while seniors Ju15 runs batted in, was select- lia Schumaker of Gladstone ed the IMC player of the year and Michaela Meeuwsen of after helping the Lava Bears North Marion shared player to a 21-6 overall record and of the year honors. La Salle's their first conference cham- Walt Stockfletch was voted pionship since 2009. Rid- the conference's coach of the geview's Dakota Schaum- year. Cody Shepherd was the burg was named the pitcher only Madras player selectof the year after going 3-2 ed to the TVC's all-league with three complete games baseball squad, as the junior and 33 strikeouts in 32 2A in-

Q

g~

qj

~C' ~ O

Tuck

ond team as a pitcher. The ho with a .331 batting averRavens' Kahl Malott (first age on the season, while logbase), Collin Runge (third ging team highs in RBIs (26) base) and Tyler Ross (desig- and home runs (five). Teamnated hitter) were first-team mate Alyssa Nitschelm, a selections. 2013 Redmond grad, was Catcher Cal Waterman, recognized as the GNAC's outfielder Josh Cherry, util- player of the week at the ity player Dylan Albertazzi end of April. In four games and pitcher Chris Mason during that week, Nitschelm

next level, as Austin Phillips

and Blake Knirk recently committed to play for NCAA

Conference's softball f i r st

route to a second-team all-

team, led by pitcher of the year Megan Berrigan and player of the year Lisa Sylvester. Berrigan went 10-4 in the circle with 11 complete

state selected on defense. He was also selected as a

games and 105 strikeouts in

mention quarterback l a st

first-team a l l -IMC

c e nter

and is expected to walk on at Idaho. Knirk, an honorable

leading the Lava Bears to a fall, will join former Cougars 19-6 record during the regu- Kyle Shaver and Trevor Roblar season and a share ofthe erts at Willamette. IMC title w it h R i dgeview. Former Bend standout is Sylvester batted .432 with all-league: Colton Raichl, a two home runs, seven dou- 2011 Bend High grad and a bles and 15 RBIs for Bend. junior at the University of

Ridgeview's Sandy Fischer

Idaho, has been named a

was chosen IMC coach of

second-team attacker by the

the year. Other Bend players Pacific Northwest College named to the first team were Lacrosse League. Raichl catcher Awbrie Elle Kinkade led the Vandals in goals (37) and infielders Kendall Kram- and assists (18) while ranker and Katie Brown. The ing fourth in the conference Ravens boast four first-team in points per game (4.231). selections in pitcher Rachel The former Lava Bear also Collins, catcher Paige Davis passed 100 career goals in and infielders Erin Ware and leading Idaho to a 6-7 overall Hannah George. Infielder Ki- record. ahna Brown and outfielder La Pine alum stars at CCC Kaitlin Ross were first-team championships: L a P i n e selection from R edmond High grad Kassi Conditt won High, while pitcher Emily the women's shot put at the Benton and infielder Jena Ov-

Cascade Collegiate Confer-

ens represent Crook County

ence track and field championships earlier this month at

N o r t hwest N a z arene

University in Nampa, Idaho. team as a utility player/desig- Conditt, a senior at the Orenated hitter and to the second gon Institute of Technology team as a pitcher. Alex Popp, in Klamath Falls, recorded a throw of 43 feet, 4~/~ inches to

fielder, highlighted Summit's win the event by two feet and all-league selections. For a post OIT's lone individual victory at the meet.

ball players, see Prep ScoreFormer Cowboy named to board,C5. all-league team:Crook CounTVC releases all-league ty grad Zach Close received softball, baseball: Six Ma-

Midwest Collegiate Confer-

dras softball players were recognized recently when

ence first-team baseball honors after leading AIB College

the Tri-Valley Conference

of Business of Des Moines,

released its all-league teams. Iowa, to a 25-20 overall reJuniors Shelby Mauritson cord and a third-place finish a nd K eely

B r ow n w e r e in the MCC. Close, who was

named as a first-team infielder and utility player, respectively, and freshman Chloe Martin was named a first-team outfielder after leading the White Buffaloes

also selected to the league's Gold Glove Team, hit .315 on the season with an on-base

percentage of.445. He led the Eagles with four home runs and 17 stolen bases and had

a .993 fielding percentage and a 7-8 mark in TVC play. with 128putouts.

to an 11-14 overall record

/

n

TIII WINS NRHE QINI

the team state championship.

From the MorningOrego-

ST.'llh A T l t t W T S

T Xl i T : ' l . l . Il

P IRSTS, T\VO SECOW A ~ .

nian on May 11, 1919: "Eleven times Tuck was called for-

H igh Sehool atl I . tic 1l a I lwa l 0 1'ect " 1 I sl P l n ll lc I s Scco d l a M c e t .

ward until his pockets and his arms were burdened with the three silver cups."

REDl t OÃ D.

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Redmond and is the name-

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"the g r eatest a l l -around high school athlete that ever sprang into prominence in Oregon," according to the Morning Oregonian. His times, heights and distances may not be as remarkable as m o dern-day

tw d

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t k t ak l g t l t l t l tb d l w ~ ~ 1 t

h

p a bW t

If

it h

o 8

I l~

d d id

th

t 1 >.

sequently,

e n t ir e up s t ate

squads, and Redmond's oneman track team, were most-

ly ignored in the advance dope. lege championships while at the University of Oregon and competed in the 1920 Olympics, where he placed 11th in the javelin. But all that remains from T uck's decorated past i s a

scrapbook o f ne w spaper clippings and photos. Years ago, his home was broken into. According to his granddaughter, Lisa Nelson, hundreds of his medals, his Olympic track gear, and his Oregon state trooper badge. (Tuck presumably was one of the state's first troopers, as

Arilnn Tat.l> AP ths Iledmond high se hool Eugrne bs tspturlaysarcn thsl champinnship fraek snd fleM meeL ai tlltt A S t l l lo FCCOtlls slld t l v O '. nd unc bccond. He shattered I N orthwrst ln t h a tonlests.

the Oregon State Police was established in 1931.) Tuck's history was stolen from him. Yet his track leg-

Tuck breezed over the loose, churned-up cinder track at

Kincaid Field. Nowadays, athletes sport featherweight

footwear costing over $100 10-second 100-yard dash, ac- as they take to the stateure t h ane-coated cording to the National Fed- of-the-art eration of State High School track surface at Hayward A ssociations, converts t o Field. Tuck hurled what was a 10.9 over today's 100 me- described as a "college-size" ters; Thomas Tyner, now a discus, which carried more UO running back who was weight and had a greater dia prep standout at Aloha ameter than the high school High, holds the OSAA state- discus of today. In the shot meet record at 10.48 seconds. put, there was no spinning Tuck's state-record throws technique, as it was not deof 123 feet, 10 inches in the veloped until the 1970s. The discus and 174 feet, 8 inches high jump's "Fosbury flop" standards. For instance, his

in the javelin are diminutive when stacked up against the

be the

principal contestants. Con-

among the stolen items were

o

sake for the city's John Tuck Elementary School,became

w ere expected t o

Tuck went on to win col-

C Ci

t

V i e w fo o t ball

one man, won similar honors. That 'team,' of course, was Arthur Tuck."

'10Oll.

Mountain

Bend High players have been tain Conference's defensive named to the Intermountain player of the year in 2013 en

complete list of all-IMC soft-

T h P r l n«rlll h l x h e h aI t . n « Ill ll • In «11 I daiir . aa d I I lll cluh ot t h l l n d I l g l cl fun>l»b t seral num> • r. f r in!uor nrugruw. A n w vlnv, p> < (l>oN' vrlll be u I '«iur' I h "

II

Oregon 'team,'composed of

The Bulletin's story continued: "Portland high schools

flf » l p II X

it ll | I b 1 t m ~ hl g I tt i li I t d th Iy i th t k d f l& d

IMC softball teams: Fi ve was named the Intermoun-

chosen as a second-team out-

: t Vllt I 'd l

After just eight events (not including preliminary heats) in one day, Tuck, whose faCollege c o mmitments ther, John, was a teacher from Cougars: Two senior in the first public school in players have announced they will play football at the

14

Yl • op hlnr v a l s l l i I t »<rnam nr • < 0 • m . a a d <h 1 I I . Il nol d l a m t ~ m n •I • ~ a :sill cln Ih • d > . Tt a t nl 11run>l» io I p cl Ily I <t n t l>ls y ar . (: o l d mM I I I II 4

went 8 for 11 with two doubles and four RBIs.

IMC baseball players, see Division-I University of IdaPrep Scoreboard,C5. ho and D-3 Willamette UniLava Bears highlight all- versity, respectively. Phillips

on the IMC first team. Mountain View's Hannah Wicklund was voted to the first

phies stayed with him long after his headline-stealing day: a silver cup that recognized him as the meet's highpoint winner, and a trophy, now tarnished with age, for

4 1

field events over the span of a single day — Tuck was prehis achievements. Two tro-

I

hlAI)NAII, \ I i 1 , Th l n l 0 I u h o o l& r h ul I ed J f . II b h I d I I i 1 7 a l M u l r I I • I el I• l a be e s rr f r, «nd • I r a • t l o d s a

competed in 13 races and five

named to the Great Northwest A t hletic C o nference Division-II Crusaders of Ida-

t t

A day after the 1919 state

five medals to commemorate

baseball second team as an outfielder. Callen paced the

'll.l. I~ B l. .h I o I ' »» Tjo4 ()I ~T) > u

O iei,Gt>XS C;i«..YI A I I I I . I. I I .

meet — during which Tuck

sented with three cups and

For a complete list of all-

.'4

Continued from C1

High graduate, has been

Crook County's lone allleague selection was Spencer Copeland, who was named to the IMC second team.

<n

w•

Photos by Joe Kline /The Bulletin

tin Callen, a 2011 Redmond

Hunter Smith and Mountain View outfielder Devin Haney were named to the first team.

c

Above and below,Art Tuck clippings from a scrapbook at the Des Chutes Historical Museum in Bend.

shortstop, respectively. Also for Ridgeview, which went 19-7 during the regular season, George Mendazona

team. Redmond High catcher

4\

~C ~+

second team as pitcherand

represent Summit on the first

e,- wS

infielder was named to the

nings pitched. Bend's Bret second team. Brandon Beck Bailey was voted the league's of Estacada was picked as coach of the year. the pitcher of the year, North Other Lava Bears named Marion's Kyle Williamson to the IMC first team were was chosen as player of the Creighton Simmonds (second year, and Estacada's Ryan base), J.J. Spitler (outfield), Carpenter was named the Elliot Willy (utility) and Sami conference's coach of the Godlove (pitcher). Hurd was year. also chosen to the first team Former Panthers recogas a pitcher, while Spitler and nized by GNAC: Northwest Godlove were selected to the Nazarene sophomore Jus-

was named to the first team as a shortstop and to the sec-

''1

would not revolutionize the

seconds in the 100-yard dash. end remains. And as Tuck recalled decades H e was a s e n sation t o later, the P o rtland p apers many of his time, a phenom called it a fluke. to others. And to The Sun in "They said no man who New York, reporting on Tuck was six-foot and 200 pounds

at an AAU meet in Philadel-

could run that fast," Tuck said phia in September 1919, he in the 1977 Bulletin interview. was the "young giant from But after his one-day, fame- the sun kissed slopes of the filled state c hampionship Rockies." (We can suppose showcase, moods shifted. t hat The Su n k n e w m o r e Recapping the state meet, about track and field than one newspaper reported that about U.S. geography.) Tuck "covers the ground like Redmond's Art Tuck was a whirlwind despite his form a titan. He was Herculean. and exceptional bigness for a And in Oregon high school dash man." track and field, he remains a In a May 15, 1919, issue of legend. the Spokesman, it was writ— Reporter: 541-383-0307,

event for another 49 years, so ten that Tuck "comes home jumpers in Tuck's day utilized loaded with Glory, Honor, eithera scissors-style leap or Cups and Medals enough for best javelin throw of 2 31-1 a Western roll, during which a coat of mail." In 1937, after (set in 2009). jumpers cleared the bar while Bend High won its first-evBut picture the setting in facing down rather than up. er state track and field team w hich Tuck d e l ivered h i s A week before that 1919 title, The B u lletin r ecalled championship performances. state meet, the "sensation of that "once before a Central In h eavier t r ac k s h o es 1919," as Tuck was dubbed he later recalled purchas- by several publications in ing for "four or five" bucks, Oregon, was timed at 10.1

glucas®bendbulletin.com.

OSAA's top discus mark of 197-11 (set in 1985) and the

-

' NQRTHWEsT CROSSING Aauard-aeinning neighborhood on Bend's

teestside. EVENT OFTHE WEEK Bend High held an eight-stroke lead after the first day of the Class 5A boys golf state championships in Banks last Monday. Despite that advantage being whittled down to just one stroke after the first nine holes of the final round the following day, the Lava Bears steadied the ship and pulled away to post a team score of 318. TheLava Bears' 36-hole total of 617 defeated corunners-up Sherwood and Summit by10 strokes, sealing for Bend its first boys golf state championship in school history. ATHLETE OFTHEWEEK With Summit's sixth straight Class 5A girls golf state championship already in hand in Creswell last Tuesday, the only drama left for the Storm was whether Madison Odiorne would continue her reign as the individual state champ. As one of only two golfers in the 62-player field to shoot 81 or better in the final round, Odiome finished with a two-day158 to secure her third straight 5A title. The Summit junior became the eighth three-time state champion in Oregon high school girls golf history and next year could become the first-ever four-time winner in Oregon — girl or boy. STAT OF THEWEEK 37. On her third attempt at the Class 4Atrack and field state championships in Eugene onFriday, Laken Berlin leaped 17feet 1 ~/4inches in the long jump. When all was said and done, the Crook County junior's mark wasgood enoughfor first place, the Cowgirls' first long jump state champion in 37years. And with Hannah Troutman winning the shot put, CrookCounty boasted two individual girls state champions for the first time since 2008.

www.northwestcrossing.com •

.

II

I

w idgi ~ G OL F C L U B

18707 S W Century r . , en www,wid i,com (541) 382-4449

ek


PREP SCOREBOARD Baseball IntermountainConference All-LeagueTeams Player of theyear —Dalton Hurd, sr., Bend Pitcher of theyear — DakotaSchaumburg, sr., Ridgeview Coach oftheyear —BretBailey, Bend First team —Hunter Smith, so., Redmo nd, C; CalWaterman, so., Summit, C;KahlMalott, sr., Ridgeview,1B;Creighton Simmonds, jr., Bend,2B; Collin Runge,jr., Ridgeview,3B; DaltonHurd, sr., Bend, 3B;GeorgeMendazona,so.,Ridgeview,SS; J.J. Spitler, jr., Bend,OF;Devin Haney,sr., Mountain View,OF;Josh Cherrry, sr., Summ it, OF;Tyler Ross, jr., Ridgeview,DH; Elliot Willy, so., Bend, UT; DylanAlbertazzi, so., Summ it, UT;SamiGodlove, sr., Bend,P; Dalton Hurd,sr., Bend,P;Chris Mason, so.,Summit,P;Dakota Schaumburg,sr., Ridgeview,P. Second team — TonyWatters, sr., Bend, C; Brock Powell, sr., Mountain View, C; Colton Lovelace,so., MountainView, 1B; TroyViola, so., Summit, 2B;NoahYunker, so., Summ it, 3B;Sami Godlove,sr., Bend,SS; ColbyScott, so.,Summ it, SS; HunterMcDonald,jr., Bend, OF;NolanJuhl, so.,Summit,OF;SpencerCopeland,so.,Crook County,OF;J.J. Spitler,jr., Bend,P; BrockPowell, sr., MountainView,P;GeorgeMendazona,so., Ridgeview,P. Honorablemention —MitchSpringer,sr., Ridgevi ew;HaydenSmith,so.,Redmond;SamWalker,sr., Ridgeview; Justin Parsons,so., Bend;Trevor Slawter, jr., Crook County; ColtonSlavey,so., Redmond; Brody Blok, sr.,MountainView;Tyler Mullen,sr., Summit; Sinjin Robinson,sr., Ridgeview;NathanMiler, sr., Bend. OSAA Playoffs ClassBA First Round

Monday'sresults Crater 3,Aloha1 Tigard4, Beaverton2 Century5, Central Catholic 4 Sheldon6,Sunset 3 Clackamas 4, Glencoe1 WestLinn3,Roseburg1 Westview 3, Thurston 0 Hillsboro5,West Salem1 Tualatin3,David Douglas 0 Lincoln 4,Lakeridge1 McMinnvile5,Sprague2 NorthSalem5, Reynolds 2 McNary7,Jesuit2 LakeOswego 4,Southridge0 BarlowatSouth Medford NorthMedford5,OregonCity 3 SecondRound Wednesday'sGames Tigard atCrater CenturyatSheldon WestLinnat Clackamas HillsboroatWestview Lincoln atTualatin NorthSalematMcMinnvige McNaryatLakeOswego SouthMedfordat North Medford ttuarterfinal Round May 30,TBA Semifinal Round June 3,TBA ChampionshipFinal June 7 atVolcanoesStadium, Keizer,TBA Class BA First Round

fr., CrookCounty,C;AubreyClemans, so., Summit, C; MorganWatts, jr., Summ it, IF; KelseeMartin, sr., CrookCounty, IF; IvyVann,fr., MountainView,IF; JamieWithrow,so., MountainView,IF;ShawnaMarshall, jr., Ridgeview, IF;SavanahO'Neil, fr., Redmond, IF; KarleeHollis-Myers, jr., CrookCounty, OF;Alex Popp, so.,Summit,OF;JeanevaSenko,so.,Redmond, OF; MariahBuckner, jr., Bend,OF;KirstenHawk,jr., Bend,OF . Honorabl e mention — KayleeJohnson,sr., CrookCounty,IF; JacquelineManley, sr., Sum mit, IF; ZoeLash,sr., Ridgeview,IF; MadisonEdwards, so., Redmond,IF; SaraMcKinney,jr., Ridgeview, OF; LexyBrown,sr., Ridgeview,OF;Alex Spencer, fr., Ridgeview,OF;BrookeBerry, fr., Bend,UT/DH; HaileyBurress,so., Redmond, UT/Dl-I; BaileeWood, sr., CrookCounty, UT/DH; BrookeFrey, so., Summit, UT/DH. OSAA Playofls Class BA First Round Monday'sResults NorthMedford6, Beaverton 0

Jesuit 6,Sprague4(9innings) Thurston 5, OregonCity 2 GrantsPass9, Gresham1 Westview3, Clackamas1 West Linn6,Reynolds2 Lincoln 7,Tigard5 Barlow11,McMinnvile1(5 innings) SouthMedford5,Tualatin 1(11innings) Roseburg 6,ForestGrove5 Aloha 6,Canby2 Glencoe12,Sheldon9 CentralCatholic6, Lakeridge0 Southridge3,West Salem2 Newberg 11, McNary5 SouthSalem13,South Eugene0(5innings) SecondRound Wednesday'sGames Jesuit atNorthMedford Thurstonat Grants Pass WestLinnatWestview Lincolnat Barlow SouthMedford atRoseburg Aloha atGlencoe Southridge atCentral Catholic NewbergwinneratSouthSalem Ouarterfinal Round May30,TBA Semifinal Round June 3,TBA Championship Final June 7 at OSUSoftball Complex, Corvallis, TBA Class BA First Round Wednesday'sGam es WilsonatSandy Marist atSt. Helens Churchill atPutnam EaglePointatWest Albany Corvallis atPendleton Silvertonat Liberty WillametteatBend Sherwood atHood RiverValley OuarterlinalRound Friday's Games Wilson/Sandywinnervs. Marist/St. Helenswinner Churchill/Putnam winnervs. EaglePoint/WestAlbany winner Corvallis/Pendleton winner vs. Silverton/Liberty winner Willamette/Bendwinner vs. Sherwood/Hood River Valleywinner Semifinal Round June 3,TBA Championship Final June 7 at OSUSoftball Complex, Corvallis, TBA

Wednesday'sGames Marist atBend Sandyat Madison Hermistonat Sherwood DallasatAshland HoodRiverValey atSpringfield Corvallis atPendleton Churchill atWestAlbany NorthEugeneat Crescent Valley Quarterfinal Round Friday's Games Marist/Bend winnervs. Sandy/Madisonwinner Class 4A Hermiston/Sherw ood winner vs. Dallas/Ashland First Round winner Wednesday'sGames HoodRiverValley/Springfieldwinnervs. Corvagis/ Mazama at Yamhill-Carlton Pendletonwinner Churchill/WestAlbanywinnervs. NorthEugene/Cres- BanksatSouthUmpqua centValleywinner Staytonat Sweet Home SemifinalRound DouglasatHenley June 3,TBA Marshfieldat Gladstone Championship Final ElmiraatRidgeview June7atVolcanoesStadium, Keizer,TBA Scappoose at Newport NorthMarionat McLoughlin Guarterffnal Round Class4A Friday's Games First Round Mazama /Yamhig-Carlton winner vs. Banks/South Wednesday'sGames Umpqua winner Mazama at Sisters Stayton/SweetHomewinner vs. Douglas/Henley NewportatNorth Bend winner La Grande at Scappoose Marshfield/Gladstonewinner vs. Elmira/Ridgeview HiddenValleyatNorth Marion winner EstacadaatBaker Cascade atRidgeview Scappoose/N ewport winnervs. North Marion/McAstoria atPhilomath Loughlinwinner CottageGroveat Henley Semifinal Round Guarterffnal Round June3,TBA Friday's Games Championship Final Mazama /Sisters winner vs. Newport/North Bend June 7 at OSUSoftball Com plex, Corvallis, TBA winner La Grande /Scappoosewinnervs. HiddenValley/North Marionwinner Class 3A Estacada/Bakerwinnervs. Cascade/Ridgeviewwinner First Round Astoria/Philomathwinnervs. CottageGrove/Henley Wednesday'sGames winner Rogue Riverat Glide Semifinal Round June 3,TBA Vale atLakeview Championship Final Wigamina atBlanchet Catholic June7atVolcanoesStadium,Keizer,TBA Elgin atPleasantHil Harrisburg at Rainier Class SA First Round Wednesday'sGames Amity atValleyCatholic BlanchetCatholic atClatskanie HarrisburgatStanfield Dayton atGlide Burns atHorizonChristian, Tualatin Vale atPleasantHil St. Mary'sMe , dford atSantiamChristian RainieratCascadeChristian Quarterfinal Round Friday's Games Amity/ValleyCatholicwinnervs. BlanchetCatholic/ Clatskanie winner Harrisburg/Stanfieldwinnervs. Dayton/Glide winner Burns/HorizonChristian, Tualatin winnervs. Vale/ PleasantHil winner St. Mary's, Medford/SantiamChristian winner vs. Rainier/Cascade Christian winner Semifinal Round June 3,TBA ChampionshipFinal June at 6 VolcanoesStadium,Keizer,TBA Class2A/1A First Round Wednesday'sGames Lost RiveratKnappa PortlandChristian atGold Beach CountryChristianatWeston-McEwen GastonatUmpquaValley Christian ReedsportatKennedy Regis atToledo Dufur atGrantUnion Union at Monroe Quarterffnal Round Friday's Games Lost River/Knappa winnervs. Portland Christian/Gold Beachwinner CountryChristian/We ston-McEwen winnervs. Gaston/Umpqua Valley Christian winner Reedsport/Kenn edywinnervs. Regis/Toledowinner Dufur/GrantUnionwinnervs. Union/Monroewinner Semifinal Round June 3,TBA Championship Final June 6 atVolcanoesStadium,Keizer,TBA

Softball IntermountainConference All-LeagueTeams Player oftheyear—LisaSylvester, sr., Bend Pitcher of theyear —MeganBerrigan, jr., Bend Coach ofthe year — SandyFischer, Ridgeview First team —MeganBerrigan,jr., P,Bend; Emily Benton,sr., CrookCounty, P; Rachel Collins, so., Ridgeview,P;Awbrie Elle Kinkade,jr., Bend,C;Paige Davis, jr.,Ridgeview,C;KiahnaBrown,sr., Redmond, IF; LisaSylvester,sr., Bend,IF;JenaOvens,sr., Crook County,IF;KendagKramer,sr., Bend,IF; Erin Ware, sr., Ridgeview, IF;HannahGeorge,jr., Ridgeview,IF; Katie Brown,sr., Bend,OF;Carriann Elms,sr., Mountain View,OF;JennaHenninger, sr., MountainView,OF; Kaitlin Ross,sr., Redmond, OF;HannahWicklund, jr., MountainView,UT/DH. Second team — Alexis Hill-Gruenberg,sr., Bend, P;SaraMcKinney,jr., Ridgeview, P; Hannah Wicklund,jr., MountainView,P;AspenChristensen,

Colton atCorbett SantiamChristianatEnterprise ClatskanieatDayton

euarterfinal Round Friday's Games RogueRiver/Glidewinnervs.Vale/Lakeviewwinner Wigamina/BlanchetCatholicwinnervs.Elgin/Pleasant Hill winner Harrisburg/Rainiewi rnnervs. Colton/Corbett winner SantiamChristian/Enterprise winnervs. Clatskanie/ Dayton winner Semifinal Round June3,TBA ChampionshipFinal June B at OSUSoftball Complex, Corvallis, TBA Class2A/1A First Round Wednesday'sGames GoldBeachatWeston-McEwen Pilot Rock at Riddle Lowell at Central Linn Knappa at Bonanza Regisat Union Prospect atVernonia WesternMennoniteat Yoncalla KennedyatNorth Douglas ttuarterfinal Round Friday's Games Gold Beach/W eston-McEwen winner vs. Pilot Rock/ Riddlewinner Lowell/Central Linn winner vs. Knappa/Bona nza winner Regis/Unionwinnervs. Prospect/Vernoniawinner WesternMennonite/Yoncaga winner vs. Kennedy/ NorthDouglaswinner Semifinal Round June3,TBA ChampionshipFinal June6at OSUSoftball Com plex, Corvallis, TBA

BOYS LACROSSE OHSLA Playoffs SecondRound

Today'sGames Beavertonat OregonEpiscopal CentralCatholicatSherwood SouthridgeatLincoln GlencoeatLakeridge Westview atWest Linn BendatSunset Summiat t Clackamas Wilsonville atJesuit Guarterfinal Round Friday's Games Beaverton/Ore gonEpiscopalwinnervs.Central Catholic/Sherwoodwinner Southridge/Lincoln winner vs. Glencoe/Lakeridge winner Westview/W est Linnwinnervs. Bend/Sunsetwinner Summit/Clackamaswinner vs. Wilsonville/Jesuit winner Semifinal Round June 4,TBA Championship Final June 7,TBA

TENNIS: FRENCH OPEN

NBA PLAYOFFS

Wawrinka falls inopener

Heat take control in East finals

"I was trying to find my game, trying ... to be aggressive, trying to find anything.

By Howard Fendrich The Associated Press

PARIS —

T h e p o sitive

vibes and big-deal victories

And I didn't," said Wawrinka,

began for Stan Wawrinka at

whose trademark one-handed backhanded was off-target throughout. "I was completely flat."

last year's U.S. Open, back when he still went by "Stanislas," and picked up steam at

this year's Australian Open, where he earned the right

Another top-10 man lost

to forever be called "major

champion." And yet all of that seemed

Miami Heat moved one win away from a r eturn trip t o t h e N B A F i n a ls with a 102-90 win over the Indiana Pacers on Mon-

looked listless. More stun-

serves to Stanislas Wawrinka ka's first Grand Slam match during a first-round match since winning his first major of the French Open in Paris title. Monday. Surprisingly, Wawrinka ningly, he looked very little development of the tournalike a guy who was seeded ment's first two days, WawNo. 3 behind Rafael Nadal

and Novak Djokovic and proclaimed himself "one of the favorites" just a few days

rinka lost in the first round at Roland Garros with a 6-4, 5-7, 6-2, 6-0 defeat to 41stranked Guillermo Garcia-Lo-

earlier. In by far the biggest pez of Spain.

LeBron

zan of Slovakia. No. 17 Ro-

Maria Sharapova and 2011 Wimbledon w i n ner P e tra Kvitova. N o. 2 D j okovic took a 6-1, 6-2, 6-4 victory against

MichelEuler/TheAssociatedPress

Guillermo Garcia-Lopez

-

MIAMI

James had 32 points and

came apparent — in Wawrin-

the French Open as dusk approached — and defeat be-

The Associated Press

Monday when No. 9 Kei N ishikori of J apan w as eliminated by Martin Kliberta Vinci of Italy was the only seeded woman to exit Monday, when w i n ners included 2012 champion

so far away late Monday at

By Tim Reynolds

44th-ranked Joao Sousa of PortugaL

10 rebounds, Chris Bosh

added 25 points and the

day night. Dwyane Wade scored 15 points for

t h e H e at,

who have won three of the first four games in the Eastern Conference finals.

Nadal improved to 60-1 at

They can win the East for a fourth straight season

the French Open by winning

with a win at Indiana on

6-0, 6-3, 6-0 over Robby Gine-

Wednesday night.

pri, an American ranked

Miami led wire-to-wire,

opening up as much as a 23-point lead in the final

279th.

quarter.

U.S. men

weak — historically weak — at the top. "The numbers are really the worst they've

Continued from C1 been since I've been here, the top-100 numBut, for the moment, only one U.S. man, bers, but I'm actually more encouraged than John Isner,ranks in the top 60, and zero are I've ever been," McEnroe said. in the top 10. His increasingly exposed post makes him "That is really extreme, and I certainly the most visible target, but McEnroe, who has hope for better," said Jim Courier, a former been on the job for five years, and the USTA No. 1 who is now the captain of the U.S. Davis are certainly not the only ones to blame for Cup team. "I think the one thing that hopeful- the men's tailspin. Other factors include prily it does is wake up our fans. We should let vate coaches and academies, as well as the go of this sense of entitlement that Americans rise of Europe and the rising profile of other deserve top players. We don't deserve it. We sports that continue to attract talented Amerhave to earn it like everybody else." icans who presumably would do quite nicely Courierand other coaches and former hitting forehands and backhands. players see a lack of world-class work ethThis drought, which one can only hope ic and toughness in too many of the young is not climate change, has been a long time Americans. building. "There are plenty of talented players who In May 1984, there were 24 American men are not getting the most out of their talent," in the top 50 and six in the top 10. In May 1994, Courier said, declining to name them. there were 11 American men in the top 50 and JoseHigueras,Courier' sformer coach and four in the top 10. the head of coaching at the U.S. Tennis AssoBut the great generation — so ably led by ciation, would not argue. Pete Sampras, Andre Agassi, Courier and Mi"We try to show them what it takes, but chaelChang — who combined to win 27 mathey are not really that interested, at least for jor singles titles between 1989 and 2003, gave now," said Higueras, who, at 61, called this the way to the generation led by Andy Roddick, toughest job he had ever held. "The animal which managed to win just one, when Rodis so big; believe me, it's a lot easier to coach dick prevailed at the 2003 U.S. Open. somebody individually. Actually, a piece of Roddick, a fixture in the top 10, who also cake, to be honest." reached four other major finals, retired in Some, like the former leading American 2012. The leaders of the next wave of U.S. player Tim Mayotte, ascribe part of the prob- men — the 29-year-old Isner and Sam Querlem to persistent holes in technique. Others rey, 26 — have yet to reach a Grand Slam point to a lack of the early emphasis on point semifinal. construction that comes with playing often on Although the 11th-ranked Isner and the clay, a situation the USTA is addressing. Still 67th-ranked Querrey each won in straight others focus on a lack of supreme athletes sets in the first round Sunday, the French who can compete with the likes of Rafael Na- Open — playedon red clay — would hardly dal and Novak Djokovic. seem the most likely place for a turnaround. It is, without a doubt, a complex subject, No U.S. man has reachedthe tournament's and Patrick McEnroe, the general manager fourth round since Robby Ginepri in 2010, and of player development at the USTA, has spent Ginepri, now 29 and ranked 279th, lost to Rarecent months meeting with coaches and ex- faelNadal on Monday, 6-0, 6-3,6-0. perts around the country in a series of conferIt is not U.S. tennis as a whole that is weak. ences intended to build communication and The women,led by the top-ranked Serena repair bruised feelings. Williams, with her 17 Grand Slam singles tiThere is already more formal outreach to tles, are faring relatively well and had more college coaches and players, now viewed as players in the main singles draw in Paris (14) critical in an increasingly physical sport, in than any other nation, including France. "I think there are a lot of American guys which professionals are breaking into the top 100 later. And Higueras and McEnroe both

that are a lot better than their ranking," Isner said. "It's up to them to go out there and keep

said they saw coaches' education as critical in a country where entry requirements to the playing hard." professionare lower than in some European The top-ranked Americans under age 25 nations. are Steve Johnson, Bradley Klahn, Jack Sock, Still, the world rankings remain all too easy DonaldYoung, Denis Kudla and 22-year-old to read. Although the U.S. still has seven men Ryan Harrison, who was once ranked as high in the top 100 and seven more in the top 200, as 43rd, but is now 125th. He lost in French placing it third, behind France and Spain, it is Open qualifying.

Beavs Continued from C1 Oregon State (42-12) is the No. I seed for the first time after being No. 3 a year ago. The Beavers have one of the nation's best starting pitching rotations in Ben

Wetzler, Jace Fry and Andrew Moore and one of the top offensive players in the country in left fielder Michael Conforto.

Oregon (42-18) landed a berth in the Nashville Regional, which will be hosted by Vanderbilt. Florida (40-21) won the SEC regular-season title for the third time in five yearsand reached the conference

tournament final. The Gators' schedule ranks as toughest in the country, and they are 16-5 this season in one-run

games. Virginia (44-13) has the ACC's top pitching staff, headed by sophomore lefthander Nathan Kirby, but the Cavaliers lost four of their past six games. The tournament opens Friday with 16

Beavers,Ducks set forpostseason CORVALLISREGIONAL (Deuble elimination) Friday's Games (3) UC jrvjne (35-22) vs. (2) UNLV(35-23), 2 p.m. (4) North Dakota State (25-24) vs. (1) Oregon State (42-12), 8 p.m.

NASHVILLEREGIONAL (Deuble elimination) Friday's Games (3) Cjemson (36-23) vs. (2) Oregon (42-18), 10a.m. PDT (4) Xavier (29-27) vs. (1) Vanderbilt (41-18), 5 p.m. PDT

Paul George scored 23 points and David West added 20 points and 12

rebounds for the Pacers, who got 15 points from George Hill. But Lance Stephenson was held to nine and Roy Hibbert was scoreless in 22 minutes for Indiana. T he Pacers won t w o elimination games in the

first round against Atlanta, and need to win three

more if their yearlong plan of topping Miami as kings of the East is going to become reality.

The odds are obviously stacked against them. When holding a 3-1 lead, M iami i s

8-0 in G ame

5s over the past four postseasons.

Much as he did Sunday, Indiana coach Frank Vogel used the big brother-little brother analogy with his team, trying any way to urge the Pacers to

break through against the team that has ended their

season in each of the past two years. "He's got to make a decision at some point in his life, that no matter what,

we're not going to lose this fight anymore," Vogel said, likening the Pacers to the little brother in that scenario. "We're at t h at

point." The fight isn't over. But i t w a s a w f ully one-sided for long stretches of Game 4.

"You can never get too high, you can never get too low in the postseason,"

James said. "You've got to stay even-keeled. You got to try to get better every

single day, every single game improve. "When you do that and

you go out and play the type of game that you're capable of playing, you can be satisfied with the results and t h at's w h at we've built over the years."

Oregon State starts the tournament against Summit League champion North Dakota State. UC I r vine and

UNLV also are in the Corvallis Regional. Casey said his team's No. 1 seeding did not come with an easy path to Omaha. Barring an upset, the Beavers would be matched against Big 12 regular-season champion Oklahoma State in a super regional. "I have no complaints," Casey said. "It's a tough job, trying to balance it out. You could take every regional, and everybody would have something to say." Oregon, the No. 2 seed in the Nashville Regional, opens play against No. 3 regional seed Clemson (36-23). Miami coach Jim Morris is not pleased with the prospect of his ACC regular-season champion team having to play at Florida in a super regional. Though NCAA selection committee chair Dennis Farrell listed Rice and Vanderbilt as

tournament for the first time. Thirty-two of the 64 teams were in the

teams that were edged out for national seeds, Miami was in the running for one

four-team, double-elimination regionals. field last year. before it lost two of three games in the Best-of-three super regionals will be held Miami is in th e field for the 42nd ACC tournament. "You never know the rhyme or reason next week, with those winners moving straight year, extending its own record. to the College World Series in Omaha. Florida State is in for the 37th season in a for where you're going to go," Morris said National seeds that win their region- row, second all time. on the ESPNU selection show. "It makes als play at home in super regionals. Three teams with losing records are in no sense to me, if we're on the borderline, The SEC has 10 teams in the tourna- after winning conference tournament ti- to be going to possibly the No. 2 seed." ment, the most ever by a conference. The tles: Youngstown State (16-36), Siena (25Florida will be challenged this weekACC is represented by seven schools, the 31) and Bethune-Cookman (26-31). end. It will be hosting the Big West's Big 12 and Pac-12 by five apiece, and the UCLA (25-30-1) will not get a chance second-place team in Long Beach State, Big West by four. to defend its national title. The Bruins a North Carolina squad with lots of postKennesaw State of the Atlantic Sun did not make the tournament for the first season experience, and a 41-win College Conference and Sacramento State of the time since 2009 after finishing ninth in of Charleston that is the bottom seed in Western Athletic Conference are in the the Pac-12 in an injury-plagued season. the regional.


© www.bendbulletin.com/business

THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, MAY 27, 2014

BRIEFING EU seeks credit solutions European Central Bank President Mario Draghi says theECB could take targeted steps to get credit flowing to struggling small businesses as awayto boost the tepid economic recovery. Draghi said Monday at a conference in Sintra, Portugal, that the inability to get credit

was hurting viable companies in countries such as Spainand Portugal and holding back growth there. He said the ECB

could make morecredit available to banks, so that they could lend

it. Or, the ECBcould purchase securities based on loans to small companies, an indirect way of making money available. He said that"could help reduce the drag on the recovery coming from temporary credit supply constraints." He didn't say what the bank might do at its next meeting June 5. — From wire reports

I'Ll ma er's Ll OLl izz es

What: CascadianGroupLLC What it does:Provides venture development andexecutivemanagement consulting Pictured:JasonMoyer, principal, seated, andNate LiaBraaten, manager of consulting operations and finance Where:2755 N.W.Crossing Drive, Suite 205, Bend

By Jenny Anderson

Employees: Fouremployeesand one private contractor Phone:541-728-0637 Wehsite:http://cascadiangroup. weebly.com

New York Times News Service

Pfizer confirmed on Mon-

day the end of its audacious bid to buy AstraZeneca, BritRyan Brennecke/Ttte Bulletin

e in ow Usincsscs By Rachael Reesa The Bulletin

To help companies on the cusp of tremendous growth get their strategies right and put those plans into action, Jason Moyer developed the Cascadian Group. Moyer — who formerly held corporate roles at Intel, PacifiCorp and other companies — formed

BEST OFTHE BIZ CALENDAR TODAY • Professional Enrichment Series:Prepare for retirement with financial planner andretirement expert David Rosell. To learn more, call 541-3823221; $25 BendChamberof Commercemembers, $30 nonmembers;11:30a.m.; Bend Golf andCountry Club, 61 045 Country Club Drive; 541-382-7437. WEDNESDAY • SBIR/STTRLunch 8 Learn Workshop: Businesses with a potentially technologyoriented product canlearn howto applyfor Small Business Innovation Research andSmall Business Technology Transfer funding. Register online at www.oregonbest. org/what-we-offer/supportfor-startups/sbirsttrsupport-center/sbirsttrtraining-and-workshops/ or call 503-546-8813; $12; 11:30 a.m.-f p.m.; COCC Chandler Building, 1027 N.W. TrentonAve., Bend. • Business After Hours: Learn aboutTetherow's growth. Beer,wine and appetizers will be served. Opportunities for networking andprizes. Register at www.bend chamber.org; free; 5p.m.; Tetherow Golf Club,61240 skyline RanchRoad,Bend; 541-382-3221. THURSDAY • Taste of Leadership Bend Class:Highlights of the complete Leadership Bend program, followed by a caterednetworking reception at Elevate,the CascadesCulinary Institute; registration required; $30; 1-5 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College,Wille Hall, 2600 N.W.College Way; www.bendchamber. org/community-is-on/ community-events/a-tasteof-leadership-bend-bend-or/. • Search EngineStrategies 1:Learn the do's and don'ts of searchengine optimization. Registration required; $99; 6-8 p.m.; Central OregonCommunity College, 2600N.W.College Way, Bend;541-383-7270. FRIDAY • Grant Writingfor Nonprofits:Learn to select grant opportunities for nonprofits and write successful applications. Registration required. Computer iab;$89;9a.m .-4 p.m.; La PineCommunity Center, 1 6405 First St.; 541-536-2223 or www. lapineparks.org. MONDAY • Healthcare ITTechnician: Preparation for theCompTIA HIT-001 Certification exam. Learn to study incompliance with all of thechanging rules andregulations, and the computer operations that makethis possible. Registration required;$449; 5:30-8:30 p.m.;COCC Chandler Building, 1027 N.W. TrentonAve., Bend; 541-383-7270. • For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday'sBulletin or visit bendbulleun.com/bizcal

PFIZER AND ASTRAZENECA

EXECUTIVE FILE

the business in 2005. He began casual operations a year later, upon moving back to Bend, consulting as a sole practitioner. In late 2013, he pursued serious growth, moving the company into an office in NorthWest Crossing and began hiring his staff. "Working independently was always part of mymaster plan, but a corporate background is necessary for the sake of experience

ly change a company's future," he said. "We really do focus on getting results, not just talking about stuff." For example,for a company needing an executive, Cascadian can providemanagement coaching or a candidate to fill the posi-

What is your • favorite part about owning and operating Cascadian Group? • Working daily • with a team and with clients who appreciate a unique, no-nonsense,results-oriented business philosophy. Having control of our own destiny.

Q•

A

Whathas • been the biggest challenge with getting Cascadian Group up andrunning? • Setting aside • the inevitable distractions, and focusing as intensely on our own business as we focus oneverybody else's.

Q•

the company at nearly 70 billion pounds at a time when

rejection of what the U.S.

AstraZeneca's market capital-

drug giant called its final offer earlier this month. The cash-

ization was roughly 55 billion pounds. AstraZeneca de-

and-shareoffer,whichvalued AstraZeneca at about $119

manded an offer of more than 74 billion pounds.

billion, would have created the

world's largest pharmaceutical company. Pfizer had indicated that it

would not pursue a hostile bid, which would allow AstraZeneca's shareholders to vote on

Pfizer's final offer valued

That Pfizer was unable to use its vast clout to woo its

smaller rival, whose performance had been less than spectacular, marks a coup for AstraZeneca. The company staged a spir-

the deal without the approval ited defense against the takeof AstraZeneca's board. Under over, arguing that its pipeline, British takeover rules, Pfizer dry not long ago, was chock cannotcome back with anfull of promising new drugs, other offer for AstraZeneca for six months. The earliest

it could offer a higher price would be in three months if AstraZeneca's board agreed to

the talks. "We continue to believe

among them MEDI4736, a

lung cancer drug, which some analysts thought could be worth up to $6 billion. AstraZeneca played up Pfizer's interest, if the merger known as an inversion. Such

right executive can be found, said

full value for AstraZeneca based on the information that

a deal would allow Pfizer to escape a higher American

Nate LiaBraaten, manager of con-

was available to us," Ian Read,

corporatetax rate and free

sulting operations and finance. Clients are typically companies in transition, facing significant challenges and events. Moyer said Cascadian is working with

Pfizer's chairman and chief executive, said in a statement. "As we said from the start, the pursuit of this transaction was a potential enhancement to

its overseas profits from any claims by U.S. tax collectors. British politicians weighed in, arguing that Pfizer should guarantee jobs, even though

our existing strategy."

AstraZeneca has eliminated

industry expertise will continue to

grow and evolve," Moyer said.

The advances by Pfizer, the

maker ofbest-selling drugs like Lipitor and Viagra, pitted two of the world's largest

drugmakers against each other, with powerful political forces from Westminster to

the United States weighing in on corporate taxes, cancer researchand pharmaceutical

jobs in Britain, where an economic recovery is underway

— Reporter: 541-617-7818, rrees@bendbulleti n.com

Cost to insure a family: $23,215 By Jason Millman

Employees' share of the

The Washington Post

costs has been rising faster73 percent since 2007 — than

care for a family of four with the employer contribution, employer-based insurance which has grown 52 percent this year is $23,215, according over the same period. Don't blame the four-yearto the Milliman actuarial old Affordable Care Act for

these changes, however. amount has more than douMilliman says the Affordable bled in the past 10 years. The Care Act has barely had any goodish news: That cost grew impact so far on these large just 5.4percent between 2013 employer plans, but that's and 2014, the slowest growth aboutto change. That $23,215 figure isn't what the employee pays, though. Employers pay about 60 percent ofthosecosts ($13,520), while workers pay the rest through payroll deductions ($5,908) and out-ofpocket costs ($3,787).

offer for AstraZeneca" in the wake of the British company's

compelling and represented

tion on an interim basis until the

"(We) help founders and senior executives turn challenges into opportunities that can substantial-

rate since Milliman started tracking this in 2002.

prospects."

were to go through, to relocate to Britain for tax purposes,

ment teams.

firm. The bad news first: That

the company and its attractive

In a statement, Pfizer said it "does not intend to make an

that our final proposal was

and credibility," he said. "I had a lot on my plate over the years, and clients from Central California late last year ... I decided to focus to Northern Washington, in a a lot more on building my own variety of industries including business, as much as I'd previous- energy, specialty foods, software ly spent working on other people's applications, medical devices and businesses." banking. The cost of its services The company provides guid- varies by project, ranging from ance to businesses, from startups roughly $100 to $250 per hour. to those seeking a merger or oth- He said Cascadian Group may er major transition, and executive occasionallyreceive an ownermanagement consulting, as well ship stake or shares of its clients' as merger and acquisition support. companies. When clients come to the CasMoyer said he hopes Cascadian cadian Group,the team focuses will be at least five times bigger in on helping them develop business the next five years. "I think our geographic reach, models, financial, marketing and operations plans and manage- team composition and depth of

The typical cost of health

ain's second-largest pharmaceutical company.

Pfizer made multiple offers

for AstraZeneca, all of which were rebuffed by the British company's board. The directors said that the latest offer, made May 18, "undervalues

cost increases. Higher outof-pocket costs are fueling efforts around health care price transparency, and that's making consumers become better health careshoppers. Conversely, an improving economy and an increase in

expensive specialty drugs will drive costs up. Employer health plans are undergoing a major transition. They're increasingly looking at things like "reference pricing" and private health insurance exchanges, which put more responsibility on employees to control

plenty of them. By the end of the bidding process,AstraZenecashareholders were split on the company's decision to balk at the

deal. Its largest shareholder, BlackRock, supported its decision to walk awaybut wanted AstraZeneca to renew its talks with Pfizer about a potential

but employment remains

deal at a later date, according to a person familiar with the

shaky.

dlscusslons.

U.S. winstrade dispute with Chinaoverduties By John Zarocosias McClatcky Foreign Staff

trade representative, hailed Friday's ruling, which will

GENEVA — The World Trade Organization ruled Friday that China had violated trade rules when it slapped

have the effect of cutting the

punitive duties as high as 21 percent on American-made

The U.S. auto industry employs nearly 850,000 workers

cars and sport utility vehicles.

throughout the country, from

cost of U.S.-made cars and SUVs imported for sale inside China.

The ruling was an enorMichigan to California. "The message is clear: Chimous victory for U.S. automotive manufacturers, coming na must follow the rules, just at a time of rising tensions like other WTO members," between the U.S. and China Froman said. He promised on a range of strategic issues. to continue to press China It was the second time in two to change trade practices months that the U.S. has won a WTO trade case against China. In March, the WTO

"that unfairly restrict U.S.

importer must pay on items

health care costs. That's all to say that the

ruled that China had restricted trade by imposing export duties on so-called rare earth elements, the lightweight, su-

forceemployers to scaleback health plans.

strategies large employers ul-

perconductive minerals that

Chineseauto manufacturers

timately adopt to keep down

that U.S. automobiles with

Milliman points to other

costs — and what employees can bear — are still evolving.

are critical to a wide range of high-tech products.

The actuarial firm cites the

health care law's impending excise tax on "Cadillac" plans

— valued at at least $27,500 for family coverage starting in 2018 — as a factor that will

factors that will push down

Michael Froman, the U.S.

exports." The duties — fees that an it wishes to sell inside China — were imposed in 2011 in response to a 2009 petition from

largeengines were being sold at unfairly low prices.

DEEDS • Signature Homebuilders LLC to Charles J.and Suzanne M.Lange, Laurel Springs, Lot 44, $249,900 • Hugh G. andColly J. Rosenberg to AaronW. McGrath andPetra D. St. John, Township 20, Range 10, Section 1, $220,000 • Stonegate Investment LLC andStonegate Development LLC to Stonewater Development Inc., Stonegate, PUD Phase 1,Lots 23-25, 35, 57, 61-62, $420,100 • Clifford J. Hari to Thomas D.and EricaK.

Grey, Winchester, Lot24, Phase 1, Lot 7,$209,000 Block 2, $211,300 • Lisa M. Luehrs, affiant • Robert and Katherine of the estate of StephenA. Wellen to Ronald B.Gregg Baisch, to FederalNational andEllenC.Wood,Pines Mortgage Association, at Pilot Butte, Phase 1and Ridge at EagleCrest 56, Lot 1 27,$202,103.63 2, Lot 30, $275,000 • pacwest II LLC to • Pacwest II LLC toRolf W. Christine M. Hunter,Eagles and Marcia L Raak,Eagles Landing, Lot 39, $259,872 Landing, Lot 24,$257,677 • Melba L.Ross,trustee • Justin R. and Anne of the RossFamily Trust, E Shraketo JosephJ. to Aaron S.andAmy M. Kozlowski, CadyAddition, Tarnow, OutbackSection Lot 5, Block 1,$230,000 of Sunrise Village, Block 2, • Hayden Homes LLC $467000 to Floyd W.TaulbeeJr., • Molly J. Seideman to Obsidian Ridge, Phases1 Stacy Anable, Sunpointe, and 2, Lot 26, $265,000

• John W. Cooperand Lisa D. Jimenez,who acquired title as Lisa D.Cooper, to Matthew P.Brophy and Sarah L. Bassett, Howells Hill Top Acres, Lot4, Block 8, $210,000 • Markand Angela Heilbrunn to Joel P. and Dawn M.Borellis, Mountain VillageWest, Phase 2, Lot 6, Block18, $339,500 • SFI CascadeHighlands LLC to Devon M.and David R. Jero,Tetherow, Phase 1,Lot103, $225,000

• Richard Campand Paula Stone toShannon R. and Bryan P.Minkel, Sagewood, Lot 49, $405,000 • David A. andShelley Huckins to William T.and Mary S. Brothers, Awbrey Butte Homesites, Phase1, Lot 2, Block 1,$482,500 • Lamar N. andHelena J. Blair, trustees of the Lamar andHelena Blair Living Trust, to Jerry J. Haverland, BrokenTop, Lot 32, $1,175,000 • Creative RealEstate Solutions LLC toMark A.

Ullrich, Partition Plat 201 33, Parcel 1,$300,000 • Bruce J. Englund and MarianneRyburnEnglund, who tooktitle as MarianneEnglund, to Lamar N.and HelenaJ. Blair, trustees of the Lamar and HelenaBlair Living Trust, Parksat BrokenTop, Lot 32, $51 2,500 • Heritage HomesNW LLC to Peter A.Wray and Andrea S.Kaye,NorthWest Crossing, Phase17,Lot 752, $521,007.27 • Enduring Log Finishes LTD to GlennMillar, Bonne

Home Addition to Bend, Lot 21, Block 25,$500,000 • Floyd C. Antonsen and Elizabeth AguilarAntonsen to Brianand Mark Redfern, 27th Street Crossing, Lot16, $234,947 • Buettner Land GroupLLC to HaydenHomes LLC, Village Meadows,Lots 2324and 28-30, $225,000 • Julie A. Presler, formerly known as Julie A.Smith, to Josh andLaura Richardson, Deschutes RiverWoods,Lot 5, Block 1, $305,000


IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Food, Recipes, D2-3 Home, Garden, D4-5 Living Smart, D5 THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, MAY 27, 2014

O www.bendbulletin.com/athome

HOME

FOOD h

htur,.

Courtesy Rust-Oleum

These vases were painted with a reflective mirror paint.

Painting beyond the basics:mirrored,

chalkboardandmore

By Alison Highberger eFor The Bulletin

By Linda Turner Griepentrog For The Bulletin

uinoa. Four years ago, we were mispronouncing it "quinn-OH-ah" and thinking it was probably just the latest food fad — a curiosity that would have its 15 minutes of fame and then fade away when the next hot food trend came along — like kale.

If you've ever bought paint, you've probably been bombarded with questions

from a salesperson wellversed in the various products, finishes and product us-

age. In addition to color, you have several otherfactorsto decide upon, depending on the end use. Do you want latex or oilbased paint? Do you want a

Now it looks as if "KEEN-wah" is here to stay. (Kale, too.) Quinoa is no longer hard to find. Mainstream grocery stores stock a wide variety of quinoa products, from bulk and packaged white, red and black varieties, to quinoa flours, flakes,

flat, eggshell, gloss or semigloss finish? The inquisition can be mind-boggling. But as you search beyond the basics for painting walls, ceilings and trims, there are several

cereals, blends with rice and spices, sprouted quinoa, soups and more.

other paint types to consider

Courtesy Krylon

This lamp was painted with a natural stone finish.

for home decor and craft uses.

Chalkboard cues Available in a host of col-

ors, and in spray and brushon applications, chalkboard paint is one of the most popu-

lar in home decorating. It can turn almost any surface into a slatelike finish that you can

write on with ordinary chalk. This specialty paint can take up to three days to dry

thoroughly, depending on the surface it's applied to, so don't be in a hurry to label

requires "curing" before you scribble — a simple process of rubbing chalk all over it, embedding it into the painted surface, and then erasing it completely. Why do you want to write on things? Despite the latent

childhood fantasy of writing on walls, it's handy for all kinds of decor and entertain-

ing uses. Paint a long wooden tray and label the types of cheeses on your party cheeseboard.

everything in sight. It also

SeePaint/D4

GARDEN

Smart watering habits for here inCentra Oregon Photos by Andy Tullis I The Bulletin

By Marielle Gallagher

small farms instructor with

The Bulletin

Oregon State University Ex-

Watering in the High

The quinoa fritters at 900 Wall in Bend are dressed with a spicy aioli. See recipe, Page 03.

Desert can be a tricky task.

Quinoa's appeal is that it's a mildly nutty-tasting ancient seed (often mistaken for a grain), sacred to the Incas, that's low in fat, cholesterol and sodium and high in protein (with all nine essential amino acids, it's a complete protein), fiber, vitamins and minerals. It's gluten-free, too.

Surprisingly, quinoa (Chenopodium quinoa) is a member of the goosefoot family of plants,

And there's no easy answer for how much and how often

watering.

water should be applied. It

the output of the watering system being used. A measuring technique that works for automatic sprinkler systems, hand-held devices or oscillating sprinklers, to ensure all sprinkler heads are dispensing water equally, is to set out

seems the best answers may be found in the soil. There are many variables that affect

water usage, such as season, weather, precipitation levels and the type of plants, shrubs

which includes beets, chard

and trees planted. But knowing how to check water levels

and spinach.

and moisture in the soil will

help prevent over- and under-watering. Toni Stephan,

Quinoa has rocketed to

tension, offered some tips for establishing best practices for It's important to first know

tuna or soup cans in random

locations across the lawn and garden beds. SeeWatering/D4

international fame. Maybe you missed it,

TODAY'S RECIPES

but 2013 was declared the I

International Year of Quinoa by the Food and Agricultural

+,1,

it

Quinonrecipes:BendBootcamp Hot Quinoa Cereal, Hillside Inn Bed and Breakfast's Quinoa Breakfast Cereal, TimGarling's Jackalope Grill QuinoaSalad with SmokedSalmon and Fresh Herbs, Hillside BedandBreakfast's Quinoa Muffins, Mark Bittman's SmokyQuinoaCrumbs,D2

Organization of the United More quinoarecipes: Quinoa Stir-Fry with Veggies & Egg,900 Wall's Tofu QuinoaFritters, Quinoa, Apricot and Nut Clusters, Mushroom andQuinoaSoup, D3

Nations, "to focus world attention on the role that

Hillside Bed andBreakfast serves uptasty quinoa muffins. See recipe, Page 02. Yogurt drinks:Rhubarb Shake,Salt and PepperLassi with Mint, D3

quinoa's biodiversity and nutritional value play in food security, nutrition and poverty eradication," the United Nations announced last year.

Good recipesfor whenthe garduninggoeswrong:Mixed Green Salad withHard-BoiledEggsand RadishPods,FavaBeanSalad with Mint, Burrata and Pistachios,D4

SeeQuinoa/D2 Recipe Finder:A cheeseball to please all, D3


D2 THE BULLETIN• TUESDAY, MAY 27, 2014

FOOD

Next week: Building the best burger

Quinoa

He shared his recipe for Quinoa Salad with Smoked noa crumbs — he called it "my Salmon and Fresh Herbs (see favorite new quinoa obses- recipe). It's not on his restausion," plus a soup and dessert rant's menu, but he told us he recipe with quinoa as a key frequently makes a simple quiingredient. noa recipe for lunch. "I cook it up with some rice, Bend chef Timothy Garling of The Jackalope Grill is a big in a rice cooker, and then mix fan of the tiny seeds. in blackbeans and salsa. I often York Times writer Mark Bitt-

man's recipe for crunchy qui-

Continued from 01

Quinoa at every meal If you cook quinoa as a pilaf or side salad and never venture in other directions with it, it's time to try this powerful food

again. We have some delicious local

"I like the idea of it, as much as I like the taste of it. I think it

Quinoanutrition Quinea (1 cup,cooked) 222 calories 3.6 g calories from fat 0 g saturated fat 0 g polyunsaturated fat 0 g monounsaturated fat

out blowing the familybudget," Freeland said. "I work with a lot of women

that are older and less likely to change what they're eating. If I can get them to add something

Source: www.caloriecount.about.com

new — add quinoa to their salad every day — it becomes more filling, and they think beyond meat or eggs as a source of protein," Freeland said.

ple just trying to get into better shape. "Our family was eating a lot

Cookingquinoa

have that for lunch with avo-

cado on top: complete protein, breakfast cereal, muffins and tastes similar to hazelnuts or al- tons of fiber, it's good for you. bootcamp.com). a stir-fry (from Hillside Bed monds. I like the way it makes I don't serve that in the restauShe developed it to get a good and Breakfast and Bend Boot- those curlicues — almost an rant. When I'm not working, I tasting, nutrition-rich bre~ into her family — her husband, camp), to a tofu quinoa fritter ampersand. Quinoa is a com- eat very simply," Garling said. D'Anza Freeland, owner of two young daughters and herappetizer (from 900 Wall), and plete protein, it can be grown in an entree salad (from The Jack- a wide variety of places and in Bend Bootcamp, has a recipe self — and she knew it would alope Grill). all sorts of conditions, and it's forHot Quinoa Cereal (seerec- be great for her clients: athletes, We've also induded New easy to cook," said Garling. ipe) on her website (www.bend- Ironmen-in-training and peorecipes for you to try, from hot

tional protein to your diet with-

0 mg cholesterol 0 mg sodium 0mg potassium 0 mg carbohydrates 0 mg dietary fiber 0g sugars 8.1 g protein

of oatmeal, and although that

Cooking quinoa is about as easy as cooking gets. Measure

was fine, I was trying to add it, and then rinse it in a sieve, more protein, and especially unless the package says the more plant-based protein. Qui- quinoa is already washed. noa is a great way to add addiContinued on next page

Bend Bootcamp Hot Quinoa Cereal Makes 3 to 4servings. 1 C quinoa, rinsed

2 TBS chia seeds Handful of blueberries Big dash of cinnamon

1t/s C water 1 C almond milk

Honey or agave totaste to sweeten

Place quinoa in a sieve, rinse with water stirring with your fingers, and then drain. Put the rinsed quinoa in a medium saucepan along with the 1t/2 cups of

water and the cup of almond milk. Bring the mixture to a boil, and then cover and simmer for 15 to 20 minutes. Add the chia seeds, blueberries, dash of cinnamon and sweetener; stir, and it's ready to serve.

~. r

— O'AnzaFreeland, owner of Bend Bootcamp, wwwbendbootcamp.com, 541-350-5343 Quinoa works for breakfast, too. Serve with a variety of toppings. 1

Hillside Inn Bed and Breakfast's Quinoa Breakfast Cereal Makes 4 to 6servings. My guests are always surprised to beserved quinoa for breakfast, and it's always a hit.

Photos by Andy Tullis /The Bulletin

Tim Garling of the Jackalope Grill enjoys making this Quinoa Salad with Smoked Salmon and Fresh

Herbs.

— Annie Goldner, ownerandcook 1t/2 C light coconut milk 1 C water t/s tsp salt

1 C organic quinoa, rinsed and /s tsp fresh grated nutmeg

Tim Garung's Jackalope Grill Quinoa Salad with Smoked Salmon and Resh Herbs

drained t/2 tsp ground cinnamon

Makes 4 servings. Rinse and drain the quinoa, and then combine the coconut milk, water, cinnamon, nutmeg and quinoa in a This isn't currently on the restaurant's menu, but it may beavailable this summer. medium saucepan.Gradually bring the mixture to a low boil. Reduceheat to low; cover and simmer for15 to 20 minutes or until most of the liquid is absorbed. Turn off the heat, and let it stand, covered, for 5 minutes. Serve the quinoa cereal in bowls, andaccompany it with an assortment of toppings: fresh berries, nuts, dried FOR THE QUINOA: t/4 tsp fleur de sel or other flaky FOR THE GARNISH: fruit, toasted coconut, yogurt, brown sugar and apitcher of hot milk, for example. 1 C quinoa sea salt 1 ripe avocado, cut into cubes t/sC pine nuts — Hillside lnn Bedand Breakfast, 1744 NN 12th St, Bend, wwwbendhillsideinncom, 5413699660 2 C water or chicken stock(or (optional) vegetable stock) t/4 C dried cranberries (optional) t/a C microgreens (optional) 3 TBS unsalted butter

- -- -- - ENTER THE BULLETIN'S -- ----

4 scallions, sliced thin t/2 C finely chopped red bell

FOR THE SALAD: 2 TBS extra-virgin olive oil t/2 tsp lemon zest 2 tsp lemon juice

2 tsp honey

pepper

1 head butter lettuce, separated

into "cups" (optional)

t/a C sliced French breakfast

t/2 C finely chopped carrot

(optional)

radishes (optional) 2 TBS finely sliced basil

t/4 tsp ground black pepper Pinch of ground cinnamon

chiffonade (optional)

t/2 Ib smoked salmon, coarsely

brokenup

LOOK-ALIKE CONTEST

Make quinea:There are lots of ways to cook quinoa. Oneof the easiest is to use a rice cooker (1 part quinoa to 2 parts liquid, then follow your rice cooker's instructions.) Look at the quinoa package. If it says the quinoa hasbeenwashed, then you canskip washing. If you are not sure, measure the quinoa, put it in a fine-mesh strainer and run cold water over it, stirring with your fingers, and then drain. Place the quinoa in asmall saucepan with 2 cups of water or stock and butter. Bring to a boil, cover, and simmer over low heat for about15 to 20 minutes, or until all liquid is absorbed. Removefrom heat and let stand for 5 minutes. Fluff with a fork and let cool completely. Make the salad:Mix together the olive oil, lemon juice, lemon zestand honey.Gently toss this dressing with the cooled quinoa andthe other salad ingredients. Tasteand add moresalt, if desired. Ts serve:There are manyways to present this salad on the plate, and you are limited only by your imagination. A nice way is to make little "cups" on the plate out of butter lettuce. Place the quinoa salad in the lettuce leaves, and placethe pieces of smokedsalmon ontop. Garnish with any orall of the suggested options: avocado, radish slices, basil chiffonade. Bonappetit! — Tim Gani'ng's JackalopeGnll, 750N.N Lava Road, Bend, wwwjackalopegrill com, 541-318-8435

Hillside Bed and Breakfast's Quinoa Muffins Makes12. Adapted from a Martha Stewart recipe, these also makenice mini-loaves that are perfect for gift-giving. The muffins are extremely densebut havethis wonderful earthy flavor and makea perfect treat to take hiking, as they do not crumble easily. — Annie Goldner, ownerandcook

.. anN

Just in time for Father's Day ... The Bulletin is hosting a Father-Son Look-alike contest.

ENTER FOR FREE AT:

www.bendbulletin.comllookalike (Simply fill out the form and upload your photo. At least one of the individuals must reside in Central Oregon.)

The winning pair will receive two box seat tickets to a Bend Elks baseball game along with dinner, Twhirts and hats. RunnerS-uP will receive $25 Old Mill giff CardS.

t/a C quinoa, rinsed and drained '/2 C of water t/2 C light coconut milk 2 C all-purpose flour s/4 C dark brown sugar

or call 541-617-7860

The Bulletin bendbulletin.com Terms & conditions: Nopurchase required for contest entry. Your first name, last name, email address,and submitted photos may be shared withThe Bulletin circulation department and contest co-sponsors.Yougrant rights to allow TheBulletin to use your submitted photos in print, online, and in other marketing materials.TheBulletin has the right to reject photo entries for any reason,especially if they are offensive in nature. Employeesand families of employees of WesternCommunications are ineligible to participate.

2 Ig eggs 1 tsp vanilla

t/2 C raisins or chopped dates

— Hillside inn Bedand Breakfast, 1744 NIflt 12th St., Bend, www bendhillsideinn com, 541-389 9660

Mark Bittman's Smolqf Quinoa Crumbs

TO VIEW ALL THE ENTRIES VISIT

QUESTIONS? Please e-mail:ajohnsonObendbulletin.com

well)

t/a C whole milk t/2 C sour cream

Preheat the oven to 350degrees, and grease12 muffin tins with butter or cooking spray. Bring the water and light coconut milk to a boil in a small saucepan andadd the rinsed and drained quinoa. Simmer covered until all liquid is absorbed, about15 minutes, and then let it cool. Don't overcook the quinoa. It should be like grains. In a bowl, mix together all of the dry ingredients (flour, brown sugar, baking powder, salt) and the cooled, cooked quinoa. In a second bowl, mix together all of the wet ingredients (oil, raisins or dates, whole milk, sour cream, eggs, vanilla). Add thewet ingredients to the dry ingredients and stir gently until combined. Fill the12 greased muffin tins, and bakefor 30 minutes. Removethe muffins from the tins immediately upon removing from the oven, and cool on a rack. Store the muffins in an airtight container for up to 5 days, or keep them in the freezer.

Deadline to enter is 9 a.m. on June 9th. Winners will be notified on Friday, June 13th.

www.bendbulletin.comlcontests

1t/s tsp baking powder 1 tsp salt t/sC vegetable oil (canola works

1 C quinoa

Sait

1 TBS smokedpaprika

Heat the oven to375. Put the quinoa and alarge pinch of salt in a mediumsaucepan. Addwater, and cover the quinoa by about1 inch. Bring to a boil, and thenadjust the heat sothat the mixture bubbles gently. Cover, and cook, stirring occasionally, until the quinoa is tender andthe water is absorbed, 15 to 20 minutes. If any water remains in the pot, strain it off.

Spread the quinoa on a large rimmed baking sheet, using your hands to break upany clumps. Sprinkle with salt and the smokedpaprika. Toss to combine, andspreadthe quinoa into as even alayer as possible. Bake, tossing once or twice with a spatula, until the grains dry out and become crisp, 15 to 25 minutes, depending on how crunchy you want them. Useimmediately, or cool completely and store in an airtight container in the fridge for up to aweek. — The SundayNewYorkTimes, Jan.29, 2014, wwwnytimes.com


TUESDAY, MAY 27, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

F OO D From previous page Quinoa Stir Fiy with Veggies Sc Egg "Quinoa grows with a protective, bitter coating of sapo- Makes 4 to 6servings. nin (a glucose compound) that keeps birds and bugs from de- ~/s C quinoa, rinsed and drained 1 clove garlic, smashed vouring it. In processing, most ~/2 C of water Salt to taste of the saponin is removed, but ~/s C of light coconut milk Freshly ground pepper to taste quinoa must still be thoroughly 2 TBS olive oil Fresh parsley, chopped rinsed before cooking. Saponin A variety of vegetables you like, Lemon zest (optional) lathersunder running water,so such as: Poached or lightly fried egg for rinse until there are no suds," Sliced or diced yellow or green each serving notes the authors of "Moosezucchini or summersquash Pepper jack or ancho cheddar wood Restaurant Favorites," by Fresh corn, sliced off 1ear cheese, grated, for garnish The Moosewood Collective, St. Red and yellow bell pepper, (optional)

o u rin o e wor,no oosmoo

Martin's Griffin Press, 2013.

Smoothies are everywhere,

diced

1 tsp Chinese garlic red pepper

By Melissa Clark New York TimesNews Service

When it comes to yogurt drinks, we've gotten ourselves into a smoothie rut.

For every cup of quinoa, 1 sm bok choy, sliced sauce mixed into ~/4 Clow fat add about two cups of water or 1 green onion, diced plain yogurt broth to a medium saucepan, andbring it to aboil. Reduce the Prepare basic quinea:Bring the ~/2cup of water and ~/2cup of light heat, coverthepan and simmer coconut milk to a boil in a small saucepanandadd the rinsed anddrained the quinoa for about 15 minutes, quinoa. Simmer covered until all liquid is absorbed, about 15 minutes, or until the liquid is absorbed. and then let it cool. Don't overcook the quinoa. It should be like grains. Set One cup of uncooked quinoa aside the cooked quinoa to cool. will quadruple in size after In a wok, saute your choice of vegetables in 2 tablespoons of olive oil cooking. until tender, about 5 minutes. Seasonthemwith salt, freshly ground pepWhen done, quinoa has per, lemon zest (optional) and fresh parsley. Stir in the cookedquinoa. the little white curlicues that Serve the quinoaandveggies in shallow bowls, and top with a poached Garling said he likes. The or lightly fried egg. Sprinkle with grated cheese, and top with a dollop of Whole Grains Council (www. the spiced yogurt, if desired. — Hillside lnn Bedand Breakfast, 1744N.W. 12thSt., Bend, wholegrainscouncil.org) calls

at every juice bar, street cart

them "little white tails," and ex-

'ltukey; borhani, the fr a-

wev.bendhillsideinn.com, 541-369-9660

plains that they're the germ of

and deli, and premixed in bottles lining supermarket shelves.

Not that there's anything wrong with sweet, frothy fruit-and-yogurt drinksI whip them up often. But they are not the only cultured beverages out there.

In yogurt-loving countries around the world, compelling possibilities abound. There's ayran, the salted foaming yogurt libation of grant herbal draft of Bangladesh; and India's sweet

the quinoa kernel that stick out

when they're cooked. tehhing," Christensen said. Creative cooks are exploring 900 Wall restaurant regularAnother hot spot in Central new ways to prepare quinoa, ly features quinoa on the menu, Oregon for quinoa is the Hill- induding food writer Bittman from an appetizer like Tofu side Bed and Breakfast at 1744 who, in January of this year, Quinoa Fritters with Spicy Aio- NW. 12th St. on Bend's west- shared his recipe for smoky quili (see recipe) to an entree with side (www.bendhillsideinn. noa crumbs (see recipe) in the quinoa, asparagus, kale and ro- com). Owner and cook Annie Sunday New York Times. "Sprinkle them on salads, mescosauce. Goldner frequently offers qui"We get a lot of compliments noa muffins, quinoa hot cereal stirfry dishes,pastas or anyfrom regularmeat eaters who and abreakfast veggie-and-qui- thing else you might be inclined give quinoa a try," Executive noa stir fry (see recipes) to her to finish with toasted bread sous chef Celena Christensen guests, among other choices. crumbs or chopped nuts," Bitt"I've never had a guest not man wrote. said. She has been working with executive chef Cliff Es- enjoy the quinoa. They're alQuinoa is making its mark linger for four years, developing ways surprised to be served on restaurant and home menus what they call "friendly and quinoa for bre~ a n d are fa-around the world, while public seasonal menus using local, re- miliar with it beingused instead policymakers are exploring sponsibly sourced ingredients, of rice for meals. Adding fruit how it can help alleviate hunger whenever possible." to the hot quinoa cereal, or veg- and malnutrition. That's pretty 900 Wall cooks quinoa with a gies and egg to the quinoa stir- big stuff for a tiny food. No wonvegetable nage."It's awhite wine fry, reallycreates a nutritionally der we're stiII keen for quinoa. and white vegetable stock: on- balanced meal, and it's so easy — Reporter: ahighbert,erlmac. ions, celery, leeks and herbs. It's to prepare," Goldner said. com

rosewater lassis, to name

just a few. Whatever form they take, yogurt drinks are nutritious,

refreshing concoctions that can accompany a meal or replace one — an enticing option in summer heat. Once you start thinking AndrewScrivani I New YorkTimes News Service file photo beyond the typical smoothie Rhubarb and rosewater shakes are madewith rhubarb, honey, formula, it's pretty easy to Greek yogurt, rosewater and a garnish of pistachios. come up with your own yogurt-laced combinations. When you have excelRhubarb Shake lent yogurt, it's best to keep

things simple. Try mixing it Makes 2 servings. with a touch of salt, sugar or both. Then add a little water to thin it out and serve it

over ice cubes. It's a cooling, restorative drink perfect for

ablazing afternoon. Slightly more complex is a salt and pepper lassi that

also includes fresh mint leaves, which are tradition-

900 Wall's Tofu Quinoa Aitters

al, and lime zest, which

Makes about 4 dozen fritters. 1 block soft tofu, pressed

2 egg yolks

overnight (see instructions below) 2 C red quinoa, rinsed and

~/s C chickpea flour 1 TBS fennel seed, toasted and

ground ~/s Cparsley, chopped

drained

D3

~/s tsp white pepper 1 tsp salt

1 qt (about 4 C)canola oil for frying

Rosewater, to taste

Finely chopped pistachios, for garnish

Stir together rhubarb, honey and 2 tablespoons water in a medium saucepan. Bring to a simmer andcook, stirring often, for 6 to 8 minutes, until rhubarb has melted and becomejamlike. Let cool. (Rhubarb can be made up to aweek aheadand refrigerated.) Add rhubarb compote, yogurt, ice cubesand afew dashes of rosewater to blender. Blend until smooth. Taste andadd more honeyand rosewater, if desired. Pour into 2 glassesandgarnish with pistachios.

is not. A touch of brown sugar keeps the acidity in check. The pepper stands in for the toasted cumin seeds that usually appear Salt and Pepper Lassi with Mint in a savory lassi, and adds a slight bite. Makes 2 servings. Lastly, on th e

Press tofu between afew paper towels and put a weight on top to remove excess liquid the night before you plan to cook the fritters. You should lose '/4 to~/swater weight. Cookthe quinoaaccording topackageinstructions, and then cool completely. This canalso bedone the night before. Heat the canola oil in a deeppot to 350 to 375 degrees for frying. Combine all of theingredients in alarge bowl until well-mixed. Youcando this with awhisk, or putall of the ingredients in a mixer onmediumspeed.Thetofu should breakapart easily and becomepart of the mixture. Scoop tablespoon-size balls of the fritter mix, and pat into~/2-inchthick disks. This will help them to fry evenly. Fry the fritters in batches, 3 to 4 minutes for each batch, or until heavily browned. The fritters should float in the oil while they fry. Put the cooked fritters on paper towels to drain for a fewseconds, and then serve them hot with spicy aioli (see below). Thefritters are also a delicious snack, served cold.

/2 Ib rhubarb, thinly sliced (2 C) 5 TBS honey, more to taste 1 /2 C Greek yogurt 2 C ice cubes

s weeter

side, consider a rhubarb rosewater shake blended with honey and thick Greek

12 oz (1/2 C)yogurt (recipe calls for sheep's milk yogurt, if available)

/2 tsp ground black pepper /4 tsp kosher salt Zest of 1 sm lime

yogurt. Although the com- /4 C coarsely chopped mint Pinch of brownsugar bination of fruit and yogurt leaves suggests a smoothie, don't be fooled. This is heady, rich Combine all ingredients in a blender. Add 2 tablespoons water. Blend stuff, less suitable for break- until smooth. Serve over ice. fast than it is for dessert.

900 Wall's Spicy Aioli

c eese a to ease a

1 C homemade orstore-bought mayonnaise 3 TBS Sambal Oelek chili paste

Mix well together andserve with the tofu quinoa fritters as adipping sauce. — 900Wall Restaurant, 900N.IN Wall St., Bend, www.900Mrall.com, 641-323-6295

By Julie Rothman

Requests

The Baltimore Sun

Quinoa, Apricot and Nut Clusters Makes 20. In this version of a granola bar, clusters of quinoa, apricots, pistachios andsunflower seedsmakea sweetand delightfully chewy snack. White quinoa is used in this recipe, but you can substitute any variety; all share the same nutritional qualities, flavor and texture. — From theeditors of WholeLiving iNagazine 1~/s C water '/4 C white quinoa, rinsed and drained 1~/s C old-fashioned rolled oats

~/s C raw shelled pistachios,

coarsely chopped 1 C dried apricots, preferably unsulfured, thinly sliced ~/4 C sugar

(not instant)

2 TBS neutral-tasting oil, such

as canola or safflower 2 Ig eggs plus1 Ig eggwhite,

"These cheese balls were

with her.

absolutely wonderful. Everywhere I took one, people would ask me for my recipe, but of course I couldn't give it to them." The sorority stopped selling them years ago and she has been searching,

Carlin Lohrey from Kelso, Wis., is looking for a recipe for Super Ginger Cookies. She ter's piano teacher, and they said the recipe was giventoher were the best-tasting cookies many years ago by her daugh- she ever made.

lightly beaten

— "Power Foods: 150Delicious Recipes with the 38Healthiest Ingredients," from the editors of Whole Living Magazine, Clarkson/Potter Publisher, 2010

Mushroom and Quinoa Soup Makes 4 servings. Creamy white beans and quinoa combine with juicy mushroom slices for a luscious, protein-rich soup that makes a satisfying lunch or light supper. — Robin Robertson

1 Ig yellow onion, chopped 2 carrots, peeled and chopped 3 C finely shredded Napa

cabbage 1 C uncooked quinoa, rinsed and drained 5C mushroom or vegetable broth

3 TBS dry white wine, sherry or mirin 1 TBS minced fresh thyme or1 tsp dried thyme

1~/s C cooked white beans or1 (15.5-oz) can white beans,

~/2 tsp porcini powder (optional)

parsley Salt and freshly ground black pepper

12 oz white mushrooms, thinly

sliced (about 3 C)

She said she wrote to the

Looking for a hard-tofind recipe or cananswer a request? Write to Julie Rothman, Recipe Finder, TheBaltimore Sun, 501 N. Calvert St., Baltimore, MD 21278, or email baltsunrecipefinder© gmail.com. Namesmust accompany recipes for them to be published.

1~/s tsp pure vanilla extract

Preheat oven to350. Bring thewater to a boil in a small saucepan. Add quinoa; return to a boil. Stir once; cover, and reduce heat to a simmer. Cookuntil quinoa is slightly underdone (it will finish cooking in the oven) and has absorbed most of the liquid, about12 minutes. Using aslotted spoon, transfer quinoa to a rimmed baking sheet. Bake, fluffing with a fork occasionally, until pale golden, 30 to 35minutes. Transfer to a large bowl, andlet cool. Spread oats evenly on the baking sheet; bake stirring occasionally, until lightly browned, about 15 minutes. Add oats to bowl with quinoa. Spread seeds on baking sheet; bake, stirring occasionally, until lightly toasted, about 7 minutes. Add to quinoa mixture; let cool. Reduceoventemperature to 300. Toss nuts, apricots, sugarandsalt with quinoamixture. Mix honey,oil andvanilla into eggs;stir into quinoa mixture. Line an unrimmed baking sheet with parchment paper; lightly coat with cooking spray. Place '/4 cupmixture onto sheet for each cluster, spacing them 3 inches apart. Flatten to '/4-inch thick. Bake, rotating sheet halfway through, until crisp, about 25 minutes. Let cool completely on awire rack. Store loosely covered with aluminum foil, for up to 2 days, at room temperature. Nutrition information perserving (2 clusters): 329 calories; 3.4 g saturated fat; 7.2 g unsaturated fat; 42.3 mg cholesterol; 49 g carbohydrates; 10 gprotein; 139 mgsodium; 5 g fiber

1 TBS olive oil or ~/4 Cwater

a fundraiser. She would

RECIPE FINDER

purchase several of them restaurantsome years ago,but each year a n d s a y s, it would not share the recipe

Vegetable oil cooking spray

~/s C raw shelled sunflower seeds

Nancy Harrell from Niles, f r o m Mich., is searching for the S outh Bend, I n d., w a s recipe for what she called looking for a recipe mak- " Wilderness Soup." I t w a s ing a cheese ball like the served at Via Maria Trattoria one she would buy some in Holland, Mich. The soup years ago that was made was cream-based with mushand sold by a s orority rooms, garlic , rice and peri n M i shawaka, Ind., a s hapscabbage. S usan Fisher

rinsed and drained 2 TBS minced fresh Italian

Heat the oil or water in a large pot over medium heat. Add the onion, carrots and cabbageandcook, stirring occasionally, until softened, about 5 minutes. Add the quinoa, broth, wine and dried thyme (if using). Bring to a boil, then reduce theheat to a simmer and cook, covered, for 20 minutes. Stir in the porcini powder (if using), mushrooms, beans, fresh thyme (if using) and parsley. Season to taste with salt and pepperand cook until the mushrooms aretender, about10 minutes. Serve hot. — "OneDish Vegan:Morethan 150SoulSatisfying Recipes for Easyand Delicious OneBowl and OnePlate Dinners,"by RobinRobertson,TheHarvard Common Press,2013

Cheese Ball

with no luck, for the recipe

ever since.

Makes 8 servings.

She said the cheese balls ~/s C crumbled blue cheese were light and creamy and 8 oz cream cheese, at room rolled in chopped nuts and temperature /2 C finely chopped walnuts, parsley. 1 C shredded cheddar cheese pec ans, or pistachios No luck finding anyone f rom M i s h awaka w i t h Combine the cheeses well by hand or in a food processor and form the exact recipe that Fish- them into a ball. er was seeking, but good Place the nuts on apie plate. Roll the cheeseball in the nuts until comcheese ball recipes are pletely covered. Wrap the cheese ball in plastic wrap or wax paper and easy to come by. It's some- chill for 2 hours or up to 2 days. Removefrom refrigerator about 30 minthing I make frequently utes before serving. for entertaining. Variations:Instead of nuts, roll the cheese ball in finely chopped T he b a s e f o r mos t herbs, such as amixture of parsley, chives, dill or basil. You canalso use cheese balls is cream acombinat ionofchopped nutsand choppedherbs. cheese, and then it's a matter ofpersonal preference

as to what other cheeses and seasonings you add. My favorite recipe comes

from "The Crabby Cook" cookbook b y Je s sica Harper. (Full disclosure: I'm related to the author,

and the recipe in her book is credited to me.) It's easy, tasty and versatile. Feel free to substitute the

Batteries • Crystal • Bands

WATCH BATTERY SSiiii INFINITY WATCHREPAIR

c heeses and

toppings. And consider doubling the recipe and popping one ball in the freezer for the next time

unexpected guests stop by. You'll be glad you did.

503-887-4241 61405 S. Hwy. 97, Bend OR 97702 Office: 541.728.0411• Cell: 503.887.4241 Daniel Mitchell, Owner S tem & Crowns M o v e m e n ts


D4

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, MAY 27, 2014

HOME ck

AR D EN A

Paint

4

Next week: Planting combos foryour garden

A-' a

P.

Continued from 01 Label the drawers of a repurposed dresser so you

- «%X

know what's inside, and in

the office, detail contents of file drawers. It's also great for painting the base of wine glasses or coasters: You can scrawl the name of the drink's owner to avoid mix-ups. Or

turn an old picture or tray into a handy "Welcome, guests" greeting board. Canisters, wine bottles and home brews can be painted

Courtesy Rust-Oleum

Paint a tray with chalkboard paint to allow for labels for whatever you use it for. Chalkboard paint also works for kitchen walls.

with chalkboard paint labels Anne Cusack/Los Angeles Times

Mixed green salad with hard-boiled eggs and radish pods

to identify the contents. Or paint the refrigerator doors and createa large surface for

en t e ai enin s i s on'tmatc coo in taent

calendars and grocery lists.

Los Angeles Times

One thing I've learned for

certain since I put vegetable beds in our front yard is that,

as a gardener, I'm a pretty good cook. My agricultural shortcomings are not something I'm proud of. I start every growing season with the best of

intentions, laying out well-ordered plots that seem almost guaranteed to turn into things of beauty. But then life inter-

venes, weeks pass and somehow the whole operation has

gotten away from me. What starts with fantasies

of my photo in Sunset magazine winds up with a reality that warrants my picture in the post office — with the

one vegetable I've been able sweet taste but with only a to grow reliably (even I can't trace of the heat. It was kind kill a fava). But because the of like a cross between a radfavas take a long time to ma- ish and a sugar snap pea. ture, I thought I'd over-sow I started getting ideas. I some radishes — they pop up was bringing a salad to a so quickly that they'd be long friend's potluck that evening harvested by the time the fa- — a simple thing, mixed letvas came on. tuces and quartered hardSmart idea, right? Well, boiled eggs — so I tossed in fast-forward a c ouple of a handful of pods along with months and somehow a few some of the radish flowers of those radishes never did and blooms from other plants get picked (hey, I was busy). that had bolted. They had bolted and now The salad was deliciouswere sending up head-high and far prettier than my garshoots of flowers from some- den could ever hope to be. where hidden deep in the fava I did get some of those fava jungle. beans too, and after much Time to go in and rip them shucking and peeling, simall out. But when I went to do mered them briefly with garthat, I noticed that some of the

lic and mint and then served

branches were full of these them with burrata as another warning "Wanted: For plant tiny needle-shaped pods: salad. That, too, was good. murder." radish seed pods. I picked The beans were tender and The most recent example: one and tasted it. It was crisp full of that sweet, flash-ofThis winter, I planted fava and practically popped in my green spring flavor for which beans because they're the mouth. Think of a r a dish's we love favas so much.

Mixed Green Salad with Hard-Boiled Eggs and Radish Pods Makes 6 servings. 1 Ib mixed salad greens '/4 C olive oil

1 TBS Champagne orsherry 2 to 3 oz radish pods, or equal vinegar weight thinly sliced radishes

1 TBS freshly squeezed lemon Sait juice 3 hard-boiled eggs, peeled

Assorted herbs or other edible

flowers

Place the saladgreens in alarge mixing bowl. Mix the olive oil, lemon juice andvinegar in asmall bowl, and whisk until smooth. (Alternatively, combine them in a small lidded Iar and shake to emulsify.) Pour half of the dressing over the greensandtoss with your hands to lightly coat with dressing. Add only as much more as you need. Season to taste with salt. Mound the greens on aplatter. Cut the eggs in quarters and season with salt and freshly ground pepper. Arrange the eggsover the greens. Add the radish pods or sliced radishes to the samework bowl asthe salad was mixed in andtoss just to lightly coat. If you need moredressing, add it a dribble at a time. Scatter the radish pods orsliced radishes over the top of theeggs andgarnish with the herbflowers. Serve.

Fava Bean Salad with Mint, Burrata and Pistachios Makes 6 servings. 4 Ibs fava beans in pod Olive oil /3 C chopped green onion

Painting pointers No matter if you're using one of these fun cover-ups or everyday latex to spruce up

Since the paint can be used outdoors as well, you can paint

Glitz

a section of the fence for chil-

finish on most any surface us- basic pointers for painting ing a glitter paint. Tiny flecks success:

dren to draw on — no clean-

up needed; the rain will wash away the artwork, readying it for new.

Magneticappeal By Russ Parsons

protective spray helps with durability.

If you've ever wanted to turn a

It's easy to create a sparkly

of metal are included in the

aerosol can and applied along with the paint color pigments. This is a fun paint for photo frames, glassware and of course holiday ornaments and

s u r face into some- craft projects. A clear sealer

your home, there are some • Read t h e

in s t r u ctions

thoroughly before you purchase the product. • Note what types of surfac-

es the paint can (and cannot) be used on and whether it can be used indoors only, or out-

thing with magnetic proper- helps keep the glitter from po- doors as well, depending on ties, you're in luck as there's tentially flaking off during an your project. a magnetic paint just for the

item's use.

cause. It works on wood, masonry, drywall and plaster,

Another option for glitz is one of several types of metaland you can even combine it lic spray paints — from bright with chalkboard paint for a and shiny (almost mirrorlike) two-in-one artistic c anvas. to hammered, brushed and Its basic color is gray, but textured looks. it can be painted over with any latex color and still offer Glassglamour stick-to-itiveness. To add color to clear glass

Glow-in-the-dark giggles T his

and still maintain the trans-

parency, look for a stained

l u m i nescent p a i n t glass paint. This colorant

will glow an eerie green (or adds hues without changing other color, depending on the opacity. brand) for four to eight hours More opacity and texture after it's been charged with can becreatedusing afrosted light. It's a fun touch for kid's glass paint. Combine this one rooms, especially ceilings with mirror paint for an interwhere you can paint stars or esting yin-yang appearance. galaxies in fine detail. Also fun for light switches, lamp Rocksolid bases, stair edges and door Who would have thought frames, this paint can help that you could make somewith safety for t h ose who thing look like rock using a might be up at night. Glow- spray paint? Whether it's a in-the-dark paint can be used lamp base or an outdoor bird-

• What type of surface

preparation is needed? A clean,grease-free surface is a common requirement, though

some paint effects require sanding and/or priming. • The coverage area should be listed on the containercompare that to the size of

your project. Use this number in conjunction with how many coats of paint your project will require. There's nothing worse than running out of paint in the middle of a spray session. • Note the d rying t ime needed beforethe project can

be used. • When you get the paint home, try it on a small board

or other surface like your project before committing to the real deal. Some faux finishes

can require practice to achieve a professional look. • Protect the work surface,

on wood, metal, drywall and

bath, you can create the likes

and paint outdoors if possible

plastics with equal ghostly appeal, and it goes without saying that's it's fun for a party.

of ancient ruins or canyon rocks, or even beach sand or

or in a well-ventilated area. • It's especially import-

Some companies also make a fluorescent paint that glows

only under a UV or black light — also great for party ambiance.

Reflective elements Here's looking at you! If you want to create a reflective sur-

ant on some novelty paints to shake (or stir) the product for Ifyou prefera crackled por- a few minutes before applying celain look i n stead, there's it to mix up the pigments/ada can for that, as well. Actu- ditives. The mixing time and ally, it's a glaze applied over methods should be noted on the paint to create the tex- the label — don't cut it short. tured surface of centuries-old • Some m anuf a cturers granite with just the pssst of a button on the can.

artifacts. Love terra cotta? There's a paint for that, too. It's both for indoor and outdoor use, so you can refreshpots and ceramics

face on glass or acrylic tabletops, jars, vases, candle holders, etc., mirror spray paint to look like new. is the answer. When using And then there's faux maron glass, the paint is sprayed ble in a can, offering the veins on the underside, so the re- and colorations of this tradiflective properties are on the tional stone look. Makes you right side. Coating with clear wonder: How'd they do that?

recommend a protective fin-

ish applied over the paint for durability. Clear finishes are available in matte and shiny,

depending on the desired look. • Remember, if you don't l ike something you did paint over it and try again. — Reporter: gwizdesigns®aot com

2 (4-oz) balls fresh burrata (a

/2 C white wine Sait 1 TBS chopped fresh mint

fresh Italian cheese made

from mozzarella and cream) Freshly ground pepper

(green part only) 1 tsp lemon zest

/4 C chopped toasled pistachios

Shuck the beans into a work bowl. Cover the beans with boiling water and set aside until cool enough to handle. Cut a nick in the bottom of the skin of each beanwith your thumbnail and squeezethe inside beans /~to3cupsfavabeans. from the skin. Youshould have2t In a large skillet, heat /4 cup olive oil over medium heat andaddthe green onion and lemon zest. Add the fava beans, the white wine and 1 teaspoon salt, and simmer until the beans are just tender, about 7 to 10 minutes. Removefrom the heat, stir in the mint and cool until ready to serve. When ready to serve, mound the favas on a plate. Cut each burrata ball into quarters and arrange them over the top. Seasonthe burrata with a little more salt and freshly ground pepper, and drizzle lightly with olive oil. Scatter the chopped pistachios over the top andserve.

Watering Continued from 01 Then run the system for the same amount of time as if it

were set to run a typical watering schedule and check the depth of water in the cans.

"Collect all those cans. Measure where they are and see how much water is in it so you

could see if one area is getting t/~ inch of water and another is getting '/4 inch and you'd want

to correct the system," said Stephan. Another indicator of uneven coverage is if certain areas ofthe lawn become brown in the heat of summer.

egr<aP <~pog

This may be because those

areas are not getting enough

uNPf88' ~,P 8

water.

After discerning how much water is being distributed, gardeners should think about

the frequency for running the sprinklers. For an up-to-date location-specific indicator for rec-

ommended watering amounts, Stephan recommends usingthe 0

0

ggp g

o)

AgriMet website: www.usbr.

gov/pn/agrimet. AgiMet is a cooperative agricultural weather network that reports water us-

age specifications forthe Pacific Northwest, with stations located in Bend, Powell Butte, Ma-

dras and Warm Springs. The "Crop Water Use" feature of the

I,

website details how much water

shouldbe applied for lawns. In the spring, before sprinklers start running consistently,

2121 NE Division St Bend, OR 97701 I (541) 382-4171 g 641 NW Fir Ave Redmond, OR 97756 I (541) 548-7707

PQgg g Qgg

*Discount taken off Miller Paint's full retailprice. Prices available only at Bend & Redmond Oregon locations.

the soil should undergo a deep watering. "Because we have dry winters, our ground dries out," said Stephan. "We want to water more frequently and longer at first so the water goes

deep. We call that filling the soil trunk dry is ideal. The roots of profile with water." To achieve a tree spread out in a fan shape this, do two waterings back-to- from the trunk, meaning waback on the same day or once tering should cover the soil intwo days in arow. side the dripline. "You want that water to get a Tree roots need oxygen, so good 8 inches deep." To check be sure that the soil around a soil moisture, use a soil mois- tree isn't saturated with water. ture probe or dig a hole that is Because trees take their water about 12 inches deep to do a from the top 2 feet of soil, they squeeze test. To perform the will be happier with a deeper test, grab a fistful of dirt from soak. "If you water the tree too the bottom of the 12-inch hole shallowly, the roots will grow and squeeze it tightly. If the soil where the water is, and if the holds together in a ball when water's only at the top, that's jiggled, the moisture is good. If where the roots are going to the soil simply falls apart and go," said Stephan. slips through your fingers, it's Perennials, trees and shrubs still too dry. And conversely if like moisture at least 12 inches it's soupy or muddy, it's too wet. deep, and the top 3 to 4 inches of "And you need to know your soil should dry between watersoil type," said Stephan. "In La ings. Watering should also be a Pine it's pumice. Bend is pri- longer and less frequent cycle marily a loamy, sandy type." than annuals and lawn. "We Once the soil profile is moist- suggestadrip system orsoaker ened, the regular watering re- hose where you can turn it out gime can be maintained. An ex- and let it run for three to five tra soak should still be planned hours," said Stephan. for about once every six weeks. Signs that a lawn is over-wa"Until you learn what your wa- tered include the presence of tering strategy needs to be, you leaf hoppers in the grass, mosshouldbe doingthe squeeze test quitoes hatching out of the so you can figure out a time- lawn, moss and mushroom line," said Stephan. growth and yellowing grass. If Annuals and turf have simi- a lawn is under-watered it will lar water needs. be a grayish color, won't grow "Annuals, you want to water very fast and the blades won't like your lawn because they spring back into place when don't have a deep root sys- walked on. As for best time of tem," said Stephan. Perennials, the day to water, Stephan said shrubs andtreesrequire a dif- that ideally, automated sprinferent set of standards. In gen- kler systems should run in the eral, lawns shouldn'tbeplanted early-morning hours and when inside a tree's dripline, which is it's not windy. "Our lawns dry the diameter of the full width pretty well in the day, so our of the tree's limbs, because lawns don't have disease." The their needs are different. Trees system should be run early should not be watered on their enough to give the blades a trunks. In fact, keeping a tree's chance to dry.


TUESDAY, MAY 27, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

D5

Editor's note:Martha Stewart's column will return. Questions of general interest can beemailed to mslietters@marthastewart.com. For more information on this column, visit www.marthastewart. com.

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Tony Cenicola/New York Times News Service

A collection of items that can help with avoiding clutter. While a closet-organization system is worth considering and easy to install,

you can makemajor progress and spendfar less with small changes that make vast improvements. r c*-

Thinkstock

Screened porches are the focal point of somehomes, contractors say. Adding a porch can cost a few thousand to tens of thousands.

By Bob Tedeschi New York Times News Service

On the household to-do list my wife and I update whenever we're orbiting Neptune in our hovercraft, "organize

change your hangers so they all match, you'd think your closet is more organized."

Products to consider Big-box retailers like the

closets" is right up there with

C ontainer Store brim w i th

by Rotten Tomato rating." But

you h ave.

"hand-tune our unused pia- products that will help you no" and "sort DVD collection make better use of the space I z sa k r e c om-

when we recently had friends mended a closet rod like the over for dinner and I couldn't Dublet from Umbra ($20), fit their coats into the entry which gives you two tiers for hall closet, I figured I had to do hanging. something. A double-tiered hanging This particular closet was

rod allows you to consolidate

stuffed with 26 coats, 28 pairs of shoes, a dozen hats and multiple gloves, two old lamps and a pair of empty coat racks we keep there for irony. My task: find a way to make this closet useful without resorting to a built-in organiza-

clothes, but the downside, Murphy said, is that longer garments may drag on the floor. I tried one on a standard-height closet rod (the

tion system that might cost

more than $1,000. For help, I called on three people with personal-organization c o nsultancies: Laura Leist, of

two-tiered rod hangs from

the standard rod, with the second one hanging as much as 28 inches lower), and while my 12-year-old son's shirts didn't hi t

t h e f l oor,

"The ones I've tried are just disenfranchised people, my experts said, the company's website offers useful tools for extended beyond 36 inch- customizing a system. es, but at shorter lengths it I tried it and I agree. I seemed sturdy enough. browsed many samples onFor storing shoes, Murphy line and then called a Contold me, she prefers bins or tainer Store saleswoman baskets: "For hall closets, I'd with the measurements of usetheentirefloorspace and my closet and a rough inbuy a basket for every family ventory of items we want to member, or put kids' shoes in keep there, and she guided one and the parents' shoes in me to a $550 Elfa system in another." the most inexpensive finish. My wife and I didn't love (My closet is 91 by 23 by 53 the idea of rummaging on the inches, and I chose wirefloor for shoes, so we chose mesh components without a hybrid solution: a hanging w ood-veneer f r o nts. T h e canvas shoe bag for us and more expensive Elfa sysa shortened (and therefore tems for walk-in closets, sturdy enough) shoe rack for by contrast, cost a r ound the rest of the family. $3,000.) But bins worked well on My system includes slidethe closet's two shelves. I out shelves from the floor to tried a new product, Clever hip level for shoes and a sinCrates, which are collapsible gle shelf up top. The hanger baskets. The 33.8-quart size bar sits 12 inches higher than ($10 at Home Depot) is big m y old one,so there's far enough for a bunch of shoes more space beneath the jacknot well made," she said. Mine felt wobbly when it

mine did. My advisers also suggestEliminate Chaos, in Seattle; ed looking into storage items or winter items, while the Barry Izsak, of Arranging It that use the surface of the 16.9-quart-size ($8) is good All, in Austin, Texas; and Ash- closet door. One option is for hats or scarves. I like this ley Murphy, of Neat Method, the Hinge-It Clutter Buster idea because our unused based in San Francisco. ($30), which attaches to the crates always attract junk. While a closet-organization door hinges and includes four These won't. system is worth considering rods for hanging garments or Our hall closet was now and easy to install, they said, towels. more spacious, but the twoyou can spend far less and still Back-of-the-door racks are shelf setup at the top was a make vast improvements. a good choice for shoes, but stretch for my family. And "A lot of times, people think only if you can close the door now that we've put away our they don't have enough closet with the rack filled. For that cold-weather jackets and unspace or they think they need reason, the PerfectCurve flip- used coats, the closet had a a new closet system, when the flop rack ($10) found a place lot of wasted space at knee fact is they just need to orga- in our hall closet rather than level. So as much as I wantnize it better," said Izsak, who the clothes closet. ed to avoid installing a closet is immediate past president An under-bed slide-out system, it seemed the only of the National Association of tray seemed like the perfect alternative. Professional Organizers. way to store dress shoes my wife only occasionally wears. DIYsystems Carve out space first I tried one (the sliding underMy panelists were unanIf one or two closets are bed shoe organizer, $30 at imously enthusiastic about especially bad, Murphy said, the Container Store), but our do-it-yourself closet organidon't start w it h t h em. You bed's unusually low clear- zation systems — in particumay discover there isnowhere ance of 5 i nches thwarted lar, the Elfa system from the else to put the items you've that idea. Container Store. These sysjammed into the problem area, A shoe platform for the tems, they told me, are easy or you may simply trade one closet worked better. I tried to install and equally easy to problem closet for a nother. the two-tier adjustable shoe adjust according to seasonal Instead, take a close look at rack ($18 at the Container needs. less cluttered or less import- Store), which extends to a That all sounded great, exant closetsor storage areas. width of 44 inches. cept that I live in one of the If your hall closet contains Again, Murphy was not a roughly 25 states without a sports equipment or old coats fan. Container Store. For similarly (or, perhaps, old lamps), carve out space elsewhere for this stuff so you can create useful

ets now, and the shelves can

be repositioned if we need more space for big coats in the winter.

As a do-it-yourself project, it was one of the easier jobs I've tackled. I cleared the ex-

isting hardware and shelves in 15 m inutes, drilled six holes for wall anchors and

screwed in the horizontal bracket that holds the oth-

er components. The printed installation directions were slightly vague, but two quick calls to the company helped. The job took me four hours, start to finish. Was it worth it? For my big

family and my space-constrained house, yes. We could have gotten by with the vari-

ousspace-savingaccessories, but I suspect they would have

broken or gone unused after a year or two. For another $300 or so, the installed system offers a more permanent fix, and when we eventual-

ly sell the place it will be a bonus.

creene -in orc es rowin in o uari iI- -

that adding a porch will cost

ANGIE

from a few thousand to tens of

thousands of dollars, depending on the size and style. Meanwhile, if you have a porch but haven't yet prepared hat area of the home it for the season, you may

HICKS

offers the best of in-

need to expend a little sweat

side and outside liv- to be sure it remains a no-swat ing, with no downside except zone. Take time to inspect the for the need for occasional structure and screens. Con-

cleaning and maintenance? The answer: a screened-in porch. No matter how small

it may be, a porch lets you live large. Few home experiences approach paradise quite like an afternoon curled up in a wicker rocker, reading a good book, or an evening of al fresco enter-

sider hiring a well-reviewed handyman to re-stain the wood or repair screening. Our team found that a handyman is likely to charge $50 to $100 to replace damaged screens. M eanwhile, here are a few ideas for decorating a porch: • Hire a reputable electri-

taining withyour favorite folks. B ut if y o u t h ink o f a

cian to add a ceiling fan and lighting, so you can use it at s creened-in porch a s j u s t night and during the hotter a home add-on,you might times of year. not be thinking big enough. • Furnish it with comfortT op-rated contractors w h o able seating and a place to provide outdoor living solu- dine. You can spend as much tions say porches increasingly or as little as you like, with opare becoming a focal point in tions ranging from matched many homes. outdoor furniture sets to paintThey tell o u r c o n sumer your-own garage sale finds. services research team that • Add plants and flowers porches aretrendinglarger and that complement your furnishmore luxurious, with high-end ings and house color. features like well-appointed • Consider a plug-in water outdoorkitchens and massive fountain, wind chimes and stone fireplaces. O ther tr e n d s

other features that add to a ind u d e porch's sensory delights.

e ye-catching ceilings a n d floors. Flooring options range from tile to tongue-in-groove hardwood. Ceilings maybe fin-

— Angie Hicksis the founder of Angie's List, which offers consumerreviews on everything from home repair to health care.

ished in an open-rafter style or

with wood planking. If you're porchless but crave the experience of listening to

I n the meantime, I'll be turning my attention to the pi-

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ON PAGES 3&4: COMICS & PUZZLES M The Bulletin

Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.com THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, MAY 27, 2014 •

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Ads starting as low as $10/waak rivate art onl

Call for package rates

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Call for prices

Prices starting at $17.08 arda

Run it until it sells for $99 oru to12months

:'hours:

contact us: Place an ad: 541-385-5809

Fax an ad: 541-322-7253

: Business hours:

Place an ad with the help of a Bulletin Classified representative between the

Includeyour name, phone number and address

. Monday - Friday

businesshours of8 a.m. and 5 p.m.

Subscriber services: 541-385-5800

: 7:30 a.m. -5 p.m.

. .Classified telephone hours:

Subscribe or manage your subscription

: Monday- Friday 7:30 a.m. -5 p.m.

24-hour message line: 541-383-2371 Place, cancel or extend an ad

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On the web at: www.bendbulletin.com

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Items for Free FREE Craftsman LT1000 42" riding mower w/

catcher, needs engine

work. 541-318-6185

FREE Llama Manure Shovel ready, you haul! Call 541-389-7329

Just bought a new boat? Sell your old one in the classifieds! Ask about our Super Seller rates! 541-385-5809 Free sod grass 889 sq.ft., no weeds. Must cut yourself, sod cutter is approx. $108 per day at rental yard.

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245

253

260

267

269

266

Furniture & Appliances

Golf Equipment

TV, Stereo & Video

Misc. Items

Fuel 8 Wood

Gardening Supplies & Equipment

Sales Northeast Bend

A1 Washers8 Dryers

Mens' McGregor set complete $150; Ladies McGregor set with Mizuno drivers, $100. Taylor Burner bubble, $50; other mixed irons, $10; ladies shoes, size 6, $10, hats and ball sets. 541-923-3298

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WHEN YOU SEE THIS

Music/Voice Studio

MorePixatBendbjlletin,com

Includes: • Pro Tools 8 software On a classified ad • Mbox 2 mini version 8.0 go to • Behringer B1 mic Desk, L-shaped stained www.bendbulletin.com • Sony headphones oak mission style, excelto view additional • Samson USB studio lent cond, $500. photos of the item. mic w/stand; 541-408-8188 • Training books 261 • Corrugated foam Medical Equipment padding 246 Package price new, Guns, Hunting $01200+Wheelchair & Fishing Offered at $550. Pronto (All reasonable offers Freezer, 5.5 cu ft, Bend local pays CASH!! considered) (by Invacare®) Magic Chef, $100. for all firearms 8 Call 541-639-3222 powered 541-385-5781 ammo. 541-526-0617 wheelchair,

I

255

WHEN BUYING FIREWOOD... To avoid fraud, The Bulletin recommends payment for Firewood only upon delivery and inspection. • A cord is 128 cu. ft. 4' x 4' x 8'

• Receipts should include name, phone, price and kind of wood purchased. • Firewood ads MUST include species & cost per cord to better serve our customers.

9 7a •

** FREE ** INSTANT GREEN McPheeters Turf Lawn Fertilizer •

542-389-9663

Garage Sale Kit

Place an ad in The Bulletin for your garage sale and receive a Garage Sale Kit FREE!

INCLUDES: Lawn mower electric • 4 KIT Garage Sale Signs self-propelled c ord- • $2.00 Off Coupon To less used 1 y e ar, Use Toward Your

$150. 541-330-3917 270

Next Ad

• 10 Tips For "Garage Sale Success!"

Lost & Found PICK UP YOUR Found earring, weekend of 5/16 at Bend's Fred GARAGE SALE KIT at 1777 SW Chandler Mever. Call to identify, Ave., Bend, OR 97702 54f-389-1308

325

Hay, Grain & Feed

Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbunetin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 541-385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbunetin.com

in good condition, CASH!! Computers $450. For Guns, Ammo & The Bulletin 541-633-7824 The Bulletin Reloading Supplies. T HE B ULLETIN r e Find exactly what Servrng Cenrral Oregon srncel903 gervfng Central Oragon stncefgttg 541-408-6900. t you are looking for in the quires computer advertisers with multiple 263 CLASSIFIEDS Full-size headboard, All Year Dependable IIIAI TII Need to get an IOI ad schedules or those Tools white wicker, $50. Firewood: Seasoned; selling multiple sysad in ASAP? 541-385-5781 Found key, 5/15 in front Lodgepole 1 for $195 Bend 541-382-6865 tems/ software, to dis- Contractor job box, You can place it or 2 for $365. Cedar, room of Deja Vu, key is DO YOU HAVE close the name of the G ENERATE SOM E 5'x2'x 2', $250. 208 split, del. Bend: 1 for marked. 541-317-91 69 SOMETHING TO online at: EXCITEMENT in your business or the term 541-480-1353 $175 or 2 for $325. Pets & Supplies SELL "dealer" in their ads. neighborhood! Plan a www.bendbulletin.com 541-420-3484. FOR $500 OR Private party advertis- Paint s prayer T i tan Call a Pro garage sale and don't LESS'? ers are defined as 440i, excellent cond, forget to advertise in Whether you need a The Bulletin recom541 -385-5B09 269 Non-commercial classified! those who sell one $375. 541-383-8270 mends extra caution fence fixed, hedges advertisers may computer. Gardening Supplies when purc has- 541-385-5809. place an ad trimmed or a house Power Washer (com& Equipment 290 ing products or ser257 with our mercial) new in crate, The Bulletin built you'll find vices from out of the Sales Redmond Area "QUICK CASH Musical Instruments Honda 13 hp 4000 recommends extra area. Sending cash, professional help in SPECIAL" BarkTurfSoil.com psi, 4 gpm. Retails checks, or credit in- I ca ton n e n p r Moving Sale: contents 1 week3lines 12 The Bulletin's "Call a $1849, Sell $ 1349. chasing products or • f ormation may b e of 3 bedroom house! 341 OI' DRUM SET Steve 541-771-7007. services from out of I Service Professional" PROMPT DELIVERY subjected to fraud. Fairly new items/ misc. aa aka a N New complete set of Horses & Equipment ~ the area. Sending I 542-389-9663 For more informaDirectory Fri thru Mon. 2421 SW Ad must Pearl drums, cash, checks, or tion about an adverFissure Loop. include price of plus Zildjian 541-385-5809 tiser, you may call I credit i n f o rmation nle tem ot gaoo cymbals & cases. a~ Free Manure will load, may be subjected to the O regon State or less, or multiple Call 541-728-1265 Deschutes Mkt Rd., Attorney General's I FRAUD. For more Get your for details. items whose total Bend. 541-318-8707 Office C o nsumer information about an I does not exceed business advertiser, you may I REMEMBER: If you Protection hotline at Total Shop - Sheet $500. I call t h e Ore g onI People Lookfor Information 1-877-877-9392. For newspaper have lost an animal, Metal Equipment 3-Horse Trailer, 22' long, ' State Atto r ney ' Call Classifieds at About Products and don't forget to check a ROW I N G 7' wide, 2 rear axles, good 4' air shear; 6'x16ga delivery, call the I General's O f fi ce The Bulletin Circulation Dept. at The Humane Society cond. Logan Coach Inc. Services EveryDaythrough Hand Brake; Pinspotter; 541-385-5809 Serving gentrel tgregon sincetgttg Consumer Protec- • www.bendbulletin.com 541-385-5800 Bend Pittsburgh 20ga w/Acme $4900 obo. 305-794-0190 The Bulletin Classiffeds with an ad in tion h o t line at I Rolls', Manual CleatTo place an ad, call 541-382-3537 Adopt a rescued cat or i 1-877-877-9392. bender 24nx20ga; Spot 541-385-5809 Redmond The Bulletin's 260 Check out the kitten! Fixed, shots, ID Welder w/24" arms; Slip or email 541-923-0882 GUN SHOW "Call A Service Misc. Items chip, tested, more! I TheBulletin I May 31 - June 1 n dia; classifiedeibendbulletin.com classifieds online roll (manual) 3'x2 Pi ei t t e Serving Central Oregon since tppg 65480 78th, Tumalo, Deschutes Fairgrounds Professional" Box & Pan Brake 48" x16 aat-447-ttrn; www.bendbulletin.com 3 00-gallon fuel t a n k ga; Easy Edger (Bench The Bulletin Sat/Sun 1-5 389-8420 Buy! Sell! Trade! or Craft Cats Serving Central tpragonsinceIgtg Directory Updated daily w/stand, filter & hose, 212 SAT. 9-5 • SUN. 10-3 www.craftcats.org type)... will sell complete 541-389-8420. $8 Admission, $750. 541-480-1353 or by the piece. Antiques & Bichon Frise AKC pups, 12 & under free! Call 541-771-1958 vet checked, hand raised, Collectibles OREGON TRAIL GUN 42" Troy Built riding ,s $500+. 503-856-6107 lawn mower. 2 yrs. Wildland SHOWS, 541-347-2120 Fi r e fighting The Bulletin reserves o ld. $ 3 7 5 OBO . or 541-404-1890 equip., new 8 u sed, Boxers AKC & V alley the right to publish all 541-312-2448 hose, nozzles, wyes, Bulldogs CKC puppies. ads from The Bulletin reducers, bladder bags. $700-800. 541-325-3376 newspaper onto The Kimber Solo, C-D-P 7'x22' steel 1/4-inch dia- Steve 541-771-7007. Dachshund AKC mini pups Bulletin Internet web- (L-G) 9mm pistol mond plate, $400 all. or with 3 clips, $975. $5 per sq ft , i f c u t. www.bendweenies.com site. 265 541-447-4405 541-420-7100 All colors • 541-508-4558 Building Materials The Bulletin Donate deposit bottles/ Serving gentrel tgregon sincetggg Rem 700 .243 Weaver cans to local all vol., Bend Habitat couch, and match241 3x9, sling/ammo, non-profit rescue, for RESTORE ing recliner, $200. $850. 541-548-5667 feral cat spay/neuter. Bicycles & Building Supply Resale I Bose stereo system Cans for Cats trailer Quality at LOW Accessories series 321, $400. Ruger Mini-14 Ranch, at Grocery Outlet, 694 PRICES Oak Entertainment Arms 45/70 rolling SE 3rd & Bend Petco Trek 2120 bicycles, (2) Navv 740 NE 1st center, $350. 1959 Ruger 357 near Applebee's, do- 54cm and 58cm, car- block, 541-312-6709 Can oe, $300. BH 6.5 n 3 screw unmodi- I nate M-F a t S mith bon fiber, Shimano fied and many more for Open to the public. Sign, 1515 NE 2nd; or 105, SP D p e dals,sale. SERIOUS ONLY CRAFT, Tumalo. Lv. $400 each. Miyata email for pics & info, Sisters Habitat ReStore msg. for pick up large kids Triathalon bike, boombaby35©gmail.com Buylnf! Dlamonds Building Supply Resale /Gold for Cash amt, 5 4 1-389-8420. $125. 541-410-7034 Quality items. Saxon's Fine Jewelers www.craftcats.org LOW PRICES! BULLETINCLASSIFIEOS 541-389-6655 242 150 N. Fir. . E 8 .=, Fish Tank, new 45-gal Search the area's most 541-549-1621 bow-front w/stand, com- Exercise Equipment comprehensive listing of BUYING Open to the public. Lionel/American Flyer plete, ready for fish, $200 classified advertising... ~o obo. 541-408-0846 real estate to automotive, trains, accessories. Nautilus NS 200 266 541-408-2191. merchandise to sporting Lab/Jack Russell puplike new! Pulley Heating & Stoves goods. Bulletin Classifieds BUYING & S ELLING system with extra p ies. 8 w k s . $ 5 0 appear every day in the All gold jewelry, silver weights,$600! (541)903-0346 or NOTICE TO print or on line. (541)419-6485 Will deliver! and gold coins, bars, ADVERTISER Call 541-385-5809 541-388-2809 rounds, wedding sets, Since September 29, Lab Pups AKC,black & www.bendbulletin.com class rings, sterling silyellow, Master Hunter 1991, advertising for ver, coin collect, vinsired, performance pediwoodstoves has 245 The Bulletin tage watches, dental used Serving Central Oregon since fgaa been limited to modree, OFA cert hips 8 elGolf Equipment gold. Bill Fl e ming, ows, 541-771-2330 els which have been W alther P PK-S x l n t 541-382-9419. Includes: www.kinnamanretrieverg.com certified by the OrCHECKYOUR AD c ond .380 S&W i n egon Department of Moving boxes from 2 Llewellin/Hound cross 3 S erving Central Oregon s ince 1 9 03 • Feature item photo/graphic case 2 c l ips $475 households, all sizes + Environmental Qualmales, 7 months old, CASH FIRM paper & bubble wrap, ity (DEQ) and the fed• 7 lines of text very beautiful $150 541-385-5809 541-419-0531 E n v ironmental 25S ea obo541-639-8944 eral each. 541-447-1323 • Bold Headline A g e ncy Wanted: Collector seeks Swamp cooler, heavy Protection POODLE,toys & minis, • Border (EPA) as having met also rescued older pup on the first day it runs high quality fishing items duty, like new, 3ft. x smoke emission stan• Up fo zi days of advertising & upscale bamboo fly to adopt. 541-475-3889 to make sure it is cor- rods. Call 541-678-5753, 3 ft., p o rtable o r dards. A cer t ified nSpellcheck n and rect. s tationary. $3 7 5 . w oodstove may b e or 503-351-2746 Queensland Heelers human errors do ocidentified by its certifi541-382-6773 Frl., Sst. Sun., 8 SP» Standard & Mini, $150 your ad will Qjsooppp~r cur. If this happens to cation label, which is 64695 Wood Ave. 247 & up. 541-260-1537 your ad, please conWanted- paying cash permanently attached Loveseat, mattress set, • The Bul l e tin • The CentralOregonNitksj Adf www.rightwayranch.wor Sporting Goods tact us ASAP so that for Hi-fi audio & stu- to the stove. The Buldpress.com queen, furniture, oak • Central Oregon Marketplace + bsndbullstjn.com corrections and any dio equip. Mclntosh, letin will not know- Misc. barrel, tools, and lots adjustments can be JBL, Marantz, D yingly accept advertisYorkie pups AKC, 2 boys, of misc. made to your ad. 2 girls, potty training, UTD Pool table & accys, Con- naco, Heathkit, San- ing for the sale of 541-385-5809 *Privateparty adsandfuIIdraisers Deadline II:00amTuesday shots, health guar., $450 nelly T-ft, excellent. $800 sui, Carver, NAD, etc. uncertified & up. 541-777-7743 The BulletinClassified delivered. 541-604-6435 Call 541-261-1808 woodstoves. ggt:.:ggggg

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E2 TUESDAY, MAY 27, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

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Houses for Rent General

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Looking foryour next emp/oyee? Place a Bulletin help All real estate adver- wanted ad today and tising in this newspareach over 60,000 per is subject to the readers each week. Custom — Nationally F air H o using A c t Your classified ad known Sweet 16. Built 528 which makes it illegal will also appear on by Baron's Custom to a d vertise "any Loans & Mortgages bendbulletin.com Accessories for Kapreference, limitation which currently rewasaki, to tour as a or disc r imination WARNING ceives over show bike. Built on '03 The Bulletin recombased on race, color, 1 5 milhon page Kawasaki Vulcan 1600 religion, sex, handimends you use cauviews every month Classic base. Prem. tion when you procap, familial status, at no extra cost. cond., ready for show marital status or navide personal Bulletin Classifieds & great rider. 4,500 information to compa- tional origin, or an inGet Results! miles. Original private nies offering loans or tention to make any Call 385-5809 or owner. What a steal O credit, especially such pre f erence, place your ad on-line $8400 (More pix at limitation or discrimithose asking for adat sweet16motorcycle.we vance loan fees or nation." Familial staebly.com) Call John at bendbulletin.com tus includes children companies from out of 541-610-9921 state. If you have under the age of 18 living with parents or 773 concerns or questions, we suggest you legal cus t odians, Pet Grooming Acreages consultyour attorney pregnant women, and or call CONSUMER people securing cusBusy Dog 5.17 acres. 65694 Old Place aphotoin yourprivate party ad PRIVATE PARTY RATES tody of children under Bend/Redmond Hwy, HOTLINE, Grooming Busiforonly$15.00par week. Starting at 3 lines 1-877-877-9392. 18. This newspaper mtn view, power, waness in Redmond will not knowingly ac*UNDER '500in total merchandise FXSTD Harley OVER '500 intotal merchandise is looking for BANK TURNED YOU cept any advertising ter, septic approved. EXPERIENCED DOWN? Private party for real estate which is $174,000 O.B.O. Call Davidson 2001,twin 7 days.................................................. $10.00 4 days.................................................. $18.50 5 4 1-419-1725, cam 88, fuel injected, pet groomer will loan on real es- in violation of the law. Brad 14 days................................................ $16.00 7 days.................................................. $24.00 Vance & Hines short tate equity. Credit, no O ur r e aders a r e or Deb 541-480-3956. shot (must have own *llllust state prices in ad exhaust, Stage I 14 days .................................................$33.50 problem, good equity hereby informed that debraobendbroadtools). Also looking with Vance & Hines band.com 28 days .................................................$61.50 is all you need. Call Garage Sale Special forexperienced all dwellings adverfuel management Oregon Land Mort- tised in this newspa4 lines for 4 days ................................. $20.00 Icall for commercial line ad rates) bather/brusher. system, custom parts, 775 gage 541-388-4200. per are available on Must have resume. extra seat. Manufacturedi equal opportunity $10,500OBO. LOCAL MONEyrWe buy an basis. To complain of Mobile Homes Call Today Leave msg A Payment Drop Box is available at CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: secured trust deeds & ca l l 541-516-8684 541-678-3421. note,some hard money d iscrimination Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. HUD t o l l-free at 2 006 S u pe r Go o d loans. Call Pat Kellev 1-800-877-0246. The Cents mfd 1296 sq. ft. BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN (*) 541-382-3099 ext.13. toll f re e t e lephone home, 2 full baths, 3 Service Advisor REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well number for the hear- bdrm, walk in closets, (Bend Oregon) ing i m p aired is all appliances go, inas any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin Big Country RV has 1-800-927-9275. cluding freezer. Very immediate openings for bendbulletimcom reserves the right to reject any ad at clean,must be moved full time e xpenenced any time. is located at: $36,000. 541-382-6650 Harley Davidson 2005 Service Advisors who will FLHRCI Road King share our commitment to Banjj 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Classic,less than 5,000 our customers is a team Have an item to ~0 ©%[]Q one-owner miles. Lots of Bend, Oregon 97702 player with a positive atextra chrome, just like titude, to operate with sell quick? new, never laid down, energy and is customer If it's under PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction service oriented. Retiregarage stored. Paid over 630 $20K disability forces is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right ment Plan, Paid Vaca'500you can place it in sale for$1 1,500. to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these tion, and a competitive Rooms for Rent The Bulletin 541-546-8810 or medical benefit package. newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party cell, 206-790-7352 Apply in person © 63500 Furn. room i n q u iet Classifieds for: Classified ads running 7 or moredays will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday. before 7pm. N Hwy 97, Bend Oregon home no drugs, alcoHomes for Sale Seriousinquiries only. or email your resume to hol, smoking. $450 '10 -3 lines, 7 days 476 476 476 bcrvhire@ mail.com t st/1st. 541-408-0846 '16- 3 lines, 14 days Employment Employment Employment NOTICE Harley Davidson 2009 632 All real estate adver- (Private Party ads only) Super Glide Custom, Opportunities Opportunities Opportunities Stage 1 Screaming AptiMultiplex General tised here in is subEagle performance, ject to th e F ederal Part-time Church FACTORY SPECIAL too many options to Fair Housing A c t, Executive Director Administrator CHECKYOUR AD DRIVERS New Home, 3 bdrm, which makes it illegal list, $8900. Kids Club I chasing products orI Nativity Luth e r an $46,500 finished 541-388-8939 • services from out of • to advertise any prefJefferson County Church seeks a creon your site. Class A and Class l the area. Sending erence, limitation or ative and self-directed (Madras) J and M Homes B CDL Drivers c ash, checks, o r discrimination based Responsibilities i ndividual to be r e 541-548-5511 needed. 476 include overseeing l credit i n f ormation on race, color, relisponsible for adminMust be able to operations, supervis• may be subjected to gion, sex, handicap, Employment istering the workings work hard, pass on the first day it runs familial status or naing staff, managing I FRAUD. of a vi b rant a n d Opportunities to make sure it is cor- tional origin, or intenU/A and backresources, working For more informagrowing church, skills :e. rect. "Spellcheck" and tion to make any such with board, tion about an adverground check, plus required inc l ude: Add your web address human errors do ocfundraising/eyents. l tiser, you may call have furniture preferences, l i mitastrong computer profito your ad and readHarley Davidson More info, visit cur. If this happens to tions or discrimination. the Oregon State ciency (Microstate Of- moving experience. ers on The Bullefin's www.'ckidsclub.com l Attorney General's 2011 Classic Limyour ad, please con- We will not knowingly fice S uite) s t rong web site, www.bendSubmit resume, cover ited, Loaded! 9500 tact us ASAP so that Office C o nsumer l accept any advertiscommunicator, record Call Bill, bulletin.com, will be letter, 3 references & corrections and any miles, custom paint Protection hotline at l ing for real estate keeping, strong writ541-383-3362 "Broken Glass" by able to click through application by 5:00 adjustments can be ten and oral skills. See I 1-877-877-9392. which is in violation of automatically to your pm on June 6,2014to made to your ad. Nicholas Del Drago, for more info. this law. All persons Nativity website kidaclub reziS mail.com website. new condition, 541-385-5809 www.nativityinbend.org are hereby informed 805 The Bulletin Classified that all dwellings adheated handgrips, for jo b d e scription. Misc. Items auto cruise control. Resumes delivered in Garage Sales vertised are available 634 $32k in bike, on an equal opportuperson t o N a t ivity GarageSales TiCk, TOCk Looking for your next Compressor for only $20,000or best AptJMultiplex NE Bend nity basis. The BulleLutheran Chu r ch, Garage Sales tow car, $500. employee? offer. 541-318-6049 60850 B r o sterhous tin Classified TiCk, TOCk... Place a Bulletin help 541-504-8666 Call for Specials! Rd., B e n d , OR Garage Sales wanted ad today and Look at: 5 41-388-0765. Re ...don't let time get Limited numbers avail. reach over 60,000 850 HDFatBo 1996 Bendhomes.com sumes accepted May 1, 2 and 3 bdrms. Find them away. Hire a readers each week. 27-30. Position closes W/D hookups, patios for Complete Listings of Snowmobiles Your classified ad in professional out 4 p.m. May 30, 2014. or decks. Area Real Estate for Sale will also appear on of The Bulletin's MOUNTAIN GLEN, Arctic Cat 580 1994, The Bulletin bendbulletin.com Driver 746 541-383-9313 EXT, in good Find them in "Call A Service Classifieds which currently Night Driver needed Professionally condition, $1000. Northwest Bend Homes receives over 1.5 Apply at Owl Taxi, The Bulletin Professional" managed by Norris & Located in La Pine. 541-385-5809 million page views 1919 NE 2nd St., Completely Stevens, Inc. Call 541-408-6149. Directory today! Brand new on market! Classifieds! every month at Rebuilt/Customized Bend, OR 97701 Custom craftsman 3 bd, no extra cost. 2012/2013 Award 646 860 2.5 ba, extensive interior Call The Bulletin At Bulletin Classifieds Winner Apt./Multiplex Furnished upgrades, granite slab in General Motorcycles & Accessories Get Results! Showroom Condition gourmet kitchen, hickory The Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our SaturCall 385-5809 Many Extras Fully furnished loft apt. flooring. Off Mt. Washday night shift and other shifts as needed. We or place Low Miles. At: www.bendbulletin.com currently have openings all nights of the week. on Wall St., Bend with ington Dr.t borders Quail your ad on-line at $17,000 Everyone must work Saturday night. Shifts parking, all utilities paid. Park, adjacent to Awbendbulletin.com 541-548-4807 Call 541-389-2389 for brey Glen golf commustart between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and nity. Fabulous Cascade appointment to see. end between2:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m. Allposkyline view, private fully PiaggioNespa 3-wheel sitions we are hiring for, work Saturday nights. fenced backyard. 2004 2005 HD Super Glide MP3 scooter 2 0 09 Starting pay is $9.10 per hour, and we pay a • • Tour of Homes! Open Human Resources Assistant with only 400 miles 1 minimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shifts custom, fuel injected 1-4 Sat. & Sun. 2772 Not a scratch! Like are short (11:30 - 1:30). The work consists of 7k mi, new tires, like The Bulletin is looking for a Human Resources NW Rainbow Ridge Dr. brand new! $5900. new cond. $8500 loading inserting machines or stitcher, stackC all 54 /-385-58 0 9 $575,000. By owner, Assistant. HR duties will include all areas of 520-360-9300, owner 541-639-9857 ing product onto pallets, bundling, cleanup to ro m o te o u r s ervice 541-848-0040 pre-employment drug testing, preparing paand other tasks. For qualifying employees we offer benefits i ncluding life i n surance, perwork for newly hired employees, orientaCrest Butte Apartments tion; benefit enrollment and helping employAdult Care Landscapingtiyard Care short-term 8 long-term disability, 401(k), paid 1695Purcell Blvd., Bend, Oregon ees keep t heir p ersonnel and b enefit vacation and sick time. Drug test is required Now accepting applications for the wait list of information current. Maintains personnel files Professional Caregiver NOTICE: Oregon Land- prior to employment. a federally subsidized Affordable Family and records for the purpose of providing with 26+ yrs exp will pro- scape Contractors Law up-to-date reference and audit trail compliHousing project. Crest Butte is a beautiful vide private care in your (ORS 671) requires all Please submit a completed application attenproperty, less than 4 y e ars remodeled, ance. Assist with payroll processing as the home. Disabled/elderly/ businesses that adtion Kevin Eldred. Applications are available Tnumph Daytona offering 1 and 2 bedroom units to those who back-up to the Payroll Manager. Provides adhospice.541-279-9492 vertise t o pe r form at The Bulletin front desk (1777 S.W. Chan2004 1 5 K mi l e s income qualify. Close to St. Charles and vice to employees on matters in designated Landscape Construc- dler Blvd.), or an electronic application may be perfect bike, needs medical/dental providers, as well as daycare human resources areas. Establish and mainBuilding/Contracting tion which includes: obtained upon request by contacting Kevin nothing. Vin and schools. On-site laundry facilities and new tain favorable working relationships within all l anting, deck s , Eldred via email (keldredobendbulletin.com). ¹201536. WesCom departments to assist in effectively playground available. NOTICE: Oregon state ences, arbors, No phone calls please. Only completed appli$4995 Please contact site manager for further detail. law requires anyone water-features, and in- cations will be considered for this position. No achieving department objectives, while reDream Car Project phone ¹: (541) 389-9107 sponding to requests for reports, records and who con t racts for stallation, repair of irresumes will be accepted. Drug test is reAuto Sales TTY. 1(800)735-2900 construction work to rigation systems to be quired prior to employment. EOE. information in a professional and timely man1801 Division, Bend be licensed with the licensed w i t h the ner. Review, input and audit data in HRIS to "This institute is an equal DreamcarsBend.com Construction Contrac- Landscape Contracsupport employee actions such as promotions, opportunity provider." 541 -678-0240 The Bulletin tors Board (CCB). An tors Board. This 4-digit transfers, hires and terminations while mainservtng cenrral oregon srncer903 Dlr 3665 active license number is to be intaining the highest level of data integrity. Other means the contractor cluded in all adverduties include, processing paperwork for unis bonded & insured. tisements which indiemployment and worker's compensation. Fill in Verify the contractor's cate the business has as a backup person for the Reception desk CCB l i c ense at a bond, insurance and Facility Administrator when necessary. www.hirealicensedworkers compensacontractor.com tion for their employMinimum two years human resources experior call 503-378-4621. ees. For your protec- Community Counseling Solutions has ence (payroll and benefits knowledge prean opening for a f u l l t ime Facility The Bulletin recom- tion call 503-378-5909 ferred) in a support capacity. General knowlmends checking with or use our website: Administrator. edge of applicable state and federal laws. the CCB prior to con- www.lcbistate.or.us to Working knowledge of HRIS/Payroll systems. tracting with anyone. check license status The facility is located in John Day, Oregon Strong computer skills with the ability to profiSome other t rades before contracting with and is a 9 bed acute care treatment facility ciently use Word and Excel. Strong attention to also re q uire addi- the business. Persons working with mentally ill adults who are in detail. Strong interpersonal skills. Must be able tional licenses and doing land scape an acute phase of their illness. to maintain highest degree of confidentiality, certifications. maintenance do not discretion and tact. r equire an LC B l i - This individual will be responsible for the Debris Removal cense. The Bulletin deliVerS yOur "HELP WANTED" ad to daily operation of the facility, including staff For qualifying employees we offer benefits inAeration/Dethatching hiring and discharge, training, developing cluding life insurance, short-term 8 long-term JUNK BE GONE 70,000 print readers and20,000 online visitors a day. 1-time or Weekly Services and disability, 401(k)i paid vacation and sick time. im p lementing pr a ctices and I Haul Away FREE Ask about FREEadded Drug test is required prior to employment. The Bulletin, local, hassle-free, worry-free advertising. procedures, working closely with insurance For Salvage. Also svcs w/seasonal contract! companies and other healthcare providers. Cleanups & Cleanouts Bonded & Insured. EOE/Drug Free workplace position will work closely with the Mel, 541-389-8107 COLLINS Lawn Maint. The Medical Director to coordinate health care Ca/i 541 -480-9714 liinterested please submit resume services. The administrator will assist the andscapingiyard Care and salary expectations to Allen Reinsch Yard Executive Director in meeting the needs of hrresumesowescom a ers.com Maintenance & Mowing the community, overseeing a large and F OR O N L Y S 2 1 . 4 3 A D A Y ! ~ No phone calls please. (& many other things!) complex budget and facility, and program Call 541-536-1294 or And get $33 in ad upgrades for FREE! development. The position will report to the 541-815-5313 Executive Director. BASED ONA 2" AD SPACE

AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES

Monday • • • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri • Tuesday.••• • • • .Noon Mon. Wednesday •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Tues. Thursday • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Wed.

Friday. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate.. . . . . . . . . . 1 1 :00 am Fri.

Saturday • • • Sunday. • • • •

PUBLISHER'S NOTICE

Finance City of Prineville is seeking an experienced, highly motivated, professional applicant for the position of Finance Assistant II. Full-time position and salary will DOE and DOQ. Full benefit package included. To v iew Iob descnption, go to www.cttyofpnneville. com. You may apply onhne. The City of Prineville is an equal o p portunity employer.

• . 3:00pm Fri.

• • 5:00 pm Fri •

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541 385 5809

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Get 7 consecutive days

Serving Central Oregon Since 2003 Residental/Commercial

Sprinkler Activation/Repair Back Flow Testing Maintenance

~Thatch & Aerate • Spring Clean up .Weekly Mowing & Edging •Bi-Monthly & Monthly Maintenance •Bark, Rock, Etc.

~Landsca in •Landscape Construction ~Water Feature Installation/Maint. •Pavers •Renovations • Irrigations Installation

Senior Discounts Bonded & Insured 541-815-4458 LCB¹8759

Painting/Wall Covering

Thc Bullctin

Applicants should have at least five years of WESTERN PAINTING progressive experience working in a health CO. Richard Hayman, care related f i eld, p r io r e x perience a semi-retired paint- supervising directly or indirectly at least 15 employees, a bachelor's degree in a health ing contractor of 45 years. S m all Jobs care related f i eld (master's degree Welcome. Interior & preferred), ability to assist the Executive Exterior. c c b¹51 84. Director in managing a large and complex 541-388-6910 budget, facility and program development, and community relations. Experience may Tree Services be substituted for education on a two for one basis. N o c ertifications or licenses MR. STUMP BUSTER required, but preference will be given to Professional Stump & Tree applicants with an RN or related health care Removal• 24 yrs exp. certification(s). T h i s i n dividual will be Insured - Free estimates! required to participate in an on call rotation. Call 541-213-9103 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

Serving Centraf Oregon since f903

Freelance writers

The Bulletin Serving Centrai Oregon since t903

The Bulletin in Bend is seeking freelance writers to provide short to medium length feature articles for the newspaper's special projects department.

Topics covered include real estate, home and garden, local events/happenings and personality profiles. Also provided are information regarding contacts, story length The salary range fo r t h e s u ccessful and deadline. candidate w ill be betwee n $69,000-$103,500 per y ear. E xcellent Pay is competitive and is commensurate to HbeneNs. length and type of article assigned. Knowledge of AP style a plus. Please c o ntact N i n a Bi s so n at 541-676-9161 or n i n a.bisson tN gobhi.net Send writing samples and contact info to with questions or to request an application. aborckobendbulletin.com.

Classifjeds 5 41 -38 5 - 5 8 0 9 The Bulletin offers both print adanddaily online accessfor our emPIOymentneedShere at COCC. ThiSreaCheSa large audience at agreat price. Data provesemployment 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 Gunnell, Human ResourcesCentral OregonCommunity College t




THE BULLETIN• TUESDAY, MAY 27 2014 E5

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 860

880

870

Motorcycles & Accessories Boats & Accessories M

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Victory TC 2 0 0 2, 40K mi., runs great, s tage 1 kit, n e w tires, rear brakes & more. Health forces s ale. $4,50 0 . 541-771-0665

Chaparral 2130SS Clean, well m aintained 2 1 ' fa m i ly 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. 541-419-9510

Dodge Brougham 1978, 15', 1-ton, clean, 69,000 miles. $4500. In La Pine, call 541-602-8652

880

881

881

882

882

908

Motorhomes

Travel Trailers

Travel Trailers

Fifth Wheels

Fifth Wheels

Aircraft, Parts & Service

RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work ...

Fleetwood Wilderness NW Edition 2002, 26'

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

CHECKYOUR AD

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. 541 -447-3425

Take care of your investments with the help from The Bulletin's Yamaha Ro a d star Warrior, 2002 excelFleetwood Discovery "Call A Service lent condition, 29k, 40' 2003, diesel, w/a!I Good classifiedadstell Mustang seat, cruise, options - 3 slide outs, Professional" Directory LED signals - fun bike! the essential facts inan satellite, 2 TV's, W/D, Keystone Laredo31' $3,900 Sisters, interestingManner.Write etc., 32,000 miles. Great Tow Car! RV 20 06 w i th 1 2' 541-410-8522, Tony from thereadersview - not Wintered in h eated Saturn 2001 station slide-out. Sleeps 6, shop. $64,900 O.B.O. wagon, dark blue, gray the seller's. Convert the 865 walk-around leather interior, V6, auto, queen 541-447-6664 bed w/storage underfacts into benefits. Show ATVs exlnt mileage, curb neath. Tub 8 shower. the readerhowthe itemwil weight 3800 lbs., a qreat 2 swivel rockers. TV. A rcticCat AT V 7 0 0 help them in all-around car! $2950. Air cond. Gas stove someway. IS;n & 2008 t w o-rider ve541-768-4844 This refrigerator/freezer. h icle, EFI LE . L o w Microwave. Awning. advertising tip hours, high p erforOutside sho w er. mance. Nice wheels, brought toyouby FLEETWOOD Slide through storwinch, extra equip., PACE ARROW, 1999 a ge, E a s y Li f t . $5000. Moving causes Updated interior, 36', 2 $29,000 new; ServingCenirel Oregonsince rgre sale. 541-447-3342. shdes, 42,600 miles, V10 Asking$18,600 541-447-4605 870 Enclosed raft t r ailer, as, 5000 watt generator, TIFFIN ALLEGRO 12'x7', pulley system ydraulic levelers, auto Boats 8 Accessories steps, back-up camera, to help load, wired for washer/dryer, central vac, BUS 2010 - FULLY Want to impress the 12 volt a i r p u mp.ice m a ker, l o a ded, LOADED 40QXP 12'1969 SearsalumiPowerglide Chassis / relatives? Remodel $750. 541-593-6053 excellent condition. num fishingboat, 425HP Cummings your home with the low hours on new 8 $27,500 541-620-2135 Engine / Allison 6 875 hp engine, with trailer help of a professional (SeeCraigslist Spd Automatic Trans and extras. Good Watercraft ¹4470374489) / Less than 40K miles from The Bulletin's shape! $1600. / Offered at $199K. "Call A Service Rare 1969 4x4 school nWa 541-382-2599 ds published in Too many options to bus, Blue Bird body, 19'. Professional" Directory tercraft" include: Kay GMC running qear, new list here! For more aks, rafts and motor 350, balanced &g RVcam. information go to wnrn new Ized personal $6000. In L a Grande, w~ Komfort Ridgecrest 23', watercrafts. Fo 541-663-9091 2008, queen bed, ~nlle robus.com 12' aluminum fish"boats" please se or email sleeps 6, micro & AC, ing boat, t r ailer, Class 670. tra!nwater157O full awning, living gmail.com room slider, yule motor, fish finder, 541-365-5609 tables, outside accessories, $1200. or call 858-527-8627 shower, 4 closets, 541-389-7234 fiberglass frame, as nervrngrenfrei Oregon rince rg03 new, $11,500. La Pine Tioga 24' Class C 14' Klamath boat HOLIDAY RAMBLER call 541-914-3360 880 Motorhome with trailer, $450. VACATIONER 2003 Motorhomes Bought new in 2000, 541-480-1353 8.1L V6 Gas, 340 hp, What are you currently under 20K workhorse, Allison 1000 miles, excellent 5 speed trans., 39K, looking for? 15' 1971 Fishing shape, new tires, NEYI/ TIRES, 2 slides, boat, full top cover, professionaly winterYou'll find it in Onan 5.5w gen., ABS 35 H P Ev i nrude every year, cutbrakes, steel cage cock- ized motor, trailer and The Bulletin Classifieds off switch to battery, pit, washer/dryer, firespare tire, accessoplus new RV batterlace, mw/conv. oven, ries, good condition. !es. Oven, hot water ree standing dinette, 541-385-5809 $1100 obo. 2007 Winnebago heater & air condiwas $121,060 new; now, 541-406-3611 tioning have never Outlook Class "C" $35,900. 541-536-1008 31', solar panel, Cat. been used! The Bulletin heater, excellent $24,000 obo. Serious inquiries, please. 15' fiberglas condition, more exTo Subscribe call Stored in Terrebonne. Sportsman, tras. Asking $58K. 541-385-5800 or go to 541-548-5174 75HP motor, trailer, Ph. 541<47-9268 www.bendbulletin.com good condition, Can be viewed at Lance 2013 Model 2385 $950. Western Recreation 24' w/large slide, 4-SeaJust too many 541-389-1086 (top of hill) son, fully loaded & used 541-419-6034 collectibles? in Prineville. only 4 times. Has extra Trident surface protecSell them in tion coat, stinger w/sway The Bulletin Classifieds bars, electric tongue jack, KOUNTRY AIRE 6-volt batteries, queen 1994 37.5' motorwalk-around bed, large 541-385-5809 front kitchen w/pantry, home, with awning, and one slide-out, complete entertainment system w/exterior spkrs, 16' 1996 Lowe alum. Only 47k miles Alfa See Ya 200636' power awning. Like new, and good condition. f ishing boat, 2 0 h p $29,995. 541-480-4148 Evinrude outbrd 8 re- Excellent condition, 1 $25,000. mote control Minnkota owner, 350 Cat diesel, 541-548-0318 t rolling motor, f i sh 51,000 miles, 4-dr frig, n (photo aboveis of a Say ngoodbuy finder, bow f i shing icemaker, gas stove, similar model & not the oven, washer/dryer, to that unused chair, Bimini top, trailer actual vehicle) Winnebago Advenw/spare tires, anchor, non-smoker, 3 shdes, turer 2005 35t/~', gas, item by placing it in generator, invertor, fenders, life jackets, less than 20,000 miles, The Bulletin Classifieds leather interior, satellights, exc. cond. & G R E A T n excellent condition, 2 lite, 7'4 ceiling. reat for local lakes, slide-outs, work horse Clean! $77,500. 2,995. 541-390-9932 National RV chassis, Banks power 541-385-580 9 541-233-6520 Tropical, 1997, brake system, sleeps 5, with al l o p tions, 35-ft, Chevy Vortec Alle~ro 28' Class A 2008 $62,000 / negotiable. engine, new tires, For V10 gas, 50K miles, Call 5 4 1-306-6711or 2 slides, satellite, 2 TVs, new awnings, 12-ft email a i kistu@bendslide-out, queen Onan gen, rear & side cable.com 18'Maxum skiboat,2000, cameras, hydraulic level- bed, Italian leather inboard motor, g reat ers, 300w solar w/in- couch and recliner, Like NEW! Trail-Lite cond, well maintained, verter, original owner, excellent condition. 2011 Crossover, 21-ft. $8995obo. 541-350-7755 $55,500. 541-420-4303 Ready to travel„ A/C, awning, AM/FM CD, towing hitch in1981 Johnson 7.5 hp custom queen bed, cuscluded. $19,900. motor, 2-cycle, excellent tom drawer pullouts. Dry 541-815-4811 condition, asking $425. axle wgt 2,566; dry un541-419-4989 Winnebago Aspect loaded wgt 2,847. Equa2009- 32', 3 slide- Flex suspension, exteNeed help fixing stuff? outs, Leather inte- rior shower, indoor tub/ Call A ServiceProfessional rior, Power s eat, shower combo, stabilizer find the help you need. locks, win d ows, iacks, 2 batteries, plus Beaver Marquis, www.bendbulletin.com Aluminum wheels. MORE!$12,995. 1993 e Call 541-280-9516for 17 Flat Screen, 40-ft, Brunswick Navion IQ Sprinter Surround s o u nd, info or to see - in Bend. floor plan. Many chassis RV 2008, 25' camera, Queen bed, extras, well mainMercedes Benz diesel, Foam mattress, Awtained, fire suponly 24k miles, excelning, Generator, Inpression behind lent condition, autoverter, Auto Jacks, refrig, Stow Master matic rear slide-out Air leveling, Moon 20tirg' Bavliner 2050 LS, 5000 tow bar, w/queen bed, full bath roof, no smoking or 1996 40th Anniversary, $23,995. w/shower, deluxe cap- p ets. L ik e n e w , Mercruiser 5.0L V8, 192 541-383-3503 tain swivel front seats, Orbit 21' 2007, used $74,900 hours, water sports, diesel generator, 541-480-6900 only 8 times, A/C, stored inside, $9300. awning, no pets/ oven, tub shower, 541-549-6329 no smoking.$65,500. micro, load leveler 541-382-2430 hitch, awning, dual (2) 10' Kayaks; Old Winnebago batteries, sleeps 4-5, Town Otter, Ocean Sightseer EXCELLENT CONFrenzy Si t -on-top, 30' 2004 DITION. All accesboth with p a ddles, sories are included. $225/ea. Bigfoot Diesel 32' 541-593-6053 $13,900 OBO. 2006, Su per C 541-382-9441 Duramax di e s el, Ads published in the with living r oom Allison trans., only Providence2005 "Boats" classification slide, 48,000 miles, 37K mi., do u ble Fully loaded, 35,000 include: Speed, fishin good condition. slide, 5500 Onan miles, 350 Cat, Very Need to get an ad ing, drift, canoe, Has newer Michdiesel gen., to many clean, non-smoker, house and sail boats. options to list. Vin¹ elin tires, awning, in ASAP? 3 slides, side-by-side For all other types of blinds, carpet, new $79,995. refrigerator with ice watercraft, please go 534032, BeaverCoach maker, Washer/Dryer, coach battery and to Class 875. Fax it to 541-322-7253 Flat screen TV's, In HD TV. $31,000 Sales &Service, 541-365-5609 Bend 541-914-8438 motion satellite. Call Dick at The Bulletin Classifieds DLR ¹3447 $95,000 541-408-2387 541-480-2019

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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

OPEN ROAD 36' 2005 - $25,500

on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. nSpellcheck" and human errors do occur. If this happens to

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

your ad, please con-

tact us ASAP so that

corrections and any adjustments can be made to your ad. 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classified

Advertise your car! Add A Pgcfure!

1/5th interest in 1973

Cessna 150 LLC 150hp conversion, low time on air frame and engine, hangared in Bend.Excellent performance & affordable flying! $6,000. 541-410-6007

Reach thousands of readers!

Call 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classifieds RV CONSIGNMENTS

Fleetwood Prowler 32' - 2001

WANTED We Do The Work ... You Keep The Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! Free Advertising. BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495

2 slides, ducted heat & air, great condition, snowbird ready, Many upgrade options, financing available! $14,500 obo. Call Dick, 541-480-1687.

Redmond:

The Bulletin

172 Cessna Share IFR equipped, new avionics, Garmin 750 touchscreen, center Recreation by Design stack 180hp. 2013 Monte Carlo, clean 36-ft. Top living room, 2 Exceptionally & economical! bdrm, has 3 slideouts, 2 $13,500. A/Cs, entertainment Hangared in KBDN center, fireplace, W/D, Call 541-728-0773 garden tub/shower, in

great condition.$36,000 obo. Call Peter, 307-221-2422,

( in La Pine )

541-548-5254

Wind River 201127ORLDS (Four Sea-

sons) 28' by Outdoor RV 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!$24,000. 541-548-2109

The Bulletin

Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory is all about meeting your needs. Call on one of the professionals today! 882

WILL DELIVER RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do the Work, You Keep the Cash! On-site credit

2180 TT, 440 SMO, Holiday Rambler 37' 180 mph, excellent Presidential model condition, always approval team, 2003, all factory ophangared, 1 owner web site presence. tions, 3 slides, 2 A/C We Take Trade-Ins! for 35 years. $60K. units, 4 door fridge, Free Advertising. fireplace, generator, BIG COUNTRY RV In Madras, electric jacks front Bend: 541-330-2495 call 541-475-6302 and rear, flat screen Redmond: TV, e n t ertainment 541-548-5254 BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS center, bay window, exc. cond., MUST Search the area's most 885 SEE! Sacr i fice comprehensive listing of $24,500 OBO. classified advertising... Canopies & Campers 541-223-2218 real estate to automotive, merchandise to sporting Eagle Cap 850, 2005 slideout, AC, micro, goods. Bulletin Classifieds Just bought a new boat? with Sell your old one in the frig, heater, queen bed, appear every day in the print or on line. classifieds! Ask about our wet bath, exlnt cond, $16,900. 541-368-3477 Super Seller rates! Call 541-385-5809 leave message. 541-385-5809 www.bendbulletin.com

The Bulletin

SNUG TOP Pickup canopy for F250 short bed,

white in color, like new, $675.

Kit Road Ranger 541-416-9686 22' 1996, Gr eat 1976 Cessna 150M condition, new stereo cd, new battery Western W i l derness Just oyer 3000hrs, 600 10'9 n 1996 c amper, hrs since out of frame charger, new tags. Incl. h itch, s o l ar fully self contained, major, Horton Stol Kit. panel, awning, staused very little, elec- Avionics Apollo 65 GPS b ile j a c ks , et c , tric jac k s , call & additional radio (4 frequencies can be moni541-965-2904 stored inside, clean, tored at once). Traneverything w o r ks. sponder w/mode C, JPI $5,900. Steve Fuel Flow Monitor, digi541-420-9478. n tal density, temp & amp monitor. Nice paint & upholstery w/memory foam seat bottoms. Oil filter & Laredo 30' 2009 block htr. 1 owner past 14 yrs; always hangared, no damage history. N9475U.$26,000.

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541-480-4375

Fifth Wheels

mxjmx

1974 Bellanca 1730A

908

1990 5th Wheel

Transporter

Call a Pro Whether you need a fence fixed, hedges trimmed or a house built, you'll find professional help in The Bulletin's "Call a Service Professional" Directory 541-385-5809

Aircraft, Parts & Service

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

$28,000

Low miles, EFI 460,

541-419-3301

4-spd auto, 10-ply tires, low miles, almost new condition, $3500.

1/3interestin

Columbia 400,

Financing available.

$150,000

(located @ Bend)

Ask for Theo, 541-260-4293

3000 sq. ft. Hangar Bend Airport west side. 60' wide by 50' deep with 55' wide by 16' high bi-fold door, 14'x14' door rear side. Upgraded with painted floor, windows, sky lights, 240V/50 amp outlets. $195,000. (520) 360-9300, Owner

541-268-3333

MONTANA 3585 2008, exc. cond., 3 slides,

king bed, Irg LR, Arctic insulation, all options $35,000 obo. 541-420-3250

Arctic Fox 29' 2003, 1/3 interest in wellcovered storage, slideequipped IFR Beech BoFind It in nanza A36, new 10-550/ out, exc. cond inside & outside 2016 tags, prop, located KBDN. The Bulletin Classifieds! $65,000. 541-419-9510 $14,900. 541-678-1449 541-385-5809 www. N4972M.com or 541-410-8849

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Earn $500 to over $1,000 per week! We are looking for a responsible and ambitious individual who wants the opportunity to build their own sales team, work independently, and earn a big weekly income. YOU CONTROL WHAT YOU EARN!Work your own

designated territory and essentially build your own business! • PEOPLE ORIENTED • RELIABLE TRANSPORTATION, CELL PHONE, COMPUTER WITH INTERNET ACCESS • SALES EXPERIENCE (OUTSIDE SALES OR INSIDE SALES EXPERIENCE, RETAIL SALES ASSOCIATE OR TELEMARKETING) PREFERRED. • PROFESSIONAL PERSONAL APPEARANCE.7

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E6 TUESDAY, MAY 27, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

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

908

933

933

935

935

975

975

975

975

Aircraft, Parts & Service

Pickups

Pickups

Sport Utility Vehicles

Sport Utility Vehicles

Automobiles

Automobiles

Automobiles

Automobiles

Toyota Tundra Limited2010

Save money. Learn to fly or build hours with your own airc raft. 1 96 8

A ero Commander, 4 seat, 150 HP, low time, full panel. $23,000 obo. Contact Paul at 541-447-5184.

T-Hangar for rent at Bend airport. Call 541-382-8998. 916

Trucks & Heavy Equipment

541-408-7826

Dodge Ram 1500 SLT uadcab 1999

Hyster forklift, H 3 0E

propane, 2 stage, 672 hours, $1900 obo. 541-389-7596

5 .2L V8 auto . , 1 43,659 mi. R W D Vin ¹ 628726 B ar-

gain Corral. $4,977 ROBBERSON LINcoLN ~

Peterbilt 359 p otable water truck, 1 990, 3200 gal. tank, 5hp p ump, 4 - 3 N hoses, camlocks, $ 25,000. 541-820-3724

Where can you find a helping hand? From contractors to yard care, it's all here in The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory 925

Utility Trailers

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541-312-3986 DLR¹0205

4WD, 4 dr. dbl cab, less than 33K mi. VIN¹123670 $36,977 ROBBERSON ~

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541-312-3986 DLR¹0205

Big Tex

$1,200

541-379-3530

TURN THE PAGE

For More Ads The Bulletin 931

Automotive Parts, Service & Accessories

4 All-season summer tires, like new VHP

Good classified adstell the essential facts in an interesting Manner.Write from the readers view -not the seller's. Convert the facts into benefits. Show the reader howthe item will help them insomeway.

The Bulletin serving centraloregonsince tete

Ford F150 LIGHTNING The Bulletin Classifieds 1993, 500 miles on rebuilt engine. Clean inteRV tra i le r tire s , rior & new tires. $7000, P205/75R-15 (4) summer OBO. 541-647-8723 tires, 80% tread remaining, $145. 541-788-4844 Ford F-250 1985 Diesel 2WD. 110,000 original 932 miles. ATS Turbo, Gear Antique & Vendor Splitter Box overdrive, camper shell, Classic Autos tool box, trailer brakes. Excellent condition, $5500. Call Gary 208-720-3255

Ford F250 2004 Lariat Super Duty 4x4, 6L

diesel, crew cab, 16,200 miles, loaded, excellent shape, $23,500 With Lance Camper Model 1030,excellent shape, loaded, stored inside, original owner, $18,000. Call 541-549-6329

~

2011

Ford Bronco il 4x4, 1989Automatic, power steering, stereo upgrade, set-up to tow, runs good. $1700. 541-633-6662

Garage Sales

black w/ leather seat trim, 3.4L V6, 27,709 miles. vin¹362484 26.977 ROBBERSON LI II C 0 LII ~

Buick Skylark 1972 17K orig. miles. Please see hemmings.com for details. $18,900. 54'I -323-1898

The Bulletin Classified 541485-5809

16 mpg Hwy, Vin¹ 66902 Bargain Corral $9,977

Ford Thunderbird 2004 Convertible

ROBBERSON

with hard & soft top, silver with black interior, all original, very low mileage, in premium condition. $19,900. 702-249-2567 (car is in Bend)

940

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541-312-3986 dlr ¹0205

Chrysler Town & Country LXI 1997, beautiful inside & out, one owner, nonsmoker,. loaded with Lexus ES330 2005, 1 options! 197,892 mi. owner, 66K, well maint'd, Service rec o rds available. $4 , 950. $13,500. 541-420-6032 Call Mike, (541) 8158176 after 3:30 p.m.

Ford Explorer XLT 2002

ABS, 4WD, V6, front fog driving lights. vin¹C23396 $8,977 co. ~

975

Automobiles

Pontiac G6 2007, just 36,000 miles, in very good condition, $8900. 541-548-1422

on black, sport/prem packs, leather, 3.5i turbo, nav., 20k miles, 19 Nwheels, cold weather pkg, Xenons, warranteed to 9/2015. $38,000 One owner, 503-789-9401

(Portland)

mam a

541-312-3986 dlr ¹0205

BMW X3 2011black

Corvette 1979

Lincoln Navigator 2003 4WD, V8 5.4L, tow pkg, fully loaded with DVD, heated leather seats, 3rd row seating, runs 8 drives exc., well maint., 143k mi. Non-smokers. New tires, brakes, rotors and struts. $7,950. 541-604-4166

Porsche Carrera 911 2003 convertible with hardtop. 50K miles, new factory Porsche motor 6 mos ago with 18 mo factory warranty remaining. $37,500. 541-322-6928

Take care of your investments with the help from The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory

VW Convertible Beetle, 2007, low miles, terrific cond, garaged, new tires, Where can you find a $10,700. 541-729-1677 helping hand? Find exactly what From contractors to yard care, it's all here you are looking for in the CLASSIFIEDS in The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory VTVJetta GLI 2012

Vans

ROBBERSON

Sell them in The Bulletin Classifieds

aged or abused. $12,900.

Dave, 541-350-4077

541-385-5809

Bluetooth, pl, pw, manual trans. Vin¹108574 $18,977 ROBBERSON Ltucoto~

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541-312-3986 DLR ¹0205 WHEN YOU SEE THIS

Just too many collectibles?

L82- 4speed. 85,000 miles Garaged since new. I've owned it 25 years. Never dam-

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MoreP ixatBendbjjlletin.com On a classified ad go to www.bendbulletin.com to view additional photos of the item.

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ton dually, 4 spd. trans., great MPG, could be exc. wood hauler, runs great, new brakes, $1950. 541-419-5480.

ToyotaLandcruiser VX 1999

ROBBERSON BMW X3 2008, 3.0 si., 71,800 mi., Premium, cold weather, sports pkg. All maintenance up to date w/ records. Lots of extras - new brakes, new tires, new battery, winter mats, running boards, hitch-Must see! $19,000 obo. 541-480-8815

541-322-9647

USE THE CLASSIFIEDS!

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2003 6 speed, X50 added power pkg., 530 HP! Under 10k miles, Arctic silver, gray leather interior, new quality tires, and battery, Bose p remium so u n d stereo, moon/sunroof, car and seat covers. Many extras.

Garaged, p e rfect condition, $59,700.

541-312-3986 DLR ¹0205

DLR¹0205

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541-312-3986 dlr ¹0205

Moon roof, roof rack, l eather, pdl, p w . vin¹C15393 $16,997

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f products or servicesf from out of the area

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Serving Central Oregon since 1903

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checks, or credit in- s formation may be I [ subject toFRAUD. For more informa-

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f tion about an adver-f tiser, you may call

I the Oregon Statel s Attorney General's s > Office C onsumer I f Protection hotline atf 1-877-877-9392.

The Bulletin Seroiog Central Oregonsince fgta

Say Ngoodbuye

to that unused item by placing it in The Bulletin Classifieds

541 -385-5809

2011 - 2. 5 L 4 cyl., FWD, auto., 64k miles, Bordeaux Reserve vin¹324193

541.312.3986

541-385-5809

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matching canopy, 30k original miles, possible trade for classic car, pickup, Plymouth B a r racuda motorcycle, RV 1966, original car! 300 $13,500. hp, 360 V8, centerIn La Pine, call lines, 541-593-2597 928-581-9190 WHEN ONLY THE BEST WILL DO!

Ford FusionSjoorf

Door-to-door selling with fast results! It's the easiest way in the world to sell.

CL ~

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

O5809

4.7L V8, 4WD, auto.

Find them in The Bulletin Classifieds

Ford F-350 4x4,

FORD XLT 1992 3/4 ton 4x4

Il tt m t a

1996, 73k miles,

Porsche 911 Turbo 541 N385

..48~

Ford EscapeXLT 2010

Garage Sales

Need to get an ad in ASAP? You can place it online at: www.bendbulletin.com

$20,997 ROBBERSON 4

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Garage Sales

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Ford T-Bird, 1966, 390 engine, power every2006 XLT 4-door thing, new paint, 54K orig. miles, runs great, Crew Cab exc. cond.in/out. $7500 6.0L Turbo diesel, full obo. 541-480-3179 power, a u t omatic, 6-disc CD, cruise, fog lstee lights, running boards, pggg tow pkg, bedliner, grill guard, folding rear seat. Tan cloth interior, metallic tan exterior. 91,400 miles. HOT ROD Price reduced to 1923 Ford Roadster, $20,500 302 Ford V-8, auto 541-350-6925 C-4 transmission, 9" rear. Has matching custom trailer. $18,900 will consider offers. CashOnly! 541-233-6010

503-358-1164.

nma a a

Get your business

with an ad in The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory

III R K R

541-312-3986 DLR ¹0205

ROBBERSON ~

This advertising tip brought toyouby

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72 Chevelle, reblt 350trans, new tires/batt/tags, lots of chrome, asking, $12,500. 541-410-5349 Chevrolet pickup 1953 V-8 w/ auto trans, new tires, good cond., $2500 obo. 541-516-8222 Ford Mustang GT 1965, local car, low mileage, pony interior, dark blue, 4 speed, excellent condition, Prinevi lle, $ 18,500. C a ll Paul, 503-201-7974. Ford pickup 1935, restored 8,000 m iles ago, stock, 3 spd, flat head, excellent condition, $19,555, Paul 503-201-7974

LINCOLN ~

Dodge Ram 2500 2008 Diesel, X3 2 0 07, 99K exc. towing vehicle, BMW miles, premium pack2WD, 55,000 age, heated lumbar miles. New battersupported seats, panTick, Tock ies, rear air bags, oramic mo o nroof, Roll-n-lock bed Bluetooth, ski bag, XeTiCk, TOck... non headlights, tan & cover, spray-in ...don't let time get black leather interior, liner. 5th wheel n ew front 8 re a r away. Hire a hitch available, too. brakes © 76K miles, $19,000. professional out one owner, all records, 541-604-1285 very clean, $16,900. of The Bulletin's

255/60r 17-1 0 6V. $350. 541-317-0502

Chevy C-20 Pickup 1969, was a special order, has all the extras, and is all original. See fo believe! 541-923-6049

ROBBERSON

Have an item to Sport Utility Vehicles sell quick? If it's under Chev Trailblazer LS 2004, Volvo S60T52013 AWD, 6 cyl, remote entry, '500you can place it in clean title, 12/15 tags, The Bulletin $5995. 541-610-6150 Classifieds for: People Lookfor Information About Products and Services Eveq Day through '10- 3 lines, 7 days AWD, less than 11k '16 - 3 lines, 14 days The Bulletin Clnssifieffs mi., auto, 6 spd. (Private Party ads only) vin ¹202364 $30,977 NissanMurano SL 541-312-3986 DLR ¹0205

Ford 3/4 ton F250 1993 Power Stroke diesel, turbocharged, 5-spd, good runner 8 work truck. $4500 obo. Call 541-389-5353 or 541-647-8176

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 $30,977

935

541-388-4360

utility frailer 5'x8', drop ramp. Perfect for hauling your motorcycle,jet skis, quads, etc!

CORVETTE COUPE Glasstop 2010

Chevrolet Trailblazer 2008 4x4 Automatic, 6-cylinder, tilt wheel, power windows, power brakes, air conditioning, keyless entry, 69K miles. Excellent condition; tires have 90% tread. $11,995. Call 541-598-5111

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.

Porsche 911 Carrera 993 cou

MercedesBenz

C300 S ort2012

Want to impress the relatives? Remodel your home with the help of a professional from The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory

a

0 1000

1000

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

clarifications, etc). Failure to r o v ide contact information to the De artment of S olid Waste w i l l result in r o o ser INVITATION TO BID u~io uotacotto . Knott Landfill Cell 6 Onl mand ator Construction Project r e-bid mee t i n attendees and those Sealed bids will be the received at the Des- notif in De artment of Solid chutes County DeWaste of w e bsite p artment o f So l i d W aste, 61050 S E access to the ro ect lans and s e cifi27th Street, B end, Oregon 97702, until cations will receive f~ooow-u but not after, 2:00 .m. o n T h ursda documents June 1 2 20 1 4 ; at addenda clarificawhich time all bids for t~iooo etc . the above e n titled solid waste project will Bids shall be made on be publicly opened the forms furnished by County, and read aloud. Bid- the incorporating all ders must submit a First Tier S u bcon- contract documents, including a Bid Bond tractor Dis c losure Statement Form. The or Cashier's Check for Subcontractor Disclo- the minimum amount sure Statement may o f 10% of t h e B i d Price, addressed and be submitted in the mailed or delivered to sealed bid prior to 2:00 p.m. on Thurs- Deschutes C o u nty Department of Solid day, June 12, 2014 or W aste, 61050 S E in a separate sealed 27th Street, B e nd, e nvelope mar k ed Oregon 97702 in a "FIRST TIER S UBenvNe lope CONTRACTOR DIS- sealed CLOSURE STATE- plainly marked Knott Landfill Ce l 6 MENT-KNOTT L ANDFILL CELL 6 Construction Project" along with the name CONSTRUCTION and address of the P ROJECT" prior t o 4:00 .m. on June 12 bidder. 2014 at the above loNo b i d wi l l be cation. considered by S aid work is to b e Deschutes C o u nty t he bid performed at the Knott unless L andfill located i n contains a statement by the bidder that the Bend, Oregon and shall include: excava- p rovisions of O R S tion for a refuse cell; 279C.800 — 279C.870 are to be complied c onstruction of e m bankments; installa- with. Each bid must tion of geosynthetics; contain a statement i nstallation o f so i l as to w h ether the materials for c u sh- bidder is a r esident ioning, and drainage; bidder, as defined in construction of ORS 279A.120. leachate c o l lection be systems and pump Bidders s h al l with stations; installation of prequalified landfill gas piping and Deschutes County or flare systems; and in- w ith th e S t ate o f stallation of a sphalt Oregon in accordance concrete pavement. with ORS 279C430The The estimated con- 279C.450. struction c o s t is prequalification to classification required $2,000,000 f or this p roject i s $4,000,000. "General Plans, specifications Construction." and other bid docu- Prequalification ments may be in- applications shall be spected at the Des- filed no l a ter t h an c hutes Count y seven (7) days prior to Department of Solid the bid opening date. successful Waste website The bidders and (http://www.deschutes.org/Solid-Wast subcontractors provid ing l a b o r sha l l e /Projects.aspx) o r obtained from Des- maintain a qualified drug testing program chutes County Dep artment o f So l i d for the duration of the contract. Bidders shall Waste be registered with the (541 -31 7-3163), 61050 SE 27th Street, Construction Bend, Oregon 97702, Contractor's B oard. and for a fee of $50.00, Contractors which is not refund- subcontractors need not be licensed under able. If you wish to have them mailed to ORS 468A.720. you, enclose an addi- Deschutes C o unty tional $5.00 with your request. Should ex- may reject any bid not pedited handling be in compliance with all b i d ding desired, Federal Ex- prescribed and press or e quivalent procedures r equirements, an d service will be utilized on a collect on deliv- may reject for good ery basis. Inquiries cause any or all bids p ertaining t o thi s upon a f i nding of Deschutes County it is project shall be dir ected t o Ger r y in the public interest Friesen of G. Friesen to do so. The protest f or this A ssociates, Inc. a t period procurement is seven (503) 635-1233. (7) calendar days. A MAND A TORY Timm Schimke, pre-bid construction meeting will be held at Director of Solid Waste 1:30 p.m. on June 4, PUBLISHED: 2014 at the Department of Solid THE BEND BULLETIN: May 22 and 27, 2014 Waste Office which is located at 61050 SE DAILY JOURNAL OF COMMERCE: 27th Street, B e nd, Oregon. A tour of the May 23 and 28, 2014 project site will be part of this meeting. All bidders are required to attend. LEGAL NOTICE

Deschutes County, Oregon Department of Solid Waste

IMPORTANT:

The Bulletin is your

Prospective Employment proposers downloading/access Marketplace ing website-posted p roject plans , specifications and Call other bid documents MUST completeand submit the Contact 541-385-5809 I nformation F o r m p rovided o n th e to advertise. website, or contact the Department of Solid W a ste by telephone at (541) WWW.bendbulletin.Com 317-3163, to provide contact information, to receive followup docu m ents Sefef'ng Central Oregonsince lgrn (addenda,

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