Bulletin Daily Paper 05-28-14

Page 1

Serving Central Oregon since190375

WEDNESDAY May 28, 2014

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Springgolf SPORTS • C1

OUTDOORS • D1

bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD Your online data — The FTC takesaim at brokers who collect info on theactivities of consumers.C6

ewer

soo

an

• United Express will halt daily Redmond-PDXflights in September

Portland. Alaska Airlines

operates four nonstop flights daily from Portland to Red-

By Joseph Ditzler

spokeswoman for SkyWest

will be discontinued "due

Coal cleanup —one ofthe

The Bulletin

Airlines, which operates

to underperformance in the

mond through its affiliate Horizon Air, according to its

dirtiest power plants in the U.S. is slashing its pollution.AS

those flights for United

markets."

online flight schedule.

inate its three daily, direct

Airlines. United Express' direct

United will contact customers with flights booked

flights from Redmond to San Francisco and Redmond to

beyond Sept. I to make other

Denver will continue, she said.

in an email Tuesday. The airline's decision does

United Express will elimflights between Portland and

PCT record —Hikingwith Heather Anderson.D1

Disc golf doom — Asurvey

Redmond after Sept. I, officials said Tuesday. The airline also will be ending direct flights from Portland to Eugene and

Snow said the flights between Portland and Redmond, Eugene andSeattle

Seattle, said Marissa Snow,

accommodations, she wrote not mean an end to flights from Redmond Airport to

"We'll still have service, but

this is an economic decision," said Jon Stark, Redmond office manager for Economic Development for Central Oregon. "One we knew was coming." SeeFlights /A5

tags it as one ofthe fastestgrowing sports in the U.S.D5

METOLIUS

Searchers find body of missing fisherman By Shelby R. King The Bulletin

Rescue crews on Tuesday recovered the body of a Corvallis man who

slipped into the Metolius River on Monday, according to Jefferson County Sheriff's Patrol Capt. Marc Heckathorn. Isamu (Sam) Furuichiman, 62, went missing after falling into the river from the shoreline where

he was fishing near Bridge

Paucityofpork — pri ces

99.

have risen after a virus killed as many as 7 million pigs.C6

Furuichiman's body was found about 2:30 p.m. Tuesday by search

Plus: more onthe food

and rescue members in

fron't —In Oregon,acom-

kayaks, Heckathorn said

bination of aquaculture and hydroponics.B3

In national news — The U.S. Army removesthe commander of one of its busiest hospitals after two deaths.A2

in a news release Tuesday

ReflRII

f-

- .:.HUSI ~

~ %e

night. His body was 2.3 miles downriver from where he fell in. SeeFisherman/A5

Fishermansearch

And a Wed exclusive-

Searchers reported finding abody Tuesday after a fishermanwas swept into the waters of the Metoiius near Bridge 99 inthe Camp Shermanareaon Monday.

2

Campus killings set off anguished conversation. bendbelletin.cem/extras

WARM SPRINGS I N D I AN RES

USF Reddsway Inc

Metol'Ios Rlver

Lake Billy Chinook

EDITOR'5CHOICE

Briflge 99

New study reinforces walking for aging well

Lrer

r4 1 00

DESCR TES N ATI N A L FOR ST

mp Sherman

Aga Butte t

To Sis s Andy Zetgert I The Bulletin

By Gretchen Reynolds New Yorh Times News Service

Regular exercise, including walking, significantly reduces the chance that a frail older person will become physically disabled, according to one of the largest and longest-run-

Andy Tullie/The Bulletin

Traffic backs upTuesday afternoon as a train crosses Reed Market Road in Bend. Twocity councilors said recent news of an increase in oil shipments by train through Central Oregon is a reminder that these types of crossings are dangerous, and they say more attention should be dedicated to ensuring the public's safety.

By Hillary Borrud

tracks. However, in most cases there is no timeline to

ning studies of its kind to

The Bulletin

date. The results, published Tuesdayin the journal

say the news published this

buildthose bridges because of a lack of money at the

month that trains are carry-

local and state level.

ing an increasing amount of oil through Central Oregon is a reminder of the danger

For example, the city of Bend initially considered building a bridge over the railroad tracks as part of the project to overhaul

JAMA, reinforce the ne-

cessity of frequent physical activity for our aging parents, grandparents and, of

Two Bend city councilors

posed by streets that cross

hard, scientific evidence

railroad tracks. "I think it's something that everybody in Bend ought to be concerned about because of the sub-

about its benefits in the old

stantial risk to public safety

and infirm has been sur-

involved with trains going through our city," Mayor

course, ourselves. While everyone knows

that exercise is a good idea, whatever your age, the

prisingly limited. "For the first time, we have directly shown that

exercise can effectively lessen or prevent the development of physical disability in a population of extremely vulnerable elderly people," said Dr. Marco Pahor, the director

of the Institute on Aging at the University of Florida,

Gainesville, and the lead author of the study. Countless epidemiological studies have found a strong correlation be-

tween physical activity in advanced age and a longer, healthier life. But such studies can't prove that exercise improves older people's health, only that healthy older people exercise. SeeWalking/A4

ute more to projects such

as overpasses that would increase railroad safety. Often, the cost of a railroad

bridge project includes purchasing land from the railway. Clinton repeated an

Southeast Reed Market Road. But at an estimated

idea he proposed during a meeting with federal, state and local officials Friday, that federal lawmakers should pass legislation to

cost in 2006 of $14.7 million,

impose a fee on shipments

the bridge was deemed too

of hazardous materials to help pay for safety mea-

expensive for the city. A 2009 state rail plan for Central Oregon estimated the

At-grade crossings in and nearBend There are eight at-grade railroad crossings in Bend, where traffic must stop for trains and there is a risk of train-vehicle collisions. The city lacks money to build bridges over the tracks, but some city counciiors say the increase in oii-by-raii shipments makes it more important to find a solution.

TODAY'S WEATHER

y,t t it,

Possible showers High 59, Low33 Page B6

The Washington Post

A growing number of homebuyers are bringing an unusual tactic to the ta-

sales, but they've soared • Local to about 40 pnc es, C6 percent na-

potential spills. Federal regulations require railways

C5-6 Comics/Pu zzles E3-4 Horoscope 0 6 Outdoors B2 Crosswords E 4 L o cal/State Bf-6 S ort Ef-8 Dear Abby D6 Ob ituaries B5 TV/Movies

By Dina EIBoghdady

ter of home

sures and preparation for

tionwide, according to the

research firm CoreLogic. And more of these buyers are individuals, not the institutional investors who

plunged into the housing market when it collapsed,

Source: ODOT Andy Zeigert IThe Bulletin

The Bulletin

INDEX Business Calendar Classified

real estate ble: an all-cash offer. Cash purchases traditionallymake up aboutaquar-

• At-grade crossing

cost at $18 million, roughly "There's the potential for ve- the same amount the city is to pay 5 percent of the cost hicles having collisions with spending for the entire Reed of projects that eliminate trains, and then there's alMarket Road project, which at-grade crossings, when ways the potential for a de- includes widening the road the crossing previously had railment or some other hap- and building sidewalks, active warning devices such pening that causes one of landscaped stormwater as lights, automatic gates, these spills or explosions." features and a roundabout. bells and highway signals. These intersections are There are seven other atRussell said the railroad known as at-grade crossgraderailroad crossings in also benefits when govings, and the Oregon DeBend. ernments build overpasses partment of Transportation Clinton and City Counacross train tracks because and local governments have cilor Sally Russell said they trains can move more plans that list intersections would like railways and the quickly through populated where they would like companies shipping hazareas. to build bridges over the ardous materials to contribSeeTrains/A4 Jim Clinton said Tuesday.

Cashdeals shifting U.S.

D1 - 6 C1-4 DB

AnIndependent Newspaper

Vol. 112 No. 14e 32 pages, 5 sections

then pulledback when home prices rose. Wealthy people, foreigners and retirees are transforming markets across the United States with these

all-cash deals. SeeHomebuyers/A4

Q l/i/B use recyclnewspri ed nt

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8 8 267 02329


A2

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o f investigations into t h e gressively going after them," deaths of the two patients. similar issues that we are ag-

New York Times News Service

ONLINE

The Army ousted the com-

mander of one of its busiest hospitalsand suspended three

top deputies'Itfesday after two patients in their 20s unexpectedly died shortly after they sought treatment at the hospital's emergency room in the past 10 days. The shake-up at the hospital, Womack Army Medical Center at Fort Bragg, N.C., came at a moment of heightened sensitivity about health

said Rear Adm. John Kirby, the Pentagon press secretary.

Womack is one of 41 domestic inpatient hospitals run by

Defense officials said the re- the Defense Department, servview, which will cover access ing active-duty service memto health care, patient safety bers and their families, as well and quality of care, had been as long-serving retirees and decided upon last week and their families. The separate was unrelated to the situation system run by the Department at Womack. of Veterans Affairs cares for They said the changes at those who left the military afWomack were due tothe pa- ter less than 20 years. tient deaths and problems Pentagon data shows that with surgical infection iden- Womack, which performs tified in March by the Joint

more than 14,000 inpatient

Commission, an independent and outpatient surgical pronity, stirred by the furor over body that accredits hospitals. cedures a year, had a higher treatment delays in the sepa- In a statement, the Army said than expected rate of surgical rate medical system serving that "senior Army medical complications from January care in the military commu-

the nation's veterans. Late

Tuesday, Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel ordered a broad review to ensure that military

leaders have lost trust and 2010 to July 2013, the latest confidence" i n Wom a ck's data available. In March, the

commander, Col.Steven J. hospital suspended all elecBrewster, and had replaced tive surgery for two days afpatients — many of them ac- him with Col. Ronald T. Ste- ter inspectors from the Joint tive-duty service members phens, another doctor. Commission found fault with and their families — are not New acting deputies were s urgical-infection cont r o l facing similar problems. also named to head clinical procedures. "He wants to make sure that services, nursing and adminThe hospital has remained to the degree that we have any istration, pending the results fully accredited.

UKRAINE REPORTS MORE PRO-RUSSIAN FIGHTERS

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CORRECTIONS The Bulletin's primary concern is that all stories areaccurate. If you knowof an error in a story,call us at541-383-0356.

Syrian COnfliCt —President Barack Obamamaysoon sign off on a project to train andequip moderate Syrian rebels, in anopen move that would significantly boost U.S. support to forces who havebeen asking for three years for military help in their quest to oust President Bashar Assad, administration officials said Tuesday.Thestep would send a limited number of American troops to Jordan to bepart of a regional training mission that would instruct carefully vetted members of the FreeSyrian Army on tactics, including counterterrorism operations, the officials said. Theysaid Obamahas not given approval for the initiative, and that there is still internal discussion about its merits and potential risks. Egyptiah tfct8 —After Egypt's revolution three years ago, so many voters eager for democracy turned out for elections that officials had to scramble to accommodate the throngs. OnTuesday, the military-backed government confronted the opposite problem: Officials extended ascheduled two-day vote to a third day because so few people hadshown up. Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi, the former army field marshal who deposedMohammed Morsi of the Muslim Brotherhood, Egypt's first freely elected president, is still universally expected to win by a landslide. Yet the disappointing turnout has upendedhis supporters' hopes that the vote would grant him newlegitimacy after the ouster. PakiStalli ll88tillg —A pregnant Pakistani woman wasbeaten to death by her family outside a courthouse in theeastern city of Lahore on Tuesday becauseshehaddefied their wishes and married the man of her choice, police officials said. Police investigators said that the woman was beaten to death on a busy street as a crowd of about 30 men watched, but did nothing. Suchattacks, known as honor killings, are common in pockets of rural Pakistan where tribal traditions are strong. But they are relatively rare in large cities such asLahore.

ChineSe-VietnameSe tenSIOhS — Tensions in the South China Sea escalated Tuesday asChina and Vietnam traded accusations over the sinking of a Vietnamesefishing vessel in the vicinity of a Chinese oil rig parked in disputed waters off Vietnam's coast. In the latest incident, a Chinesevessel rammed and sank aVietnamese fishing boat about17 nautical miles southwest of the rig Mondayafternoon, the state-run Vietnamesetelevision network, VTV1, reported. AII10 crew members were rescued, the network said. But Beijing labeled Vietnam as theaggressor. Then Chinaaccused Vietnam of sabotage and interfering with the operations of the oil rig.

South Korean hospital fire —Afire at ahospital annex housing elderly patients in the southwestern county of Jangseong killed 21 people early today, officials said. Twenty patients and anurse died at the hospital, which specializes in elderly patients who suffer from dementia and palsy, andseven others were injured, officials with the Jangseong Fire Department said, speaking on condition of anonymity because of office rules. Thevictims died after suffocating on poisonous gas, officials said. Therewere 35 patients and anurse on duty on the second floor of an annex ofHyosarang Hospital when the fire broke out, officials said. The fire wasput out after about six minutes, the officials said. Thecausewas not immediately known.

TALK TO AN EDITOR Business Tim Doran.........54f-383-0360 CifySheila G.Miler ..........541-617-7631 CommunityLife, Health JulieJohnson....................541-383-0308 Editorials RichardCoe.....541-383-0353 GD! Magazine Ben Salmon....................... Home,All Ages AlandraJohnson...............541-617-7860 NewsJanJordan..............541-383-0315 Photos DeanGuernsey.....541-383-0366 Snorts Bill Bigelow............541-383-0359 State Projects Lily Raff McCaulou...........541-410-9207

Afghan war —Charting an endto America's longest war, President Barack Obamaannounced plans Tuesdayfor keeping nearly 10,000 U.S. troops in Afghanistan after this year but then withdrawing virtually all by the close of 2016andthe conclusion of his presidency. Thedrawdown would allow Obamato bring America's military engagement in Afghanistan to anendwhile seeking to protect the gains made in awar in which hesignificantly intensified U.S. involvement. "We have to recognize that Afghanistan will not be aperfect place, and it is not America's responsibility to make it one," Obama declared during anappearance in the White House RoseGarden.

— From wire reports Ivan Sekretarev/The Associated Press

A pro-Russian militia manpatrols a checkpoint Tuesday on aroadleading to the airport in Donetsk, Ukraine. The eastern Ukrainian city was in turmoil a day after government forces usedfighter jets to stop pro-Russian militia from taking over the airport. The Ukrainian army said Tuesday that it had evicted armed separatists from the international airport in Donetsk after a 24-hour gun battle, but the government in Kiev warned of a newthreat as truckloads of armed Russian volunteers reportedly

crossed the border. Donetsk Mayor OleksandrLukyanchenko said 48 people were killed, including two civilians, in the fighting at Sergei Prokofiev International Airport. The pro-Russian rebels said they hadsuffered more than 50 fatalities, many of them the result of an army attack on atruck evacuating wounded. A government spokesmansaid the incident was under investigation. — McClatchy Foreign Staff

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SupremeCourt rules against rigid intelligencetests for executions By Mark Sherman

capital punishment requires

The Associated Press

giving inmates the chance to scored as low as 60 and as

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WASHINGTON — Twelve pr e s ent evidence of m e ntal high as 80, with his most re-

years after barring execution disability in borderline cases. cent scores between 69 and 74, "The states are laboratories according to the state. of the mentally disabled, the Supreme Court on Tuesday for experimentation, but those prohibited states in borderline experiments may not deny the cases from relying only on in- basic dignity the Constitution telligence test scores to deter- protects," Kennedy said in an mine whether a death row in- opinion that was joined by mate is eligible to be executed. the court's four more liberal In a 5-4 decision that split

j u s t ices.

the court's liberal and conservative justices, the

court said that Florida and a handful of other states must look beyond IQ scores when inmates test in th e range of 70 to 75. IQ tests have a margin

At m o st, eight other states employ a similar cutitoi~t6" o f of 70 , K e nnedy • Protesters' said. He listed those c a se against states as: Alabama, Secret Arizona, D e l aware, S e rviceis Kan s as, Ke n tucky, b l ocked,B3 N o rth Carolina, Virginia and Washing-

of error, and those inmates

Oregon Lottery results

TOUCHMARK

(Nemrprial Day to Lobor Duy)

Ij' ,

t o n . Kansas has not executed

whose scores fall within the a nyone in nearly 50 years and margin must be allowed to W ashingtonrecentlysuspendpresent other evidence of men- ed its death penalty, he said. tal disability, Justice Anthony In d i ssent for the four jusKennedy said in his majority t i ces to the right of Kennedy, opinion. Justice Samuel Alito said the A score of 70 is widely ac- court has no evidence that cepted as a marker of mental relying on test scores just disability, but medical profes- above 70 i s u n reasonable sionals say people who score and so should not be held as high as 75 can be consid- unconstitutional. ered intellectually disabled Tu e sday's decision came in because of the test's margin of the case of 68-year-old Frederror. die Lee Hall. Lawyers for Hall In 2002, the court said that

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executing mentally disabled show that he is mentally disinmates violates the Eighth abled, even though most of his Amendment prohibition on m u ltiple IQ tests have yielded cruel and unusual punish- scorestopping 70. Hall has ment. But until Tuesday, the b e en on death row for more justices left to the states the de- t han 35 years since being con-

termination of who is mentally victed of murdering a pregnant 21-year-old woman in 1978. disabled. Kennedy said the finality of In n i n e tests administered

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WEDNESDAY, MAY 28, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

A3

TART TODAY

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

It'sWe dnesday,May28,the 148th day of 2014. Thereare 217 days left in the year.

HAPPENINGS Veteran care — AU.s. House Veteran's Affairs Committee hearing is scheduled, with testimony expected from Department of Veterans Affairs officials about veterans' health care.A2

Spelling —Theon-stage

TRENDS

INNOVATION

MIT's ' H obby Shop' owconcerss i e spawns ideas,including rom son s o s e aces a way to slowoil leaks

rounds of the Scripps National Spelling Beebegin in Maryland

By Tom Moroney Btoomberg News

"r /

HISTORY Highlight:In1934, the Dionne quintuplets — Annette, Cecile, Emilie, MarieandYvonnewere born toElzire Dionneat the family farm inOntario, Canada. (Of the five, AnnetteandCecile are still living.) In1533, the Archbishopof Canterbury, ThomasCranmer, declared themarriage ofEngland's King HenryVlll to Anne Boleyn valid. In1863, the 54th Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry Regiment, made upof freed blacks,

BOSTON — Folkers Rojas calls his invention, sim-

(/-lt P(/( riy

/ Lisa DeJong / For The Washington Post

Items on permanent display at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum in Cleveland include "The Teacher," a 30-foot-tall inflatable sculpture that was part of the stage set for Pink Floyd's live performances of "The Wall" album.

the Titanic disaster that cited a

"state of absolute unpreparedness," improperly testedsafety equipment and an "indifference to danger" assome ofthe causes of an "unnecessary tragedy." In1929, the first all-color talking picture, "Onwith the Show," opened inNewYork. In1937, President Franklin D. Roosevelt pushed abutton in Washington signaling that vehicular traffic could begincrossing the just-openedGolden Gate Bridge inCalifornia. Neville Chamberlain became prime minister of Britain. In1940,during World WarII, the Belgian armysurrendered to invading German forces. In1959, the U.S.Army launched Able, a rhesusmonkey,and Baker, asquirrel monkey, aboard aJupiter missile for a suborbital flight, which both

primates survived. In1961,Amnesty International had its beginnings with thepublication of an article in the British

newspaperTheObserver, "The Forgotten Prisoners." In1964, the charter of thePalestine Liberation Organization was issued at the start of a meeting of thePalestineNational Congress inJerusalem. In1984, President Ronald Reagan led a state funeral at Arlington NationalCemeteryfor an unidentified Americansoldier killed in the Vietnam War.

Ten yearsage:The Iraqi Governing Council choselyad Allawi, a longtimeanti-Saddam Hussein exile, to becomeprime minister of Iraq's interim government. Fiveyearsago:AwhiteNew York City police officer killed an off-duty black colleaguein afriendly fire incident in East Harlem. (Agrandjury declined to indict Officer AndrewDunton in the shooting of Officer Omar Edwards, whohaddrawn his gun andwaschasing aman who had brokeninto his car.) Kavya Shivashankar, a13-yearold girl from Kansas,spelled "Laodicean" (lukewarmor indifferent in religion or politics) to win the ScrippsNational Spelling Bee. One yearage:Calling it perhaps the biggest money-laundering scheme inU.S.history, federal prosecutors chargedsevenpeople with running whatamounted to an online, underworld bank, saying that Liberty Reserve handled $6 billion for drugdealers, child pornographers, identity thieves andother criminals around the globe.

BIRTHDAYS Basketball Hall-of-FamerJerry West is 76. FormerNewYork City Mayor RudolphGiuliani is 70. Singer JohnFogerty is 69. U.S. Rep.Mark Sanford, R-S.C., is 54. SingerKylie Minogueis 46. Sen. MarcoRubio, R-Fla., is 43. Olympic gold medalfigure skater EkaterinaGordeeva is43. Television personality Elisabeth Hasselbeck is37. — From wire reports

Tracing the modern, multimillion-dollar concert effects industry from its humble beginnings: smoke bombs, coffee cans and burnt fingers. By Steve Knopper

beginning a keeping-up-with-

the-Joneses era in rock-and-roll In the beginning, there was special effects that continues

Special to The Washington Post

Alice Cooper. By the late '60s, rock bands

had been tinkering with rudimentary special effects, like the oily projections the Grateful

Dead and Jefferson Airplane used as psychedelic backdrops. Cooper, however, was a guerilla showman. In addition to employing the snakes and guillotines that would make him

famous, he and his resourceful crew cut up pillows and floated the feathers into strobe lights.

ing parts came with Tommy Lee's drum solo during Motley Crue's 1987 tour. As Van Ha-

today.

len, AC/DC, Def Leppard and Queen followed Kiss' lead, addreal rules," says Mark Gre- ing moreand more lasers,exga, who started out touring plosions, flashpots and general with Deep Purple and is now pyro to their productions, Lee a partner in Chicago's Strictly won the arms race by drumFX. "IfJohn Bonham wanted ming highabove the audience to set something on fire, I'm and rotatingupside down. Lee's acrobatics turned out sure a roadie walked up there, doused it with kerosene, and lit to be delightfully primitive. a match. That was probably the Engineers built an arm onto first time that anybody was set- the drum riser and attached ting something on fire." the whole thing to a converted forklift, which operated the "Back then, there were no

They turned backstage mops Laser show into weapons. Ron Volz, one of In 1975, Led Zeppelin also Cooper's early effects men, had became one of the first bands spent his youth setting off fire- to use an actual laser — a sinworks. So when somebody on gle red beam that connected the crew suggested,"We cango the back of the stage to the auget smoke bombs!" he bought dience. (Blue Oyster Cult, the some at a f i r eworks stand, American hard-rock band, had twisted three wicks together been using the effect around and tried them out in a coffee this same time.) John "Wiggy" can. The experiment worked. Wolff, production manager for So during one of Cooper's The Who, took one mesmerencores, Volz crawled to the ized look during a London con-

contraption via old-fashioned levers. "It would probably be

more than 250,000 square feet

at Home Depot and brought with him into the Massachu-

career- focused cauldron of

how we think, how we solve

and is critical to sustaining in-

still," he said.

The Hobby Shop is a far different and more informal place than the better-known MIT

Media Lab, which has a budget 180 times larger and occupies

Miami University of Ohio. "Students need a place to feel

bot in the Hobby Shop that landed him on the cover of

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proving timing. U2's 1992 Zoo TV may not have been as visually impressive as the band's later tours, such as Pop (with its giant golden arch) and Vertigo (with elaborate LED walls), but it innovated video, stacking TVs on top of each other and displaying Bono's shtick of calling the president nightly on a big screen. Madonna's tours of that

I" ~

r ~I

era, such as 1990's Blond Ambi-

SINCE 1940

tion and 1992's The Girlie Show, began to use video to support the stories she told on stage.

ing without being ridiculed," Huang said. "Without crazy thinking, how can we break free from convention'?"

2 locations in Bend

2863Northwest CrossingDr,suite iO

Computer coordination

safe about their crazy think-

ver, came up with a ball ro-

tion designer for recent shows by U2, Madonna and others.

tor, she wanted scenes," Berry

JBIRl1121314tj152014

up with a cathedral scene, and the next scene was a cabin

5 PRCA RoDEo PERFQRMANcEs

"Because she was a direc-

says. "So our video was great at changing scenes — it opened where she was shooting people, then it was 'Vogue.' It all

matchedthe songs." By the 2000s, computers and robotics had taken over.

Theme parks, Cirque du Soleil and Hollywood movies were innovating with computer-generated graphics, video, moving productions and green screens, and concerts followed their lead. Mark Fisher, the late set

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designer and concert architect, floated Tina Turner over the stage on a robot arm. Daft

Punk tookadvantage ofevolving laser technology, which made the beams farmore so-

lights. For its 1976 Destroyer

phisticated and flexible than they had been in the days of The Who and Zeppelin, and built pyramids and other spectacular light shapes. In recent years, the biggest concerts have taken on a sleek, professi onal feel.U2's360tour,

tour, the stage filled with thick

from 2009 to 2011, was almost

overwhelmingly huge, with onds, and bassist Gene Sim- a bank of LEDs and colorful mons breathed fire and blewup lights suspended from a spideratorch. like structure in the middle of a One key innovation in mov- stadlum. smoke within the first 40 sec-

Asian and American Studies at

standthe Hobby Shopis as a place where ideas happen." Pioneers like D i gital Equipment Corp.founder Kenneth Olsen and car designer Chuck Jordan honed their skills and imagination amid the shop's bandsaws, millingmachines and lathes. Greg Schroll ,a2008 MIT graduate who lives in Den-

Main Center

human button-pushers and im-

ing a bit crazy, explained his entire nightclub," recalls Volz, vision to the band and received now a veteranart director for ablank look. dozens of music videos and TV The Who's first laser was a commercials. "I'd burn my fin- four-watt Spectra-Physicsarger many times." gon beam — more powerful From these explosive but and versat ile than Led Zeppehumble beginnings developed lin's beam had been. From the the modern, multimillion-dol- back of the stage, Wolff malar concert special-eff ects nipulated the laser, by hand, industry. Over time, smoke splitting the light into multiple bombs gave way to pyrotech- beams using a diffraction gratnics; levers and pulleys gave ing. (Because the lasers were way to hydraulics, then robot- so hot, he had to have a garden ics; strobe lights gave way to hose on hand for cooling.) He lasers; video advanced from oil covered the laser with a piece on a projector lens to complex of cardboard and, during the LED displays. Whenever Lady band'sdramatic "See Me, Feel Gaga acts as the ringleader in Me," he slowly pulled it back to a circusof flames, explosions reveal a"ceiling of light." and spurting fake blood; whenRecalls Wolff: "When Pete ever Taylor Swift surfs on a (Townshend, guitarist) saw huge floating robot catwalk; beams coming out, he actually whenever Hnk spins head- dropped a chord and looked at over-heels in a spherical cage me, andhe mouthed, 'Oh, (ex30 feet high — that's because pletive), what's that?' The audiof generations of tinkerers and ence just went ludicrous — they pioneers, beginning with Volz, were jumpingup, tryingto grab who riskedtheir fingers for the- the beams." The '70s and '80s were a atrical immortality. "It's totally changed from time of elaborate experimentawhat it used to be," says veter- tion, from Pink Floyd's flying an effects man Jimmy Page pig to Parliament-Funkadelic's Henderson, 67, vice president mothership to the Plasmatics' of Syncrolite, a Dallas lighting exploding cars. "We used to company that has provided be able to get away with what installations for Disney World we'd never be able to get away and Epcot Center. "Every- with now," says "Pyro" Pete thing's digital now. It's so com- Cappadocia, a longtime speplicated now, you almost need cial-effects man who works for to have a degree to go out and Stage and Effects Engineering become a roadie." inAlbuquerque. Alice Cooper was one of Kiss didn't so much innovate rock's first g r eat t heatrical new tricks as pile up all the old showmen. His 1973 Billion ones into an almost punishDollar Babies tour included ing show of pyrotechnics and

said. "So one way to under-

2150NE StudioRd,Suite1II

who had the reputation of be-

would proceed to smoke out the

problems, how we learn," novation in the U.S., according MIT President L. Rafael Reif to Quanyu Huang, director of

and moved on to be the produc-

wicks inthree separate cans."It

cert and said to himself: "That's

academia. Overseen by MIT's setts Institute of Technology Division of Student Life, it's a Hobby Shop. Tucked away refuge for a merry band of tinin the basement of a red- kerers whose designs on a betbrick gymnasium on the ter mousetmp didn't leave them MIT campus in Cambridge, when the Erector Set, Tinker Mass., the little-known incu- Toys and Legos did. bator has spawned hundreds That freedom tocome and of patented inventions. go as they please and work on "Tinkering and making what they choose sparks their things is actually part of creativity, shop devotees say,

Berry, who worked on that tour

the future, right there." Wolff,

Genesis picked up the mantle,

gallons asecond — the mte of

Health and Safety, but that's how we did it," recalls Jake

front of the stage, careful not to disturb the show, and lit the

ing weather balloons full of baby powder and play money. British rock bands such as Led Zeppelin, Pink Floyd and

can roll up inclines and ascend stairs, feedingback intelligence. Since leaving school, Schroll has failed to find a workshop with a similar vibe. "I miss it

deemed totally unhealthy by

By the '90s, computers were beginning to coordinate mechanical productions to rhythmic dick-tracks, removing

mannequins, a crazed dentist, a giant toothbrush and float-

ply, "the hairball." Inspired by the 2010 BP oil spill, the prototype is a small motor that feeds wire into a ruptured pipe. As the wive gets entangled inside, it forms a hairball-like mass that oil compresses into a nearly impermeable plug. Rojas said trial runs show it could shrink a leak fmm 33

BP's — to tlnee. Such results intwo buildings. have attmcted oil executives By co m parison, the looking to pvevent another 4,000-square-foot Hobby Shop, e nvironmental ~ phe . with its lowrumble of machines Rojas began assembly not and sweetperfume ofcutwood, onabigbudgetinsome fancy is anunderground oasisin the lab but with items he bought increasingly regimented and

left Boston to fight for the Union

in the Civil War. In1892,the Sierra Clubwas organized inSanFrancisco. In1912,the SenateCommerce Committee issuedits report on

Popular Mechanics asone of the "10 Most Brilliant Innovators of 2009." Almost twice the size of a basketball, the robot

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A4

TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, MAY 28, 2014

UPDATE CALIFORNIA KILLING SPREE

After shocking attack, students pauseand seek closure By lan Lovett New York Times News Service

ISLA VISTA, Calif. — The police barricades and caution

tape have been removed from this sunny college town after the rampage on Fridayin which a lone killer wielding knives and guns left six students dead and more than a dozen people 1I1]ured.

But dasses, and any semblance of normalcy, were halt-

ed at the University of California, Santa Barbara, on Tuesday

as students andfacultygrasped forsome catharsis. Across the stteet from the IV Deli Mart, where Christopher

Ross Michaels-Martinez, 20, was killed when Elliot O. Rodger opened fire Friday night, a memorial wall had been set up

Grieving father's message: Give me action, not sympathy

said during anextensive interview, his faceflushed as tears rolled downhis face. "Get to work anddo something. I'll tell the president thesamething if he calls me.Getting a call from apolitician doesn't impress me." Saying "weareall to blame"for thedeathof his 20-year-old son,Martinez urgedthe public to join him in demanding "immediateaction" from membersof Congressand President BarackObamato curb gun violence bypassingstricter gun-control laws. "Today, I'm going toaskevery person I can find to send apostcard to every politician they can think of with threewords on it: Not onemore," he said Tuesday."Peopleare looking for something to do. I'm asking people tostand upfor something. Enough is enough."

Thousands of people attend-

Strong" and on the chalk wall,

ed amemorial service on 'Ibes- hoping to repair the sense of GOLETA, Calif.— Richard Martinez grew up day night at the campus athletic community. Others wrote "Miaround guns, shooting birds out of the fruit trees stadium,and severalbusiness- sogyny Kills," acknowledging on his family's farm. Helater served as amilitary es dosed duringthe event. the hateful and vengeful feelpolice officer in the U.S.Army before going on to "I felt like I needed to come ings toward women that Rodbecome acriminal defense lawyer, at times repredown here to have some clo- ger expressed in amanifesto he senting the youngandthe violent. sure," said Adam Schnee, 22, leftbehind. Now, Martinez is a grieving father. a senior who is set to graduate Classes were scheduled to reHe's asking members of Congress to stop in a few weeks. "A lot of people sume today, with final exams to calling him to offer condolences but nothing were gone over the long week- begin shortly thereafter. Many more for the death of his only child, Christopher end, so to have everyone here students said they still did not Michaels-Martinez, whowas killed in the rampage together in one place and get it feel readyto getbackto workor Friday in Santa Barbara, Calif. all out, and do it together, is go- to life as usual. "I don't care about your sympathy. I don't give ing to be very important just to One student, a junior named a s-- that you feel sorry for me," Richard Martinez bring some normalcy back. It's Kate Nollner, summed up the — The Washington Post been a pretty hectic couple of sentiments that many seemed days." to be expressing. "I just want "Boston to be with everyone," she said. where students wrote mournOn ca m pus, students stood i n g "Have a great day" to pass- F ollowing t h e ful and inspiring messages in beside a bike path holding i n g cydistsandskateboarders. Strong" mantra that emerged "I can't really imagine trying to "Free Hugs" signs and shout- FlagsatalllOUniversityofCal- in that city after the marathon focus on dass right now." chalk.

Walking

cise, Lipsitz continued. But if the scientists in the LIFE study "had been able to use a control

Continued fromAf

group of completely sedentary older people with poor eating

Other small-scale, random-

ized experiments have persuasively established a causal link

habits, the differences between

between exercise and healthy

aging. But the scope of these experiments has generally been narrow, showing, for instance, that older people can improve their muscle strength with weight training or their e ndurance capacity w i t h walking.

owns enough land near its existing track to build a

of physical disability."

second track in the future,

a

cos t -benefit

cost about $1,800 per participant per year, Pahor said, including reimbursement for

h

tion criteria. Unlike in many exercise studies, which tend

to be filled with people in rel-

travel to the research centers.

But that figure is "considerably less" than the cost of full-time Rob C. Witzel /New YorkTimes News Service

Mildred Johnston walks along a path at the Kanapaha Veteran's Memorial Park in Gainesville, Fla.

recruited volunteers who were Regularexercise, including walking, significantly reduces the chance that a frail older person will sedentary and infirm, and on

become physically disabled, according to one of the largest and longest-running studies of its kind to

the cusp of frailty. Ultimately, they recruited

date. "Exercising haschanged my whole aspectonwhataging means,"saysJohnston,82.

1,635 sedentary men and wom-

en aged 70 to 89 who scored lower than a nine on a 12-point scale of physical functioning oftenused to assess older people. Almost half scored an

vised group walks on a track, ly to have become persistently, with the walks growing pro- possibly permanently disgressively longer. They were abled, defined as being unable also asked to complete three or to walk those 400 meters by

eight or lower, but all were able to walk on their own for 400

home, aiming for a total of 150 Most of the volunteers "tolminutes of walking and about erated the exercise program

four moreexercise sessions at

themselves.

meters, or a quarter-mile, the three 10-minute sessions of very well," Pahor said, but the researchers' cutoff point for weight-training exercises each results did raise some flags. beingphysically disabled. week. More volunteers in the exerThen the men and women Every six months, research- cise group wound up hospitalwere randomly assigned to ers checked the physical func- ized during the study than the either an exercise or an educa- tioning of all of the volunteers, participants in the education tion group. with particular attention to group, possibly because their Those in the education as- whether they still could walk vital signs were checked far signment were asked to visit 400 meters by themselves. more often, the researchers the research center once a The experiment continued say. The exercise regimen may month or so to learn about nu- for an average of 2.6 years, also have "unmasked" undertrition, health care and other which is far longer than most lying medical conditions, Patopics related to aging. exercise studies. hor said, although he does not The exercise group received By the end of that time, the feel that the exercise itself led information about aging but exercising volunteers were to hospital stays. also started a program of about 18 percent less likely to A subtler concern involves walking and light, lower-body have experienced any episode the surprisingly small difweight training with ankle of physical disability during ference, in a bsolute terms, weights, going to the research the experiment. They were in the number of people who center twice a week for super- also about 28 percent less like- became disabled in the two

groups. About 35 percent of those in the education group had a period of physical disability during the study. But so did 30 percent of those in the exercise group.

nursing care after someone becomes physically disabled, he said. He and hiscolleagues hope that the study prompts Medicare to begin covering the costs of group exercise programs for olderpeople. P ahor cautioned that t h e LIFE study is not meant to

prompt elderly people to begin solo, unsupervised exercise. "Medical supervision is important," he said. Talk with "At first glance, those results your doctor and try to find are underwhelming," said Dr. an exercise group, he said, Lewis Lipsi tz,a professor of adding, "The social aspect is medicine at Harvard Medical important." School and director of the InM ildred Johnston, 82, a restitute for Aging Research at tired office worker in GainesHebrew SeniorLife in Boston, who was not involved with the study. "But then you have to look at the control group,

a possibility that ODOT considered when it worked on the 2009 Central Ore-

gon rail plan. "We haven't heard anything in the last five to six

The exercise intervention

using an unusual set of selec-

itan Planning Organization last year that Burlington

come, which is the prevention

including analysis.

recruiting volunteers in 2010,

Farn s w o rth,

Northern Santa Fe Railway

sults for additional follow-up,

universities and research centers around the country began

Gary

ODOT Central Oregon area manager,told mem-

an important study because it focuses on an important out-

hor and his colleagues plan to mine their database of re-

LIFE, trial, scientists at eight

Continued fromA1

bers of the Bend Metropol-

In the coming months, Pa-

Independence for Elders, or

Trains

the groups would be much more pronounced," he said. Overall, Lipsitz said, "It's

So, for this latest study, the L ifestyle I nterventions a n d

atively robust health who can easily exercise, the scientists

ifornia campuses flew at half- bombings lastyear, one student staff in honor of the victims. after another wrote "Isla Vista

ville who volunteered for the

LIFE trial, has kept up weekly walks with two of the other volunteers she met during the

which wasn't really a control study. "Exercising has changed group at all." That's because in many cases the participants in my wholeaspect on what agthe education group who were ing means," she said. "It's not receiving information about about how much help you need nutrition and exercise began from other people now. It's to exercise, study data shows, more about what I can do for althoughthey were not asked myself." Besides, she said, gosto do so. siping during her group walks "It wouldn't have been eth- "really keeps you engaged ical" to keep them from exer- with life."

years about when they would want to press that forward," Farnsworth said

Tuesday. A BNSF spokesman could not be reached for comment.

CentralOregon received good news this year when ODOT set aside funding to build an overpass for U.S. Highway 97 across the railroad track in La Pine,

a project that will have a price tag near $20 million, Farnsworth said. None of

the other at-grade crossings is identified for overpass funding. "The problem is, we're just seeing less and less access to state

and federal funding," Farnsworth said. BNSF transported more

than 4,300 tanker cars of crude oil through Central Oregon in 2013, roughly 23 percent of the more than 19,000 carloads of crude transported o n

r a i lways

through the state last year, The Bulletin reported May 8. It was a 58 percent in-

crease from 2011, when the railroad transported more than 2,700 tank cars of oil

through Central Oregon. ODOT officials believe the oil shipments through Central Oregon are on their way to refineries in

California. Russell said Tuesday that the increase in crude

Homebuyers Continued fromA1 The shift is helping make up for an alarming shortage of first-time buyers who are

struggling to save for a down payment or qualify for a loan, a cause of grave concern about

the long-term health of the marketand its prospectsfora true recovery. "It's the investor and the

wealthy individual that's keeping the market alive," said Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody's Analytics. "The wealthy buyers in particular are fully engaged now. The stock market is up and times are good for them." Tatyana Baytler, a real estate

o il shipments by r a i l through Central Oregon,

"If you don't have to get a loan, then don't get one. But this must be incredibly hard for most

buyers."

percent in 2012 to 19 percent

— Lori Pearce, retiree last year and the first quarter of this year. "It implies that there's plenty of cash sloshing his primary residence. ly rolled in, all at or above the around. "I've invested wisely all my $160,000 askingprice. One was Yun says seniors who have life and I have a pretty good from an investor. a lot of equity in their homes "My client took the cash of- are probably helping sustain job, so paying cash for a condominium didn't seem like a fer, even though it was lower the all-cash market. CoreLogstretch," said Denninger, 55,

than the others, to ensure it

who bought the condo three would dose quickly and withyears ago for $70,000 and sank out problems," Bridges said. an additional $30,000 into upB ut wit h p r i ces o n t h e grades. "I use it quite a bit now, riseand the foreclosure supand I never, ever rent it. I keep it ply shrinking, investors are to myself." starting to r etrench. Rental income does not necessarily Rental shift go up when housing values agent at Lagert Real Estate in The potential yield from rise. The largest institutional Rockville, Md., said foreign rents is what attracted inves- investors, some of whom bid buyers tend to offer cash in tors to the housing sector once on hundreds of homes a day, partbecause they're wealthy, the market hit bottom in late purchased about $400 million but also because they have not 2011. In areas where home worth of homes a month in the lived in the country and built pricesplunged, investors be- first three months of the year, the credit history needed to se- gan snapping up foreclosures down from $520 million in the cure a mortgage. and other deeply discounted same period a year ago, ac"Every fourth client I have properties, betting they could cording to a Morgan Stanley now is an all-cash purchaser," rent them for a tidy profit. The report. said Baytler, a Russian speak- buying frenzy helped clear Blackstone Group, which er. "I had a client from Russia the excess supply of homes has invested $8.6 billion to buy in February who purchased a on the market and boost pric- 45,000 homes in the past two house in Washington, D.C., for es. It also frustrated first-time years, scaled back its purchas$850,000 all cash. They want to buyers who could not compete es by about 70 percent since leave (Russia) because of politi- because their offers included last summer, the company said cal unrest." financing contingencies, ap- in a statement. It now buys $30 John Denninger, a business praisals and inspections. million to $40 million worth of owner in New Y ork, didn't That still happens, said Rich- homes a week. "Since the supply of diswant to plunk down that kind ard Bridges, a real estate agent of cash when he bought a va- at ERA Blue Diamond Realty tressed properties has thinned cation home not far from West in Woodbridge, Va. Two weeks out, we expected the all-cash Palm Beach, Fla. But he didn't ago, Bridges listed a condo- sales would be falling, but want a mortgage, either, now minium in Woodbridge for a that's not the case," said Lawthat he has paid off the loan on

to a lady in Boston who is comaltors, which recently released ing here to be near her family. a survey showing the share of She's paying all cash, and she's investorshas dropped from 24 keeping the home in Boston the National Association of Re-

client. Four offers immediate-

rence Yun, chief economist of

ic data show that the share

of cash sales remains high among non-distressed properties, which are not popular among investors.

'National phenomenon' "It's truly a n ational phe-

and renting it out." But all-cash deals do not

necessarily mean all cash, even if they're registered that

way in the public record. Buyers sometimes tap into alternate forms of financing that

as well as an anticipated overall increase in t r ain

traffic through the region, are both reasons to focus more on the need to elimi-

nate at-grade crossings. "Certainly, the change in loads the trains are carrying, including more volatile oil loads, that's an issue," Russell said. "And the in-

count as cash, which is what Lori Pearce did to purchase a

creased train traffic in our

condominium i n Seattle.

versation is finally bringing these issues to the surface again."

d o w ntown

Pearce, a retiree, already owns a more spacious condo

nearby that she's selling. She said she's borrowing against her stock holdings to finance

the purchase of the new condo, nomenon,"said Sam Khater, and she will pay off the loan CoreLogic's deputy chief econ- with the proceeds of the sale omist. "The share of cash sales from the old unit. is higher than normal in many Since the start-up she joined parts of the country that never went public in the mid-1990s, had a housing bust, like the ru- Pearce said she has never takral heartland states of Oklaho- en out a mortgage to finance a ma or Missouri." home, including a place in HaFran Kormann, a real estate waii where she spends part of agentwho specializes in selling theyear. homes at the Potomac Green Her real estate agent, Kirk senior community in Ashburn, Russell of John L. Scott Real Va., said every transaction she Estate, said it's rare that buyhas handled recently has been ers have all the cash they need a cash deal, perhaps because on hand. Instead, they levershe is working with an older age their assets to buy second demographic than usual, buy- homes for themselves or starters who are 65 or older and er homes for their children, have accumulatedmore sav- who may not have the credit ings than clients in their 50s. scores or down payment need"I thought the all-cash deals ed to qualify for a loan. "If you don't have to get would have stopped because the prices went up to $600,000, a loan, then don't get one," but they didn't," said Kormann, Pearce said. "But this must an agent with Keller Williams be incredibly hard for most Realty. "I just sold a property buyers."

communities.... This con-

— Reporter: 541-617-7829, hborrud@bendbulletirLcom

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WEDNESDAY, MAY 28, 2014 • T HE BULLETIN A 5

IN FOCUS: POLLUTION

UPDATE RARE WEATHER

North Dakota

eca es, an inamous ir ower an o

tornado prompts safe discussion

By Dina Cappieilo and Kevin Begos

By James MacPherson and Josh Wood

The Associated Press

hanced Fujita or EF scale, the

weather service said,adding that preliminary information

The Associated Press

HOMER CITY, Pa.— Three years ago, the operators of one of the nation's dirtiest coal-fired power plants warned of "immediate and devastating" consequences from the Obama administration's push to clean up pollution from coal.

W ATFORD CITY, N . D . suggests the twister's winds — No sirens or local alert peaked at 120mph.

system warned an RV park housing workers in North

Hastyaccommodations

Dakota's oil patch about a Memorial Day tornado that

Faced with cutting sulfur dioxide pollution blowing

injured nine people and damaged or destroyed 15

into downwind states by 80

trailers. Even with warning, there are scantplaces to take cover

percent in less than a year, lawyers for EME Homer City Generation L.P. sued the En-

Many who have come to

the area looking for work in wake of the oil boom live in hastily assembled trail-

er parks, known as man camps, which house prefabricated structures t h at

in the wide-open plain. Though such weather is

resemble military barracks. Some companies rent blocks rare in th e a rea, officials of hotel rooms for employsay the twister already has ees, and some workers sleep prompted discussion among in their cars or in tents.

vironmental Protection Agency to block the rule, saying it would cause it grave harm and bring a painful spike in electricity bills.

companies and others about

"The tornado was com-

None ofthose dire predictions came to pass.

how to better protect the thousands of workers who

ing down the hill along our only escape route. There was

Instead, the massive west-

have taken t o

ern Pennsylvania power plant is expected in a few years to

t e mporary nowhere for us to go. It was

homes as they cash in on the crazy," said Dan Yorgason, region's booming industry. who lives in a neighboring

turn from one of the worst

workers' camp to the one de-

%here is the shelter?'

polluters in the country to a model for how coal-fired pow-

stroyed and filmed the torna-

has targeted at coal, which

other power plant in the U.S.— is expected to slash its pollution in coming years. "If there is a war on

McKenzie County Emergency Manager Jerry Samuelson said some oil companies have contacted him inquiring about shelters. He said the county might also discuss adding conditions to the zoning laws, though it might be cost prohibitive. "We never had zoning

supplies about 40 percent of the nation's electricity. The

coal, that plant won," says Eric Schaeffer, the executive director of the Environmental Integrity Project.

laws in M cKenzie County

er plants can slash pollution.

The story of the Homer City plant reflects the position of older coal-fired plants

r

C

these days, squeezed between cheap and plentiful natural gas and environmental rules Keith Srakocic/The Associated Press the Obama administration The Homer City Generating Station in Pennsylvania — which releases more sulfur dioxide than any

latest regulation, the first pro-

posal to curb earth-warming power plant in the U.S. — have carbon dioxide from power committed to install $750 milplants, is due next week. It lion worth of pollution control will pose another challenge equipment by 2016 that will to coal-fired power plants. make deeper cuts in sulfur Dozens of coal-fueled units than the rule it once opposed. have already announced they Last month, the Supreme would close in the face of new Court upheld the EPA's rule rules. in the case initiated by Homer But Homer City also shows City Generating Station. how political and economic GE Energy Financial Serrhetoric sometimes doesn't vices, the plant's majority ownmatch reality. Despite claims er, now says it can do it — and by Republicans and industry without electricity bills increascritics that the Obama ad- ing for the two million houseministration's regulations will holds it provides with power. "We believe in the plant's shut down coal-fired power plants, Homer City survived long-term value, and that in— partly because it bought stalling equipment will enable itself time by tying up the it to comply with environmenregulation in courts. Even en- tal regulations," said Andy vironmental groups that ap- Katell, a spokesman for GE, plaud each coal plant closing which has been the plant's and protested Homer City's primary owner since 2001 pollution, now say the facili- and did not participate in the ty is setting a benchmark for litigation. The operator of the air pollution control that other facility, Edison Mission Enercoal plants should follow, even gy, couldn't raise the money if it took decades. to pay for the pollution con"If there is a war on coal, trols and filed for bankruptcy t hat plant w on," said E r i c Schaeffer, the executive director of the Environmental

Integrity Project and a former enforcement official at EPA. The owners of the massive

western Pennsylvania power plant — which releases more

sulfur dioxide than any other

before the case made it to the

al judge dismissed the case,

that's something that needs

est power generator, filed for bankruptcy in April after it

arguing that it fell outside the statute of limitations. But U.S. District Judge Ter-

to be incorporated into our zoning — if you're going to put up abig man camp up there, where is the shelter?"

environmental r e gulations rence McVerry in his opinion and cheap natural gas prices said that he appreciated the that made it difficult to pay

frustration "that society at

down its debt.

large continues to bear the brunt of significant sulfur

For more than 40 years, Ho-

mer City has spewed sulfur dioxide emissions from that dioxide from two of its three grandfathered facility." units completely unchecked, A class-action lawsuit filed and still does because it is

by local citizens to get the

largely exempt from feder- plant to clean up its pollution al air pollution laws passed also failed. And the Sierra years after it was built in 1969. Club appealed the plant's Last year, the facility released plans to control sulfur diox114,245 tons of sulfur dioxide, ide, securing a settlement in more than all of the power

2012 that requires it to show

plants in neighboring New

that it will not exceed sulfur

York combined.

dioxide limits.

state air pollution," said Lem Srolovic, the head of the envi-

the country," said Tom Schuster, who h eads th e S ierra

"It is an emblem, a poster "It should be the new stanchild of the challenge of inter- dard for coal plant permits in

ronmental protection bureau Club's Beyond Coal campaign for the New York A t torney in Pennsylvania. "When coalGeneral's office, in aninterview fired power plants are held with The Associated Press. responsible, the health and New York, along with the quality of life benefits far outstates of New Jersey and Penn- weigh any cost."

Supreme Court. Numerous sylvania and the EPA sued Hostates, environmental groups mer City in 2011, arguing that and other companies operat- it was operating in violation of ing power plants joined the the Clean Air Act because it litigation, keeping it alive. failed to install pollution conNot all have fared so well. trol technology in the 1990s The parent company of Lu- when it made upgrades that minant, another challenger to increased emissions.A feder-

Continued from A1 Alana Hughson, president

SkyWest spokesman Wes

haul routes such as Portland to

Horrocks said the Redmond

Redmond, he said. The combination of changes in aircraft and regulations with a marginally profitable

route,"from what we've seen on a h i storical trend," per-

formed poorly in terms of gon Visitors Association, said revenue. Plus, the airline is rethe loss of the United Express placing its Embraer 120 Brasilflightswas expected because ia turboprops, the aircraft that of SkyWest's decision to re- flies those routes, with Bomplace its short-haul turboprop bardier CRJ-200 regional jets. aircraft with more efficient jet The Embraer seats 30; the aircraft. Bombardier seats 50, but costs "Any change in service more to fly. Using it on the always has a significant im- Redmond-Portland route did pact," Hughson said Ilresday. not make financial sense, Hor"We always prefer adding rocks said. He said the Skyseats to losing seats. But we've West flight from Redmond to expected this for quite some San Francisco, which employs and CEO of the Central Ore-

time." She said the loss of United

b oth the Embraer and t h e

route all factored into the decision to eliminate the Redmond

service, according to sources interviewed for this report. " You never l ik e t o l o s e

flights," said EDCO Execu-

tive Director Roger Lee. "It's

just a matter of time before these small turboprops are

c

.

route," she said.

tional cost, especially on short-

Fisherman

accidentally stumbled and fell

Continued from A1 He was found still wearing

Heckathorn said. partment officers and personAbout 3:40 p.m. Monday, nel from Sisters-Camp Sher-

his neoprene chest waders

deputies from th e

There are n o

into the swift-moving river,"

egon State Police troopers, Black Butte Ranch Police De-

North Dakota Department

quate shelter especially must

pay close attention to severe weather warnings and seek appropriate shelter. The

hurt was a 15-year-old girl who suffered critical injuries and was flown to a M inot

Watford City Civic Center

hospital. The girl, who was is a designated emergency visiting an aunt and uncle, was in an intensive-care unit

shelter.

ty, with 14 since 1950, with

tornadoes.

"The individual also is but is expected to survive, duty bound and must heed Samuelson said. warnings," Fong said. He did no t r elease the It was not immediately girl's name or the communi- known who owned the camp ty in which she lives. Eight that was hit. other people were treated at Meterologist Ken Simosko a Watford City hospital for said the growth of tempoless serious injuries. raryhousing means there is Tornadoes are rarely re- more of a chance for death, ported in McKenzie Coun- injury and destruction from "People living in trailers creates a very dangerous

no fatalities, according to weather service data. Monday's tornado was an EF-2 in strength on the 0-to-5 en-

situation because there is no

protection," Simosko said.

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by raft in the river and with an

mocop8

air ambulance, according to a Monday news release.

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

This will publish Saturday, June 14 in The Bulletin

H ERYI. JONES

In addition to searchers in area by foot along the shore,

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

-

S heriff's man Fire Department. kayaks, teams searched the

s t atewide

rules or restrictions governing crew camps, said Cecily Fong, spokeswoman for the

IhSK 1

and was not wearing a life Office were dispatched to a jacket. Alcohol and drugs are report of a missing person in not believed to be factors in Camp Sherman. the accident, Heckathorn said. Jefferson County Sheriff's "Sam was employed as a Office search and rescue was sushi chef and was spending aided by the Deschutes Counthe day fishing on the Metoli- ty Search and Rescue Swift us River with his wife when he

— Reporter: 541-617-7815, jditzler@bendbulletirLcom

and hail. He hunkered down in his trailer.

50 miles southeast of Williston. One of the nine people

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Portland to Redmond route. But it's a 7 6 -seat aircraft,

with that airframe."

because of the wind, rain

Sendm Message

Bombardier, will use the jet Express service from Portland solely beginning Sept. 2. making it a more profitable to Redmond provides Alaska Also, the Federal Aviation plane to fly, Lee said. "Horizon's second-largest Airlines an opportunity to in- Administration in February crease service. enacted new regulations re- business out of Portland is "Our hope is that with the ducing, in some cases, the Redmond. It's a very active withdrawal of United Express amount of time air crews may m arket for Horizon," he said. from that route, there will fly, said Bob Noble, the Red- "They're in it for the long haul tor. The change creates addi-

heard the sirens from town

of Emergency Services. about 7:50 p.m. Monday just She said residents who live south of Watford City, about in housing that has inade-

Ihk

airlines." Horizon flies the Bombardier Q400 turboprop on its

mond Airport interim direc-

ago. He said he got an alert on his phone and then barely

The twister touched down

~h

no longer in the fleets of most

be incentive for Horizon and Alaska to add seats to that

was destroyed but moved to Watford City four weeks

Supyort Sraduatinl Seniors of III4! s

Flights

used to live in the park that

"Ain't no place to take covbefore the oil boom and now we do," he said. "And maybe er," Smith said.

the EPA rule and Texas' largwas faced with more stringent

do from inside his truck. M ichael Smith s aid h e

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The Bulletin Servmg Central Oregon snce 1903


A6

TH E BULLETIN + WEDNESDAY, MAY 28, 2014

IN FOCUS: GLOBAL POLITICS

Deep-sea search for missing flight is halted for 3 months

Past aides to Obama

Bloomberg News

in Britain,

A robot submarine will leave the suspected crash

SYDNEY — The search for

months, its air-accident in-

vestigator said in a statement, confirming that a final digital transmission from the jet most likely coincided with it running out of fuel. No trace of the Boeing 777200 has been found in 81 days of searching from Thailand to

wreckage of Malaysian Air area 1,000 miles from Perth Flight 370 will be suspended today, according to Austrawhile investigators assemble a lia's Joint Agency Coordinabetter map of the Indian Ocean,

tion Centre. The search will

as satellite operator Inmarsat resume once a ship-based said it canprovide no more data survey of the seabed has been on theplane's flight path. c ompleted in a b out t h r ee

the Southern Ocean, the lon- went down with 239 people gest hunt for a missing plane aboard March 8. "The complexities surin modern aviation history. Data exchanges with an In- rounding the search canmarsat orbiter, including a last burst when fuel exhaus-

tion seems to have interrupted the electrical supply, remain the only clue to where the jet

not be understated," Martin

Dolan, chief commissioner of the Australian Transport S afety Bureau, said on i t s

website.

facin goff By Jason HorowItz New Yorh Times News Service

LONDON — David Axelrod

stood on a stage in the Buckingham Room of the Labour Party headquarters this month, rallying British progressives who are hoping, and paying, for President Barack Obama's message maven to lead them back into power.

Cleanly shaven with a light purple shirt and darkpurple tie, Axelrod held forth about the

similarities between Obama's presidential campaign and that of the Labour candidate for

prime minister, Ed Miliband, who is running on a platform of narrowing economic inequality in Britain. Axelrod is not the only top Obama operative at work here.

A week earlier, Jim Messina, Obama's lanky 2012 campaign manager, met at Downing Street with his client, Prime Minister David Cameron of the Conservative Party, who

OLl

argues that years of austerity have correctedthe profligate

8 S B L IS

years of Labour rule and that tough immigration laws are protecting British values and

jobs. The British elections in 2015 will be waged over these

competing economic visions, Cameron's hard-right anti-immigrant rhetoric, and the can-

didates' abilities to manage coalition partners. But the contest is also shaping into a proxy competitionbetween two titans of the No-Drama-Obama cam-

paigns who are acting out their ideological and personal conflicts on a faraway stage. As more former aides turn

their affiliation with the president into lucrative consulting

Of course, coming together means more locations, ATMs

arrangements, the Battle of

and services. But it also means more people who are as

Britain crystallizes a concern among some Democrats over whether those most central to

likely to help you find the perfect checking account as they

Obama's riseshould beexpected in their private business to

stand for Obama's public policies and values. And if they are

are to help change your tire in a pinch. And in an Umpqua

not, some of the president's supporters wonder what exactly it

store it definitely means more space for yoga sessions,

means to work for Obama in the first place. The anxiety centers on Mes-

art events — even a last-minute wedding.

sina, 44, who not only helped lead Obama to victory with his

expertise in digital technology and data-driven organizing,

Yes, all of that happened. "Whoa" is right.

but who also looms in the par-

ty's future as the head of Priorities USA, the pro-Obama turned p r o-Hillary

C l i nton

super PAC. That role has only intensified the sense among some Obama campaign and administration veterans that

Messina's work for the Tories has crossed an ideological threshold that his consulting for casinosand corporations only approached. Messina rejects the premise. "Look, I feel very comfortable with my decision to go to work for David Cameron," said Messina, who flies back to

London on Thursday. He said he found Cameron's support of same-sex marriage in the face

of his party's opposition "heroic" and called him a "real leader" on health care and climate

change. Progressives argue that Cameron has long since abandoned the moderate ground from which he once called the hard-right U.K. Independence Party "fruitcakes and loonies

and closet racists." Now he is courting UKIP's Euro-skeptic

voters and sending vans carrying "go home or face arrest" billboards to immigrant neighborhoods. And they believe Cameron's support for economic austerity, as well as his

tax cuts for the highest earners, put him in diametrical opposi-

e r

tion to Obama.

"I'm drawn to this fight because itvery much reminds

• •

e

s e

me of the two campaigns I was

involved in here with Barack Obama," Axelrod said in an April 17 online video that an-

nounced Labour's hiring of his firm, AKPD. And Axelrod

opened his meeting last Thursday with Miliband and his closest advisers by saying, "I'm not here on business. If I were doing this for business reasons I'd be doing something else."

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Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B5 Weather, B6

© www.bendbulletin.com/local

THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, MAY 28, 2014

BRIEFING Mot-guilty plea for 90 abuse charges A Redmond woman has pleaded not guilty in Deschutes Circuit Court to more than 90 felony counts of abuse. Her trial is set for this summer. Michelle Saunders, 42, on Friday pleaded not guilty to six counts of second-degree assault, 58 counts of first-degree criminal mischief, 15 counts of felony strangulation, six counts of unlawful use of a weaponand seven counts of felony fourth-degree assault. Court documents allege Saunders repeatedly abused her juvenile stepdaughter. Saunders has beenin custody since her March extradition from Nevada. On May1, Saunders' attorney, Jacques DeKalb, requested that she be released to her mother, but JudgeBarbara Haslinger denied the request. Saunders is set for jury trial at 9 a.m.Aug.

e mon: eS 0 ouSin an • Urban planners back 20-year project to boost downtown residences By Leslie Pugmire Hole The Bulletin

REDMOND — While all residential construction

in Redmond hit the brakes during the recession, one type was in the doldrums long before the economy tanked: City center housing starts were 4

percent of Redmond's overall residential construction duringtheboom yearsof1990

Tuesday night, Redmond's Urban Renewal Agency adopted a plan containing a 20-year strategy designed to boost residential development downtown and provide guidance for city policies regarding urban housing. The plan has been nearly two years in the making, using consultants Johnson Reid LLC and Redmond's Downtown

Urban Renewal Advisory

to 2010.

OUR SCHOOLS, OUR STUDENTS

' '

~

Commission. Urban Renewal Agency board members expressed

concerns about the density and quality of potential development. Community Development Director Heather Rich-

everyone will be comfortable with. In a related action earlier in the evening, the Redmond

City Council approved a change to city code for downtown's C2 zone that had set a

limit on density of residential development.

ards said Redmond's housing

The new code has no max-

market and land values won't

imums downtown, allowing cost-effective projects for developers, according to Richards. SeeRedmond/B6

be conducive to very dense housing for quite a while, giving the city plenty of time to create design standards that

Educational newsand activities, and local kids andtheir achievements. • School Notes andsubmission info, Bs

STATE NEWS Memorial Day deaths: 2 is low Oregon State Police say preliminary figures show two pedestrians were struck and killed over the Memorial Day weekend. The police said Memorial Day weekends in Oregon averagesix fatalities, and last year seven people died. Since1970, therehave been four years inwhich two people havedied in highway fatalities over the weekend. It's never been fewer thantwo. This year, a 35-yearold man wasfatally struck by a carFriday on Highway 217 in Beaverton after he was reported to havetried to jump in front of traffic several times. On Saturday, an 80-year-old manwho wasn't using a crosswalk as hecrossed River Road inEugene was struck by apickup and killed.

Motorcycle test being phasedout

19.

Nine Oregon DMV offices will discontinue

Chemical leak at Bend BestBuy A stockroom at Bend's Best Buystore on U.S. Highway 97on Tuesday wasdoused in more than150 gallons of an antifreeze-water mix when the sprinkler system sprang aleak. Cindy Kettering, deputy fire marshal for the Bend Fire Department, said a contractor who was at the store repairing a leak in the fire sprinkler system accidentally created a larger leak. That leak sprayed 150 to180 gallons of the chemical propylene glycol (which is used in antifreeze) mixed with water inside the store's stockroom. The store remained open throughout the incident, Kettering said. There has not beena dollar amount assigned to the damage,but Kettering said quite a few products in the stockroom were drenched.

Redmond tolease old train depot The RedmondCity Councilapproved a lease agreement Tuesday night for the city-owned Redmond passenger depot building, located off Airport Way. Most recentlya restaurant, the building has beenvacant for more than ayear. Mike Olarrea andDavid Limburg requested the fiveyear lease to operate a coffee and doughnut shop, to be called Kafea. The leaseamount for the 103-year-old building is$1,991 amonth and contains two fouryear extensions.

motorcycle skills testing beginning Sunday. These offices areAlbany, BakerCity, Cave Junction, McMinnville, Pendleton, Roseburg, southeast Portland, St. Helens andTillamook. The Oregon Department of Transportation has been phasing in a rider education requirement by ageto replace skills testing. During 2014, applicants younger than 61 will be required to complete an approved education course if they don't currently have a valid motorcycle endorsement. Those older than 61 have the option of passing an endorsement knowledge test and a motorcycle skills test until 2015. DMV offices in Prineville, Beaverton, Coos Bay,Eugene, La Grande, Medford and north Salem will continue to provide skills testing through the end

• Star student and Bend DECApresident istaking her businessacumen to Arizona for college By Megan Kehoee The Bulletin

z

Oe Raiter likes watching commercials.

She likes reading magazine and newspaper ads. And she loves reading billboards.

Photos by Joe Kline/The Bulletin

of 2014.

Raiter returns a ball during practice with the Bend High

this spring. "DECA has been a huge part of my life," Raiter said. "It kind of forces you to grow up if you want to be part of the

girls tennis

business world."

team at Juniper Park ln Bend.

nization her sophomore year. The first

The education course is provided byTEAM Oregon, a motorcycle safety program run by Oregon State University in partnership with ODOT.Motorists can get a motorcycle endorsement on a current valid Oregon driver's license by presenting a rider education certificate. Skills testing for threewheeled motorcycles will continue and no education course is required. For more info, visit www.oregondmv.com.

project sheworked on,a projectbased on Oregon State University's football

— Fiomstaff and wire reports

The Bend High School senior knows it's unusual.

Zoe Raiter, 18, is president of the Bend High DECA club. "DECA has been a huge part of my life," Raiter said. "It kind of forces you to grow up if you want to be part of the business world."

"I know it's kind of geeky and weird," Raiter, 18, said. "I mean, who's passion-

president of DECA, the school's business club. She is also captain of her tennis

ate about business at 18?"

team and a leader on the school's student

The answer, obviously, is that Raiter is. Naturally drawn to all things busi-

council who has dedicated countless hours to community service projects.

ness- and marketing-related, Raiter is

Raiter has qualified for and competed

at the national DECA competition twice

during high school for business projects. She also helped the DECA program, which was recently named the largest chapter of the organization in Oregon with 160 students, obtain an enthusiasm and spirit award at the state convention

Raiter became involved with the orga-

She is captain of the tennis team.

team promotions, earned her a ticket to the national competition in Salt Lake

City, where she and her project partner

Pendleton

placed in the top 20 in the country for the sports and entertainment promotional

— From staff reports

planning category. SeeStudent/B5

Well shot! Reader photos

• We want to see your photos for the next special theme ofWell shot! — "psyched about summer" — to run in the Outdoors section. Submit your best work at bentibulletin.cem/ summer2014and we'll pick the best for publication. • Email other good photos of the great outdoors to readerphotos© bentibulletln.cem

La Pineschoos improveon high absenteerates By Tyler Leeds The Bulletin

LA PINE — La Pine-area

schools are making gains in reducing chronic absenteeism, accordingtoa reportpresent-

ed Tuesday night to the BendLa Pine School Board. A chronically absent stu-

dent is defined as one who

"I can't point my finger to one thing and say that was it, but I'm

The average rate in the district is 18 percent, down from

21the school year before. La Pine Middle School Prin-

glad it worked."

cipal Jim Boen said gains were made through a variety of pro— Principal Jim Boen, grams, induding frequent posLa Pine Middle School itive recognition for students withgood recordsandletters

misses 10 percent or more of

sent to the homes of students

and tell us a bit about

school days. At La Pine High School, the rate is down from

the rate dropped from 35 to 22 percent. Rosland and La

where and whenyou took them.

41 percent last school year to

Pine elementaryschools have

33 percent this school year.

made gains, reducing their rates from the mid-20s to 18

At La Pine Middle School,

and 22 percent, respectively.

they were absent. "I can't point my finger to one thing and say that was it, but I'm glad it worked," Boen sard.

At La Pine High School, a survey ofabsenteeism confirmed conventional wisdom

about attendance. Students most often missed school on Friday and most often attend-

who were chronically absent. A ed on Wednesday. Additionteam of volunteers and school ally, older students had more staff also met with those stuunexcused absences than dents missing the most school younger students. days to better understand why SeeBend-La Pine/B5

•Jacksonville

• Pendleton:Lockdown at the state prison after a series of dinnertime fights,B3 • Jacksonville: President Bushvisited in 2004 andsparked a protest-turned-lawsuit that ended its run atthe U.S. SupremeCourt on Tuesday,B3 • Plus:A last-minute plea to the court to block same-sex marriage,B3 • Novemberballot: Campaigns for and against immigrant driver's cards are getting revved up,B3 News of Recomf, B2


B2

TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, MAY 28, 2014

E VENT

ENDA R

9 a.m.-5 p.m.; Crooked River Ranch Senior Center, 6710 S.W.Ranch House Road; 541-504-8236. OREGON'SLAST COMEDIAN FUN FRIDAYS:Featuring a petting STANDINGSHOWCASE: $10;9 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W. zoo, hay rides and other kids' events; Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881. $5;10 a.m.-4 p.m.; DD Ranch, 3836 N.E. Smith Rock Way,Terrebonne; 541-548-1432,dugganceddranch. THURSDAY net or www.ddranch.net. OPEN 'TIL DARK:The museum will AUTHORPRESENTATION:Jenny be open late, featuring music by Grit Milchram presents her book"Ruin 8 Grizzle; $8 adults, $5 students with Falls," with refreshments and ID, free for 4 andyounger; 5-8 p.m.; prize drawings; free, reservation HighDesertMuseum, 59800 S.U.S. requested; 5:30-7 p.m.; Sunriver Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754 Books 8 Music, Sunriver Village or www.highdesertmuseum.org/ Building 25C; 541-593-2525 or open-til-dark. www.sunriverbooks.com. AARONMEYER:The Portland COCC LATINOPROGRAM classical-rock violinist performs, with SCHOLARSHIPFUNDRAISER: Featuring Latin dance performances special guests Tim Ellis, Jean-Pierre Garau and Jamin Swenson; $5-$15 and silent auction; $30 includes in advance; 7-9 p.m.; Cascades small plates and beer; 6-9 p.m.; Aspen Hall, 18920 N.W. Shevlin Park Academy,19860 Tumalo Reservoir Road, Bend; 541-382-0699 or www. Road, Bend; 541-318-3726.

TODAY

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

Central Oregon Community College Chorus; free, donations accepted; 7 p.m.; First Presbyterian Church, 230 N.E. Ninth St., Bend; www.

kids crafts anddancersfrom Wasco,

Expo Center, 3800 S.W.Airport Way, Redmond; 541-699-8844.

Burns Paiute, Aztec and Polynesia tribes, on the COCC Athletic fields; free, donations accepted; 10 a.m.-4 SATURDAY cascadechorale.org. p.m.; Central Oregon Community CENTRAL OREGONFLEA MARKET: College, 2600 N.W. College Way, DESCHUTESBREWERYBEERBend; 541-318-3782. on;8a.m.-4p.m.; LESQUE:TASTINGSANDTASSELS: Freeadmissi Deschutes County Fair & Expo Featuring Portland's burlesque SUNRIVERBREWFEST: Including stars, Deschutes beer and Naughty Center, 3800 S.W. Airport Way, 12 tokens and a Brewfest mug; $25; noon-6 p.m.; Sunriver Resort, 17600 Pierre from Colorado; $5; 7-10 p.m.; Redmond;541-385-3364, info@ centraloregonfleamarket.com or The Old Stone, 157 N.W.Franklin Center Drive; 541-593-1000 or www. www.centraloregonfleamarket.com. centraloregonbeerweek.com. Ave., Bend; 541-322-7273 or www. centraloregonbeerweek.com. GARAGESALEFUNDRAISER: CRESCENDO BENDO: Students Benefitting the Vima Lupwa Home BEND IMPROVGROUP: The of the Cascade School of Music for disadvantaged children in comedy group performs; adult perform in five different concerts; Zambia, Africa; free; 8:30 a.m.-3:30 free; 1-8:30 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 themes; $8 in advance, $10 at p.m.; Private Residence, 440 N.W. the door; 7:30 p.m., doors at 7 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-382-6866 Congress St., Bend; 541-388-3671 or www.cascadeschoolofmusic.org. p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. or www.lupwahomes.org. Lafayette Ave.; 541-312-9626 or CASCADECHORALESPRING www.2ndstreettheater.com. BAKE, BOOK AND PLANT SALE: CONCERT: The group performs A fundraiser for the Crooked River COMEDYIMPROVSHOW:Featuring music from Lerner & Loewe Triage and theReality Benders, Ranch Senior Center; free admission; and Rodgers 8 Hart, with guest 9a.m.-5 p.m.; Crooked River Ranch conductor Trish Sewell and the supporting Bend Theatre for Young People's scholarshipprogram;$5; Senior Center, 6710 S.W.Ranch Central Oregon Community College House Road; 541-504-8236. cascadesacademy.org. 7:30 p.m.; Greenwood Pl a yhouse, Chorus; free, donations accepted; BLACKFLAG:The legendary 148 N.W. GreenwoodAve., Bend; 541- BEND VEGFEST: 2 p.m.; First Presbyterian Church, AMERICANA PROJECTCONCERT: A daylong hardcore punk band performs, 389-0803 or www.bendimprov.com. celebration of plant-based foods 230 N.E. Ninth St., Bend; www. Celebrate the release of the Sisters with Cinema Cinemaand High cascadechorale.org. High School Americana Project 2014 and other animal-free products, with Desert Hooligans; $25 plus fees in BEND LADYROUGHRIDERS CD "Under The Sun"; $10 suggested RUGBY FUNDRAISER:Live vendors, speakersandtastings and CASCADEHORIZON BAND advance; 8 p.m., doors open at 7 a film screening; free; 9 a.m.-5:30 SPRING CONCERT: The band plays p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W. donation; 7 p.m.; The Barn in Sisters, music andbeerspecials; free, accepted;9 p.m.;JC's p.m.; Cascade Culinary Institute, marches, music ofBroadway, Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881. 68467Three Creeks Road; 541-549- donations 4979 or info©sistersfolkfestival.org. Bar 8 Grill, 642 N.W. Franklin Ave.; 2555 N.W. Campus Village Way; popular and patriotic tunes; free, 541-325-1972, bendvegfestce 541-383-3000. donations accepted; 2 p.m.; Sisters CASCADE CHORALE SPRING FRIDAY bendbroadband.com or www. High School, 1700 W. McKinney CONCERT:The group performs DRIVE-IN MOVIENIGHT:The Butte Road; 541-330-5728 or BAKE, BOOK AND PLANTSALE: music from Lerner &Loewe Ridgeview Boosters host a screening bendvegfest.org. cascadehorizonband.org. A fundraiser for the Crooked River and Rodgers & Hart, with guest the 2011 film version "Footloose"; SALMON BAKE:Featuring a Ranch Senior Center; free admission; conductor Trish Sewell and the traditionally cooked salmon lunch, LOVE: THEBITTERANDTHE $5;9 p.m.;DeschutesCounty Fair&

SWEET:The University of Oregon OperaEnsemble and the OperaBend Ensemble perform pieces from

a selection of operas;$7,COCC

students free; 7 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Pinckney Center for the Arts, 2600 N.W.CollegeWay, Bend;541-3837510 or www.operabend.org. BROADWAY-BOUND TALENT EXTRAVAGANZA:Family-friendly eveningofmusic,dance,comedy and variety; $20, available in advance; 7:30 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-312-9626, 2ndstreettheater©gmail.com or www.2ndstreettheater.com. COMEDYIMPROVSHOW:Featuring Triage and theReality Benders, supporting Bend Theatre for Young People's scholarship program; $5; 7:30 p.m.; Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W.Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541389-0803 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 p.m., doorsopen 8 p.m .;Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W.Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 or www. volcanictheatrepub.com.

1VEWSOF RECORD POLICE LOG The Bulletin will update items inthe Police Logwhensuch a request is received. Anynewinformation, such asthe dismissal of chargesor acquittal, must be verifiable. For more information, call 541-633-2117.

BEND POLICE DEPARTMEMT Burglary — A burglary was reported at1:46 p.m. May13, in the500block of Northeast Majesty Lane. Theft —Atheft was reported at 4:34 p.m. May19, in the800 block of Northwest BrooksStreet. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at7:17p.m. May 20, in the areaof Northeast GenetCourt and Northeast MeerkatAvenue. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at8:41a.m. May 21, in the19500 block ofGreenLakes Loop. DUII —Daniel Kelly McDermott, 30, was arrested onsuspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at5:24p.m. May21,intheareaof Northeast Butler Market andNortheast Boyd Acres roads. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at11:06 a.m. May 22, in the2800 block of Northeast Aldrich Avenue. Unlawful entry — Avehicle was reported entered at8:17 a.m.February 24, in the 600block of Northeast Shirley Court. Unlawful entry — Avehicle was reported entered at7:56 p.m. March 2, in the 61600block of VegaStreet. Unlawful entry — Avehicle was reported entered at7:11 p.m.March16, in the19500 block of FishhawkLoop. Unlawful entry — Avehicle was reported entered at9:04 a.m. March19, in the 62600 block of Larkview Road. Unlawful entry — Avehicle was reported entered at11:32a.m. March 19, in the 21300block of Puffin Drive. Unlawful entry — Avehicle was reported entered at11:12a.m. March 27, in the areaof Northeast TucsonWay andNortheastNeffRoad. Theft —Atheft was reported andan arrest madeat1 p.m. May21, inthe 600 block of Northeast Third Street. Burglary — Aburglary was reported at 9:22a.m. May22,inthe20000blockof Millcrest Place. Theft —Atheft was reported andan arrest madeat11:40a.m. May22, in the 3700 block of North U.S.Highway97. Theft —Atheft was reported at10:50 a.m. May 23, inthe 3200 block of Northwest Prairie Place. DUII —Dustin Arthur Kampert, 31, was arrested onsuspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 1:05 p.m. May21, inthe1300 block of Northwest GalvestonAvenue. Theft —Atheft was reported at1:19 p.m. May22, in the1000 block of Northwest HarmonBoulevard. DUII —Teigan ElaineVeit,24, was arrested onsuspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 2:14 a.m. May 23, inthe areaof Southeast Division Streetand Southeast Reed Market Road. Theft —Atheft was reported at10:01 a.m. May 23, inthe 200block of Northwest Skyliner Summit Loop. Theft —Atheft was reported at 3:16 p.m. May23, in the1100 block of Southeast ReedMarket Road. DUII —EdwardGeorgeHowland, 29, was arrested onsuspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at11:59 p.m. May23, in the areaof Southeast Fifth Streetand Southeast Reed Market Road. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at12:21 a.m. May 24, in theareaof Northwest Drake Road andNorthwest Nashville Avenue. Burglary — A burglary was reported and an arrest madeat 2:15a.m. May 24, in the 62900 block of North U.S. Highway 97. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at4:36a.m. May 24, inthe20400blockofMazama Place.

Theft —Atheft was reported at11:23 a.m. May24, in the 2600 block of Northeast BrandonCourt. Theft —Atheft was reported at12:37 p.m. May24, inthe 2500 block of Northeast Moonlight Drive. Theft —Atheft was reported at 4:47 p.m. May24, inthe 2500 block of Northeast Neff Road. DUII —Austin Harrison Shannon, 27, was arrested onsuspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 9:08 p.m. May23, inthe area of Northwest ColumbiaStreet and Northwest GalvestonAvenue. DUII —Richard EthanWagner,19, was arrested onsuspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 2:08a.m. May 24, in the300 block of Northeast Dekalb Avenue. DUII —Philip Albert Dagostino, 60, was arrested onsuspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 12:46 a.m. May25, inthe 2500 block of Northeast U.S.Highway20. DUII —Yeri GomezHernandez, 25, was arrested onsuspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 2:26a.m.May25,inthe900 blockof Northwest BondStreet. Theft —Atheft was reported at 2:38 p.m. May25, inthe area of Third Street. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported and anarrest made at 2:23a.m.May26,inthe900 block of Northwest GalvestonAvenue. Theft —Atheft was reported at 8:49 a.m. May26, in the area of Desert Sage Street andMarsh Orchid Drive. DUII —Kim Kirkpatrick, 58, was arrested onsuspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at11:39 p.m. May23, in the1900 block of Northeast Third Street. Unlawful entry —Avehicle was reported enteredandanarrest made at 9:35p.m.May 22,inthe3000 blockof North U.S. Highway97. Unlawful entry —Avehicle was reported entered at9:43 a.m.May 24, in the1000 block of SoutheastThird Street. Theft —Atheft was reported at 7:27 p.m. May21, inthe 61400 block of South U.S.Highway97. Theft —Atheft was reported at 8:02 a.m. May 21, in the2400 block of Northeast Twin Knolls Drive. Theft —Atheft was reported at1:43 p.m. May23, in the900 block of Northwest CarlonAvenue. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at7:30 a.m. May15, in the1700 block ofSoutheast Tempest Drive. Theft —Atheft was reported at 1:09 p.m. May23, in the100 block of Northwest AdamsPlace. Theft —Atheft was reported at 6:52 p.m. May22, in the300 block of Southwest Garfield Avenue. Theft —Atheft was reported at 4:08 a.m. May23, in the1700 block of Southeast TempestDrive. Theft —Atheft was reported at12:06 p.m. May22, in the1800 block of Northeast Lotus Drive. Unlawful entry —Avehicle was reported enteredat12:44 p.m. February 24, in the1200 block of Northwest Knoxville Boulevard. Theft —Atheft was reported at 6:42 a.m. May22, in the1400 block of Northeast TucsonWay.

REDMOMD POLICE DEPARTMENT Theft —Atheft was reported andan arrest madeat1:43 p.m. March 4, in the 300 block of Southwest Sixth Street. Theft —Atheft was reported andan arrest made at6:27 p.m.April 7, in the 300 block of Northwest OakTreeLane. Theft —Atheft was reported and an arrest madeat10:56 p.m. April 22, in the 300 block of Northwest OakTree Lane. Theft —Atheft was reported at 8 a.m. May19, in the4500 block of Southwest Elkhorn Avenue. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at4:01 p.m. May19, in the700 block of Southwest Sixth Street. Theft —Atheft was reported at 6:14 p.m. May19, in the2600 block of

Southwest Fissure LoopNorth. Theft —Atheft was reported and an arrest made at3:57 p.m. May20, in the 300 block of Northwest OakTree Lane. Burglary — Aburglary was reported at 3:59 p.m. May20, in the1400 block of Southwest11th Street. Theft —Atheft was reported at 4:43 p.m. May20, in the100 block of Northwest Sixth Street. Theft —Atheft was reported at 4:52 p.m. May20, in the100 block of Southwest Ninth Street. Burglary — A burglary was reported andanarrestmadeat8:09 p.m.May 20, in the1700 block of Southwest 22nd Court. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at9:25 a.m. May 21, in the4500 block of Southwest Elkhorn Avenue. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at11:07 a.m.May21, inthe area of Southwest17th Streetand Southwest HighlandAvenue. Theft —A theft was reported at1:55 p.m. May 21, in the1200 blockof Northwest UpasAvenue. Theft —A theft was reported at 8:31 p.m. May21, inthe 2800 block of Southwest Indian Place. DUII —Jim LeeSannes, 61,was arrested onsuspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 8:46 p.m. May21, intheareaof EastU.S. Highway126 andSoutheast LakeRoad. Unlawful entry — Avehicle was reported entered at4:43 a.m. May 22, in the 2200 block of South U.S. Highway 97. Theft —A theft was reported at 2:39 p.m. May 22, in the700block of Northwest Fifth Street. Theft —Atheft was reported and an arrest made at3:19 p.m. May22, in the 300 block of Northwest OakTree Lane. Theft —A theft was reported at 7:13 a.m. May 23, inthe1500 blockof Northwest Fir Avenue. Unlawful entry — Avehicle was reported enteredat11:48 a.m. May23, in the 900 block ofSouthwestVeterans Way. Unlawful entry — Avehicle was reported entered at4:23 p.m. May23, in the 3200 block ofSouthwest Pumice Avenue. DUII —Dennis Hamilton Borden, 32, was arrested onsuspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 7:16 p.m. May23, in the1500 block of Southwest HighlandAvenue. Unlawful entry — Avehicle was reported entered at7:48 p.m. May23, in the 300 block ofNorthwest OakTree Lane. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at8:03 p.m. May 23, in the 300 block of Northwest Oak Tree Lane. DUII —Bret Arthur Acuff, 42, was arrested onsuspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 8:06 p.m. May 24, in the3800 block of Southwest 21st Street. Theft —Atheft was reported and arrests made at9:14p.m. May24, in the 300 block of Northwest OakTree Lane. DUII —Julio Garcia-Ramirez,19, was arrested onsuspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at11:43 p.m. May24, inthe1200 block of South U.S. Highway97. Burglary — Aburglary was reported at 12:40 p.m. May25, in the 2800 block of Southwest 21st Street. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at1:05 p.m. May 25, in the1300 block of South U.S. Highway 97. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at4:22 p.m. May 25, in the 3300 block of Southwest KalamaAvenue. Theft —Atheft was reported and an arrest made at5:09 p.m. May25, in the 1700 block of South U.S.Highway 97. Burglary —A burglary was reported at7:36 p.m.May25,inthe2000 block of Northwest Ivy Place. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at 8:31 p.m. May25, in the area of South U.S. Highway 97and Southwest Veterans Way.

Northwest Pelton DamRoad. Theft —Atheftand an actof criminal mischief were reported at5:21 p.m. May 22, in the1500 block ofSouth Adams Drive. Theft —Atheft was reported at 6:57 a.m. May 23, inthe100 block of Adams Avenue. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at12:41 p.m. May 24, in the9000 block of Southwest Elbe Drive. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at 4:36 p.m.May26, in the area of South U.S.Highway 97near milepost102.

PRIMEVILLE POLICE DEPARTMENT Theft —A theft was reported at11:53 a.m. May23, in the area of Southeast Combs FlatRoad. DUII —David Bilodeau, 41,was arrested onsuspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at11:47 p.m. May23, inthe area of Northeast Third Street. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at6:09 p.m. May 26, in the areaof Northwest Claypool Street.

& FFERSOM COU~

0RK G 0 g

sygyz

SHERIFF'S OFFICE DUII —Timothy Powell McGahey,39, was arrested onsuspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 2:15 a.m.May19, in the area of

Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at10:01 a.m.May 22, inthe area of U.S.Highway 97and Central

Avenue, inTerrebonne. DUII —Alec JamesIngraham,18, was arrested onsuspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 6:14 p.m. May23, intheareaofWest U.S. Highway 20near milepost 94. DUII —Terry Michael Hoyez,55, was arrested onsuspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 10:07 p.m. May24, inthe area of U.S. Highway 97near milepost126. Theft —Atheft was reported and arrests made at9:31 a.m. May25, in the area ofU.S.Forest Service Road 950. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at10:35 a.m.May25, in the area of U.S.Highway 97and Northwest Lower BridgeWay. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at 7:58 p.m.May 25, inthe area of EastU.S.Highway 20near milepost 35.

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WEDNESDAY, MAY 28, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

B3

REGON RIGHT TODRIVE

AROUND THE STATE

oomSover rive SCa S By Chad Garland

actions and encourage illegal gether many of the groups tion Reform. Jim Ludwick, a immigration. that pushed for the bill in the spokesman for the group, said SALEM — A c oalition of The bill was to go into effect Legislature last year, he said, its members are still formulatgroups in Oregon is preparing in January, but opponents col- including faith, business and ing plans for fundraisers and for what they say could be a lected enough signatures last labor groups. Its biggest sup- outreach. "We think that they can outheatedcampaign to approve a fall to put it before the voters porter, according to campaign ballot measure granting driv- on the November ballot this finance records,is the Ser- spend us, but the right is on ing privileges to people who year. vice Employees International our side," Ludwick said. can't prove they are legal resIt would allow immigrants Union, which has contributed Though opponents have idents of the U.S. and others to apply for the driv- $20,000. There are some new raised little on this campaign, Unions, immigrant-rights er's cards if they have lived in partners, too. The gay-rights their 2013 petition commitgroups and a hospitality-in- Oregon for at least a year and group Basic Rights Oregon t ee brought i n m o r e t h a n dustry lobby group have start- meet other requirements. The has pitched in $5,000, the $140,000, including $100,000 ed pouring money into the cards cannot be used to vote, second-largest contribution from Nevada business owner YES on Oregon Safe Roads board a plane, get government reported. Loren Parks, one of the biggest campaign account, which benefits or buy firearms. Some law enforcement funders of conservative candilaunchedin early May and has Supporters of the measure groups had supported the dates and causes in Oregon. don'thave a campaign budget. measure in the Legislature last raised $35,000. Bill Lunch, a retired OreThey want voters to approve But with the May primaries year.ButOregon'ssheriffshad gon State University political a measure, which Gov. John over, they plan to ramp up out- not taken a position until April, science professor,said the Kitzhaber signed last year, reach and fundraising efforts. when the group Sheriffs of Or- measure's opponents may "We are looking at a pretty egon announcedthat 28 ofthe have an advantage that isn't granting four-year restricted licenses, called driver's cards, spendy campaign," said Jeff state's 36 sheriffs oppose the measured in dollar amounts. to people who don't have doc- Stone, a member of the cam- measure. Voters who are confused or uments proving they are in paign's leadership and execuThe campaign opposing the uninformed about the meathe country lawfully. They say tive director of the Oregon As- driver'scards, Protect Ore- sure could choose to oppose it it's about public safety and ac- sociationof Nurseries. "We're gon's Driver's Licenses, has re- by default. "Getting a 'no' vote is a heck cess to transportation for all going to have to raise a good ported raising $6,000. Most of Oregonians, but opponents deal of money." that has come from the group of a lot easier than getting a say it would reward illegal The campaign brings to- Oregonians for I m m igra- 'yes' vote," Lunch said. The Associated Press

Protesters' case against

iL,

By Sam Hananel WASHINGTON — The

U.S. Supreme Court on Tuesday dismissed protesters' free-speech claims against two Secret Service agents who were guarding President George W. Bush during a 2004 campaign trip to Oregon. In a unanimous decision, the justices said the agents by moving them farther

Craig Reed/Roseburg News-Review

from the president while

Jami and Jim Brownexamine mini-romaine lettuce, which they are growing in anaquaponics system

allowing pro-Bush demonstrators to stay nearby.

at their Myrtle Creek-area property.

only because their l o ud chants w er e d i s turbing

Bush's dinner on an outdoor patio and not for genuine security reasons. The Obama administration said the actions were

proper crowd-control tactics and argued that agents who

m a k e o n - t he-spot

decisions about the president's security should be shielded from liability. Writing for

t h e c o urt,

Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg said the protesters'

claimsare undermined by a map of the area, which showed that their location

presented a potential security risk to the president while the location of pro-

Bush supporters did not. The agents, therefore, had a valid security reason for their actions and are enti-

tled to immunity from pri-

Lettuce venture is in t e green By Craig Reed

"The easiest thing to do is

Roseburg News-Review

and returned to aPortland widow. Thievestook the medalawardedto George Szimonisz, as well as family pictures anddocuments, from a home storageunit two years ago. Hiswidow, Carol, lives in Northeast Portland. OnMonday, a couple contacted thetelevision station to say they had foundthe medalwith the veteran's nameengraved onit at a storage unit auction. The TV station KATUfound Szimonisz's wife and delivered themedal andother items on Monday, Memorial Day.Someof the pictures showedSzimonisz as aboy in Hungary, where hewas born and before heandhis family escaped in1956. His wife says hecameto the United Statesand enteredthe U.S.Air Force. Hereceived the medal from another Hungarian soldier for excellenceandloyalty.

Jim and Jami Brown have built

it in salad dressing.

Aquaponics

murdered Gladstone hair salon owner filed a wrongful death lawsuit against the deadwoman's husband, a former police officer in that community south of Portland. Irene Berg is seeking $900,000 in damages in the suit filed Tuesday.Shelives in Walnut Creek, Calif. Former Gladstone Sgt. Lynn Benton's murder trial is scheduled for February 2015. Hewasfired from the police department in December 2011. A grand jury indictment accusesBenton of plotting for more than a year to haveDeborah HigbeeBenton killed. She wasfound dead in her beauty salon onMay28, 2011. Lynn Benton underwent a female-to-male sexchange about a year before marrying Higbee Benton. Authorities say Benton beganplotting to kill the woman before the marriage. — From wire reports

f r o m Or e g on

Tilth. The lettuce had much less competition in the organic marketplace.

'One of a kind' Jim Brown said one customer said the lettuce was so sweet, he didn't have to drown

Pendleton prisonfight prompts a lockdown The Associated Press PENDLETON — Fighting

"There was no forewarning."

on their property produces organically certified mini-green and mini-red romaine lettuce. The couple has gradually turned the system into a commercial venture, selling the

process as a dosed loop aqua- markets, the lettuce sells for 99 ponic growing system, with cents a head. "It's different, something I the engine for the 26,000-gallon systembeingthe fish. haven't seen other stores carWhile the Browns are new ry," said Rodney Chandler, the

state prison in Pendleton, with 46 inmates being placed in disciplinary cells. The Oregon Department

living lettuce over the past

to aquaponics, they are the

assistantproduce manager at

of Correctionssaid a series

couple of months at farmers markets, Sherm's Thunderbird Market in Roseburg and to Seven Feathers Casino Resort in Canyonville.

22-year owners of Flyboy Naturals, a business that specializes in growing flowers and then freeze-drying the petals for sale. They had the space on

Sherm's. "The product itself is absolutely beautiful, a one-ofa-kind item. From everybody I've talked to, they seem to really enjoy it. It has good flavor."

of fights broke out about 5:30p.m.Monday in thedin- were canceled. ing room, leading to a lockThe prison is a medidown in part of the East- u m-security facility w i th ern Oregon Correctional 1,700 men in custody.

It's considered living lettuce

The couple described the

their 11-acre property to diver-

private lawsuits unless they

violate a legal or constitu-

to about three weeks.

Government officials are generally immune from

certification

grow the vegetable," said Jim M YRTLE CREEK — A s Brown. "It grows very quickwater circulates through the ly. The biggest challenge has aquaponics system, it has a been finding a market for it." "We like growing something dual purpose: providing a home for fish and nutrients for that is sustainable and self-reliant," added Jami Brown. growing lettuce. The aquaponics system that

sify, and they were intrigued system attached to the head by the aquaponics process and and the roots enclosed in a philosophy. "With drought conditions, it bag with water. The moisture keeps the lettuce fresh for up seemed like a neat idea," Jim

vate lawsuits, she said.

Stalenmedal returned — Astolenmilitary metalhas beenfound

BeautyShOp Slaying update — The70-year-ol d motherofa

did not violate the protesters'First Amendment rights

The protesters claimed

drained the water from two open-air reservoirs that triggered a boil alert last weekand arecleaning, filling and testing them. The first test results from one reservoir are expected today, with test results from a second reservoir on Friday. The tests check for the presence of total coliform and generic E.coli bacteria. Portland Water Bureau administrator David Shaff says those are the tests that indicate fecal contamination. Thecity lifted a 24-hour boil order Saturday. It was the largest such order in Portland's history. Tests found E. coli in the city water supply over athree-day period beginning May 20.

Boy killed —The Lincoln County Sheriff's Office says a14-yearold Portland boywas killed whenhe tried to jumpaboard atrailer at a camp, fell off and slippedunderthetrailer's wheel. Cruz Miller was an eighth-grader at MountTabor Middle School in southeast Portland. Authorities said hewasamong about 50 children Monday in aJapanese language-immersion programwhohadbeenat CampWestwind north of Lincoln city. Deputies said thedriver didn't seetheyouth, and the death wasaccidental.

The Associated Press

the agents moved them

Draining POrtland reSerVOirS — Crewsin Portlandhave

Tunnel driVer —A 19-year-old faces criminal charges after crashing his car and injuring himself and three others because hepassed out behind the wheelwhile trying to hold his breath through anearly 800-foot-long Portland tunnel. Thepassenger in Daniel Calhoon's Toyota Camry suffered the most serious injuries as thecar drifted across the center dividing line and into aFord Explorer on Sundayafternoon. Thepassenger, 19-year-old Bradley Meyring, improved from serious to fair condition Tuesday atLegacyEmanuelMedical Center in Portland. Calhoon wascited for reckless driving, three counts of recklessly endangering another person andfourth-degree assault. He has beenasked to appear in court in late June should prosecutors move forward with the case.

SOUTHERN OREGON

SecretService is blocked

Gay marriage —The National Organization for Marriage saysit is asking the U.S.SupremeCourt to block afederal judge's order declaring Oregon's same-sexmarriage banunconstitutional. Thegroup, which opposes gaymarriage, says it filed therequest Tuesdaywith Justice Anthony Kennedy,who handles such requests from the region that includes Oregon.OregonAttorney General EllenRosenblum hasdeclined to defend thestate's same-sex marriage ban,and U.S.District Judge Michael McShaneordered last weekthat gaysand lesbians beallowed to marry. TheNational Organization for Marriage isseeking astay of that ruling while it appeals anearlier decision that prohibited the group from defending themarriagebanonbehalf of its Oregon members.

because it's sold with the root

The

At Sherm's and at farmers

Chandler said the store is

selling 30 to 40 heads of minigreen lettuce a week and about 50 heads of mini-reds.

Steve Rolston, manager of the Roseburg Sherm's, said the

Brown said. "We'd heard of company is looking into the g r owing p r o cess other people starting projects possibility of selling the prod-

erupted at dinnertime at the

Institution.

— Ron Mil es,spokesman, Eastern Oregon Correctional Institution

Miles said the 46 men in-

Melees continuedbreak- volved in the fighting were ing out after dinner, leading assigned one- or two-man to a c o m plete lockdown. cells in the disciplinary segOne inmate had to leave the regation wing. In the immegrounds for treatment but diate aftermath of the fights, was returned Tuesday. 0th- authorities had to ensure ers were treated on-site. they weren't putting adver"There was no forewarn- saries in a single cell. ing," said prison spokesman Miles said the prison looks Ron Miles, adding that the at inmates' histories and prison is still working to even questions the men as to figure out what led to the whether they will be able to violence. cohabit peacefully.

tional right that was "clearly established" at the time

c ombines aquaculture w i t h

like this because of the drought,

of the conduct.

hydroponics.

The American Civil Liberties Union represented the

especially down in California. stores and at its Klamath Falls Our system uses only 5 percent store.

The Browns have about 1,000 tilapia split b e tween of the water a normal ground 3,200-gallon tanks. The water crop oflettuce would use."

A nother benefit f o r t h e

circulates the fish excretions, which are high in ammonia, with about 15 types of lettuce through two settling tanks, before deciding on the miniwhere the solids settle to the green and mini-red romaine.

solids that are sucked from the bottom of the settling tanks

and then sprayed on the base

officials said the prison was associates, someone they running on "modified op- may already have some rela-

bottom.

of theroses that are grown for

erations," and outside visits

protesters inthe case. ACLU legal director Steven Shapiro said 'Tuesday that no one disputes the Secret Service's interest in protecting the president, "but that does not

include the right to shield

Browns that the aquaponics The couple experimented systemprovides is the liquefied

c r iti-

The remaining effluent flows into troughs, where it is

cism." He said a jury should have been allowed to decide

broken down by bacteria into nitrates and then into nitrites.

the president from

whether the case was about

"security or censorship." The dispute began after Bush made an impromptu

decision to have dinner at an outdoor patio during a campaign stop in Jacksonville. Fifteen minutes into

the dinner, Secret Service agents ordered police to move the anti-Bush protesters two blocks farther from the inn. The agents

claimed they did not want anyone "within handgun or explosive in range of the president."

uct at its two Medford-area

"They're nice compact little heads of lettuce that make nice individual salads," Jami Brown

said. "They grow well in the system, and grow quickly." Floating in the troughs are From the time a lettuce seed largeperforatedpiecesofplas- is pushed into the chopped-up tic foam with romaine lettuce coconut fiber in a small pot, to heads growing up from 2-inch the mature head of lettuce bepots in each hole.

The roots hang down into the water and provide a home for microorganismsto flourish, feeding on the nitrites and

ing taken from the trough to

In a statement Tuesday,

"In some cases, it's known

tionship with," Miles said.

Flyboy Naturals' dried petal business. Jim Brown called it "a better fertilizer than what

we had been using." When th e B r owns b u i lt the system, it was construct-

Resignations atLNGgroup

ed with expansion in mind. The couple is planning also

The Associated Press

utive of

COOS BAY — Three community members who set up

Port of Coos Bay, says the

a foundation to funnel money from a proposed $4 billion liquefied natural gas development to schools have resignedasagroup.

people that have mistrusted their intentions." Some in the region have criticized the plan to grant the Jordan Cove LNG proj-

The three directors said

ect a property tax exemption

to grow tomatoes and cucum-

be sold, takes about six weeks bers in the aquaponic system, during warmer weather and beginning in 2015. "It's been a big learning eight weeks during cooler months. curve, a lot of trial and error," cleaning up the water before it Initially, the Browns' lettuce Jim Brown said. "But things is pumped back into the fish growing system was not cer- are beginning to level out." "We've made it much more tanks to begin the cycle again. tified organic, but they found The Browns are harvesting their product couldn't com- streamlined, more efficient, about 1,800 heads of lettuce a pete with other conventionally more organized," Jami Brown week and have room to grow grown lettuce. So they applied said."People's response to the more as the market for the for and received U.S. Depart- process and to the product has vegetableexpands. ment of Agriculture organic been so positive."

t h e I n t ernational

three have been "berated by

in a statement they had done and impose a community what was necessary to allow service fee i nstead. They the South Coast Community said the foundation is a priFoundation to move forward. vate entity that wouldn't be David Koch, chief exec- transparent.


B4

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n amazing thinghappened when U.S. Sen. Ron

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Wyden, D-Ore., showed up in Bend on Friday. Central Oregon's first responders finally got some answers they need. First responders need to know w hat dangersthey may face from an accident from the trains that rumblethrough the area. What size oil spill might occur? What sorts of chemicals roll through town? They had asked for that information from the railroad. Responders are entitled to it. They have not been getting it. Johan Hellman, an executive director of g overnment affairs for Burlington Northern Santa Fe Railway, went through a long list of reasons why BNSF doesn't usually share such information publicly. He cited federal regulations. He cited the expectation of privacy of BNSF customers. And then he said: "That doesn't mean that local first responders don't have the ability to get that information." Wyden interrupted Hellman and asked Bill Boos, deputy chief of fire operations of the Bend Fire Department, if he had the information. "Actually, to be honest with you, I just got it today," Boos said.

It should not take the

arrival of a U.S. senator to compel BNSF to release a basic summary to help keep communities safe. The timing of the breakthrough got Wyden's attention. "They hadn't gotten it in the past," Wyden said. "And somehow magically through the roof it fell this afternoon." It should not take the arrival of a U.S.senator to compel BNSF to release abasic summary to help keep communities safe. "We can't just have communities get information when ... United Statessenators schedule a forum," Wyden said. Of course, it's good that BNSF has now provided a summary. But the railroad needs to show it takes its responsibility to the communities its trains pass through seriously all the time — not just when there's a U.S. senator around.

,I I "I ' ) I I

M 1Vickel's Worth Ensure Internet neutrality

cle in the Sisters Nugget about the

enterprise in the United States, to small businesses, to innovation and

more questions than answers! I of-

fer a few quotes from the article: most importantly to the unfiltered "to enhance and create integrated dissemination of information. This science, technological, engineering has all happened because govern- and math at Sisters High School and ment has protected thefreeand open Middle School," "grant will help the Internet. Please continue to do so by district build upon existing classensuring Internet neutrality. es to create a systematic integrated David Smith engineering curriculum," "new inBend

OSU coach'sbuyout is a sellout

f y o u're P r esident B arack Obama, you have abig stake in the November election. A Republican-controlled U.S. Senate joining the GOP-led House of Representatives surely would make his life more difficult than it already is. And how Americans feel about the Affordable Care Act when they vote this fall could make a difference in the election outcome. The administration is right to worry about the ACA. According to F orbes Magazine, one investment firm surveyed health insurance brokers last month and found they expect health insurance rates to skyrocket, at least in some states. The brokers predicted individual rate increases of 100percent in Delaware, 53 percent in California and 45 percent in Connecticut, to name a few. Meanwhile, in the small group market, they foresee rates going up a whopping 588percent in Washington, 66 percent in Pennsylvania and 37 percent in California. That's bad enough. Americans will begin enrolling for next year's coverage this fall on Oct. I — just about a month before the general election.

t

A dministration o ff icials a l ready are responding to the Forbes prediction and others like it. And, as they've done in the past, that response comes in rewriting the ACA by changing the regulations that accompany it. This time, they've changed the rules to make insurers eligible for federal dollars if they keep premiums down and lose money in the process. The new regulation would allow the Department of Health and Human Services to move money from otherprograms to cover losses under the ACA. Meanwhile, officials continue to say they don't believe rates will jump as much as many expect. It isn't the first time the administration has "adjusted" the ACA to fit its own political needs — it has delayed severalrequirements on businesses for a year or more. Individuals, too, have been told they need not meet deadlines that were part of the original law. Now it's the insurance companies' turn. The administration knows that unless it can keep the "affordable" in the Affordable Care Act, it faces the real possibility of a Congress controlledby Republicans.

medical care facility is perfect, nor

our school system, fire department, police or government, nor any of us. Our government, anytime some-

thing happens, resorts to: "fire the person in charge, do an investigation, etc."

Iam proud ofourme n andwomen, who have protected us, "we the peo-

structional methodologies as well

ple of the United States of America."

as foundational courses in math and science," and here is the best

Thank you, veterans — we love you and are so proud of you, again and again.

one, "an all weather outdoor facility

for construction projects." (Maybe it will also fund another bus trip to

Craig Robinson, the former Or-

ACA changesreflect real election worries

of our veterans, yet they were right

nearly $200,000 STEM grant to there to help everyone. The Internet has been a boon to the Sisters school system, I found In our lifetime, we all will see no

egon State University head basket-

visit other schools' outdoor facili-

ball coach, will leave Oregon State ties! Do I sound sarcastic? I surely with a $4.2 million payout after be- hope so! You will have to read this ing relieved of his coaching duties. article to appreciate my sarcasm.) Robinson has contributed to t he What in blazes do we have for a development of numerous student program at present? What have our athletes in his six years at OSU. He currentteachers been doing up to now'? It raises a still larger question: is an admirable man.

Elizabeth R. Kelly Redmond

SupportBuehlerfor

Legislature

As we look on to Nov. 4, when it

comes to our House district, only one candidate truly represents the

whole new state education system!

independent spirit of Bend. Dr. Knute Buehler is the only candidate who has been ingrained in the community. His deep background in health care will provide valuable insight to

Thanks to our veterans

innovation that teachers right here

However, with the annual cost for an Oregon resident attending Or-

If the state realizes the school's failure in these fields to date, we don't

egon State in Corvallis new being over $20,000 (tuition, fees, books, room and board on campus plus extras), Robinson's $4.2 million contract buyout would pay for the costs

need more money — we need a

Not a "new outdoor facility," which the Legislature as we work to repair they need like another hole in their our state health insurance system. empty heads. I had all these basic Buehler also has his finger on the of attending OSU for the 2014-15 studies when I went to high school pulse of education. Having been a schoolyear for210 students. over 70 years ago. What has hap- board member ofthe Bend-La Pine What does this say about our val- pened to American education'? budget committee and the OSU-Casues when a buyout is a sellout to the Russell Williams cades campus, he is in a position students at Oregon State University? Sisters to lead the efforts to improve K-20 Byron H. Dudley education statewide and spread the Sisters

STEM grant raises questions

My poppa was treated fantastic by the veterans for many years.

in Bendhave made to benefit our students. Please join me in supporting Buehler for state representative.

Being with him, I saw the shortage of employees needed to take care

As I read (and re-read!) the arti-

Douglas Lonergan Bend

Letters policy

In My Viewpolicy How to submit

We welcomeyour letters. Letters should be limited to one issue, contain no more than 250words and include the writer's signature, phonenumber and address for verification. Weedit letters for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. Wereject poetry, personal attacks, form letters, letters submitted elsewhereandthose appropriate for other sections of TheBulletin. Writers are limited to one letter or Op-Ed pieceevery 30 days.

In My View submissions should be between 550and 650 words, signed and include the writer's phone number and address for verification. Weedit submissions for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. Wereject those published elsewhere. In My View pieces run routinely in the space below, alternating withnational columnists. Writers are limited to one letter or Op-Ed pieceevery 30 days.

Please address your submission to either My Nickei's Worth or In My View and send, fax or email them to The Bulletin. Email submissions are preferred. Email: letters©bendbulletin.com Write: My Nickel's Worth/ In My View

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

How to navi ate c arit 's ast an s ow anes By Cass R. Sunslein

charity wants to reach them, it would

tiveness, Karlan and Wood worked Peru, an independent study found

Bloomberg News

probably do best to provide photographs or a moving narrative about a needy child or family. Otherpeople give money because of their judgment that, all things considered, certain charities will significantly help people. Donors of this

with Freedom from Hunger, a nonprofit organization that offers advice

magine you're running a charity. Suppose you have evidence showing that your charity is highly effective — that you are really making a difference in people's lives. In your fundraising campaign, should you emphasize how effective you are? kind are willing to do at least a little In a new study, Yale economist calculating. They won't necessarily Dean Karlan and Clemson University do a lot of homework, but they care a economist Daniel Wood offer a sur- lot about whether their money is beprising answer. It turns out that large ingput to good use. donors respond positively to statistical The distinction between the two evidence of effectiveness — but small kinds of givers corresponds to the donors respond negatively. There's a psychologists' distinction, elaborated major lesson here for the charitable at length by Nobel Prize winner Dansector, and the lesson has implications iel Kahneman, between two ways of

t

for other activities and institutions,

thinking: fast and slow. Fast think-

induding political campaigns, health ing is intuitive and often emotional. education and various businesses. When people are thinking fast, visuMany people give emotionally, and al images are important. Slow thinkalmost automatically. For some of us, ing is more deliberate. When people giving produces a kind of warm glow, are thinking slowly, numbers count. and we give in part because we want Now let's turn to the recent reto enjoy that glow. To warm-glow giv- search. To test the effects of providing ers, numbers don't much matter. If a

information about a charity's effec-

to institutions providing microfinance in developing nations. In a direct-mail marketing campaign, Karlan and Wood provided thousands of people with an emo-

amounts showed a 1.4 percent reduc-

tion in the likelihood of giving and a Credit with Education program had reduction of 81 cents in their gifts. 16% higher profits in their business- Across large numbers of people, those es than those who were not, and they relatively small decreases also addup. increased profits in bad months by Overall, the gains from large do27%!" The paragraph also noted that nors and the losses from small ones the independent study involved "a essentially canceled each other out, randomized evaluation, the method- so there was no net effect on the avology routinely used in medicine, to erage donation.Karlan and Wood measure the impact of our programs contendthat large donors are more on things like business growth, chil- likely to be slow thinkers, focusing that "women who were offeredour

tional appeal, describing an old woman named Sebastiana and explaining how Freedom from Hunger helped her. "She's known nothing but abject poverty her entire life. Why on earth dren's health, investment in educa-

on the actual effects of their dona-

should Sebastiana have hope now'?"

tions, whereas small donors arefast-

tion, and women's empowerment."

The answer is that because "of carThe new paragraph had a major, ing people like you, Freedom from beneficial effect on large prior donors Hunger was able to offer Sebastiana (defined as those who had given more a self-help path toward achieving her than $100 to Freedom from Hunger). dream of getting 'a little land to farm' Frequent donors of large gifts showed and pass down to her children."

a 2.2 percent increase in their like-

er thinkers and more likely to be re-

acting emotionally. In recentyears,many people have been trying to evaluate the effective-

ness of various charities. These evaluations are important, but if a charity

Karlan and Wood provided an lihood of giving — and the average wants to attract small donors, it might essentially identical appeal to thou- amountthey gave jumped by $12.98. be a mistake to highlight them. sands of other people, but with a cru- Across large numbers of people, those — Cass R.Sunstein, the former cial twist in the form of an additional relatively small increases add up. administrator of the White House Office paragraph about scientific research By contrast, small donors became of information and Regulatory Affairs, is on the impact of Freedom from Hun- less likely to give, and they donata professor at Harvard Law School and a ger.The paragraph reported that in ed less. Frequent donors of small BIoomberg View columnist.


WEDNESDAY, MAY 28, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

SCHOOL NOTES

BITUARIES DEATH NOTICES Yvonne Jean Flower, of Bend Dec. 27, 1922 - May 21, 2014 Arrangements: Deschutes Memorial Chapel 541-382-5592 www.deschutesmemorialchapel.com

Services: No services will be held. Contributionsmay be made

New York Times News Service

Heller Stacking Dishes, designed in 1964 by Massimo Vignelli.

to:

Partners In Care, 2075 NE Wyatt Court, Bend, OR 97701.

Gary Dollar Christensen, of Bend July 13, 1938 - May 23, 2014 Arrangements: Deschutes Memorial Chapel - Please leave an online condolence for the family at www.deschutesmemorialchapel.com.

Services: A celebration of Gary's life will be held at a later date. Contributionsmay be made

Vignelli was a modernist

designerfor American businesses

to:

St. Charles Foundation, 2500 NE Neff Road, Bend, OR 97701, https://foundation.stcharle

shealthcare.org. Dennis Michael Shirley, of Redmond

Jan. 3, 1942 - May 24, 2014 Arrangements: Redmond Memorial Chapel, 541-548-3219, Services: A viewing will be held May 28 from 12-3 at Redmond Memorial Chapel, and a graveside service will be held May 29 at 10:00 a.m. at Willamette National Cemetery in Portland,

OR. Please sign our guest book at

redmondmemorial.com

Jose Trinidad MataYsarraraz, of Redmond Sept. 20, 1945 - May 24, 2014 Arrangements: Redmond Memorial Chapel 541-548-3219

please sign our online guestbook www.redmondmemorial.com Services: A rosary will be held Thursday May 29, 2014 at 6pm at St. Thomas Catholic Church, Funeral Mass Friday May 30, 2014at10 am at St. Thomas Catholic Church. Contributionsmay be made to:

Partners In Care Hospice in his name.

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. Theymaybe 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 must be receivedby5p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the second day after submission, by1 p.m. Fridayfor Sunday publication, and by 9a.m. MondayforTuesday 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, OR97708

Grout, Conor Hegewald, RaeKeener, REUNIONS Eliza Miller, William PonandJack Siemens. TheBendHighSchoolclassof 1974 will hold a reunion Aug. 6-9, The following local students have been named to the spring 2014 2014; No Host Bar, 61276 S.U.S. Dean's List at GeorgeFoxUniversity: Highway 97,Bend,5 to11 p.m. Courtney Boyd, Alethea Kercher, Aug. 8; BendHigh School tour, Raeann Morelli, Ryan Rudnick, Scott 10 a.m. Aug.9;BendGolfand Stevens, Andrew Harris, Justin Country Club, 61045Country Holman, Brea Munsell, Jacob Munsell, Club Drive, Bend, 5 to11 p.m. Michaela Conley, Sommer Kirk, Aug. 9; visit www.lavabearsl reunionmanager.com to register or Sarah MacKenzie, Weldin Yanes,Ben contact Kathy Timm at 541-480Fullhartand Madelyn Larson. 4345 or jktimmland©aol.com. The following local students have been initiated into Phi KappaPhi COLLEGE NOTES Honor Society at Oregon State University: Cody Manriquez, Andrew Su, TereseThompson, Kelly Kiefer Kuhn, of Bend,presented Simoneau, Eric Sorenson, Tamara his project, "Reservoir-Scale SequenceStratigraphy andFacies Apple, Tyler Sanderson, Rebecca Variation Within theMississippian Johnson, Kayla Meredith, Debora Leadville Limestone,Southwestern Tirrill and Laura McManaway. San JuanMountains, Colorado" at an UndergraduateResearchand TEEN FEATS Creative Activities Symposiumat Fort Lewis College inDurango,Colo. Samuel Taylor,amember of Crew The following students graduated 120, earnedthe rank of EagleScout with bachelor's degreesfrom on Feb. 24.Forhis Eagleproject, GonzagaUniversity in Spokane, Samuel contributed 247volunteer Wash.: AlexandraCrowell, Olivia hours planning anddeveloping the

Massimo Vignelli, an acclaimed graphic designer who gave shape to his spare, modernist vision in book covers

and shopping bags, furniture and corporate logos, even church pews and a New York

City subway map that enchanted aesthetes and baffled straphangers,

FEATURED died Tuesday

OBITUARY

M anhatt a n .

He was 83. His death, after a long illness, was confirmed by Carl Nolan, a longtime employee of Vignelli's. An admirer of

a r chitects

Mies van der Rohe and Le Corbusier, Vignelli moved to New York from Italy in the

mid-1960s with the hope of propagating a design aesthetic inspired by their ideal of functional beauty. He preached clarity and coherence and practiced it with intense discipline in every-

Continued from B1 Her junior year, Raiter's business project promoting a family-friendly sports restaurant earned her a trip to the national competition for the second year in a

row. Raiter, along with her project partner, had to create an entire promotional

realized that I had to put that

aside to reach my goal."

enormous amount about

kitchenware, public signage, books or home interiors. "Massimo, probably more than anyone else, gets the credit for introducing a European

m anaging peopleand delegating tasks.

American graphic design," Michael Bierut, a partner in Pentagram, a leading graphic design firm, said in an interview. Vignelli's work has been ex-

Modern Art, th e M etropolitan Museum of Art, the Coo-

of the hardest things she's ever overcome but that it

was a valuable learning experience. "I worked hard, but the skill j ust

His brochures for the Nation-

want, but that you can't just

Beach in the late 1940s who

became a fit ness trainer for Hollywood stars such as Clark Gable and Mario Lanza. Died

May 19 in West Los Angeles. Dick Grimm, 91:Golf executive who helped grow the sport in Canada; he played a key role in building Glen Abbey

This k in d

Find It All Online bendbujjetin.com

— Reporter: 541-383-0354, mkehoe@bendbufletin.com.

I

I

AO'.

AO'L P R 0

is something that makes Raiter an outstanding student as well. "She lights up the classroom," said Douglas Brown, Raiter's incredibly positive influ-

But when th e M etropolitan Transportation Authority re-

ence on other students and

leased his new subway map in 1972, many riders found it the

Brown said Raiter also stands out for the way she

opposite of understandable. Rather than represent the sub-

treats her fellow classmates and Bend High staff.

— From wire reports

tleeds@bendbulletfn.com

s

o f a t t i tude

make it more understandable.

Sunday in Philadelphia.

credits. — Reporter: 541-633-2160,

could earn college credit. "There may be a bit of a

and bethere foryourteam anyway."

Advanced Placement government teacher. "She's an

ended in homelessness.Died

classes for which students

get down about it and give

I

on the mood of the class."

"Most kids at this age

can be sort of narcissistic and self-absorbed for the most part," Brown said. "Zoe isn't like that at all.

She's very considerate and conscious of other kids."

R aiter's next stop i s Arizona State

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U n iversi-

ty, where she will enroll in the college's business school. She plans to major go into event planning or sports marketing as a career. Raiter said the lessons

Terry Robinson, 98: Bodybuilding denizen of Muscle

to qualify them to teach col-

up. You have to come back

an "information architect," one who structures information to

Golf Club in Oakville, Ontario, and retaining Jack Nicklaus as the course architect. Died Monday. Matthew Saad Muhammad: Boxing champion, thought to be 59 years old, known for his bruising style whose rags-toriches-to-rags life story began in abandonment and nearly

lege classes. The program will also investigate other means of certifying teachers beyond paying for them to complete a master's or 15

Some teachers will be re-

imbursed for taking college courses in their content area

program's funding will be spent on professional development to qualify high school teachers to teach

But it taught me a lot about

in business and wants to

Deaths of note from around the world:

trict's grant writer, said the

w a sn't t h ere,"

myself. I learned that you don't always get what you

DEATHS ELSEWHERE

in the field they are teaching.

Raiter said. "I was really down about it for a while.

Lutheran Church in Manhattan had him design its pews.

gle they are, it showed them as uniform stripes of various colors running straight up and down or across at 45-degree angles — not unlike an engineer's schematic diagram of themovement of electricity. Design aficionados, however, considered the map an ingenious work of streamlinedbeauty.

have a master's or 15 credits

the opportunity to earn significant college credits before graduating from high schooL Bruce Abernethy, the dis-

Raiter said it was one

Museum in New York, as well

way lines as the spaghetti tan-

— Bruce Abernethy, Bend-La Pine grant writer

a n other

per-Hewitt National Design

al Park Service are still used. Bloomingdale's, Saks Fifth Avenue and Barneys all gave out Vignelli-designed shopping bags in the 1970s. He designed the signage for the New York and Washington subways, and suggested the name Metro for the Washington system. Vignelli described himself as

between K-12 and higher ed."

about her defeats. Raiter, who played all season last year on the varsity volleyball team, was benched player edged her out of her position on the team.

ican Airlines, Ford, IBM, Xerox and Gillette. St. Peter's

"There may be a bit of a turfissue

to ensure all students have

to talk about her successes, she's not afraid to talk

this year w hen

and Hamburg, Germany. His clients included Amer-

mkehoe©bendbulletin.com

a l s o h e ard

that although she's eager

Europe. It is in the permanent collections of the Museum of

Montreal, Jerusalem, Munich

Contact: 541-383-0354,

One of the things that makes Raiter stand out is

hibited in North America and

as museums in Philadelphia,

Activities:DECApresident, student council member, tennis captain Favorite movie:"Hot Rod" Favorite TVshow:"Grey's Anatomy" Favorite hook:"The Truth about Forever" by Sarah Dessen Favorite musicians:Taylor Swift, Death CabForCutie

strategy for the establishment, including radio spots, billboard designs and other advertisements. She said she particularly enjoyed competing and doing well in a category she said is usually dominated by boys. making sacrifices is worth "We were two g i rls it," Raiter said. "I stayed betalking about f ootball," hind every day after school Raiter said. "No one saw it and worked in the back of the coming. And we were able class for those DECA projects. to pull it off." I would have rather gone to Raiter said being pres- the pool with my friends, but I

thing he turned out, whether

m odernist point of v iew t o

Bend High School senior GPA:3.8

ident of the chapter this

Story ideas Student profiles:Knowof a kid with a compelling story?

an update on the Cascades Commitment, a p r ogram that brought $445,000 in state funding to Bend-La turf issue between K-12 and Pine Schools and the oth- higher ed," Abernethy said, er Central Oregon school noting the difficulty posed dtstricts. by the requirement that comThe aim of the program is munity college instructors

Zoe Raiter,18

year has taught her an

Other schoolnotes:College announcements, military graduations or training completions, reunion announcements. Contact: 541-383-0358, bulletin©bendbulletin.com

CascadesCommittment programupdate The board

Student

OR 97708

Continued from B1

— Zoe Raiter, about a junior-year business project

New York Times News Service

Teen feats:Kids recognized recently for academic achievements or for participation in clubs, choirs or volunteer groups. (Please submit a photo.) Contact: 541-383-0358, youth©bendbulletin.com Mail:P. O.Box6020,Bend,

Bend-La Pine

pull it off"

By Douglas Martin

How to submit

construction of a storageshedfor Bethlehem Inn. Heis the son of Robert and AlexandraTaylor, of Bend. AlexanderNoble, amemberof Crew 66, earned therank of EagleScout on Feb. 24.Forhis Eagleproject, he contributed 70volunteer hours planning andleading apresentation of World War II for theBoys &Girls Club of Bend. Heistheson of Jennifer Noble. Abigail Black,asenior at Summit High School, hasbeen awarded the 2014BBT Architects scholarship. Abigail plans to attend Colorado State University in Fort Collins to pursue adegree in environmental engineering. Shemaintains a4.0 GPA and volunteers100 hours annually for local organizations like Becca'sCloset andtheHumane Society. Dylan Gillespie, a senior atMountain View HighSchool, took second onthe upright bass at theOregonSchool Activities Association State Championshipsolo competition at Lewis 8 Clark. Heisthe son of DerekandTeresa Gillespie, of Bend.

"We were two girls talking about football. No one saw it coming. And we were able to

she learned in Bend High's marketing program will stay with her as she gradu-

4 •

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ates and moves into a new

phase of her life. "It made me realize that

working really hard and

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B6

TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, MAY 28, 2014

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

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ALMANAC TEMPERATURE Yesterday Normal Record 67 39'

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SATURDAY

40'

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UV INDEX TODAY

POLLEN COUNT

NATIONAL WEATHER

WATER REPORT

SKI REPORT In inches as of 5 p.m.yesterday

Ski resort Mt. Bachelor

New snow Base

Mt. HoodMeadows Timberline Lodge

0

61- 1 30

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Providence Raleigh

Rapid City Renn Richmond Rochester, NY

Sacramento St. Louis Salt Lake City Snn Antonio snn Diego Snn Francisco San Jose

santa re

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

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83/68/I

80/62/pc 79/60/pc 85/68/I 85/67/I 76/48/pc 80/51/s

82/69/I 86/70/t 87/76/pc 79/67/0.51 64/50/pc 68/52/pc 73/67/0.02 83/60/pc 84/62/s 88/67/0.00 85/65/I 87/67/I ssnwo.o5 82no/t 82/70/t 86/71/Tr 64/51/nh 67/55/pc 88/68/Tr 66/53/c 68/55/c gtnarrr 88/66/I 71/63/c 71/64/0.99 85/65/pc 87/67/I 90/67/Tr 86/62/I 84/64/pc 90/71/Tr 90//0/t gontn to4nz/o.oo101n5/pc 100/74/pc 85/68/0.05 81/60/I 82/59/pc 88/66/0.37 75/54/I 66/54/c 107/78/0.00 106/84/pc 99/81/pc 84/67/0.14 78/59/I 76/56/pc 52/50/0.45 56/41/ch 63/46/pc 83/64/0.00 59/44/nh 67/50/pc 90/68/0.31 90/67/I 80/63/I 77/51/0.03 94/60/pc 92/59/t 87/55/0.00 79/47/c 76/52/s 92/66/0.06 91/66/I 73/62/c 83/63/0.00 71/53/pc 72/53/pc 87/58/0.00 84/51/s 87/51/s 87/67/0.52 85/68/I 86/69/pc 90/63/0.00 94/63/pc 82/60/pc 92/69/0.01 90/69/I 89/70/t 74/65/0.00 72/64/pc 73/64/pc 68/55/0.00 72/52/pc 73/51/s 74/53/0.00 81/53/n 84/52/s 84/46/0.00 86/56/pc 85/56/pc 87/68/0.00 90/68/I 89/69/I 68/50/0.00 61/50/I 64/48/c 86/60/0.02 85/57/pc 84/61/s 70/44/0.00 63/42/I 65/44/pc 78/63/0.39 81/64/I 83/66/I 87/72/0.32 88n4/t 89/73/t 102/69/0.00 103/75/pc 97nz/pc 73/64/0.13 85/65/I 85/68/t 92/69/0.87 84/63/I 68/59/r 81/63/0.25 87/65/pc 84/66/I 73/38/0.00 70/43/I 74/42/pc 107/73/0.00 103//8/pc toon7/pc

I

Mecca Mexico City

108/83/0.00 109/83/s 108/84/s 74/58/0.29 74/55/I 74/56/I Montreal 61/48/0.05 64/50/pc 70/55/I Moscow 81/59/0.01 75/56/pc 75/59/r Nairobi 81/61/0.00 78/59/c 79/59/c 1O4nO/pc Nassau aan5/0'.04 86/77/pc 84/75/sh 81/70/pc New Delhi 102/82/0.00 106n7/pc 110/79/pc 60/42/pc Osaka 75/61/0.00 83/61/pc 81/59/s 67/47/sh Oslo 61/46/0.00 66/42/s 70/47/s 72/52/pc Ottawa 70/55/0.00 68/50/pc 72/53/t 63/52/pc Paris 61/54/Tr 62/50/ch 69/50/pc 92/68/pc Ric de Janeiro 79/70/0.12 73/65/nh 73/65/r 97ng/pc Rome 70/55/0.00 71/54/sh 74/56/s 63/37/I Santiago 77/36/0.00 66/45/pc 52/39/r Sno Paul o 63/54/0.10 66/55/pc 66/56/pc ssns/pc 56/49/r Sappcrc 71/53/0.00 75/52/pc 77/55/pc 59/44/pc Seoul 81/57/0.00 83/58/s 84/58/pc 68/47/pc Shanghai 93/70/0.00 94/69/pc 93/73/pc 77/46/o Singapore 86/81/0.17 89n9/t gongn 89/81/pc Stockholm 50/43/0.00 55/42/c 59/44/pc 80/66/c Sydney 77/63/Tr 74/52/pc 70/55/pc 81/65/pc Taipei 66n7/o.os 87/75/t 84/75/t 69/46/s Tel Aviv 89/66/0.00 87/68/pc 84/69/pc 72/61/pc Tokyo 77/64/0.00 79/66/pc 82/68/pc 72/57/pc Toronto 84/68/0.03 71/53/pc 72/52/pc 65/54/sh Vancouver 64/50/0.00 60/52/I 62/48/c 77/54/s Vienna 73/59/0.13 65/55/r 66/49/r 92/81/t Warsaw 77/59/0.00 68/48/t 59/44/c

.

5'

ca group has pulled out of a expensive to get access from proposal to put a leadership a highway to the site near the

Omaha Orlando Palm Springs Poorin Philadelphia Phoenix

81/60/pc 81/66/I

81/66/I

ssns/o.oo 86n6/pc

OklahomaCity

86n5/pc Szns/pc

60/48/sh 82/62/t 63/55/c 110/83/pc 95/82/pc

84/71/0.93 80/62/0.00 89/73/0.00 85/68/1.46 85/69/0.12

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

95n4/s 95nO/pc 70/45/pc 75/50/pc 85/60/I 88/59/pc

.

of the Oregon Future Farm-

Litiie Rock Lcs Angeles Louisville Madison, Wl Memphis Miami

80/57/pc 88/56/I 82/62/pc 79/53/pc 77/56/pc 73/49/s 78/53/s

76/47/pc 78/54/pc 77/50/pc 78/65/I 63/55/r 71/50/pc 74/45/pc

Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W HiRo/W 59/43/0.00 60/43/pc 63/46/pc 84/63/0.00 83/65/I 82/66/t 81/66/0.10 76/50/pc 77/54/pc 105/82/Tr 100/82/pc 96/80/pc 88/69/0.00 83/64/I 83/63/I 87/65/0.06 88/62/t 86/64/pc

Juneau Kansas City Lansing Lns Vegns Lexington Lincoln

86no/I

82/53/pc 77/51/pc 72/47/s 89/66/I 78/60/t 61/43/sh 79/51/pc

Yesterday Today Thursday

City

sgno/I

MCMINNVILLE A ers of A m erica Foundation Future Farmers of Ameri- said it would be difficult and center and farming laborato-

69/56/I 86/65/I 80/62/t

Amsterdam Athens

"

FFA drOPS Yamhil landfill-Site PlanS The Associated Press

Hi/Lo/W 86/65/pc 78/54/pc 72/53/pc 88/63/pc 59/51/sh 86/67/I 62/54/c 86/65/I 64/54/r 78/52/pc 86/65/I 96/62/t 71/48/s 64/51/pc 66/53/pc 71/53/pc 72/53/pc 71/45/pc 92/70/t 86/65/I 88/65/I 81/54/I 73/53/pc 82/61/t 75/55/pc 84/55/I 84/66/I 92/68/t 89/67/I 82/59/pc 69/46/pc

64/59/1.10 60/53/sh ' 86/66/0.00 87/68/pc 8 Mii ..4' Auckland 54/39/0.00 58/50/s enlnn ~ + ~~ fnlt Baghdad 106/79/0.00 103/79/s 4/47 " " CI Innn 9/53 Bangkok 95/82/0.05 95/81/I 2 81/So; i T, 7 htlndonphln SS/5 . + ~, seijing 92n1/0.00 98/66/s 0 cc 77/68/0.00 85/66/s nn nmncc S nlt Lake Ity Inwtunxxxxx x Beirut • nnn Berlin 70/59/0.68 59/47/r 72/52 94/SS 99/5 Lnn V nn Bogota 63/50/0.09 66/49/I nu e 100/8 Budapest 77/57/0.07 72/53/sh * ss/65' ~~~YI Buenos Ai r es 63/37/0.00 63/50/pc L Angeles h.lv • nn chnrln Cabc Snn Lucnc 94n4/o'.oo 91/71/c P hoenix se / ST ss/6 4 Cairo 102/77/0.00 94nO/s 10&IS4 o l klnnnma ~h nrng • • Atl tn Calgary 66/39/0.01 51/39/I x ~/5 9 sn El paso . 8 8/6 6 Cnncun 86n5/0.00 88/77/pc o~~ ~ ~ ~ ir in g hn 7 96/74 Dublin 61/36/0.00 60/47/c do/8 64 Edinburgh 61/48/0.04 55/50/r Geneva 59/52/0.33 69/45/pc J u Hnrnre • rlnndn 74/48/0.00 76/47/s Orleans k 9 0 Hong Kong 89/80/0.10 89/80/pc Honolulu Chihuahua 82/70 " .a ~ l Istanbul 77/65/0.00 75/64/pc 96/75 86/59 Mlnml Jerusalem 85/61/0.00 83/61/s Montnr ey S enn,- IZ , Johannesburg 72/48/0.00 69/45/s 95/SS Limn 76/66/0.00 73/62/s Lisbon 66/51/0.01 70/59/pc Shown are today's noonpositions of weather systemsand precipitation. Temperature bandsare highs for the day. London 55/52/0.70 62/54/r T-storms Rain S h owers S now F l urries Ice Warm Front Sta t ionary Front Madrid Cold Front 73/55/0.00 74/50/r Manila 93/77/0.01 92/79/t "

Partly sunnyand breezy

Yesterday Today Thursday

"

39'

TRAVEL WEATHER

Shownistoday's weather.Temperaturesaretoday'shighs and tonight's lows. Umatiaa Hood 70/48 RiVer Rufus • ermiston l45 lington 69/45 Portland 6444 Meac am Losti ne 47 • W co 64/37 Enterprlse dlet,n 56/3 he Daa • • 62/37

National high: 117 Death ValmyCA National low: 29 at Lake Yellowstone,WY Precipitation: 2.59" at La Grange,TX

~

sun

Abilene Akron / Albany PRECIPITATION Albuquerque Tigamo • 67/ 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday Trace CENTRAL: Cooler with 59/45 andy • Anchorage 66/49 Mc innviH • 0.52"in 1993 a mixture of clouds Joseph Atlanta Record /51 Gove • He ppner Grande • nt • upi o o • Condon l40 Atlantic City 81/67/0.22 Cam 63 36 Month to date (normal) 0.1 9 (0.76 ) and sunshinetoday Union Lincoln o o Austin 73/63/1.66 52/ Year to date (normal ) 4.02 (4.69 ) with spotty showers, 58/48 Sale Baltimore 90/63/0.26 •• pray Graniteu Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 30 . 0 3" especially in the 63/ /42 Billings 75/54/0.51 'Baker C Newpo 57/31 higher elevations. • 63/37 Birmingham 85/69/0.02 SUN ANDMOON /45 58/45 • Mltch II 62/31 Bismarck 83/60/Tr 0 a m 9 S e r a n R 6 d WEST:More clouds 60/3 7 Today Thu. n O r9 U6I Boise 86/50/0.00 Yach 58/35 • John uU Sunrise 5:28 a.m. 5: 2 7 a.m. than sunshine 66/45 Boston 57/48 • Prineville oay /34 tario Bridgeport, CT 74/51/Tr Sunset 6:36 p.m. 8: 3 9 p.m. today, with brief but 87/60/0.04 62/34 • Pa lina 61/ 3 7 77 47 Buffalo 75/61/0.17 Moonrise 5 :40 a.m. 6:26 a.m. numerousshowers Floren e • Eugene o ' Se d Brothers Valeu 59/47 Burlington, VT 76/57/Tr and cooler, breezy Moonset 6:3 9 p.m. 9:3 1 p.m. Su iVeru 59/33 75/46 Caribou, ME 54/40/0.00 conditions. Nyssa • 5 7 / 1 • La Pjne Ham on MOONPHASES Charleston, SC 90/69/0.00 76/46 Grove Oakridge New F i r s t Full Last Charlotte 87/67/0 05 • Burns Juntura OREGON EXTREME Co 71/39 64/42 /40 Chattanooga 86/69/0.06 59 5 • Fort Rock Riley 63/33 YESTERDAY Cresce t • 59/31 Cheyenne 78/48/0.01 61/33 56/32 Chicago 85/68/Tr High: 67' Bandon Roseburg • C h ristmas alley Cincinnati 87/68/0.00 May 26 Jun 5 J u n1 2 J u n 19 at Rome Jordan V Hey 59/45 Beaver Silver Frenchglen 67/44 Cleveland 85/68/0.07 Low:30' 69/39 Marsh Lake 65/33 THE PLANETS ColoradoSprings 83/51/0.00 55/30 at Meacham Po 0 60/31 • Burns Jun tion Columbia, Mo 82/64/0.06 T he Planets R i se Set • Paisley 60/ a Columbia, SC 90no/0.51 70/38 Mercury 6:47 a.m. 1 0 :30 p.m. Chiloquin Columbus,GA 84/69/0.00 Medfo d 5 9 / 31 Gold ach eu Rome Venus 3:53 a.m. 5 : 1 4 p.m. 0 ' Columbus,OH 90n3/0.00 59/ 72/38 Mars 3:26 p.m. 3 : 0 9 a.m. Klamath Concord, NH 72/55/0.09 Fields • • Ashl nd 'Falls Jupiter 8:28 a.m. 1 1:43 p.m. • Lakeview Mcoermi Corpus Christi gonzrri Bro ings 69/41 67/ Saturn 6:46 p.m. 4: 5 4 a.m. 61/4 60/31 61/32 71/41 Dallas 79/66/0.21 Dayton 88/68/0.00 Uranus 3:14 a.m. 4: 0 3 p.m. Denver 83/51/0.00 Yesterday Today Thursday Yesterday Today Thursday Yesterday Today Thursday oes Moines 82/64/0.19 city H i/Ln/Prec. Hi/Ln/W Hi/Ln/W C i ty Hi/Ln/Prec. Hi/Ln/W Hi/Ln/W city Hi/Ln/Prec. Hi/Ln/W Hi/Ln/W Detroit 86/70/0.12 63/44/Tr 6 0/48/t 6 1/46/c Ln Grande 72/ 43/0.00 63/36/t 6 8/36/pc Portland 68/5 2/0.0064/52/t 66/50/c 10 a.m. Noon 2 p.m. 4 p.m. Astcrin Duluth 70/57/0.00 Baker City 69/38/Tr 62/31/pc66/32/pc La Pine 60/31/0.00 56/32/pc 65/34/pc Prineville 59/ 4 0/0.0062/34/pc65/35/ pc El Paso 95/61/0.00 4 N(~ 7 ~ 7~ N 4 Brcckings 62/46/0.00 61/47/pc 65/46/pc M e dfcrd 7 3/55 /0.00 69/43/pc76/47/pc Redmond 66 / 34/0.0061/32/pc 67/35/pc Fairbanks 66/46/0.01 The highertheAccuWenuter.txrmIV Index number, sums 77/38/Tr 63 / 33/s 6 6/37/pc N e wport 6 1/43 /Tr 5 8 / 4 5/t 5 9 / 44/c Roneburg 67/ 5 2/0.0067/44/t 73/47/pc Fargo 89/55/0.03 the greatertheneedfor eyenndskin protecgcn.0-2 Low, Eugene 69/50/0.00 64/42/t 68/41/c N o r th Bend 61 / 46/0.00 59/45/t 6 0/46/c Salem 67/52/0.01 63/46/t 67/45/c Flagstaff 82/43/0.00 35 Moderate; 8-7 High;8-10 VeryHigh; 11+ Exlreme. Klamath Falls 68/37/0.00 60/31/s 68/37/pc Ontari o 85/56/0.00 77/47/n 74/46/pc Sisters 60/33/0.00 60/32/pc67/35/ pc Grand Rapids 82/68/Tr Lnkeview 73/34/0.00 61/32/s 65/40/pc Pendleton 71/39/0.00 67/43/t 72/45/pc The Oalles 7 1 / 46/0.00 68/49/t 72/47/pc Green say 73/63/0.01 Greensboro 86/66/0.30 Weather(W):s-sunny,pc-pnrtlycloudy, c-clcudy, sh-shcwers,t-thunderstcrms,r-rain, sf-sncwflurries, sn-sncwi-ice,Tr-trace,Yesterday data ascf 5 p.m. yesterday Harrisburg 87/62/0.59 G rasses T r ee s Wee d s Hnrffcrd, CT 86/59/0.37 • Hi g~h ~L o~ w Abs e nt Helena 79/48/0.00 Source: OregonAllergyAsscciates 541-683-1577 Honolulu 86/72/0.05 ~ o s ~ f o s ~ 2 09 ~ 30s ~ 40s ~ 50s ~ 609 ~ 709 ~a os ~g os ~f ccs ~tf Os Houston ~ 108 ~os 76/65/1.44 Huntsville 86/68/0.00 NATIONAL Indianapolis 85/66/0.00 As of 7 n.m.yesterday Queb nder eny 64/ Jackson, MS 88/71/0.25 Reservoir Ac r e feet Ca pacity EXTREMES Jacksonville 87/65/0.00 (for the C rane Prairie 515 1 5 93% YESTERDAY nnfnx pon

81'yo Wickiup 162157 Crescent Lake 7 6 5 65 66% Ochoco Reservoir 33673 76% Prineville 144999 98% River flow St a tion Cu. ft.lsec. Deschutes R.below CranePrairie 362 Deschutes R.below Wickiup 709 Deschutes R.below Bend 113 Deschutes R. atBenhamFalls 1640 Little Deschutes near LaPine 201 Crescent Ck. belowCrescent Lake 59 Crooked R.above Prineville Res. 52 Crooked R.below Prineville Res. 201 122 Crooked R.nearTerrebonne Ochoco Ck.below OchocoRes. 0

SUNDAY "'" 72'

74'

OREGON WEATHER

Bend through 5 p.m.yesterday 63 37'

'

LGW 33'

Periods of sun with a shower; breezy

I f' I

THURSDAY

PREMIUM HEARING AIDS

to legally justify the landfill's destruction of our prime farmland in the courts," MCPhillips sald.

Expansion opponents recently suffered a s etback And he said the group was when their attorney missed

landfill.

ry on a site that was set aside for community projects when "concerned about putting our Waste Management Inc. ap-

students in a situation where-

plied to expand a Yamhill Countylandfill. The company plans a 37-

by they may have todefend the location."

Ramsey McPhillips, who farms next to the landfill, said Landfill, which n eighbors he and other neighbors lobbied have opposed. the group to withdraw, saying The 450-acre Stewardship legal entanglements were inPlan was unveiled two years evitable because land-use lawago as Waste Management suits include lots the company renewed eff ortsto expand the offered the group to farm. "I am relieved to see the FFA landfill and extend its life by up to 20 years. will no longer be used as a Spokesman Kevin White pawn by Waste Management acre addition to its Riverbend

the deadline for submitting

appeal documents to the state Land Use Board of Appeals. "We thought the FFA project fit well in the overall plan, and would have been an as-

set for our community," said Don Clements, chair of Waste Management's Stewardship Committee.

STAY CONNECTED at Factory Direct, Retail Outlet Prices!

The committee plans to focus on a proposal to develop a project to create five local farm plotson 59 acresto grow

Freedom SIE

$399

food for local markets.

O.9,

I I$400 REBATE! Sxoo due aotime of purchase.

o

wWe Want tO find the

town Redmond, certain kinds

When the city amended its Urban Renewal Plan in 2012, it

sweet spot where the market will respond to our product, and we're

of housing may be a better choice than others, according to the plan. Garden apart-

targeted $7 million in funds as

not there yet."

Redmond Continued from B1

an inCentiVefOr 500 neW hous-

ing units downtown through low-interest or fo r givable loans, system d evelopment

space, are best-suited to the medical district because of ex— Heather Richards, isting large lots. And accessory Redmond's community dwellings, sometimes called development director granny flats or mother-in-law

charge discounts, city investment in infrastructure and private/public partnerships. lots and a lack of supporting "That will incentivize devel- amenities such as continuous opment in our study area as sidewalks and open spaces. opposed toother areas of the The plan suggests city-fundcity," Richards said. ed streetscape improvements The housing strategy iden- with developments of 15 units tifies four key areas ripe for or more. downtown housing: the hisThe plan recommends that toric core between Glacier the first step of the program and Antler avenues, a "mid- be a partial waiver of systown" zone north from there tem development charges on to Hemlock,an "uptown" area between Hemlock and Maple

along the Sixth Street corridor, and a district surrounding St. Charles Redmond.

new construction, targeting

accessory dwellings on lots with existing housing and redevelopment of properties

that increase density. FinancRichards said a key element ing of a pilot project using at of the strategy is, "What will least some public funds would move forward the best nowcome later ,perhaps five years and in the future?" in. nWe Want to find the SWeet spot where the market will

ments,which need more open

The city of Portland, where

urban density is strongly enrespond to our product," she couraged, is waiving most Said, nand We're not there yet." system developmentcharges Obstacles to the housing for eligible accessory dwellplan include convincing a ings and has seen applications population no t a c customed skyrocket. to city center housing of its Because of existing condibenefits, few large buildable tions in various parts of down-

Rebate processed30 days after invoicing. Offers valid through May3I,2074or whilesupplies last.

All Hearing Aids Include FREE: Hearing Test, 3 Year Repair Warranty, 1 Year Loss & Damage Coverage, Start-Up Accessories and In-Ofhce Adjustments

apartments,are perfect for the

residential area east of Fifth Street andparts of the northern

'

Fifth-Sixth corridor because

of existing small houses with room for an apartment above a

garage or a detached small cottage, according to the plan. "After Seeing th e

A • m •

S t udy,

(the advisory commission's) preferenceis to see m ixed-use developments (with housing on upper floors) on Fifth and Sixth street frontages, rather than single-family units or high-density apartments," Richards told

Redmond's Urban Renewal Agencyboard members. The housing strategy also includes a plan to establish and initially fund a downtown manager who would be responsible for d eveloping events and marketing the city

center, although urban renewal funds would not be sustainable, and another source of

funding would be necessary long term. — Reporter: 541-548-2186, lpugmire@bendbulletift.com

America Hears

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Monday through Friday 9:00 am to 6:00 pm Saturday by appointment 547 NE Bellevue Drive Suite ¹10 5 B e nd, Oregon

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fnfG


IN THE BACK BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NEWS W Scoreboard, C2 M LB, C3 Sports in brief, C2 Tennis, C3 NHL, C2 NBA, C4 THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, MAY 28, 2014

O www.bendbulletin.com/sports

HORSE RACING

PREP LACROSSE

California Chrome gets in workout ELMONT, N.Y.— California Chromecouldn't wait to get rolling Tuesday, and on anunseasonably warm morning, he burned up thetrack. The chestnut colt was unusually wired, straining exercise rider Willie Delgado's forearms but elevating his mood. "He was muchstronger today," Delgado said after a two-mile gallop on Belmont Park's main track. "He waspulling me, and I had to pull him back. "This is the strongest he's felt, and hereally gets over this track well. I just hope hecan keep going andwin the Triple Crown. Thencan I retire," he addedwith a laugh. Assistant trainer Alan Sherman wasasked about trying to sweep three classics in five weeks. "I don't know about intimidating," he said, "but it's hard to do. That's why it's been 36 years since Affirmed. It takes a special horse. It would be nice to beNo. 12, but we're not counting our chickens before they're hatched."

LOCAL GOLF

Bears bowout

of playoffs Bulletin staff report PORTLAND — Joe Kerwin conceded thatbefore the sea-

son began, expectations were minimal for Bend High. Safe to say, Kerwin said, the

Lava Bears have far exceeded preseason projections. That is why Tuesday's result was not overly disheartening for Kerwin, Bend's boys lacrosse coach.

In the second round of the Oregon High School Lacrosse Association state playoffs, the

Lava Bears were outscored 10-1 in the second half in suffering a 13-3 loss to Sunset.

"It's definitely a step up in the level of play — a lot more athletic team," Kerwin said. "I

was hoping it would be a little closer of a game. But we were

expecting a much more physical game." Ryan Brennecke i The Bulletin

Jim Neal, of Crooked River Ranch, tees off at the seventh hole while playing the Crooked River Ranch Golf Course Tuesday.

each scored for Bend (15-4 overall), which was seeded No. 10 in the 24-team bracket. Bryant Jolma and Eli Pite had an assistapiece forthe Bears,

— Neyysday

and Lake Larsen was credited with 15 saves in goal — nine

BASKETBALL

in the second half alone.

Bucks' employees

SeeBears/C4

get final present

Inside

MILWAUKEE — It

was a surprise that left employees of the Milwaukee Bucks' arena stunned andsomein tears. Outgoing owner Herb Kohl sent BMOHarris Bradley Center employees a letter of appreciation as he left the team. And inside every note of gratitude was acheck for $500. Bradley Center usher Izeal Atkins said he is not quick to shed atear. But when heopened his letter, he couldn't help but cry. Atkins says "nobody just walks upand gives you $500." Security guard Markeish Stringer told WISN-TV hewas surprised and very happy when he openedhis letter from Kohl. Stringer says "you just don't hear about ... people doing that." The former U.S. senator sold the team to New York investment firm executives Wesley Edens andMarc Lasry for about $550 million.

James Rockett, Chance Beutler and Cade Hinderlider

• Attendance atgolf courseshasbeen lackluster early in the 2014 season By Zack Hall The Bulletin

A Central Oregon spring can do a number on the hairline of anyone

who manages an area golf course. Ask any local course operator and

they will tell you that weather — and temperature in particular — is the single most accurate predictor to how

"To us it feels positive. My lessons are just going crazy now. It makesme feel like people are getting excited about the season and planning on playing a lot of golf."

many rounds of golf will be played on — Matt Phillips, Widgi Creek head pro a given day. In a region where spring often brings with it wild swings in weather, that could mean similar swings Lakes Golf Course in Prineville. "This year, we've had some nice in golf business. And so far it appears that the 2014 Central Oregon weather at times, but never any long golf season is limping out of the stretches," Lampert says. "So it has gates. just never really felt like the season "I think in general it feels a little had arrived.... Until now. I think it's here now." quiet," says Rob Malone, director of golf at Aspen Lakes in Sisters. But unpredictable spring weather M any of theregion's30coursesare is not all there is to blame. reporting that so far golf rounds are At least some in the industry have flat, or in some cases even a bit down, beenfrustratedthatsome days have from lastseason. been slow when the weather was The main culprit for the slow start

pleasant, says Bruce Wattenburger,

appears to be the weather, says Zach Lampert, head golf pro at Meadow

the head pro at Juniper Golf Course

Wattenburger saw that on Monday, when, after a relatively strong week-

end, play dropped off in the afternoon on what turned out to be a mild Memorial Day. What gives? "I'm still not convinced the economy is fixed, and obviously gas prices are still up there where you have to think about travel," Wattenburger offers.

He cautions, though, about reading too much into the early season.

• Prep scoreboard,C4

Storm fall atstate Bulletin staff report CLACKAMAS — For three

quarters, Summit proved it belonged. But after being shut out in

The peak of the golf season just teed off with last week's opening of

the fourth, after Clackamas posted six unanswered goals,

The Woodlands at Sunriver Resort,

the Storm fell 14-8 in the sec-

the last of Central Oregon's courses to open for the season. And with June fast approaching, consistently warm weather is ahead. That will undoubtedly bring more golfers.

ond round of the Oregon High

"I think we're still expecting a

the 24-team bracket, hung with the No. 6 Cavaliers

most of the way, not allowing

level year," Wattenburger says. "The core golfers are still playing. We're not seeing any desertion of the membership."

in Redmond.

SchoolLacrosse Association

state playoffs. Summit, seeded No. 11 in

SeeGolf /C4

Clackamas to create much

separation. After matching the Cavs each quarter, the Storm (15-7

overall) headed into the final period knotted up 8-8. SeeStorm /C4

— The Associated Press

COLLEGE BASEBALL

NBA PLAYOFFS

Beavers oo in to eru e osts Ducks ready for return to Nashville

By Steve Gress

The Corvallis Gazette-Times

CORVALLIS — Oregon State

was the unanimous No. 1 college baseball team in the country a week ago after the Beavers took Russell Westbrook

shoots during Tuesday night's game against San Antonio. Westbrook had 40 points for the Thunder.

Thunder cruise to victory overSpurs Russell Westbrook, Serge IbakaandKevin Durant lead Oklahoma City to a105-92 victory over SanAntonio, C4

MLB

two of three from Washington in a showdown of the top two teams But the Beavers, who needed just one win or one Washington

A bobblehelpsMinnesota score the game-winning run overTexas,C4

')

loss over Memorial Day weekend

tI II I

to claim at least a share of the conference title, could not build

"We've been to Vanderbilt,

had some guys in Duck uni-

And while the Beavers did manage to claim the title outright with a win over USC in Los An-

forms who competed there

geles on Saturday behind a shutout by Ben Wetzler, the week is OSU dropped three of the four 6-2 nonconferenceloss to Or egon

in Eugene on Tuesday — and managedjustsevenrunsinthose contests.

SeeBeavers/C4

EUGENE — Good memories returned for the University of Oregon when be heading to Nashville for an NCAA baseball regional.

the postseason.

one the Beavers would probably just as soon forget.

The (Eugene) Register-Guard

the Ducks saw that they would

off that momentum heading into

games last week — including a

Twins rally for win

By Steve Mims

in the Pac-12 Conference.

Amanda Cowan/The Corvallle Gazette-Times

Oregon State head coach Pat Casey, facing, is hoping to get the Beavers

through the Corvallis Regional this weekend and into a super regional.

Nextup Corvallis Regional: OregonState vs. North Dakota State When:Friday,8a.m.TV:ESPNU Radio:940-AM

and had success there," UO coach George Horton said Nashville Reafter the bracket was unveiled gional, Oregon Monday morning. "Our team vs. Clemson is different and their team is WhssPrlday different, but the road to Oma- 10 a m ha (site if the College World Ty,ESPN3 Series) is never easy." The Ducks (42-18), seeded No. 2 in the region, will face No. 3 Clemson (3623) to open the regional at 10 a.m. Friday. See Ducks /C4


C2

TH E BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, MAY 28, 2014

ON THE AIR

COREBOARD

TODAY TENNIS

French Open,second round French Open,second round

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

ES P N2

BASEBALL

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

1 0 a.m. 5 p.m. 7 p.m.

ML B MLB Roo t

2 p.m. 2 a.m.

Golf Golf

GOLF

College, NCAA Men'sChampionship EuropeanTour, NordeaMasters HOCKEY

NHL Playoffs, Los Angeles atChicago

5 p.m. NBCSN

Today Baseball: 5A stateplayoffs, first round: Maristat Bend,4:30p.mc4Astateplayoffs, first round:MazamaatSisters, 4:30p.mcCascade at Ridgeview, 4:30p.m. Softball: 5Astateplayoffs,first round;Wilametteat Bend,4:30p.m44Astateplayoffs, first round:Elmira atRidgeview,4:30p.m. Boys lacrosse:OHSLACascade Cup, first round: SouthSalematSisters,5 p.m.

oni, Croatia7-6 , (2), 6-3. Kiki Bertens,Netherlands, def. AlexandraCadantu, Romania7-6 , (5), 6-1. JelenaJankovic (6), Serbia,def. Sharon Fichman,

IN THE BLEACHERS

Canada, 5-7, 6-1,6-3.

SloaneStephens(15), UnitedStates, def. Peng Shuai,China,6-4, 7-6(8). PolonaHercog,Slovenia, def.JanaCepelova,Slovakia,6-2, 6-3. Silvia Soler-Espinosa, Spain, def. Chanelle Scheepers,SouthAfrica,6-2,6-3. ElinaSvitolina,Ukraine,def. PetraMartic, Croatia, 5-0,retired. Ana Ivanovic(11), Serbia,def. CarolineGarcia, France,6-1,6-3. KirstenFlipkens(21), Belgium,def. DankaKovinic, Montenegro,7-6(6),6-2. Julia Glushko,Israel, def. DonnaVekic, Croatia,

In the Bleachers O2014 Steve Moore. Dist. by Universal Uclick www.uocomica.com/inthebleachers

BASKETBALL NBA Playoffs NATIONALBASKETBALL ASSOCIATION AN TimesPDT

BASKETBALL

NBA Playoffs, Miami at Indiana SOCCER InternationalFriendly, Mexico vs. Israel

ON DECK

5:30 p.m. ESPN

7-5, 2-6,6-4)

YaninaWickmayer, Belgium, def. CarolineWozniacki (13),Denmark, 7-6(5), 4-6,6-2. MagdalenaRybmarikova, Slovakia, def. Urszula Radwanska,Poland,4-6, 6-4, 3-0,retired. CoCoVandeweghe,UnitedStates, def. IvetaMelzer, CzechRepublic, 7-6(6), 6-2. Maria-Teresa Torro-Flor, Spain,def.KlaraKoukalova (30),CzechRepublic, 7-6(4), 6-2. EkaterinaMakarova(22), Russia,def. Shelby Rogers, United States,6-2, 6-3. DinahPfizenm aier, Germany, def. EstrellaCabeza CandelaSpai , n,4-6, 6-3,6-3. CaseyDeffacqua, Australia, def. LourdesDominguezLino,Spain, 7-5,6-3. LucieSafarova(23), CzechRepublic, def. Mandy Minella Luxemourg b 6-3 7-5 SaraErrani(10), Italy, def.MadisonKeys, United States,7-5, 3-6,6-1.

CONFERENCE FINALS

(Bect-of-ceven;x-if necessary)

6:25 p.m. ESPN2

Tuucday'sGame

Oklahoma City105, SanAntonio92, seriestied2-2

Today'sGame

THURSDAY TENNIS

French Open,second round French Open,third round

Miami atIndiana,5:30 p.m.,Miami leadsseries 3-1 ThurcdayiuGame x-Oklahoma City atSanAntonio,6 p.m.

Time TV/Radio 6 a.m.

ES P N2

2 a.m. E SPN2

BASEBALL

MLB, TexasatMinnesota MLB, Atlanta at Boston MLB, Los AngelesAngels at Seattle

1 0 a.m. 4 p.m. 7 p.m.

ML B MLB Roo t

GOLF

PGA Tour, Memorial Tournament EuropeanTour, NordeaMasters

11:30 a.m. Golf 2 a.m. Golf

HOCKEY

NHL Playoffs, Montreal at NewYork Rangers

5 p.m. NBCSN

BASKETBALL

NBA Playoffs, OklahomaCity at San Antonio

6 p.m.

TNT

Listingsarethe mostaccurate available. TheBulletin is not responsible for latechangesmadeby 7Vor radio stations.

SPORTS IN BRIEF BASKETBALL GriZZlieSSign COaCh to eXtenSiOn —Grizzlies coachDave Joerger has signed acontract extension to remain in Memphis after speaking to the Minnesota Timberwolves about their vacancy. The Grizzlies announcedJoerger's extension Tuesday.Terms of the deal weren't disclosed. In astatement released by the team, Grizzlies controlling owner Robert Perasaid that"following an openand honest dialogue with Dave, it becameclear that Dave wasfully committed to Memphis and we are committed to him." Joerger had interviewed with the Timberwolves twice in three daysbefore deciding over the weekend to stay with the Grizzlies.

Sterling reSPOndS to NBA,June 3 hearing Still On —Los Angeles Clippers owner DonaldSterling responded to the NBA's attempt to oust him onTuesday,arguing that there is no basis for stripping him of his teambecause his racist statements were illegally recorded "during an inflamed lovers' quarrel in which he was clearly distraught." According to the response, acopy of which was obtained by The Associated Press, Sterling says V.Stiviano recorded him without his knowledgeandthus the recording was illegal under California law. He alsosaid hecould not have "willfully" damagedthe league because hedid not know it would bemadepublic. "A jealous rant to a lover never intended to bepublished cannot offend the NBArules," Sterling said in thedocument, which wasfirst reported by USAToday.

GOLF U.S. WOmen'S OPengOing to Alahama in 2018 —The 2018 U.S.Women's OpenChampionship will be played at Shoal Creek in Birmingham, Alabama.TheUnited States Golf Association announced the venue onTuesday for the tournament scheduled for May 31-June 3 in2018. Shoal Creekhas hosted the RegionsTradition, a ChampionsTourmajor, since 2011. It was also the site of two previous USGAevents, the1986 U.S. Amateur Championship and the 2008 U.S. Junior Amateur.

SOCCER POliCe inVeStigate WOrld Cllp friendly — TheScottlsh Football Federation said onTuesdaythat it 'liaised' with British police following allegations of attempted match-fixing involving a friendly between Scotland andNigeria. Thewebsite of the Daily Telegraph newspaper reported Tuesdaythat officers from the National CrimeAgency (NCA) haveaskedFIFA"to issue an alert over potential attempts to rig the game."TheNCA,which investigates organized crime, and FIFA both declined to comment onthe report but the Scottish football federation confirmed in astatement to the Associated Press it"liaised with the relevant authorities andwill prepare for the match asnormal."

CYCLING Quintana takeSleadwith win Onbrutal 16th StageNairo Quintana movedinto the overall lead in the Giro d'Italia after winning the tough 16th stage, in difficult weather conditions across the legendary GaviaandStelvio climbs on Tuesday in Italy. Quintana, who is famed for his climbing skills, finished eight seconds aheadof Ryder Hesjedal. Pierre Rolland wasthird on the 86-mile race from Ponte di Legno toVal Martello. Quintana — started the day 2minutes and 40 seconds behind former leader Rigoberto Uran but beat his fellow Colombian bymorethan four minutes. — From wire reports

Friday'c Game

x-IndianaatMiami, 5:30p.m.

Saturday'sGame x-SanAntonioatOklahomaCity, 5:30 p.m. Bunday'uGame x-MiamiatIndiana,5:30p.m. Monday'uGame x-Oklahoma City atSanAntonio,6 p.m.

Q lc lt

DEALS

Tuesday'sSummary

Thunder105, Spurs 92

Transactions

"Well, his rotator cuff is shot. I warned you about pitching him too. many innings, but hey. What do I know? I'm just a transmission mechanic!"

BANANTONIO(92) Leonard 3-92-210, Duncan3-83-49, Splitter1-3 1-2 3, Parker7-120-014, Green1-4 0-0 3, Ginobili 2-8 0-0 5, Diaw 5-112-2 14, Mills 2-9 0-0 4, Belinelli 2-4 2-2 7,Joseph4-7 3-411, Baynes0-32-2 2, Bonner 3-40-0 8,Ayres0-1 2-42. Totals 33-83 17-22 92. OKLAHOM ACITY(1BB) Durant11-227-931, Ibaka4-81-4 9, Perkins1-1 36),4p.m. 0-02, Westbrook12-2414-1440, Jackson1-50-03, Nashville, Tenn. Lamb2-72-2 7,Butler2-3 0-04,Adams2-3 0-2 4, Friday, May3B Fisher1-20-03,Collison0-00-00, Jones1-10-02. Game1— Clemson (36-23) vs. Oregon(42-18), 10 Totals 37-76 24-31106. a.m. BunAntoniu 26 2 3 24 25 — 92 Game2 —Vanderbilt (41-18) vs. Xavier(29-27), 5 Oklahoma Cit y 2 6 3 2 26 22 — 166 p.m. Oxfurd, Miss. Friday'uGames WNBA Game 1—GeorgiaTech(36-25) vs. Washington (3915-1),1 p.m. WOMEN'SNATIDNAL BASKETBALL Game 2— Mississippi (41-18)vs.Jacksonvile State ASSOCIATION (36-25),p. 5m. AN TimesPDT Baton Rouge,La. Fridey'c Games AN TimesEDT Game1 — LSU(44-14-1) vs.Southeastern Louisiana EasternConference (37-23),noon W L PctGB Game2—Bryant (42-14)vs. Houston (44-15), 5p.m. Chicago 4 1 .8 0 0 t/t Lafayette, La. Atlanta 2 2 ,50 0 1 Friduy'u Games NewYork 2 2 ,50 0 1 1/t Washington 1 2 .3 3 3 2 Game1 —SanDiego State(42-19) vs. Mississippi State(37-22),11a.m. Connecticut 1 3 .2 5 0 2)/t Indiana 1 3 ,2 5 0 2 '/z Game 2 —Louisiana-Lafa yette (53-7) vs. Jackson WesternConference State(31-23),4p.m. W L PctGB Stillwater, Okla. Friday's Games Minnesota 5 0 1 . 000 Los Angeles 2 1 .6 6 7 2 Game1 —CalStateFugerton (32-22)vs. Nebraska (40-19),10a.m. Phoenix 2 1 .6 6 7 2 SanAntonio 2 2 .5 0 0 2 )/t Game2 — OklahomaState(45-16) vs. Binghamton (25-25),p. 4m. Seattle 1 4 .2 0 0 4 Tulsa 0 2 .0 0 0 3'/~ Fort Worth, Texas Friday, May30 Tueudey'cGame Game1—SamHoustonState(4M7) vs.DalasBapNewYork70,Seatle 64 tist (40-19),12:30p.m. Today'sGame Game 2—TCU(42-15)vs. Siena(26-31),5 p.m. Tulsa atSanAntonio, 5 p.m. Houston Friday'uGames Game1— Texas A&M(33-24) vs.Texas(38-18), 1 HOCKEY p.m. Game2— Rice (41-18) vs.GeorgeMason (34-20), NHL Playoffs 5p.m. CorvuNis NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE Fridey'c Games AN TimesPDT Game1 —Uc Irvine(35-22) vs.UNLV(35-23),2 p.m. Game2—OregonState(42-12) vs.North DakotaState CONFERE NCEFINALS (25-24),p. 6m. (Beut-of-ueven;x-if necessary) Bun Luis Obispo,Calif. Friday'c Games Tueuday'cGame — Pepperdine(39-16) vs.ArizonaState(33Montreal7, N.Y.Rangers 4, N.Y.Rangers leadseries Game1 22),1p.m. 3-2 Game2—Cal Poly (45-10) vs. SacramentoState(39Today'sGame 22),6p.m. LosAngelesatChicago,5p.m.,LosAngelesleads series3-1 Thurcday'uGame SOFTBALL x-Montrealat NYRangers, 5 p.m. Fridayic Game College x-Chi cagoatLosAngeles,6p.m. Saturday'sGame Women'sCollegeWorld Series x-NYRangersat Montreal, 5 p.m. At ASAHall uf FumeStadium Bunday'uGame Oklahoma City x-LosAngelesatChicago,5p.m. All Times PDT Double Elimination; x-if necessary Thuruday'cGames BASEBALL Game1—Florida(50-12) vs.Baylor (47-14), 9a.m. Game2 — FloridaState(55-7) vs. Oregon(54-7), College 11:30a.m. Game3 — Louisiana-Lafayette (49-8) vs. Kentucky NCAADivision I Baseball Regionalc (48-14),4p.m. All TimesPDT Game4 — Oklahoma (50-11) vs. Alabam a (50-11), Double Elimination; x-if necessary 6:30p.m. Charlottesville, Vu. Friduy'u Games Friday'c Games Game5—Game1winnervs. Game2winner,4 p.m. Game1— Virginia (44-13) vs. Buckneg(30-19-1), Game 6 — G am e 3 winner vs. Gam e 4winner, 6:30 11a.m. p.m. Game2 —Liberly(41-16) ys.Arkansas(38-23),4p.m. Saturday'sGames Columbia,B.C. Game7— Game1loservs.Game2loser,9a.m. Friday'u Games Game 6 — G am e3 loservs. Game4loser,11:30a.m. Game1 —OldDominion (36-24) vs. Maryland(36- Game9— Game 5loservs.Game7winner,4p.m. 21),10a.m. —Game6 loser vs.Game8winner,630 p.m. Game 2—South Carolina (42-16)vs. Campbell (40- Game10 Bunday' sGames 19),4p.m. Game11 —Game5winner vs. Game9winner,10a m. Guineuvige, Fla. Game12 —Game6winner vs.Game10winner,12:30 Friday'c Games p.m. Game1 — NorthCarolina (34-25) vs. LongBeach x-Game13 —Game5winnervs. Game9loser,4 p.m. State(32-24),10a.m. 14—Game6winner vs. Game10loser, 6:30 Game 2— Florida (40-21)vs.Collegeof Charleston x-Game p.m. (41-17), 4 p.m. NOTE;If onlyonegameis necessary, it wil be played Coral Gublec, Flu. at4p.m. Friday'u Games ChampionshipSeries Game1 —Columbia(29-18) vs.TexasTech(40-18), (Beut-uf-3) 11a.m. onday,June2; TeamsTBD, 5p.m. Game2—Miami(41-17) vs. Bethune-Cookman(26- M T uesday, June 3: T e am sTBD,5 p.m. 31),4p.m. x-Wednesday, June4: TeamsTBD,5 p.m. Tallahassee,Flu. Friday'c Games Game1 —KennesawState(37-21) vs.Alabama(34SOCCER 22),9a.m. Game 2—FloridaState(43-15)vs.GeorgiaSouthern MLS (39-21),3p.m. Louisville, Ky. MAJORLEAGUESOCCER Friday'uGames AN TimesPDT Game 1 —Kansas (34-24) vs.Kentucky (35-23), 11 a.m. EasternConference Game 2— Louisville (45-15)vs.KentState(36-21), W L T Ptu GFGA 3 p.m. N ew England 7 3 2 23 21 1 4 Bluomington,lnd. S porting KansasCity 5 4 4 1 9 1 9 13 Friday'c Games D.C. 5 4 3 1 8 17 14 Game1—Stanford (30-23) vs. IndianaState(35-16), Houston 5 7 2 1 7 1 6 24 11a.m. Columbus 4 4 4 1 6 1 5 14 Game2—Indiana(42-13) vs. YoungstownState(16- NewYork 3 5 6 1 5 2 0 22

BASEBAL L AmericanLeague BALTIMOR EORIOLES—Reinstated1B Chris Davis from thepaternity leavelist. BOSTON REDSOX—Sent RHPStevenWright to Portland(EL)for arehabassignment. CLEVEL AND INDIANS — PlacedC/INF Carlos Santanaon the 7-day DL, retroactive to Monda y, and1B NickSwisheronthe15-day DL. Selectedthe Toronto Fc 4 4 1 1 3 1 1 1 1 contractof CGeorgeKottarasfromColumbus(IL). ReChicago 2 3 6 1 2 1 9 2 1 calledINFJesus Aguilar fromColumbus,Designated Philadelphia 2 7 5 1 1 1 6 2 4 RHPBlakeWoodfor assignment. Montreal 1 6 4 7 9 22 HOUSTONASTROS— OptionedOFLJ.Hoesto WesternConference Oklahoma City (PCL). Recaled OFRobbieGrossman W L T Ptc GF GA fromOklahom aCity. Seattle 8 3 2 2 6 25 21 KANSASCITYROYALS— TradedOFMelkyMesa R eal SaltLake 6 0 6 24 2 3 1 3 andRHPPJ.Waltersto Torontofor cashconsiderations. Colorado 5 4 3 1 8 1 6 15 TAMPABAYRAYS— OptionedRHPAlexColome FC Dallas 5 6 3 1 8 2 2 2 2 to Durham(IL). SelectedC Ro man Ali Solis from Vancouver 4 2 5 1 7 1 6 1 4 Durham. TransferredLHPMatt Mooretothe 60-dayDL. Los Angeles 4 3 3 15 14 9 National League SanJose 3 4 4 1 3 13 12 ARIZONADIAMONDBACKS — Optioned RHP Portland 2 3 7 1 3 1 6 2 0 ZekeSpruil toReno(PCL). ChivasUSA 2 5 4 1 0 13 20 ATLANTA BRAVES— Agreedto termswith RHP NOTE; Threepointsfor victory,onepointfortie. Kameron Loeon aminorleaguecontract. CHICAGO CUBS— Placed LHPWesley Wright Tueuduy'uGame on paternity leave.Recalled RHPBlakeParker from SportingKansasCity1, NewYork1, tie lowa(PCL). Today'sGame LOSANGELESDODGERS— PlacedCA.J.Ellison Portlandat ChivasUSA, 7:30p.m. the15-dayDL,retroactiveto Sunday. Recalled CTim Saturday'sGames FederowiczfromAlbuquerque(PCL). RealSaltLakeatSeattle FC,1 p.m. MIAMIMARLINS—PlacedRHPCarter Cappson ColumbusatTorontoFC,2 p.m. the15-dayDL,retroactive to Monday. Recalled RHP NewEnglandatMontreal, 4 p.mi ArquimedesCaminerofromNewOrleans(PCL). SportingKansasCityat D.C.United,4 p.m. NEW YORKMETS—RecalledRHPVicBlackfrom SanJoseatFCDallas,5:30p.m. LasVegas(PCL). Philadelphiaat ChivasUSA, 7:30p.m. PITTSBURGHPIRATES — Designated RHP Vin Sunduy'uGames Mazzaro for assignme nt. Recalled RHPBrandon LosAngelesatChicago,1 p.m. Cumpton fromIndianapolis (IL). Houston at Colorado 5p.m. ST. LOUIS CARDINALS— Agreedto termswith Vancouver at Portland, 6p.m. LHPPedroFeliciano onaminor leaguecontract. BASKETB ALL National Basketball Association TENNIS NBA —FinedIndianaFPaul George $25,000 for public criticismoftheofficiating.

Professional

FOOTBALL

FrenchDpen Tuesday At BtudeRolandGarrou Paris Purse: $34.12miNion(GrandSlam) Surface:Clay-Outdoor Singles Men First Round Ivo Karlovic, Croatiadef. , Grigor Dimitrov (11), Bulgaria,6-4,7-5, 7-6(4). CarlosBerlocq,Argentina, def.LleytonHewitt, Australia, 3-6,6-2,6-1, 6-4.

AndreasSeppi(32), Italy,def. SantiagoGiraldo, Colombia6-3, , 7-5, 6-3. Axel Michon,France,def. BradleyKlahn, United States 6-1 6-7(4) 5-7 6-1 6-4

DavidFerrer(5),Spain, def. IgorSijsling, Nether-

National Football League ARIZONA CARDINALS— SignedTCoryBrandon, CB JimmyLegree, WRKevin Ozier, andRBJalen Parmele. BALTIMORE RAVENS— SignedLBC.J.Mosley. CINCINN ATI BENGALS—SignedHBJeremyHil and DE Wil Clarke. DALLAS COWBOYS—PlacedTEEvanWilsonon the waived/injured list. SignedGTyronneGreen. JACKSONVI LLEJAGUARS — SignedLB Telvin Smith. MIAMI DOLPHINS— Signed OLSamuelLongo and MichaelPhilippandDLMicajahReynolds. NEWENGLANDPATRIOTS— SignedWRsWilson

VanHooserand ReeseWiggins. PITTSBURGHSTEELERS — Signed OLWesley Johnsonand LBJordan Zumwalt to four-year contracts.

SAN FRANCI SCO 49ERS — Pl aced OT Luke Marquardtonthewaived/injured list andLBMorgan Breslin onthewaived/non-football injury list. Signed WR BruceEllingtonto afour-year contract, TEKevin Greeneto athree-yearcontract andLBChaseThomas contract. Philipp Kohlschreiber(28), Germ any, def. Pere to a two-year SEATTLE SEAHAWKS — SignedWRKevinNorRiba,Spain,7-5,6-4,6-1. Denis IstominUzb , ekistan, def. SergiyStakhovsky, woodandLBsKevin Pierre-Louis andHoraceMiler. HOCKEY Ukraine,6-3, 6-4,2-6, 6-3. National HockeyLeague Andreas Haider-Maurer, Austria, def. Daniel COLUMBU S BLUEJACKETS — Signed coach Brands,Germany, 4-6, 4-6, 6-2,6-3, 6-4. KevinAnderson(19), SouthAfrica, def.Stephane Todd Richards to a two-yearcontract extension t h rough the 2016-17 season. Robert,France,7-5,6-3,6-4. SOCCER SimoneBoleffi, Italy, def. AndreaArnaboldi, Italy, U.S. SOCCER— NamedTonyGustavssonwom6-4, 6-4,6-2. en's nati o nal team a s si s tant coach. JurgenZopp,Estonia, def.TommyHaas (16), GerMajor LeagueSoccer many,2-5,retired. PORTLANDTIMBERS— SignedD DannyO'RoJack Sock,UnitedStates,def. NicolasAlmagro urke. (21), Spain5-0, , retired. COLLEGE Pablo Cuevas,Uruguay,def.MatthewEbden,AusECAC — Named Ronnie Nunnassociatecommistralia, 6-1,6-2,6-3. sioner for offi c i a ti n g. DusanLajovic,Serbia,def. Federico Delbonis, ArALBANY (N.Y.)— Named IsokenUzamere womgentina,6-3,6-2,6-3. AndyMurray(7), Britain, def. AndreyGolubev,Ka- en'sassistantbasketball coach. KANSAS STATE— Granted a transfer releaseto zakhstan, 6-1,6-4, 3-6, 6-3. Fernando Verdasco(24), Spain, def. MichaelLlo- women'sbasketball GLeticia Romero. OHIO ST A TE—Announced DEJamal Marcuswil dra, France, 6-2,7-6 (4), 7-6(3). MarinkoMatosevic,Australia, def.Dustin Brown, transfer. OKLAHOMACHRISTIAN— NamedJessicaRuckGermany, 7-6(5), 6-4,6-7 (1), 7-5. associatehead softball coach. Gael Monfils (23), France,def. Victor Hanescu, man TROY — NamedStephanieDemake women'sasRomania6-2, , 4-6, 6-4,6-2. sistantsoccercoach. Jan-Lennard Struff, Germany, def. AlbanoOlivetti, UCONN —NamedSarahCullen andEllenHerman France,6-1,6-4,6-4. women'assi s stant volleyball coaches. Steve Johnson,UnitedStates, leadsLaurentLokoli,

lands,6-4,6-3, 6-1. RichardGasquet (12), France,def. BernardTomic, Australia,6-2,6-1, 7-5. Juan Monaco, Argentina, def. Lucas Pouile, France,6-3,6-1,6-4.

France,4-6,6-7(7),7-6(3),6-3,3-1, susp.,darkness. Women First Round SimonaHalep(4), Romania, def.Alisa Kleybanova, Russia,6-0,6-2. KristinaMladenovic, France,def. Li Na(2), China, 7-5, 3-6,6-1. AnastasiaPavlyuchenkova(24), Russia,def. KimikoDate-Krumm,Japan,6-3,0-6,6-2.

Svetlana Kuzne tsova (27), Russia, def. Sofia Shapatava, Georgia, 6-3,6-1. CamilaGiorgi, Italy,def.BojanaJovanovski, Serbia, 6-4,6-3. TelianaPereira, Brazil, def. Luksika Kumkh um, Thailand,4-6,6-1, 6-1. HeatherWatson, Britain, def. BarboraZahlavova Strycova,CzechRepublic,6-3, 6-4. SoranaCirstea(26), Rom ania, def. Aleksandra Wozniak, Canada, 6-7(3), 7-5,6-2. AlisonRiske,UnitedStates, def.MirjanaLucic-Bar-

FISH COUNT Upstream daily movement of adult chinook,jack chinook, steelheadandwild steelheadat selected ColumbiaRiverdamslast updatedonMonday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd WuBhd Bonneville 1,929 4 1 5 64 14 The Daffes 1,533 46 5 31 6 John Day 1,504 39 7 24 0 McNary 9 9 4 352 15 1 Upstreamyear-to-date movement of adult chinook, jackchinook, steelheadandwild steelhead at selectedColumbiaRiver damslast updatedon Monday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wctlhd Bonneville 178,807 24,213 5,338 3,949 T he Daffes 131,452 18,621 837 20 3

John Day 111,493 16,451 3,097 1,123 M cNary 93,271 12,515 78 6

33 4

Canadiensstay alive with victory over Rangers The Associated Press MONTREAL — Rene Bourque scored three

NHL PLAYOFFS

Weise was wobbly when he got up and went for treatment, but returned to the bench late in the

goals and the Montreal Canadiens chased goal- speciaL" peylod. ie Henrik Lundqvist and defeated the New York Derek Stepan, playing with a guard on his It was a night of strange bounces and spotRangers 7-4 on Tuesday to stave off elimination helmet to protect a broken jaw suffered from ty goaltending, even if New York's best chance in the Eastern Conference final. a Brandon Prust hit in Game 3, returned to the of the game had Carl Hagelin's shot stopped The Rangers, who lead the best-of-seven se- lineup to score twice for the Rangers. Chris by the end of Dustin Tokarski's stick midway ries 3-2, will have another chance to earn a trip Kreider had a goal and three assists and Rick through the first period. to the Stanley Cup final in Game 6 on Thursday Nash also scored. Lundqvist was pulled in favor of Cam Talbot "It was a different game than what we've had after allowing four goals on 19 shots. night in New York. "Ipulledhimbecause I thought at that time we Alex Galchenyuk,Tomas Plekanec and Max so far in this series," Rangers coach Alain ViPacioretty also scored for Montreal, which out- gneault said. needed a little momentum shift," Vigneault said. shot the Rangers 28-27. At 10:41 of the third, Rangers defenseman "I thought it might catch everyone's attention. It "That was a Iot of fun," Pacioretty said. aWe John Moore was given a major penalty and did for a while. But obviously it didn't work out." came out strong. That's a group effort. Every- was ejected for a blindside, open-ice hit on Dale Tokarski stayed in despite allowing four one contributed tonight and that makes it more Weise that was similar to Prust's hit on Stepan. goals on his first 14.

'c

k

Ryan Remiorz/TheAssociated Press

Montreal left wing Rene Bourque (17) celebrates with teammates after scoring against the New

York Rangers during the second period of Game 5 of the Eastern Conference final Tuesday in Montreal.


WEDNESDAY, MAY 28, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

C3

OR LEAGUE BASEBALL Standings

Toronto NewYork Baltimore Tampa Bay Boston Detroit

Chicago Minnesota Kansas City Cleveland Oakland

LosAngeles Texas Seattle Houston

AMERICANLEAGUE East Division W L Pct GB 31 22 .585 27 24 26 24 23 30 22 29

Central Division W L

29 19 27 27 24 25 24 27 24 29

West Division W L 31 21 29 22 26 26 25 26 21 32

Milwaukee St. Louis Pittsburgh Cincinnati

NATIONALLEAGUE East Division W L 28 23 27 25 25 26 23 28 22 27

Central Division W L 31 22 29 23 23 28 22 28 19 31

S—Miley.

.434 8 .431 8

Pd GB .604 .500 5 .490 5'/2

471 6r/t 453 71/2

Pct GB

.596

.569 R/t

.490 5'/t .396 10'/t

519 O/x

Pct GB

.585

,558 1r/t

.451 7 .440 7'/x .380 fgr/t

R E R BBSO 3 4 0 0 0 1 0 0 0

1 2 0 0 1

3 1 11 1 0 2 0 0 1

SAN FRANCISCO — Tim Hudson turned in another vintage performance to start this season, tossing seven scoreless innings to lead San Francisco past the Chicago Cubs. Chicago

Jim Mone/The Associated Press

Minnesota pinch hitter Danny Santana, second from left, is mobbed by teammates after his walkoff

game-winning RBI during Tuesday night's game in Minneapolis. The Twins won 4-3 after Texas pitcher Joakim Soria bobbled a ball with the bases loaded and two outs allowing the game-winning run. HBP—byElias (lanneta). WP—Weaver. T—3:03. A—13,064(47,476).

run Houston needed in a victory over the Royals.

Twins 4, Rangers 3

Houston KansasCity ab r hbi ab r hbi A ltuye2b 5 0 1 0 Aokirf 4000 Springrrf 4 0 1 0 Infante2b 4 0 1 0 Fowlerdh 4 1 1 0 Hosmer1b 4 0 0 0 Jcastroc 4 1 2 0 BButlerdh 4 0 0 0 MDmn3b 5 0 1 1 AGordnlf 4 0 1 0 Krauss1b 2 0 0 0 S.Perezc 3 0 1 0 Guzmnph-1b0 1 0 0 L.caincf 3 0 1 0 Grssmnlf 4 0 20 AEscorss 3 0 0 0 Presleycf 3 0 3 1 Pareds3b 3 0 1 0 MGnzlzss 4 0 1 0 Totals 3 5 3 122 Totals 3 2 0 5 0 Houston 000 100 020 — 3 K ansas Cit y 0 0 0 0 0 0 000 — 0

MINNEAPOLIS — Texascloser Joakim Soria bobbleda slow-bouncing ball hit by Minnesota's DannySantana tothe left of the mound with two outs andthe bases loaded in theninth inning, allowing the winning run to score in the Twins' victory over theRangers.

San Francisco

2

1

Interleague

Brewers 7, Orioies 6(10 innings) MILWAUKEE— Jonathan Schoop hit two home runsand newly acquired Nick Hundley singled in the go-ahead run in the10th inning as Baltimore rallied past Milwaukee. Baltimore

Giants 4, Cnbs0

.500 5

.490 3 .451 5 .449 5

IP H

San Diego Stults 6 5 3 ThayerH,6 2-3 0 0 A.TorresBS,1-1 0 1 0 QuackenbushW,1-1 1 1-3 0 0 0 StreetS,15-15 1 0 0 Arizona Miley 7 8 3 E.MarshaffL,2-1 1 2 1 OPerez 1 0 0 Stults pitched to1batter inthe7th. A.Torres pitchedto3 batters inthe7th. T—2:53.A—17,862 (48,633).

.520 3t/t

Pct GB .549

BlackW,1-0 11 - 3 1 0 0 2 Mejia S,4-4 2 1 0 0 2 WP — Volquez2,J.Gomez2. T—3:43. A—20,263(41,922).

(11), Maybin(8), M.Mon tero (8), Pennington(4). HR — Medica (2), Prado(1). SB—Pennington (2).

.529 3

Tuesday'sGames Toronto9,TampaBay6 Boston 6, Atlanta3 Milwaukee 7,Baltimore6,10 innings Chicago WhiteSox2, Cleveland1 Houston 3, Kansas City 0 Minnesota 4, Texas3 St. Louis6,N.Y.Yankees0 Detroit 6,Oakland5 L.A. Angel6, s Seattle 4 Today'sGames Houston(Cosart3-4) atKansasCity(Duffy2-4),11:10 a.m. TampaBay(Archer 3-2) at Toronto(Hendriks 1-0), 4:07 p.m. Atlanta(Floyd0-1) at Boston(Lackey5-3), 4:10p.m. Baltimore (B.Norris 3-4)at Milwaukee(Gallardo2-3), 5:10 p.m. Cleveland(House0-1) at ChicagoWhite Sox(Noesi 0-4),5:10p.m. Texas (J.Saunders 0-1) at Minnesota (Gibson4-4), 5;10 p.m. N.Y.Yankees (Kuroda3-3) atSt. Louis(S.Miger6-3), 5:15 p.m. Detroit(A.Sanchez 2-2) atOakland(Kazmir 5-2), 7:05 p.m. L.A. Angels(C.Wilson6-3) at Seattle (F.Hernandez 6-1), 7:10 p.m.

Atlanta Miami Washington NewYork Philadelphia

S an Diego 008 0 0 0 010 — 4 Arizona 0 10 001 100 — 3 E—Grandal (4), M.Montero(6). DP—San Diego 1. LOB —San Diego 7, Arizona8. 28—E.cabrera

LATE BOBBLE; TWINS WIN

All TimesPDT

ab r hbi ab r hbi Bonif accf 4 0 0 0 Pagancf 4 2 2 0 R ugginlf 4 0 1 0 Pencerf 3 1 2 0 R izzo1b 4 0 1 0 Poseyc 2 0 0 2 Scastross 4 0 1 0 Sandovl3b 4 0 1 1 Valuen2b 4 0 0 0 Arias3b 0 0 0 0 Castilloc 4 0 1 0 Morse1b 4 0 2 1 S chrhltrf 3 0 0 0 Colvinlf 4 0 1 0 Olt3b 3 0 1 0 Bcrwfrss 4 0 0 0 Arrieta p 2 0 1 0 Adrianz 2b 3 1 1 0 Coghlnph 1 0 0 0 THudsnp 2 0 0 0 BParkrp 0 0 0 0 Blancoph 1 0 0 0 Verasp 0 0 0 0 Aff eldtp 0 0 0 0 Machi p 0 0 0 0 Totals 33 0 6 0 Totals 3 1 4 9 4 Chicago 0 00 000 000 — 0

Milwaukee ab r hbi ab r hbi Markksrf 5 1 2 1 Segurass 4 1 2 0 M achd3b 4 0 0 0 Braunrf 5 1 2 0 A.Jonescf 4 0 0 1 Lucroy1b-c 5 0 2 1 C.Davis1b 4 0 0 0 CGomzcf 5 1 1 3 N.cruzlf 3 2 2 1 RWeks2b 3 0 0 0 LoughIf 1 0 0 0 Gennettph-2b 1 0 0 0 McFrlnp 0 0 0 0 KDavislf 4 1 1 1 Hardyss 4 0 0 0 MrRynl3b-1b 4 2 2 1 Hundlyc 4 1 1 0 Maldndc 3 0 0 0 Schoop2b 4 0 10 WSmithp 0 0 0 0 W.chenp 1 0 0 0 LSchfrph 0 0 0 0 D Yongph 0 1 0 0 Faluph 1 0 0 0 Guilmtp 0 0 0 0 Thrnrgp 0 0 0 0 Pearceph 1 1 1 3 FrRdrgp 0 0 0 0 R.Webbp 0 0 0 0 Gallardph 1 0 1 1 O'Dayp 0 0 0 0 Garzap 1 0 0 0 Matuszp 0 0 0 0 Overay1b 2 0 1 0 BNorrsph 0 0 0 0 EHerrrpr-3b 0 1 0 0 ZBrittnp 0 0 0 0 Flahrtylf 0 0 0 0 Totals 3 5 6 7 6 Totals 3 97 127 Baltimore 0 0 0012 300 0 — 6 Milwaukee 3 1 0 100 001 1 — 7 Twooutswhenwinningrunscored. E—Machado (5), Segura(7). DP—Baltimore 1. LOB —Baltimore 5, Milwaukee8. 28—Markakis (9),

N.cruz (12),Braun(9), Lucroy(21), Gallardo(1). HR—N.cruz(17), Pearce (4), C.Gomez(11), K.Davis (8), Mar.Re ynolds(12). S—Machado, B.Norris, Segura, Garza. SF—A.Jones.

IP H R E R BBSO DP— Chicago2.LOB— Cleveland5,Chicago10. San Francisco 200 020 Ogx — 4 Baltimore 28 — GBeckham(7), DeAza(5).HR —GBeckham(4). LOB —Chicago 6, SanFrancisco 6. 28—Olt (3), 5 7 5 5 0 6 W.chen CS — Aviles(2). Morse(13),Colvin (7).SB—Pagan(11), Pence(7), Guilmet 1 0 0 0 0 2 IP H R E R BBSO Adrianza (1). SF—Posey2. R.WebbH,6 1 1 0 0 0 1 Cleveland 2-3 1 0 0 2 0 IP H R E R BBSO O'DayH,6 MastersonL,2-4 3 4 1 1 2 3 Chicago 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 MatuszH,7 Lowe 1 1 1 1 1 1 ArrietaL,1-1 6 7 4 4 1 6 Z.BrittonBS,1-4 1 2 1 1 0 0 Outman 2-3 1 0 0 0 1 B.Parker 1 1 0 0 0 0 McFarlandL,0-1 2-3 1 1 1 1 0 Axford 1 1-3 0 0 0 0 2 Veras 1 1 0 0 0 0 Milwaukee Rzepczynski 1 0 0 0 1 0 San Francisco Garza 62-3 5 6 3 2 9 Allen 1 2 0 0 0 0 T.HudsonW5-2 7 6 0 0 0 5 W.Smith 11-3 1 0 0 0 0 Chicago Affeldt 1 0 0 0 0 1 Thornburg 1 1 0 0 0 1 Sale 3 0 0 0 1 4 Machi 1 0 0 0 0 2 Fr.RodriguezW2-1 1 0 0 0 1 1 Arrieta. Carroll W,2-3 3 5 0 0 0 0 WP — WP — W.Smith. T—2:39.A—41,060 (41,915). S.Downs 0 2 1 1 0 0 T—3:44. A—25,552(41,900). PetrickaH,5 2 1 0 0 0 1 BelisarioS,3-5 1 0 0 0 0 1 Rockies 6, Phillies 2 Cardinals 6, Yankees0 S.Downs pitchedto 2batters inthe7th. Lowepitchedto1batter in the5th. WP — Masterson. PHILADELPHIA —Wilin Rosario ST. LOUIS —LanceLynnthrew a T—3:05(Raindelay:1;58). A—14,237(40,615). hit a go-ahead, three-run homer five-hit shutout in his first career

Minaesota E—L.cain (1). DP —KansasCity 3. LOB—Housab r hbi ab r hbi KansasCity 5.28—J.castro (7). SB—GrossPct GB Choolf 4 0 0 0 Dozier2b 3 1 1 0 ton11, man(2). SF —Presley. .635 Andrusss 4 0 1 0 Mauer1b 4 0 1 1 IP H R E R BBSO and Jorge De LaRosa pitched six complete gameandSt. Louis got 547 41/2 Morlnd1b 4 1 1 0 Plouffe3b 4 0 0 0 National League Houston .538 5 A Beltre3b 4 0 1 0 Arciarf 4 2 2 1 strong innings to lift Colorado to a home runs from Allen Craig and M cHugh W3-3 7 5 0 0 0 9 453 9 1/2 Riosrf 4 1 3 0 Wlnghdh 4 0 0 0 SippH,3 11-3 0 0 0 0 1 Dodgers 6, Reds 3 victory over Philadelphia. Matt Holliday in a victory over the .389 13 G imenzc 4 1 2 1 Parmellf 2 0 0 0 Quaffs 23 0 0 0 0 1 LMartncf 3 0 0 0 Nunezph-If 2 1 1 1 New York Yankees. Kansas Ci t y Colorado Philadelphia LOS ANGELES — Andre Ethier Tuesday'sGames DMrphdh 3 0 0 1 KSuzukc 4 0 1 0 G uthrie L,2-4 6 7 1 1 3 5 ab r hbi ab r hbi Colorado 6, Philadelphia2 Odor2b 3 0 1 1 EEscorss 2 0 0 0 New York SI. Louis Crow 1 1 0 0 0 0 drove in the LosAngeles Dodgers' Stubbscf 5 2 2 1 Reverecf 5 1 1 1 Miami at Washington, ppd., rain A.Hickscf 2 0 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi Ti.collins 1 2 2 2 1 0 first four runs with a homerand LeMahi2b-3b4 0 1 0 Roginsss 4 0 0 0 Boston 6, Atlanta3 P intoph 1 0 0 0 KHerrera 1 2 0 0 0 0 T lwlzkss 2 0 0 1 Utley2b 5 0 1 0 Gardnrlf 4 0 1 0 Mcrpnt3b 5 1 1 0 N.Y.Mets4, Pittsburgh2 DSantn cf 1 0 0 0 a bases-loaded triple, and Zack Jeterss 3 0 0 0 Wong2b 4 HBP —byGuthrie (Krauss). WP—Ti.collins. C Gnzlzlf 2 0 0 0 Byrdrf 4 0 0 0 JMrphyc 0 0 0 0 Hoffidylf 3 20 30 10 Milwaukee 7,Baltimore6,10 innings Totals 3 3 3 9 3 Totals 3 34 6 3 T—3:02.A—17,826 (37,903). Greinke tied aseason high with11 D ickrsnlf 0 1 0 0 Ruf1b 4111 St. Louis6,N.Y.Yankees0 Texas 020 001 000 — 3 Ellsurycf 3 0 1 0 MAdms1b 4 1 3 1 1 0 0 1 Mayrrylf 3 0 1 0 SanDiego4,Arizona3 M innesota 011 0 0 0 002 — 4 strikeouts in a victory over Cincin- Barnesph-If 3 0 1 0 YMolinc 3 1 0 0 C uddyrrf 3 1 1 0 Ruizc 2 0 2 0 Mccnnc-1b L.A. Dodgers 6, Cincinnati 3 Twooutswhenwinningrunscored. Blue Jays 9, Rays6 S olarte3b 4 0 0 0 Craigrf 4 1 2 2 nati. Greinke (8-1) allowed three Mornea1b 4 0 0 0 CHrndz3b 3 0 1 0 SanFrancisco4, ChicagoCubs0 E—Soria (1). DP—Minnesota1. LOB —Texas5, ASorinrf 4 0 0 0 JhPerltss 4 0 1 1 Rosarioc 4 1 1 3 Howardph 1 0 0 0 Today'sGames runs, eight hits and nowalks in Minnesota6. 28—Rios (13), Odor(2), Dozier(6), TORONTO B Rorts2b 4 0 1 0 Jaycf 4000 — Mark Buehrle beC ulersn3b 3 0 0 0 DeFrtsp 0 0 0 0 Pittsburgh(Morton 1-6) at N.Y.Mets (Colon3-5), Mauer(6), Arcia(2). 3B—Rios (6). HR —Arcia (1). 7Ys innings. K Jhnsn 1b 3 0 0 0 Lynn p 4 000 Ottavinp 0 0 0 0 Hamelsp 2 0 1 0 S—L.Martin, E.Escobar. SF—Do.Murphy. came the first nine-gamewinner 10:10a.m. Aceves p 0 0 0 0 Blckmnph 1 0 0 0 GwynJph 1 0 0 0 ChicagoCubs(E.Jackson3-4) at San Francisco IP H R E R BBSO in the majors, Edwin Encarnacion Cincinnati Phelps p 2 0 0 0 Los Angeles Hwknsp 0 0 0 0 Manshpp 0 0 0 0 (Lincecum 4-3),12:45 p.m. Texas Ryan1b-ss 1 0 1 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi JDLRsp 2 0 0 0 Hollndsp 0 0 0 0 ndhitback-to-back Colorado(Lyles 5-1) at Philadelphia (R.Hernandez S.Baker 6 3 2 2 0 4 andAdam Li Totals 31 0 5 0 Totals 3 5 6 10 5 BHmltn c f 4 0 0 0 DG o r d n 2 b 3 0 0 0 Loganp 0 0 0 0 Brignc3b 0 0 0 0 2-2),4;05p.m. PoredaH,4 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 home runs andToronto extended N ew York 000 0 0 0 000 — 0 chmkr2b 4 0 1 0 Crwfrdlf 3 2 1 0 Rutledg 2b 1 1 1 0 Miami (H.Alvarez2-3) at Washington (Zimmermann OgandoH,7 12- 3 1 0 0 1 2 its winning streak to eight games, S SI. Louis 004 010 10x — 6 Mesorcc 4 1 1 2 VnSlyklf 0 0 0 0 Totals 32 6 6 6 Totals 3 4 2 8 2 3-2),4:05p.m. Soria L,1-2BS,1-9 2-3 2 2 1 1 1 E — B.R ob erts (6), Ke. Johnson(4). DP—St. Louis B ruce rf 4 0 1 0 Puig rf 2 1 1 0 C olorado 000 1 0 0 320 — 6 Atlanta(Floyd 0-1) at Boston(Lackey5-3), 4:10p.m. Minnesota beating TampaBay. —NewYork7, St. Louis7. 2B—Mccann (4), Frazier3b 4 0 1 0 HRmrzss 4 0 1 1 P hiladelphia 0 0 0 1 0 0 100 — 2 1. LOB Baltimore (B.Norris 3-4)at Milwaukee(Gallardo2-3), P.Hughes 7 8 3 3 0 3 Lutz1b 4 1 2 0 Arrrrnss 0 0 0 0 DP — Colorado1. LOB —Colorado4, Philadelphia B.Roberts(6), Ma.Adams (16). HR—Hoffiday (3), 5:10 p.m. Fien 1 0 0 0 0 0 TampaBay Toronto Cozartss 4 0 0 0 AdGnzl1b 3 1 1 0 10. 28—Stubbs(7). 3B—Rutledge(1). HR —Rosario Craig(5). N.Y.Yankees (Kuroda3-3) atSt. Louis(S.Miger6-3), PerkinsW,2-0 1 1 0 0 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi IP H R E R BBSO B erndnlf 3 0 1 1 Ethiercf 4 2 2 4 (5), Revere (1), Ruf (1). SB — S tubbs (6), Ba rnes(4), New York 5:15 p.m. WP — Ogando. YEscorss 5 0 2 0 Reyesss 4 2 1 0 S imonp 1 0 0 0 Buterac 3 0 0 0 Cuddyer(2). SF—Tulowitzki. SanDiego(Stauffer2-0) atArizona(C.Anderson2-0), T—2:43. A—22,702(39,021). Longori3b 5 1 1 0 Mecarrlf 5 1 1 1 6 8 5 3 2 5 Ondrskp 1 0 0 0 Figgins3b 4 0 2 1 IP H R E R BBSO PhelpsL,1-2 6:40 p.m. Forsyth2b 3 2 1 0 Bautistrf 4 1 3 1 Aceves 2 2 1 1 0 3 SMrshllp 0 0 0 0 Greinkp 2 0 0 0 Colorado Cincinnati(Bailey4-3)at L.A.Dodgers(Kershaw3-1), Tigers 6, Athletics 5 D eJessph 1 0 0 0 Lind1b 5 2 3 2 Heiseyph 1 1 1 0 Howellp 0 0 0 0 SI. Louis J.De LaRosaW,6-3 6 6 1 1 2 4 7:10 p.m. DJnngscf 3 1 1 0 Encrncdh 3 2 1 1 9 5 0 0 3 2 Hooverp 0 0 0 0 Kempph 1 0 0 0 LoganH,7 2-3 2 1 1 0 1 LynnW,6-2 SRdrgzlf 3 1 2 3 JFrncs3b 4 1 1 1 Jansen p 0 0 0 0 OttavinoH,11 1 1 - 3 0 0 0 1 1 T—2:41.A—45,202(45,399). — Pinch-runner OAKLAND, Calif. Myersrf 3 0 0 2 StTllsn2b 0 0 0 0 Totals 34 3 8 3 Totals 2 9 6 8 6 Hawkins 1 0 0 0 1 1 American League Loney1b 4 1 2 0 Lawrie2b-3b 4 0 2 1 C incinnati Rajai Davis scored onAustin Jack- JMolinc 000 0 1 0 020 — 3 Philadelphia Red Sox 6, Braves3 4 0 2 0 DNavrrc 4 0 1 1 — 6 Los Angeles 01 0 400 10x H amel s L,1-3 7 3 4 4 2 4 Angels 6, Mariners 4 son's fielder's choice groundout J oycedh 4 0 1 1 Gosecf 4 0 0 0 DP—Cincinnati 1,LosAngeles 1. LOB—CincinManship 1-3 2 2 2 1 0 Totals 3 5 6 126 Totals 3 7 9 138 the eighth inning andDetroit Jackie Bradley Jr. hit nati 4, LosAngeles 6. 28—Lutz(1), Heisey(9), Fig- Hollands 2-3 1 0 0 0 1 ATLANTA — SEATTLE— Jered Weaver gaveup in T ampa Bay 0 0 0 2 0 1 120 — 6 1 0 0 0 0 0 a two-run single during Boston's ins (3). 38—E thier (1). HR—Mesoraco(6), Ethier DeFratus beat Oakland to end a three-game Toronto 000 242 10x — 9 three runs over six innings for his losing streak. HBP — by O tta vi n o (R ui z ), by De F r at u s (R u t l e dge). uig (4). S—Greinke. E—Reyes (4). DP—Toronto 3. LOB—TampaBay 3). CS—P four-run rally in the seventh inning IP H R E R BBSO T—3:21.A—23,159 (43,651). fifth win in six starts andC.J. Cron 6, Toronto 7. 28 —De.Jennings (11), S.Rodriguez Cincinnati and the RedSox beat Atlanta in (6), Loney(12), Lawrie(9). 38—S.Rodriguez (1). SimonL,6-3 homered to leadthe Los Angeles Detroit Oakland 32- 3 5 5 5 4 2 HR —Lind (3), Encarnacion (16), J.Francisco (9). Ondrusek the latest comeback following their Mets 4, Pirates 2 ab r hbi ab r hbi 21-3 1 0 0 0 1 Angels to a victory over Seattle. SB — Reyes(11). SF—S.Rodriguez,Myers. K insler2b 5 0 0 0 Crispcf 5 0 1 0 1 1 1 1 1 0 longest losing streak in 20years. SMarshag Weaver (6-3j gave upseven hits IP H R E R BBSO T rHntrrf 5 2 2 1 Jasoc 1112 — Juan Lagares drove Hoover 1 1 0 0 0 3 NEW YORK Tampa Bay and a walk while striking out five. Micarr1b 4 2 2 2 DNorrsph-c 1 0 0 0 CobbL,1-2 Los Angeles Boston Atlanta in two runs, Vic Blackgavethe 5 9 6 6 1 7 GreinkeWB-1 7 2 - 3 8 VMrtnzdh 3 0 1 0 Dnldsn3b 3 0 0 0 3 3 0 11 ab r hbi ab r hbi Weaver has lasted at least six 2-3 2 2 2 2 0 C.Ramos J Mrtnzlf 3 0 2 1 Moss1b 4 0 0 0 bullpen a boost and the New York H owell H,11 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 Holt3b 5 1 1 0 Heywrdrf 5 1 1 1 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 Boxberger innings in nine of his 11starts this RDavispr-If 0 1 0 0 Cespdslf 4 1 1 0 J ansen S, 1 6-18 1 0 0 0 0 2 Bogartsss 5 1 1 0 BUptoncf 5110 Mets finally managedsometimely Lueke 2 2 1 1 0 1 HBP 3 0 0 0 Lowriess 4 1 1 1 —byS.Marshall (Puig). Pedroia2b 4 1 3 1 FFrmn1b 5 1 2 0 season, and this was the first time D.Kelly3b Toronto hits in their first gamewith a new Cstllnsph-3bg 0 0 0 Reddckrf 4 1 1 0 T—2;58. A—46,013(56,000). D.Ortiz1b 4 1 1 1 J.Uptonlf 3 0 3 0 3 1 3 in eight outings he allowed more AJcksncf 4 1 1 1 Callaspdh 4 1 2 1 BuehrleW,9-1 6 2-3 8 4 batting coach, beating Pittsburgh. JGomsrf 5 1 1 0 CJhnsn3b 3 0 0 2 1 2 2 2 1 0 Avilac 4 0 1 1 Sogard2b 4 0 1 0 Delabar than two runs. GSizmrlf 5 1 2 1 Smmnsss 3 0 2 0 Cecil H,13 1-3 1 0 0 0 0 Padres 4, Diamondbacks 3 AnRmnss 4 0 0 0 D.Rossc 4 0 1 1 Uggla2b 0 0 0 0 PiNsburgh New York Janssen S,B-B 1 1 0 0 0 1 Totals 35 6 9 6 Totals 3 4 5 8 4 B rdlyJrcf 4 0 2 2 Lairdc 4010 ab r hbi ab r hbi Los Angeles Seattle Cobb.Balk—Boxberger. 2 01 100 110 — 6 WP — Detroit PHOENIX — Tommy Medica hi t Lesterp 3 0 0 0 Pstrnck2b 2 0 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi JHrrsn3b 4 1 0 0 Lagarscf 5 1 2 2 T—3:00.A—15,993 (49,282). Oakland 0 20 300 000 — 6 Lvrnwyph 0 0 0 0 Varvarp 0 0 0 0 Tabatarf 4 0 0 0 DnMrp2b 4 1 2 1 HKndrc2b 5 0 0 0 J.Jonescf 5 0 0 0 a tiebreaking solo homer in the LOB —Detroit 5, Oakland6. 28—Tor.Hunter (11), C arpph 0 0 0 0 Avilanp 0 0 0 0 AMcctcf 3 1 1 0 DWrght3b 4 0 0 0 Troutcf 3 0 1 1 MSndrsrf 4 1 1 0 J.Marti eighth inning, Eric Stults pitched nez (5), Avila(9), Crisp(8), Lowrie(15), CalWhite Sox 2, lndians1 B reslwp 0 0 0 0 Halep 0000 P ujols1b 4 0 0 0 Canodh 5 0 2 1 GSnchz1b 4 0 1 0 Grndrslf-rl 3 0 0 0 laspo(5). HR—Tor.Hunter (7), Mi.cabrera(8), Jaso six effective innings andSan DiR Martnc 3 0 0 0 BAreurf 3 0 1 1 Tazawap 0 0 0 0 Doumitph 1 0 0 0 Freese3b 4 1 2 0 Smoak1b 3 1 1 1 (5). SB — R .D a vis (16). CS — C r is p (2) . Ibanezph 1 0 0 0 Gillespipr 0 0 0 0 Martelf 3 0 1 2 Mejiap 0 0 0 0 AMillerp 0 0 0 0 Thomsp 0 0 0 0 ego beat Arizona. Stults was sharp S IP H R E R BBSO CHICAGO— GordonBeckham Ueharap 0 0 0 0 Harangp 1 0 0 0 JMcDnl3b 0 0 0 0 Seager3b 5 0 2 0 NWalkr2b 3 0 1 0 Duda1b 2 0 0 0 Detroit homered, Conor Gillaspie singled early before giving up acouple of R.Penaph-2b 2 0 0 0 C rondh 4 2 2 2 Ackleylf 3 2 1 0 B armesss 2 0 1 0 Blackp 0 0 0 0 Scherzer 6 8 5 5 2 4 Aybarss 4 1 1 1 Frnkln2b 4 0 2 1 home another run andthe Chicago runs that allowed Arizona to tie the I.Davisph 1 0 0 0 CYoungph-If 1 0 0 0 Totals 39 6 12 6 Totals 34 3 10 3 Krol 0 0 0 0 1 0 Boston 100 100 400 — 6 Greenlf 3 1 1 0 Zuninoc 4 0 0 0 JGomzp 0 0 0 0 Reckerc 4 0 0 0 Alburquerque W,2-1 1 0 0 0 0 0 White Sox outlasted Cleveland game at 3-all. Atlanta 1 01 010 000 — 3 Calhonph-rf 1 0 0 0 BMifferss 2 0 0 0 JuWlsnp 0 0 0 0 Tejadass 2 2 2 0 ChamberlainH,10 1 0 0 0 0 0 despite the departure of ace E—C.Johnson (3). DP—Boston 2. LOB —BosChris lannettc 3 0 2 1 P Alvrzph 1 0 0 0 Niesep 2 0 0 0 N athan S,12-15 1 0 0 0 0 1 San Diego Arizona Cowgillrf-If 4 1 2 0 Grigip 0 0 0 0 Campff1b 2 0 0 0 ton 10,Atlanta9. 2B—Pedroia (18), G.Sizemore (9), Sale after just three innings in a Oakland ab r hbi ab r hbi B.upton(10).3B—FFreeman(1). HR —Heyward (4). Totals 36 6 115 Totals 3 5 4 9 3 Volquezp 2 0 0 0 6 8 4 4 1 5 game twice delayed by rain. Ecarerss 5 1 2 0 Poffockcf 3 0 0 0 SB — G.Sizemore (4), BradleyJr. (4). SF—Pedroia, L os Angeles 08 0 100 110 — 6 Gray Mercerss 1 0 0 0 OteroBS,2-2 1 1 1 1 0 0 Denorfi rf 5 1 1 1 GParrarf 5 0 1 1 C.Johnson. Seattle 0 10 200 001 — 4 Sniderph 1 0 0 0 1-3 0 1 0 2 0 Cleveland DP — LosAngeles1, Seatle1. LOB —LosAngeles AbadL,0-2 QuentinIf 4 1 1 0 Gldsch1b 1 1 0 0 IP H R E R BBSO Chicago Totals 3 2 2 5 2 Totals 3 24 7 4 12-3 0 0 0 0 3 AmarstIf 0 0 0 0 MMntrc 3 0 1 1 7, Seattle10.28—Freese (3), Cron(5), Aybar(12), Gregerson ab r hbi ab r hbi P ittsburgh 000 0 0 2 000 — 2 Boston Krol pitched to 1 ba tt e rin the 7t h . Headl y 3b 3 0 1 1 Prado3b 4 1 1 1 — 4 Lester W, 5 -6 6 8 3 3 3 7 lannetta(7), Cowgil (5), Ackley(8). HR —Cron(3), Bourn cf 4 0 1 0 Eatoncf 4 1 1 0 New York 001 1 0 2 Ogx .Norris. BalkGyorko2b 4 0 0 0 Hill2b 4010 E—A.Mccutchen (4), Tejada(3), Cam pbell (1). BreslowH,1 2-3 1 0 0 0 0 Smoak(7). SB—lanneta (3), B.Miger (3).SF—Trout. HBP—byScherzer (Jaso). PB—D Acarer ss 4 0 1 0 GBckh2b 4 1 2 1 DP — NewYork 2. LOB —Pittsburgh 11, NewYork Tazawa H,4 2-3 1 0 0 1 0 IP H R E R BBSO Scherzer. Brantly If 4 0 1 0 Giffaspi3b 2 0 1 1 Medica1b 4 1 3 2 C.RossIf 4 0 0 0 T — 3: 1 9. A — 21,549 (35, 0 67). 2-3 0 0 0 0 2 Los Angeles Raburn dh 4 0 2 0 A.Dunn 1b 3 0 0 0 Maybincf 4 0 2 0 Pnngtnss 4 1 2 0 10. 2B —Lagares(10), Dan.Murphy2 (14), Tejada(5). A.Miller H,3 S B — T ejada ( 1). WeaverW,6-3 6 7 3 3 3 5 YGomsc 4 0 0 0 AIRmrzss 4 0 2 0 Grandlc 3 0 0 0 Mileyp 100 0 UeharaS,11-11 1 0 0 0 0 2 S.BurnettH,1 1 - 3 0 0 0 0 0 Astros 3, Royals 0 Aguilar1b 1 0 0 0 Viciedorf 4 0 1 0 Rivera c 1 0 0 0 AMarteph 0 0 0 0 IP H R E R BBSO Atlanta SalasH,4 2-3 1 0 0 0 0 Chsnhllph-1b3 1 1 0 Sierrapr-rf 0 0 0 0 Stults p 3 0 0 0 Echavzph 1 0 0 0 Pittsburgh Harang 6 7 2 2 1 7 J.SmithH,6 1 0 0 0 1 1 DvMrp rf 3 0 1 0 Konerkdh 4 0 0 0 Thayer p 0 0 0 0 EMrshlp 0 0 0 0 Volquez 5 4 2 2 5 6 VarvaroL,1-1H,3 1-3 2 2 2 0 0 — Collin KANSAS CITY, Mo. Frieri S,7-9 1 1 1 1 2 0 Aviles 3b 2 0 1 1 DeAzalf 4 0 1 0 ATorrsp 0 0 0 0 OPerezp 0 0 0 0 J.Gomez L,0-2 1 - 3 2 2 2 1 0 AvilanBS,1-1 1-3 3 2 2 1 0 12-3 0 0 0 0 3 1 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Seattle Sellers 2b 3 0 0 0 Flowrsc 3 0 0 0 Qcknsh p 0 0 0 0 Owingsph 1 0 0 0 Ju.Wi l s on Hale McHugh held light-hitting Kansas Elias L,3-4 Totals 32 1 8 1 Totals 32 2 8 2 Alonsoph 1 0 0 0 Grigi 1 1 0 0 0 3 Thomas 1 0 0 0 0 1 City at bay over seven innings, and HBP—byHale(Carp). WP —Harang. Leone Cleyeland 0 00 000 100 — 1 Streetp 0000 New York Wilhelmsen Matt Dominquezdrove in theonly Chicago 001 010 ggx — 2 Totals 37 4 104 Totals 3136 3 Niese 52-3 3 2 2 4 2 T—3;32. A—37,168(49,586).

Chicago

West Division W L SanFrancisco 33 19 LosAngeles 29 24 Colorado 28 24 SanDiego 24 29 Arizona 21 33

Texas

Li second Australian Open champion knocked out in Paris By Howard Fendrich The Associated Press

PARIS — Much to her dismay, Li Na is familiar with this feeling.

She earnsaGrand Slam championship, is heralded at home, then shows

103rd in the first round, not quite four months removed from winning the Australian Open.

"I didn't follow the game plan," Li said. "Didn't have any idea how to play."

up at subsequent major tournaments Her 7-5, 3-6, 6-1 exit against Krisand seemingly forgets how to win. tina Mladenovic of France in front a Happened in 2011, after her French partisan crowd on a cloudy, windy Open triumph made her China's first Day 3 came about 16 hours after player with a Grand Slam singles ti- the men's Australian Open chamtle. Happened again Tuesday, when pion, third-seeded Stan Wawrinka, Li was seeded second at Roland was beaten in Paris — making this Garros but lost to someone ranked French Open already unlikeany

TENNIS: FRENCH OPEN Grand Slam tournament in history. It's the first time that the men's and

"Always tough to pass the first round." Top players, even the likes of Rafael Nadal and Serena Williams, frequently talk about being particularly

women's singles champions from the jittery at the start of a Grand Slam previous major lost in the first round. tournament, even against clearly out"Nobody say if you (are) No. 2 in classed competition.

still hoped that I would try or be able

to find ways through my first match and negotiate my way through a tricky opponent in these conditions." No. 13 Caroline Wozniacki, the

2009 U.S. Open runner-up, was beaten Tuesday; No. 11 Grigor Dimitrov, the world, you have to win all the They notice, to b e s ure, when considered an up-and-coming threat matches. I mean, this i s t ennis," folks such as LI or Wawrinka depart by many, lost to Ivo Karlovic; two said Li, who works with Carlos Ro- quickly. seeded men, No. 16 Tommy Haas and "Regardless of what's happened No. 21 Nicolas Almagro, quit during driguez,former coach of four-time French Open titlist Justine Henin. to the other players," said reigning the first set because of injuries; past For an opening match at a major, Wimbledon champion Andy Mur- Grand Slam titles winner Lleyton the "tension is different," she added.

ray, who won in four sets 'Itzesday, "I

Hewitt also lost.


C4

TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, MAY 28, 2014

Beavers

just one of those times in our season that everybody was just slumping at

Bears

Continued from C1 Going back to the Washington series, OSU has scored just 13 runs, an average of not even two per game. "When youplay as many games as you play in baseball, everybody has a spell where you don't play quite as well as you would like to," Oregon State coach Pat Ca-

the wrong time....

Conforto both said the Beavers did not do some of the little things that

Continued from C1 "He had a g r e at game," Kerwin said of his goaltender. "He definitely came to play. He was focused.... He was attacking the ball. He kept usin the game for awhile." Sunset jumped out to

"I think it's one of those things that happens and I'm probably glad it happened at this point just to re-

alize what we need to work on and focus on at practice and move forward and learn from it."

Davis and left fielder Michael

sey said Monday after the Beavers

are needed. Big hits have been rare,

a 2-0 lead before Bend

were awarded the No. I seed to the

they noted, and the team's situation-

NCAA tournament. "If we were in Game 25 I think

al hitting has not been as good as it was earlier in the year.

evened it up midway through th e s econd quarter. After grabbing a 3-2 halftime lead, the No. 7Apollos postedtwo

we would be having a lot of conversations about what we were doing over the weekend," Cassy said. "I

think now you just get to the next game." That next game comes Friday when the Beavers (42-12) open the Corvallis Regional with an 8 p.m. game againstNo. 4 regional seed North Dakota State (25-24) at Goss

"I think w e had some trouble

executing some things," Conforto said. "There were acouple times move guys over, we didn't put the ball in play in times that we needed Pac-12 Conference with 63 RBIs, while Conforto is second with 55.

need to improve in the postseason if the Beavers want to reach their ulti-

mate goal of not only getting to the or you go home and we've got to re- College World Series but winning a alize this is the last time we get to third national title. "We have some of the best hitters play together as a team. For us seniors, it's the last time we get to play in the country up and down the linecollege baseball and play for this up and guys just have to believe in university. themselves, and if we go out and do "You have to go out and enjoy it that we'll be just fine," Wetzler said. and I think we just need to get back With the veteran leadership and to that." the experience of getting to the carefree. From here on out it's win

Before the final stretch, the Bea-

CWS last season, the Beavers feel

vers were averaging 6.47 runs per like they can put the slump behind game. That has dropped to 5.87 per them. "We know what we did wrong contest. "I think it's just baseball," junior and weknow what we need to fix," right fielder Dylan Davis said. "It's Wetzler said. "And we'll do that."

Ducks

Tolman said. "Obviously, we'd love to host, but I am excited to go out

Continued from C1 there. It should be good competiTop-seeded Vanderbilt (41-18) fac- tion. It is not going to be easy to get es Xavier (29-27) in the other game through it." at Hawkins Field, where the Ducks Clemson was one of the last swept three games from Vander- teams to receive an at-large bid, and bilt in 2012 by a combined score of Xavier won the Big East Confer18-10. ence tournament title. Vanderbilt, "It's excitingbecause I know most under coach Tim Corbin, is one of of the guys have been to Vanderbilt, 10 SEC teams in the field. "It is kind of refreshing, if you are so we have an idea of what to expect," said Oregon outfielder Kyle not hosting, to get out of the West Garlick, recalling the series against and not see the same teams you are the Commodores. "Obviously, when

familiar with," Horton said. "It is not

w e wenttheretwo years ago they didn't fill the stadium, but I expect

easy by any stretch. It is a deep field. Xavier won its tournament. One of

the teams seeded lowest overall but SEC (Southeastern Conference). with tradition is Clemson and that It will be a different experienceprogram making it to Omaha, and playoff baseball, so you play new in recent history in the Corbin era, teams we have not played this year, there's Vanderbilt. It is a tough rebut it will be fun." gional with those teams in it." Garlick remembered the HawThe winner in Nashville will play kins Field stadium, where he was 2 in the super regional round against for 9, being friendly to hitters. the winner of the Bloomington Re"I would have loved to host at our gional hosted by Indiana, the No. stadium, but it is nice to go some- 4 overall seed in the tournament. where where the ball actually trav- Stanford, Youngstown State and Inels a little bit," he said. diana State are also in that regionaL "It is a little ironic, if Stanford gets Second baseman Aaron Payne and catcher Shaun Chase also through theirs and we get through played for the Ducks two years ours, we'd play each other," Horton ago at Vanderbilt, and Jake Reed said. "First things first. We'll be and Tommy Thorpe pitched in that happy to play anybody in the super series. regional." "I'm pretty pumped," right fielder Horton said he would look at Tyler Baumgartner said. "I remem- scouting reports on the other teams ber watching that series before I in Nashville before determining his was on the team. It looks like a cool pitching order. place to play, a cool environment. I Oregon is in the NCAA field for am excited to get the next phase of the fourth time since reinstating the season going." baseball in 2009. The Ducks lost in Oregon has hosted a regional in the regionals in 2010 and last seaeach of the past two seasons but son; they made it to the super renow opens the postseason on the gionals in 2012. them to have a lot of fans from the

road for the first time since 2010.

"It is exciting going out to Vanderbilt," third baseman Mitchell

Golf Continued from C1 To that point, not every course is

having a lackluster spring. Rounds of golf at Sunriver Resort are up 44 percentso far this sea-

son compared with 2013, says Skip James,the resort's directorofsales and marketing. While Sunriver's daily fee business has grown, the resort has enjoyed particular success this spring with prebooked group packages as a result of an aggressive marketing campaign outside Central Oregon, James says. Such prearranged golf rounds have the added benefit of being less susceptible to changes in the

"It is nice to be invited to the dance," Horton said. "Now, we have

to dance."

times will catch back up. But (group business) is where we've seen the growth." Aspen Lakes, too, has seen an uptick in group business. Group play (a single booking of

12 or more golfers) at the Sisters course is up "8 to 9 percent at this point," says Malone. That has offset a dip in daily fee play, he adds. "Usually our groups are more of a leading indicator, because when there are issues or concerns economically, those groups tend not to

come," Malone says. Growth in group business could portend a strong summer, giving Malone reason for optimism. Matt Phillips, the head professional at Widgi Creek Golf Club in Bend, adds that his lesson bookings have nearly doubled from this point last season.

So w h il e

Sue Ogrocki /The Associated Press

Oklahoma City forward Serge Ibaka (9) gets up to block a shot by San Antonio center Tiago Splitter in the second quarter of Game 4 of the Western Conference finals in Oklahoma City Tuesday night.

Thunder tie serieswith Spurs

a

sl o w st a r t i s

"eye-opening," Malone says, "if

we're having the same conversation in a month then that is more of

an issue." — Reporter: 541-617-7868, zhall@bendbulletin.com.

NBA PLAYOFFS

By Cliff Brunt The Associated Press

Oklahoma City Thunder back to even in

Westbrook allowed Durant to still score 31 points. It was Durant's highest-scoring game of the series after the NBA's leading scorer was held to a 22.7-point average in the first three games. Serge Ibaka added nine points and eight rebounds for the Thunder, who have

the Western Conference finals. He had 40 points, 10 assists and five

turned around the series since he returned from an injury that was expected to keep

steals in a 105-92 victory over the San Antonio Spurs 105-92 that tied the series at

him out for the rest of the postseason. "We just play well with Serge," Thunder coach Scott Brooks said. "We can do things with Serge in the lineup that we can't do with other guys."

OKLAHOMA CITY — While accept-

ing the award for himself, Kevin Durant called Russell Westbrook an MVP-caliber player. And on 'Itiesday, Westbrook delivered a championship-caliber effort that got the

two games apiece. "Coach told us he needed maximum effort from us tonight, and it starts with me

at point guard," Westbrook said. "My job

Boris Diaw had 14 points and 10 re-

bounds, and Tony Parker added 14 points to win a championship, those are things for the Spurs, who blew a 2-0 lead against you have to do." the Thunder in this round two years ago It matched the second-highest playoff and are in danger of doing it again. San point total of Westbrook's career, falling Antonio will host Game 5 on Thursday is to play both sides of the ball. If you want

short of the 43 he scored in the 2012 NBA Finals.

and won't be worried about the past. "I think we shouldn't think like that," Parker said. "Each game is different.

the defensive end and his poise on the offensive end, I think that's what's fun to

Each series. Each year. We worked hard all year to have home court advantage,

"Just his focus on every possession on

watch," Durant said. "People outside of

and now, it's our job to protect home

really started t o

s t ep

up," Kerwin said of Sunset. "They had a great second half. They did a good job of riding us.... I think they were pretty dominant all day. They were coming up with possessions and starting to wear down on us a little bit."

Jacob Leonard had three goals and an assist for Sunset (10-10), Will Jelhson logged two goals and an assist, and Bill Miller scored twice

for the Apollos, who will face West Linn in

the quarterfinals on Friday. "There was no sign of ayoung team outthere," Kerwin said about the

seasonlong per f o rmance of his squad, which graduated 13 seniors from last season.

"We were never really waiting around for something to happen. We were making things happen."

Storm

nitely build on as a group, is watching him

court. Oklahoma City dominated for the second consecutive game after getting blown

wreak havoc on the defensive end and of-

out in the first two. The Thunder commit-

Clackamas (15-5) logged six goals and

fensively, playing with such patience." At times, Westbrook has been a maddening player for Thunder fans to watch. His dynamic athletic ability gives him a supreme confidence level that sometimes

ted just seven turnovers and shot 49 per-

shut out the High Desert

cent from the field.

Conference champion Storm to secure the sec-

our team don't really look at that type of stuff, but that's something we can defi-

The Spurs scored the first eight points of the game, but things went downhill from there. A steal and dunk by West-

brook gave the Thunder a 42-32 lead to hold the ball at the expense of offensive with just under five minutes left in the flow. first half. Back-to-back 3-pointers by But in this game, Westbrook did just Durant pushed Oklahoma City's lead to about everything right. He shot 50 percent 50-36. from the field and took just five 3-pointers. The Thunder led 58-43 at halftime. DuHe made 14 of 14 free throws. rant scored 22 points and Westbrook add"Sometimes he's going to go off," Spurs ed 17 points, eight assists and four steals guard Manu Ginobili said. "He's capable before the break. of doing that. If he makes a lot of jumpers, Parker shot 6 of 9 in the first half, but it gets really tough." the rest of the Spurs made just 11 of 32 beIn the midst of posting a monster game, fore the break. leads to ill-advised shots and a tendency

Continued from C1 But i n

t h e f o u r th,

ond-round win and earn

a quarterfinal matchup on Friday at Jesuit

Dylan Smith paced S ummit

with

thr e e

g oals, an d Gr i ff i n Reinecke chipped in with two goals. Seth M illard, S tu Bl ed soe and Cole Gaines

each scored once for the Storm, while Troy LaLonde dished out one

assist.

PREP SCOREBOARD Boys lacrosse OHSLAStatePlayoff s SecondRound Tttesday's Results Oregon Episcopal 13, Beaverton 3 CentralCatholic6,Sherwood5(3 OTj Lincoln14,SouthIidge7 Lakeridge20,Glencoe3 WestLinn12,Westview1 Surtset13,Bend3 Clackamas14,Summit 8 Jesuit 20,Wilsonville9 Qttatletlinals

Friday's Games CentralCatholicatOregonEpiscopal Lincoln atLakeridge SunsetatWestLinn Clackamas atJesuit Semifinal Round June 4,TBA ChampionshipFinal June 7, TBA

Baseball

"To us it feels positive," Phillips says. "My lessons are just going craweather. zy now. It makes me feel like people "So far what's made the differ- are getting excited about the season ence for us is we have a lot of groups and planning on playing a lot of at the resort this summer, and we golf." presold a lot of golf packages," Besides, the meat of the golf seaJames says. "I'm sure the member son is only in its infancy. tee times and the local golf pass tee

"Their (midfielders)

Davis leads the Beavers and the

Conforto, though, has been strugNo. 2 regional seed UNLV (35-23) gling the past three weeks. and No. 3 regional seed UC Irvine He broke out with a couple of (35-22) open the regional at 2 p.m. home runs in the finale against Games each day will be at 2 p.m. UCLA after starting hitless in his and 8 p.m. in the double-elimination first nine at-bats in the series. tournament, the winner of which But he is just 5 for 26 in the past advances to a super regional. eight games with only one RBI. "I think we just got away from The of fe n siv e pr o d u ction that and let the added pressure get throughout the lineup will likely can't do (that), we've got to go play

to close out the victory.

to."

Stadium.

to us a little bit," Wetzler said. "We

straight scores to open

the third and logged eight unanswered goals

we didn't get bunts down, we didn't

OSAAPlayotfs Class 6A First Round Mottday's results Crater 3, Aloha1 Tigaid 4,Beavertort 2 Century 5, Central Catholic 4 Sheldon 6, Sunset3 Clack amas4,Gl encoe1 WestLinn3, Roseburg1 Wesh/iew 3,Thurston0 Hillsboro5,WestSalem1 Tualatin 3,David Douglas 0 Lincoln 4,Lakeridge1 McMittrtville 5,Spragtie2

NorthSalem5,Reynolds 2 McNary7,Jesuit2 LakeOswego4, Southridge0 SouthMedford5, Barlow4 NorthMedford5, OregonCity 3 SecondRound

Today'sGames Tigardat Crater Centuryat Sheldon WestLinnat Clackamas HIllsboroatWesIview Lincoln atTualatin NorthSalemat McMinnvile McNary at LakeOswego SouthMedfordat North Medford Quarterlinal Round May30, TBA Semilinal Round June 3, TBA ChampionshipFinal June at 7 VolcanoesStadium,Keizer, TBA Class 5A First Round

Today'sGames Marist atBend SandyatMadison HermistonatSherwood Dallas atAshland HoodRiverValeyat Springfield

CorvallIsat Pendleton Churchillat WestAlbany NorthEugeneat Crescent Valley Guarlettinal Round Friday's Games Marist/Bendwinnervs. Sandy/Madisonwinner

Hermiston/SheN roodwinnervs. Dallas/Ashland

winner

HoodRiverValley/Springfieldwinnervs. Corvallis/Pendletonwinner Churchill/WestAlbanywinnervs. North Eugene/ CrescentValleywinner Semifinal Round June3,TBA ChampionshipFinal June at 7VolcanoesStadium,Keizer, TBA

Class 4A First Round Today'sGames Mazama at Sisters NewportatNorthBend La Grande at Scappoose HiddenValeyat NorthMarion EstacadaatBaker Cascade at Ridgeview Astoria atPhilomath CottageGroveat Henley

Qttarteriittal Round

Friday's Games Mazama /Sisters winner vs. Newport/North Bend winner LaGrande/Scappoosewinnervs.HiddenVall ey/ NorthMarionwinner Esta cada/Bakerwinnervs.Cascade/Ridgeview winner Astoria/Philomathwinner vs. CottageGrove/ Henleywinner Semifinal Round June3,TBA ChampionshipFinal June at 7 VolcanoesStadium,Keizer, TBA

tian/Gold Beachwinner CountryChristian/We ston-McEwen winnervs. Gaston/Um pquaValleyChristian winner Reedsp ort/Kennedy winner vs. Regis/Toledo winner Dufur/GrantUnion winner vs. Union/Monroe winner Semifinal Round June 3,TBA Championship Final June at 6 VolcanoesStadium,Keizer,TBA

Softball OSAAPlayoff s Class 6A First Round Monday'sResults NorthMedford6, Beaverton 0 Jesuit 6,Spragtte4(9 irtn.) Thurston5, OregonCity 2 GrantsPass9, Greshami Westview8, Clackamas1 West Linn6,Reynolds2 Lincoln 7,Tigard5 Barlow11,McMinnville 1(5inn.j SouthMedford5 Tttalatin 101inn.j Roseburg6, ForestGrove5 Aloha 6,Canby2 Glencoe12,Sheldoit9 CentralCatholic6, Lakeridge0 Southridge3,West Salem2 Newberg 11,McNary 5 SouthSalem18, South Eugene0(5inn.) SecondRound Today'sGames Jesuit atNorthMedford Thurstonat GrantsPass WestLinnat Westview Lincoln atBarlow SouthMedford atRoseburg Alohaat Glencoe SottthridgeatCentral Catholic NewbergatSouth Salem

Class 4A First Round Today'sGames Mazama atYamhil-Carlton BanksatSouth Umpqua Staytort atSweet Home

Douglasat Henley Marshfieldat Gladstone Elmira at Ridgeview Scappoose at Newport NorthMarionat McLoughhn Quatlerlittal Round Friday's Games Mszama /Yamhil-CaIlton winner vs. Banks/ SouthUmpquawinner Stayton/Swee t Homewinner vs. Douglas/Henley winner Marshfield/Gladstone winner vs. Elmira/Ridgeviewwinner Scappoose /Newport winnervs. NorthMarion/ McLoughlin winner Semifinal Round June 3,TBA ChampionshipFinal June7at OSUSoftball Complex, Corvallis, TBA

Class 3A First Round Today'sGame s Rogue Riverat Glide Vale atLakeview WillamittaaiBlartchet Catholic Elgi/I atPleasantHil Harrisburg at Rainier Colton atCorbet Santiam ChristianatEnterprise ClatskanieatDayton Class 3A Qttarlettinal Round First Round Friday's Games Today'sGames RogueRiver/Glide winner vs. Vale/Lakeview Amity atValleyCatholic winner BlanchetCatholic atClatskanie Willamitts/BlanchetCatholic winner vs. Elgin/ HarrisburgaIStaitfield PleasantHil winner DaytonatGlide Harrisburg/Rainiewi r nner vs. Colton/Corbett Burns atHorizonChristian, Tttalatin winner Ouattettittal Round Vale atPleasantHil SantiamChristian/Enterprisewinnervs.ClatsMay30,TBA St. Mary'sMed , fordat SantiamChristian Semifinal Round kanie/Dayton winner Rainier atCascadeChristian June 3,TBA Semifinal Round Guattettinal Round Championship Final June 3,TBA Friday's Games ChampionshipFinal June 7 at OSUSoftball Com plex, Corvallis, TBA Amity/ValleyCatholic winnervs. BlattchetCathJune6at OSUSoftball Complex, Corvallis, TBA olic/Clatskaniewinner Class SA Harrisburg/Stanfield winnervs. Dayton/Glide Class 2A/1A First Round winner Today'sGames Firsl Round Burns/HorizonChristian, Tualatin winnervs. WilsonatSandy Today'sGame s Vale/Pleasant Hil winner Marist atSt. Helens GoldBeachatWeston-McEwen St. Mary's,Medford/SantiamChristian winner Churchill atPutnam Pilot RockatRiddle vs. Rainier/Cascade Christian winner EaglePointat West Albany Lowell atCentral Linn Semifinal Round Corvallis atPendleton Knappa at Bonanza June3,TBA Silvertort atLiberty Regisat Union ChampionshipFinal WillametteatBend ProspectatVerttonia June at 6 VolcanoesStadium,Keizer, TBA Sherwood atHoodRiverValley WesternMennoniteat Yoncala Qttattettinal Round KennedyatNorthDouglas Class 2A/1A FrIday'sGames Qttarlerlinal Round First Round Wilson/Sandywinner vs. Marist/St. Helens Friday's Games Today'sGames winner Gold Beach/e W ston-McEwen winner vs. Pilot Lost Riverat Kttappa Churchill/Putnam winner vs. Eagle Point/West Rock/Riddlwi enner PortlandChristianat Gold Beach Albanywinner Lowell/CentralLinnwinnervs. Knappa/Elohanza CountryChristianat Weston-McEwen Corvallis/Pendleton winnervs. Silverton/Liberly winner Gastort atUmpqttaValey Christian winner Regis/Union winner vs. Prospect/Vernortia ReedsportatKennedy Willamette/Bertd winner vs. Sherwood/Hood winner RegisatToledo RiverValleywinner WesternMennonite/Yoncallawinnervs,KenneDufttr atGrantUnion Semifinal Round dy/NorthDouglas winner Union atMonroe June3,TBA Semifinal Round Qttartettinal Round ChampionshipFinal June 3,TBA Friday's Games June 7 at OSUSoftball Com plex, Corvallis, TBA ChampionshipFinal Lost River/Knappa winner vs. Portland ChrisJune6at OSUSoftball Complex, Corvallis, TBA


C5 THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, MAY 28, 2014

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HIGH LOW CLOSE CHG. 16688.69 16607.42 16675.50 +69.23 DOW Trans. 8044.32 7994.82 8017.84 +31.26 DOW Util. 541.52 534.12 537.81 +3.79 NYSE Comp. 10732.13 10701.83 10720.61 +38.74 NASDAQ 4237.07 4204.72 4237.07 +51.26 S&P 500 191 2.28 1902.01 1911.91 +11.38 S&P 400 1381.39 1371.57 1378.40 +8.74 Wilshire 5000 20261.57 20123.50 20258.82 +135.32 Russell 2000 1144.10 1132.43 1142.20 +1 6.01

DOW

%CHG. WK MO QTR YTD $.0.42% L L L +0.60% $.0.39% L L L +8.34% $.0.71% L +9.63% $.0.36% L L L +3.08% $.1.22% L +1.45% +0.60% L L L +3.44% +0.64% L L L +2.67% +0.67% L L L +2.81% -1.84% +1.42% L

52-WK RANGE o CLOSE Y TD 1YR V O L TICKER LO Hl CLOSE CHG%CHG WK MO QTR %CHG %RTN (Thous) P/E DIV

+ -.24 '

1.3637+

-.0009

StoryStocks lnvestors pushed the Standard & Poor's 500 index to an all-time high for the second trading day in a row on Tuesday. Before the market opened, the Commerce Department said orders for long-lasting goods crept up in April, powered by demand for military aircraft. Economists had predicted that orders would shrink. Smaller companies and technology companies rallied, driving the tech-heavy Nasdaq composite index and the Russell 2000 to larger gains than other major indexes. Nine of the 10 industry groups in the S&P 500 posted gains, with information-technology companies and banks leading the way. Telecoms lost ground. Hillshire Brands

NorthwestStocks NAME

based on trailing 12 month results

"

1,900

+ -.35

$19.04

DOW jones industrials Close: 16,675.50 Change: 69.23 (0 4%)

16,320" ""' 10 DAYS "

1,950

4Q '12 4 Q ' 13

Price-earnings ratio: 3 2

GOLD $1,265.40

0)

............ Close: 1,91 1 .91 Change: 11.38 (0.6%)

Vol. (in mil.) 2,826 1,775 Pvs. Volume 2,365 1,504 Advanced 2134 1981 Declined 9 75 6 7 4 New Highs 2 29 1 0 0 New Lows 21 24

80

EPS

.

1,840' " ""'10 DAYS

$95.74

,'

+

SstP 500

Wednesday, May 28, 2014

KORS $100 $59.81

10 YR TNOTE 2.52%

1,911.91

HSH

Close:$45.19%8.17 or 22.1% Pilgrim's Pride offered to buy out the food producer for close to $6 billion, saying it trumps the bid from rival Pinnacle Foods. $50 40

Bank of America

BAC

Close: $15.22L0.50 or 3.4% The bank resubmitted its capital plan a month after errors forced the suspension of a bigger dividend and a stock buyback. $18 16

M A 52-week range $36.35~

M $4 5.52

M A 52-week range $12.13~

M $ 18 D3

Vol.: 41.7m (16.7x avg.) P E: 24.4 Vol.:124.6m (1.3x avg.) PE : 17.3 Mkt. Cap:$5.54 b Yie l d : 1.5% Mkt. Cap:$160.05b Yi e ld: 0.3%

AstraZeneca

AZN AutoZone AZO Close:$72.05 V-0.23 or -0.3% Close:$520.25T-20.65 or -3.8% Pfizer dropped its $119 billion takeRising demand for parts in both over bid, the largest in industry hisNorth and South America drove tory, after the drugmaker called the quarterly profits up more than 7 peroffer inadequate. cent at the retailer. $90 $560

Alaska Air Group A LK 50.31 ~ 98.69 98. 2 2 +. 1 7 +0.2 L L L +33. 9 +6 7 .7 7 1 0 1 2 1. 0 0 Dividend: none Avista Corp A VA 25.55 ~ 32.94 32.0 8 + .4 0 + 1 .3 L L L +13.8 +18 .6 3 4 3 1 6 1. 2 7 BAC 12 . 13 ~ 18.03 15. 2 2 + . 5 0 +3.4 L T T -2.2 +11.7120562 20 0.04 Source: FactSet Bank of America Barrett Business B B S I41 . 96 o — 102 . 20 47 . 71 + . 95 + 2.0 L T T -48.6 -16.6 9 4 2 1 0 7. 2 80 540 Boeing Co BA 9 6 .31 ~ 144. 5 7 13 4.17 +1.76 +1.3 L L L -1.7 +35.2 3054 2 3 2 . 92 Luxut)r market beltwether 70 520 Cascade Baacorp CA C B 4 . 15o— 69 .5 4.36 +.0 8 + 1.9 L T T -16.6 -25.6 101 4 ColumbiaBnkg COLB 2 1.46 ~ 3 0.3 6 25.13 +.43 $-1.7 L L T -8.6 +1 6.9 1 3 5 1 9 0 .48a Toll Brothers' latest quarterly M A M M A M Columbia Sportswear COLM 55.58 ~ 8 9.96 84. 8 1 + 1.30 +1.6 L L L +7.7 +41 . 1 4 8 28 1.1 2 earnings should provide insight 52-week range 52-week range Costco Wholesale CO ST 107.38 ~ 1 26.1 2 11 3.87 -1.07 -0.9 T T L -4.3 + 2 . 7 2 553 2 6 1.42f into the luxury home market. $46.87~ $82 .68 $464.87~ $ 561.62 Craft Brew Alliance BR EW 7.40 ty 18.70 11 .44 -.04 -0.3 T T T -30.3 +50.3 7 8 60 The company is the nation's Vol.:6.9m (1.4x avg.) PE :2 2 .7 Vol.:519.5k (2.0x avg.) PE : 1 8.1 FLIR Systems F LIR 23.58 ~ 37.42 34. 7 6 +. 3 8 +1.1 L L T +15. 5 +4 3 .4 6 3 2 2 5 0. 4 0 biggest builder of luxury homes. Mkt. Cap:$90.86b Yie l d: 5.3% Mkt. Cap:$17.29 b Yield: ... — o 34.09 33 .10 -.62 -1.8 T L L +18.3 +3 8 .0 19474 12 0 . 6 4 Hewlett Packard HP Q 20 . 25 Much of its home communities Intel Corp I NTC 21.89 ~ 27.24 26.7 1 +. 4 2 $ .1.6 L L L +2.9 $.1 3 .1 26787 14 0 . 9 0 JinkoSolar Holding JKS Vringo VRNG and condominiums are located Keycorp K EY 10.24 ~ 14.70 13.5 5 +. 1 8 +1 .3 L L T +1.0 +27. 9 6 0 25 1 3 0 . 26f along the Northeast, a region that Kroger Co Close: $25.08T-0.78 or -3.0% Close: $3.41 L0.14 or 4.3% K R 3 2 .77 ~ 47.90 47. 0 0 +. 1 5 +0.3 L L L +18. 9 +3 8 .9 1 439 16 0 . 6 6 The Chinese solar company fell well The software developer could be a was battered by frigid winter Lattice Semi LSCC 4.17 ~ 9.19 8.08 +. 1 7 + 2.1 L T L +47.2 +58 .8 1 2 69 5 4 short of Wall Street profit expectabig beneficiary of a Supreme Court weather this year. Did the weather LA Pacific L PX 13.77 ~ 19.43 14. 9 0 +. 2 3 +1.6 L T T -19.5 -23.1 4051 23 tions for the first quarter as shipruling in its fight with Google over limit its sales in the NovemberMDU Resources MDU 24 . 09 ~ 36.05 3 3. 8 2 -.25 -0.7 T T T +10.7 +33 .5 4 6 6 23 0.71 ments tumbled sharply. patent infringement. January quarter? Find out today, Mentor Graphics MEN T 18.42 ~ 24.31 22. 0 4 + . 2 2 +1.0 L L L - 8.4 +21.4 6 0 8 1 7 0 . 20 $40 $5 when Toll Brothers reports fiscal Microsoft Corp M SFT 3 0 .84 ~ 41.66 40. 1 9 +. 0 7 +0.2 L T T +7.4 +20 . 6 25716 15 1 . 1 2 4 second-quarter results. Nike Inc B N KE 59.11 ~ 80.26 76.6 1 +. 7 6 +1 .0 L L L -2.6 +21.2 3318 26 0 . 96 30 Nordstrom Ioc J WN 54.90 ~ 70.71 67.9 2 +. 0 7 +0 .1 L L L + 9.9 +14. 8 1 4 56 1 8 1. 3 2 Nwst Nat Gas N WN 39.96 ~ 45.15 45.1 9 +. 6 7 + 1 .5 L L L +5.5 +5.5 230 21 1.8 4 M A M M A M PaccarIoc P CAR 5113 ~ 68 81 6402 +1 07 + 1 7 L L T +8 2 +19 8 170 5 1 9 0 8 8 f 52-week range 52-week range Planar Systms P LNR 1.55 ~ 2.93 2.16 -.02 -0.9 T T L -15.0 +28.2 15 dd $7.25~ $3 7.88 $2.61 ~ $5.45 Ii m,.'.Qt !Iti,' ,t! tuu, ' Plum Creek P CL 40.57 ~ 52.41 44.6 6 + 1 .01 +2.3 L L L -4.0 -13.2 1989 39 1 . 76 Vol.:5.0m (2.0x avg.) PE: . . Vol.:6 .4m (3.2x avg.) P E: . . . Prec Castparts PCP 207.47 ~ 274. 9 6 25 2.19 +3.17 +1.3 L T T - 6.4 +18.8 7 3 3 2 1 0 . 12 Mkt.Cap:$677.49 m Yie ld: ..Mkt.Cap:$295.07 m Yie ld: ... Safeway Inc SWY 19.92 ~ 36.03 3 4. 2 1 -.03 -0.1 T L L +17.4 +67 .4 1 3 24 3 0.92f Schnitzer Steel SCHN 2 3.12 ~ 33.32 2 4. 9 9 -.52 -2.0 T T T - 23.5 + 0. 5 3 9 7 d d 0 . 7 5 Brooks Automation B RKS Staples SPLS +9.9 432 27 2.2 0 Sherwin Wms SHW 163.63 ~ 208. 6 3 28 2.02 -.39 -0.2 T L L +10.1 Close:$9.81 %0.41 or 4.4% Close:$11.42 V-0.23 or -2.0% StaocorpFocl S FG 43.86 ~ 69.51 60. 6 8 +. 6 4 +1.1 L L T -8.4 +40.2 1 2 9 1 2 1 .10f A pair of Wall Street analysts upCompetition in the office products StarbucksCp SBUX 62.31 ~ 82.50 73. 6 6 + 1.68+2.3 L L L - 6.0 +14.9 4994 3 0 1 . 04 graded the automation and instrusector is growing and that's going to mentation company citing improved trim margins, leading to a downTriquint Semi TQNT 6.66 — o 15.71 16 .07 + . 40 +2.6 L L L +92.7 + 1 34.9 4263 dd grade from Goldman Sachs. umppuaHoldings UM PQ 13.28 ~ 1 9.6 5 16.70 +.08+0.5 L L T -12.7 +26.9 1061 20 0 .60a growth prospects. $12 $14 US Bancorp U SB 34.80 ~ 43.66 41. 7 4 +. 2 9 +0.7 L L T +3.3 +20 . 3 5 5 22 1 4 0 . 9 2 WashingtonFedl WA F D 16.87 ~ 2 4.5 3 20.82 +.06+0.3 L T T - 10.6 +21.3 1 8 7 1 4 0 . 4 0 11 13 Eye on home loans WellsFargo & Co WFC 39.40 — o 50.49 50 .55 + . 39 +0.8 L L L +11. 3 +2 8 .5 13026 13 1 .40f 10 12 The Mortgage Bankers AssociaWeyerhaeuser W Y 2 6 .38 ~ 32.55 30.9 0 +. 0 3 +0 .1 L L L -2.1 -0.9 6080 27 0 . 8 8 tion reports today the results from M A M M A M 52-week range 52-week range its latest weekly mortgage $8.74~ $11.64 $11.54~ $ 17 38 applications survey. DividendFootnotes:a - Extra dividends werepaid, but areuot included. b -Annual rate plus stock. c - Liquidating dividend. 5 -Amount declaredor paid in last t2 months. f - Current Vol.:733.9k(1.9x avg.) PE : 6 1.3 Vol.:12.0m (1.0x avg.) PE: 1 2 .8 Home loan applications have annual rate, whichwasincreased bymost recentdividendannouncement. i —Sum of dividends paidafterstock split, ro regular rate. I —Sumof dividends paidthis year.Most recent Mkt. Cap:$655.03 m Yi eld: 3.3% Mkt.Cap:$7.38 b Yield: 4.2% been increasing modestly this dividend wasomitted cr deferred. k - Declared or paidthis year, acumulative issue with dividends in arrears. m — Current annualrate, which wasdecreasedbymost recentdividend p— Initial dividend, annual rate nct known, yield nct shown. r —Declared or paid ic preceding 12months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, approximate cash month. At the same time, average announcement. SOURCE: Sungard AP value on ex-distrittution date.PEFootnotes: q —Stock is a closed-end fund - no P/E ratio shown. cc —P/Eexceeds 99. dd - Loss ic last12 months. interest rates on fixed mortgages have been declining, falling two InterestRates NET 1YR weeks ago for the fourth straight TREASURIES YEST PVS CHG WK MO QTR AGO week. The low rates have helped give a boost to the spring 3 -month T-bill . 0 2 .0 2 T L T .04 outstanding shares, making it the company's homebuyingseason, which got off Shares of Aeropostale surged 15 percent 6-month T-bill . 0 4 .04 ... T T .07 Tuesday. Investors were encouraged by largest shareholder, ahead of Fidelity, to a slow start this year. 52-wk T-bill .08 .07 +0 . 0 1 L T T .10 news that the struggling teen clothing •I 3 which has a 10.6 percent stake. MBA's mortgage applications retailer has completed a deal to obtain Aeropostale also said that two 2 -year T-note . 3 5 .35 ... L T L .25 The yield on the survey $150 million in loans from the investment directors selected by Sycamore, Stefan 5 -year T-note 1.53 1.53 ... L T L .89 8' 10-year Treasury seasonally adjusted percent change firm Sycamore Partners. Kaluzny, managing director at Sycamore 10-year T-note 2.52 2.53 -0.01 L T T 2.01 6% fell to 2.52 5.3 The deal, which was first announced in Partners, and Julian Geigera, former CEO of 30-year T-bond 3.36 3.40 -0.04 T T T 3.17 4.3 percent Tuesday. March, also enables Sycamore Partners to take Crumbs Bake Shop, will join its board. 4 3.6 Yields affect up to a 5 percent larger stake in the company. Aeropostale has posted five consecutive rates on NET 1YR If Sycamore buys 5 percent more shares, it 0.9 quarterly losses and had been looking at mortgages and BONDS YEST PVS CHG WK MOQTR AGO -3.3 -5.9 would hold roughly 12.3 percent of its strategic options. other consumer BarclaysLongT-Bdldx 3.17 3.20 -0.03 T T 2.88 loans. * Total return YTD 1 - Y R 5 - YR AeropOStaje (ARQ) T uesd a y's close: $3.92 Bond Buyer Muni Idx 4.51 4.51 . . . L T T 4.17 -56.9% -73.4 -29.7 ARO Barclays USAggregate 2.22 2.23 -0.01 T T T 1.97 Price-earnings ratio: Lost money PRIME FED Barcl 3.7 17 . 7 18.8 aysUS HighYield 5.07 5.05 +0.02 L T T 5.40 $3 16 (Baaed on trailing 12 month results) RATE FUNDS Moodys AAA Corp ldx 4.19 4.23 -0.04 L T T 3.97 4/11 4/18 4/25 5 / 2 5/ 9 5/ 1 6 *Annuagzed AP T o t al returns through May 27 Source: FactSet YEST3.25 .13 week ending Barclays CompT-Bdldx 1.78 1.77 +0.01 L T L 1 16 . 6 MO AGO3.25 .13 Source: FactSet Barclays USCorp 2.90 2.92 -0.02 T T 2.79 1 YRAGO3.25 .13 AmdFocus SelectedMutualpunds

::.";::Aeropostale shares jump

SU

HIS

,

AP

PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1YR 3YR BYR 1 3 5 BalA m 25.8 5 + .89 +3.1 +12.1 +12.2+14.9 8 A A CaplncBuA m 60.83 +.20 +5.5 +11.0 +9.6+12.5 8 A 8 CpWldGrlA m 47.44 +.22 +5.1 +17.3 +10.9+14.3 8 8 C EurPacGrA m 50.38 +.25 +2.7 +15.3 +6.8+11.6 8 8 8 FnlnvA m 52. 7 5 +.30+2.8 +17.1 +13.3+17.1 D C C S&P500ETF 594913 191.52 +1.17 GrthAmA m 44.25 +.31 +2.9 +20.4 +14.5+16.9 8 8 D Facebook 548934 63.48 +2.13 T Rowe PriceSmCpStk OTCFX IncAmerA m 21.55 +.85 +5.2 +12.2 +11.2+15.3 8 A A SiriusXM 468635 3.32 +.05 InvCoAmA m 38.66 +.23 +5.7 +20.9 +15.0+16.9 A 8 D Spherix 446723 2.97 +1.46 VALUE B L EN D GR OWTH NewPerspA m38.33 +.25 +2.1 +15.6 +11.3+15.6 C 8 8 iShR2K 438627 113.58 +1.61 WAMutlnvA m40.84 +.17 +4.0 +17.3 +15.4+18.4 8 A 8 MktVGold 392863 22.41 -.90 iShEMkts 373587 42.77 -.37 Dodge &Cox Income 13.92 +.81 +4.0 + 3 .8 + 4.6 +7.0 A 8 8 IShJapan 362469 11.48 +.09 Intlstk 45.97 +.12 +6.8 +21.3 +9.8+15.1 A A A Hillshire 334340 45.19 +8.17 Stock 173.72 +.48 +3.6 +22.9 +16.5+20.0 A A A Fidelity Contra 96.61 + . 88 +1.5 +18.9 +14.6+18.4 C 8 8 Gainers ContraK 96.5 8 + .88 +1.6 +19.0 +14.8+18.5 C 8 8 NAME LAST CHG %CHG LowPriStk d 50.40 +.24 +1.9 +18.6 +14.3+19.9 C A C Fideli S artan 500l d xAdvtg 67.99 +.41 +4.3 +18.3 +15.3+18.9 8 8 A Spherix 2.97 +1.46 + 96.7 DyaxCp 8.41 +1.81 + 27.4 «C FraakTemp-Franklin Income C m 2. 55 .. . + 6 .0 + 11.8 +9.4+14.5 A A A Irmsuites 2.25 +.45 + 2 5.0 63 IncomeA m 2. 5 3+.81 +6.7 +12.5 +10.1+15.1 A A A Hillshire 45.19 +8.17 + 2 2 .1 Oakmark Intl I 27.86 +.21 +2.8 +15.4 +12.1+17.5 8 A A GlycoM n 8.38 +1.42 + 20.4 Do Oppeaheimer RisDivA m 20 . 11 +.89+2.1 +13.8 +11.8+15.4 E D E PacBkrM g 5.08 +.77 + 1 7.9 RisDivB m 17 . 97 +.89+1.8 +12.9 +10.8+14.3 E E E Moroingstar OwnershipZone™ FairwayGp 7.00 +1.06 + 1 7.8 RisDivC m 17 . 86 +.88+1.9 +13.0 +11.0+14.5 E E E UBIC 9.68 +1.41 + 1 7 .0 OeFund target represents weighted SmMidValAm 45.89 +.33 +3.7 +20.9+10.0+17.3 8 E E Marrone8 n 10.60 +1.52 + 16.7 average of stock holdings SmMidValB m38.61 +.28 +3.4 +19.9 +9.1+16.3 C E E Lentuo 2.21 +.31 + 1 6.3 • Represents 75% of fund's stock holdings T Rowe Price Eqtylnc 33.71 +.16 +3.3 +14.9 +13.9+18.1 D C 8 Losers CATEGORY Small Growth GrowStk 52.68 +.59 +0.2 +22.7 +15.9+19.8 A A A NAME L AST C H G %C H G MORNINGSTAR HealthSci 61.68 +.74 +6.7 +32.5 +25.5+29.1 A A A R ATING™ **** * -.47 -16.4 Vanguard 500Adml 176.85+1.86 +4.3 +18.3 +15.3+18.9 8 A A Frontline 2.39 KellySB 18.19 -3.26 -15.2 ASSETS $9,439 million 500lnv 176.81 +1.85 +4.2 +18.1 +15.1+18.8 C 8 8 -2.49 -14.8 DirGMnBull 14.35 5006gnl 146.88 +.87 +4.3 +18.3 +15.3+18.9 8 A A EXP RATIO 0.91% LiveDeal s 3.79 -.63 -14.3 CapOp 48.75 +.40 +5.6 +21.7 +16.4+19.3 8 A 8 MANAGER Gregory McCrickard -1.04 -13.6 HimaxTch 6.62 Eqlnc 30.95 +.11 +4.8 +16.0 +16.1+19.8 C A A SINCE 1992-09-02 IntlStkldxAdm 28.90 +.89 +3.9 +13.4 +5.3 NA C D -3.2 RETURNS 3-MO Foreign Markets StratgcEq 31.61 +.25 +5.4 +25.0 +17.0+23.2 A A A YTD -0.6 TgtRe2020 28.13 +.11 +3.8 +11.2 +9.0+13.0 A A B NAME LAST CHG %CHG 1-YR +18.1 Tgtet2025 16.35 +.87 +3.8 +12.3 +9.6+13.9 8 A 8 Paris 4,529.75 +2.82 + . 06 3-YR ANNL +13.8 TotBdAdml 10.83 +.81 +3.7 +1.7 +3.4 +5.0 C D D London 6,844.94 +29.19 + . 43 5-YR-ANNL +22.9 Totlntl 17.28 +.86 +3.9 +13.3 +5.2+10.9 C D C Frankfurt 9,940.82 +48.00 + . 49 TotStlAdm 48.26 +.33 +3.8 +18.8 +15.0+19.5 8 8 A Hong Kong22,944.30 -18.88 -.08 TOP 5HOLDINGS PCT -.11 Brunswick Corp TotStldx 48.23 +.32 +3.8 +18.6 +14.9+19.3 8 8 A Mexico 41,958.97 -45.61 1.5 Milan 21,403.55 -90.32 -.42 USGro 29.49 +.26 +2.8 +22.5 +15.2+18.4 8 A 8 Incyte Corp Ltd 1.35 Tokyo 14,636.52 +34.00 + . 23 Welltn 39.41 +.12 +4.5 +12.4 +11.5+14.2 A A A 1.06 Stockholm 1,395.39 + 1.24 + . 09 Jack Io The BoxInc Fund Footnotes: b -Feecovering marketcosts is paid from fund assets. d - Deferredsales charge, cr redemption 1.01 fee. f - front load (salescharges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually amarketing feeandeither a sales or Sydney 5,490.80 + .36 + . 01 Signature Bank Zurich 8,71 0.38 -1.97 -.02 Lennox International Inc 0.96 redemption fee.Source: Mornunastar.

T. Rowe Price Small-Cap closed FAMILY to new investors at the end MarhetSummary AmericanFunds of last year, but Morningstar Most Active says size hasn't hindered perforNAME VOL (BOs) LAST CHG mance; it carries a silver analyst BkofAm 1205624 15.22 +.50 rating.

Commodities The price of oil slipped Tuesday as traders weighed how the conflicts in Ukraine and Libya were likely to affect crude supplies. Natural gas rose. Gold and silver also declined.

Foreign Exchange The dollar rose versus several currencies, including the euro and British pound. But the ICE L.S. Dollar Index, which compares the dollar against a basket of major currencies, fell.

55Q QD

FUELS

CLOSE PVS. 104.11 104.35 Crude Oil (bbl) Ethanol (gal) 2.32 2.33 Heating Oil (gal) 2.94 2.95 Natural Gas (mmbtu) 4.51 4.41 UnleadedGas(gal) 3.00 3.02

%CH. %YTD - 0.23 + 5.8 +0.26 +21.6 -0.51 -4.5 + 2.27 + 6 . 5 - 0.94 + 7.5

CLOSE PVS. 1265.40 1291.60 19.04 19.39 1462.30 1472.80 3.18 3.18 830.55 831.30

%CH. %YTD - 2.03 + 5 . 3 -1.80 -1.6 - 0.71 + 6 . 7 +0.11 -7.5 -0.09 +1 5.8

METALS

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

CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD 1.36 1.36 - 0.51 + 0 . 8 Coffee (Ib) 1.79 1.82 -1.40 +62.0 Corn (hu) 4.70 4.78 -1.73 +11.3 Cotton (Ih) 0.85 0.86 - 1.55 + 0 . 4 Lumber (1,000 hd ft) 316.90 317.30 -0.13 -12.0 Orange Juice (Ih) 1.58 1.58 -0.22 +1 5.8 Soybeans (hu) 14.89 15.16 -1.77 +1 3.4 Wheat(hu) 6.41 6.53 - 1.76 + 5 . 9 1YR.

MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.6812 -.0036 -.21% 1.5104 Canadian Dollar 1.0 857 +.0002 +.02% 1.0335 USD per Euro 1.3637 -.0009 -.07% 1.2933 JapaneseYen 101.97 + . 0 5 + .05% 1 01.08 Mexican Peso 12. 8 705 +.0059 +.05% 12.4759 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.4806 +.0002 +.01% 3.7138 Norwegian Krone 5 . 9539 -.0051 -.09% 5.8444 SouthAfrican Rand 10.4533 +.0966 +.92% 9.6006 Swedish Krona 6.6 2 16 -.0002 -.00% 6.6439 Swiss Franc .8967 +.0021 +.23% . 9 637 ASIA/PACIFIC Australian Dollar 1.0800 -.0021 -.19% 1.0377 Chinese Yuan 6.2475 +.0061 +.10% 6.1261 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7533 -.0004 -.01% 7.7637 Indian Rupee 59.025 +.305 $..52% 55.573 Singapore Dollar 1.2563 +.0031 +.25% 1.2612 -.73 -.07% 1122.63 South KoreanWon 1023.40 Taiwan Dollar 3 0.16 + . 0 5 +.17% 2 9.88


© www.bendbulletin.com/business

THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, MAY 28, 2014

PACIFICORP

BRIEFING

ar es aaco e OrS Rate hike

Home prices up in Deschutes Average homeprices in Deschutes County rose nearly19 percent in the first quarter of this

year over the first quarter of 2013, according to federal data released Tuesday. The increase gave the Bend-Redmond Metropolitan Statistical Area, which comprises all of Deschutes County, the11th-highest rate of home-price appreciation of the nation's nearly 300 metropolitan statistical areas, according to the Federal Housing Finance Agency's All-transactions House Price Index. However, prices in the Bend-Redmond MSA remain nearly 6 percent below those recorded in the first quarter of 2009, according to the index, which tracks average price changes from repeat sales and refinancings on thesame single-family properties. The Merced, Calif., MSA recorded the highest year-over-year increase in homeprices, rising nearly 31 percent, while Fond duLac, Wis., had the lowest, dropping more than 4 percent. — From staff reports

BANKRUPTCIES Chapter7 Filed May20 • Kyle A. Taber,63216 Wishing Well Lane,Bend • Joseph A. Brabham,P.O. Box 1043, Madras Filed May21 • Brett M. Wallace, 20240 Reed Lane,L248, Bend • Justin A. Goodman and Jennifer A.Lupton-Goodman, 61617 KaciLane,Bend • Claudia L. Mullins, 465 N.E. OlneyAve., No. 1,Bend • Ryiee K. Lewis, RO.Box 1772, Prineville • Arthur Albert Judd III and Dawn G. Judd,19945 Cinder Lane,Bend Filed May22 • Tracy J. Thompson, 1168 N.E. McRae Court, Prineville • Sherry L. Subica, P.O. Box 31, La Pine Filed May23 • Nathaniel I. Morgan and Lindsay S.Morgan-Duran, 21264 Hurita Place,Bend • Amy E York, 2291 N.E Cherry Loop, Prineville • Jodi R. Fish, 1153S.W. Currant Drive, Redmond • Joshua Adkins, 795 N.E. Fieldstone Court, Prineviiie • Ronald J. andJoanneM. Ward, P.O.Box2338, LaPine Chapter13 Filed May21 • Kayja L Buhmann,P.O. Box1791, Bend Filed May23 • Gregory T. and Catherine E. Freyberg, 2234N.W.High Lakes Loop,Bend

By Steve Lohr

recommends, should give con- to discriminate against cersumers accessto the informatain racial, ethnic or socioecotion collected about them by nomic groups.

and religious affiliations, our income and socioeconomic

data brokers, allow consumers to suppress information

FTC chairwoman, said in a

amounts of information on

investigation of the data-bro-

the activities of consumers for marketing purposes operate

and inform consumers what inferences are being made

ker industry, two Democrats introduced a bill that would

with "a fundamental lack of

about them.

require data brokers to disclose more information about

New York Times News Service

Data brokers that col-

lect, analyze and sell huge

transparency," the Federal Trade Commission said in a report Tuesday. The report is the result of a lengthy investigation of the data-broker industry, and it rec-

ommends that Congress enact legislation that requires the companies to disclose more

information about themselves and the data they collect. The legislation, the FTC

TODAY • SBIR/STTRLunch 5 Learn Workshop: Businesses with a potentially technologyoriented product can learn how to apply for 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/ orcall 503-546-8813; $12; 11:30 a.m.-f p.m.; COCC Chandler Building, 1027 N.W. TrentonAve.,Bend. • BusinessAfter Hours: Learn about Tetherow's growth. Beer, wine and appetizers will be served. Opportunities for networking and prizes. Register at www. bendchamber.org; free; 5 p.m.; TetherowGolf Club, 61240 Skyline RanchRoad, Bend; 541-382-3221. THURSDAY • Taste of Leadership Bend Class:Highlights

on how information collected about people is used by companies. In May, the White House issued its own report that focused largely on how companies gather and use vast stores of data online about individuals, and that

those practices could be used

their practices and to give

consumersmore controlover their information collected and sold by the companies. "Theextentofconsumer profiling today means that data brokers often know as

much — or even more — about us than our family and friends,

induding our online and instore purchases, our political

behalf of consumers, many of whom are unaware that data brokers even exist."

Privacy advocates said the FTC could have gone further in its recommendations. Marc

Rotenberg, executive director of the Electronic Privacy Information Center, said the

agency's report placed too much responsibility on individual consumers to monitor the activities of data brokers.

' ome e acon, 0 ecause i 's oo ex ensive By Mark Fisher

Strips of

Cox Newspapers

sizzling bacon alongside youreggs

DAYTON, Ohio — A sus-

tained surge in the cost of pork — caused in part by a virus that has killed as many as 7 million pigs — has finally

new plant isn't online By Joseph Ditzler The Bulletin

PacifiCorp, an electricity provider for parts of Central Oregon, has until

noon Friday to bring its newest power plant online

to qualify for a previously approved monthly rate hike of about $1.58 per household. The Oregon Public Tuesday delayed the rate increase pending word from the utility that its Lake Side 2 natu-

ral-gas-fired power plant 40 miles south of Salt

Lake City is operational. Unless the utility brings the plant online by noon

Friday, it must refile its requestfora rate hike, according to a PUC staff

recommendation. PacifiCorp, parent company of Pacific Power, expects to meet the deadline. The rate increase, the sixth

may soon be

for PacifiCorp since 2010, wouldtakeeffectSunday.

and taters a luxury not

It last increased rates,

forced restaurants and gro-

everyone can

cerystorestoraiseprices. And more hikes may be on

afford. Fears about a bacon

with PUC approval, by 1.5 percent Jan. 1. The utility

the horizon: Several restau-

shortage due

rant and grocery store owners who have avoided boosting prices say they won't be able to do so much longer. "We absorbed it for a long time, as long as we could," said Robert Bernhard Jr., owner of Dot's Market, which operates grocery stores in Ohio. "But we've had to adjust some of

in part to last

summer's drought aren't coming true,

our prices, unfortunately."

Kroger has seen wholesale price increases and has "raised some retail (prices) accordingly," spokeswoman Rachael Betzler said. Jack Gridley, who oversees meat and seafood for the Dorothy Lane Market chain in

Dayton, said his company has notraised fresh-pork prices but did add 20 cents a pound

lion, of the cost to build

Lake Side 2. The commission approved $21.9

increasefor

million, or a 1.8 percent

pork products.

rate hike, according to the

nadian provinces and several

from which bacon is made

ribs for five years, but the ris-

areas of Mexico. The National Pork Produc-

— that has seen some of the

ing wholesale cost of pork has prompted Steve Meyer, CEO

to its spiral-sliced ham prices

prior to Easter.

because of PEDv. The coun-

cil estimated that hog prices Pig sickness would rise by 15 to 25 percent, The porcine epidemic diarand consumer prices for pork rhea virus (PEDv), which does by 10 to 12 percent. Droughts not affect humans or food in several parts of the U.S. and safety, kills 80 to 100 percent the rising cost of grain used of the piglets that contract it. for livestock feed have conThe virus began to emerge tributed to the rising prices, as a problem a year ago, and which also have pushed beef since then more than 4,000 prices higher.

Restaurants that utilize

pork front and center on their menus are facing similar pressures. Pizza places — which use plenty of pepperoni, sausage, ham and bacon on their pies— arealso keepinga close eye on their escalating costs. An Ohio barbecue chain

called OinkADoodleMoohas

PUC's Dec. 18 order, but it delayed it until the plant

was operational.

Customer impact

Baconbummer

biggest jumps. Bernhard said the suggested retail price of a 1-pound package of Oscar Mayer bacon has jumped to $8.99 — up from $4.99 to $5.99 a year ago.

asked the PUC to recover Oregon's share,$22.7m il-

ers may still notice a price

outbreaks have been reported in at least 30 states, four Ca-

But it's pork belly — the cut

agreed to seek no further rate increases until Jan. 1, 2016. Pacific Power in 2013

but consum-

TheAssociated Press file photo

ers Council said this month that hog slaughter this summer could fall by more than 10 percent from 2013 levels

been off eringits "Buck A Bone"

Wednesdayspecial onpork

and a franchise owner, to raise

theper-boneprice to $1.15. The cost of the restaurants'pulledpork sandwich also rose, if only by 10 cents, to $4.99. Those modest price increases won't cover Meyer's sky-

rocketing food costs. The pork shoulder used for pulled pork that he was buying a year ago for 97 cents a pound now costs $1.81 a pound — an 87 percent

A residential customer

using 900 kilowatt-hours per month will pay another $1.58 if the increase

takes effect as planned. Commercial and industrial customers would see their

ratesincrease from 1.5 percentto 2.4percent,said Deborah Garcia, a PUC

staff member. If PacifiCorp fails to meet the noon deadline,

rates will not change and the utility must refile its request to recover its Lake

increase. "We'll take part of

Side 2 costs, according to Garcia's May 19 report.

the hit, and we're feeling it. There are no winners here."

their costs to build and

Utilities may not recover operate their plants until they're "used and useful,"

according to state law,

Investigators toGM:Flawlikely kiled morepeople By Charles Fleming

BIZ CALENDAR

momentum to the push in Washington to put new curbs

statement. "It's time to bring transparency and accountability to bear on this industry on

on hold if

Utility Commission on

families of the victims — however many they may be.

Los Angeles Times

BEST OF THE

The FTC report adds

In February, after a Senate

status," Edith Ramirez, the

GeneralMotors should be

"GM knew about the safe-

tion-switch failure, having

case afterward to recover

earlier put that number at 32.

their costs. That practice

The ignition-switch problem has led to recalls of 2.6 million GM vehicles and prompted federal fines and multiple investigations into why GM neglected to issue the recallsformorethan adecade. The company has said it is taking several hundred million dollars in write-downs

changed within the past decade, said PUC spokes-

result of faulty ignition switch-

defect until this year," NHTSA

"To the best of our knowledge, there have been 13 driver or

es installed in its vehicles, the head of the National Highway

acting administrator David

front-seat occupant fatalities

Friedman said in a statement. "NHTSA has been assisting

that may be related to the

of problems with the faulty

switches, which can disable the vehicles' air bags, and owes "straight answers" to the

of the complete Leadership Bend program, followed by a catered networking reception at Elevate, theCascades Culinary Institute; registration required; $30; 1-5 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Wille Hall, 2600 N.W.College Way; www.bendchamber.orgl community-is-on/communityevents/a-taste-of-leadershipbend-bend-or/. • Search EngineStrategies 1:Learn the do's and don'ts of search engine optimization. Registration required; $99; 6-8 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W.CollegeW ay,Bend; 541-383-7270.

families by identifying whether ornot theirloved ones are in the number counted by GM.

The final death toll associated with this safety defect is not known to NHTSA, but we be-

FRIDAY • Grant Writingfor Nonprofits: Learn to select grant opportunities for nonprofits and write successful applications. Registration required. Computer lab;$89;9a.m .-4p.m.;LaPine Community Center, 16405First St.; 541-536-2223 orwww. lapineparks.org. MONDAY • Healthcare ITTechnician: Preparation for theCompTIA HIT-001 Certification exam. Learn to study in compliance with all the changing rulesand regulations andthe computer operations that makethis possible. Registration required; $449; 5:30-8:30 p.m.;COCC

Until recently, utilities built their plants then filed a rate

13 lives were lost." The Detroit automaker on

ty defect, but did not act to protect Americans from that

said'Itresday. The company was aware

be actually providing power to their consumers.

lieve it's likely that more than

prepared to acknowledge that more than 13 people died as a

Traffic Safety Administration

meaning the plants must

Tuesday repeated its position.

ignition-switch defect," the company said. "That's after a thorough analysis of the information available to us." GM has said it is aware of 47 front-impact accidents

associated with the igni-

Chandler Building, 1027 N.W. TrentonAve., Bend; 541-383-7270. WEDNESDAY • Business Startup Class: Learn to run a business, reachyour customer base,find funding options, assesshowmuch moneyyou need tostart and understand legalities involved; registration required; $29; 6-8 p.m.; COCC Chandler Building, 1027 N.W.Trenton Ave., Bend; 541-383-7290. JUNE5 • Team Developmentfor Greater Productivity:Increase collaboration toachieve companyobjectives. Registration

related to the recalls. GM may

also face civil lawsuits and criminal charges.

required; $95; 8a.m.-noon; Central OregonCommunity College, 2600N.W.College Way, Bend;541-383-7270. • Build YourBusinessWebsite with WordPressII: Learn to modifythemes, customize content, useadvanced plugins, understand search engine optimization and discover WordPress E-commerce. Registration required; $129; 9 a.m.-noon; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W.CollegeW ay,Bend; 541-383-7270. • BusinessContinuity/Disaster Planning:Learn to be prepared for unexpected events and disasters. Registration required;

$69; 6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Redmond campus, 2030 S.E.College Loop, Redmond;541-383-7270. • Soil Fertility, Health and Sustainability:Central Oregon Wine and GrapeGrowers Association meeting; learn the benefits of soil management, cover cropping andhowit can help build health and sustainable soils; pleaseRSVP; 6 p.m.; OregonState University Extension Service, 3893 S.W. Airport Way, Redmond; 541-280-6243 or khd@rnchat thecanyons.com. • For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday'sBulletin orvisit bendbupetin.com/bizcal

man Bob Valdez. "Recently we've noticed

the utilities are favoring collecting from customers

from day one, whereas, in the past, they used to get them up and running and file them in their upcoming rate case," Valdez said Tuesday. PacifiCorp expects to have Lake Side 2 online by the Friday deadline, said Tom Gauntt, company spokesman. The plant is undergoing routine tests, he said Tuesday. "There's no reason to believe it's not going to go operational," he said. PacifiCorp started build-

ing Lake Side 2, which generates approximately 637 megawatts, enough to power about 326,000

homes, in 2011, according to the company website.

PacifiCorp provides power to 587,000 customers in Oregon. — Reporter: 541-617-7815, jditzler@bendbulletin.com


IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Reader photos, D2 Fishing Report, D3 Outdoors Calendar, D4 THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, MAY 28, 2014

O< www.bendbulletin.com/outdoors

MOUNTAIN BIKE TRAIL GUIDE

WATER REPORT

Pacific Crest

For water conditions at local lakes and rivers, seeBB

BRIEFING

Trail hiker recallsher path to glory

4, I

Star Party hested in Prineville The annual Star Party returns to Prineville Reservoir State Park on Saturday. The Oregon Observatory at Sunriver and Oregon Parks and Recreation Department co-organize the free event, which invites "partygoers" to view night skies through telescopes provided by professional and amateur astronomers beginning at10 p.m. A 30-minute orientation will come before the viewing. "Central Oregon skies are typically clear and dark, which makes for unforgettable views of night sky objects," said Paul Patton, a resource specialist with the Oregon Parks and Recreation Department, in a press release. "The annual star party is a great summer activity for families to enjoy." The event begins at 1 p.m. with astronomy exhibits and activities for all ages in the dayuse area. Afternoon presentations include "Cosmological Communication" (2 p.m.) and "Prehistoric Stars; Prehistoric Oregon" (4 p.m.). At 3 p.m. space artist and photographer John Foster will lead an interactive space art session, where the audience will guide the creation of a piece of art. Safe solar viewing opportunities will also be offered throughout the day, according to the release. Evening presentations include children's activities focused on rocketry, astronomy and stargazing; a 7 p.m. talk on combating sky pollution, and "More Earths Than YouCan Count" at 8 p.m., a talk on the search for habitable planets outside our solar system presented by Dr. Jan Dabrowski, dean of the College of Arts and Sciences at Marylhurst University. Campsites are available. Prineville Reservoir State Park is located 16 miles southeast of Prineville on Southeast Juniper Canyon Road. — From staff reports

s

.;.'p4.'"

relief of her interviewer-

as she hiked a North Idaho ;'4$ „

trail last week. "The difference between me and the thru-hikers

8-.'. P

who have a fast pace is that I walked 3 mph all day and into every night, averaging 5 hours of sleep, without a

s

rest day." For two months! That's how Anderson,

a Photos by Mark Morical/The Bulletin

The Middle Fork of the Willnmotto River flows through the Willametto National Forest near Oakridgo.

, ci-

r I.

e

- t'W''C

32, beat the unsupported backpacking speed record on the Pacific Crest Trail by four days. Starting June 8, 2013, at the U.S-Mexico

border, the Bellingham, Wash., hiker averaged nearly 44 miles a day gobbling up nearly 2,700 miles along the PCT to arrive at

the Canada border in 60 days, 17 hours, 12 minutes. "Once I realized this was

not a backpacking trips

r'

1

"ll

1

that it was all about pain

and suffering — it was easier to cope," she said. Anderson, who works

s

at the food co-op in Mount Vernon, has no current

plans to set another record of any kind. She says she's content running 30- to 100-mile ultra-marathons

Navigating the Middle Fork Trail eThe MiddleFork ofthe Wilamette Trail is anarrow, remotetrack of sheerbeauty Editorsnote: Mountain Bike Trail Guide, by Bulletin sports and outdoors writer Mark Morical, features various trails in Central

area for its mountain bike trails. Most of them ride

ery, the river and the trail

Oregon and beyond. The trail guide appears in Outdoors on

the Alpine Trail, a fast and furious downhill ride just

its e lf, which features impossibl y narrow singletrack cut-

northwest of this community of about 3,700 residents, a former mill town that has long billed itself as a destina-

t i n g through the dark, heavy

alternating Wednesdays through the riding season. OAKRIDGE — This trail just might redefine the term

"singletrack." Barely half a foot wide in certain places, the 30-milelong strip of dirt known

MARK ' -) g~ MORICAL coming accessible, so it might seem silly to seek mountain

through green meadows, moss-covered Douglas fir trees and numerous creeks. For mountain bikers looking for an experience of true isolation and adventure, the Middle Fork is not to be ignored. In Central Oregon, the snow at higher elevations is rapidly melting, and more and more singletrack is be-

bike trails elsewhere. But I was ready for some-

thing different, and Oakridge was calling my name. The mountain-biking mecca about 40 miles southeast of Eugene — and about 100

miles from Bend — offers a refreshing change of pace from the High Desert. Out-of-towners, and out-of-

staters, flock to the Oakridge

I was awed by the green-

canopy of the Willamette Natio n al Forest — with the s p a r k ling Willamette River

tion for outdoor recreation as a constant backdrop. opportunities. The Middle Fork of the - -- -- - -- -- -------------------------- Willamette is not Without an

as the Middle Fork of the Willamette River Trail cuts

-

-

-

-

-

extra vehicle ~ S e e video footage and driver to ~ f r om the trail at: bondbnllotin.com/middlofork shuttle my bikeandme -

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

to the top of the trail, I was

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

the murky Willamette River that

flows through Eugeneand

Portl a nd. The Middle Fork

wary of the long, 6-mile climb springs from the ground near up doubletrack to reach the Ti m p anogas Lake, some 43 north end of the Alpine Trail. m i les southeast of Oakridge. So I drove south of Oakridge A t about 5,000 feet in elevapast Hills Creek Lake to the t i o n, Timpanogas marks the northwestern terminus of the Middle Fork Trail at Sand

s o u theast terminus of the Middl e Fork Trail, and its

Prairie Campground, about a highest point. 2-hour trip from Bend.

GARY

~5

LE WI S

On the celestial equator, the

blue-whites and red supergiants, the stars that make up

Gary Lewis/ For The Bulletin

for Metallica. Hetfield is to be

Daryl Sutton, from loft, Jason Elamand Gary Collison prepare for a

the narrator in an upcoming History Channel series called

climb up and away from the beach on an October hunt.

"The Hunt."

She's already proved herself to herself — hiking through obesity, fear of the dark, self-doubt, a marriage and the triple crown of the USA's long-distance trails. She startedfrom scratch

12 years ago. "Never in my dreams did I imagine setting a record of any kind, much less an athletic record," she said,

noting that she grew up in a relatively inactive Michigan family. "I weighed 200 pounds when I graduated from high school." SeePCT/D3

u n er

Alaska Department of Fish &

hunt is difficult and the suc-

Game, in which 496 tags are awarded through a lottery system. The Kodiak bruin's co-exis-

cess rate is low. A hunter with an experi-

tence with humans is nothing

ting one doesn't guarantee an opportunity for a shot. Most glimpses of game on Kodiak (I've hunted deer there twice) are fleeting in heavy cover.

enced guide may not even see a bear on a 10-day hunt. Spot-

field, who has hunted Every hunt starts at the bears, will tell the story H U NTING beach, and the terrain of the men and women defeats a lot of hunters who sleep with one eye open, before they start. with the knowledge that any I thought of Kodiak again moment theycould become when I answered the phone the hunted. last week. It was a guy from By the comments posted Portland, a salmon and steelonline at the frayed ends of head fisherman, hungry for sanity, it appears a lot of hua new challenge. He wanted mans think the rock star is to become a hunter. He asked some kind of monster. what my price was for guidA common refrain is "anying him on his first big-game

"Twice a year," the channel's press release began, "on the rugged island of Kodiak, Alaska, a select group of hunt-

the elements and the largest

Greek saw a hunter in Orion.

land predator on Earth — the Kodiak brown bear."

ers head into the wilderness for the ultimate test against

the Lakota on the plains, as

And the memory remains. "The Hunt" will take the viewer back in time to the natives who hunted brown

well as the Hungarian and the

bears for food and hides. Then gun." This is so far from the

The Alutiiq on Kodiak and

— Heather Anderson

of cognition. Even in environments with a lot ofbears, the

ment. The 50-year-old Het-

about James Hetfield, lead vocalist and rhythm guitarist

pain and suffering — it was easier to cope,"

truth it reveals a pitiable lack

hunt. rector for KTWS 98.3 FM, Ron Alvarez, sent me a story

that it was all about

through the centuries to today's hunts regulated by the

known to various cultures to representthehunterand the My friend, program di-

"Once l realized this was not a backpacking trip-

the series will fast forward

short of one of the most successful conservation stories in scientific wildlife manage-

the constellation Orion, are

and disappearing into the wilderness regularly to climb peaks and hash out obscenemileageswith friends.

SeeMiddle Fork/D3

econse a iono e

Summer trail access is improving eachweek as the weather warms and the snowline rises. Snowline ranges between 5,000 and

SeeTrails /D3

"I'm not a particularly fast walker," Heather An-

derson said — much to the

With ChrisSnbo

blowdown approaching the snowline on higher elevation trails. Phil's area trails are snow-free with increasing snow above5,300 feet. Phil's trailhead gate is closed until further notice. Jefferson Lake Trail has beencleared for at least two miles with more volunteers planning maintenance on the trails the first week of June. Hikers should be awarethere is still dense brush and blowdown beyond the two-mile mark. Biking is permitted uphill only on North Fork Trail when snow-free through Metolius-Windigo Trail.

The Spokesman-Review

Hhg .

TRAIL UPDATE

6,200 feet with some

By Rich landers

one could kill a bear with a

hunt. See Kodink/D5


D2

TH E BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, MAY 28, 2014

• We want to see your photos for the next special theme of Well shot! — "psyched about summer" — to run in the Outdoors section. Submit your best work atbendbulletin.com/summer2014 and we'll pick the best for publication. • Email other good photos of the great outdoors toreatierphotos©bendbulletin.comandtell us a bit about where and whenyou took them. All entries will appear online, and we'll choose the best for publication in print. Submission requirements: Include as much detail as possible — when and where you took it, and any special technique used — as well as your name, hometown and phone number. Photos must be high resolution (at least 6 inches wide and 300 dpi) and cannot be altered.

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WEDNESDAY, MAY 28, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

D3

FISHING REPORT For the water report, turn each day to the weather page, today on B6 Here is the weekly fishing report for selected areas in andaround Central Oregon, provided by fisheries biologists for the Oregon Department of Fish andWildlife. This report was last updatedTuesday. ANTELOPE FLATRESERVOIR: Fishing has been fair dueto the turbid water. Usingscent or lots of flash will help thefish find your offering. The majority of the fish range from12- to 14-inches long. BENDPINENURSERYPOND:Stocked last week with rainbow trout. Current regulations allow for a limit of two fish perday,8-inch minimum length. Fishing should be fair for the nextfew weeks. BIG LAVA LAKE:Fishing has beengood with reports of decent-size rainbow trout being caught. CLEARLAKE:Clear Lake hasbeenstocked and

should be agreat place tocatch recently stocked legals, trophies andhold-overs. CRANE PRAIRIE RESERVOIR: Fishing has been good for rainbowand brooktrout. Closed from one hourafter sunset until one hour before sunrise. CROOKEDRIVER BELOW BOWMAN DAM: Keep aneyeon the gaugeto seeif theflow is being adjusted. The fishing is usually poor until the flow hashadafew days to stabilize. Theuse ofbait isallowed throughOct.31. Pleasebe mindful to not trampleany redds. EAST LAKE: Scheduled to bestocked with rainbowtrout this week.Catch-and-releasefor non-adipose fin-clipped rainbow trout. FALL RIVER: Theriver belowthe falls opened for fishing Saturday. Norecent fishing reports. Restricted to fly fishing only withbarbless hooks.

LAKEBILLYCHINOOK:Anglers are still reporting easy limits of kokaneethroughout the reservoir. Bull trout fishing hasbeenfair with anglers mostly catching undersizedfish. NORTHTWIN: Fishing hasbeenfair with moderate pressure onthe weekends. OCHOCO CREEKUPSTREAM TO OCHOCO DAM:Angling is restricted to artificial flies and lures; two trout perdaywith an8-inch minimum length. Trout over 20inches areconsidered steelheadandmust be released unharmed. OCHOCO RESERVOIR: Troutanglers are reporting slow fishing. Recentsampling indicates the crappieandbassare staging in the shallow coves. ODELLLAKE:Fishinghasbeen goodwith decentsiz ekokaneebeingcaught.Thereisa catch limit of 25 kokaneeper day(nosize limits) in addition to other trout species.Trout daily catch limit may includeonly onelaketrout, 30-

inch minimum length. PAULINA LAKE:Scheduled to be stockedwith rainbowtrout this week.Catch-and-releaseon non-adiposefin-clippedrainbowtrout. Checkon current accessibility as winter conditions may still exist. PINE HOLLOW RESERVOIR: Thereservoir is warming andhasbeenstocked. PRINEVILLE RESERVOIR:Fishing has been slow. PRINEVILLE YOUTHFISHINGPOND:Fishing should be goodfor trout, and the bassshould be more active asthe water warms. ROCKCREEKRESERVOIR:Thereservoirhas beenstocked andshouldbeagreatplaceto go this spring andcatch rainbow trout. Irrigation withdrawals will be lowering water levelsas summer approaches,which might shut off the fishing.

SHEVLINYOUTHFISHING POND:Stocked with rainbow trout this week.Fishing should be good for the nextfew weeks.Twotrout perday, 8-inch minimum length. Fishing restricted to anglers17and younger. SOUTHTWIN LAKE:Fishing has beenfair with decent-size rainbow trout being caught. SUTTLELAKE:Fishing has beenfair for kokaneeand should improvewith warmer weather. TAYLOR LAKE:Taylor hasbeenstocked and there should begood fishing for rainbows. There

has alsobeensomeexcessadultsteelheadfrom the Hood Riverstocked in Taylor. WICKIUPRESERVOIR:Fishing has beenfair. There is acatch limit of 25 kokanee per day(no size limits) in addition to other troutspecies. Closed from onehourafter sunset until one hour before sunrise.

age and mail before she left. and her full-blooded AnishiRough start Continued from D1 naabeg grandmother. "The big eye-opener wasn't Her epiphany came that Although she would later summer after she landed a just learning that I could do avoid snow in the Sierras by job at Grand Canyon National long-distance hiking, but that I opting for a late June 8 start, Park. was pretty good at it," she said. she paid a price during the ini"I fell in love with the trails," That hike — and shedding tial 40- to 50-mile days in the she said. "I had never hiked 70 pounds that year — was her California desert, packing up before." new beginning. to six liters of water as temperaOn the AT, she learned about tures soared. After running Change ofheart the Pacific Crest Trail. In 2004, out of water and relying on a In college she majored in re- she hiked it with a partner in source that turned out to be a ligious studies and minored in a normal time of about four mud hole, she wandered two creative writing. "I wanted to months. more hours in 115 degrees to "On that trip, I crossed paths find another. be a Christian missionary," she "Too close," she said. "That said. "I had my sights on Mon- with David Horton, who was golia until I realized I was no on his way to setting a support- almost did me in." good at proselytizing." ed PCT speed record," she said. Confidence that she could Meantime, her introduction "I'd never even thought about keep up the record pace was to hiking had been taking root such a thing. I began to wonder elusive until she scaled the last and was ready to blossom into if I could do it." of five major passes ranging to another sort of mission. Hooked on the freedom of 13,200 feet in the Sierra Nevada "The day after I graduat- trails, she completed long-dis- Range intwo 40-mile days. "At 1,000 miles I realized I ed from college in 2003, my tance hiking's Triple Crown by f riends dropped me off i n bagging the 3,000-mile Conti- could do it," she said. "But it Georgia at the beginning of nental Divide Trail in 2006. was goingto hurt." the Appalachian Trail," she By 2013, the girl who had Huge blisters formed on her said. "I said goodbye and took never dreamed of an athletic heels in the desert and never off on my own for four months achievement became the first had a chance to heal. "They hiking to Maine. Most people woman to take a serious stab at were tangerine-size beauties," prepare for something like the the PCT speed record. she said. "Didn't dear up for "I had the advantage of hav- two months after the hike." AT, but I had neverbackpacked overnight. ing done the PCT on a normal Most hikers offered encour"At the first resupply oppor- trip, enjoying the social part agement,butspeed hikers can tunity, I had to go shopping. of it and learning the route," expect negative vibes. Anish I had to shiver under a space she said. "It was the driest has been criticized for makblanket for a week to realize I year in California since 1977. ing a race out of backpacking, needed a sleepingbag." That meant snow-free hiking a sport most people associate Her empty cache of back- through the High Sierra." with enjoying the scenery, packing experience started She planned for months us- smelling the roses and comfilling as she shared the miles ing spreadsheets to map out muning with nature. "Actually, I w a s g etting with experienced thru-hikers. the mileages she would need to She took on the trail name An- make, including side trips for heaping helpings of almost evish (pronounced "ah-NISH"), to the resupply boxes she'd pack- erything a backpacker seeks

except sitting around in camp," Nevertheless, her plan to she said, pointing to her iPhone hike 50-mile days and blow and a single photo that includ- through Oregon in nine days ed about three dozen moun- pushedher limits. She hadtroutain goats in the Goat Rocks ble ~ g e n ough food to eat. Wilderness. She bought extra food at stores, Night hiking was one of the inhaled Oreos smothered in fearsshehadto overcome. "I've congealed coconut oil, and always been a scaredy-cat," she sucked down a bag of tuna at said. "But I couldn't reach my night for protein. She'd elevate goal without continuing after her legs on a pack at night to dark. There simply weren't reduce the swelling in her feet, enough daylight hours. but she wasn't getting enough "Night hiking grew on me. hours in the sack for her body After I got over the initial shock to recover. "I was falling asleep on of walking by four rattlesnakes and stepping over a tarantula in the trail, thinking this was rithe desert, I realized night hik- diculous to be this tired and ing was cooler, peaceful and I be barely halfway," she said. used more senses. The sounds "The challenge was becomand smells were different." ing as much mental as it was Courage she never knew she physical." had emerged one night in OreShe got a boost by discovgon. "It was 11 p.m. and I was ering she'dbecome famous. trying to get in another couple "I came across a Boy Scout miles when I lifted my head and troop," she recalled. They asked the light shined on the eyes of a if Iwas Anish. WhenI saidyes, cougar," she said. "It was right they were like the paparazzi. there, way too close. I reacted L onesomeness ate at h e r purely out of instinct. I barked. psyche, but being alone had its It was a very tough, don't-mess- advantages. with-me bark. "I cried a lot, especially in the "That cougar w a s o u t ta mornings or when a resupply

Middle Fork

Recreation Trail in 2007, the Middle Fork of the Willamette Trail was built in the late 1980s

hard to achieve on the climb to

and earl y'90s asamultipurpose trail. It is also popular among hikers andhorsebackriders. The Middle Fork Trail is

it back to Sand Prairie, I had

honor her Great Lakes heritage

Continued from D1 The first 4 miles of the trail

from Timpanogas are steep, extremely technical, expert-only sections where the trail de-

scends sharply. Fortunately, many trailheads and campgrounds are located along Forest Service Road21, whichruns south and east from Oakridge. Bikers can opt for an out-and-

back ride from Sand Prairie Campground, located at about 2,000 feet in elevation, or shut-

tle up to a starting point of their choosing. My plan was for an out-andback ride from Sand Prairie, hopingtoreach an area called Campers Flat. That would cov-

er only about athird of the trail, but I knew it would still make

for a complete day in the saddle. I started out riding through areas of long, green grass, along a mostly flat stretch of trail. The river went in and

out of my view, and I dimbed high above it in certain spots and rode right along side it in others.

I splashed through several creeks and puddles, as recent rain made forsome areas of

Continued from D3 Bridge CreekTrail is hiking only. South Forktrail to Swampy has light blowdownandmoderate snow.Construction is still underway onthe Sunriver paved path. Skyliner is still closed with limited parking alongthe roadway. A roadproject is expected to end in afew weeks. Tumalo CreekandMrazek Trails out of Shevlin Parkare snow free up to5,300 feet with some reported blowdown. Deschutes River trails and trailheads are ingood condition. Wanoga Mountain BikeTrails are blocked bypatchysnow above 5,500feet. SwampyLake is under sectional snow. Metolius-Windigo Trail is 60 percent blocked bysnowwith limited trail clearing happening at lower elevations. HorseButte trails are in mostly goodcondition with snow at6,000feet toward Newberry Caldera. In ThreeS>stersW>lderness, Deer Lake,WinopeeLake, Lucky LakeandSix Lakes are accessible. SouthSister Climbers trail is under 3to12 feet of snowandthe route is not marked for snowtravel. In Sisters RangerDistrict, Black Butte Trail from theroad to the trailhead issnow-free with patchy snow onthe summit. Metolius River,Peterson Ridge, Suttle LakeandLakeCreektrails are in fair to goodcondition. CascadeLakesis openfrom Dutchman tothe north endof Elk Lake, but recreation sites are blocked bysnow andthere is no parking availablealong that stretch of highway.McKenzie Pass is still closeddueto spring plowing. It is scheduled toreopen June15. Tumalo FallsRoadis opento

didn't work out right and I'd

there."

By Oregon, her body was

lose hours and think my goal was out of reach," she said. "I'd down like her pack of any un- have my little pity-fests, and essential weight. She was a cal- then get over it. in peak trail condition, pared ories-in, miles-out, trail-termi-

nating monster in a sun dress. "The alarm on my watch would chime every hour to re-

mind me to reach into my pack for 200-to 300-calorie snacks I'd eat on the go," she said.

"I've learned that I n e ed wilderness to be whole. I take strength from it.

"And like I told my mom,

don't worry. When I'm on a trail like the PCT, I'm with

family."

Campers Flat. By the time I finally made

been cyding for 4'/2 hours. I was thoroughly taxed, but not overly so, which is always a somewhat similar to the North welcome feeling after a long Umpqua River Trail and the mountain bike ride. McKenzie River Trail, other For those lookingto skip some National Recreation Trails in oftheuphill, OregonAdventures western Oregon, but the Mid- in Oakridge (oregon-advendle Fork sees far less use. And tures.com) offers shuttles and I found it less punishing than guides along the hundreds of Mark Morical/The Bulletin the McKenzie Trail, which in- miles of singletrack in the area, One of several creek crossings along the trail. cludes more climbs and techni- induding the Middle Fork and cal lava-rock sections. But the Alpine trails. The company also amount of physical suffering hosts its annual Mountain Bike high water and mud. Most of thick forest of mixed conifer, endured depends on how much Oregon Festivals in Oakridge, the creeks I could ride direct- bigleaf maple and cottonwood, of the trail one chooses to ride. scheduled this year for July 18ly through, but I was forced Iwas forced to take on several I eagerly turned around 20 and Aug. 15-17. to wade across some of them. steep dimbs, but nothing im- when I reached Campers Flat I plan to return to Oakridge Late May is still relatively early possibly grueling. after about 2'/2 hours of riding. to ride the Alpine Trail later in the season to ride the MidThe Middle Fork Trail also The ride on the way back to this summer, when I might yet dle Fork Trail, as the Greater requires several bridge cross- Sand Prairie was surprising- again be searching for more Oakridge Area Trail Stewards ings over creeks or the Willa- ly fast, as I did not realize how variety on the western flank of (GOATS) typically begin trail mette itself. Most of the bridges much I was actually ascending the Cascades. — Reporter: 541-383-0318, dearingand maintenance on are narrow, forcing bikers to on the way out. the path in June. carry their bikes or put them Cruising back through the mmorical@bendbulletin.com This made an already prim- up on wheelies in front of them creeks and alongside the giant itive trail seem even more so, during the walk across. Riders trees was a blast. Despite the but I welcomed the added sense should negotiate the bridges rugged nature of the trail, it is of isolation, and I encountered with caution. One time, I could fairly smooth, save for a few no significant obstructions feelthebridge swayingbeneath brief areas of river rock. I was along the way. me as I walked across. able to establish a continuous 7%1SW10th • Redmand • (541) 5484616 As I pedaled deeper into the Designated as a National rhythm to the ride that I found www.redmondwindowtreats.com

the trailhead, with North Fork

Trail snow-free for thefirst1'/4 miles. Road 21into Newberry Caldera is openbutaccess to Paulina Peak is closed until snow melts off. There is limited parking, campgroundandboat ramp access inthat area.Road 16, from UpperThreeCreekto Three CreeksLake,and Road 370through Roads4601 and16 are closed. DutchmanSno-park is in marginal condition, with afew feet of snow inthe flat and no maintenance.

' NQRTHWEsT CROSSING Aauard-aeinning neighborhood on Bend's

REDN OND

INDOW TREAT%

Oakridge

NiddleForkofthe WillametteRiver Trail

Middle ForkPV ilamette River To Eugene

Kitson Ridge

Hills Creek Reservoir

AsandPrairie

Trails

Nililile Fork

imiiamettB Rlvgr Trall

Campground Diamond Peak Wilderness

Warner Mountain

Diamond Peak Lighthouse Rock Middle Fork Willamefte River

Directions:FromOakridge, travel east onstate Highway58 for 2 miles to Kitson Springs County Road.Turnright and proceed half a mile toForest Service Road21. Turn right and follow for 11 miles toSand Prairie Campground.Trail can be ridden as anout-and-back from the campground, or bikers can shuttle up to manyotheraccess points along thetrail. Trail features:Narrow singletrack cutting through lush,

green forest of mixedconifer, cottonwood andbigleaf maple along the MiddleFork of the Willamette River. Several creek crossings add tothecharacter of the trail. Thetrail is relatively flat, but the riding on theuppermost 4 miles is extremely steep and technical. Length:Total length of the trail — from TimpanogasLaketo Sand Prairie Campground —is about 30 miles. Thetrail can beaccessedfrom manypoints along Forest Service Road21 for shorter rides. Rating:Aerobically intermediate and technically intermediate, depending onlength of ride.

teestside. www.northwestcrossing.com

.

II

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Summit

Lakeg

p~~ g

rolO

kafQf Das"

w idgi ~ < June15th,2014

Timpanogas Cam Greg Cross / The Bulletin

www.benddash.com

G OL F C L U B

18707 SW Century r . , e n www,wid i,com (541) 382-4449

ek


D4

TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, MAY 28, 2014

UTDOORS CYCLING TOUR DESCHUTES:Cancersurvivors benefit bike ride and run; Saturday, July12, 6 a.m. to 4 p.m.; this nonprofit event benefits Central Oregon children and adult cancer survivors; register online at Tourdeschutes.org.

CLIMBING ROCK MONKEYS TUESDAYS OR THURSDAYS:Beginner rock climbing class for kids ages 7 to 12; $75 to $95 per month, includes gym membership; throughJune;4 to 5:15 p.m.;Bend RockGym; 541388-6764; info©bendrockgym.com. YOUTH ROCKCLIMBING MONDAYS AND WEDNESDAYS:Designed for intermediate to advanced climbers looking to hone their skills; $95 to $110 per month, includes gym membership; through June; 4 to 5:30 p.m.; Bend Rock Gym; 541388-6764; info©bendrockgym.com.

CYCLING SUMMER MOUNTAINBIKING PROGRAM:TheM t.Bachelor Sports Education Foundation will hold the sessions for two weeks each in June, July, and August; call 541-388-0002, email mbsefO mbsef.org, or visit www.mbsef.org.

FISHING CENTRALOREGONBASSCLUB:

New memberswelcome;7-9 p.m.; meets on the first Tuesday of each month; Abby's Pizza, Redmond; www.cobc.us. DESCHUTESCHAPTEROFTROUT UNLIMITED:For members to meet and greet and discuss what the chapter is up to; 6 p.m.; meets on the first Monday of each month; Oregon Natural Desert Association

END

Email events at least 10 days before publication to communitylifeibendbulletin.com, or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0351.

offices, Bend; 541-306-4509, professional tracker to learn how to communications@deschutestu.org, identify and interpret tracks, signs www.deschutestu.org. and scat of the animals in Central Oregon; 8a.m. to noon;two or more BEND CASTINGCLUB: Agroup walks per month; $35; 541-633of fly anglers from around Central 7045; dave@wildernesstracking. Oregon who are trying to improve com, wildernesstracking.com. their casting technique; 6-8 p.m.; club meets on the fourth Wednesday THE BENDCHAPTEROFTHE of each month; location TBA; 541OREGON HUNTER'SASSOCIATION: 306-4509 or bendcastingclub© 7p.m. ;meetsthesecond gmail.com. W ednesday ofeach month;King Buffet, Bend;ohabend.webs.com. THE SUNRIVERANGLERSCLUB: 7 p.m.; meets on the third Thursday of THE OCHOCO CHAPTER OFTHE eachmonth; Sunriver Homeowners OREGON HUNTER'SASSOCIATION: Aquatic 8 Recreation Center; www. 7 p.m.; meets the first Tuesday of sunriveranglers.org. each month; Prineville Fire Hall; 541-447-5029. THE CENTRALOREGON FLYFISHERSCLUB:7 p.m .;m eets THE REDMONDCHAPTEROFTHE on the third Wednesday of each OREGON HUNTER'SASSOCIATION: month; Bend Senior Center; www. 7 p.m.; meets the third Tuesday of coflyfishers.org. each month; Redmond VFWHall.

HIKING

MISCELLANEOUS

METOLIUSPRESERVE WANDER: June 4, from10 to11:30 a.m., wander the norther portion of the Metolius Preserve to learn about old-growth ponderosa pine forest and the white-headed woodpeckers that depend on them; visit Lake Creek and hear how native salmon are returning to the creek; free; online registration required at www.deschuteslandtrust.org/ events;541-330-0017;eventO deschuteslandtrust.org. DESCHUTESLANDTRUST WALKS + HIKES:Led by skilled volunteer naturalists, these outings explore new hiking trails, observe migrating songbirds, and take in spring wildflowers; all walks and hikes are free; registration available at www. deschuteslandtrust.org/events.

YOUTH ANDFAMILY OUTDOOR DAY:Saturday, May 31, from 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. at Cyrus Ranch, 68395 Cloverdale Road, Sisters; activities include archery, sporting clays, camping essentials, wilderness survival, and more; $10 per person; call 541-480-7323 or visit www.ohabend.webs.com.

PADDLING KAYAKROLLSESSIONS: Noninstructed sessions at indoor pool; 4:05-6 p.m.; runs through the end of May; $12 for in-district residents, $16 otherwise; Juniper Swim 8 Fitness Center, Bend; register at bendparksandrec.org or call 541-389-7665.

SHOOTING

HUNTING

COSSA KIDS:Coaches are on hand to assist children; rifles, ammo, ear and eye protection are provided; parent or guardian must sign in

LEARN THEART OFTRACKING ANIMALS:Guided walks and workshops with a certified

for each child; fee for each child is $10; 10 a.m.; third Saturday of each month; Central Oregon Shooting Sports Association range, milepost 24, U.S. Highway 20, Bend; Don Thomas, 541-389-8284. PINE MOUNTAINPOSSE: Cowboy action shooting club; second Sunday of each month; Central Oregon Shooting Sports Association range, milepost 24, U.S. Highway 20, east of Bend; 541-3188199,www.pinemountainposse.

FLY-TYING CORNER

com. HORSE RIDGEPISTOLEROS: Cowboy action shooting with pistols, rifles and shotguns; 10 a.m.; first and third Sunday of each month; Central Oregon Shooting Sports Association range, milepost 24, U.S. Highway 20, east of Bend; 541-408-7027 or www.hrp-sass. com. Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin

SNOW SPORTS

Granato's Chubby ET Golden, courtesy Rainy's Flies

ALPINESKIING YOUTH CAMP: The Mt. Bachelor Sports Education Foundation is holding an alpine skiing camp foryouth at Mt. Bachelor, June13-20; for more information, call 541-388-0002, email mbsef©mbsef.org, or visit www.mbsef.org. NORDICSKIING YOUTH CAMPS: The Mt. Bachelor Sports Education Foundation is holding a Fire and Ice nordic camp for youth, June 13-18; call 541-388-0002, email mbsefO mbsef.org, or visit www.mbsef.org. FREERIDESKIAND SNOWBOARD YOUTH CAMP:The Mt. Bachelor Sports Education Foundation is holding a camp for youth, June 13-21; call 541-388-0002, email mbsef©mbsef.org, or visit www. mbsef.org.

As the water warms, the big nymphs crawl toward shore to perch in the tall grass and in the trees. When the wind blows, the bugs can fall in. And the trout are waiting. Both the golden stones and the salmonflies are on the menu. One stretch of the river might have more golden stones while around the corner, the larger salmonfly is the bug the big rainbows want. It pays to bring various sizes in both flavors. When a fish snubs a No. 6, tie on a smaller version of the same fly. With its long rubber legs, foam body, and sparkle, Granato's Chubby ETGolden has the right profile and it will keep floating even after a dozen fish. Try it when the fish are keying on goldens. Tie this pattern with tan thread on a No.8-10 2XL dry-fly hook. Wrap the underbody with a golden UVsparkle dubbing. Trim 2 millimeters of tan craft foam to shape and secure with dubbed thread. Tie in an underwing of root beer Krystal Flash and a wing of calf tail or substitute. Tie in root beer rubber legs then wrap two grizzly hackles and tie off behind the head. Trim hackle. Finish with two small stick-on red eyes. — Gary Leyyis, For TheBulletin

The Bm11etin r U M a g a mim,e 8r Rohh e r aton Po r d, Pr e atemt 0

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WINNERS will be announced in The Bulletin's tt MAGAZINE alOng With SOme OfOUI'faVOrite PhatO PICS. Look fOr yOur neXt

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WIN THIS 6RKÃD PRIZE • A $500 GIFT CERTIFICATE YO THE GREAT WO L F L ODGE IN CFNYRALIA, WASHINGTO N • USE OF A 2014 FORD ESCAPE FOR 3 DAYS • A $100 GAS CARD A $1,400 value. Courtesy of ROBBERSON FORD. $500 gift certificate equals the expense of two nights lodging and water park passes for four. Winner is responsible for any additional taxes or fees. Prize has no cash value. Must be 21 or older to win. Visit www.bendbulletin.com/familyphotocontest for complete rules.

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WEDNESDAY, MAY 28, 2014 • T HE BULLETIN D 5

i M, 0

0 ua

SO a IIn a e

• With humble beginnings and relatively new origins, discgolf hasbeenamong the fastest-growing sports in thenation

ing with the city of Spokane Valley and the city's mas-

4

r$

ter plan to establish another

r

course in the valley. For more information on Disc Golf Uprising and the cool things they're innovating, including expanding Camp

ha

)t I .r !

By John Hennessy

Sichuan Cafe, started playing target or "object" golf with his SPOKANE, Wash. — It has high school friends in Santa the sound of pure silver — a Cruz, Calif., in 1971. They foldisc golfer's driver finding lowed Wham-0's maxim and chains, holing out. Or it could invented games, throwing The Spokesman-Review

be a putter. The farther it flies,

discs at wooden posts with

the louder the sound. It's a familiar clang at High Bridge, Downriver Disc Golf Course in Sekani. There, under sunshine, the shimmering rustle of chains, followed by a report of cheers, echoes perpetually among the pines and stone ridges. Disc golf. The rules can be inferred from its name, as it

high and low marks that de-

shares many similarities with

the traditional game of golf. One major difference exists: It is perhaps the fastest-growing sport in the nation. According to a survey put out by Infinite Discs in Jan-

Sekani's picturesque course,

lookforthem on Facebook.

Etiquette ir

pects of the sport that make it

ones with ideas.

unique from any other, including the environment in which

"By 1978 some friends of

friends were announcing a Frisbee golf tournament up

it resides.

SDGA, Disc Golf Uprising and disc golf players strive to

in the hills above Corolitas," Gordy said. "A little town east of W atsonville, C a lifornia.

remember simple etiquette,

The first thing we realized was that the other players were throwing these smaller

KathyPlonka ITheSpokesman-Review

and far denser discs than we

Disc golfer Dave Muir of Post Falls, Idaho, plays on the course at Sekani in Spokane, Wash. In the

were and were already at the next dimension in disc golf in terms of technology." In 1983, Dave Dunipace sought to meet the developing equipment needs of players. He founded Innova Discs and created "the Eagle," what In-

past eight years, the number of disc golf courses across the nation has doubled.

Filling the void

can speak to the exponential Gordy and his wife, Jaymie, attendance at local courses. moved to Spokane in 1994. "We couldn't find any disc Those who haven't, who might view the sport as simply a golf or frolf (Frisbee golf) anymash-up of rules employing where in town," he said. "You a cheap toy from childhood, couldn't (even) find someone may want to reconsider. who wanted to go throw discs

The beginning In 1964, California-based

toy company Wham-0 patented a 119-gram plastic flying

Disc golf brings people out for different reasons. All players should remember the as-

fined the target area. But they weren't the only

Denver and John Dierdorff,

uary, nearly 50 percent of who were both instrumental the 1,421 disc golfers polled in helping move our concept nationwide have been playforward and eventually aping for two years or less proach the parks department (check out t heir r esearch nova calls the world's first disc about formalizing the course at infinitediscs.com/blog / designed specifically for the with the city." the-state-of-disc-golf-growth/). sport of disc golf. The Eagle They called themselves the The number of courses in still serves as a favorite among Spokane Disc Golf Associthe U.S. has doubled in the disc golfers today. ation, to help be taken more past eight years. Anyone who seriously. They received perhas tried the sport in Spokane

mission to outfit the course with baskets, and in 2001, disc

ilar to the break in a baseball pitcher's wrist right before releasing the ball. Snap, among other techniques, gives a disc

Crum's favorite part about

and from Perrewe. There are no green fees at

disc golf is something that

golfer's throw distance and

transcends the sport. "You can always learn to do better," he said. "At the next

speed.

hole, there's always hope, to do

public courses, and most pri-

vate courses ask only for a minimal fiscal contribution, oftenper car (private coursChoosing a disc es such as Four Mound and Disc golf engineers employ Stimpi's Ridge). A great online a complex set of equations, resource is www.dgcourserwhich would appear like hi- eview.com, where you can eroglyphics to most of us, to search for courses nationwide determinethe speed, accuracy

golf had officially arrived in Spokane. "Wobbly" Bob P errewe, m embership secretary o f

and flight path of a particular disc. Too fast a disc in amateur hands will fade severely, without distance, right off the tee, SDGA, o r g anizes t o u rna- while other discs with a lowments forthe Spokane area, er speed and higher glide will at trees." including weekly and profes- travel farther and straighter. He and his wife would take sional contests. He is also the Most novice players gravtheir kids for a walk down by first person most beginner itate toward Innova's Valkythe river below the golf course players meet when deciding rie or Sidewinder for a driver, a t D o w nriver, t o s s d i s cs which disc is best. For touraround among themselves. naments and events, he carts

such practices as keeping groups at five players or fewer, or if playing within a larger group, to allow smaller groups to play through. Treat the park like you would any wild area. Respect all nature. And most important, "Pack your trash!"

Golf Course and Pro Shop,

then a Roc or Discraft's Buzz

better."

In disc golf, after a hole is done and you've picked up your discs and tallied your throws, a new tee box awaits, and past it, a labyrinth of trees,

bushes of rocky mountain juas well as get all the info you nipers. A dirt path winds beneed per directions and tee tween them. times. A new goal sits blurred Jeff "Papa" Crum, direc- in the distance, a silver lintor of Disc Golf Uprising and ing hemmed in yellow steel. co-designer of t h e C amp Chains wait to ignite and kinSekani Jamboree course, dle hope. spent 50 hours simply walking by ZIP code and read reviews,

the terrain of Sekani and es-

tablishing an idea for a 27-hole course. "You have to memorize it,

for midrange. Choosing a putaround bins of discs in the bed ter comes down to simply de- map it, lay it out," Crum said. "It's quite the process." of his truck. He unloads and ciding what feels best. sets up shop at a table, fielding Discs, depending on the Disc Golf Uprising is workquestions from veteran and quality of plastic ("ChampichangtngSmiles on" plastic is a good starting novice players. Denture & Implant Center "The more snap they have, point), vary between $16 and curves. Experiment!" to a tree, the 'Tennis Court' Disc golf was inevitable. hole," Gordy said. "People be- the more advanced disc they $22 apiece and can be found Gordy Crafts, treasurer of gan leaving notes there asking can use," Perrewe said. easily at The General Store, Call 541-388-4444 "Snap" is the last fulcrum Sunset Grocery on Sunset the Spokane Disc Golf Asso- how we could all hook up and for $100 OFF ciation and owner of Gordy's play. That's how we met Jason in a disc golfer's throw, sim- Boulevard, Stimpi Ridge Disc your new denture disc and named it "Frisbee."

"It wasn't too longbefore we Under the disc cover, below thecopyright,read thephrase: had a 'bucket' course going "Play catch. Invent games. To down by the river which infly, flip away backhand. Flat cluded one standard Disc Golf flip flies straight. Tilted flip Association basket chained

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EndsSaturdayMay31st Entire lnventory FIXTURES REDUCED

Gary Lewis/ For The Bulletin

At the Central Oregon Shooting Sports Association range, Mark Fero watches as Callan Valentine

Was Now

shoots through a box of practice rounds in preparation for a first deer hunt two years ago.

Kodiak Continued from D1 "I'm not a guide," I said. That out of the way, I tried to

to shoot before hunting season starts'?" This is the most important

thing to master. If planning a bow hunt, start in May and

coach the 37-year-old into a shoot every day till opening proper way of thinking. day. "Don't try to be a trophy A rifle hunter should go to hunter, that can come later. the range a few times then Learn to be a n e x perience spend a day in the desert hunter." shooting targets at 50 yards This is the time of year and out to 300 and beyond. when a person should begin Two weeks before the opener, thinking about it. We have go back to the range. passed the deadline for the M ake sure the r i fl e h i t s controlled hunt l o t tery, so point of a im, th e bullets some ofthose options are off group in 2 inches or less at the table, but there are still 100 yards. Dry-fire 100 times a lot of opportunities for the to focus on the fundamentals first-timer. of the trigger squeeze. Aim This is a

t r a dition often small, miss small. After that,

passed down g e neration there is much to learn about to generation. When that deer, bear and elk, their habdoesn't happen, it's incum- itat, the w i nd, r egulations, b ent upon t h e h o peful t o ethics and etiquette. It comes find a guide, a mentor or a in time. friend to help him along, to For the beginner, some of become a minor star in the the best opportunities are for constellation. antlerless deer and elk. AnI suggested he hire a guide, other option is to hunt turkeys someone who would teach, in spring and fall. Spring not just take him for a ride in varmint hunts ar e another the truck. good point of entry. Often the "I'm not a real good shot first hunts end without game right now, how important is to process, but e xperience that? Do I have time to learn builds upon experience.

Hillman Key Machine $275. ?? Paint Color Match System 995 . ?? P aint Colorant & 1 G Shaker 725. ? ? Harbil 5 Gal Paint Shaker SOLD L ozier 4 ft Sliding Panels (3) 125. ? ? Screen Cutting Rack 6 5. ? ? PitneyBowes100lbScale 7 5 . ?? Sharp Cash Register 6 5. ? ? Lozier Metal Shelving Units 45 . ?? Fletcher Glass Cutter 895. ??

"Don't try to be a trophy hunter, that

can come later. Learn to be an experience hunter." — Gary Lewis

Kyocera Print, scan, copy 1 , 2 50 .

At the end of most hunts

??

D isplay Racks & Accessories 45. ? ? P 0 S System Bids Nuch More

there isa campfire, sometimes under an open sky. The lights that wink on th e ce-

lestial equator are the same asterism where the Siberian Chukchi and

t h e M e x ican

Seri and so many others saw the hero of the chase. Around the fire, the differ-

A heart felt Thank You to all our loyal customers!

ences between the grandfather and boy, between guide and client, disappear. They are hunters all, at different points in their journeys, all stars fixed in the constellation of the hunter. — Gary Lewis is the host of "Frontier Unlimited" and author of "John Nosier — Going Ballistic," "A Bear Hunter's Guide to the Universe," "Hunting Oregon" and other titles. Contact Le wis at www.GaryLewisOutdoors. com.

O®UT O®F •.

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D6

TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, MAY 28, 2014

ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT

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wi

TV SPOTLIGHT

"Everybody is shocked by it (honesty), which

By David J. Cdblez

drives me to be more honest and forthright. It

Newsday

seems like such an untapped resource in this town. But it's serving me pretty well."

NEW YORK — Comedian Chelsea Handler tells it like it is. Sometimes her blunt-

— Chelsea Handler

ness raises eyebrows, but she prides herself on being direct. Her brutal honesty is what has made this Jersey girl the alpha female she is todayhost of her own TV show on E! ("Chelsea Lately"), stand-up

and I don't want to be respon-

sible for the worst trip of your life." It's a t otally different world.

star and best-selling author.

Newsday caught up with Handler, 39, on a day she was "playing hooky" after her tennis match and just before she was going on a "Breaking Bad" TV binge at her Bel Scott Roth I invision via The Associated Press Air home on a break from With the ending of her contract with E!, Chelsea Handler is looking her "Uganda Be Kidding Me" to branch out in her next venture. stand-up /book tour.

Q

and forthright. It seems like

fer Aniston and Gwyneth Pal-

trow as girlfriends?

A

such an untapped resource in this town. But it's serving me

pretty well.

• the culture of celebrity is so strange. They have good

Women follow you like • a pied piper. Did you have that quality growing up? I've always had a big • personality. I was trickier as a kid. I behaved errati-

cally instead of consistently. I would have tons of friends and

How does your "Ugan• da Be Kidding Me" live then I would have no friends. show parlay with the book of I'd be with the cool girls, then the same name'? the uncool girls. I migrated A lot of the stories I tell from group to group because I • on stage are from the was bored or people got bored book and some of what's going with me. I was very intense. on in my personal life. The one thing you can be guaranteed is Do you think your hon- that the stories are true, even if • esty surprises people? some are horrifying to retell. I think so. Everybody What's it l i k e h aving • is shocked by it, which drivesme to be more honest • Sandra Bullock, Jenni-

Q

A

Q

A

dler's contract ending at E!, people are talking about whether she will follow Stephen Colbert on CBS in the

be the worst trip of your life,

Q

A

It's different, because

attitudes about it. But they

12:35 a.m. slot n ex t

Q

"The next venture for me is

• ing to most men. Some

men are just disgusted with me and think I should have

not going to be filling someone else's shoes," she says. "That's never been appealing my mouth sewn shut. The thing I care the most about is to me." someone who tells the truth ... Then there's the rumor that and obviously they have to be she's possibly going to Netgood-looking . flix, to which she responds:

Q

" Rumors ar e r u m ors. I ' m meeting with tons of different

Are you worried about • turning 40?

people. I'm not even exactly sure what my next step is going to be." Whatever step she takes, one thing i s c lear: Handler wants to do something different.

are all so perfect-looking, so I still feel like I'm a kid, who cares if they are getting • but I ' ve a ccomplished their photograph taken'? They a lot. I have responsibilities, are more cautious as to how even though I behave like a it affects other people. Sandy teenager three nights a week. and I are planning this trip, I can write books and run a and I said, "Listen, Sandy, we TV show, but DVRing is beare going overseas, we are yond my scope of capability. going to walk down the street and visit museums." She said, "I know. I'm preparing my- Next steps self. I'm just saying if the paW ith t h e l a t e-night T V parazzi find us, it's going to landscape shifting and Han-

o rien wantsto ateot ers

"I don't want to sit around and talk about celebrities all the time. I want to take it to the next level," she says. "I want to do the things that in-

terest and move me in a funny, cool way."

MOVIE TIMESTODAY • There may be an additional fee for 3-0and IMAXmovies • Movie times are subject to change after press time. I

Dear Abby: I met the most won-

he gets out of bed to peruse a dat-

but she must come straight home afterward. I'm confused, Abby.

derful man on a dating site. We ing site, you should go with himseemed to hit it off. In fact, we are on your way out the door. What can I do'? falling in love with each other. But Dear Abby: I have a friend, — Something's Not Right he isn't ready for an exclusive re- "Michelle," who is attractive, inDear Something's Not Right: lationship and still wants to date. telligent and works as a teacher's How sad for Chloe. Michelle's reHe gets on the dating sites when assistant in a public school. What lationship with her daughter is I'm asleep in his bed. I can't u nderstand more "smotherhood" than mothI really care for is, she refuses to erhood. It's not healthy for either him, but I don't want go anywhere with- of them. Your friend appears to be DFP,R to pressure him. He out her 33-year-old unable to see Chloe as separate has told me he loves daughter, "Chloe." from herself — which is why she m e, but r i ght n ow They even d r ess wants them to dress like twins he just wants to be alike. and becomes anxious when Chloe friends. He says I should also date, Chloe is pretty and doesn't have is with friends instead of by her but how do you turn off love? a boyfriend. When Chloe goes side. — Sad and Confused out with friends, her mother rings The kindest thing you could Dear Sad and Confused:Please her cellphone over and over until do forthe young woman would don't think I'm unkind, but when

Chloe turns it off.

a man is falling in love with a What do you think is the probw oman, hedoes not creep out of lem? If Michelle and I go somebed in the dead of night to visit place, she wants to bring Chloe, dating sites. He also doesn't tell or she calls her and has her come her to date other people. to where we are. Chloe complains Although you may love this to me that she wants her freedom, guy, from where I sit, when he but Mom accuses her of not loving said he "just wants to be friends," her, and cries and makes her feel it appears he meant friends with guilty. benefits. Because you are looking Chloe is a college graduate. for more than that, the next time

HAPPY BIRTHDAYFOR WEDNESDAY,MAY28, 2014: This year you come up with many different ideas for friends and professional associates. Others sometimes wonder where these intellectual gems come from, but they enjoy their usefulness regardless. If you are single, people find you to be a charming conversationalist. By midsummer, you'll have many potential sweeties to choose from. Ask yourself what kind of relationship you want first. Do not minimize your need for companionStnrsshowthnkind ship. If you are of dnyyon'llhave attached, the two **** * Dyn ofyouneverseem ** * * Positive to want for a topic * ** g of conversation. ** So-so You might not * Difficult

always agree, but you respectyour

Her mother allows her to work,

By Jacqueline Bigar

situation. You might want to let others know more of what is going on with

you. Someoneknows how to makeyour imagination work overtime. Be aware of your natural limits. Tonight: All smiles.

CANCER (Juns21-July 22) ** * * Y our intuition will guide you. You might need some time by yourself to do some intense thinking. A roommate or family member could lose his or her patience. A friend in the know will reveal much more of what is going on with this person. Tonight: Play it low-key.

LEO (July 23-Aug.22)

** * * * Z ero in on what makes the most sense. You might not be ready to declare your thoughts about a personal matter just yet, but you will make a considerable effort to initiate this discussion. Someone enjoys yourcompany. ARIES (March 21-April 19) ** * * You will be more expressive than Tonight: Where your friends are. you havebeen in awhile.You could have VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) a chance for a special new beginning ** * You might want to deal with a because of your willingness to face facts. loved one directly. An element of the You're determined to accomplish what unexpected seems to run through an you want. Others can't help but be drawn important decision. You know where toward you. Tonight: Strut your stuff. and how to spend your money, but a key associate or loved one might have a TAURUS (April 20-May 20) different idea of what works. Tonight: In ** * You will put yourself on the line, the spotlight. if need be. You'll feel as if you have a lot to offer, and you might want to let LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) others know. Know that they likely have *** * You can meet anydemand strong feelings as to what they want to that comes your way. Your creativity do. Respond to an offer from a friend seems to wander from onearea of life who cares a lot about you. Tonight: Let to another. The answers you seek are it happen. a high priority in your mind. You could find that someone else doesn't see GEMINI (May 21-Juns20) ** * * You'll have so much going things the same way. Tonight: A must on that you can barely keep up with a appearance. different ideas and processes. When you meet a fellow GEMINI, you might not see a similarity unless you detach, as all of you are multifaceted.

be to tell her to discuss this with

a licensed mental health professional, because she will need help and support in severing the umbilical cord at this late date. That won't be easy. There will be pain involved for both Chloe and her

desperately possessive mother, but if Chloe is going to have an independent life, it has to happen. — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA90069

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)

YOURHOROSCOPE

y e ar.

(Current "Late Late Show" When you date, are host Craig Ferguson will be • guys intimidated be- stepping down this year.) But cause you are so bold? Handler denies being in the I'd say I' m i n t i midat- running.

** * * * R elate to a partner directly. You'll have an important decision to make, but first you might prefer to have a discussion on the topic. You will want to be sure of yourself when you finally decide to act. Your imagination could help your approach. Tonight: Enjoy a break.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)

I

I I

Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680S.W. Powerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • THE AMAZING SPIDER-MAN 2(PG-13) 1:20, 4:45, 8 • BLENDED(PG-13) 1, 3:55, 7:05, 9:55 • CAPTAINAMERICA:THEWINTERSOLDIER (PG-13) 1:05, 4:20, 7:30 • DIVERGENT (PG-13) 1:30, 4:40, 7:55 • GODZILLA(PG-13) l2:20, 3:20, 6:I5, 9:15 • GODZILLA IMAX3-0 (PG-13) 12:50, 3:50, 6:45, 9:45 • THE GRAND BUDAPESTHOTEL(R) 3:25, 6:40, 9:40 • HEAVEN ISFORREAL(PG) 12:40, 7:25 • LEGENDSOF OZ:DOROTHY'8 RETURN (PG)12:l0 • MILLION DOLLAR ARM (PG) 11:45a.m., 2:40, 6:10, 9:05 • MOMS' NIGHTOUT(PG)4:10, 10:10 • NEIGHBORS (R) 1:40, 4:35, 7:45, 10:15 • THEOTHER WOMAN (PG-l3)I:35,4:15,6:55,9:35 • THE RAILWAY MAN(R) 11:55 a.m., 2:45, 6, 9 • RIO2(G) 11:50 a.m., 2:50,6:05, 9:10 • X-MEN: DAYS OFFUTUREPAST(PG-13) Noon, 3:15, 4, 6:30, 7: I5, 9:30 • X-MEN: DAYS OFFUTUREPAST3-0 (PG-13)12:30, 12:45, 3:45, 7, 10, 10:15 • Accessibility devices are available forsome movies. •

TV TODAY 8 p.m.on 29, "The Middle"Frankie (Patricia Heaton) is arrested — handcuffs, trip to the police station and all N and has no clue why. When she learns the reason is an unreturned library book, she fingers her own prime suspect: Brick (At-

ticus Shaffer). Sue(Eden Sher) doesn't like the Rev. TimTom's (Paul Hipp) new love interest

(Casey Wilson) but isn't sure how to tell him. Axl and Cassidy (Charlie McDermott, Galadriel Stineman) are reunited in "Stormy Moon." 8 p.m. on 6, "Hawaii Five0" — Chin's (Daniel Dae Kim) life is in danger when the team investigates a murder that may be the work of a serial killer. Danny and Grace (Scott Caan, Teilor Grubbs) discover a mysterious puzzle box that's washed up on the shore in "Pukana" — Hawaiian for "keepsake." Heather Dubrow ("The Real Housewives of Orange County") guest stars. 8p.m. on10, "So You Think You Can Dance" —Season 11 of the competition brings a new

crop of dancers hoping to im-

pressthe judgesandthe home audience and jump-start their careers. Cat Deeley returns as host, and Mary Murphy and Nigel Lythgoe are back to judge the contestants with a little help from special guest judges. 8 p.m. on FAM, "Melissa 8 Joey" —Ah, unexpected guests — gotta love 'em. In this new episode, Joe's (Joey Law-

rence) mother (Faith Prince) pays a surprise visit, to Mel's (Melissa Joan Hart) chagrin. Joe has a bigger problem with another relative who's stopped by unannounced: his estranged brother, Tony (Matthew Lawrence). Speaking of sibling

issues, Ryder (Nick Robinson) resists Lennox's (Taylor Spreitler) efforts to help him get into college in "Uninvited." 8 p.m. onFX, Movie: "Love 8 Other Drugs" —The tone of director Edward Zwick's 2010 comedy-drama shifts frequently, but Anne Hathaway gets kudos for hanging with the changes and faring nicely with a complex character. She plays a spontaneous young woman who appeals to a ladies man pharmaceutical salesman (Jake Gyllenhaal, who worked with Hathaway earlier in "Brokeback Mountain"), and what he initially doesn't know about her eventually puts their relationship to a big test. © Zap2it

716 SW11th St. Redmond 641.923.4732

I

McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 N.W.Bond St., 541-330-8562 • THE LEGO MOVIE (PG)3 • LONE SURVIVOR(R) 9:15 • NOAH(PG-13)6 • After 7p.m.,showsare21andolderonly.Youngerthan 21 may attendscreenings before 7 p.m.ifaccompanied by a legal guardian.

WILSONSof Redmond Tin Pan Theater, 869 N.W.Tin PanAlley, 541-241-2271 • DAMNATION(noMPAArating) 5:30, 7:30

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** * * You know how to bend for the well-being of the group. You have high energy and a sense of direction. Friends play a significant role in your decision-making process. Indulge a

• GODZILLA(PG-13) 3:45, 6:30, 9: I5 • MILLION DOLLAR ARM (PG-13) 3:30, 6:15, 9 • NEIGHBORS (R) 4:45, 7:15, 9:30 • X-MEN:DAYS OF FUTURE PAST (PG-I3)4,6:45,9:30

your life. Tonight: Be more of a pal to a key person.

Sisters Movie House,720 DesperadoCourt, 541-549-8800 • GODZILLA(PG-13) 6:30 • MILLION DOLLAR ARM (PG) 6:15 • NEIGHBORS(R) 7 • X-MEN:DAYS OF FUTURE PAST (PG-I3)6

IjV&TRESS

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loved onewho plays asignificant role in CAPRICORN (Dsc. 22-Jan. 19) ** * * You could be quite involved with a friend who adds considerable happiness to your daily life. You might need to maintain a nice, even pace to accomplish what you must. Use your instincts with a message, and you will choose the right words. Tonight: Let the good times roll.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) ** * * * Y ou might want to be spontaneous.Use your sixth sensewith anassociate or a very playful friend. Explain your expectations as clearly as possible, and it will help others relax. Everyone has his or her strengths; use yours well. Tonight: Act as if it were Friday!

PISCES (Feb. 19-March20) ** * You'll need to hone your juggling skills as you attempt to balance an intellectual discussion with an intense premonition and a sense of destiny. You might have difficulty integrating these different concepts, as you could feel a little off-kilter. Tonight: Head home. © King Features Syndicate

Madras Cinema 5,1101S.W. LI.S. Highway 97, 541-475-3505 • BLENDED(PG-13) 4:45, 7:20 • GODZILLA(PG-13) 4:10, 7 • MILLIONDOLLAR ARM (PG)4,6:50 • NEIGHBORS (R) 5, 7:10 • X-MEN:DAYS OF FUTURE PAST (PG-l3)6:40 • X-MEN:DAYS OF FUTURE PAST3-0 (PG-l3)3:50

MRw EQIB

%P

Visit us this month for errific prices on Mayta as well as REBATES and financingoffe rs!

SON vPu.fk 6/rztd 6 60.

Pine Theater, 214 N.MainSt., 541-416-1014 • GODZILLA(Upstairs — PG-13) 6:15 • X-MEN:DAYS OF FUTURE PAST (PG-l3)6:30 • Theupstairsscreening room has limitedaccessibility.

O

Find a week'sworth of movie times plus film reviews in Friday's 0 GO! Magazine

aj B~ dc 1~ Bend Redmond

John Day Burns Lakeview

La Pine 541.382.6447

bendurology.com


ON PAGES 3&4: COMICS & PUZZLES M The Bulletin

Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbuiletin.com THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, MAY 28, 2014 •

• i

•f•

i,'c;

Ads starting as low as $10/week rivate art onl

kfl

Call for package rates

=e

Packages starting at $140for28da s

Call for prices

Prices starting at $17.08 erda

Run it until it sells for $99 oru to12months

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contact us: Place an ad: 541-385-5809

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Place an ad with the help of a Bulletin Classified representative between the

Includeyour name, phone number and address

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Want to Buy or Rent

Wanted: Aluminum screen door, 34" wide. Call 541-516-8225 People Lookfor Information About Products and Services EveryDaythrough The Bulletin Clesslgeds 203

Holiday Bazaar 8 Craft Shows

1 7 7g

S W . Q t tkagd l e

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A v e .

• B e gd ~ o

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208

210

246

257

263

266

269

Pets & Supplies

Pets 8 Supplies

Furniture & Appliances

Guns, Hunting & Fishing

Musical Instruments

Tools

Heating & Stoves

Gardening Supplies & Equipment

Lab Pups AKC,black & The Bulletin recom- yellow, Master Hunter mends extra caution sired, performance pediwhen purc h as- ree, OFA cert hips & eling products or ser- ows, 541-771-2330 vices from out of the www.kinnamanretrievera.com area. Sending cash, checks, or credit in- Llewellin/Hound cross 3 males, 7 months old, f ormation may b e very beautiful $150 subjected to fraud. each. 541-447-1323 For more i nformation about an adverPOODLE, toys 8 minis, tiser, you may call also rescued older pup the O regon State to adopt. 541-475-3889 Attorney General's Office C o n sumer Protection hotline at Catt a Pro 1-877-877-9392. Whether you need a fencefixed,hedges The Bulletin trimmed or a house built, you'll find Adopt a rescued cat or kitten! Fixed, shots, ID professional help in chip, tested, more! The Bulletin's "Call a 65480 78th, Tumalo, Service Professional" Sat/Sun 1-5 389-8420 Directory www.craftcats.org 541-385-5809 Bichon Frise AKC pups, vet checked, hand raised, QueenslandHeelers $500+. 503-856-6107 Standard & Mini, $150 Boxers AKC & Valley & up. 541-280-1537 Bulldogs CKC puppies. www.rightwayranch.wor $700-800. 541-325-3376 dpress.com

a

The Bulletin recommends extra '

I caution when pur-I chasing products or • services from out of I t the area. Sending t ' cash, checks, o r ' I credit i n f ormation may be subjected to

I

I

I FRAUD. For moreI about an t I information advertiser, you may I

HOH'T MIS THIS DO YOU HAVE SOMETHING TO SELL FOR $500 OR LESS? Non-commercial

advertisers may place an ad f call t h e Ore g onf with our ' State Atto r ney ' "QUICK CASH I General's O f f i ce SPECIAL" Consumer Protec- • 1 week 3 lines 12 tion h o t line a t I ot' i 1-877-877-9392. ~ee eke ei e Ad must t TheBulletin t include price of Serving Cenrrei Oregon sincerggg le te oi Ssoo n~ or less, or multiple 212 items whosetotal does not exceed Antiques & $500. Collectibles Call Classifieds at The Bulletin reserves 541-385-5809 the right to publish all www.bendbulletin.com ads from The Bulletin newspaper onto The GUN SHOW Bulletin Internet webMay31 - June1 site. Deschutes Fairgrounds

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Total Shop - Sheet Metal Equipment 4' air shear; 6'x16ga Hand Brake; Pinspotter; Pittsburgh 20ga w/Acme Rolls', Manual Cleatbender 24ex20ga; Spot Welder w/24" arms; Slip roll (manual) 3'x2n dia; Box & Pan Brake 48" x16 ga; Easy Edger (Bench type)... will sell complete or by the piece. Call 541-771-1958

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260

NOTICE TO ADVERTISER Since September 29, For newspaper 1991, advertising for delivery, call the used woodstoves has Circulation Dept. at 541-385-5800 been limited to models which have been To place an ad, call 541-385-5809 certified by the Oregon Department of or email Environmental Qual- classifiedebendbulletin.ccm ity (DEQ) and the fed- The Bulletin eral E n v ironmental Serving Centrel Cngon sinceigla Protection A g e n cy (EPA) as having met 270 smoke emission standards. A cer t ified Lost & Found w oodstove may b e identified by its certifi- Found earring, weekend cation label, which is of 5/16 at Bend's Fred permanently attached Meyer. Call to identify, to the stove. The Bul- 541-389-1308 letin will not knowingly accept advertis- Found key, 5/15 in front ing for the sale of room of Deja Vu, kev is uncertified marked. 541-317-9169 woodstoves. Lost Beat headphones. Mon., 5/26 at Big Sky 267 Park. I f f o und call Fuel & Wood 541-580-2582.

Fax it to 541-322-7253 Misc.ltems Patchwork Antiques & Crafts Summer Sale 3 00-gallon fuel t a n k The Bulletin Classifieds Sat. & Sun., w/stand, filter 8 hose, May31,9-5; June1,9-3 $750. 541-480-1353 797 C Ave., Wildland F i r efighting Terrebonne.Antiques, equip., new & used, All YearDependable furniture, home spun hose, nozzles, wyes, Firewood: Seasoned; couch, and matchcrafts, yard art, reducers, bladder bags. Lodgepole 1 for $195 ing recliner, $200. Steve 541-771-7007. container gardens, Buy! Sell! Trade! or 2 for $365. Cedar, Bose stereo system flowers and herbs, The Bulletin SAT. 9-5 • SUN. 10-3 ServingCentralCregon since Sgta 265 split, del. Bend: 1 for series 321, $400. honey, baked goods, Dachshund AKC mini pups Yorkie pups AKC, 2 boys, $8 Admission, $175 or 2 for $325. Oak Entertainment Building Materials jellies and more. 12 & under free! www.bendweenies.com 2 girls, potty training, UTD 541-420-3484. 240 center, $350. 541-419-8637 All colors• 541-508-4558 shots, health guar., $450 OREGON TRAIL GUN I Can oe, $300. La Pine Habitat 541<80-8469 Crafts & Hobbies SHOWS, 541-347-2120 & up. 541-777-7743 RESTORE 269 Donate deposit bottles/ or 541-404-1890 Building Supply Resale Gardening Supplies cans to local all vol., 210 205 AGATE HUNTERS Buying Diamonds non-profit rescue, for Quality at Kimber Solo, C-D-P Polishers • Saws & Equipment Items for Free /Gofd for Cash LOW PRICES feral cat spay/neuter. Furniture & Appliances ( L-G) 9mm i s tol 52684 Hwy 97 Saxon's Fine Jewelers Cans for Cats trailer with 3 clips, f975. FREE Llama Manure Repair 8cSupplies 541-389-6655 541-536-3234 at Grocery Outlet, 694 541-420-7100 BarkTurfSoil.com Shovel ready, you haul! SE 3rd & Bend Petco A1 Washers&Dryers s g s Open to the public . $150 ea. Full warBUYING Call 541-389-7329 near Applebee's, do- ranty. Free Del. Also Rem 700 .243 Weaver Lionel/American Flyer Good classified adstell PROMPT DELIVERY nate M-F a t S m ith wanted, used W/D's 3x9, sling/ammo, trains, accessories. the essential facts in an 542-389-9663 241 Sign, 1515 NE 2nd; or 541-280-7355 BULLETINCLASSIFIEDS $850. 541-548-5667 541-408-2191. interesting Manner. Write CRAFT, Tumalo. Lv. Bicycles & Search the area's most Ruger Mini-14 Ranch, BUYING 8i SE LLING from the readers view- not comprehensive listing of msg. for pick up large Desk, L-shaped stained Accessories Navy Arms 45/70 rolling All gold jewelry, silver the seller's. Convert the Free Manure will load, amt, 5 4 1 -389-8420. classified advertising... oak mission style, excelblock, 1959 Ruger 357 and gold coins, bars, facts into benefits. Show Deschutes Mkt Rd., real estate to automotive, www.craftcats.org Trek 2120 bicycles, (2) lent cond, $500. BH 6.5e 3 screw unmodiBend. 541-318-8707 rounds, wedding sets, the reader howthe item will merchandise to sporting Fish Tank, new 45-gal 54cm and 58cm, car541-408-8188 fied and many more for class rings, sterling silgoods. Bulletin Classifieds bow-front w/stand, combon fiber, Shimano sale. SERIOUS ONLY ver, coin collect, vin- help them insomeway. This appear every day in the plete, ready for fish, $200 G ENERATE SO M E 105, SP D p e dals,email for pics & info, tage watches, dental Find exactly what advertising tip print or on line. EXCITEMENT in your $400 each. Miyata boombaby35Ogmail.com gold. Bill obo. 541-408-0846 Fl e ming, you are looking for in the brought to you by neighborhood! Plan a kids Triathalon bike, W alther PPK-S x l nt 541-382-9419. Call 541-385-5809 CLASBIFIEDS www.bendbulletin.com Lab/Jack Russell pup- garage sale and don't $125. 541-410-7034 cond .380 S&W in Moving boxes from 2 The Bulletin ServingCentral Creeon sincefeta p ies. 8 w k s . $ 5 0 forget to advertise in case 2 c l ips $475 households, all sizes + The Bulletin 242 (541)903-0346 or classified! S«vingCentral Oregon since190S CASH FIRM paper & bubble wrap, 541-385-5809. (541)419-6485 Exercise Equipment 54'I -419-0531 25e ea obo541-639-8944

I I

'

Nautilus NS 200 like new! Pulley system with extra weights, $600! Will deliver! 541-388-2809

282

286

286

Sales Northwest Bend Sales Northeast Bend Sales Northeast Bend AWBREY BUTTE Housecleaning Sale May 31, 8-3. No early birds! Big sale lots of good stuff! No clothes or children's items. Furniture, yard tools, games, books,small appl., & kitchen items. COLLECTIBLES: • Belleek • Waterford • Royal Doulton • Gorham • Silver and Crystal • David Winters 2618 NW Three Sisters

9 7a •

208

** FREE ** Garage Sale Kit Place an ad in The Bulletin for your garage sale and receive a Garage Sale Kit FREE!

Plus size clothes, lots of sewing notions, fabric, 2 sewing machines, iron press, & much more! Sat., 5/31, 8-3. 2445 NE Desert Willow Ct 290

Sales Redmond Area

245

Golf Equipment CHECK YOURAD

on the first day it runs to make sure it isn coro rect. Spellcheck and human errors do occur. If this happens to your ad, please contact us ASAP so that corrections and any adjustments can be made to your ad.

Swamp cooler, heavy Take care of duty, like new, 3ft. x your investments 3 ft., p o rtable o r stationary. $375. with the help from 541-382-6773 The Bulletin's Wanted- paying cash "Call A Service for Hi-fi audio & stuProfessional" Directory dio equip. Mclntosh, JBL, Marantz, D yWanted: Collector seeks naco, Heathkit, Sanhigh quality fishing items sui, Carver, NAD, etc. & upscale bamboo fly Call 541-261-1808 rods. Call 541-678-5753, or 503-351-2746 261 Medical Equipment 253 TV, Stereo & Video Wheelchair Pronto

MusicNoice Studio

Includes: • Pro Tools 8 software • Mbox 2 mini version 8.0 • Behringer B1 mic • Sony headphones • Samson USB studio mic w/stand; 541 -385-5809 • Training books The Bulletin Classified • Corrugated foam Garage sale at 110 NW Tools, household goods, PICK UP YOUR padding Vicksburg (off of Aw- GARAGE SALE KIT at farm equip., misc. Fri Package price new, Just too many brey) Sat. 5/31 8-2 1777 SW Chandler & Sat., 9-5. 17325 NW $1200+O'Neil Hwy. Cash for all sales. Ave., Bend, OR 97702 collectibles? Offered at $550. (All reasonab/e offers The Bulletin considered) Sell them in ServingCenirel Oregon sinceigOS 292 284 Call 541-639-3222 The Bulletin Classifieds Sales Southwest Bend Fundraising Sale, 5/30- • Sales Other Areas 255 9am-3pm, 515 NE sale Illloving Sale, 61409 5/31, 541-385-5809 Computers Dekalb Ave. (upstairs in Moving/Downsizing Sat. 5/31 8-5. 3 bdrm Blakely Rd. 5/30-5/31, the social servtces bldg m o t or9-5. Good q u alityof the Salvation Army). home i nt o T HE B U LLETIN r e 246 stuff. Downsizing, fur- Traditional faire along home! No early birds. quires computer adHouston Lake Rd. to niture, lots of misc. Guns, Hunting with vintage p ottery, Cornett Lp, to 1385 vertisers with multiple lassware, toys, dolls & NW McDaniel Road, & Fishing ad schedules or those ooks. 3 tabies I of new selling multiple sysPowell Butte. 286 toys, antique tile table. Bend local pays CASH!! temsi'software, to disSales Northeast Bend Multi Family Yard Sale for all firearms 8 close the name of the ammo. 541-526-0617 business or the term Furniture, toys, clothes, Part Estate & Farmyard Annual Neighborhood hot tub, ski equipment, "dealer" in their ads. Sale! Fri 8 Sat, 9am. sale, Burnside 8 13th dive gear, much more. Fire hose, water pumps, Private party advertisCASH!! s treets. Fri. & S a t . May 31st, 8am-3pm, ers are defined as Ford 8N tractor, antiques For Guns, Ammo & 8-4. S c rapbooking, 1150 NE Paula Dr., & much, much more! Reloading Supplies. those who sell one furniture & lots of misc. Bend. 541-390-9723 5470 Gerke Rd Prineville 541-408-6900. computer. KIT INCLUDES:

• 4 Garage Sale Signs • $2.00 Off Coupon To Use Toward Your Next Ad • 10 Tips For "Garage Sale Success!"

Moving Sale: contents of 3 bedroom house! Fairly new items/ misc. Fri thru Mon. 2421 SW Fissure Loop.

(by Invacare®)

powered wheelchair, in good condition, $450. 541-633-7824 263

Tools

Contractor job box, 5' x 2' x 2', $250. 541-480-1353 Want to impress the relatives? Remodel your home with the help of a professional from The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory

Paint sprayer T i tan 440i, excellent cond, $375. 541-383-8270

Power Washer (commercial) new in crate, Honda 13 hp - 4000 psi, 4 gpm. Retails $1849, Sell $ 1349. Steve 541-771-7007.

Garage Sales Garage Sales Garage Sales Find them in The Bulletin Classifieds

541-385-5809

REMEMBER: If you have lost an animal,

don't forget to check The Humane Society Bend 541-382-3537 Redmond 541-923-0882 Prine ille

eci-447-tite; or Creii Cats

sci-seo-e420.

Advertise with a full-color photo in The Bulletin Classifieds and online.

Easy, flexible, and affordable ad packages are also available on our Web site. To place your Bulletin ad with a photo, visit www.bendbulletin.com, click on "Place an ad"and follow these easy steps: • Ij ChooSe a CategOry, ChooSe a ClaSSifiCatiOn,

~ and then select your ad package. II Write your ad and upload your digital photo. II Create your account with any major credit card. Ajl ads appear in both print and online Please allow 24 hours for photo processing before your ad appears in print and online.

To place your photo ad, visit us online at ~ . b endbullefin.com or call with questions 541-385-5809

QIgssj j


E2 WEDNESDAY, MAY 28, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

TO PLACE ANAD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809

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

AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES

Friday. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate.. . . . . . . . . . 1 1 :00 am Fri.

• . 3:00pm Fri. • • 5:00 pm Fri • Place a photo inyourprivate party ad foronly$15.00par week.

PRIVATE PARTY RATES Starting at 3 lines

*UNDER '500in total merchandise

OVER '500 in total merchandise

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

Garage Sale Special

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

4 lines for 4 days ................................. $20.00

(call for commercial line ad rates)

*tlllust state prices in ad

A Payment Drop Box is available at CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN (*) REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin The Bulletin bendbulletimcom reserves the right to reject any ad at any time. is located at: 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, Oregon 97702

MX

PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Classified ads running 7 or moredays will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday. 341

476

Horses & Equipment

Employment Opportunities

DRIVERS

325

3-Horse Trailer, 22' long, 7' wide, 2 rear axles, good cond. Logan Coach Inc. $4900 obo. 305-794-0190

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 bendbulletln.com which currently recelves over 1.5 million page vlews every month al no extra cost. Bulletin Classifleds Get Results! Call 541-385-5809

or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com

Find Your Future Home Here!

Classifjeds Thousands ofads daily in print and online. •

a

a li

476

Employment Opportunities CAUTION: Ads published in "Employment O p porlunities" include employee and independent positions. Ads for p o sitions that require a fee or upfront investment must be stated. With any independentjob opportunity, please i nvestigate th o r oughly. Use extra caution when applying for jobs online and never provide personal information to any source you may not have researched and deemed to be reputable. Use extreme c aution when r e s ponding to A N Y online employment ad from out-of-state. We suggest you call the State of Oregon Consumer H otline at 1-503-378-4320

• C a l l 54 / -3 85 -5 8 0 9 to r o m ot e Adult Care

o u r service Landscaping/Yard Care

Class A and Class B CDL Drivers needed. Must be able to work hard, pass U/A and background check, plus have furniture moving experience.

Call Bill, 541-383-3362 for more info. Executive Director Kids Club Jefferson County

(Madras)

Responsibilities include overseeing operations, supervising staff, managing resources, working with board, fundraising/eyents. More info, visit www.'ckidsclub.com Submit resume, cover letter, 3 references & application by 5:00 pm on June 6,2014to kidaclub reztlit mail.com

Just bought a new boat? Sell your old one in the classifieds! Ask about our Super Seller rates! 541-385-5809

For Equal Opportunity Laws contact Oregon Bureau of Labor & I n dustry, Freelancewriters Civil Rights Division, 971-673- 0764.

The Bulletin seruinycenwl oreyonsince raa 541-385-5809

476

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

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.

Monday • • • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri • Tuesday.••• • • • .Noon Mon. Wednesday •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Tues. Thursday • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Wed.

Saturday • • • Sunday. • • • •

476

MECHANIC Needed Immediately ASE Certified Automotive/Diesel Mechanic in beautiful Baker City, OR. Wage depends on experience. Great benefits. Call 541-523-3200 or apply on line at rum sre air.com

648

LOCAL NONEYrWe buy secured trustdeeds & note,some hard money loans. Call Pat Kellev 541-382-3099 ext.13.

PUBLISHER'S NOTICE

Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. XK$%k 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! • R ooms for Rent Call 385-5809 or place Furn. room i n q u iet your ad on-line at home no drugs, alcobendbulletin.com hol, smoking. $450 1st/1st. 541-408-0846

RBEIIII SS

® RIAR(IM

rt tt

All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the F air H o using A c t which makes it illegal to a d vertise "any preference, limitation or disc r imination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap familial status mantal status or national origin, or an intention to make any such pre f erence, limitation or discrimination." Familial status includes children under the age of 18 living with parents or legal cus t odians, pregnant women, and

Check out the classifieds online www.bondbulletin.com Updated daily Apt JMultiplex General

528

Busy Dog Grooming Business in Redmond is looking for

Loans & Mortgages WARNING The Bulletin recom-

mends you use caution when you provide personal information to companies offering loans or credit, especially those asking for advance loan fees or companies from out of

EXPERIENCED

pet groomer (must have own tools). Also looking forexperienced bather/brusher. Must have resume. Leave msg

on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. "Spellcheck" and human errors do occur. If this happens to

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

state. If you have concerns or questions, we suggest you consult your attorney Servlce Advlsor 634 or call CONSUMER Apt./llllultiplex NE Bend (Bend Oregon) HOTLINE, Big Country RV has 1-877-877-9392. immediate openings for Call for Specials! full time e xpenenced numbers avail. Service Advisors who will BANK TURNED YOU Limited 1, 2 and 3 bdrms. share our commitment to DOWN? Private party W/D hookups, patios our customers is a team will loan on real esor decks. player with a positive at- tate equity. Credit, no NfOUNTAIN GLEN, titude, to operate with problem, good equity 541 -383-931 3 energy and is customer is all you need. Call Professionally service oriented. Retire- Oregon Land Mortmanaged by Norris & ment Plan, Paid Vaca- gage 541-388-4200. Stevens, Inc. tion, and a competitive medical benefit package. Apply in person @ 63500 Human Resources Assistant N Hwy 97, Bend Oregon or email your resume to The Bulletin is looking for a Human Resources bcrvhire@ mail.com Assistant. HR duties will include all areas of pre-employment drug testing, preparing paTick, Tock perwork for newly hired employees, orientation; benefit enrollment and helping employTick, Tock... ees keep t h eir p e rsonnel an d b e nefit information current. Maintains personnel files ...don't let time get and records for the purpose of providing away. Hire a up-to-date reference and audit trail compliance. Assist with payroll processing as the professional out back-up to the Payroll Manager. Provides adof The Bulletin's vice to employees on matters in designated "Call A Service human resources areas. Establish and maintain favorable working relationships within all Professional" WesCom departments to assist in effectively Directory today! achieving department objectives, while responding to requests for reports, records and information in a professional and timely manThe Bulletin ner. Review, input and audit data in HRIS to support employee actions such as promotions, transfers, hires and terminations while mainchasing products or I taining the highest level of data integrity. Other services from out of • duties include, processing paperwork for unl the area. Sending employment and worker's compensation. Fill in c ash, checks, o r as a backup person for the Reception desk l credit i n f ormation when necessary. • may be subjected to I FRAUD. Minimum two years human resources experiFor more informaence (payroll and benefits knowledge pretion about an adverferred) in a support capacity. General knowll tiser, you may call edge of applicable state and federal laws. the Oregon State knowledge of HRIS/Payroll systems. l Attorney General's Working Strong computer skills with the ability to profiOffice C o n sumer a ciently use Word and Excel. Strong attention to Protection hotline at l detail. Strong interpersonal skills. Must be able l 1-877-877-9392. to maintain highest degree of confidentiality, LThe Bulleting discretion and tact. 541-678-3421.

The Bulletin in Bend is seeking freelance

541-848-0040

Find them in The Bulletin Classifieds!

541-385-5809

The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory is all about meeting yourneeds.

Call on one of the professionals today!

Crest Butte Apartments 1 695Purcell Blvd., Bend, Oregon Now accepting applications for the waif list of a federally subsidized Affordable Family Housing project. Crest Butte is a beautiful property, less than 4 y e ars remodeled, offering 1 and 2 bedroom units to those who income qualify. Close to St. Charles and medical/dental providers, as well as daycare and schools. On-site laundry facilities and new playground available. Please contact site manager for further detail. Project phone ¹: (541) 389-9107 TTY. 1(800)735-2900 "This institute is an equal opportunity provider."

General The Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our Saturday night shift and other shifts as needed. We currently have openings all nights of the week. Everyone must work Saturday night. Shifts start between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and end between2:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m. Allpositions we are hiring for, work Saturday nights. Starting pay is $9.10 per hour, and we pay a minimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shifts are short (11:30 - 1:30). The work consists of loading inserting machines or stitcher, stacking product onto palletsi bundling, cleanup and other tasks. For qualifying employees we offer benefits i ncluding life i n surance, short-term & long-term disability, 401(k), paid vacation and sick time. Drug test is required prior to employment.

I

writers to provide short to medium length your web address feature Professional Caregiver NOTICE: Oregon Land- Add articles for the newspaper's special to your ad and readwith 26+ yrs exp will pro- scape Contractors Law projects department. vide private care in your (ORS 671) requires all ers on The Bulletin's web site, www.bendhome. Disabled/elderly/ businesses that adTopics covered include real estate, home hospice.541-279-9492 vertise t o pe r form bulletin.com, will be and garden, local events/happenings and able to click through Landscape Construcpersonality profiles. Also provided are inautomatically to your Building/Contracting tion which includes: formation regarding contacts, story length website. l anting, deck s , and deadline. NOTICE: Oregon state ences, arbors, Part-time Church law requires anyone water-features, and inAdministrator who con t racts for stallation, repair of ir- Nativity Luth e r an Pay is competitive and is commensurate to construction work to rigation systems to be Church seeks a cre- length and type of article assigned. Knowlbe licensed with the licensed w i t h the and self-directed edge of AP style a plus. Construction Contrac- Landscape Contrac- ative ndividual to b e r e tors Board (CCB). An tors Board. This 4-digit isponsible Send writing samples and contact info to for adminactive license number is to be inaborck© bendbulletin.com. the workings means the contractor cluded in all adver- istering f a vi b rant a n d is bonded & insured. tisements which indi- o church, skills Verify the contractor's cate the business has growing inc l ude: CCB l i c ense at a bond, insurance and required Facility Administrator strong computer profiwww.hirealicensedworkers compensa- ciency (MIcrostate Ofcontractor.com tion for their employ- fice S uite) s t rong or call 503-378-4621. ees. For your protec- communicator, record Community Counseling Solutions has an opening for a f u l l t ime Facillty The Bulletin recom- tion call 503-378-5909 strong writ- Administrator. mends checking with or use our website: keeping, and oral skills. See the CCB prior to con- www.lcb.state.or.us to ten tracting with anyone. check license status Nativity website The facility is located in John Day, Oregon www.nativityinbend.org Some other t rades before contracting with for jo b d e scription. and is a 9 bed acute care treatment facility also re q uire addi- the business. Persons working with mentally ill adults who are in tional licenses and doing land scape Resumes delivered in an acute phase of their illness. person t o N a t ivity certifications. maintenance do not Chu r ch, r equire an LC B l i - Lutheran 60850 B r osterhous This individual will be responsible for the Debris Removal cense. Rd., B e n d , OR daily operation of the facility, including staff 41-388-0765. R e - hiring and discharge, training, developing JUNK BE GONE USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! 5 sumes accepted May and im p lementing pr a ctices and I Haul Away FREE Door-to-door selling with 27-30. Position closes procedures, working closely with insurance For Salvage. Also 4 p.m. May 30, 2014. companies and other healthcare providers. Cleanups & Cleanouts fast results! It's the easiest The position will work closely with the Mel, 541-389-8107 way in the world to sell. Medical Director to coordinate health care Automotive services. The administrator will assist the andscaping/Yard Care The Bulletin Classified Parts Executive Director in meeting the needs of Salesperson 541-385-5809 the community, overseeing a large and NAPA Auto Parts complex budget and facility, and program Aeration/Dethatching (High Desert development. The position will report to the 1-time or Weekly Services Auto Supply) Executive Director. Ask about FREEadded is seeking an experiServing Central svcs w/seasonal contract! enced, outside sales Oregon Since 2003 Bonded & Insured. p erson. Loc a l l Applicants should have at least five years of Residental/Commercial COLLINS Lawn Maint. owned and operatert progressive experience working in a health Ca/i 541 -480-9714 we provide excellent Sprinkler care related f i eld, p r io r e x perience benefits and are an Activation/Repair supervising directly or indirectly at least 15 Allen Reinsch Yard equal o p o rtunity Back Flow Testing Maintenance & Mowing employer. IPyou are employees, a bachelor's degree in a health (& many other things!) care related f i eld (master's degree an ener etic, motiMaintenance Call 541-536-1294or preferred), ability to assist the Executive vated individual who ~Thatch & Aerate 541-815-5313 Director in managing a large and complex wants to work for the • Spring Clean up budget, facility and program development, number one automo.Weekly Mowing Painting/Wall Covering tive parts supplier in and community relations. Experience may & Edging Central Oregon, conbe substituted for education on a two for •Bi-Monthly 8 Monthly WESTERN PAINTING 'oining sider our one basis. N o c ertifications or licenses Maintenance CO. Richard Hayman, team. 3ompensation required, but preference will be given to •Bark, Rock, Etc. a semi-retired paint- will consist of a base applicants with an RN or related health care ing contractor of 45 salary plus commis~Landsca in certification(s). T h i s i n dividual will be years. S m all Jobs sion, depending on •Landscape required to participate in an on call rotation. experience. Apply in Welcome. Interior & Construction Exterior. c c b¹5184. person with resume ~Water Feature The salary range fo r t h e s u ccessful 541-388-6910 at NAPA Auto Parts Installation/Maint. located in Bend or candidate w ill be betwee n •Pavers Redmond, Oregon. $69,000-$103,500 per y ear. E xcellent Tree Services •Renovations Ilbenefits. • Irrigations Installation MR. STUMP BUSTER Driver Senior Discounts Professional Stump & Tree Night Driver needed Please c o ntact Ni n a Bis s o n at Apply at Owl Taxi, Bonded & Insured Removal• 24 yrs exp. 541-676-9161 or n i na.bisson@gobhi.net 541-815-4458 Insured - Free estimates! 1919 NE 2nd St., with questions or to request an application. LCB¹8759 Call 541-213-9103 Bend, OR 97701

NOTICE

GarageSales

l l l l l l

Serving Cenrral Oregon since 1903

Homes for Sale

GarageSales

I

The Bulletin

'z7Qo o

All real estate advertised here in is subject to th e F ederal F air Housing A c t , which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or intention to make any such preferences, l i mitapeople securing cus- tions or discrimination. tody of children under We will not knowingly 18. This newspaper accept any advertiswill not knowingly ac- ing for r eal e state cept any advertising which is in violation of for real estate which is this law. All persons in violation of the law. are hereby informed O ur r e aders a r e that all dwellings adhereby informed that vertised are available all dwellings adver- on an equal opportutised in this newspa- nity basis. The Bulleper are available on tin Classified an equal opportunity basis. To complain of d iscrimination ca l l Northwest Bend Homesl HUD t o l l-free at 1-800-877-0246. The Brand new on market! toll f ree t e lephone Custom craftsman 3 bd, number for the hear- 2.5 ba, extensive interior ing i m p aired is upgrades, granite slab in 1-800-927-9275. gourmet kitchen, hickory flooring. Off Mt. Washington Dr.t borders Quail Park, adjacent to AwGarageSales brey Glen golf community. Fabulous Cascade skyline view, private fully fenced backyard. 2004 Tour of Homes!Open 1-4 Sat. 8 Sun. 2772 NW Rainbow Ridge Dr. $575,000. By owner,

CHECK YOUR AD

Pet Grooming

Bsdl 5aRmRs Vm ©nljII

Houses for Rent General

Loans & Mortgages

For qualifying employees we offer benefits including life insurance, short-term & long-term disability, 401(k)i paid vacation and sick time. Drug test is required prior to employment.

Please submit a completed application attention Kevin Eldred. Applications are available at The Bulletin front desk (1777 S.W. Chandler Blvd.), or an electronic application may be obtained upon request by contacting Kevin Eldred via email (keldred©bendbulletin.com). No phone calls please. Only completed applications will be considered for this position. No resumes will be accepted. Drug test is required prior to employment. EOE.

EOE/Drug Free workplace if interested please submit resume and salary expectations io hrresumes@wescom a ers.com No phone calls please.

The Bulletin

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ES WEDNESDAY, MAY 28, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

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in Sheriff 's O ff ice,63333 2009-25946 principal as would J une 24 , 2 0 1 4 a t W. Highway 20, Bend, Book - - Page - not then be due had 10:00 AM in the main Oregon, sell, at public of Official Records no default occurred) lobby of t h e D e so ral auction to t h e in the office of the and by curing any chutes County h ighest bidder, f o r Recorder of DESother default comSheriff 's O ff ice,63333 cash o r ca s hier's CHUTES C ounty; W. Highway 20, Bend, plained herein that check, the real prop- OREGON c o veris capable of being Oregon, sell, at public erty commonly known ing the following decured by tendering o ral auction to t h e as 1818 NW Fir Ave, scribed real propthe performance rehighest bidder, f or Redmond, O r egon erty situated in said ca s hier's quired u n der the cash o r 97756. Conditions of county and state, to o bligation of t h e check, the real propSale: Potential bid- wit: LOT 7, BLOCK Trust Deed, and in erty commonly known ders must arrive 15 7, FOREST PARK addition to paying as 20758 Amber Way, minutes prior to the said sums or ten11, D E S CHUTES Bend, Oregon 97701. auction to allow the COUNTY, ORdering the perforConditions of S ale: Deschutes C o u nty E GON Bo t h t h e mance necessary to Potential bidders must Sheriff's Office to re- beneficiary and the cure the default, by arrive 15 minutes prior view bidder's funds. trustee have elected to the auction to allow paying all costs and Only U.S. currency to sell the said real expenses actually the Deschutes County and/or cashier's property to satisfy incurred in enSheriff's Office to rechecks made payable the obligations seforcing the obligaview bidder's funds. to Deschutes County cured by said Trust tion and Trust Deed, Only U.S. currency Sheriff's Office will be Deed and a Notice together with and/or cashier's accepted. P ayment o f D e f ault ha s trustee's and checks made payable must be made in full been recorded purattorney's fees not to Deschutes County immediately upon the suant to O r egon exceeding the Sheriff's Office will be close of the sale. For Revised S t atutes amounts provided accepted. Payment more information on 86.735(3); the deby sa i d ORS must be made in full this s al e g o to: fault for which the 86.753. I t w ill be immediately upon the www.oregonsheriffs.c foreclosure is made necessary for you to close of the sale. For om/sales.htm is Grantor's failure contact the undermore information on to pay when due, signed prior to the this s al e go to: LEGAL NOTICE following sums: time you tender rewww.oregonsheriffs.c Nationstar Mortgage the P YMTS F R OM instatement or om/sales.htm LLC, its successors 7 3 TO payoffso that you and/or assigns, Plain- 08/01/1 LEGAL NOTICE 02/01/14 @ may be advised of tiff/s, v. Matthew Scott 1,209.46 $8,466.22 The Bank of New York the exact amount, Higgins; Keybank Na- 6 Mellon FKA The Bank L/C FROM including t rustee's tional A s s ociation; o f New Y o rk, a s 08/1 6/1 3 TO costs and fees, that Oregon Department of 01/16/14 O 6 0 . 47 Trustee for the certifiyou wil l b e r eJustice, Division of cateholders of Sub-Total q uired t o pay . Child Support; Kath- $362.82 CWABS Inc, Payment must be in ryn C. McMahon AKA of Amounts in ArAsset-Backed Certifithe full amount in Kathryn Crowl; and all rears:$8,829.04 cates, Series 2007-1, with any the form of cashier's Other Persons or Par- Together Plaintiff/s, v. Scott J. default in the payor certified check. ties unknown claim- ment of r ecurring T he effect of t h e Gunty; Oregon Afing any right, title, lien, fordable Housing Asobligations as they sale will be to deor interest in the Real become sistance Corporation; due. prive you and all Property commonly ALSO, if you have and Persons or Parthose who hold by, known as 65125 Hun- failed to pay taxes ties unknown claimthrough and under nell Road, Bend, OR ing any right, title, lien, of a l l interest 97701, Defendant/s. on th e p r operty, you o r i nterest i n th e in the property dei nsurance Case No.: provide property described in on the property or s cribed above. I n 1 3CV1233FC. N O the complaint herein, construing this nopay o t h er senior TICE OF SALE UND efendant/s. C a s e liens o r e n cum- tice, the masculine DER WRIT OF EXNo.: 13CV1080. NObrances as required gender includes the ECUTION REAL i n the n ot e a n d TICE OF SALE UNf eminine and t h e PROPERTY. Notice is T rust D eed, t h e DER WRIT OF EXneuter, the singular hereby given that the b eneficiary ECUTION - REAL ma y includes the plural, Deschutes C o u nty insist that you do PROPERTY. Notice is so the word "grantor" Sheriff's Office will on in order to reinstate hereby given that the includes any sucJ une 17 , 2 0 1 4 a t Deschutes C o unty cessor in interest to y our account i n 10:00 AM in the main good standing. The Sheriff's Office will on the grantor as well l obby of t h e D e s- beneficiary July 22, 2014 at 10:00 may as a n y other perchutes County AM in the main lobby son owing an obliSheriff 's O ff ice,63333 require as raecondiof t h e De s chutes i nstate- gation, the perforW. Highway 20, Bend, tion t o County Sheriff's Ofthat you promance of which is Oregon, sell, at public ment fice, 63333 W. Highvide reliable written s ecured by s a i d way 20, Bend, o ral auction to t h e Orevidence that you T rust Deed, a n d h ighest bidder, f o r egon, sell, at public have paid a l l sethe words "trustee" cash o r ca s hier's oral auction to t he and "beneficiary" inliens or encumcheck, the real prop- nior h ighest bidder, f o r brances, p roperty clude their respecerty commonly known taxes, and hazard cash o r ca s hier's tive successors in as 6 5125 H u nnell insurance p r e mi- i nterest, i f check, the real propany . Road, Bend, Oregon u ms. These r e - The Beneficiary may erty commonly known 97701. Conditions of as 2867 SW Juniper b e attempting t o for reinSale: Potential bid- quirements Avenue, R edmond, statement should be collect a debt and ders must arrive 15 confirmed by conOregon 97756. Conany information obminutes prior to the ditions of Sale: Potacting the undertained may be used auction to allow the signed tential bidders must Tru s tee. for t h a t purpose. Deschutes C o u nty The street or other arrive 15 minutes prior If the Trustee is unSheriff's Office to re- common designato the auction to allow able to convey title view bidder's funds. tion if any, of the the Deschutes County for any reason, the Only U.S. currency real property deSheriff's Office to resuccessful bidder's and/or cashier's s cribed above i s view bidder's funds. sole and exclusive checks made payable Only U.S. currency remedy shall be the to b e : to Deschutes County purported and/or cashier's 57104 GR I Z ZLY return of m o nies Sheriff's Office will be LANE 7 , S U N RIchecks made payable paid to the Trustee, accepted. P ayment V ER, OR to Deschutes County 97 7 0 7 and the successful must be made in full The Sheriff's Office will be u n d ersigned bidder shall have no immediately upon the Trustee d i sclaims accepted. Payment further recourse. If close of the sale. For any liability for any must be made in full a vailable, the e x more information on incorrectness of the immediately upon the pected opening bid this s al e g o to: a bove street o r close of the sale. For and/or p o stponewww.oregonsheriffs.c more information on other common ment i n f ormation om/sales.htm this s al e go to: designation. By may be obtained by www.oregonsheriffs.c LEGAL NOTICE reason of said decalling t h e followom/sales.htm Nationstar Mortgage fault, th e b e nefi- ing telephone numLLC, its successors ciary has declared LEGAL NOTICE ber(s) on the day and/or assigns, Plain- all sums owing on b efore th e s a l e : TRUSTEE'S NOTICE tiff/s, v. James L. Thill; the obligation seOF SALE TS N o .: (888) 988-6736 or U nited S t ates o f cured by Loan No.: said you may a ccess 013149-OR ***** * America; and all Other Trust Deed immedi1896 Refersales information at Persons or P a rties ately due and payence is made to that salestrack.tdsf.com Unknown C l aiming able, said sums becertain trust deed (the DATED: 0 2 /1 3/1 4 Any Right, Title, Lien, ing the following, to "Deed of Trust") exCHRISTOPHER C. or Interest in the Real wit: ecuted by JOSEPH A Principal D ORR, OSBA ¹ Property commonly $210,853.30, COPE as Grantor to 992526 By toknown as 3698 SW gether with interest AMERITITLE, as CHRISTOPHER C. Helmholtz Way, Red- as provided in the D ORR, AT T O R- trustee, in favor of mond, O R 9 7 7 56, note or other inNATIONAL CITY N EY AT LAW D l D efendant/s. C a s e strument s e cured MORTGAGE A DIVIRECT INQUIRIES No.: 13CV0806. NO- from SION OF NATIONAL 07/0 1/1 3, TO: T.D. SERVICE TICE OF SALE UNCITY BANK, as Bena nd s uc h o t h e r COMPANY DER WRIT OF EXeficiary, dated costs and fees are FORECLOSURE ECUTION - REAL due under the note 8/6/2007, r e c orded DEPARTMENT PROPERTY. Notice is or other instrument 8/14/2007, in official 4000 W. Metropolihereby given that the s ecured, and a s records of Deschutes tan Drive Suite 400 Deschutes C o u nty a re provided b y County, Oregon as inOrange, CA 92868 Sheriff's Office will on statute. W H E RE- (800) no. 843 - 0260 strument 2 007-44750, w h i c h J une 26 , 2 0 1 4 a t F ORE, notice i s TAC¹ 968768 PUB: 10:00 AM in the main hereby given that covers the following 05/1 4/1 4, 05/21/1 4, l obby of t h e D e s- the described real propun d ersigned 05/28/1 4, 06/04/1 4 chutes County trustee will, on June erty situated in DesLEGAL NOTICE Sheriff 's O ff ice,63333 3 0, 2014, a t t h e Request for Proposalschutes County, OrW. Highway 20, Bend, hour of 10:00 A.M. egon: LOT Janitorial Services Oregon, sell, at public in accord with the THIRTY-TWO (32), The Deschutes Public o ral auction to t h e BLOCK UU, D E SStandard Time, as Library District (DPL) C HUTES h ighest bidder, f o r RIVE R established by ORS is issuing a Request cash o r ca s hier's 1 87.110, WOODS, IN S I D E for Proposal (RFP) CORDED MARCHREcheck, the real prop- THE MAIN LOBBY 22, from qualified compa- 1962, IN PLAT BOOK erty commonly known O F T H E DES nies to provide janitoas 3698 SW Helm- CHUTES COUNTY 6, DESC H UTES r ial s ervices. T h e holtz Way, Redmond, COURTHOUSE, COUNTY, OREGON. Company selected will Oregon 97756. Con- 1164 NW B O ND, APN: 110736 Combe responsible for ditions of Sale: Po- BEND , County of m only known a s : cleaning all DPL fatential bidders must 60488 Z U N I RD DESCHUTES, State cilities: Library Adarrive 15 minutes prior of OREGON, (which OR 97702 The ministration O f f ice, BEND, to the auction to allow is the new d ate, Current Beneficiary is Downtown Bend Lithe Deschutes County time and place set P NC B ANK, N A brary, East Bend Li- TIONAL A SSOCIASheriff's Office to re- for said sale) sell at brary, La Pine Library, view bidder's funds. public auction to the TION, SUCCESSOR Redmond L i b rary, BY MERGER TO NAOnly U.S. currency highest bidder for Sisters Library, and and/or cashier's cash the interest in TIONAL CITY Sunriver Lib r ary. checks made payable the said described A DIVIDeadline for propos- MORTGAGE, to Deschutes County real property which SION OF NATIONAL als is June 19, 2014. CITY BANK Both the Sheriff's Office will be the Grantor had or See http://www.des- beneficiary and the accepted. P ayment had power to conchuteslibrary.org/abou trustee have elected must be made in full vey at the time of t/ for more details immediately upon the execution by him of to sell the above-declose of the sale. For the LEGAL NOTICE scribed real property said T r ust more information on Deed, together with River Forest Acres to satisfy the obligathis s al e g o to: any interest which Road District will have tions secured by the www.oregonsheriffs.c the Grantor or his its annual meeting on Deed of Trust and noom/sales.htm June 7 at the Sunri- t ice has b ee n r e successors in interver Library. 1-3 pm. corded pursuant to est acquired a f ter LEGAL NOTICE All River Forest prop- ORS 86.752(3). The t he execution of OREGON erty owners are in- default for which the said Trust Deed, to T RUSTEE'S N O vited to attend. Gregg foreclosure is made is satisfy the foregoTICE OF SALE T.S. ing obli g ations Jones. 503-939-6265 the grantor's: InstallN o: L544512 O R ment of Principal and thereby secured and Unit Code: L FNMA LEGAL NOTICE im the c o sts and ex- Robert H. Little, dba I nterest p lu s Loan¹: 4006718502 and/or adpenses of sale, inLoan No: Little Ent e rprises, vpounds cluding a r eason4435499'I/RAHIMP laintiff/s, v. D a w n ances which b e able charge by the IAN AP ¹1: 138238 Friedlander and Wil- came due on 2/1/2013 plus late charges, and Title ¹ : 84 0 5 431 trustee. N o t ice is liam Warren Friedll s ubsequent i n further given that Reference is made lander, S u c cessor a any person named to that certain Trust Trustees of the Carol stallments of principal, interest, balloon payin O.R.S.86.753 has D eed made b y Sue and Edwin Wilimthe right, at any time BARRY RAHIMIAN, liam Friedlander Joint ments, p l u s and/or adprior to f i ve days R evocable MARSHA M. JENLiv i ng vpounds ances a n d lat e before the date last KINS as Grantor, to Trust dated January set for the sale, to BRAD L. WIL14, 2009, charges that become have this f orecloLIAMS as Trustee, D efendant/s. C a s e payable. Delinquent Da t e s : sure p r oceeding No.: C V in f a vor of ADDI12 - 1 178. P ayments: S ON AVE N U E dismissed and the NOTICE OF S A LE 2/1/2013-4/1/2014 No. 15 Amount $816.60 Trust Deed r einFEDERAL CREDIT U NDER WRIT O F Total: stated by payment $12,249.00 UNION as BenefiEXECUTION - REAL Charges: to the beneficiary of ciary. Dated June PROPERTY. Notice is Late $105.66 Beneficiary the entire amount hereby given that the 9, 2009, Recorded then due (other than June 19, 2009 as Deschutes C o u nty Advances: $1,410.80 such portion of the Instr. No. Sheriff's Office will on Foreclosure Fees and

Expenses: $ 975.00 arrive 15 minutes prior and/or ca s h ier's 20, Bend, Oregon, T otal R equired t o to the auction to allow checks made paysell, at public oral Reinstate: $14,740.46 the Deschutes County able to Deschutes auction to the highTOTAL R E QUIRED Sheriff's Office to re- County Sheriff's Ofest bidder for cash TO PAYOFF: view bidder's funds. f ice will b e a c or cashier's check, P a yment the real p roperty $114,764.12 By rea- Only U.S. currency cepted. son of the default, the and/or cashier's must be made in full commonly known as beneficiary has de- checks made payable i mmediately u p on 19219 Kiowa Road, clared all obligations to Deschutes County t he close o f t h e B end, Ore g o n secured by the Deed Sheriff's Office will be sale. For more in97702-8918. Condiof Trust immediately accepted. Payment f ormation on t h is tions of Sale: Podue and payable, in- must be made in full sale go to: www.ortential bidders must cluding: the principal immediately upon the egonsheriff s.com/sa arrive 15 m inutes sum of $102,410.54 close of the sale. For les.htm prior to the auction together with interest more information on to allow the DesLEGAL NOTICE thereon at the rate of this s al e go to: Wells Fargo Bank, c hutes Coun t y 6.625 % per annum, www.oregonsheriffs.c S heriff's Office t o N.A., it successors from 1/1/2013 until om/sales.htm review bid d e r's in interest and/or paid, plus all accrued funds. Only U . S. LEGAL NOTICE assigns, Plaintiff/s, late charges, and all c urrency an d / or U.S. Bank National v. Roland C. Benitrustee's fees, fore- Association, cashier's c h e cks tez AKA Roland Beclosure costs, and any Plaintiff/s, v. Darrell V. nitez; Tylene M. Hill made payable to sums advanced by Mallery and Sandra C. AKA Tylene J. BeDeschutes County the beneficiary pursu- Mallery; et al, Defen- nitez; U.S. B ank, Sheriff's Office will ant to the terms and d ant/s. Case N o . : National A ssociabe accepted. Payconditions of the Deed 1 3CV1532FC. N O - t ion; Kathline M . ment must be made of Trust Whereof, no- TICE OF SALE UN- Benitez; and occuin full immediately tice hereby is given DER WRIT OF EXupon the close of of the prethat the undersigned ECUTION - REAL pants the sale. For more mises, Defendant/s. trustee, CLEAR PROPERTY. Notice is Case information on this No.: R ECON COR P . , hereby given that the 13CV0610. sale go to: www.orNOw hose address i s egonsheriff s.com/sa Deschutes C o u nty T ICE O F SA L E 4375 Jutland Drive, Sheriff's Office will on UNDER WRIT OF les.htm San Diego, CA 92117, J une 17, 2 014 a t EXECUTION LEGAL NOTICE will on 9/11/2014, at 10:00 AM in the main REAL PROPERTY. Wells Fargo Bank, the hour of 11:00 AM, lobby D e s- Notice is h e reby NA, its successors standard time, as es- chutesof t h eCounty given that the Desin interest and/or t ablished b y OR S Sheriff 's Office,63333 c hutes Cou n t y assigns, Plaintiff/s, 187.110, At the front W. Highway Bend, Sheriff's Office will v. K i m S c h ouw; entrance of the Court- Oregon, sell,20, public on July 24, 2014 at Athena W a l lace; h ouse, 1164 N . W. o ral auction at to t h e 1 0:00 AM i n t h e Ray Klein, Inc. dba Bond Street, Bend, highest bidder, main lobby of the Professional Credit f or O R 97701, sell a t cash o r ca s hier's Deschutes County Service; Te r r ebpublic auction to the check, the real prop- S heriff's Of fi c e , onne P.U.D., LLC; h ighest bidder f o r erty commonly known 63333 W. Highway Terrebonne Estates cash the interest in as 1365 Spring Ridge 20, Bend, Oregon, Homeowner's Assothe above-described Court, Redmond, Or- sell, at public oral ciation; and Occureal property which egon 97756. Condi- auction to the highpants of the Prethe grantor had or had tions of Sale: Poten- est bidder, for cash mises, Defendant/s. power to convey at t ial b i dders m u st or cashier's check, No.: the time it executed arrive 15 minutes prior the real p r operty Case 13CV0118. NOthe Deed of Trust, to- to the auction to allow commonly known as ICE O F SA L E gether with any inter- the Deschutes County 19122 S h o shone T UNDER WRIT OF est which the grantor Sheriff's Office to re- Road, Bend, O rEXECUTION or his successors in view bidder's funds. egon 9 7702-7926. REAL PROPERTY. interest acquired after Only U.S. currency Conditions of Sale: Notice is h e reby the execution of the and/or Potential b i d ders given that the DesDeed of Trust, to sat- checks madecashier's must arrive 15 minc hutes Cou n t y isfy the foregoing ob- to Deschutes payable u tes prior t o t h e Sheriff's Office will ligations thereby se- Sheriff's OfficeCounty will be auction to allow the on July 1, 2014 at cured and the costs accepted. P ayment Deschutes County 1 0:00 AM i n t h e and expenses of sale, must be made in full Sheriff's Office to main lobby of the including a reason- immediately upon the review d e r's Deschutes County able charge by the close of the sale. For funds. Onlybid U . S. S heriff's Of fi c e , trustee. Notice is fur- more information on c urrency an d / or 63333 W. Highway ther given that any this s al e g o to: cashier's c h ecks 20, Bend, Oregon, person named in ORS www.oregonsheriffs.c made payable to sell, at public oral 86.778 has the right to om/sales.htm Deschutes County auction to the highhave the foreclosure Sheriff's Office will est bidder, for cash LEGAL NOTICE proceeding dismissed be accepted. Payor cashier's check, and the Deed of Trust Wells Fargo Bank, ment must be made the real p r operty r einstated by p a y - N.A., as Trustee for in full immediately commonly known as Freddie Mac Secument to the benefiupon the close of 8872 Morning Glory ciary of t h e e n tire rities Remic Trust Drive, Terrebonne, the sale. For more a mount the n d u e 2005-S001, its sucinformation on this O regon 977 6 0 . cessors in interest (other than the porgo to: www.orConditions of Sale: ass i gns, sale tion of principal that and/or egonsheriff s.com/sa Potential b i d ders would not then be due Plaintiff/s, v. Michael les.htm must arrive 15 minhad no default oc- C. Sigler; and Ocu tes prior t o t h e LEGAL NOTICE curred), together with cupants of the Preauction to allow the Wells Fargo Bank, the costs, t rustee's mises, Defendant/s. Deschutes County No.: N.A., its successors and attorneys' fees, Case Sheriff's Office to in interest and/or and curing any other 13CV1027FC. NOreview bidd e r's SA L E assigns, Plaintiff/s, default complained of T ICE O F funds. Only U . S. UNDER WRIT OF v. Unknown Heirs of in the Notice of Dec urrency an d / or Dan Dundas; John fault by tendering the EXECUTION c h e cks Dundas; D e a nna cashier's performance required REAL PROPERTY. made payable to Notice is h e reby Lobe; James Dununder the Deed of Deschutes County das; Mary F. ChrisTrust at any time not given that the DesCou n t y tianson. O r e gon Sheriff's Office will later than five days c hutes be accepted. PayAffordable Housing before the date last Sheriff's Office will ment must be made Assistance Corposet for sale. Without on June 26, 2014 at in full immediately ration; State of Orlimiting the trustee's 1 0:00 AM i n t h e upon the close of egon; Occupants of disclaimer of repre- main lobby of the the sale. For more the Premises; and sentations or warran- Deschutes County information on this Of fi c e , the Real Property ties, Oregon law re- S heriff's go to: www.orlocated at 1 9 2 19 sale quires the trustee to 63333 W. Highway egonsheriff s.com/sa Kiowa Road, Bend, state in this notice that 20, Bend, Oregon, les.htm Oregon some residential sell, at public oral 97702-8918, DefenLEGAL NOTICE p roperty sold at a auction to the highdant/s. Case No.: Wells Fargo Bank, t rustee's sale m a y est bidder, for cash or cashier's check, 13CV0276. NON.A. successor by have been used in SAL E m erger t o W e lls manufacturing meth- the real p roperty T ICE O F commonly known as UNDER WRIT OF Fargo Home Morta mphetamines, t h e EXECUTION gage, Inc. fka Norchemicalcomponents 60347 Zuni Circle, Ore g o n REAL PROPERTY. west Mortgage Inc., of which are known to B end, 97702. C onditions Notice i s h e r eby its successors in be toxic. Prospective interest and/or aspurchasers of r e si- of Sale: P o tential given that the Desc hutes Coun t y signs, Plaintiff/s, v. dential prop e rty bidders must arrive What are you 15 minutes prior to Sheriff's Office will Ruby Harding; U.S. should be aware of looking for? on June 24, 2014 at Bank, National Asthis potential danger the auction to allow the Desc h utes 1 0:00 AM i n t h e soc b efore deciding t o You'll find it in main lobby of the place a bid for this County Sheriff's OfThe Bulletin Ciassifieds rev i e w Deschutes County property a t the f ice to bidder's funds. Only S heriff's Of fi c e , trustee's sale. In concurrency 63333 W. Highway struing this notice, the U.S. 541-385-5809 masculine gender in1000 1000 1000 1000 cludes the feminine and the neuter, the Legal Notices Legal Notices Legal Notices Legal Notices singular includes plural, the word "grantor" includes any succesFORM LB-1 NOTICE OFBUDOET HEARING sor in interest to the Apublicmeslinii ofIhe cily of Ls pine, oregon, cily coundl wlll le held on June11, 2014, at 5:30 p.m. at La pine cltr Hall, 16345 sixlh street, i.s pfne, oregon. grantor as well as any The purpose of this meeiing is to diseuss the budgal for the Sscalyear beginning July i, 201i ss appnwed by the City of Ls Pine Budget Committee. A summap of other persons owing Ihe budget is presenled betow.A eopyof Ihe budget may be inspecled or oblained sl ls Pine Cily Hall bstween Ihe hours of e:00am.and 5 00 p m.or online at www.ci.la-pine.oor.us.Thisbudiisl is forsnannual budgetperiod. Thisbudgetwasprepared onabsiis of accounting ihat is Ihs ssme as ihe preceding year. a n o b ligation, t h e performance of which i s secured by t h e C ontacL RickAlten Interimo M e r Tel hone: 541 536-1482 Email; infa ciis- ins.or.us Deed of Trust, the words "trustee" and FINANCW SUiWMAllY - IlEIOURCES 'beneficiary" include TOTAL OFAu. FUMDS AChel Amounl Adopt8d BUdgst ApplQW!dSUdgioi their respective suc2012-18 This Year2013-14 Nexl Year 2014-16 Beginnlng FundBalsree/Net Worklng Cspllal 685 542 4438 297 4 404 638 cessors in interest, if Fees, Ucanses, Permita, Fines, Assassmlntad Olher Servlce Chsrges 1 M! 803 1 304 750 1 306 560 any. Dated: 4/29/2014 Fedwel. Slale and allOlherGrants, Gilts, Altoaalions and Oonstlons 158524 1SS 900 1$2 000 C LEAR RECO N Revenue framSondsandOlher Debt 0 0 0 CORP 4375 Jutland Inlefund Transfers I fntemal Swvice Reimbursemenls 0 3 406 017 1 236m Drive San Diego, CA All Other Reaoueas ExceptCunent Year Pepeiy Taxes 3312 INS 3S 692 • 3 750 92117 Phone Num222 422 216445 235 375 CurrentYearPe Tsxw Estimsted to be Reeeived ber: 8 5 8 -750-7600 Tolal Resounea 'T41I313 6 626 S40 0 M410i Name: Hamsa Uchi, Authorized Signatory FINANCNLSUMMIRY -REQUIREMENTS SY OSJECT CIASSIFICATION of Trustee Penennel Seviaes 4aeiee 491 rs2 460 767 A-FN4457121 05/14/2014, 05/21/2014, 05/28/2014,

06/04/2014 LEGAL NOTICE U.S. Bank National Association, Plaintiff/s, v. James Czesak, trustee of the James Czesak 2002 Trust U/D/T; Pronghorn Community Association, Inc.; et al, D efendant/s. C a s e No.: 13CV0784. NOTICE OF SALE UNDER WRIT OF EXECUTION - REAL PROPERTY. Notice is hereby given that the Deschutes C o u nty Shenffs Office will on J une 19, 2 014 a t 10:00 AM in the main lobby of t h e D e schutes County Sheriff's Office, 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public o ral auction to t h e h ighest bidder, f o r cash o r ca s hier's check, the real property commonly known as 65915 Pronghorn E states, Bend, O regon 97701. Conditions of Sale: Potent ial b i dders m u st

Malelals and Servlces Ca lal Ou5a Debt Servlcs Interfund Transfers CanSn encies S 'al P ents 'ated Endi Balance andResawed for Futue Una Tolal ulnmaHs

1 144 077 2 818 514

494 105

7ersi 233 237 0 0 0 4 369 376

hdliut8

966 531 435 000 238 100

237 711

S 406 01r

$0 840

&7 547 0 i 060 603

1 235 000 447 174 0 3 842 741

!4

7 418,313

101

FINANCIALSUINiiUNY • RMVIREMENTS ANDFULL-TIME EOUIVALEiiT EMPLOYEES S Y OllSAMIZATIONIL UNIT OR i'ROGRlM ' Namo ofOtyanizs5onel Unit or Pegram F TE fOf tll8l llhll Of l 8 l l l

457 824 1.86 375 005 0.10

2.32 274 465 2.32 4 689 486 0 6 26840

2.52 438 990 2.52 8 010 292 0

1.00 2413S8 0.55 410 580 2AS 606654 2.48 5 796 015 0

101 7.0

7 1I313 L5

Frs

m FTE Nili Services - Wster

Frs Wil Services-Sewer FTE

Noi Allocatad io anizslonsl Vnil erP FTE Total R ulremtnts Total FTE

3io 70B

357 S29 1.26 82 $4d 0.10 221 212

GgnewuiamineOaiiw

321 990

0.0

STATEMENT OFCHANGESIii ACTIVITIES and SOURCES OFFINANCING subslenbel changes inac5vities andsoutces of finansng in the eppmved FY2014-15 budget: - Implemenlalion of Business ueensepmgram. - Appnwal to Isvy theCiiy's tull permanent tax ale of $1.eS per $1,000. PROPERTYTAXLEVIES

Rale or AmountImposed 2012-13 1.90 r 1000

PermanehlRate rate limil $1.N rW1000 LoealO onLe L For Geneel obli rion Bonds

Rate or AmountImposed Rafeor Amounl Approved This Year 201 8.14 Nex t Year 2014.15 $1.93 I 10 0 0

0 0

$1.9S er 1000 0 0

STATEMENT OFIiiDESTEDNESS

LONGTERM DEBT

General Obli alion Bonds Olher Sonds OlfMlf 80ffOWI S

rotel

Esllmatad DebtOulstsnding an Jul 1. $2 010000 $905 OOO

$3,$1$ Oio

Ewimeted Debl Authorized, Bul Not lncurred onJul i $0 $0 $0 $0

0 0


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