Serving Central Oregon since1903 $1
THURSDAY May 28,2015
MEDICAL MISTAKES KEPT TOTHEMSELVES
Use of the food assistance program is far more common than you might think, so advocates want to remove the stigma of using SNAP, inOregon's more rural areas, too PEOPLE USINGFOOD STAMPS, INAPRIL:
Health care centers make errors, and the idea is that reporting them to the state can be a learning experiencefor others.
Deschutes: 18% Crook:24% Jefferson:32%
But 89% of such centers, from pharmacies tosurgical centers to nursing homes,did not report anyerrors lastyear.
STORIES IN HEALTH• D1
bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD Hydro Flask HQexpands
— The Bend-basedcompany is getting bigger digs. C6
The man en 'smai-so in acii behind the o remain o en — or now Kitzhaber By Scott Hammers
and Eugene were among roughly 50 scheduled to dose
The Bulletin
in July as the U.S. Postal Ser-
A Bendmail-processing
vice struggles to deal with dedining revenues.
center slated to close July 1 has
beenspared— atleastfora year — Oregon's representa-
Vaping risks — Electronic
tives in Congress announced
cigarettes' popularity is booming, but their health effects are still largely unknown. D3
Wednesday. Processing centers in Bend
volume has fallen by 36.3 percent over the past 10 years, and the Postal Service has been running at a deficit every year since 2007. The Postal Service has been closing down processing centers andpost offices since 2011. A processing center in Salem
A2014 report from the Con-
gressional Research Service shared by Rep. Greg Walden's office Wednesday states mail
email leak speaksout
closed in 2013, and a Pendleton
center closed in April. The Bend processing center has been on the chopping block since the closures began, and the Postal Service has
already scaledbackthe mail sorting done there.
The Associated Press SALEM — The man
who leaked thousands of
See Mail /A4
emails from the personal
account of former Gov. John Kitzhaber to a Port-
Quick reduild — Despite losing big-nametalent from last year's team, theBeavers are back in thecollege baseball playoffs. C1
1C in
Prep playoffs — Summit
land newspaper is coming forward publicly. In a story published Wednesday, Michael
1C
Rodgers told Willamette Week that he wants to speak out because
he's worn down from months of isolation and
on
advances in thebaseball bracket, while Ridgeview's season comes to anend in softball. C1
investigation.
"Life has not been good for me," Rodgers told the newspaper. "I can't do this
And a WedexclusiveCould 95 percent of the world be wrong about salt? beedbenetie.cem/extras
EDITOR'SCHOICE
any longer." Rodgers is on paid leave
By Ted Shorack The Bulletin
from his job at the Department of Administrative
Trucks used for haul-
ing freight are increasingly moving up and down U.S. Highway 97, according to average
Services, where he's a senior administrator
overseeing technology for state agencies. His staff is responsible for storing emails and data for tens of thousands of workers.
daily volumes monitored
The 2016 presidential campaign, Gen Xstyle By Katie Zezima and Sean Sullivan
The Washington Post
WASHINGTON — De-
by the Oregon Department of Transportation. The increase is likely due to an improving economy and a growing
••
I
See Email /A4
•
population east of the
Cascade Mountains. Trucking companies might also be choosing to use Highway 97 in-
ANALYSIS
A 'beautiful
stead of Interstate 5 as ODOT projects on the dress traffic congestion. ODOT monitors aver-
age dailyvolumes for all vehicles. The number of single-unit trucks with
Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin
claring Tupac Shakur superior to The Notorious B.I.G. Naming favorite episodes of "The Simpsons." Explaining how one found meaning at a foam party. This could be a scene
two axles and up to mul-
Jason Streeter attaches his truck to a semitrailer at the Oak Harbor Freight Lines terminal in Bend last
tiple trailers with seven
Thursday.
from a mid-1990s dorm room — orthe recent mus-
Klamath Falls saw the
dlside
axles increasedbetween 2011 and 2014 heading northbound and south-
bound on Highway 97. Southbound near
ings of men
largest increase, with 40 percent more use during
who are vy-
the three-year timespan.
• Santorum ing to be the launches leaderofthe campaign, free world. Welcome to
A daily average of 1,505 trucks drove northbound through Bend on the highway during
the presidential race, Generation X style.
2014. The number of trucks
A2
dent.These men came of
on I-5 has also increased in areas since 2011. The largest spike was northbound near the border
age during the presidency of Ronald Reagan, the fall
with California. Those involved in
of Communism, the 1991
the trucking industry have differing opinions
For the first time, multi-
ple members of Generation X are running for presi-
Persian Gulf War and the 24-hour news cycle. They quote the movies and music
of their youth and connect with those even younger by admitting to beinghooked on elect ronicgames and using social media platforms like Snapchat. Politically, they are painting themselves as young, fresh alternatives to lead the country in a new direction, away from can-
didates named Bush and Clinton, who are seen as early front-runners. See Gen X/A4
game' led by a loathed organization
highway continue to ad-
about what might be
drivingthe increased traffic along Highway 97, which stretches from
Weed, California, to the Canadian border in northeast Washington. See Truck/A5
By Ishaan Tharoor
Semi-truck traffic: U.S.Highway 97vs. Interstate 5
The Washington Post
For many, the arrests of
In terms of overall numbers, semi-truck traffic on U.S. Highway 97pales in comparison to the volume found on Interstate 5. But traffic around Bend is the heaviest on the highway, and it's growing.
)
;
seven top officials at FIFA, soccer's global governing body, on U.S. federal corruption charges was a long time coming. The world may love the beautiful game more
VOLUMEOFAVERAGE OAILYSEMI-TRUCKTRAFFICBYMONITOR POINT
• Traffic monitor M 2 0 1 1W P tlan
I-5
Binn m as J~>nctioA, I
20 1 4 P ercent change,2011 to 2014
southbound
I
n o r thbound +10%
than any other, but the sport's main administra-
CI o
tive organization is widely perceived as being bloated and rapacious. Its head, FIFA President Sepp Blat-
•
CO I
I;-
I•
1Madras
i
~
~
•
+30%
L
+12%
•I
I•
I
ter — who was not among those arrested — rules like
S
Eugen e
)
6end
+35%
/
1,505 trucks I
(
g iJ~ Grags Pass
Average number —.+15% of trucks driving northbound on U.S. Highway 97 per day in 2014
+20%
+23%
27%
KlamathFhlls Source: Oregon Department of Transportation
a sovereign monarch, undeterred by hostile public opinion. So what is FIFA? In 1904, the Federation Internationale de Football
-11%"
Association was founded by a group of Frenchmen seeking to form an umbrella organization for the
+.40.'/e ..... +16%
'Percentchange, Z010t02014
sport's various national
bodies.
Pete Smith i The Bulletin
See Soccer /A5
TODAY'S WEATHER Mostly sunny High 80, Low 48 Page B6
INDEX Business Calendar Classified
D1-6 Obituaries B5 C5 - 6 C omics/Puzzles E3-4 Health c1-4 B2 Crosswords E 4 H o roscope De Sp orts E 1 - 6Dear Abby De Lo cal/State B 1-6 N '/Movies De
The Bulletin AnIndependent
Q l/l/e use recycled newsprint
vol. 113, No. 14e,
s sections O
88 26 7 02 32 9
1
A2
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, MAY 28, 2015
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Immi ration over au aces en t att e sity in St. Louis. "If the pro-
By Michael D. Shear New York Times News Service
WASHINGTON —
cess drags on until the sumP r esi- mer of 2016, then implemen-
dent Barack Obama's overhaul of the nation's immigration system, which he announced in a prime-time speech to the nation in November, may remain under a
cloud of legal uncertainty until months before he leaves office in 2017, legal experts and administration officials said Wednesday. Officials from the Justice Department said in a statement that they would not ask the Supreme Court forper-
mission to carry out the president's immigration programs — which seek to provide work
permits and deportation protection to millions of undocumented immigrants — while
a fight over presidential authority plays out in the lower courts.
That legal battle may extend for a year or more, offiSi sil.rva
Dtsouies rr
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cials said, undermining any hope of putting the president's plan into effect until right before the 2016 election.
"The timing is critical," said Stephen Legomsky, a law professor at Washington Univer-
FIOOdS —Volunteers descended onWimberley, Texas, in the hundredsonWednesday,to searchthewreckageandmuckalongnormally idyllic rivers for sevenpeople still missing three daysafter floodwaters ravaged thearea. This wasthe largest of many search operations across a region that hasbeenbattered since Saturday byseverethunderstorms, flooding andtornadoes, leaving at least19 people dead in Texas andOklahoma, and 14 in Mexico, with others missing and the toll expected to rise. With moreheavyrain expected in thecoming days in Texas,LouisianaandOklahoma, forecasters issued newflood warnings, including onefor the RedRiver in Louisiana.
who could apply for it. In a
s t atement, officials
from the Justice Department tation becomes very difficult." said they disagreed with a deThe inability to quickly put cision bythe U.S. Court of Apinto effect the president's re- peals for the Fifth Circuit that forms isanother severe blow continues to block the presto Hispanic activists, who had ident's immigration actions. successfully lobbied Obama But they said the government to take bold executive action will fight on the merits of the in the face of Republican op- program, rather than push position to c omprehensive for permission to carry it out changes in immigration law. immediately. The president vowed to act Officials said they were days before Thanksgiving committed to defending the last year, urging undocument- p resident's actions an d t o ed immigrants to "come out eventually getting the immiof the shadows" and declar- gration programs in place ing that his actions were "not with certainty. "The department believes only lawful, they're the kinds of actions taken by every sin- the best way to achieve this gle Republican president and goal is to focus on the ongoevery Democratic president ing appeal on the merits of for the past half-century." the preliminary injunction itBut administration officials self," said Patrick Rodenbush, Wednesday said the decision a spokesman for the Justice not to ask the Supreme Court Department. to allow the program to move The state of Texas last year forward immediately reflects filed a lawsuit against the a practical reality: Even if the president, accusing him of justices had given the green exceeding his authority and light to begin implementing failing to follow the proper the program, the continuing procedures for establishing legal fight would probably new immigration rules. Twenhave scared away most of the ty-five other states joined the undocumented immigrants lawsuit.
IdelltltIf 'tllaf'tS —IRS investigators believe the identity thieves who stole the personal tax information of more than100,000 taxpayers from an IRSwebsite are part of a sophisticated criminal operation based in Russia, two officials told the Associated Press. Theinformation was stolen as part of an elaborate scheme toclaim fraudulent tax refunds, IRSCommissioner John Koskinen told reporters. Koskinen declined to saywhere the crime originated. But two officials briefed on the matter said Wednesdaythe IRSbelieves the criminals were in Russia, based oncomputer data about who accessed the information. The officials spoke oncondition of anonymity becausethey were not authorized to publicly discuss the ongoing criminal investigation. ISlamiCState — As Iraqi forces gathered for a major new offensive to try to take backthe sprawling Sunni heartland of Anbar province, Islamic State militants struck first, unleashing awaveof suicide bombings that killed at least17 soldiers. Theattacks outside the extremist-held city of Fallujah camejust hours after the Iraqi government announced thestart of a wide-scale operation to recapture areas under Islamic State control in the vast desert province that stretches to the border with Jordan. Themilitants used a sandstorm that engulfed most of Iraq to launch thedeadly wave of bombings late Tuesday night, Brig. GenSaadMaanIbrahim, the spokesman for the Joint Military Command, told TheAssociated Press. AnthraX Shipment — The Centers for DiseaseControl and Prevention said Wednesday it is investigating what the Pentagon called an inadvertent shipment of live anthrax spores to government and commercial laboratories in as many asnine states, as well as one overseas, that expected to receive deadspores. "At this time we do not suspect any risk to the general public," CDCspokeswoman Kathy Harben said. A Pentagon spokesman,Col. SteveWarren, said the suspected live anthrax samples were shipped from DugwayProving Ground, an Army facility in Utah, using a commercial delivery service. Faka dlplOmaS — Pakistani investigators arrested the chief executive of Axact, a software companyaccused of running a global diploma mill, early Wednesdayafter discovering a storage room filled with blank fakedegrees. Thechief executive, Shoaib Ahmed Shaikh, and four other Axact executives were initially charged with fraud, forgery and illegal electronic money transfers, law enforcement officials said. Thecharges were later expanded to include money laundering and violating Pakistan's electronic crimes act. Thearrests were a sharp blow to acompany that claimed to be Pakistan's biggest software exporter and that was onthe cusp of starting a major television network.
SANTORUM ENTERS RACE FORPRESIDENT
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MigrantS — EuropeanUnion authorities appealed to the bloc's member states Wednesday toaccept quotas of migrants to relieve the burden on southern states like Italy and Greecethat are the main landing points for them. Theproposal by the European Commission is a response to concern that the bloc's southern coastal states could become overwhelmed bythe inflow of migrants making the dangerous crossing of the MediterraneanSea.TheInternational Organization for Migration said Wednesdaythat1,840 migrants had been lost at sea or were known to havedied while crossing the Mediterranean so far this year.
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Phane data dill — Obamaadministration officials on Wednesday intensified pressure onCongress to strike a dealbefore aSunday deadline over legislation governing the National Security Agency's bulk collection of telephone records, arguing that failing to do so would suspend crucial domestic surveillance authority at a time of mounting terrorism threats. "What you're doing, essentially, is you're playing national security Russian roulette," one senior administration official said of allowing the powers to lapse. That prospect appears increasingly likely with the measure, theUSAFreedomAct, stalled and lawmakers in their homestates and districts during a congressional recess.
/7
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— From wire reports Keith Srakocic/The Associated Press
Former Pennsylvania Sen.RickSantorum, center, announces that he isentering the Republican presidential race Wednesday inCabot, Pennsylvania. Santorum, the runner-up in the Republican nomination race four years ago, pledged to restore a middle class "hollowed out" by government policies.
A former U.S. senator from rural western Pennsylvania, he appealed primarily to social conservatives four years ago. But hehasdonned a new mantle of economic populism, one hecalls "blue-collar conservatism."
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Nebraska legislatorsvote ~.";,",,",„" ",","'""
to abolishdeathpenalty By Julia Bosman
views and urging Nebraskans
New York Times News Service
to pressure their senators to
oppose it, immediately deka on Wednesday became the nounced the vote.
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LINCOLN, Neb. — Nebras-
first conservative state in more than 40 years to abolish the
"My words cannot express
how appalled I am that we have lost a critical tool to pro-
death penalty, with lawmakers defying their Republican gov- tect law enforcement and ¹ ernor, Pete Ricketts, a support- braska families," he said in a er of capital punishment who statement. had lobbied against banning it. Some senators said capital After more than two hours punishment should be retained of emotional speeches at the as a tool to punish the most heiCapitol here, the Legislature, nous crimes. Others said the by a 30-19 vote that cut across death penalty, which has not partylines, overrode the gover- been used in Nebraska since nor's veto of a bill repealing the 1997, was irretrievably broken. state's death penalty law. The Opponents of the death penrepeal measure passed by just alty were able to build a coalienough votesto overcome the tion that spanned the ideologveto, after two senators who ical spectrum by winning the had previously voted for repeal support of Republican legislaswitched to support the gover- tors who said they believed the nor at the last minute. death penalty was inefficient, T he v ot e c a pped a expensive and out of place with monthslong battle that pitted their party's values, as well as most lawmakers in the unifrom lawmakers who cited cameral Legislature against religious or moral reasons for the governor, many law en- their supporting the repeal. forcement officials and some Though it formally considers family members of murder vic- itself nonpartisan, the Nebrastims. The Legislature approved ka Legislature is dominated by the repeal bill three times this Republicans. Nebraska now joins 18 other year, each time by a veto-proof majority. states and Washington, D.C., in Ricketts, who fought against banning the death penalty. The the repeal bill by appearing bill replaces capital punishrepeatedly in television inter-
ment with life imprisonment.
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THURSDAY, MAY 28, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
A3
TART TODAY
• Discoveries, breakthroughs,trends, namesin the news— the things you needto know to start out your day
It's Thursday, May28, the 148th day of 2015. Thereare 217 days left in the year.
A novel attempt
CUTTING EDGE
HAPPENINGS PreSidential raCe —Former NewYork Gov.George Pataki, a Republican, is expected to announce he isjoining the list of Republican presidential candidates for the 2016 race.
HISTORY Highlight:In 1945, the novel "BridesheadRevisited" by EvelynWaugh waspublishedin London by Chapman 8Hall. In1533, the Archbishop of Canterbury, ThomasCranmer, declared the marriage of England's King Henry Vlll to Anne Boleyn valid. In1892, the Sierra Clubwas organized in SanFrancisco. In1912, the SenateCommerce Committee issued its report on the Titanic disaster that cited a "state of absolute unpreparedness," improperly tested safety equipment and an"indifference to danger" as some ofthe causes of an "unnecessary tragedy." In1929, the first all-color talking picture, "Onwith the Show!", produced byWarner Bros., opened inNewYork. In1937,President Franklin D. Roosevelt pushed abutton in Washington signaling that vehicular traffic could begin crossing the just-openedGolden Gate Bridge inCalifornia. Neville Chamberlain became prime minister of Britain. In1940, during World War II, the Belgian army surrendered to invading German forces. In1959, the U.S.Army launched Able, arhesus monkey, and Baker, asquirrel monkey, aboard aJupiter missile for a suborbital flight which both primates survived. In1961, Amnesty International had its beginnings with the publication of anarticle in the British newspaperTheObserver, "The Forgotten Prisoners." In1985, David Jacobsen, director of the American University Hospital in Beirut, Lebanon, wasabducted by pro-Iranian kidnappers (hewas freed 17 months later). In1998,comic actor Phil Hartman of "Saturday Night Live" and "NewsRadio" famewas shot to death at his homein Encino, California, by his wife, Brynn, who then killed herself. Ten yearsago:Two bombs exploded about15 minutes apart in a crowdedmarket in the Christian-dominated Indonesian town ofTentena, killing at least 22 peopleand wounding 40. Five years ago:President Barack Obamavisited Grand Isle, Louisiana, wherehe personally confronted the spreading damagewrought by the crude gushing into theGulf of Mexico from the BPblowout — and the bitter anger rising onshore. One yearago:Seeking to redefine America's foreign policy for a postwar era, President Barack Obamatold West Point graduates the United States remained the only nation with the capacity to lead onthe world stage butarguedit would be a mistake to channel that power into unrestrained military adventures. MayaAngelou, 86, a Renaissancewomanwho survived the harshest of childhoods to become aforce on stage, screenand the printed page, died in Winston-Salem, North Carolina.
BIRTHDAYS Rockabilly singer-musician Sonny Burgess is 86.Actress Carroll Baker is 84. Basketball Hall of FamerJerry West is 77. Former NewYork City Mayor Rudolph Giuliani is 71.Singer Gladys Knight is 71. Singer John Fogerty is 70. Country singer Phil Vassar is 51. Singer-musician Chris Ballew (Presidents of the USA) is50. Rapper ChubbRock is 47. Actor Justin Kirk is 46. Sen.Marco Rubio, R-Fla., is44. Television personality Elisabeth Hasselbeck is 38. Actor JakeJohnson (TV: "New Girl") is 37.Actress Alexa Davalos is 33.Actress Megalyn Echikunwoke is33. Pop singer ColbieCaillat is 30. Actor Joseph Cross is 29. — From wire reports
8 CIX, 8
pi'mipg Oi
to save a giant turtle
is aro in e uure
insemination ever of a soft-
shell turtle, saving the species from oblivion. "Even if we get just one or two hatchlings, I will be very happy," said Gerald Kuchling, a project leader
By John Markoff New York Times News Service g'
.f~r,".
tration since." Scientists decided to inter-
vene.On May 6,Kuchling and Lu, with a team that included turtle experts from the United
States, drained the male's pond and used a cargo net to wran-
gle the 140-pound turtle onto ance, a nonprofit conserva- a stack of car tires that served tion organization. "Even a I
alarm over the possible emer-
nificent animal. It would be aturn."
tialpenile erection. Normally, the penis of the Yangtze giant softshell turtle looks a bit like a medieval largest freshwater turtle in weapon. Equipped with fleshy the world — was once com- spikes, protuberances and mon in theYangtze and Red lobes, it is designed to navigate rivers. But by the late 1990s, the female's equally complex pollution, hunting, dams reproductive organ, located and developmenthad driven inside a byzantine chamber
Submitted photo
it to the brink of extinction. called the doaca. T here ar e o n l y f o u r The problem became imme-
roboticist, has called on the
by human minders.) Reporters who covered the gies as "watching paint dry" and "watching grass grow."
computing world to drop its obsession with singularity, the much-ballyhooed time when computers are predicted to surpass their human design-
This year, the robots will
ers. Rather, he has proposed
known specimensremaining, and only one female — an 85-year-old resident of the Suzhou Zoo. For years, biologists have been trying to coax her and her 100-year-old mate to pro-
diately clear to the scientists:
duce hatchlings. So far the
and the two fought. The second
Two decades earlier, another
Yangtze giant softshell turtle had been added to the male's pond in an attempt to mate the animals. The second turtle
turned out to be male, as well,
pair have d i sappointed male was killed, and the victor scientists, with the female suffered serious damage to his laying dutch after clutch of shell and, it now appears, to his unfertilized eggs. reproductive organ. She was discovered only The team also examined in 2007, three years after the
the male's sperm — extracted
only other known female using electrical stimuli — and died at the Beijing Zoo. Des- finally discovered good news. perate to find another, Kuch-
The sperm were viable. The sci-
ling and Lu Shunqing, a tur- entists decided to proceed with tle specialist from the Wild- artificial insemination. life Conservation Society's
With no case studies to go
China branch, had asked on, the teamhad to improvise. every zoo in the country to
Now the wait begins. When
send them photographs of the female lays her first dutch any large softshell turtles in of eggs, probably by late June, their possession.
the scientists will know if this
One image, taken at the first effort was fruitful. "Nobody has ever done this Changsha Zoo in Hunan, caught their eye, and days before, and it's probably a long later, they arrived to exam- shot," Kuchling said. "But we ine the turtle. It was indeed a are all hopeful, and if it doesn't Yangtze giant softshell tur-
work this time, we'll definite-
tle and, crucially, a female. ly try again. Despair is not an K uchling and L u a r - option." ranged for her transport to the Suzhou Zoo, where
theyhoped she and the zoo's male specimen would begin producing more of their kind. To their delight, the animals did appear to mate,
completely autonomous ro-
had to be placed in the vehicles
electrical probe to induce a par-
Quite a turn, actually. The Yangtze giant softshell turtle — thought to be the
gence of self-aware machines Robots like the title character of the film "Chappie" won't be runout to do harm to the human ning and jumping anytime soon —cutting-edge models struggle race. to open doors. "I don't understand why some people are not concerned," Gates said in an inter- handle to open a door. But the lessly by people. view on Reddit. machines will remain largeThe first DARPA challenge "I think we should be very ly helpless without human more than a decade ago had careful about artificial intellisupervisors. a big effect on the perception "The extraordinary thing of robots. It also helped spark gence," Musk said during an interview at MIT. "If I had to that has happened in the last greater interest in the artifiguess at what our biggest ex- five years is that we have cial intelligence and robotics istential threat is, it's probably seemed to make extraordi- industries. that," he added. He has also nary progress in machine During the initial DARPA said that artificial intelligence perception," said Gill Pratt, challenge in 2004, none of the would "summon the demon." the DARPA program manag- robotic vehicles was able to And Hawking told the BBC er in charge of the Robotics complete more than seven of that "the development of full Challenge. the 150 miles that the course artificial intelligence could Pattern recognition hard- covered. However, during the spell the end of the human ware and software has made 2005 challenge, a $2 million race." it possible for computers to prize was claimed by a group Not so fast. Next month, the make dramaticprogress in of artificial-intelligence reDefense Advanced Research computer vision and speech searchers from Stanford UniProjects Agency, a Pentagon understanding. In contrast, versity whose vehicle defeated research arm, will hold the Pratt said, little headway has a Carnegie Mellon entrant in a final competition in it s Robeen made in "cognition," tight race. botics Challenge in Pomona, the higher-level humanlike The contest led to Google's California. With $2 million in processes required for robot decision to begin a self-drivprize money for the robot that planning and true autonomy. ing-car project, which in turn performs best in a series of As a result, both in the DAR- spurred the automotive indusrescue-oriented tasks in less PA contest and in the field of try to invest heavily in autonothan an hour, the event will of- roboticsmore broadly,there mous vehicle technology. fer what engineers refer to as has been a re-emphasis on Developing a car to drive on the "ground truth" — a reality the idea of human-machine an unobstructed road was a check on the state of the art in partnerships. far simpler task than the cur"It is extremely important rent DARPA Robotics Chalthe field of mobile robotics. A preview of their work to remember that the DARPA lenge, which requires robots to suggests that nobody needs Robotics Challenge is about a drive and, while they're walkto worry about a Terminator team of humans and machines ing, navigate around obstacreating havoc anytime soon. working together," he said. cles, remove debris, use vision Given a year and a half to im- "Without the person, these and grasp with dexterity, and prove their machines, the ro- machines could hardly do perform tasks with tools. "We had a relatively easy boticists, who shared details anything at all." about their work in interviews In fact, the steep challenge task," said Sebastian Thrun, before the contest in June, in making progress toward a roboticist who led the Stanappear to have made limited mobile robots that can mimic ford team in 2005 and later progress. human capabilities is causing started the Google self-drivrobotics researchers world- ing-car project. "Today they're Basic functions wide to rethink their goals. doing the hard stuff." In the previous contest in Now, instead of trying to build robots,which were protected bots, many researchers have from falling by tethers, were begun to think instead of creglacially slow in accomplish- ating ensembles of humans ing tasks such as opening and robots, an approach they doors and entering rooms, describe as co-robots or "cloud clearing debris, climbing lad- robotics." ders and driving through an Ken Goldberg, a Univerobstacle course. (The robots sity of California, Berkeley,
as a makeshift examination
single one would give hope stand. Putting him under anfor the recovery of this mag- esthesia, the scientists used an
TETRAVAAL
phen Hawking and Bill Gates, who have all recently voiced
event resortedto such analo-
appointment that would repeat
for the Turtle Survival Alli-
scientists like Elon Musk, Ste-
Florida in December 2013, the
laid around 180eggs. But noneproved fertile, a dis-
itself for six years. "The conzookeepers gathered at the servation world was holding its Suzhou Zoo near Shanghai. breath," said Rick Hudson, the Their desperate mission: to president of the Turtle Survival attempt the first artificial Alliance. "It's been a lot of frus-
agency, puts a spotlight on what current robots are actually capable of.
I, (
and that summer, the female
Earlier this month, an international team of scientists, veterinarians and
The upcoming Robotics Challenge, sponsored by the Pentagon's research
In glossy sci-fi movies like "Ex Machina" and "Chappie," robots move with impressive and frequently malevolent — dexterity. They appear to confirmthe worst fears of prominent technologists and
By Rachel Nuwer New York Times News Service
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have an hour to complete a set a concept he calls "multiof eight tasks that would prob- plicity," with diverse groups ably take a human less than
of humans an d
10 minutes. And the robots are likely to fail at many. This
solving problems through
time they will compete with-
out belays, so some falls may be inevitable. And they will
still need help climbing into the driver' s seat of a rescue vehicle. Twenty-five teams are expected to enter the competi-
m a chines •
P
Simple for us, difficult for them For decades, artificial-intel-
tion. Most of their robots will
ligence researchers have noted that the simplest tasks for humans, such as reaching into a pocket to retrieve a quarter, are the most challenging for
be two-legged, but many will have four legs, several will
machines. "The intuitive idea is that
have wheels, and one "trans-
the more money you spend on
former" is designed to roll on four legs or two. That robot, named Chimp by its designers at Carnegie Mellon University, will weigh 443 pounds.
a robot, the more autonomy
None of the robots will be
•
collaboration.
you will be able to design into it," said Rodney Brooks, an MIT roboticist and co-founder
two early companies, iRobot and Rethink Robotics. "The
autonomous. Human opera- fact is actually the opposite is tors will guide the machines true: The cheaper the robot, via wireless networks that the more autonomy it has." will occasionally slow to just For e x a m ple, i R o b ot's a trickle of data, to simulate Roomba robot is autonomous, intermittent communications
but the vacuuming task it per-
during a crisis. This will give an edge to machines that
forms by wandering around rooms is extremely simple.
can act semi-autonomously,
By contrast, the company's
for example, automatically walking on uneven terrain or
Packbot is more expensive, designed for defusing bombs,
grabbing and turning a door
and must be controlled wire-
Corne learn the ABC's and 0's of Medicare and the often confusing process of the Nledicare system. You'll find the information you need to make the right decisions about Medicare health insurance.
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A4
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, MAY 28, 2015
ene i s seenin ByDonald G. McNeilJr.
likely to die during the trial, de- and Prevention.
New Yorh Times News Service
velop AIDS or a serious illness
ru sa ia nosis
"This is another incentive
put on antiretroviral drugs as
than those who waited. to seek out testing and start The study is strong evidence therapy early, because you
soon as they learn they are in-
that early
People with HIV should be
t r eatment saves will benefit," said Dr. Anthony
fected, federal health officials more lives, the officials said. said Wednesday as they an- Fewer than 14 million of the
Fauci, director of the National
nounced that they were halting
fectious Disease, which sponsored the trial. "The sooner, the
Institute for Allergy and In-
estimated 35 million people
the largest ever clinical trial infected with HIV around the of early treatment because its world are on treatment now,
better."
benefitswere already so clear
a ccording to
U N A I DS, t h e
Although the CDC recom-
and pronounced. The study was stopped more than a year early because preliminary data showed that those who got treatment im-
United Nations' AIDS-fighting
mends immediate treatment, it said in November that only 37
mediately were 53 percent less
Centers for Disease Control
Gen X Continued fromA1 "Now the time has come for
Generation Xjoinspresidential politics
ry," Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla.,
what kind of country we will be."
much less those not yet show-
correct mail carrier. Haas said if the Postal
Sen.
Sen. Marco
politically — a unique perspecjor presidential aspirants to be tive not available to Republican nominees of recent elections.
Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker, a Republican, is 47. Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., is 52, the
Kevin Madden, a Generation X Republican strategist who was a top adviser to Mitt Romney in 2012.
from a Central Oregon address to another Central Oregon address then returns to
the Bend processing facility, he said, where it's sorted a second time and given to the
probably more insightful, in my opinion," Rubio told BuzzFeed in 2013. "With all apologies to the Biggie fans."
Service were to shut down
the Bend processing facility, the second stage of sorting would also take place in Portland. Local carriers would pick up their mail, presorted, before beginning their delivery routes.
mits to being addicted to his iPhone, especially Twitter and
Haas said h e c ouldn't comment on whether mov-
the game Candy Crush. An
ing both sorting stages to
artist transformed Cruz into a ripped, tattooed smoker, and
P ortland would slow t he
speed of mail delivery in Central Oregon. He said the
he put it on Facebook. On the campaign trail, Cruz mentions that a group of Republicans were murdered at a Ted Cruz
Postal Service implement-
ed new service standards in January taking the cut-
by Ibpac and "Lose Yourself' Rubio, by Eminem, which features fundraiser on the HBO show R-Fla., 43 lyrics including: "If you had one "True Blood." "For anyone over 40 in the shot ... to seize everything you ever wanted ... would you cap- room, 'True Blood' is a show tureit?" on HBO about vampires, " was asked to choose his favorWalker only occasionally Cruz said in March in New ite episode of "The Simpsons." cites pop culture, with mixed Hampshire. "You know, that's a tough results. On Hugh Hewitt's radio Rubio has said he's friends call," he said on the Federalist show in March, he compared with the rapper Pitbull — ArRadio Hour. He then immedi- the Iran-Israel conflict to a mando, to him — and is a Nicki ately launched into explain- movie. Minaj fan. Paul, the Kentucky "I remember the movie in the Republican, has been furiously ing two episodes of the show, including one in which Lisa's '80s, "Trading Places," Walk- working to attract young peofavorite musician dies and ap- er said. "You know, with Dan ple to his tech-savvy campaign, pears in doud form along with Aykroyd and Eddie Murphy, opening offices in Austin and it's like Iran and Israel are trad- San Francisco. He's also a frecharacters from "The Lion King." Naturally, he cited an ing places in the sequel." quentuserof Snapchat, sharing The '80s and '90s nostalgia a dip of himself getting poker episode involving a politician — though he botched a quote. can take a serious turn, too. lessons from the "King of InsAbout freedom. Cruz and Rubio, for example, tagram." And he's notorious for "Forwards not backwards, have shared pivotal memories trolling everyone from Clinton upwards not downwards and of Reagan from their elementa- to PresidentBarack Obama on twirling, twirling into the fu- ry school days. Twitter. "For me, I was 10 when Reature," Cruz said. The characBut youth can be a liability in ter actually declared he was gan became president. I was 18 Republican circles, too, strate"twirlingtowards freedom." when he left the White House," gists say, because of lingering Rubio has a talent for "spit- Cruz said in 2013. "The World hostility toward Obama. ting" rap lyrics and has de- War II generation would often "You do have voters who clared himself the "only mem- talk about FDR as quote, 'our will also hesitate because of ber of the hip-hop caucus in the president,' I'll go to my grave the most recent example of a Senate." NBC News asked Ru- with Ronald Wilson Reagan candidate who was ushered bio to demonstrate his hip-hop defining what it means to be into office at a young age," said style; he dedined. president." Madden.
Rand Paul, R-Ky., 52
born in the 1970s. Louisiana
trucked to Portland for initial sorting. A l etter sent
chel Sidibe, executive director of UNAIDS. "People will be
Outta Compton," "Killuminati"
Rubio and Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, 44, are the first ma-
"For folks like John McCain Gov. Bobby Jindal, a Republican, who is exploring a run, is and Bob Dole, they showed a couple of weeks younger than themselves in camera shots Rubio. with Reagan as a peer," said
faredge ofwhat is considered Generation X, which is generThis cycle's younger canallyconsidered to encompass didates claim the mantle of people born between 1964 and Reagan "not because they had 1980. worked with (him), but because For some of these men, their he was the one who sort of deyouth affords them a currency fined the big issues of their gennot readily available to older eration," Madden said. candidates, including Jeb Bush, Hillary Rodham Clinton and '80s and'90s nostalgia Texas Gov. Rick Perry (who Spokespeople for Cruz, Ruonce asked a group of young bio, Walker and Paul declined people if they remembered to comment for this article. 1979): the ability to speak flu- But the candidates' ages have ently about the popular culture shown through on the camof recent decades. paign trail. "We live in an HBO, ESPN,
said that since April 2013, all mail originating in Bend or Central Oregon has been
rap songs are NWA's "Straight
43, said last month as he anis a generational choice about
Peter Haas, spokesman with th e P ostal Service,
tive people missed by testing, Plan for AIDS Relief has been those who had no health in- essentially flat since 2010. Putsurance and therefore did not ting all the people with HIV in see doctors or could not afford the world's poor and middle-inthe drugs, and those whose come countries on treatment doctors were unfamiliar with immediately would cost almost treatment guidelines. $20billion, about triple the $6.3 Internationally, there is not billion that is now being spent nearly enough money even to on that, UNAIDS said. "This is a defining moment put those who are already sick on antiretroviral medicines, for social justice," said Mi-
In an interview with GQ, Rubio said his three favorite Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, 44
Continued from A1
ing symptoms. The Global percent of infected Americans Fund to Fight AIDS, Tubercu- scared, saying, 'Oh, it will be had prescri ptionsforthedrugs. losis and Malaria is in a con- a big number.' But this puts an The agencyblamed a mix of stant struggle to raise money end to the false debate about factors, including HIV-posi- and thePresident' sEmergency whether to pay for treatment."
agency. In the United States, only about 450,000 of the estimated 1.2 million with HIV are on treatment, according to the
our generation to lead the way toward a new American centu-
nounced his presidential run in Miami, adding, "This election
Cruz once aspired to be an
TMZ society," said Republi-
Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker, R, 47
actor, andhe peppershisstump "The ones that I know are speeches with references to "Most people do not follow pol- quotes from movies including from the '90s, they're notitics that closely. Sometimes, "The Usual Suspects." they would all be censored any"You had me at hello," a line way," Rubio said. talking about something other than politics can be smarter from the movie "Jerry MaguRubio also has taken sides ire" he repeats to people who in the famous East Coast-West than talking about politics." ask a question he is excited to Coastbattle for early '90s rap The Reagan factor answer. His favorite movie? supremacy between Tupac In a Republican Party enam- "The Princess Bride." and The Notorious B.I.G. Rubio ored with all things Reagan, The Texas Republican also noted that 'Tupac rose to fame the younger candidates are does impressions, induding when the politician was in colable to talk about how the 40th Scotty from "Star Trek" and lege and law school. "I think Iltpac's lyrics were president helped mold them Darth Vader. Last month, Cruz can strategist Ford O'Connell.
backs into account — where
before a piece of first-dass mail would be delivered in one to two days, now it's two
to three days. In 2011, Postal Service
representatives said dosing the Bend facility could save $2.1 million annually while eliminating 17 jobs and slowingdelivery of the mail. Since 2007, Congress has requiredthe Postal Serviceto beginprepaying healthbenefits for Postal Service retirees who have not yet retired. If not for this requirement, the
Postal Service would have seen a modest profit in four of the last eight years. Haas said that next year
the Postal Service intends to revisit closing the Bend
processing center and other facilities that had been targeted for closure. — Reporter: 541-383-0387, shammers@bendbulletin.com
In 2011, Postal Service
representatives said closing the
And sometimes those who
Relating to ayounger crowd
create the art the candidates
The relative youth of Cruz,
Bend facility could
cite don't like it. Al Jean, a showrunner for " The Simp-
Rubio and Paul is amplified when they speak to people even younger than they are, a demographic Republicans have struggled to appeal to in recent elections. Cruz explains his opposition to Obamacare by telling young people to Google a Jimmy Kimmel clip. He ad-
save $2.1 million annually.
sons," paraphrased Cruz's favorite episode in a way the can-
didate would not enjoy: "Ted Cruz'? Go ahead, throw
ASSURANCE
your vote away," Jean told the Daily Beast.
Iswhatyou getwhen EVERGREEN manages your lovedone's medications
Other celebrities, induding Snoop Dogg and Beyonce have said they'll back Clinton.
BANKRUPTCY Email
from the then-governor's per-
$299, ...
appointees. He said he turned to a state
sonal accountbe deleted from state servers. The request rose
Continued fromA1 human resources official who Rodgers told the newspa- through the chain of command suggested he go to the media. per that his lawyer met with to Rodgers, who refused to deWillamette Week r eports a prosecutor from the Marion lete them. that Rodgers gave the emails to County district attorney's ofRodgers told W illamette the newspaper under the condifice, who said Rodgers could Week that he went to his boss, tion that he remain anonymous resign or face one count of offi- Michael Jordan, a Kitzhaber and that none of the documents cial misconduct for each of the appointee and close ally of the that were clearly about personmore than 6,000 emails that then-governor, who said he'd almatters wouldbe published. he leaked. He refused the deal. find out from the governor's Based on the information The prosecutor, Paige Clark- staff what was going on. Jor- provided by Rodgers, the newsson, did not respond to an email dan later told him the gover- paper reported on Feb. 12 that from The Associated Press. nor's staff wanted to review Kitzhaber's staff had requested She confirmed to Willamette the emails. He copied them the destruction of the emails. Week that a call took place but to thumb drives and, fearing His spokeswoman said they did not elaborate, the newspa- they'd eventually be deleted, he were from a personal account per reported. made a copy for himself. and archived by mistake. The Facing mounting legal fees, Rodgers said he was unsure report escalated the already Rodgers has turned to an on- what to do with the emails he growingpressure on Kitzhaber line crowdfunding campaign to had. He told Willamette Week to resign. raise money. he didn't trust the state police, The next day, he announced In February, with Kitzhaber which was part of Kitzhaber's his decision to step down, and and his fiancee embroiled in administration, and found that federal investigators served a conflict-of-interest scandal, a majority of the Oregon Su- the state with a subpoena for a a technology staffer received preme Court and all of the Or- wide range of records, includa request from Kitzhaber's egon Government Ethics Com- ing the emails he sought to assistant asking that emails mission comprised political delete.
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Multiple pages listing all 2015 Graduates
from local Central Oregon High Schools will publish in The Bulletin
Saturday, June13
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The Bulletin Serving Central Oregon since 1$8
A6
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, MAY 28, 2015
TODAY'S READ: AMERICA'S 'WARRIOR CLASS'
T e ivi e etweenciviians,t emiita is iowin Hiddenbehind'fortresses'
highest number of enlistments in 2013 — a total of 18,987 — but the state supplies a relativelylow
high school in 2003, when U.S. troops were fightingin Iraq and Afghanistan. But their son refused his parents' pleas to try college. He fol-
As she awaited her husband's FortBragghomecoming recently, Amanda Schade gave her twin baby sons pacifiers printed with"I love Daddy." She checked her makeup, then held up two small American flags the Army had supplied. Amanda spotted Spc. Aaron Schade among paratroopers
lowed them both into the Army
standing at attention before a
By David Zucchino and David S. Cloud
Tribune Washington Bureau
FORT BRAGG,N.C. — Jova-
no Graves' parents begged him not to join the Army right out of
percentage of its 18- to 24-yearolds, the age group that fills the military rolls everyyear. The highest-rate contributors
were Georgia, Florida, Idaho, Virginia and South Carolina. The District of Columbia was last.
instead. Last June, 11 years later,
The military-civilian divide huge American flag at Pope is not marked by particular anField. She whispered to her imosity or resentment on the
Staff Sgt. Jovano Graves re-
3-month-old sons, Bruce and
civilian side. In airports and
turned home from Afghanistan, joining his m other,
Ben: "That's your daddy. He's a restaurants, civilians t h ank hero." It wouldbe the firstmeet- men and women in uniform for
Chief Warrant Officer 4 Sonia
ing for the father and his sons.
their service. What most don't
Graves-Rivers, for duty here at Fort Bragg, North Carolina. "My family, going way, way back, has always felt so proudto be Americans," said Graves-Rivers, who comes from a family in whichmilitaryservice spans six generations, starting with her great-gr eat-grandfather, Pfc. Marion Peeples, who served in a segregated black unit during
Ageneral announced: "Please realize is how frequently such go welcome home your soldier!" gestures ring hollow. "So many people give you lip Amanda rushed forward, a twin tucked into the crook of serviceand off er fake sympaeach arm.Aaron swept up all thy. Their sons and daughters
Carolyn Cole/Los Angeles Times via Tribune News Service file photo
U.S. Army Chief Warrant Officer 4 Sonia Graves-Rivers holds her grandson, Aiessio, next to her son,
three. "I love you," he said.
aren't in the military, so it's
Staff Sgt. Jovano Graves, and grandaughter, Aysabey, age 4, in Fort Bragg, North Carolina, in 2014. U.S. Army Chief Warrant Officer 4 Sonia Graves-Rivers and her son Staff Sgt. Jovano Grave are both on active duty and follow in a long line of military in their family.
These scenes play out across America as the troops flock home,but they happen behind thelockedgates of militarybases, largely unseen by the civil-
not their war. It's something that happens to other people," said Phillip Ruiz, 46, a former Army staff sergeant in Tennes-
World War I.
lowest rate since World War II.
bers and comrades killed and
ian world.
Her father, Cpl. Harvey Lee Peeples, fought in the Vietnam
Aseparate warrior class
maimed, and endured psycho- itary," Gen. Martin Dempsey, Increasingly, those bases stan and Iraq. logical trauma that many will chairman of the Joint Chiefs have become fortresses. Base Opinion polls consistently
War. Her uncle Henry Jones Surveys suggest that as was career Air Force. Anoth- many as 80 percent of those er uncle, Sgt. 1st Class Robert who serve come from a family Graves, spent 22 years in the in which a parent or sibling is Army. Her sister, Janice, served also in the military. They often 24 years. Graves-Rivers, her live in relative isolation — be-
their civilian neighbors. Today's military enjoys a lifestyle that in many ways exceeds that of much of the rest of the country: regular pay raises
son and her second husband,
and lavish re-enlistment bonus-
hind the gates of military instal-
Army Col. Dale Rivers, have all lations such as Fort Bragg or in deployed overseas. the deeply military communi"In our
f a mily, there's a
deep sense that being American means serving — showing gratitude by giving back to your country," said Graves, who missed the birth of his son Alessio while in Afghanistan. Multigenerational military families such as the Graveses form the heart of the all-volun-
teer Army, which increasingly is drawing its ranks from the
relatively small pool of Americans with historic family, cultural or geographic connections to military service.
While the U.S. waged a war in Vietnam 50 years ago with 2.7 million men conscripted
from every segment of society, less than one-half of 1 percent of the U.S. population is in the
armed servicestoday — the
ties like Fayetteville, North Carolina, that surroundthem.
carry forever, often invisible to
tween our society and the milof Staff, wrote in a commentary in 2013."As a nation, we've
see who was wounded twice during three tours in Afghani-
closures have consolidated findthatthemilitaryisthemost
learned to separate the warrior
troop populations onto a doz- trusted American institution. en large "joint" bases and oth- A Gallup poll last June found
from the war. But we still have
er huge installations like Fort
that 74 percent of more than
much to learn about how to connect the warrior to the citi-
Bragg, home to 55,000 soldiers and their 74,000 dependents.
"a great deal" or "quite a lot" of
1,000 Americans surveyed had
zen.... We can't allow a sense Bases often feature their own confidence in the militaryes,free health care,subsidized of separation to grow between shopping centers, movie the- versus 58 percent in 1975, at the housing and, after 20 years of us. aters, restaurants andball fields. close of the Vietnam era. service,generous retirement
Dempsey's comments reflect a
Troops board planes for distant
Yet a 2011 Pew Research
benefits unavailable to many
growing concern in the military conflicts on their airfields and Center study titled "The MiliThe segregation is so pro- other Americans. that reintegrating service mem- return wounded to their hospi- tary-Civilian Gap" found that nounced that it can be traced Senior officers live in large bers into communities whose tals. Since the terrorist attacks only a quarter of civilians who on a map:Some 49 percent of houses, travel on their own understanding of war is gleaned on Sept. 11, 2001, the bases are had no family ties to the milithe 1.3 million active-duty ser- planes and oversee whole con- largely from television may be as largely off-limits to civilians. tary followed war news dosely. "Military bases are our most Half said the wars in Iraq and vice members in the U.S. are tinents with l i t tle d i rection difficult as fighting the war. "I am well aware that many exdusive gated communities," Afghanistan made little differconcentrated in just five states from Washington. Special-op— California, Virginia, Texas, erations teams carry out kill Americans, especially our elite said Phillip Carter, an Iraq vet- ence in their lives, and half said North Carolina and Georgia. missions and drone strikesclasses, consider the military eran who directs the Military, they were not worth fighting. "We've disconnected the The U.S. military today is a some even targeting U.S. citi- a bit like a guard dog," said Lt. Veteransand Society Program separate warrior class that sees zens — that most civilians nev- Col. Remi Hajjar,aprofessorof at the Center for a New Amer- consequences of war from the itself — and is often seen by civil- er even hear about. behavioralsciences and leader- ican Security, a nonpartisan American public. As a result, ians — as distinct from the counNow, as the military winds ship at the U.S. Military Acade- think tank in Washington, D.C. that young man or woman puttry it is charged with protecting. down its 14-year war in Afghan- my at West Point. ting on the uniform is much less "They are very thankful for Geographyand Most of the country has ex- istan and the Army cuts 18,000 likely to be your son or daughperienced little, if any, personal troops from its ranks, military our protection, but they proba- hollow gestures ter, or even your neighbor or impact from the longest era of officials are stepping up efforts bly wouldn't want to have it as Increasingly, A m e r ica'sdassmate," said Mike Haynie, war in U.S. history. But those to bridge the gap between veter- a neighbor," he said. "And they warrior class is defined by director of the Institute for Vetin uniform have seen their ans and the civilian world they certainly are not going to influ- geography. erans and Military Families at lives upended by repeated de- are preparing to rejoin. ence or inspire their own kids Southern states consistently Syracuse University in upstate "The last decade of war has to join that pack of Rottweilers provide the biggest proportion New York. "That is a dangerployments to war zones, felt the pain of seeing family mem- affected the relationship be- to protect America." of recruits. California had the ous place to be."
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Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B5 Weather, B6
© www.bendbuiietin.com/iocai
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, MAY 28, 2015
BRIEFING Madras man dies in wreck A Madras mandied Wednesday night after his vehicle rolled over on U.S. Highway 26just south of Madras, according to OregonState Police. Donald Vineyard, 37, was ejected from his 2000 Chevy Blazerand died at the scene. His vehicle was westbound at about 6:30 p.m., drift-
ed across the highway and rolled on theeastbound shoulder, landing on its side, OSPsaid. The accident, near milepost 6, remains under investigation.
Dorm anddining hall planned Oregon State University-Cascades hasselected a firm to develop and constructa student residence anddining facility on its proposed 10-acre campuson Bend's west side. American Campus Communities was awarded the right to begin pre-development services for the facilities while OSU-Cascades awaits the outcomeof an appeal ofthecampus site plan to the Oregon Land UseBoard of Appeals. A decision is expected in early June. American Campus Communities has developed student housing at OSU in Corvallis, Portland State University and Southern Oregon University in Ashland. OSU-Cascades' 86,000-square-foot residence hall would house more than300 students in single-, double-, triple- and quadruple-occupancy suites and include afitness center, gameroom, lounge andkitchens. Campus officials say they plan to house40 percent of students on campus. Thetwo-story, 27,000-square-foot dining facility would serve about 250 diners at once and also feature eight classrooms andoffices. OSU plans to issue a revenuebondto pay for the facilities, with housing, dining and other leaserevenue used to paybackthe debt service. Under aseparate contract, OSU-Cascadesplansto develop athree-story, 43,650-square-foot academic building with classrooms, laboratories, offi cesandstudyspace.
Proposedhousing for formerinmates The BethlehemInn is launching apartnership with DeschutesCounty to provide temporary housing for individuals recently releasedfrom prison. In anews release, the county said the program will assist offenders whowould likely become homelessupon leaving prison due tothe challenging Central Oregon housing market. Beginning in June, the Bethlehem Inn will allocate five beds to the county's parole and probation clients. SeeLocal briefing/B3
Correction In a story headlined "Land use application count up," which appeared Friday, May22, on PageC1,the source of water potentially stored at two small reservoirs was incorrect. The water stored there would be transferred from Upper Tumalo Reservoir by the Tumalo Irrigation District. The Bulletin regrets the error.
awma ersarewor in Birth control ocari s a e's em aws accessbils IN SALEM
By Taylor W.Anderson The Bulletin
SALEM — Hemp farmers
and an expert say a bill movingthrough Salem that's proposed as a way to get Oregon's hemp industry off the ground is too restrictive and would make marijuana the state's favored cannabis plant.
Oregon lawmakers passed a law in 2009 to legalize hemp, which has been classified as a
drug federally for decades be- to a thriving commercial marCourtney Moran, a Portland cause of its relative: marijuana. ket for the plant that's grown attorneywho isconsideredan But bureaucratic delays for i t s myriad benefits, but a expert on hemp. "The actual since 2009 and changhemp expert says the concerns regarding industrial Relate" es in the last year in bill caters to medical hemp should be addressed." • New rules how federal authormarijuana growers The bill was scheduled for for medical r a t her than hemp ities view the plant apreliminary vote in commarijuana,E3 growers. have kept Oregon mittee Wednesday that was "It's very clear that farmersfrom getting postponed until today. It has seeds in the ground. only the concerns of medical received vocal opposition from Amendments to House Bill m a r i juana growers and future some farmers and county 2668were presentedasaw ay recreational mar ijuana growcommissioners. to researchtheplantandlead ers have been addressed,"said SeeHemp/B2
passedby
state panels By Taylor W.Anderson The Bulletin
SALEM — Two bills
expanding women's access to birth control in Oregon
passed out of committee and are headed to the full Senate and House.
One that would require insurance companies to pay for birth control that
i vei' ai emen ar 00 S os Iea o uis i e Lln S
is dispensed 12 months at a time is headed for a final vote in the Senate. A sec-
ond would allow women to bypass seeing a doctor before receiving birth control directly from a pharmacist. It is headed to the full House.
The two bills would work together, meaning pharmacists could tech-
nically prescribe birth control for 12 months at a time, and insurance
companies would have to pay for it if both bills pass through the Legislature and are signed by Gov. Kate Brown.
Advocates say research shows prescribing birth control for 12 months at a
time may reduce unwanted pregnancies by 30 percent. The pharmacy bill was proposed as an amendment to House Bill 2879
by Rep. Knute Buehler, R-Bend, who called it "one of the most significant improvements to women's
health in living memory." Both bills passed out of their respective commit-
tees without opposition. The 12-month bill, House Bill 3343, which is
co-sponsored by the entire House Democratic caucus, received widespread Republican support when it passed the House 55-2 late last month. SeeBirth control /B2
Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin
Construction continues Wednesday afternoon at Silver Rail Elementary, which is located south of Reed Market Road and west of American Lane in Bend. It is set to open in the fall.
By Abby Spegman The Bulletin
Every student at Bend's
newest elementary school this fall will have access to Title Iresourcesforhigh-poverty students thanks to special permission the district received
ofstudentsreceiving freeor reduced lunch, it qualifies for
to resources paid for with Title
I funds. Schools typically open under the targeted assistance
hiring extra staff, professional development and materials.
model before they can transi-
tion to the schoolwide model.
For instance, using Title I
funds Silver Rail, now under
from state education officials.
Title I funds come from the federal government,
work with all the school's
help high-poverty students who are more likely to be academically challenged. If a school has a certain number
edM
Title I funds, which can go to
construction in SE Bend, plans to hire a full-time in-
distributed by the state, to
where all students have access
In Bend-La Pine, Title I
Silver Rail Elementary School
structional coach who can teachers and oversee educational assistants. Title I schools operate under
(
Pete Smith /The Bulletin
fy certain students in need of
one of two models: targeted as- extrahelp and directresourcsistance, where schools identi- es to them, and schoolwide,
funds go mostly to elementary schools. Next year, there will be 18 elementary schools in
New rule clears Lip the Clean Water Act
the district and all but four-
By Dylan J. Darling
Amity Creek, Highland, Miller and High Lakes — will be Title I schools using the schoolwide model.
The Bulletin
SeeSilver Rail /B5
A rule finalized
Wednesday by the U.S. Environmental Protec-
tion Agency and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers provides streams and
Coun reviewing proposedbudgets By Ted Shorack The Bulletin
With another year of an im-
proving economy, proposed budgets for individual Deschutes County departments appear to be looking up. The Deschutes County
Budget Committee, which includes county commissioners, met Wednesday
for the second day of budget hearings with county departments.
The county has proposed a total budget of nearly $309 million for the next fiscal
year, which runs from July 1 to June 30. The amount is a 0.1 percent increase from the
current budget.
Proposed 2016 DeschutesCounty duiIIet PROPOSEDDEPARTMENTAL BUDGETS: ~ Fiscal year2015 ~ $10 million
PERSONNEL COSTS
TOTAL REVENUE
RR R E "'
'14
director, was one of the
QQQ I
'15
budgets to the committee on Wednesday. SeeBudget /B6
223
R R R I ~'
$50 $100 $150 $200miilion Source: Deschutes County
• RRI
84
$105 million
'16 $20 $40 $60 $80 $100million
of the Clean Water Act.
The agencies say the rule makes clear that federal protections extend up from rivers, into their trib-
F iscal year 2016(proposed) $30m illion
$40 m illion
Sheriff's Office Health Services Road Department Solid Waste 2.7% $43.4 million <Anincreaseof74 Juvenile Justice +2.5% EMr LOVEESeVFUNCTjON percent from 2015.) Community Development +15.8% Public safety District Attorney's Office +46 43 5% Adult Parole andProbation +15.2% Public works General 7.9% Assessor's Office +7.6% government Fair and ExpoCenter +12.3% 20.9% Health anti welfare Clerk's Office +4 2% Recreation 26.4% Natural Resources Department +164.5% 1.2% Justice Court +3.6% NOTE: 0.2 percent of employeeswork in other capacities
Chris Doty, Deschutes County Road Department department heads that presented individual department
$20 million
wetlands protection from pollution and degradation, bringing clarity to what had been a murky portion
utaries and headwaters. "For the water in the rivers and lakes in our communities that flow to our drinking water to be clean, the streams
and wetlands that feed them need to be clean too," EPA Administra-
tor Gina McCarthy said Wednesday in a press release. "Protecting our
water sources is a critical component of adapting to climate change impacts like drought, sea level
FULL-TIME EMPLOYEES
rise, stronger storms, and warmer temperatureswhich is why EPA and the
14
R R R K 921
Army have finalized the Clean Water Rule to pro-
16
g g g g 934 955 g g g g 200 400 600 800people Pete SmithI The Bulletin
tect these important waters, so we can strengthen
our economy and provide certainty to American businesses." SeeWater/B3
B2
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, MAY 28, 2015
E VENT TODAY SUMMER BEERGARDEN: Featuring live music by the String Rats, food, drinks and more; 4 p.m.; CE Lovejoy's Market, 19530 Amber Meadow Drive, Bend or 541-388-1188. CENTRAL OREGON BEERWEEK: Featuring tastings from 5-7 p.m. and music from 7-9 p.m. every day; 5 p.m.; Broken Top Bottle Shop,1740 NW Pence Lane, Suite 1, Bend; www.btbsbend.com or 541-728-0703. FIFTH ANNUALBENDFILM BASH: Featuring an interactive, mixedmedia show presented by the "Night Lights with Shanan Kelley" crew; 6 p.m.; $55-$80; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www.bendticket.com or 541-388-3378. BOB SCHNEIDER:TheAustin, Texas, folk-rock artist performs; 7
p.m., doors open at 6p.m.; $23.50-
ENDA R Terrebonne or 541-419-8637. OPEN 'TIL DARK:Celebrate the end of Central Oregon Beer Week and the finale of the exhibit, Brewing Culture: The Craft of Beer, with a night of beer tastings and live music; 5 p.m.; $8, $5 for children and students with ID; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; www.highdesertmuseum. org/open-til-dark or 541-382-4754. CENTRAL OREGON BEERWEEK: Featuring tastings from 5-7 p.m. and music from 7-9 p.m. every day; 5 p.m.; Broken Top Bottle Shop, 1740 NW Pence Lane, Suite 1, Bend; www.btbsbend.com or 541-728-0703. AUTHOR! AUTHOR!:Piper Kerman, author of "Orange Is the New Black: My Year in a Women's Prison," will speak; 7 p.m.; $20; BendHighSchool,230 NE Sixth St., Bend; admin©dplfoundation. org, www.dplfoundation.org or 541-312-1027.
BEST OFBROADWAYCASCADE CHORALE CONCERT:Featuring music from "The Phantom of the Opera," "Les Miserables," Rodgers and Hammerstein musicals and more, including OperaBend with Adam Bathe; 8p.m.;$8inadvance, excerpts from their upcoming $10 at the door; The Summit production "Into the Woods"; 7 Saloon & Stage, 125 NW Oregon p.m.; donations accepted; First Ave., Bend; www.bendcomedy.com Presbyterian Church, 230 NE Ninth or 541-419-0111. St., Bend; 541-647-8720. TEASE BURLESQUE: The Portland FRIDAY burlesque troupe performs; 8 p.m.; SUMMER SALE:Featuring antiques $12 plus fees inadvance, $15at the door; Volcanic Theatre Pub, and vintage items, furniture, yard 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www. art, baked goods and more, to bendticket.com or 541-323-1881. benefit local food banks; 9 a.m.; Patchwork Antiques, 797 C Ave., BLACK LIGHTWHITE OUT PARTY: $35 plus fees; Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St., Bend; www. towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700. KRISTINE LEVINE:The Portlandbased comedian performs, with
To submit an event, visit bendbulletin.comlevents and click 'Add Event" at least 10 days before publication.
Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Questions: communitylife@bendbulletin.com,541-383-0351.
"I[
Piper Kerman, author of "Or-
P
ange Is the l
New Black: MyYear in
a Women's Prison," will
speak Friday at Bend High School
as part of Deschutes Public Library Foundation's 2014-2015 Author! Author! series. Submitted photo
Featuring raffles, a photo booth and more, with DJ Codi Carrol and DJ Harlo; 10 p.m.; $5; The Astro Lounge, 939 NW Bond St., Bend; www.astroloungebend.com or 541-388-0116.
Terrebonne; 541-419-8637. BEND WOMEN'S WEEKEND:A
SATURDAY
Bend; www.bendwomensweekend.
USED FURNITURESALE:A used furniture sale to benefit Lead and Love Dog Rescue; 9am; Bend Pet Express East, 420 NE Windy Knolls Drive, Bend; 541-788-1406. SUMMER SALE:Featuring antiques and vintage items, furniture, yard art, baked goods and more, to benefit local food banks; 9 a.m.; Patchwork Antiques, 797 C Ave.,
two-day conferenceabout renewal, inspiration and connection for women of all ages; 10 a.m.-6 p.m.; free; The Riverhouse Convention Center, 3075 U.S. Highway 97, com or 541-633-7115. CENTRAL OREGONSATURDAY MARKET:Featuring crafts, music, foodand more; 10 a.m.-4 p.m .; free; Across from the Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St., Bend; 541-420-9015. HAPPY GIRLS RUNBEND: Featuring half-marathon, 10K and 5K distances; starts on the Deschutes River and includes a
mix of trails, groomed paths and registration required; Riverbend Park, 799 SW Columbia St., Bend; www.happygirlsrun.com or 541-323-0964. CARGO BIKERODEO 8[ COMMUNITY RIDE:A familyfriendly event for cyclists, cargobike adventurers and more; noon; Bend Electric Bikes, 223 NW Hill St., Bend; https://www.facebook. com/events/879579698766548/ or 541-410-7408. BEST OFBROADWAYCASCADE CHORALE CONCERT:Featuring music from "The Phantom of the Opera," "Les Miserables," Rodgers and Hammerstein musicals and more, including OperaBend with excerpts from their upcoming production "Into the Woods"; 3 p.m.; donations accepted; First Presbyterian Church, 230 NE Ninth St., Bend; 541-647-8720. A LIFE-TRANSFORMING LOVE: Never Too Late: A former U.S. Army Captain will speak about finding peace in the middle of war and everywhere after; 4 p.m.; Bend Community Center, 1036 NE Fifth St., Bend; www. christiansciencechurchbend.org/or 541-418-1176. CENTRAL OREGON BEERWEEK: Featuring tastings from 5-7 p.m. and music from 7-9 p.m. every day; 5 p.m.; Broken Top Bottle Shop, 1740 NW Pence Lane, Suite 1, Bend; www.btbsbend.com or 541-728-0703. LAST SATURDAY:Featuring local art and culture with art openings, live music, food carts, workshops and more.; 6 p.m.; The Old
The Bulletin will update items in the Police Log whensuch arequest is received. Anynewinformation, such as the dismissal of charges or acquittal, must be verifiable. For more information, call 541-633-2117.
BEND POLICE DEPARTMENT Burglary —A burglary was reported at 7:18 a.m. May15, in the 63100block of Layton Avenue. Ths!t —Atheft was reported at11:23 a.m.May 22,inthe500 blockofSW 13th Street. Theft —Atheft was reported and an arrest madeat1:36 p.m. May 22, in the 20100 block of Pinebrook Boulevard. Thsft —Atheft was reported and an arrest made at4:26 p.m. May 22, in the63400 blockofN.U.S.Highway 97. DUII — Kyle LeoSwantek, 39, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at
Hemp
10:32 p.m. May22, in the area of NW Columbia Street and NW Galveston Avenue. DUII —Nicholas JamesCraig, 29, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at11:07 p.m. May 22, in the1100 block of NE Third Street. DUII —Travis JamesRoehl, 29, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 2:37 a.m. May 23, in thearea of NWFirst Street and NWPortland Avenue. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 7:01 a.m. May 23, in the1000 blockof NW Galveston Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at 8:58 a.m. May 23, in the1200 block of SE Third Street. Unlawful entry —Avehicle was reported entered at 9:34 a.m. May23, in the1200 block of SE Third Street. DUII —Kaylee AnnSmith,19, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at12:55 a.m. May 24, in the1100 block of SE Third Street. DUII —SheenaNicole Olsen, 30, was
arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 2:32 a.m. May 24, in thearea of NENinth Street and NE Greenwood Avenue. Theft —Atheft was reported at 9:10 a.m.May 24,inthe62400 blockof Eagle Road. Unlawful entry —Avehicle was reported entered at 9:59 a.m. May24, in the 63400 block of Lamoine Lane. DUII —Grant Allen Davis, 29, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 1:46 a.m. May25, in the area of NW Greenwood Avenueand NWHarriman Street. Un!aw!u! entry —Avehicle was reported entered at 6:52 a.m.May25, in the 61200 block of Bighorn Court. Unlawful entry —Avehicle was reported entered at 7:29 a.m.May25, in the 61200 block of Bighorn Court. Theft —Atheft was reported at 9:44 a.m. May 25, in the1000 block of NE 12th Street. Theft —Atheft was reported and an arrest made at12:30 p.m. May25, in the 900 block of NWWall Street. Theft —Atheft was reported at12:04
Continued from B1 Rep. Peter Buckley, D-Ash-
land, whoalso sits on the committee regulating marijuana before itbecomes legal July 1, said he proposed the hempbill as a way tolaunch a commer-
cial hemp industry that has sputtered while states such as Kentucky, Tennessee and Col-
orado have grown the industry. The bill w ould prohibit growing hemp and marijuana outdoors within 5 miles of each other. That so-called buffer zone w ould p r event
cross-pollination between the THC-rich marijuana plant and hemp, which has virtually no psychoactive ingredients. "We're trying to find a way for coexistence to make sure
nobody's crop is damaging anybody else's crop," Buckley said in an interview.
Cross-pollination between the plants is ruinous for both
crops. If a male hemp plant pollinates a female, bud-producing marijuana plant, the buds would turnto seeds. But Cheryl Walker, a Josephine County commissioner, said the buffer zone would
amount to a prohibition of hemp growing in her county. "There is not a single valley or a single location in our county t ha t
w o ul d w o r k ,"
Walker said. Oregon has legalized three cannabis industries despite
their designation on the federal controlled substances list alongside heroin and other drugs. As more states enact cannabis laws that c ontra-
must be sterilized before they can be sent. Plants are also
cult to find seeds to plant.
Thomason would l i kely considered illegal in m o st have to plow under his newly circumstances. planted farm because it's too In last year's Farm B i ll, closeto a high school in JoseCongress put a provision that phine County, Buckley's office allows states to set up hemp said. Thomason said Buckley research programs run by the is favoring marijuana over state departments of agricul- hemp despite years of availture or public universities. able research where hemp is After taking more than five legal, such as in Canada and years tocreate rules for the Europe. "The research has already hemp industry in Oregon, the state Department of Agricul- been done. This is just awayto ture came up with rules that cut us out of the opportunity in would still leave hemp farmers favor of the medical marijuavulnerable to federal criminal na growers," Thomason said penalties. One amendment to in an interview. Buckley's bill would provide An amendment to B uckley's bill would nullify the 13 protection. The state has given 13 hemp licenses and require farmers licenses to farmers and busi- who have planted hemp seeds nesses, some of whom want to plow under their plots. The to grow hemp for its medicinal state would reimburse them ingredient, CBD, that has been for any money they lost beshown to help cancer patients cause of the change in state and people who suffer from law. Prospective hemp growseizures. They'll all lose their ers would then reapply to licenses under provisions in become one of just six test Buckley's bill. plots that would research the One farmer, Cliff Thoma- plant alongside Oregon State son, has planted hemp seeds University.
dict federal laws, Congress and federalagencies have set on some of his 43 acres after guidelines for states to follow receiving a license earlier this to prevent problems. year. He wouldn't say where For hemp, federal law pro- he got the seeds, which may hibits sending live seeds have been in violation of federacross st ate l i n e s. S e e ds al law, but he said it's not diffi-
"The amendments that have
p.m.; $10 suggesteddonation; High Desert Martial Arts, 2535 NE Studio Road, Bend; www. highdesertmartialart.com or 541-647-1220. PATRIMONY:The blues-rock band performs, with Hungry Skinny and Moon Room; 9 p.m.; Silver Moon Brewing, 24 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; www.silvermoonbrewing. com or 541-388-8331. TONY SMILEY:The loop-ninja from Portland performs;10 p.m.; $5 plus fees in advance, $7at the door; The Astro Lounge, 939 NW Bond St.,
Bend; www,astroloungebend.com or 541-388-0116.
rectly to women 18 and older. Girls can receive birth control from the pharmacy under the
Continued from B1
p.m.May 26,inthe2600 blockofNE Courtney Drive. Unlawful entry —Avehicle was reported entered at1:21 p.m. May26, in the1800 blockof NEBerg Way. Unlawful entry —Avehicle was reported entered at 7:20a.m. May24, in the 1200 block of NEDawson Drive. Theft —A theft was reported at 3:55 p.m.May 25,inthe20200 blockof Reed Lane.
Mary Nolan, interim ex- bill, but they must show proof ecutive director of Planned that they've received a preParenthood Advocates of Or- scription from a physician in egon, called the 12-monthbill thepast. one of thebiggest expansions Women must show they've
OREGOM STATE
in accessto birth control in 25
received a n
years. "If you're a college student and you get your prescription atcollege and then you're home for the holidays in be-
from a physician every three years before a pharmacist can continue prescribing them birth control under
tween, there's a gap," Nolan
said. "If you dispense ail 12 months at one time instead of 30 days or 90 days, you reduce the likelihood of an unintendedpregnancyby 30percent."
POLICE DUII —Jeremy Allen Yeust, 31, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 5:50 p.m. May 24, in thearea of Powers Road and U.S.Highway97. Vehicle crash —Anaccident was reported at12:04 p.m. May26, on U.S. Highway 97 nearmilepost145. DUII —Joseph Henry Blount,18, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 12:24 a.m. May27, inthe area of U.S. Highway 97andRevereAvenue.
Planned Parenthood
is
staying neutral on the pharmacy birth control bill, Nolan
said, because it applies di-
ex a m ination
House Bill2879.
"Increasing accessto birth control is one of the most important things we can do to
improve the lives and health of women from all walks of life," House Majority Leader Val Hoyle, D-Eugene, said in a statement. — Reporter:406-589-4347, tanderson®bendbulletin.com
Bill ill SSlem —House Bill3343 would require insurance companies to payfor birth control that is dispensed 12 months at a time, which research showsmay reduce unwanted pregnancies byasmuchas30percent.HouseBill2879asamended would allow women toreceive birth control directly from the pharmacy without seeing adoctor first. Research shows that may lower unwanted pregnancies by up to 25percent. What's next:HouseBill 3343 passed the Houselate last month 55-2. It passedout of committee onthe Senate side Wednesday and heads tothe Senatefloor for final passage. HouseBill 2879 passedout of a Housecommittee Wednesday. It will head to the Housefloor and would then gothrough the Senate. Online:ReadHouseBill 3343 at https%/lis.leg.state.er.us/ liz/2015R1/Dewniaads/MeasureDecument/HB3343/A-Engressed.ReadHouse Bill 2879 at https://alis.leg.state.er.as/ liz/2015R1/Measures/PrepssedAmendmeats/HB2B79.
into hundreds of thousands if Bill ii! Salem —House Bill 2668 would create 5-mile buffer zones betweenoutdoor hempand marijuana grow sites. Other amendments seek to create aresearch-based hempindustry in Oregon. Chiefsponsor:Rep. Peter Buckley, D-Ashland History:Oregon legalized hemp in 2009, but its industry hasn't lifted off the ground because ofconflicts between federal and state law. Thestate Department of Agriculture also took years drafting rules for farmers to follow. Evenunder the finished rules, farmers could bevulnerable to federal penalties unless the state changes the law. What's next:Scheduled for vote in committee today. Online:Readthe bill at https://eiis.leg.state.or.as/liz/2015R1/ Dewaleads/PrspesedAmenslmeat/7013
more, doors open at 7p.m., show at 8 p.m.; 7 p.m.; $17 plus fees in advance,$20 atthe door;Domino Room, 51 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; www.bendtickets.com. DEAD AT THEDOJ: Featuring the music of The Grateful Dead, performed by Brent Alan, Mark Ransom8 The Mostest, Rising Tide, DJ GratefulKevand Jive Coulis, to benefit students of HDMA, doors open at 6 p.m.; 7
Birthcontrol
XEWS OF RECORD POLICE LOG
Ironworks, 50 SE Scott St., Bend; 347-564-9080. LAVA CITY ROLLERDOLLS VS. TSUNAMI SIRENS:Roller derby bout featuring the Tsunami Sirens from Crescent City, CA, with halftime performances by the Bend Fire Pipes and Drums and the CIS Irish Dancers; 6-8:30 p.m.; $10 for two tickets online in advance, $10 at the door, $5 for children; Cascade Indoor Sports, 20775 NE High Desert Lane, Bend; 541-330-1183. WRECKONIZE:The hip-hop artist performs, with Potluck, Prevail and
paved surfaces; 9a.m.-2 p.m.; $40,
hemp were harvested for CBD rather than for another of its
uses, textiles. A provision in Buckley's bill that might be taken out would alsoprohibit hemp from being grown outdoors anywhere in Josephine, Jackson and Douglas counties, which are considered one of the best regions in
the worldto grow hemp and marijuana. Jackson a n d
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Jo s ephine
counties have a disproportionate number of registered medical marijuana growers and cardholders, according to data from the Oregon Health
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lation of about 206,000 that is
nearly four times smaller than Multnomah County, has about
three-quarters as many growers. Much of the pot in those areas is grown outdoors be-
cause of the climate. "We're going to have to
~ CELEBRATION =" CENTRAL
sharethisland between hemp
and marijuana," said Rep. Carl Wilson, R-Grants Pass, who
said he opposed somecomponents of Buckley's bill. Other farmers agree some-
•
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MAY 22 31
o
thing needs to be done to clar-
ify the plant's legality here before they plant. But with or without Buckley's bill, Oregon may likely miss another growing season.
MALT RsT[vgt
FEATURING MCMENAMINS, SUNRIVER BREWING COMPANY, WILD RIDE BREWING, DESCHUTES BREWERY, THREE CREEKS BREWING, BEND BREWZNG CO, WORTHY BREWING, BROKEN TOP BOTTLE SHOP,CROW'5 FEET COMMONS, RIVERBEND BREWING, DOWNTOWN BEND, AND MORE!
"Now would be the t i me
if we're going to move forward with it," said Eric Lund,
a license holder who plans to grow a hemp strain that is high in the medicinally valu-
been put forward would essen- able CBD. "We're unsure as of tially put us out of business," right now just because of what Thomason said, adding an in- the law is." vestment of several thousand — Reporter:406-589-4347, dollars could easily multiply tanderson@bendbulletin.com
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THURSDAY, MAY 28, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
B3
REGON
i wou e e n saueo imi a ions orsexua assau • State senate paneladvancedthe bil that would double it fromsix to 12years The Associated Press SALEM — An Oregon Sen-
ate panel advanced legislation Wednesday that would expand the length of time rape or sexual assault victims have to seek charges against their abusers, doubling it from six to 12 years. Even so, some sexual assault victims want the statute
of limitations expanded to 20 years or done away with completely. The Senate Committee on
Judiciary voted unanimously to send the measure to the full
Senate but also opted to convene a work group to study whether the statute of limita-
tions should be extended further. Eugene Democratic Sen. Floyd Prozanski, chair of the
Several victims of sexual assault testified that their cas-
es were never put on trial because the time limits on prosecutions had run out when they
"Five men have raped me in my lifetime. And I have never,I will never see justice for any of them. Theonly person who has suffered for their crimes is me." — Brenda Tracy, who alleges that four men, including
Oregon State University football players, raped her in1998
were ready to come forward. "Five men have raped me in my l ifetime. And I h ave
friend when she was 9, back when the statute of limitations was three years. She didn't report the crime until she was
never, I will never see justice for any of them. The only person who has suffered for their 12, after the reporting period crimes is me," said Brenda was up, she said. Tracy, who has alleged that The committee didn't take four men, including two Ore- action on two amendments gon State University football that had been proposed Tuesplayers, raped her at a party day, one which extended the in 1998. limits to 20 years and one that The four men were arrest- eliminated them altogether. ed, but p r o secutors didn't Opponents of the measure
unpleasant truth. All allegations of sexual assault don't look the same. Some simply are not true, some simply are not accurate. And the way in which the criminal justice
system today resolves that is through tangible evidence found shortly after the allegations are raised," said Gail Meyer, a lobbyist for the Oregon Criminal Defense Lawyers Association.
say the current statute of
the case. Sixteen years later,
evidencecorrupts over time, tions would apply to rape, such as memories that decay sodomy, unlawful sexual pen-
committee, said the 12-year
Tracy said she "couldn't be silent anymore," but the statute
concession is intended as a
of limitations has passed.
stopgap while the work group Tracy said she was first revisits the issue. raped by a babysitter's boy-
Sage grOuSefunding —FiveDemocratic senators areasking colleagues to fund preservation efforts for the imperiled greater sage grouseandGunnisonsagegrouse.ThesenatorsonTuesdayurgedthe Appropriations Committee to fund programs that include cooperative efforts with landowners. Thegreater sage grouse lives across the West. TheGunnison grouse is found in Coloradoand Utah. In November, federal officials designated theGunnison grouse athreatened species, the less restrictive of two categories under theEndangered Species Act. Theyface aSeptember deadline to decidewhether to protect the greater sagegrouse. State andfederal agencies hopevoluntary efforts will avoid a listing because ofthe restrictions it would bring. The senators are Michael Bennet ofColorado, DianneFeinstein of California, JonTester of Montanaand Jeff Merkley and RonWyden of Oregon. PiPeline PrOteSt —Hundreds of people rallied at the OregonCapitol calling onGov.Kate Brown to block two proposed liquefied natural gas export terminals in thestate. Canadiancompany Veresen Inc. wants to build anexport terminal in CoosBayon Oregon's south coast. The JordanCoveEnergy Project would receive natural gasthrough a 232-mile-long pipeline. AmericancompanyOregon LNGis also trying to build a terminal inWarrenton that would beconnected to Woodland, Washington. Thoseopposed saythat the CoosBaypipeline would cross private property, affecting about 700 landowners. It would also cross 400 bodies ofwater, which contain threatened or endangered species. Participants marchedTuesdayfrom the Capitol to the Oregon Department of State Lands,which has legal authority to block LNG terminals and pipelines.
that exists and that can be
press charges because Tracy decided not to participate in
limitations r ecognizes that
AROUND THE STATE
The new statute of limita-
or evidence, like text messag-
etration and sexual abuse, all
es, that can disappear. "In our world though we
in the first degree. The proposal now goes to
see a very unfortunate and
the Senate.
GrantS PaSS murder —A manavoided a death sentence by pleading guilty to charges related to his brother andsister-in-law's killings. Gary Goins, 62,wasfound guilty last week onaggravated murder charges. Accepting apleadeal during thesentencing phaseallowed Goins to avoid thedeath penalty. Prosecutors presentedevidence atthe trial that Goins, from Pollock Pines,California, shot the couplebecause they cut him off financially. Their bodieswerefound three dayslater in October 2011neartheir home north of Grants Pass. JaneClaus was one of the attorneys defendingGoinsandsaid Tuesday's resolution saved taxpayers money,ending amonthlong trial. Neither the prosecution nor the defendantmadedetails of the pleadeal public — From wire reports
ALSO IN SALEM
Ore on Senate ac snewre uations orme ica mariuana By Jonathan J. Cooper
counties to ban marijuana stores in their boundaries. SALEM — The state Senate Supporters of the bill say voted Wednesday to impose Oregon's minimally regulated stricter regulations on Ore- medical marijuana program gon's medical marijuana pro- produces far too much of the gram as lawmakers get ready drug, and much of the excess for the legalization of pot for ends up on the black market. recreational use. They say reining it in is crucial Senators overwhelmingly to creating a market for retail supported the measure, 29-1, marijuana. The Associated Press
but now it goes to the House,
where it's viewed with much more skepticism from key lawmakers who staunchly oppose a provision allowing cities and
Water Continued from B1 The finalized rule comes in
response to queries over the pastdecade from federallawmakers, local and state offi-
cials, environmental groups, scientists and the public, according to the EPA. U.S. Su-
"The stuff that's now
going to the black market, let's get that funneled to the
recreational market." — Rep. Glnny Burdlck
market, let's get that funneled
ocrat who has been among the
to the recreational market."
ate, including stores, testing or processing facilities, and grow The bill would impose new sites. Democrats, particularly regulations, including limits those in the House, fear the
most vocal critics of the local opt-out in the Senate bill. Still,
provision would make it too
single grow site, an inventory tracking and reporting sys-
difficult for patients to get the bill die. "The speaker believes regdrug. "I don't think at this point ulations to the medical mariwe should deny patients ac- juana program are necessary
tem, inspection requirements
and an Oregon residency mandate for growers and patients. Those provisions are
"Right now, under this remarijuana," said Rep. Ginny gressive federal system where Burdick, a Portland Demoit's illegal to transport it across state lines, we're sitting on
this huge supply of medical
cess to medicine," said Sen.
Continued from Bf
The partnership will be for one year initially, with options for renewal.
La Pine parks, Bicycle Re-Source get grants United Way ofDeschutesCounty has given $5,300 in grant funds to La Pine Park and Recreation District and to Bicycle Re-Source of Bend. La Pine Park and Recreation District received $3,600 for an expansion of its after-school program through June. Formerly, the district's after-school program only served middle and high school-aged students. Beginning in January, the district started a pilot to include third- through fifth-
grade students. During the pilot, only 12 to 20 younger children were included. Nowwith the grant, 25 to 40 younger children can attend the after-school program, which will continue through next schoolyear. Bicycle Re-Source of Bend received $1,700 to replace worn-out tools used in the shop to repair donated bicycles. Bicycle ReSource of Bend hasbeen repairing bicycles for donation to youth and adults in need for about four years. Community members donate the bicycles to the shop, where they are repaired by trained volunteers.
effort to address both issues
this session," said Lindsey O'Brien, a spokeswoman for Kotek.
Find It All tures of flowing water — a bed, and wetlands, induding tribuThe 1972 act established per- bank and ordinary high-water taries to major rivers, are under mitting and regulation for pub- mark — to garner protection, federal protection, said Rikki lic waters. It also set civil and although it does not need to Seguin, director of Environc~ pen a lties for polluters. have water in it y ear-round, ment Oregon, a Portland-based The new rule does not ex- according to the EPA. Most environmental group. Given pand the scope of what waters ditches used in agriculture do drought conditions around are protected by the act; rather not fall under the definition of much of Oregon, she said peoit better explains which waters astream. ple need to do everything they are protected, said Yvonne ValUnder the r ule, anyone can to "protect the water we lette, aquatic ecologist for the looking to physically change have." a stream or wetland must first
Online
bendbulletin.com TheBulletin
• 30 YearsExperience • Honest a Fair • NoIob Toosmall • State-of-the-Art Computer Diagnostics
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The finalized rule will help,
"The problem we had until
obtain a federalpermit, Vallette she said. "We are talking about some and wetlands. this rule came out — there was said. Changes include dredging Last March, the EPA an- not a dear definition as to what or filling, building a road cross- pretty critical water here," Senounced plans to detail which types ofstreams were subject ing and constructing a dam. gulll SRld. streams and wetlands were in- to protection or not," she said. The rule makes it dear that — Reporter: 541-617-7812, duded as public waters protectA tributary must have fea- thousands ofmiles of streams ddarling@bendbulletin.com
LOCAL BRIEFING
in order for the successful im-
Floyd Prozanski, the lone dis- plementation of Measure 91, senter in the Senate. and she supports the ongoing
broadly supported. The controversy arises from In the House,the measure crat who wa s i n strumental an option for local govern- will go to the Ways and Means in crafting the bill. "The stuff m ents torefuse permission for Committee, ledby co-chair Pethat's now going to the black marijuana businesses to oper- ter Buckley, an Ashland Dem-
ed under the Clean Water Act.
preme Court decisions in 2001 and 2006 had left questions EPA in Portland. about protection for streams
Speaker Tina Kotek, D-Portland, does not want to see the
on the number of plants at a
Many of the people who receive a bicycle are homeless or can't afford a car.
Two menarrested after meth foundhidden Two men were arrested after a quarter-pound of methamphetaminewas foundinahidden compartment within their sedan. Just before midnight on April 2, Bend Police pulled over a car on SE Third Street driven by Gibrian Jesus Cuevas Teran, 27, of Montebello, California, and Erwin Avila, 24, of Madera, California, for a routine traffic violation, according to a news release from the Central Oregon Drug Enforcement Team. During the stop, a police K-9 detected narcotics. A search of the vehicle by Bend Police and the drug enforcement team led to the discovery of the compartment, which was behind the stereo. Inside, officers found $3,500 worth of methamphetamine, according to the release. During a later search, detectives also discovered a second hidden compartment in the car's front bumper, though it was empty at the time. According to the press release, such compartments are often used to traffic drugs. Both men were lodged in the Deschutes County Correctional Facility on charges of possessing and distributing methamphetamine. — Bulletin staff reports
I' ~
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he U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs touts the Veterans ChoiceProgram as connecting veterans "to timely and convenient access to health care in your community." But that's not the case for some Central Oregon veterans. Congress needs to fix it. Veterans Choice was supposed to be one of the solutions to the VA's waiting list scandal. The program would let veterans who live more than 40 miles away from a VA health care facility see a private doctor to get their care. About $10 billion was put into the program. The program began less than a yearago,and althoughithasworked for some veterans, it hasn't really lived up to the promise of making it easierforveterans togetcare. Here's one example: The VA interpreted the 40 miles as being as the crow flies, rather than as common sense would suggest it should be — asaveteran would drive.That rule has been fixed. There is still a problem in Central Oregon and elsewhere. Bend's outpatient facility is limited. It offers many services to veterans, but doesn't offer some specialized care. There is no cancer treatment or cardiology, for instance, as Bul-
letin reporter Tara Bannow wrote in Wednesday's Bulletin. So being within 40 miles of the Bend clinic doesn't mean some veterans can get easy access to the care they need, but they couldn't use Veterans Choice. The U.S. Senate passed a billon Friday to change that part of the requirement. Thebill nowheads tothe House of Representatives. If that was all that was going on with Veterans Choice, it would sound like a fix is in the works. But President Obama said earlier this year that he would like to reallocate some of the $10 billion for the
program. The number of people using the program hasindeed been lower than anticipated. With all the problemsVeterans Choice has had, though, is that any surprise? W e don't have aproblem with reallocating the money if it can be put to more effective use to serve veterans. But it's too soon to evaluate Veterans Choice. It hasn't had a chance to be a solution.
Pendleton Round-Up doesn't need a flyover
S
omething will be missing for those attending the Pendleton Round-Up this September. Though the U.S. Air Force has resumed flyovers of some public events, it won't put in an appearance at the rodeo. That's a disappointment for the rodeo's promoters, who note that the Air Force traditionally has flown overthe Saturday afternoon championship event. The flyovers stopped two years ago, when the Air Force temporarily pulled out of the publicity flyover business. It has resumed them thisyear. Meanwhile, the rodeo's supporters have enlisted the help of U.S. Sens. Ron Wyden and Jeff Merkley, and U.S. Rep. Greg Walden, R-Hood River, to try to change the mind of Air Force Secretary Deborah James. They're not likelyto have much luck.
would spend millions. The Air Force has settled on a mere 450 flyovers in 2015. Some flyovers are far more expensive: The cost of flying over the 2011 Super Bowl in Arlington, Texas, was pegged at $450,000, accordingto U.S. Navy officials, $109,000 of that for fuel alone. While the Pendleton Round-Up is abig deal,both by rodeo and Oregon athletic competition standards — it draws more than 50,000 spectators over four days — it's nothuge on the national stage. Professional rodeo is popular, to be sure, but while it attracts more than 300,000 spectators nationwide annually, that pales in comparison with the attendance leader, high school sports, which well over 5 million Americans turn out for each year, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. In an era when military budgets Given the needs of the military face almost certain cuts, the flyovers and its budget, it's no wonder the Air are an expensive proposition. An in- Force has decided to put its flyover dividual flyover can cost as little as resources elsewhere this year. At the $36,000, but if the Air Force were to same time, it has said the Round-Up perform at each of the 5,000 events can apply again next year, which it that have sought flyovers this year, it surely will.
(~
) ~T a J
M 1Vickel's Worth Bendhas distorted
The constant waste of money the road. Mountain biking out your this city puts out is unbelievable. front door. Beer and alcohol are an No more parks! Hardly anyone easy stagger away. Many of us Bend residents are uses the ones we have! Divert funds Soon to come: Legal marijuana. really wondering about how the to getting our infrastructure back Listen up: OSU-Cascades is becitybudget is so messed up. The in shape! Otherwise, we are look- ing promoted to out-of-state stuBend parks seems to be bleeding ing more and more like an Obam- d ents — out-of-staters who w i l l money. We have new parks going anation — ignoring our national be paying full tuition. Parents, in everywhere. West side gets ev- deficit like it doesn't exist! OSU-Cascades isn't being built for That's what the city of Bend is the education of your daughters erything. Is it because of the rich on the west side? Seems whenever doing. Ignoring what is important. and sons. You're paying in-state tuthere is property to buy, Bend parks Andy Uppendahl ition — they don't want your kid. has plenty of money to buy it with. Bend OSU-Cascades wants some outWhen does city infrastructure get of-state kid who pays full tuition. any money? We have to approve Marriage shouldbe If the O SU-Cascades admission fuel tax increases to see any street office is choosing between your betweenman and woman improvement. When does its imin-state tuition son or daughter or portance play a role in our city There are only two genders, dear some out-of-state full-tuition applispending? friends: male and female. cant, who do you think is going to You drive by the many parks What we do with our masculinget the acceptance letter'? in town to see them mostly emp- ity and femininity is our choice. Mark Morgen ty. Soon we will have nothing but Excluding cases of assault, sexBend gravelroads to get places. And ual behavior is always a choice. with the city r oad m aintenance Mind you, I do not put the onus on Campus needs more land destroying our streets with mag- thoughts and feelings. But in order nesium chloride, which the city to act, we must at some point say Hats off to William Hand, whose says is not corrosive ... go drive the "yes" or "no." letter appeared May 19 in your "In stretch of Reed Market from the Let us hear the truth that is sel- My View" column. I hope this was Brookswood circle to the Bill Healy dom heard within our culture's tsu- an eye-opener to all residents of Bridge. All the fancy stamped nami of harmful nonsense: In or- Bend. The back-and-forth discusroundabouts and curbs, which cost der to provide needed stability and sion in your paper (for the most us taxpayers plenty, are eroding health, goodness and beauty for part) has missed the mark. Mr. away. The top is peeling off. Soon ourselves, our children, our coun- Hand's opinion brought into view
priorities
this whole stretch will be needing
try, the proven bond is one man,
to be replaced because of ignorant
one woman committed in marriage world can OSU-Cascades even for life. Period. Like it or not. think about building a first-class HalIe Groza university on only 10 acres! Bend I would like to congratulate Truth In Site for at least bringing some of
maintenance.
This city needs someone who knows about what this chemical does to concrete.I also wonder
what happens to the fish when magnesium chloride runs off into the Deschutes River. Not to speak
OSU-Cascades maybefor
out-ofstate students
of them spraying it down early in I doubt that the OSU-Cascades the morning, when there isn't a Campus is intended for the benefit cloud in the sky, and no precipita- of Central Oregon students. tion forecasted. That stuff keeps In i t s r ec r u iting l i t e rature, the streets sticky and wet, when OSU-Cascades touts the c lose the edge of the streets is totally dry. proximity to recreation, to the Old When will this madness stop? Mill and downtown. Skiing just up
the real issue, which is how in the
the real issues to light. However,
that is only the trees, not the forest. Mr. Hand is pointing out the forest! Kudos, and wake up, citizens
of Bend. If we allow this campus to be built on its current property,
we will regret it for years, even decades, to come. Sandy Sears Bend
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IN MY VIEW
B en cou By Nils KrIstIansen ere is much discussion about the west-side location for the
OSU-Cascades campus. Many questions have been asked about long-term planning and not been answered. Now COCC is on board with the west-side location. COCC has a huge piece of land that it has had as long as I can remember, and maybe it can benefit from filling its dorms with OSU-Cascades students. That does not mean that the piddly 10 acres that was grossly overpaid for is a good place for a university, and paying the mining company now for a future possible purchase is another money pit. The city purchased Juniper Ridge for expansion many years ago. It
e
vacant. Early on, Les Schwab headquarters moved there from Prineville. So
now this land that the city has free and clear and not generating tax rev-
enue is more expensive for OSU-Cascades than the highest-priced land in the city?
The 10-acre site is also in a commercial area, which is definitely expensive land. There are so many complaints about the present location from the neighbors not wanting the congestion in the neighborhood to increase the traffic snarl we already have. Having plenty of taverns
U u i a t) u n i er Ri e The city has put all the infrastructure cost on the
developers. That may workin places where the lots can sell for over $200,000 and the houses over $600,000, as in Northwest Crossing, but not for places where students can afford to rent.
bit the bullet and built the infrastrucWe know that there are neighborture, making it affordable for busi- hoods close by that would not like ness and housing, it would also be af- all this, but avoiding sharp contrasts fordable for OSU-Cascades to build a in the area adjoining those houscampus there with plenty of room for es could be handled. Having a road expansion. that does not go through existing Do you think ho m e-builders residential neighborhoods should be and recreationclose by sounds like might find the land affordable for possible. fun, but it's not conducive to helping low-cost housing? Low-cost housJuniper Ridge is close to shopping students excel in their studies. ing is in short supply, and students and closer to Sisters and Redmond I hear that businesses are not tak- who live off-campus could live close. than any other Bend location. Soonwas controversial because we had ing advantage by locating in Juniper Since the city owns the land it should er or later it should be developed, and the city competing with private de- Ridge — why is that? Could it be the be able to manage the zoning needs since taxes on bare, city-owned land velopers. The land still sits mainly cost of infrastructure? So if the city that we have. does not bring in a lot of revenue,
perhaps they should do like developers have to do — get the project done to get the monetary returns. The city has put all the infrastruc-
ture cost on the developers. That may work in places where the lots can sellfor over $200,000 and the
houses over $600,000, as in Northwest Crossing, but not for places where students can afford to rent.
We know that Wal-Mart planned a superstore on Cooley and Highway 97, and we lost our KOA in the pro-
cess. Again, I believe the infrastructure costsand traffic demands were
the deal-breaker, and Redmond got the store. It is time that the city administrators make it easier for individual
land owners to make their land profitable, then they can collect taxes on the profit. — Nils Kristiansen lives in Bend.
THURSDAY, MAY 28, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
Duke
Daniel James Wambaugh, of Redmond
May 22, 1949- May 24, 2015
Sept. 2, 1925 - April 12, 2015 Arrangements: Autumn FuneralsRedmond (541-504-9485) www.autumnfunerals.net Services: Celebration of Life will at the Riverhouse in Bend, Sat., May 30, 1-4 p.m.
Clayton Wayne Jonas, of Bend April 28, 1931 - May 20, 2015 Services: No services will be held.
Frank A. McKitrick Jr., of Bend Nov. 26, 1935 - May 21, 2015 Arrangements: Prineville Funeral Home, 541-447-6459, www.prinevillefuneralhome.com
Services: There will be a Celebration of Frank's life at the Bend Senior Center, May 29, 2015 at 5:00 PM.
Shellie Dee Dean,of Prineville Oct. 14, 1952 - May 22, 2015 Arrangements: Autumn FuneralsRedmond (541-504-9485) www.autumnfunerals.net
Services: A Memorial Service will take place at a later date.
Iris Edna Wood, of Bend Oct. 26, 1926 - May 24, 2015 Arrangements: Deschutes Memorial Chapel 541-382-5592 www.deschutesmemorialchapel.com
Services:
No services.
Dittany "Dee" Osgood, of La Pine Jan. 6, 1945 - May 25, 2015 Arrangements: Baird Memorial Chapel of La Pine is honored to serve the family. 541-536-5104 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A private family gathering will take place at a later date. Contributionsmay be made to:
ALS Association: Gift Processing Center, PO Box 6051, Albert Lea, MN 56007, www.alsa.org Partners In Care Hospice, 2075 NE Wyatt Ct., Bend, OR 97701, 541-382-5882, www.partnersbend.org
FEATURED OBITUARY
(SkiP) Lee
G raveside s e r vices w i l l be held on Saturday, May 30, 2015 at Deschutes Mem orial G a rdens i n B e n d , O regon for a g e n t le, l ov i ng h usb a n d , fat he r , g randfather, s o n , u nc l e a nd d e a r friend, who was taken from us after a v ery h a r d
fought
battle w ith c a n cer. Carl (Skip) Lee He passed Duke peace-
tully with
h is f a m il y
a n d be l o v e d
dogs by his side. C arl (Skip) D uk e
was
born on M a y 22 , 1949, to p arents, Carl a n d L o u i s e Duke in Flagstaff, Arizona. At the age of 2 the family m oved t o S w e e t H o m e , Oregon where he attended
g rade school an d
high
school. He resided in th e S w eet Home-Lebanon area until he moved to Bend, Oregon i n 1 9 8 1 w h e r e h e r emained until his death. H e w o r k e d f or W i l lamette Industries in Sweet Home from 1968 to 1970 w hen h e w a s i n j u red o n t he job. A f t e r m o v ing t o B end, he w a s a bl e t o g o b ack to work . H e w o r k e d as a n A r m e d Se c u r i t y Guard at the Bend River M all - D elivery D r i ver f o r S herfy D i s t r i b utin g a n d t hen J e l d -We n W in d o w and Door u n ti l h e r e t i r ed in 2014. H e met and m a r r ied h i s wife, Dorothy of 4 6 y e ars in the Sweet Home-Lebanon area where they were married on July 5, 1969. He was an avid NASCAR f an. F o r t unately over t h e y ears he w a s a bl e t o a t tend a few races which he
thoroughly enjoyed, espe-
c ially w hen h e g o t t o g o "HIS B O Y S . " H e with loved fishing, hunting, and c amping, e specially f i s h i ng w it h h i s d e a rest a n d best friend, Jim. F amily an d Fri en d s meant a lot to him . E v e ry one of them had a special p lace in his heart. H e w a s amazed by all the support and love he got from everyone during t h ese p ast few mo n t h s . H e w a s
SpecialOlympianwas Los Angeles Times
When Marty Sheets,who was born w it h D ow n s y ndrome, was about 4, a doctor
Back home, Sheets learned how to do it that same day. "He was a gentle person," said his father, David Sheets. "But one thing about Marty, he
disabilities.
said she does not anticipate changes in Title I status at
theworld:
S. Parker Gilbert, 81: Businessman who led Morgan Stanley when it went public in
1986 and, in retirement, steered the 2005 uprising that pres-
sured Chief Executive Officer Philip Purcell to step down. Died Wednesday in New York. Dennis Sheehan, 69: U2's longtime tour manager. Died Wednesday i n
Sout h ern
California.
Death Notices are freeand will be run for oneday, but specific guidelines must be followed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeral homes. Theymay besubmittedby phone, mail, email or fax. The Bulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information on any of these services or about the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825. Phone: 541-617-7825
Email: obits@bendbulletin.com Fax: 541-322-7254
— From wire reports
With more money, that
district is looking to tran-
any schools for the 2015-16 school year but there might be changes in 2016-17. New housing developments can also bring an influx of students to a neigh-
increased with the advent of the Special Olympics, where he could compete against others who also had intellectual
He competed not only in weightlifting, but also swimOlympics around the world," ming, golf, skiing, tennis and said Timothy Shriver, chair- track and field, and was also man o f t h e or g a nization, chosen to engage with celebri"someone with t oughness, ties at events that raised awarecompassion, grit and love of ness of themovement. He skied sport, Marty would always with Billy Kidd, played golf
s ition it s
— Reporter: 541-617-7837, aspegman@bendbullet in.com
Phone:202-225-6730 Web: http:I/walden.house.gov Bendoffice: 1051 NWBondSt., Suite 400 Bend, OR97701 Phone:541-389-4408 Fax: 541-389-4452
U.S. SENATE • Sen. Jefl Merkley, D-Ore. 107 Russell SenateOffice Building Washington, D.C.20510 Phone:202-224-3753 Web: http:I/merkley.senate.gov Bend office: 131 NWHawthorne Ave., Suite 208 Bend, OR97701 Phone:541-318-1298 • Sen. Ron Wyden,D-Ore. 223 Dirksen SenateOffice Building Washington, D.C.20510 Phone:202-224-5244 Web: http:I/wyden.senate.gov Bend office: 131 NW Hawthorne Ave., Suite 107 Bend, OR97701 Phone:541-330-9142
with Gary Player and chatted
with many sports giants, including Muhammad Ali, Arthur Ashe and Pele.
He witnessed the tremendous growth of the movement that now has thousands of
events worldwide for millions
He competed i n
S p ecial of athletes with i ntellectual Olympic events, where one of disabilities. The World Sum-
his specialties was power lift-
mer Games comes this year to Los Angeles, where 7,000 parIn 2010, because ofhis health ticipants will be competing at problems, he retired from the a variety of venues beginning stock room of a Macy's depart- July 25 for nine days. "At the first World Games, ment store where he had been employedfornearly 40years. we were looked at as just peoing, until about 2009.
STATE OF OREGON • Gov. Kate Brown, D 160 State Capitol, 900 Court St. Salem, OR97301 Phone:503-378-4582 Fax: 503-378-6872 Web: http://governor.oregon.gov • Secretary of State 136 State Capitol Salem, OR97301 Phone:503-986-1616 Fax: 503-986-1616 Email: oregon.sos©state.or.us • Treasurer TedWheeler, D 159 Oregon StateCapitol 900 Court St. NE Salem, OR97301 Phone:503-378-4329 Email:oregon.treasurer©state. or.Us Web: www.ost.state.or.us
U.S. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES • Rep. Greg Walden, R-HoodRiver 2182 Rayburn HouseOffice Building Washington, D.C.20515
ple," Sheets told the Charlotte
mination at the first Special Observer in 1999. "Now we're Olympics in Chicago in 1968, looked at as athletes." but not on the playing fields. He had been chosen to be one of the 1,000 athletes at the event, but fell severely ill and couldn't
gyfrrRTLAND QUQI f7y
compete. He forced himself out of bed to attend the dosing banquet,
• 0
Eunice Shriver, who was the
•
sister of John F. Kennedy and died in 2009, probably didn't give Sheets the medal just to be nice. "My mother didnot award
people who did not perform," Timothy Shriver said in an interview Tuesday. "She was all
about enabling people to do something and then rewarding them when they did.
"But there was something about Marty that caused her
to do something she would not
ordinarily do. She must have seen something in him." Sheets was born March 31,
1953, in Raleigh, North Carolina. Doctors advised his parents to consider institutionalizing
him, but they rejected that, raising him at home and enrolling him in public schools. His mother, Iris, who also survives him, played a key role in his development, David Sheets said, as did his two younger sisters who also sur-
PERFECT FOR FATHER'S DAY!
The Favorite Gift
vive him: Nancy Grantham
and Jamie Gulledge. Marty Sheets enjoyed wrestling in middle school and briefly competed. But his participation in sports greatly
2 (5 oz.j Filet Mignons 2 (5 oz.j Top Strloins 4 (4 oz.j Boneless Pork Chops 4 (4 oz.j Omaha Steaks Burgers 4 Stuffed Baked Potatoes 4 Caramel Apple Tartlets
Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and by4:30 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication. Obituaries must be received by 5 p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the second dayafter submission, by1 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication, and by 9 a.m. Mondayfor Tuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; pleasecall for details.
49377DDT
Reg. $164.00 I Now Only
Mail:Obituaries P.O. Box 6020
Bend, OR97708
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e
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a
J
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: ii
s c hools t o t h e
schoolwide model, beginning with Lynch Elementary in the fall.
PUBLIC OFFICIALS
son to represent the Special
Obituary policy
Deathsof note from around
wanted to really prioritize
support in the early grades to could change demograph- make a difference down the ics at some schools. Arntson line," Seeberg said.
Special Olympics/Submitted photo
the organization.
Sheets showed his deter-
help students in kindergarten through second grade in reading. "With limited funding, we
Crest Middle School. That Marty Sheets became one of the most prominent Special Olympic athletes in the world, winning approximately 250 medals in a variety of sports.
Carolina. He had been suffering from dementia for the last five years, said his father, and recently contracted pneumonia.
model use Title I money to
schools in an effort to alleviate overcrowding and assign students to Silver Rail and the new Pacific
Sheets went on to become one of the most prominent Special Olympic athletes in the world, winning approximately 250 medalsin everything from downhill skiing to weightlifting. He chatted with President Bill Clinton and first lady Hillary Clinton, hobnobbed with celebrities, and became one of the primary ambassadors of
home in Greensboro, North
are
Currently the district's ele-
The district this year redrew boundaries for Bend's
learn to tie his own shoes.
Sheets, 62, died May 21 at
R edmond s c hools
Pine as a Title I school using mentary schools operate unthe schoolwide model. der the targeted assistance
told his parents that he was so disabled he would never even
surface to the top of the list."
demographics of the neighborhood," she said.
R osland Elementary in L a
where the founder of the Special Olympics, Eunice Kennedy Shriver, spotted him and gave He was preceded in death him a gold medal "for your by both of his parents, Carl and L o uise, an d b e l oved guts and for your effort."
niece, Callie. He is survived by his wife , Dorothy of Bend, daughAag. 26, 1927- May17, 2015 ter, Tammy o f B e nd , son Doris Hall, 87, of Albany, and daughter-in-law, Scott passed away Sunday. The a nd A n d r ea , of Ben d ; daughter o f A den an d g randchildren , Ch r i s t o Henrietta (Woodward) pher, K a y l a , M i c h a e l a, Hardesty, she was born in Zach, Alex, Jaden, Jorden, K noxville, IL . D o r i s m a r - Sami, Austin, an d C a sey; r ied Donald H al l o n J a n . m other-in-law L om on a 10, 1 9 47, T ucker of L eban o n ; brother-in-law Ken Tucker couver, and w i f e L y n d i a o f of WA. B end; sister-m-law B o b b i Doris and Birch and husband John of Don L ebanon; s i x nep h e w s , raised n ine n i e c es, tw o g re a t their f amnephews, 13 great nieces; i ly i n t h e and d e a r es t a nd bes t Albany friends, Jim Reynolds and area until wife, Fayme. Doris Maxine the 1970s F or a n y on e w a n t in g t o Hall then lived a ttend s ervices, yo u a r e near Bend for thirty years. m ore t h a n w e l c o m e t o S he wor ke d a s a n a d - wear a NASCAR t-shirt in m inistrative secretary f o r his honor. L BCC an d C O C C . H o b D eschutes Mem or i a l b ies i n c l u de d p ai n t i n g , C hapel a n d Ga r d en s i s w riting a n d tr a v el . S h e pleased to serve the famw as an a v i d r e a der a n d ily. Please visit the on-line lover of the natural world. g uestbook a t w w w . d e s D oris is survived by h e r chutesmemorialchapel.co s ons, Jan Hall o f A l b a n y , m 541-382-5592 and Leland Hall of LaPine; s even grandchildren; a n d three great-grandchildren. S he w a s pr e c e ded i n death by he r p a r ents and husband, Donald. At her request no public service will be held. Fisher Funeral Home is handling arrangements.
ELSE%THERE
does have an impact on the
genuinelyloved by many.
Doris Maxine Hall
DEATHS
to Dana Arntson, the district's director of elementary
s a i d A r n t s on,
dealing with such changes now. A recent census showed more high-poverty students, the Title students" separat- which brought more Title I ed from other students and dollars to the district, accordteachers. ing to Linda Seeberg, Redmond's executive director of The district got s imilar permission in 2010 to open academic achievement.
By David Colker
"When we looked for a per-
borhood,
programs. "It's just not as flexible a model," she said. "You end up with this silo where you have the Title teachers and
model of determination
had determination."
Silver Rail
pointing to recent news of a Continued from B1 153-apartment complex goOpening Silver Rail un- ing up in NE Bend off U.S. der the targeted assistance Highway 20. "Depending on w h at's model wouldhave meant a disruption in services for in- being built and the clientele coming students, according who will be attracted, that
BITUARIES DEATH NOTjCES Carl
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TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, MAY 28, 2015
W EAT H E R Forecasts andgraphics provided byAccuWeather, lnc. ©2015
i
1
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I
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TODAY
ii
TONIGHT
LOW 48 ' ~ u
HIGH 8 0' ~ Mostly sunnyandvery warm
i i ' 1
ALMANAC
FRIDAY
SATURDAY
"'"
82' 52'
~
Partly sunny,warm; astray p.m. t-storm
Partly cloudy
82' 5 1'
Some sun, at-storm around in the p.m.
EAST:Sunnyto partly cloudy today with a Seasid warmer afternoon; 50/49 perhaps an isolated Cannon thunderstorm overthe 59/50 mountains late. Tigamo
TEMPERATURE
ria
/4
~
Shown is today's weather.Temperatures are today's highs andtonight's lows. umatiaa Hood SS/55 RiVer Rufus • ermiston
Warm with somesun; a stray p.m. t-storm
i
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UV INDEX TODAY
POLLEN COUNT
NATIONAL WEATHER
WATER REPORT 15S001
79%
Crescent Lake 7 5 099 s5% Ochoco Reservoir 30425 59Vo Prinevige 104701 7055 River flow St a tion Cu. ft./sec. Deschutes R.below CranePrairie 315 Deschutes R.below Wickiup 991 107 Deschutes R.below Bend Deschutes R. atBenhamFags 1450 Little Deschutes near LaPine 102 Crescent Ck. belowCrescent Lake 25 Crooked R.above Prineville Res. 50 Crooked R.below Prineville Res.
Crooked R. near Terrebonne Ochoco Ck.below OchocoRes.
4S contiguousstates) National high: 101 at Presidio, TX National low: 32 at Truckee, CA Precipitation: 2AS" at Spring, TX
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Hi/Lu/W 83/65/1 85/65/1 85/63/pc 84/59/pc 66/49/s 84/66/1 78/64/pc 84/68/1 86/65/pc 64/49/sh 85/66/1 63/37/c 84/60/pc 70/57/pc 75/59/pc 84/65/pc 85/66/pc 73/55/pc 83/67/pc 84/62/t 83/65/1 56/42/t 80/58/1 84/66/1 85/67/1 62/45/t 78/64/1 88/65/t 85/65/1 86/66/1 82/54/pc
Juneau Kansas City Lansing Lss Vsgas Lexington Lincoln Little Rock Lus Angeles Louisville Madison, Wt Memphis Miami
Milwaukee Minneapolis Nashville New Orleans New YorkCity Newark, NJ Norfolk, VA
Q
Honolulu 83/49
T-storms
Source: USDA Forest Service
ssn5/t
79/66/1 86/68/pc 62/47/t 77/56/1 85/66/1 65/40/c 96/65/pc 74/49/s 61/38/c 74/42/s 82/61/pc 78/47/t 83/64/1 85/66/1 86/60/pc 72/50/t 83/70/sh 84/71/t 83/65/1 84/65/pc 87/67/1 85/67/s
Amsterdam Athens
O
•
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Budget
plan program, which is used fiscal year 2016, the road deto upgrade roads, bridges and partment is expecting to see Continued from B1 intersections. a 2 percent increase from the "I'm really happy with $1.8 state fund. The amount alloThe road department has proposed a $27.7 million bud- (million) being available," said cated from the state is based get. It includes 8 $9.3 million Doty. on vehicle registration within beginning f un d b a l ance. About $750,000in system the county. "We're outpacing our other About $2.5 million is budgeted development charges will conto come from federalgovern- tribute to t h e i m provement counties in the state, so we're ment payments through the plan as well. The charges are getting a little more of that," Secure Rural Schools pro- collected from new develop- said Doty. gram and Payments in Lieu ment to account for the added The department's pr oof Taxes. The payments offset use and strain on the trans- posed budget has a nearly 4 declining timber payments portation system. percent increase in the beand an inability to allow develDoty also noted good news ginning fund balance from opment on public land within involving the state highway last fiscal year. But Doty said the county. fund, which is generated from the department is going to be Doty said $646,000 from a fuel tax, a tax on freight conservativewhen deciding the federal payments will go trucks and other fees. The whether to add employees to basic operations; the re- amount D eschutes County back to pre-Great Recession maining $1.8 million will go received for the current fiscal levels. to the capital improvement year was relatively flat. For Nick Lelack, the Communi-
reserve funds were at $687,470 director, also presented a pro- last fiscal year and are expectposed budget on Wednesday ed to be about $1 million this for his department. fiscal year. "We feel like we're in a very The department is made up of four divisions that include good position moving foradministrative and coordinat- ward," Lelack said. ed services, building safety, The reserve funds are environmental soils and plan- used for maintaining service ning. The proposed budget for levels during an economic the department is $7.2 million. downturn. Lelack pointed out that reLelack also noted the deserve funds, which are gener- p artment has paid of f a ated by permits and fees from $90,360 portion of debt and construction activity, have in- has one remaining payment creased and are higher in the on a $164,225 debt service, inproposed budget. The surplus cluding principal and interest. subsided during the economic Broc Stenman, chairman of downturn and was depleted the Deschutes County Historic by fiscal year 2009. Two of the Landmarks Commission, also ty Development Department
three reserve funds were reactivated in fiscal year 2015. The
82/60/s 83/62/pc 95/72/s 97n2/s
72/62/0.02 84/55/Tr 82/67/0.15 84/68/0.20 85/71/0.02 88/69/0.08
77/57/s 77/49/1 82/63/1 70/48/r 84/65/pc 84/66/1 86/73/pc 87n3/t 85/66/1 81/64/pc 88/65/1 80/63/pc
83/63/pc 82/66/pc 76/64/t 76/54/1 86/69/pc 85/69/1
77/60/pc 79/61/pc 85/68/pc 85/69/pc 83/63/pc 78/51/t 86/71/1 86no/t
ssns/0.00 87/75/pc 88n6/pc
gont/0'.00 84/67/t
83/68/1 81/60/0.15 80/66/1 80/63/1 84/53/0.00 76/65/1 77/55/1 9On2/rr' 88/69/pc 88/72/t Palm Spdings 96/66/0.00 100/73/s 103n7/s Peoria 82/65/0.01 86/67/pc 81/63/1 Philadelphia 89/71/0.57 88/68/pc 85/67/pc Phoenix 97n4/o'.oo 98/73/s 102n5/s Pittsburgh 81/65/0.46 82/60/pc 86/66/1 Portland, ME 79/63/0.00 80/57/1 73/53/pc Providence 80/62/0.00 79/59/1 81/57/pc Raleigh 87/70/0.28 86/66/t 87/64/t Rapid City 74/49/Tr 72/51/1 61/42/sh Rsnu 82/49/0.00 83/56/s 86/57/s Richmond 91/72/0.00 86/68/1 85/67/1 Rochester, NY 84/68/0.00 77/55/pc 87/65/pc Sacramento 80/54/0.00 86/56/s 88/57/s St. Louis SSnorrr 86/70/1 83/69/1 Salt Lake City 71/51/0.01 69/51/1 74/55/pc San Antonio 9Onsrr'r 87/73/c 86n1/t San Diego 69/61/0.00 70/62/pc 72/62/pc Ssu Francisco 64/54/0.00 66/54/pc 67/54/pc Ssn Joss 72/57/0.00 75/54/pc 77/55/pc Santa re 77/46/Tr 80/48/s 79/50/pc Savannah ssnuo.oo 85/64/pc 86/67/pc Seattle 76/53/0.00 78/56/s 77/53/pc Sioux Falls 83/49/0.00 77/59/1 68/43/1 Spokane 75/48/0.00 79/58/pc 81/60/pc Springfield, Mo 85/63/0.11 79/65/t 79/64/1 Tampa 91/72/1.24 90/70/s 89n2/t Tucson 96/64/0.00 96/65/s 98/67/s Tulsa 87/65/0.14 81/67/c 81/65/1 Washington, DC 9On5rr'r 90/71/1 86n1/pc Wichita 83/59/0.02 78/65/1 78/60/1 Yskims 84/55/0.00 89/57/s 91/58/pc Yuma 94/68/0.00 97/69/s 101n2/s i
SO/5 7
»
77/64/0.01 93/70/0.00 82/66/0.37 83/50/0.00 85/67/0.00 72/59/0.00 80/67/0.11 77/60/Tr 80/70/0.02
Omaha Orlando
o
k %0
Hi/Lu/Prec. Hi/Lu/W HiRo/W 58/49/0.35 71/43/pc 75/44/sh 81/56/0.00 78/65/1 77/59/1
OklahomaCity
64/46/0.01 59/49/sh 60/47/r 82/63 ~ un 79/59/0.12 72/62/t 72/61/sh ' v /60 XXXX%'eXXW XX> ffsto Auckland 57/48/0.02 58/43/s 59/46/pc 77/57 XX5' stroii w York Baghdad 100/82/0.00 106/85/pc 103/79/pc ol s 1/ee 5/55 Bangkok 95/80/0.14 97/81/1 97/80/t 5 XX< XVeafe <X< < .icsgo ot mbus ilsdelphis Beijing 89/65/0.00 gono/pc 77/60/sh 81/ 2 • • ulJI' /es Beirut 93no/0.00 84/69/s 78/67/pc sh shclsco Ssli • Den 69/51 Berlin 59/45/0.00 68/49/pc 67/51/pc ds/54 ngton 72/ LssV ss Bogota 66/52/0.04 67/50/1 64/50/t Luuts 95/7 W WkaeseWty si. „ Budapest 61/52/0.22 66/45/pc 73/51/pc : w78j!Ss Buenos Ai r es 66/50/0.02 64/54/s 62/54/pc "II .v Chsrto Los An les Csbu SsuLucss 93/70/0.00 93/68/s 96/68/s c X + WW+ v.V.++X X V.V.S4/6 7/61 Cairo 111/80/0.00 94/68/pc 85/67/s pboen usu Atbuqus Calgary 72/52/Tr 57/41/c 64/40/pc q V) +S Sa/4 Csncun 88n9/0.00 88/81/s gon2/pc • usgs Dublin 55/43/0.16 55/41/c 55/40/sb 84/6 Edinburgh 53/45/0.17 54/42/sh 54/40/sh 71/43 Geneva 66/50/0.00 73/49/pc 76/53/1 Xk • itshdu Harsrs 75/50/0.00 76/45/s 77/48/s i '0 s~h+ 4/72 rlesns , 8 59 Hung Kung 90/81/0.10 89/82/c 90/81/1 Chihushus Sd/73 0. Istanbul 70/68/0.07 71/62/pc 71/62/c 93/59 Jerusalem 97/67/0.00 91/59/pc 79/53/s Monte y 412/55,( AQ 4 93/72 Johannesburg 73/52/0.00 72/47/s 73/49/s ~ v i i i ' ve i i i i i Lima 73/67/Tr 74/64/pc 74/63/pc Lisbon 90/64/0.00 85/62/s 77/59/s Shown are today's noonpositions of weather systemsand precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day. London 68/45/0.00 62/47/c 61/46/sh Rain S h owers S now F l urries Ice Warm Front Sta t ionary Front Madrid Cold Front 84/54/0.00 87/60/s 84/59/1 Manila 90/81/0.02 93/80/sh 92/80/t XX%'e%
Yesterday Today Friday
City
•
255 151 5
FIRE INDEX
'e
Bed/v
83/SS
65' 42'
Partly sunnyandcooler with a t-storm
Yesterday Today Friday
•
Wickiup
' ~ ~
48'
City Hi/Lo/Prec. HiRo/W Abilene 90/65/0.00 83/65/1 High 72 57 87' in 1934 lington 87/54 Portland ss/Bs Akron 82/67/1.00 82/60/s Meac am Lost;ne 43' 39' 21'in 1954 Low 5 58 Albany 88n1/0.11 80/55/1 • W co 75/45 Enterprise dletcn 72/4 he Daa 8 7 Albuquerque 79/57/0.00 84/57/s • • 73/45 83/ 4 PRECIPITATION CENTRAL:Mostly andy • Anchorage 61/41/0.00 64/46/s 89/60 55/48 Mc innvia • Joseph Agsnta 83/66/0.00 82/67/t 3/55 Govee • He ppner Grande • 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.00" sunny today with a n t • u p i Condon 2/51 76 46 Atlantic City 79/64/0.00 80/65/1 Record 0.52" in 1993 warmer afternoon. union Lincoln Austin 87/67/0.20 86/70/c 80/ Month to date (normal) 0.9 7" (0.75") Clear to partly cloudy B1/50 Sale Baltimore 88/70/Tr 89/65/1 Granttee • pray Year to date(normal) 5.39 " (4.89") tonight .Mostlysunny 83/ /56 Billings 67/51/0.04 66/49/c a 'Baker G NBWPG 72/38 Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 30 . 01 " and warm tomorrow. 59/49 • ~49 Birmingham 85/68/0.13 82/66/t 2/51 • Mach 5 7B/43 Bismarck 82/48/0.00 78/49/1 C a m P S h m 5 u R e 1I WEST:Low clouds 90/48 1\ O r9 RS I SUN ANDMOON Boise 76/54/0.08 78/54/s Yach St/4S • John eu at the coast this 93/52 Boston 79/60/1 eo/49 • Prineville oay 6/41 Today Fri. tario Bridgeport, CT 85/65/0.00 morning, then partly 76/63/0.00 78/60/1 51/45 • Pa lina 79 / 5 1 5:2S a.m. 5: 2 7 a.m. 50 Buffalo 81/67/0.02 75/56/pc sunny; mostly sunny Flofell e • Eugene ' Re d Brothers 5:35 p.m. 5: 3 5 p.m. with a warm afternoon 52/50 Vatee Burlington, VT 88/70/0.03 76/56/1 St/51 Su iVere SO/48 • 47 3:45 p.m. 4: 4 5 p.m. 82/52 Caribou, ME 86/61/0.31 75/49/1 inland. Nyssa • 79/ Ham ton Charleston, SC 86n1/0.00 85/64/1 2:54 a.m. 3 : 2 2 a.m. • La plne J untura S1/ 4 9 Grove Oakridge Charlotte 84/65/0.32 86/65/1 • Burns OREGON EXTREMES L ast Ne w Firs t 80/48 82/52 /52 Chattanooga 85/66/0.00 82/64/t • Fort Rock Riley 77/43 YESTERDAY 4' Cresce t Cheyenne 68/48/0.04 66/43/c 77/43 76/50 Chicago 74/64/Tr 83/63/s High: aa' Bandon Roseburg • C h ristmas alley Cincinnati 81/65/Tr 82/64/pc Jordan V gey Jun 2 J un 9 Ju n 1 6 J u n 24 at Medford 62/51 Beaver Silver 78/45 Frenchglen 86/56 Cleveland 83/66/0.22 77/61/s Low: 35' 74/44 Marsh Lake 76/47 ColoradoSprings 75/44/0.14 72/48/c Touight's uftfffHercules, the Hero, is nearing 77/49 at Klamath Fags 79/46 Gra ra • Burns Jun tion Columbia, Mo 83/63/0.00 82/65/t • Paisley 61/ overhead before midnight. Columbia, SC 87/67/0.02 88/64/1 • 77/45 Chiloquin 79/45 Columbus,GA 85/65/0.04 83/66/1 80 / 45 Gold ach 8957 Medfcd Rome 0' Columbus,OH 82/65/0.08 81/62/s ,ss/ss 7S/47 Klamath Concord, NH 92/66/0.23 83/54/1 Source: JimTodd,OMSI Fields • • Ashi nd Falls • Lakeview McDermi Corpus Christi 88n7/0.00 88/78/pc Bro ings 78/45 83/5 79/46 53/51 77/43 77/44 Dallas 85/58/Tr 84/68/1 Dayton 83/66/0.00 82/65/s Denver 76/50/0.00 72/46/c 10 a.m. Noon 2 p.m. 4 p.m. Yesterday Today Frlday Yesterday Today Friday Yesterday Today Friday Dss Moines 82/57/Tr 81/66/1 5 I~ B ~ S I 5 City H i/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W C i ty Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Detroit 81/67/Tr 81/60/s The highertheAccuWsalher.rsrm IIVIndex number, Asturis 64/52/0.00 64/49/pc 65/49/pc L s Grande 70 / 45/0.00 76/46/pc 81/55/pc Portland 79/5 4/0.0083/58/s 83/57/pc Duluth 83/52/0.01 67/56/1 the greatertheneedfor syssudskin protscguu.0-2 Low Baker City 66/41/Tr 76/43/pc80/51/pc Ls Pins 73/35/0.00 77/47/s 80/51/t Prinsvigs 73/ 4 1/0.0081/48/s 80/52/pc El Paso 92/57/0.00 93/63/s 3-5Moderate;6-7 High;8-10 VeryHigh; 11+ Extrsms. Brookings 55/50/0.00 63/51/pc62/51/pc Medford 8 6 /49/0.00 88/58/s 90/61/pcRedmond 75/ 40/0.0081/47/s 84/51/t Fairbanks 75/52/0.04 69/48/c Bums 74/39/Tr 7 7/43/s 80/51/pc N ewport 55/5 2 /0.00 58/49/pc 58/48/pc Rossburg 83 / 50/0.00 86/56/s 86/57/pc Fargo 83/51/0.00 79/52/t Eugene 78/42/0.00 81/51/s 82/52/s No r th Bend 61 / 52/0.00 63/52/pc 63/52/pc Salem 80/49/0.00 83/54/s 83/53/p c Flagstaff 67/39/0.00 72/39/s Klsmsth Falls 77/35/0.00 79/46/s 81/51/t On t ario 78/53/0.03 82/50/s 87/56/pc Sisters 74/36/0.00 82/47/s 85/50/t Grand Rapids 74/66/0.00 82/61/s G rasses T r ee s Wee ds Lskevisw 75/37/0.00 77/43/s 79/46/pc P endleton 78/ 4 8/0.00 83/54/s 87/60/pc The Dsgss 8 6 /52/0.00 89/60/s 90/61/pc Green Ssy 76/60/0.04 84/61/pc Greensboro 83/65/0.02 84/67/1 Weather(W):s-sunny,pc-psrtlycloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showsrs,t-tbunderstorms,r-rsin, sf-snowflurries, sn-snowl-ics,Tr-trscs,Yesterday data ssof 5 p.m. yesterday ~ yh i g h v d t Ats t Harrisburg 86n1/0.65 87/63/pc Source: OregonAgsrgyAssocistss 541-683-1577 Hsrffurd, CT 86/65/0.40 87/58/1 Helena 67/50/0.51 65/49/pc Honolulu 83/68/0.01 83/69/c ~ g s ~ f g s ~ 2 05 ~ 30s ~ 40s ~ 50s ~a cs ~7 09 ~ a gs ~ g gs ~f ccs ~ff Os Houston ~ 105 ~gs 86/65/1.41 86/72/pc As uf 7 s.m yesterday Huntsville 87/67/0.40 83/65/1 Indianapolis 82/63/0.07 83/65/s Reservoir Ac r e feet Ca pacity NATIONAL Q u c . 5 rffander Bay 73/ v Hall Jackson, MS 81/70/0.01 85/67/pc EXTREMES i C rane Prairie 453 9 1 S2% %47 6 Jacksonville 86/69/0.00 85/64/pc YESTERDAY (for the
Yesterday Normal Record
MONDAY
TRAVEL WEATHER
OREGON WEATHER
Bend Municipal Airport through 5 p.m.yest.
SUNDAY "'" 78'
attended the department bud-
get meeting to ask that county
1
I
Mecca Mexico City
114/87/0.00 111/86/s 110/85/s 77/58/0.14 75/55/1 75/57/1 Montreal 82/68/0.01 72/51/sh 80/64/pc Moscow 84/57/0.00 77/58/1 73/60/t Nairobi 79/59/0.19 78/60/1 78/61/pc Nassau 84/73/0.01 85/72/pc 85/74/pc New Delhi 111/79/0.00 111/83/pc 111/84/pc Osaka 88/63/0.00 93/64/pc 90/67/pc Oslo 59/41/0.16 51/44/r 55/43/sh Ottawa 82/66/0.02 71/47/pc 82/63/pc Paris 72/46/0.00 70/50/pc 65/50/pc Riu ds Janeiro 79/66/0.00 85/71/1 78/68/r Rome 73/55/0.02 75/54/s 75/55/s Santiago 73/36/0.00 68/43/s 65/38/s Ssu Paulo 81/66/0.12 71/60/1 69/57/c Ssppuru 70/51/0.00 71/62/pc 77/59/pc Seoul 86/50/0.00 84/59/s 84/63/pc Shanghai 77/66/0.44 81/72/c 84/73/c Singapore 90/78/0.18 90/80/1 gongn Stockholm 59/43/0.12 61/46/c 59/47/sh Sydney 70/52/0.00 73/57/s 72/52/pc Taipei 87/73/0.04 92/81/pc 92/82/pc Tsl Aviv 109/65/0.00 88/69/pc 80/66/pc Tokyo 81/70/0.00 81/66/pc 81/68/sh Toronto 84/64/0.05 79/55/s 79/63/pc Vancouver 68/59/0.00 71/55/s 71/53/s Vienna 57/50/0.03 65/48/pc 74/56/pc Warsaw 59/46/0.08 63/46/pc 69/52/t
commissioners increase funding for historic preservation. Stenman said the county
has done a good job with protecting historic resources but could do better. "I think we're at a point in Deschutes County that we're
going to need to do a better job with historic preservation," he Sald.
Commissioner Alan Unger suggested that the county commission meet with the his-
toric landmarks commission to discuss possible ways to better fund historic preservation. A public hearing artd final
deliberations on the proposed budget will take place June 22. — Reporter: 541-617-7820, tshorack@bendbulletfrLcom
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IN THE BACK BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NEWS W Scoreboard, C2 N HL, C2 Sports in brief, C2 Tennis, C2 NBA, C2 MLB, C3
© www.bendbulletin.com/sports
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, MAY 28, 2015
COLLEGE BASEBALL
PREP BASEBALLPLAYOFFS
COLLEGE BASEBALL
OSU froshlands Pac-12 honor Oregon State's K.J. Harrison has been named Pac-12Conference baseball freshman of the year for 2015. The first basemanfrom Kailua, Hawaii, has hit .314 this season with 10 home runs and aleaguehigh 58 runs batted in. A vote of Pac-12 coaches announced Wednesday that Harrison and three other Beavers — junior outfielder Jeff Hendrix, junior pitcher Andrew Moore and freshman pitcher Drew Rasmussen — were namedto the all-conference first team. Oregon juniors Garrett Cleavinger, a relief pitcher, and Mitchell Tolman, athird baseman, also were named to the 32-player first team. Arizona junior second baseman Scott Kingery, the Pac-12 batting champion with a.392 average, wasnamedthe conference's player of the year. UCLAsenior David Berg wasnamed pitcher of the yearand became afour-time all-conference selection. Southern Cal senior catcher Garrett Stubbs was nameddefensive player of the year.And UCLA coachJohn Savage, who guided his team to its third Pac-12 title in five seasons, was namedcoachof the year. Oregon State's Hendrix and Moore joined USC's Stubbs on the Pac-12 all-defensive team. — Bulletin staff report
MLS
Portlandheats D.C. United1-0
eavs re ui in no time • Ayoung Oregon State squad returnsto the postseason By Steve Gress Corvallis Gazette-Times
CORVALLIS — Think
just for a moment about the players drafted last „r-r,".-~=,~~ itrrertrerNe -nsserrr t'--,. - -.-„.s-..."~.: .-~ .
June off the Oregon State baseball roster. Michael Conforto.
.
Dylan Davis. Jace Fry.
Ryan Brennecke i The Bulletin
Summit's Jason Garcia connects with a pitch for a two-run ground-rule double during the fourth inning of Wednesday's game against Crater in Bend. The Storm got the win 4-1.
Ben Wetzler. That's just to name
a few. It left the Beavers with
big holes to fill heading into the 2015 season.
Then think about this: The Beavers this season
typically have started a lineup that consists of junior center fielder
Jeff Hendrix as the lone upperclassman. Yep, one junior and the rest sophomores and
• Summit is setto host a quarterfinal match with North Eugeneon Friday ByGrant Lucas
— and the Storm — could have
The Bulletin
asked for. With runners on second and
It was a pitch Jason Garcia
simply had to offer at.
third bases, Garcia blasted the
Facing a two-strike count with two outs in the bottom of
pitch over the right fielder's head. The ball bounced over the fence for a ground-rule
the fourth inning Wednesday, the Summit junior was just protecting the plate. What ensued was more than Garcia
double that drove in two runs
and provided No. 4 Summit with a three-run lead on its
freshmen. Talk about a rebuild-
Inside
(but) left a few guys on base," • Bend High gets first-round victory said Storm coach Alan Emover Wilsonville,C4 bree, whose team is scheduled to host No. 5 North Eugene • Prep scoreboard,C4 on Friday. "They (the Comets) way to a 4-1 victory against were threatening at all times, so I've got to give credit to visiting Crater in the first round of the Class 5Abaseball Chris Mason on the mound state playoffs. and to our defense." "We manufactured our runs
ing project, right'? Most would think this
season was one with low expectations. That was pretty much the think-
ing everywhere outside the Beavers' clubhouse. Sure, OSU had plen-
ty of ups and downs throughout the season.
SeeStorm /C4
And, sure, they let
PORTLAND-
Captain Will Johnson returned to Portland's lineup to help the Timbers beat Eastern Conference-leading D.C. United 1-0 on Wednesday night. Johnson missed the first12 games of the season while recovering from a broken right leg suffered on Sept. 27. He played 84 minutes before being substituted out. Maximiliano Urruti scored the lone goal in the fifth minute. Gaston
Fernandezjumped on a loose ball on the right wing and sent a hard, rolling cross into the box for Urruti to bang home for his second goal of the season. Portland (4-5-4) threatened to extend
the lead on a few occasions, but D.C. goalkeeper Bill Hamid made several fine saves,most notablyon a sizzling shot by Darion Asprilla in the 71st minute and on Alvas Powell's header in the
some games slip away. But a 13-3-1 closing
PREP SOFTBALL PLAYOFFS
stretch put the Beavers
in contention to possibly host a regional. While the regional
avens season comesto ainu en By Victoria Jacobsen REDMOND — From any angle, Ridgeview's 2-0 loss to Sandy was, as Ravens coach Sandy Fischer put it, a hard pill to
softball state playoffs Wednesday brought a sudden end to a postseason run for a
12th-seeded Pioneers drew a walk and
then knocked a single through the infield.
OSU is headed to
Dallas to take on Texas in the regional opener at 11:30 a.m. Friday. Dallas
Baptist is the host and No. 1 seed. Virginia Commonwealth rounds out up the regional field. SeeBeavs/C3
like to rewind and do again, but overall I
team that compiled a 22-1 regular-season
then induced a infield pop-up. But the
selected to the NCAA
tournament — and earned a No. 2 seed.
all you can ask," Fischer said of her team. "There's always one or two things you'd
setback in the first round of the Class 5A
the seventh inning with a strikeout and
Conference — six of whose 11 members were
"I think they left it on the field, and that's
years the Ravens had been shut out. The
seventh inning with a chance to win the game. With the score deadlocked at 0-0, Ridgeviewpitcher Sara McKinney opened
second in the Pac-12
geview's stellar season and advancing Sandy to the quarterfinals and a Friday matchup against Marist.
swallow. It was just the second time in three
IMC-champion Ravens needed was one more out to take them to the bottom of the
the Beavers still finished
iSee additional photos on TheBulletin's ~ i website:bendbulletin.com/sports
The Bulletin
record and went undefeated in Intermountain Conference play. And all the
bid did not materialize,
Jce Kline I rhe Bulletin
Ridgeview players walk back to their dugout after losing to Sandy in the first round of the Class5A playoffs on Wednesday in Redmond.
think Sara pitched a great game. It was a one-pitch issue, and (Nutt) got a hold of it." McKinney, a senior, struck out eight and
allowed four hits in what proved to be her final high school game.
Nextup
The Ravens, who had four hits against
Oregon St. vs. Texas When: 11:30 a.m. Friday
Sandy pitcher Audrey Seipert, did have a few chances to break the scoreless tie Sandy's Molly Nutt then hit a double that
earlier in the contest. In the fourth inning,
bounced off the outfield fence, bringing both runners in to score.
Brook Herrington hit a long fly ball to right-center field and coasted into second
The No. 5 Ravens were retired in order in the bottom of the inning, ending Rid-
base.
TV:ESPN3 Radio:KICE 940-AM
SeeRavens/C4
81st.
D.C. United's best opportunity came in the 31st minute, when a corner kick by Markus Halsti found an unguarded Steve Birnbaum in the area, but the defender's header went wide of the goal. United dropped to
COLLEGE SOFTBALL
6-3-4. — The Associated Press
University of Oregon as the softball program's all-time leader in hits, runs, stolen bas-
NBA
Ducks'Takeda leaving a legacy By Ryan Thorburn The (Eugene) Register-Guard
Janie Takeda will leave the
es and doubles.
Of course, individual numbers do not matter at
Warriors knock out Rockets Golden State is headed to the NBA finals after
beating Houston10490,C2
the Women's College World Series. Takeda just wants the Ducks to prove they are the
best team and bring home the program's first NCAA championship to finish off
Nextup Oregon vs. UCLA When:6:30 p.m. TodayTV:ESPN2 her memorable collegiate career. "I don't think any one person can take pride in taking a team to a certain level," Takeda said when asked about her impact on the UO program. "I think it definitely had a lot to do with the coaching staffs over the last few years and the
t~ i
/
talent that's come in. And a
great clubhouse, that's had a lot to do with it."
Oregon coach Mike White was already starting to establish a winning culture before Takeda committed to Oregon. But since the senior from Placentia, California, stepped on campus, the Ducks have won three Pac-12 champion-
I
• Fr
ships and are about to make their third appearance in the
Women's College World Series in Oklahoma City. SeeTakeda/C3
Brian Davies/The (Eugene) Register-Guard
Oregon's Janie Takeda, left, leads the Ducks into today's Women's College World Series against UCLA in Oklahoma City.
C2
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, MAY 28, 2015
ON THE AIR
COREBOARD
TODAY TENNis French Open French Open,third round GOLF EuropeanTour, Irish Open, first round PGA Tour,AT&TByron Nelson, first round EuropeanTour, Irish Open,second round
Time TV/Radio 7 a.m. Te n nis 2 a.m. (Fri.) ESPN2 8 a.m. Golf 1 p.m. Golf 4 a.m. (Fri.) Golf
SOFTBALL
College World Series, Florida vs. Tennessee College World Series, Auburn vs. LSU College World Series, Alabamavs. Michigan College World Series, Oregonvs. UCLA
9 a.m.
ESP N
11:30 a.m. E S PN
4 p.m. ES P N2 6:30 p.m. ESPN2
BASEBALL
MLB, Boston atTexas MLB, Cleveland atSeattle
5 p.m. 7 p.m.
MLB Root
2 :30 a.m.
FS 2
FRIDAY FOOTBALL
Australia, Sydney vs. Carlton AUTO RACING
NASCAR,XFINITY, Dover200, practice NASCAR,Sprint Cup, Dover, practice NASCAR,Truck Series, Dover 200, qualifying NASCAR,XFINITY, Dover200, practice NASCAR,Sprint Cup, Dover, qualifying NASCAR,Truck Series, Lucas Oil 200 TENNis French Open French Open,third round
7 a.m. FS1 8 a.m. FS1 9 :30 a.m. FS 1 11 a.m. FS1 1 2:30 p.m. F S 1 2 :30 p.m. FS1 7 a.m. Te n nis 2a.m. (Sat.) Tennis
BASEBALL
College, NCAA tourney, Arkansas vs. Oral Roberts 10 a.m. College, NCAAtourney, Lehigh vs. LSU 1 p.m. College, NCAAtourney, Florida vs. Florida A&M4 p.m. MLB, Los AngelesDodgers at St. Louis 5 p.m. MLB, Cleveland atSeattle 7 p.m. College, NCAA tourney, UCLA vs. CalState Bakersfield 8 p.m. GOLF LPGA Tour ,LPGA Classic 10 a.m. PGA Tour,AT&TByron Nelson 1 p.m.
SEC SEC SEC MLB Root
E S PNU Golf Golf
SOFTBALL
NCAA World Series, Game5, teams TBD NCAA World Series, Game6, teams TBD HOCKEY NHL playoffs, TampaBayat NewYork Rangers SOCCER FIFA U-20World Cup, NewZealand vs Ukraine FIFA U-20World Cup,United States vsMyanmar FIFA U-20World Cup, Argentina vs Panama FIFA U-20World Cup, Ghanavs Austria
4 p.m. 6:30 p.m.
ESPN2 ESPN2
5 p.m.
NBCSN
6 p.m. 9 p.m. 9 p.m.
FS1 FS1 FS2
midnight
FS2
FOOTBALL
Australian, Adelaide vsFremantle
2:30a.m. (Sat.) FS2
Listingsarethe mostaccurate available. TheBulletin is not responsible for latechangesmadeby TI/or radio stations.
SPORTS IN BRIEF MOTOR SPORTS
ON DECK
BASEBALL
Friday Baseball: 5Aquarterfinals, NorthEugeneat Summit, TBD; 5A qnarterfinals, BendatLiberty, TBD Boys lacrosse:OHSLAquarterfinal, Bendat West Linn, 7p.m.
HOCKEY NHL playoffs NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE
All TimesPDT CONFERE NCEFINALS
(Best-of-7) Wednesday'sGame Chicago 5, Anaheim2,seriestied 3-3 Friday's Game TampaBayat N.Y.Rangers, 5p.m.,series tied3-3 Saturday'sGame Chicag oatAnaheim5p.m.
BASKETBALL
DEALS
College
NBA playoffs
Transactions
NCAAtournament All Times PDT
NATIONALBASKETBALL ASSOCIATION All TimesPDT
REGIONALS (Double elimination; x-if necessary) Tallahassee,Fla. Friday Game1 — Auburn(35-24) vs.Collegeof Charleston (43-13), 9 a.m. Game 2 —Florida State(41-19) vs. Mercer(35-21), 3 p.m. Gainesville, Fla. Friday Game1 — South Florida(33-24-1) vs.FAU(40-17), 10a.m.
Game 2— Florida (44-16)vs.FloridaA8M(23-23), 4 p.m. Coral Gables, Fla. Friday Game1— Columbia (31-15)vs. EastCarolina (4020), 10a.m. Game 2 —Miami (44-14) vs. FIU (29-29), 4 TENNIS p.m. Louisville, Ky. Professional Friday FrenchOpenResults Game1 — Michigan(37-23) vs. Bradley(35-19), Wednesdayat Paris 11a.m. Men Game 2 —Louisville (43-16) vs. MoreheadState First Round (38-20), 3 p.m. Nashville, Tenn. Gilles Muller,Luxem bourg, def. PaoloLorenzi, Italy, 4-6,4-6, 7-6(1), 7-6(5), 6-4. Friday Game 1 —Indiana(34-22) vs. Radford(43-14), SecondRound noon GillesSimon(12), France,def.Martin Klizan,SloGame 2— Vanderbilt (42-19)vs.Lipscomb(39-18), vakia,7-5,6-2, 6-3. 5 p.m. StanWawrinka(8), Switzerland,def.DusanLajovic, Champaign, III. Serbia,6-3,6-4, 5-7, 6-3. Friday Benjamin Becker,Germany,def. FernandoVerdasco G ame1 — W ri g ht State(41-15) vs. NotreDame(36(32), Spain6-4, , 0-6,1-6, 7-5, 10-8. 21), 10 a. m . SteveJohnson, UnitedStates,def. SergiyStakGame2—glinois (47-8-1) vs.Ohio(36-19), 5p.m. hovsky,Ukraine,2-6,6-3, 7-6(5), 7-6(6). Springfield, Mo. Kei Nishikori(5),Japan,def.ThomazBellncci, BraFriday zil, 7-5, 6-4,6-4. Game 1 — Oregon (37-23) vs. Iowa(39-16), 11 RogerFederer(2), Swilzerland,def.Marcel Granola.m. lers,Spain,6-2,7-6 (1), 6-3. PabloCuevas(21), Uruguay,def. Dominic Thiem, Game2— Missouri State(45-10) vs. Canisus(3428),4p.m. Austria,7-6(7), 7-5,6-7 (5), 7-5. Baton Rouge,La. Teymura zGabashvili,Russia,def.JuanMonaco, Friday Argentina,6-3, 6-4,6-2. 1 —LSU(48-10) vs. Lehigh(25-29), 1 DamirDzum hur, Bosnia-Herzegovina, def. Marcos Game p.m. Baghdatis,Cyprus,6-4,6-3, 4-6,6-2. 2 —Tulane(34-23) vs. UNCWilmington(39NicolasMahut,France,def. ErnestsGulbis (24), Game 16),5 p.m. Latvia,6-3, 3-6,7-5,6-3. Stillwater, Okla. BenoitPaire,France,def. FabioFognini (28), Italy, Friday 6-1,6-3,7-5. Game1 — O ra l R oberts(41-14) vs.Arkansas(35-22), LukasRosol, CzechRepublic, def.Roberto Bautista 10a.m. Agut (19),Spain,6-4, 6-2,6-2. 2 — Oklahoma State (37-18) vs. St.John's Jo-WilfriedTsonga(14), France,def. DudiSela, Game (39-14), 4 p.m. Israel, 6-4,6-1,6-1. Forl Worth, Texas GaelMonfils(13),France,def. DiegoSchwartzman, Friday Argentina,4-6, 6-4,4-6, 6-2,6-3. —StonyBrook(34-14-1) vs.N.C.State(34TomasBerdych(4), CzechRepublic, def. Radek Game1 21),12;30p.m. Stepanek, CzechRepublic, 6-3,6-7(7), 6-3,6-3. 2 —TCU(45-11) vs. SacredHeart (23-30-1), Philipp Kohlschreiber(22),Germany, leads Pablo Game 4 p.m. Andujar,Spain,1-6, 6-7(5), 6-3, 6-3, 4-2, susp., Dallas darkness. Friday Women Game1 —Texas(30-25) vs.OregonState(38-16-1), SecondRound 11:30p.m. MariaSharapova(2),Russia,def. Vitalia Diatchen- Game2— Dallas Baptist (43-13)vs.VCU(37-22), ko, Russia6-3, , 6-1. 4 p.m. SamStosur (26), Australia, def.Amandine Hesse, College Station, Texas France, 6-0,6-1. Friday Sabine Lisicki(20), Germany,def. Daria Gavrilova, Game1 — California(34-19)vs. CoastalCarolina Australia,6-1,retired. (38-19), 10 a.m. AnnikaBeck,Germany, def. PaulaKania, Poland, Game2 —Texas A&M(45-11) vs.Texas Southern 6-2,6-2. (31-17), 4 p.m. LucieSafarova(13), Czech Republic, def.Kurumi Houston Nara,Japan, 6-2, 6-0. Friday AlizeCornet(29),France,def.AlexandraDulgheru, Game1—Louisiana-Lafayette (39-21)vs.Rice(35Romania6-2, , 7-5. 20),12:30p.m. MirjanaLucic-Baroni, Croatia,def. SimonaHalep Game 2— Houston (42-18) vs.Houston Baptist (28(3), Roma nia, 7-5,6-1. 25),5 p.m. DonnaVekic, Croatia, def. BojanaJovanovski, Los Angeles Serbia,6-4, 6-3. Friday AngeliqueKerber (11), Germany, def. Ajla Toml- Game1 —Maryland(39-21) vs.Mississippi (30-26), janovic,Australia,6-3,6-2. 4 p.m. ElenaVesnina, Russia,def. PolonaHercog, Slove- Game2 — UCLA(42-14) vs. CalState Bakersfield nia, 2-6,6-1,6-3. (36-22-1), 8p.m. ElinaSvitolina(19), Ukraine,def.Yulia Putintseva, Fullerton, Calif. Kazakhstan, 1-6,7-5, 9-7. Friday GarbineMuguruza(21), Spain,def. Camila Giorgi, Game1 — Clemson(32-27) vs. ArizonaState (34Italy, 6-1,6-4. 21),3 p.m. FlaviaPennetta (28), Italy, def. MagdalenaRyba- Game 2—Cal StateFullerton(34-22) vs.Pepperdine rikova,Slovakia,6-2,6-0. (30-27), 7 p.m. CarlaSuarezNavarro (8), Spain, def.Virginie RazLake Elsinore, Calif. zano,France,6-3, 1-0,retired. Friday Ekaterina Makarova(9), Russia, def. TelianaPereiGame1 —Virginia (34-22)vs.Southern Cal(37-19), ra, Brazil,6-2,5-7, 6-3. 3 p.m. Ana Ivanovic(7), Serbia,def. Misaki Doi,Japan, Game2—UCSantaBarbara(40-15-1) vs.SanDiego 3-6,6-3, 6-4. State(40-21), 7p.m.
BASEBALL
CONFERENCE FINALS
(Best-of-7; x-if necessary) Wednesday'sGame GoldenState104, Houston90, GoldenState wins series4-1 FINALS
(Best-of-7; x-if necessary) Thursday,June4 ClevelandatGoldenState, 6p.m. Sunday,June 7 ClevelandatGoldenState, 5p.m. Tuesday,June9 GoldenStateatCleveland, 6p.m. Thursday,June11 GoldenStateatCleveland,6p.m. Sunday,June14 x-Cleveland atGoldenState,5 p.m. Tuesday,June16 x-Golden Stateat Cleveland, 6 p.m. Friday, June19 x-Cleveland atGoldenState, 6 p.m. Wednesday'sSummary
Warriors104, Rockets 90 HOUSTON (90)
Ariza 5-9 4-415, Smith3-143-611, Howard 5-138-1318, Terry6-132-216, Harden2-11101314, Jones 0-30-00, Prigioni 0-1 0-00, Brewer 5-10 6-616, Capela0-00-0 0. Totals 26-74 3344 90.
GOLDEN STATE(104)
Barnes10-202-224,Green3-15 3-3 9,Bogut0-1 0-0 0, Curry7-219-12 26, Thompson8-14 0-020, Ezeli 5-72-412, Ignodala3-8 0-46, Livingston0-3 0-0 0, Barbosa1-2 5-6 7, Lee0-00-0 0.Totals 3791 21-31 104. Houston 22 24 22 22 — 90 GoldenStale 1735 2 2 30 — 104
SOCCER MLS MAJORLEAGUESOCCER All Times PDT
EasternConference W L T Pls GF GA D.C. United N ew England 5
6 3 4 22 3 5 20 NewYork 4 2 5 17 Columbus 4 4 3 15 T orontoFC 4 5 1 13 OrlandoCit y 3 5 4 13 Philadelphia 3 7 3 12 Chicago 3 5 2 11 Montreal 2 3 2 8 NewYorkCity Fc 1 7 4 7 WesternConference W L T Pls Seattle 7 3 2 23 FC Dallas 6 3 3 21 Vancouver 6 5 2 20 L os Angele s 5 4 5 20 SanJose 5 4 3 18 S porting KansasCity 4 2 6 18 R eal SaltLake 4 4 5 17 Houston 4 5 4 16 Portland 4 5 4 16 Colorado 2 3 7 13
14 18 14 17 14 14 13 11 9
11 16 11 14 14 15 21 14 10
GF 18 18 14 13 13
GA 9 15 12 15 12
9 16
17 12 16 11
15 16 16 13
10 10
Wednesday'sGames Seattle1,Colorado0 Los Angeles1,RealSalt Lake0 Portland1,D.C.United0 Friday's Game FC Dallasat Sporting KansasCity,6 p.m.
SOFTBALL College NCAAtournament All TimesPDT W OMEN'S COLLEGE WORLD SERIES At Oklahoma City (Double elimination; x-if necessary)
Today'sGames Game1: Floridavs.Tennessee,9a.m. Game2: Auburnvs. LSU,11;30 a.m. Game3: Michiganvs. Alabama, 4p.m. Game4: Oregonvs. UCLA,6:30 p.m.
AmericanLeague BALTIMOR EORIOLES—DesignatedOFAlejandro De Azafor assignment. ActivatedINFRyan Flaherty from the15-dayDL.SignedLHPAriel Mirandato a minor league contract. BOSTONREDSOX— AcquiredOFCarlosPeguero from the TexasRangersfor cashconsiderations. Transferred RHPAnthonyVarvaroto the60-day DL. CLEVELANDINDIANS — Announced C Brett Hayeshasaccepted the outright assignment to Columbus(IL). LOSANGELESANGELS — AcquiredOFKirkNieuwenhnisfromtheNewYork Mets for cashconsiderations.DesignatedRHPChadSmith for assignment. TEXAS RANGERS—Recalled RHPJon Edwards fromRoundRock(PCL). Optioned OFJakeSmolinski to Round Rock. National League LOSANGELESDODGERS— Traded3BJuanUribe and RHP Chris Withrowto Atlanta for INFAlberto Callaspo,LHPEric Stults, LHPlanThomasandRHPJuan Jaime.Recalled OFChris HeiseyfromOklahomaCity (PCL).Designated RHPSergio Santosfor assignment. ST. LOUISCARDINALS— Placed1B Matt Adams on the15-dayDL.Recalled 0 EdEasleyfromMemphis (PCL). FOOTBALL National Football League CLEVELANDBROWNS — WaivedOLNickMcDonaldwithaninjury designation. INDIANA POLIS COLTS — Signed WRPhilip Dorsett. OAKLAND RAIDERS—SignedLBHorace Miler. Re-signed WRMilton WiliamsIII. WASHING TONREDSKINS— Terminatedthecontracts ofGChris Chester andCBTracyPorter. HOCKEY National HockeyLeague NEWJERSEYDEVILS— SignedFsRyanKujawinski andBlakePietila toentry-level contracts. MOTORSPORTS INDYCAR — Fineddriver Gabby Chaves$10,000 (S5,000suspended)andplacedhimonprobation for six racesafter hitting acrewmember with his car in the Indy500. Fineddriver JamesDavison $10,000 (35,000suspended)andplacedhimonprobation for six races becauseof anunsafe releasefromthepit box that ledto contactwith twocrewmembers. Fineddrivers Juan PabloMontoyaandStefanoColetti $500each for running overair hoses. SOCCER Major LeagueSoccer MLS —SuspendedSeatle assistantequipment managerBrett Johnsonone gameand fined him an undisclosedamountfor violating the Leagne's policy onenteringthefield/leaving thebencharea during a May23 gameagainst SportingKansas City. ATLANT A—NamedAnn Rodriguezvice president of businessoperations, effective June22. SPORT ING Kc — Announced it has mutually agreedwith GLuisMarinto terminatehis contract. Announced GJonKempinwas returnedfromhis loan to San Antonio (NASL). COLLEGE GRANDCAN YON — Signed men's basketball coachDanMajerle andbaseball coachAndy Stankiewiczto four-yearcontract extensionsthrough 2019. PURDUE — Named AndrewWarsawdirector of footballoperations. SUSQUEHANNA— BrandonKatesmen'sassistant soccercoach. TENNE SSEE-MARTIN— Named Heather Butler women'assi s stant basketball coach. THECITADEL—Named DerekSatterfield assistant athletic directorfor mediarelations. UTAHSTATE— Named JanaDogget interim athletic director.
FISH COUNT Upstreamdaily movement of adult chinookjack chinook,steelheadandwild steelheadat selectedColumbia Riverdamslast updatedTuesday. Chnk Jchnk Sllhd Wsohd Bonneville 3,077 416 42 21 TheDages 1,931 352 6 1 John Day 1,197 19 9 10 1 McNary 1,680 296 6 0 Upstream year-to-date movement ofadult chinook, jack chinook,steelheadand wild steelheadat selected ColumbiaRiverdamslast updatedTuesday. Chnk Jchnk Sllhd Wsohd Bonneville 206,445 11,294 4,952 2,482 The Dages 177,574 9,844 403 17 3 J ohn Day 149,374 8,946 580 33 2 McNary 138,521 6,478 69 9 402
NASCAR PenaliZOS 3teamS fOr infraCtiOnS — NASCAR penalized three teamsWednesdayfor infractions at Charlotte Motor Speedway. Matt McCall, crew chief for Jamie McMurray, wasplaced on probation through Dec. 31for a P2penalty because the right rear quarter panel wheel opening hadbeen modified after qualifying inspection for the Coca-Cola 600. Jimmie Johnson's team received a P1 penalty for receiving a written warning for the second consecutive race. As penalty, he will haveone of the last two picks for a pit stall this weekend atDover.Justin Allgaier's team also received a P1penalty for a second consecutive written warning for needing too many times to pass pre-qualifying inspection. Hewill pick with Johnson for pit stall at Dover.
Indy 500 champ, rookie fined for race infractions-
NBA PLAYOFFS
NHL PLAYOFFS
arriors eat oc ets, setto ace avsin inas
'Hawks win, force Game 7
Indy 500 rookie of the year Gabby Chaves was fined $10,000 and put on probation for six races after hitting a crew member with his car in Sunday's race. Half of the fine was suspended. Series officials also fined James Davjson $10,000, with half suspended, and put him on probation for six races because of an unsafe release from the pit box that led to contact with two crew members. Race winner Juan Pablo Montoya and Stefano Coletti were each fined $500 for running over air hoses, and a crew member for 2014 Indy winner Ryan Hunter-Reay was fined $500 for not wearing gloves.
By Antonio Gonzalez
SOFTBALL
"Why not us?" Curry said to a roaring, golden-yellow shirt wearing crowd after the War-
OregOn PitCher HaWkiRS named firSt team — Oregon
riors received the Western Conference trophy from Alvin Attles, the coach of their last cham-
points, but James Harden had a forgettable fi-
pionship team in 1975.
nale. Harden had a playoff-record 13 turnovers
pitcher Cheridan Hawkjns was selected as aNational Fastpitch Coaches Association first-team All-American on Wednesday. Also picked as first-team pitchers were Western Kentucky's Miranda Kramer and Central Florida's Shelby Turner. Oklahoma's Lauren Chamberlain, who broke the Division I record for career homers this year with 95, also made the squad. Florida utility player Lauren Haeger is a first-team choice who also has beennamed the USA Softball Collegiate Player of the Year. Sheenters the Women's College World Series with a 28-1 record and a1.24 ERA.Shealso hit.329 wjth16 home runs and 64 RBls. She is the first player in NCAA history to win 60 games on the mound and hit 60 career home runs.
The Associated Press
OAKLAND, Calif. — After a generation of
LeBron James and the Cleveland Cavaliers beginning June 4. It was hardly the prettiest performance — but one they'll savor nonetheless.
CHICAGO — D u n can Keith had three assists and
bounds, Harrison Barnes added 24 points and the Warriors advanced to the NBA Finals for the first time in 40 years with a 104-90 victory over the Houston Rockets on Wednesday night.
r elished the moment on the court with hi s
Blackhawks beat the Ana-
2-year-old daughter, Riley.
heim Ducks 5-2 on Wednesday night to force a Game 7
"We deserve to celebrate tonight but we've
still got unfinished business and it's a long time coming for the Bay Area," Warriors AllStar guard Klay Thompson said. All fiveRockets starters scored at least 10
The Warriors shook off a slow start and and scored 14 points on 2-of-11 shooting. sweated out a shaky finish in Game 5 to close Dwight Howard led Houston with 18 points out the Rockets and set up a matchup with and 16 rebounds.
TENNIS: FRENCH OPEN
Alberto Contador maintained his grip on theoverall lead of the Giro d'Italia, while SachaModolo won a bunch sprint at the end of the17th stage on Wednesday in Lugano, Switzerland, for his second victory in this year's race. Asuperb leadout from Modolo's Lampre-Merida team saw him beatGiacomoNjzzolo by a bike length to win the 134-kjlometer (83-mile) leg from Tirano to Lugano, Switzerland, which featured just oneCategory 3 climb. There was nochange in the overall standings, whereContador leads Mikel Landa by4:02, with Fabio Aru third, 4:52 behind.
The Associated Press
Sharks will hire Peter DeBoer astheir new headcoach. A person familiar with the search saidWednesdaythat DeBoer will be formally introduced later this week. Theperson spoke oncondition of anonymity because theteamhad not announced the hire yet. ESPNfirst reported the move. — From wire reports
delivered one final ace, his 21st, and closed out his latest raucous, five-set victory on
Since 1983, when Yannick vlcto+. Noah became the most recent Monfils
t r a iled A r g entina's Schwartzman two sets to
championship at Roland Gar- one, before coming back and ros, the locals have not had a whole lot to cheer about at
Court Philippe Chatrier to the their Grand Slam tennis tourdelight of roaring, partisan nament. Somark Wednesday spectators. as a rare bright light along the An entertainer at h e art, way: All five of the host counMonfils pounded his chest try's men in action advanced with his right fist repeatedly to the third round, including and, after hugging opponent three who were seeded — No. Diego Schwartzman at the 12 Gilles Simon, No. 13 Mon-
finals. Brandon Saad, Marian Hossa and Patrick Kane
scored in the second to help the Blackhawks hand the Ducks their first regulation
loss of the playoffs. Andrew Shaw had two goals in the third, and Corey Crawford finished with 30 saves.
erased some of the sting
By Howard Fendrich
G a e l M o n f ils man from France to win the
in the Western Conference
ing after two periods and
Contador keePS Glro lead, Modolo WinSStage17-
PARIS —
saved a goal in the third period, and the Chicago
T he B l ackhawks i m proved to 31-0 when lead-
Good dayfor Franceas Monfils, Tsongawin
SharkS to hire DOBoer aS head COaCh—TheSanJose
The Associated Press
wishing and waiting, the Golden State WarYellow streams and confetti fell from the riors have finally arrived on basketbaii's big- rafters when the final buzzer sounded. The gest stage again. Warriors shared hugs and handshakes, and Stephen Curry had 26 points and eight re- the crowd chanted "M-V-P!" for Curry, who
CYCLING
HOCKEY
By Jay Cohen
improving to 14-10 in five-setters with a 4-6, 6-4, 4-6, 6-2,
6-3 win filled with loud cheers between points and plenty of
supportive cries of "Allez!" "Actually, today I won because I had the crowd behind
me," Monfils said. "They give me, let's say, some wings." The 5-foot-7 (1.70-meter) net, used his right shoe to etch fils and No. 14 Jo-Wilfried Schwartzman, who is 9 inches a sketch of a smiley face on the Tsonga — and two who defeat- (23 centimeters) shorter than French Open main stadium's ed seeded players — Nicolas Monfils, noticed the fans' efred clay. Mahut and Benoit Paire. fect, saying: "He always uses " Everybody," Tson g a the people (to his advantage), Needless to say, his adoring public loved that, too. said, "remembers Yannick's in all his matches."
from Monday night's 5-4 overtime loss. Game 7 is Saturday night in Anaheim. P atrick
M a r oo n a n d
Clayton Stoner scored for the Ducks, and Frederik
Andersen made 18 saves. Anaheim caught a break when Jakob Siifverberg brushed up against Crawford's glove on Stoner's first goal of the playoffs at 1:57 of the third, trimming
Chicago's lead to 3-2. There was no call on the play and C rawford threw up h i s hands in exasperation after Stoner's big slap shot went into the net.
But Crawford quickly put the play behind him, hanging tough while the Ducks made a frantic push for the tying goaL
THURSDAY, MAY 28, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
C3
OR LEAGUE BASEBALL Standings
American League
All TimesPDT
Mariners 3, Rays0
AMERICANLEAGUE
NewYork
Tampa Bay Baltimore Toronto Boston Kansas City Minnesota Detroit Cleveland Chicago
East Division W L
25 22 24 24 21 23 22 27 21 26
Pct GB .532 .500 U/r .477 2'/r .449 4 .447 4
28 20 21 25 20 24
Pct GB .609 .609 .583 1 .457 7 .455 7
CentralDivision W L 28 18 28 18 West Division
W L 30 18 23 23 23 24 23 24 17 32
Houston Seattle Los Angeles Texas Oakland
Pet GB .625 .500 6 .489 6r/r .489 6'/r .347 13'/r
Wednesday'sGames Cleyeland12,Texas3 Chicago WhiteSox5, Toronto 3,10innings N.Y.Yankees4, KansasCity 2 Minnesota 6, Boston4 Seattle 3,TampaBay0 Detroit 3,Oakland2 Baltimore 5, Houston 4 SanDiego5, L.A.Angels 4 Today'sGam es ChicagoWhite Sox(Sale3-2) at BaltimorePWilson 1-0),10:05a.m.,1st game Chicago WhiteSox(Beck0-0) atBaltimore (M.Wright 1-0),1:35p.m.,2ndgame Boston(E.Rodriguez 0-0) at Texas (N.Martinez4-0),
5:05 p.m. Detroit (Farmer 0-0) at LA.Angels(C.Wilson2-3), 7;05 p.m. N.Y. Yankees(Sabathia 2-6) at Oakland(Graveman 2-2), 7:05 p.m. Cleveland(Kluber2-5) at Sea tle (Paxton3-2), 7;10 p.m. Friday'sGames Kansas CityatChicagoCubs,1:05p.m. Tampa Bayat Baltimore, 4:05p.m. Bostonat Texas, 5:05p.m. ChicagoWhiteSoxat Houston, 5:10p.m. TorontoatMinnesota, 5:10p.m. Detroit atL.A.Angels, 7:05p.m. N.Y.YankeesatOakland,7:05p.m. ClevelandatSeattle, 7:10p.m.
NATIONALLEAGUE East Division W L
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla.— Felix
indians12, Rangers 3
Twins6, RedSox4
Cardinals 4, Diamondbacks3
Pirates 5, Marlins 2
CLEVELAND — Carlos Santana capped andeight-run third inning with a three-run homer, leading Cleveland pastTexas toendthe Rangers' seven-gamewinning streak. Carlos Carrasco (6-4) allowed only Robinson Chirinos' solo homer in the fifth while pitching eight sharp innings.
MINNEAPOLIS —Aaron Hicks homeredand Minnesotaextended its winning streak to five games with a victory over Boston.
ST. LOUIS —Jason Heyward atoned for a critical error with a game-tying homer leading off the ninth inning and St. Louis scored the winning run oncatcher Jordan Pachecho's throwing error, completing a three-gamesweep.
PITTSBURGH — Jung HoKang capped a late rally with a two-run single and Pittsburgh ran its winning streak to six games.
Hernandez pitched a four-hitter to become themajor's first eightgame winner, Nelson Cruzhit his AL-best18th homer to snapa scoreless tie in the ninth inning and Seattle completed athreegamesweepbybeatingTampa Bay. Hernandez(8-1) got four Texas Cleveland ab r h bi ab r h bi double plays in his second shutout DShldsc f-2b 4 0 0 0 Kipnis2b 5 2 3 0 this season. It was his first win at Choorf 4 1 2 0 CSantn1b 3 2 1 3 Tropicana Field after going 0-2 in F ielderdh 4 0 1 0 Brantlylf 2 1 2 1 Beltre3b 3 0 1 0 JRmrzss 1 0 0 0 four previous starts. LMartncf 1 1 1 2 DvMrprf 5 1 1 1
Minnesota ab r hbi ab r hbi Pedroia2b 4 2 2 4 Dozier2b 3 1 0 0 B ettscf 4 0 1 0 TrHntrrf 4 0 1 2 Sandovl3b 4 0 1 0 Mauer1b 4 0 2 1 HRmrzlf 3 0 0 0 Plouffe3b 4 0 0 0 Ortizdh 4 0 0 0 EdEscrdh 3 0 1 0 Napoli1b 4 0 0 0 ERosarlf 3 1 1 1 Bogartsss 4 0 0 0 Hrmnnc 3 1 1 0 B .Holtrf 4 1 2 0 Hickscf 2 2 1 2 Swihartc 3 1 1 0 DSantnss 3 1 1 0 Totals 3 4 4 7 4 Totals 2 96 8 6 Boslon BB2 82B OBB — 4 Minnesota BB3 281 Ogx — 6 DP Bost on2.LOB Boston4,Minnesota1.28 B. Holt (8). HRPedroia2 (7), E.Rosario (2), Hicks(1). SB Betts(6). CSEdu.Escobar(1). Boston
Miami
Pittsburgh ab r hbi ab r hbi DGordn2b 4 0 3 0 JHrrsnrf-3b 5 1 1 1 Prado3b 4 0 0 0 Mercerss 3 0 0 0 Stantonrf 4 0 0 0 PAlvrzph 1 1 1 1 Bour1b 4 1 2 1 Watson p 0000 Ozuna cf 4 0 0 0 Melncn p 0000 YelichIf 4 1 1 1 Mcctchcf 3 1 2 0 Realmtc 4 0 2 0 MarteIf 300 1 Hchvrrss 4 0 1 0 Kang3b-ss 4 0 1 2 Handp 2 0 0 0 NWalkr2b 4 0 0 0 Morris p 0 0 0 0 SRdrgz1b 4 0 2 0 DSolanph 1 0 0 0 Stewartc 4 1 1 0 Dunnp 0 0 0 0 G.colep 2 0 1 0 ph 1 1 1 0 SDyson p 0 0 0 0 Tabata Cappsp 0 0 0 0 Polancrf 1 0 1 0 Mazzar p 0000 ISuzukiph 1 0 0 0 Totals 3 629 2 Totals 3 5 5 115
St. Louis ab r hbi ab r hbi 0 0 0 Wong2b 5 1 1 1 Pogockcf 4 0 2 0 Mcrpnt3b 3 1 0 0 Gldsch1b 4 0 1 0 Hollidylf 4 0 1 0 Tomas3b 4 0 1 0 JhPerltss 5 0 1 0 T rumorf 2 1 1 1 Grichkcf 4 0 2 0 P nngtn2b 4 1 1 0 Molinac 4 1 1 0 Gswschc 3 0 0 0 Rynlds1b 3 0 1 1 Pachecc 1 0 0 0 Heywrdrf 4 1 2 1 JHmltnlf 4 0 1 0 Swisherdh 5 1 2 1 A hmedss 3 1 0 0 Lynnp 2 0 0 0 Seattle TampaBay Morlnd1b 4 0 1 0 Chsnhll3b 5 2 3 3 Cllmntrp 2 0 0 0 T.cruzph 1 0 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi Andrusss 2 0 0 0 Avilesss-If 5 1 1 0 DPerltph 1 0 1 1 MHarrsp 0 0 0 0 AJcksncf 4 0 0 0 Kiermrcf 2 0 0 0 IP H R E R BBSO Delgadp 0 0 0 0 Choatep 0 0 0 0 R osales2b-3b2 0 0 0 Bourncf 5 1 3 2 S.Smithrf 3 0 1 0 TBckh2b 1 0 0 0 Boslon Chirinsc 2 1 1 1 RPerezc 4 1 1 1 OPerezp 0 0 0 0 Manessp 0 0 0 0 CTaylrpr-ss 0 1 0 0 JButlerdh 4 0 0 0 PorcelloL,4-4 7 7 6 6 2 2 Hillph 1 0 0 0 Bouriosph 1 0 1 0 Field2b-ss 3 0 0 0 Cano2b 3 1 0 0 Longori3b 3 0 0 0 Tazawa 1 1 0 0 0 0 Miami 0 10 000 100 — 2 Totals 33 3 8 3 Totals 4 0 121712 JCRmrp 0 0 0 0 N.cruzdh 4 1 1 3 DeJesslf-rf 3 0 1 0 Minnesota Pittsburgh 0 0 0 0 0 0 Bgx— 6 Texas BOO B10 BB2 — 3 Ziegler p 0 0 0 0 Seager3b 4 0 0 0 Forsyth1b 3 0 1 0 4 0 3 Totals 3 4 3 7 2 Totals 3 64 10 3 E Kang(3). DPPittsburgh1. LOBMiami7, PittsCleveland 8 2 8 1 1 0 Bgx— 12 PHughesW,4-4 62-3 6 4 Morrsn1b 3 0 1 0 Frnklnss 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Arizona burgh8.28 Mccutchen(9),S.Rodriguez(2).38PoE—Field (3). DP—Cleveland 1. LOB—Texas 4, DuensingH,3 1 - 3 OBB 182 000 — 3 BMillerss-rf 3 0 0 0 Elmore2b-If 3 0 0 0 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 St. Louis Cleveland8. 28—Beltre (8), Kipnis (14), Brantley PresslyH,3 11B O BB 002 — 4 lanco(1).HRBour(3), Yelich(2). SBD.Gordon(19), Ackleylf 3 0 0 0 Guyerrf-cf 3 0 1 0 A.Thompson 0 1 0 0 0 0 Realmuto (1), Mccutchen(3). (17), Chisenhal(9). l 3B—Kipnis (4). HR —L.Martin Twooutswhenwinning runscored. Zuninoc 3 0 0 0 Riverac 1 0 1 0 1-3 0 0 0 1 0 IP H R E R BBSO E—Pacheco (1), Heyward(2). LOB—Arizona9,St. (3), Chirinos(5), C.Santana(6), Swisher(2), Chisen- TonkinH,5 Acarerph 1 0 0 0 PerkinsS,18-18 1 0 0 0 0 0 Louis10. 28 hall (4). SB —Bourn (4). SF—Brantley. —Grichuk(6), Molina(9). HR —Trumbo Miami Totals 30 3 3 3 Totals 2 6 0 4 0 A Thompson pi t ched to1 bat t er i n the 8t h . Hand 5 4 0 0 0 2 IP H R E R BBSO (8), Wong (6), Heyward(5).SB—Pollock(11). Seattle 000 000 BOS — 3 WP — Duensing. 1 1 0 0 0 1 Texas IP H R E R BBSO Morris H,2 Tampa Bay 0 0 0 0 0 0 BOO — 0 LewisL,4-3 DunnH,7 2-3 2 2 2 0 1 2 2-3 11 10 9 1 2 Umpires —Home, Dale Scott; First, Dan lassogna; Arizona DP — Seattle 4. LOB—Seattle 2, TampaBay2. Bass 3 3 2 0 4 1-3 5 2 2 2 2 Second,CBBucknor; Third, LanceBarret. Collmenter 5 6 2 2 2 3 S.DysonL,2-2BS,2-2 0 2 2B — S.Smith (10). HR—N.cruz(18). S—Rivera. T — 2: 2 9. A — 30,027 (39 , 0 21). Capps 1-3 1 0 0 0 0 Edwards 1 1 0 0 0 2 DelgadoH,2 1 1 0 0 0 0 IP H R E R BBSO Cleveland 1 1 0 0 0 1 O .Perez H ,2 1 0 0 0 0 2 Mazzaro Seattle CarrascoW,6-4 8 5 1 1 1 8 J.C.Ramirez H,2 1 1 0 0 0 0 Pittsburgh FHernandez WB-1 9 4 0 0 1 8 Atchison National Lea ue 7 2 2 0 7 1 3 2 2 0 1 ZieglerL,0-1 BS,2-4 2-3 2 2 1 2 0 G.coleW,7-2 7 TampaBay WatsonH,10 1 1 0 0 0 2 WP—Edw ards,Carrasco. St. Louls Braves 3, Dodgers 2 Archer 8 2 0 0 0 12 T—2:47.A—15,956 (36,856). M elancon S, 1 2-13 1 1 0 0 0 0 Lynn 6 6 3 2 4 5 BoxbergerL,2-3 1 1 3 3 2 2 M.Harris 2 1 0 0 1 0 S.Dysonpitchedto 4battersinthe 7th.Umpires Home, HBP —byFHernandez(Kiermaier). — Andrelton SimChoate 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Rob Drake;First, JoeWest; Second, Gabe Morales; T—2:13. A—10,365(31,042). White Sox5,BlneJays3(10 inn.) LOS ANGELES ManessW,1-0 2 - 3 0 0 0 0 1 Third,DavidRackley.T—2:38.A—33,238(38,362). mons hadtwo hits and scored the T—3:19.A—43,715(45,399).
TORONTO — Adam LaRoche singled in the go-ahead run in the BALTIMORE — Chris Davis hit 10th inning and theChicagoWhite two homers, including a go-ahead Sox beat Toronto to avoid a threesolo shot in the eighth inning, to game sweep. lead Baltimore to a victory over Chicago Toronto Houston. ab r h bi ab r hbi
go-ahead run onAdam Liberatore's wild pitch in theeighth inning, Cameron Maybin homeredandAtlanta beat the LosAngeles Dodgers.
to a win over Oakland.
a two-run homerandSanFrancisco completed asweep in Milwaukee.
Orioles 5, Astros 4
Atlanta
LosAngeles
ab r hbi ab r hbi Petersn2b 3 1 0 0 Pedrsncf 4 0 2 0 Maybincf 4 1 2 1 Roffinsss 4 1 1 0 FFrmn1b 3 0 0 0 HKndrc2b 4 0 0 0 Markksrf 3 0 1 1 AGnzlz1b 4 0 1 0 Uribe3b 3 0 0 0 JuTrnr3b 3 0 1 1 P rzynsc 4 0 0 0 Guerrrlf 4 1 1 1 JGomslf 4 0 0 0 Heiseyrf 3 0 0 0 ASmnsss 4 1 2 0 Ethierph 1 0 1 0 A.Woodp 2 0 0 0Eff isc 3 0 1 0 Cnghmph 0 0 0 0 ABarnspr 0 0 0 0 JiJhnsnp 0 0 0 0 Greinkp 2 0 1 0 CJhnsnph 1 0 0 0 YGarcip 0 0 0 0 Griffip 0 0 0 0 KHrndzph 1 0 0 0 Hatchrp 0 0 0 0 Lieratr p 0 0 0 0 Nicasio p 0 0 0 0 Callaspph 1 0 0 0 Totals 3 1 3 5 2 Totals 3 42 9 2 Atlanta BB1 BBB 028 — 3 Los Angeles BBB 1BB OB1 — 2 DP — Atlanta1, Los Angeles1. LOB—Atlanta6,
Arizona
Inciartlf 5
Meis 7, Phillies 0 NEW YORK — Noah Syndergaard pitched six-hit ball into the eighth inning and connected for his first major league homerun and the New York Mets beat Philadelphia.
Nationals 3,Cnbs0
CHICAGO — Bryce Harper hit his 18th home runandWashington beat the ChicagoCubs.
Washington Chicago ab r hbi ab r hbi Spancf 5 0 2 0 Coghlnlf 3 0 0 0 Eatoncf 5 1 2 0 Reyesss 5 0 2 0 Washington 28 19 Houston Baltimore Dsmndss 5 0 3 0 Solerph-rf 1010 Mecarrlf 5 0 1 0 Dnldsn3b 4 1 1 2 NewYork 27 21 .563 1'/2 ab r hbi ab r hbi Abreu1b 5 1 3 2 Bautistdh 5 0 1 0 YEscor3b 5 1 1 0 Rizzo1b 3 0 1 0 Philadelphia NewYork Atlanta 23 23 500 4'/2 Springrrf 5 1 1 0 MMchd3b 4 0 1 0 Harper rf 3 1 1 1 Bryant 3b 3 0 0 0 LaRochdh 4 1 2 1 Encrnc1b 5 0 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi Philadelphia 19 30 .388 10 A ltuve2b 5 0 2 0 Sniderlf 3 0 0 0 Zmrmn1b 4 0 0 0 Fowlercf 3 0 0 0 Bonifacpr-dh 0 1 0 0 RuMrtnc-2b 5 1 2 0 Revereff 4 0 2 0 Grndrsrf 3 0 0 1 Miami 18 30 .375 10'/2 T uckerlf 5 1 1 1 LoughIf 0 0 0 0 WRamsc 3 0 0 0 Scastross 4 0 2 0 AIRmrzss 5 0 0 0 Colaefflf 5 0 3 0 Galvi sss 4 0 0 0 Lagarscf 5 0 0 0 CentralDivision Gattisdh 4 2 3 2 Paredsdh 4 1 2 0 U ggla2b 4 0 0 0 Lakerf-If 4 0 1 0 S huckrf 5 0 2 1 Carrerrf 3 0 1 0 U tley2b 3 0 0 0 Duda1b 4 3 3 2 W L Pct GB CIRsmscf 4 0 30 A.Jonescf 4 1 2 0 Janssnp 0 0 0 0 D.Rossc 2 0 0 0 GBckh3b 5 0 2 1 Smoakph 1 0 1 1 CHrndz2b 1 0 0 0 DnMrp2b 4 1 3 1 St. Louis 31 16 .660 Valuen3b 3 0 0 0 C.Davis1b 4 2 2 3 Storenp 0 0 0 0 MMntrph-c 2 0 0 0 S otoc 5 0 1 0 Tholec 0 0 0 0 Howard1b 3 0 0 0 Cuddyrlf 4 1 2 2 Chicago 25 21 543 51/2 Carter1b 4 0 1 1 Pearcerf 4 1 1 1 T Moorelf 3 0 0 0 Lesterp 2 0 0 0 C Snchz2b 4 1 1 0 Pillarcf 4 1 1 0 Diekmnp 0 0 0 0 Floresss 4 0 0 0 Pittsburgh 24 22 ,522 Br/r Jcastroc 4 0 0 0 JHardyss 4 0 2 0 MTaylrlf 1 0 0 0 Baxterph 1 0 0 0 Goins2b 3 0 1 0 Papelnp 0 0 0 0 Muno3b 3 1 0 0 Cincinnati 19 27 .413 11'/2 MGnzlzss 3 00 0 Fl ahrly2b 3 0 0 0 Valenciph-rl 2 0 0 0 ABlancph 1 0 1 0 Plawckc 3 0 1 0 Scherzrp 3 0 1 0 JRussllp 0 0 0 0 Milwaukee 16 32 .333 15r/r Villarph 1 0 0 0 Josephc 3 0 0 0 Gracep 0 0 0 0 Mot tep 0 0 0 0 Totals 43 5 145 Totals 4 2 3 133 Franco3b 4 0 1 0 Syndrgp 3 1 3 1 West Division Totals 3 8 4 114 Totals 3 3 5 104 C hicago 8 0 2BB1 000 2 — 6 Sizemrrf 4 0 2 0 Glmrtnp 0 0 0 0 Espinos2b 1 1 1 1 TWoodp 0 0 0 0 W L Pct GB Houston 010 000 300 — 4 JHerrr ph 1 0 1 0 Toronto BO OBBB 111B — 3 OHerrrcf 3 0 0 0 Cecilinph 1 0 0 0 LosAngeles 28 18 .609 Baltimore 000 4 0 0 B1x— 5 E—Encarnacion(1). LOB—Chicago9,Toronto12. ARussll2b 4 0 1 0 Ruppc 3 0 1 0 Goeddlp 0 0 0 0 SanFrancisco 28 20 .583 1 DP — Houston 1. LOB —Houston 8, Baltimore5. 2B — Abreu(8), G.Beckham(4), Reyes(6). 38—Abreu Totals 37 3 9 2 Totals 3 3 0 7 0 OSullvn p 2 0 1 0 SanDiego 23 25 .479 6 2B — Altuve(10), Tucker(5), Gatis (8), Col.Rasmus (2). HR W ashington 00 0 1 0 1 801 — 3 —Donaldson(13). SB—Shuck(2). SF—DonR uf1b 1 0 0 0 Arizona 21 25 .457 7 ( 10), Carter (3), Pa re de s (9). H R — G atti s (1 0), C . D a vi s 000 000 BOO — 0 aldson. Totals 3 3 0 8 0 Totals 3 47 127 Chicago Colorado 19 26 ,422 Br/r 2(10),Pearce(6).SB—Paredes(3), A.Jones(3). E—S.castro 2 (11), A.Russell (7). DP—Chicago IP H R E R BBSO Los Angele7. Philadelphia OBB OBB 000 — B s 28—Markakis (10). HR —Maybin(5), New York IP H R E R BBSO Chicago 1.LOB— Washington10,Chicago9.2B— Desmond2 183 1 1 1 Ogx— 7 Wednesday'sGames Guerrero(9). SB—Peterson(5), Greinke(1). Houslon E—Diekman (1). DP—Philadelphia 2, NewYork 16), Sole(12), r Lake(2). HR —Harper (18), Espinosa Samardziia 7 8 1 0 1 5 Colorado 6, Cincinnati 4 IP H R E R BBSO McHugh 6 9 4 4 0 5 PetrickaH,3 1 -3 2 1 1 0 0 6). SB —Lake(2). S—Fowler. 2. LOB —Philadelphia 6, NewYork 7. 28—A.Blanco Pittsburgh5, Miami2 Atlanta Fields 11-3 0 0 0 0 2 Putnam IP H R E R BBSO H, 1 1 -3 1 0 0 0 0 ( 5), Duda (1 5). HR — D ud a 2 (8), C u ddye r (5), S yn der N.Y.Mets7, Philadelphia0 A.WoodW,3-2 7 7 1 1 2 6 2-3 1 1 1 0 2 Sipp L,2-2 Washington DukeH,Q 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Ji.Johnson SanFrancisco3, Milwaukee1 H,13 1 0 0 0 0 2 gaard(1). SF—Granderson. Baltimore 5 0 0 1 13 RobertsonW,4-1 2 2 1 1 1 2 Griffi S,14-15 1 IP H R E R BBSO ScherzerW,6-3 7 Washi ngton3,ChicagoCubs0 2 1 1 0 0 Philadelphia U.Jimenez 7 1 0 4 4 1 5 Toronto Grace 0 1 0 0 0 0 St. Louis4,Arizona3 LosAngeles BrachW,3-0 1 0 0 0 0 0 Estrada O ' S ullivan L,1-4 5 2-3 11 7 7 1 2 Janssen H,2 1 0 0 0 0 0 7 8 3 3 0 2 SanDiego5, L.A.Angels 4 Greinke 6 3 1 1 2 9 BrittonS,12-13 1 1 0 0 0 0 Loup 11-3 1 0 0 0 2 StorenS,16-17 1 1 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 2 YGarcia Atlanta3, LA.Dodgers2 1 0 0 0 0 2 Diekman HBP —byMcHugh(Snider). Cecil 1 2 0 0 0 1 HatcherL,1-4 1 0 0 0 1 0 Chicago Today'sGam es 0 1 2 2 1 0 Papelbon T—2:26. A—16,401(45,971). Lester L,4-3 7 7 2 1 2 10 OsunaL,1-1 1 3 2 2 0 NewYork Pittsburgh (Burnett 4-1) atSanDiego(Kennedy2-4), Liberatore 1 1 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 HBP—byEstrada(LaRoche). PB—Soto. 0 6 J.Russell 7:10 p.m. Nicasi o 1 0 0 0 0 1 SyndergaardW,2-2 71-3 6 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 T—3:31.A—15,463 (49,282). Gilmartin 2-3 1 0 0 0 0 Motte Atlanta(S.Miler 5-1)at SanFrancisco(Heston 4-3), Tigers 3, Athletics 2 Hatcherpitchedto2 baters inthe8th. 1 2 1 1 0 2 Goeddel 1 1 0 0 0 2 TWood 7:15 p.m. WP—Liberatore. J.Russel pi l t ched to 1 ba ter in the8th. Gracepitched HBP —byO'Sullivan (Plawecki). Friday'sGames T—2:58. A—37,837(56,000). Yankees 4,Royals2 OAKLAND, Calif.— Yoenis Cest o 2 batters in the 8th. HBP —by Grace (Rizzo). T — 2: 4 1. A — 2 4,406 (41, 9 22). Kansas CityatChicagoCubs,1:05p.m. T—3:00. A—34,215(40,929). pedes homered with two outs in Coloradoat Philadelphia, 4:05p.m. NEW YORK — Alex Rodriguez hit Giants 3, Brewers1 Miami atN.Y.Mets, 4:10p.m. the fifth inning to break ascoreRockies 6, Reds 4 Washington atCincinnati, 4:10p.m. a three-run homer to break Lou Interieague less tie against his former team Arizona at Milwaukee,5:10p.m. MILWAUKEE — Ryan Vogel s ong CINCINNATI —Nolan Arenado hit L.A. Dodgers atSt. Louis,5:15p.m. and six Detroit pitchers combined Gehrig's American Leaguerecord Padres 5,Angels4 allowed onerun in six innings towin a three-run homer, extending his for RBls, and theNewYork YanPittsburghatSanDiego, 7:10p.m. on an six-hitter to lead theTigers AtlantaatSanFrancisco,7;15p.m. his third straight start, Joe Panik hit kees beat KansasCity to finish a hitting tear, leading Colorado to a ANAHEIM, Calif.— Justin Upton Pct GB .596
Leaders AMERICANLEAGUE PITCHING —FHernandez, Seattle, 8-1; Keuchel, Houston,6-1;Pineda,NewYork,6-2; Carrasco,Cleveland, 6-4; ti8ed at5. ERA —Gray, Oakland, 1.77; FHerna ndez, Seattle, 1.91; NMartinez, Texas,1.96; Keuchel, Houston,1.98; Archer,TampaBay, 2.12; Odorizzi, Tamp a Bay, 2.31; Chavez, Oakland,2.44. STRIKEOUT S—Kluber, Cleveland, 83; Archer, TampaBay,82;FHernandez,Seattle,71;Pineda,New York,67;Carrasco,Cleveland,66; Salazar, Cleveland, 66; BuchholzBost , on,62. SAVES —Perkins, Minnesota, 18; Soria, Detroit, 15; AMiffer,NewYork, 14;Street, LosAngeles, 14; Boxberger,Tampa Bay, 13; Gregerson, Houston, 13; Rodney, Seatle,13.
Detroit
Oakland
ab r hbi ab r hbi R Davisrf 5 0 1 0 Burnscf 3 0 1 0 Kinsler2b 5 1 1 0 Reddckrf 2 0 0 0 Micarr1b 4 1 0 0 Zobrist2b-If 4 0 1 0 C espdslf 3 1 2 3 Vogtc 4120 JMrtnzdh 4 0 0 0 Parrinopr 0 0 0 0 Cstllns3b 3 0 2 0 BButlerdh 3 0 0 0 Rominepr-3bg 0 0 0 Muncy1b 1 0 0 0 Holadyc 4 0 1 0 Canhaph-1b 1 0 0 1 DMchdss 3 0 1 0 Lawrie3b 4 0 0 0 G osecf 3 0 1 0 Fuldlf 2000 Semien ph-ss 2 1 1 0 Sogardss-2b 3 0 1 1 Totals 34 3 9 3 Totals 2 9 2 6 2 Detroit 000 030 BOO — 3 Oakland 000 000 110 — 2 DP — Detroit 2, Oakland1. LOB—Detroit 9, Oakland 6. 28 —Kinsler (12), Burns(3). 38—Vogt (2),
three-game sweep.
KansasCity NewYork ab r hbi ab r hbi AEscor ss 5 0 3 0 Gardnrlf 4 1 1 0 Mostks 3b 4 1 1 1 Headly3b 3 1 1 0 L.cain cf 3 1 0 0 ARdrgzdh 4 1 2 3 Hosmer1b 4 0 1 0 Teixeir1b 4 0 1 0 KMorls dh 4 0 2 0 BMccnc 2 1 1 1 AGordn If 3 0 0 0 Beltranrf 3 0 2 0 S.Perez c 4 0 0 0 CYoungpr-rf 1 0 0 0 Infante2b 4 0 0 0 Drew2b 4 0 0 0 Orland rf 4 0 1 0 Hethcttcf 4 0 1 0 Gregrs ss 4 0 0 0 Totals 35 2 8 1 Totals 3 3 4 9 4
San Francisco M i lwaukee ab r hbi ab r hbi
victory over Cincinnati.
and Matt Kemp hit two-out RBI
Colorado Cincinnati ab r hbi ab r hbi
singles to help SanDiegobeat the Los Angeles Angels.
Blckmncf 4 1 1 2 Schmkr2b 3 1 0 0 Ynoalf 4 0 1 0 Votto 1b 3 0 0 0 BBarnslf 1 0 0 0 Frazier3b 3 1 2 2 C Gnzlzrf 5 2 2 0 Brucerf 4 0 1 1 T lwlzk ss 3 1 0 0 Byrd lf 4 0 0 0 Arenad 3b 4 1 2 3 Cozartss 4 0 0 0 P aulsn 1b 4 0 2 1 Brnhrtc 4 111 M cKnrc 4 0 0 0 Leakep 1 0 0 0 LeMahi2b 3 1 2 0 Boeschph 1 0 0 0
San Diego LosAngeles ab r hbi ab r hbi Solarte1b 4 0 1 0 Aybarss 4 0 1 0 V enalecf 5 0 0 0 Troutcf 4 1 2 0 Uptonlf 4 0 2 1 Puiols1b 4 0 1 0 Kemprf 5 0 1 1 Calhonrf 3 0 0 1 DeNrrsdh 4 1 2 0 Freese3b 4 1 2 0 Spngnr2b 4 1 0 0 Fthrstnpr-3b 0 0 0 0 Kndrckp 4 0 0 0 MParrp 0 0 0 0 M dlrks3b 4 1 2 3 Joycelf 3 1 1 1 Logan p 0 0 0 0 Badnhp p 0 0 0 0 Amarstss 2 1 0 0 lannettdh 4 1 1 0 Romop 0 0 0 0 GParraph 1 0 0 0 Betncrtp 0 0 0 0 B.Penaph 1 0 0 0 Hedgesc 3 1 0 0 C.Perezc 4 0 2 2 Kansas City 100 BOO B18 — 2 G Blancph 0 0 0 1 Broxtnp 0 0 0 0 Axfordp 0 0 0 0 Cingrnp 0 0 0 0 Green2b 3 0 0 0 — 4 New York B 1 3B OO Bgx Casillap 0 0 0 0 FrRdrgp 0 0 0 0 Phillipsph 1 0 0 0 Giavtllph 1 0 1 0 E Gregorius(6).LOBKansasCityg, NewYorkg. Sardinsss 3 0 0 0 BHmltncf 4 1 2 0 Totals 35 5 8 5 Totals 3 44 114 NATIONALLEAGUE 2B Orlando (3), Gardner(9), Headley(7). HRMous- Totals 3 5 3 9 3 Totals 3 21 6 1 Totals 3 6 6 106 Totals 3 3 4 6 4 S an Diego 0 1 0 2 0 0 200 — 6 PITCHING —Wacha, St. Louis, 7-0; Gcole,Pitts010 1 0 1 B 10 — 4 Semien(3). HR —Cespedes (6). CS—Cespedes (4), takas (5), A.Rodriguez(11), B.McCann (6). SB L San Francisco BBB B2B OB1 — 3 C olorado 32B 0 1 B 000 — 6 Los Angeles Milwaukee B B B 1BB OBB — 1 E—Richards 2 (2), C.Perez(1). DP —San Diego burgh, 7-2; Bcolon, New York, 7-3; Shields, San Gose(5). SF —Canha. Cain(8). Cincinnati 1B B OBB 030 — 4 IP H R E R BBSO DP — San Francisco 1. LOB —San Francisco 7, LOB —Colorado6, Cincinnati 5. 28—Paulsen (3), 2.LOB— SanDiego8,LosAngeles5.28— De.Norris Diego,6-0;Bumgarner, SanFrancisco, 6-2;Scherzer, IP H R E R BBSO Kansas City M ilwaukee 4. 28 — B elt (14), Pa ga n (8). 38 — K .D a vis Washington,6-3;6tied at5. Detroit Frazier(8). HR —Blackmon(7),Arenado(10), Frazier(14), 17), Middlebrooks (5), Trout(10), Freese(9), C.Perez ERA — Burnett, Pittsburgh, 1.37; Greinke, A.Wilson 7 4 4 2 7 2(2). HR 3 0 0 0 1 1 C.YoungL,4-1 6 —Panik(3). SF—G.Blanco. Barnhad(3). SB—BHamilton(18). CS—Blackmon(3). 2). HR —Middlebrooks(6), Joyce(2). SB—Amarista 1 2 0 0 1 1 IP H R E R BBSO Los Angeles,1.48; SMiffer, Atlanta, 1.50; Scher- RyanW,1-0 3 3 1 1 3 0 Madson IP H R E R BBSO (2), Aybar (3). S—Hedges. SF—Calhoun. zer, Washington, 1.51; Wacha,St. Louis, 1.87; AlburquerqueH,4 1 0 0 0 0 2 F.Morales 1 0 0 0 0 1 San Francisco Colorado IP H R E R BBSO Harang, Philadelphia, 1.93; Gcole, Pittsburgh, B.HardyH,3 2-3 2 1 1 0 0 NewYork VogelsongW,4-2 6 6 1 1 0 5 K.KendrickW2-6 71-3 5 4 4 1 1 San Diego 2.11. ChamberlainH,7 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 PinedaW,6-2 6 2 - 3 6 1 1 1 8 StricklandH,1 1 0 0 0 0 1 Logan 0 1 0 0 2 0 CashnerW,2-7 7 8 3 3 1 6 STRIKEOUT S—Scherzer, Washington, 85; Ker- Soria S,15-16 1 1 0 0 1 2 D.carpenter 0 1 0 0 0 0 RomoH,14 1 0 0 0 0 2 BetancourtH,5 2 - 3 0 0 0 0 0 MaurerH,5 1 2 1 1 0 0 shaw, LosAngeles,83;Shields,SanDiego,82;Gcole, Oakland J.WilsonH,6 1 3- 0 0 0 0 0 CasillaS,14-16 1 0 0 0 0 2 AxfordS,B-B 1 0 0 0 0 1 KimbrelS,12-13 1 1 0 0 0 1 Pittsburgh,70;TRoss, SanDiego, 69;Hamels, Phila- Kazmir 3 0 0 0 3 4 BetancesH,10 1 1 1 0 1 3 Milwaukee Cincinnati LosAngeles delphia,67;Lynn,St. Louis,67. OteroL,2-3 2 5 3 3 2 2 A.Miller S,14-14 1 0 0 0 0 0 Fiers L,1-5 5 8 2 2 0 6 LeakeL,2-4 5 9 6 6 2 4 RichardsL,4-3 6 2 - 3 8 5 3 2 6 12-3 0 0 0 0 1 Bedrosian SAVES —Storen, Washington, 16; Familia, New Doolittle 1 1 0 0 0 2 D.carpenterpitchedto 1batterin the7th. Blazek 2 0 0 0 0 3 M.Parra 12-3 0 0 0 0 3 York, 14;Casiga,SanFrancisco, 14;Grili, Atlanta, Fe Rodriguez 2 1 0 0 0 2 WP—Pineda. Broxton 1 0 0 0 0 2 Badenhop 11-3 1 0 0 1 0 C.Ramos 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 13; RosenthalSt. , Louis, 13;Melancon,Pittsburgh, Scribner 1 2 0 0 0 2 Umpires —Home, Mike Muchlinski; First, MikeWin- Fr.Rodriguez 1 1 1 1 0 0 Cingrani 1 0 0 0 0 2 Pestano 1-3 0 0 0 1 1 12; KimbrelSan , Diego,11; Papelbon,Philadelphia, Ryanpitchedto1batter in the7th. ters; Second,MarkWegner; Third, MartyFoster. HBP —byFiers(M.Duffy). Loganpitchedto 3battersin the8th. HBP—byBedrosian(Solarte). WP —C.Ramos. 11. T—3:06. A—20,387(35,067). T—2:42.A—32,734 (49,638). T—3:00. A—35,208(41,900). T—2:46.A—23,917 (42,319). T—2:51. A—36,180(45,957).
Takeda
this team."
Lilley, a first-team all-Pac-12 pick at Continued from C1 third base who finished behind Okla"It's the biggest blessing to walk into homa pitcher Paige Parker for fresha program and be the No. 1-ranked m an of theyear on Tuesday, could team a few times in my career," Take- break Takeda's records by the end of da said. "Back izt my junior year of high her career. She credits her mentor for school, Oregon softball was just start- being an inspirational teammate and a ing to go to super regionals." graciouspasser ofthe torch. With a national player of the year fiThe tandem proved to be a terror at nalist (Cheridan Hawkins) in the pitch- the top of Oregon's batting lineup this ing circle and a freshman of the year season, combining for 116 runs artd 74 finalist (Jenna Lilley) improving an RBIs. "She's one of my favorite people I've alreadydeep lineup,the second-seeded Ducks (51-6) have a chance to be ever gotten to play with," Lilley said the last team standing when the eight- of Takeda. "We kind of have a similar team, double-elimination bracket is style of play, we understand each other complete. and have, like, a similar attitude. She's The junior-dominated roster is mo- always there to help me. I can go to her, tivated to send Takeda and fellow se- whether it be for softball or off the field, niors Karissa Hovinga (No. 2 pitcher), I know she's always there for me.... "I'm so happy that I've gotten to play Sara Goodrum (backup outfielder) and Jamie Rae Sullivan (backup infielder) with her this year. I was looking forout in style. ward to that ever since I committed (to "I saw some cool thing where they Oregon). It's been an honor to be on the were the winnirtgest class in Oregon same field with her." history," Lilley said of the seniors, who Takeda, who missed four Pac-12 have experienced an unprecedented games with injuries, is hitting .416 this 202 victor ies in four seasons. "That season. She broke the program records speaks a lot to what that class has done
for the program. It's really special. All four seniors play an integral part on
Aokilf 5 1 2 0 CGomzcf 4 0 1 0 Panik2b 4 1 2 2 KDavislf 4 0 2 0 P encerf 4 0 0 0 Braunrf 4 0 0 0 P oseyc 4 0 1 0 Lind1b 4 1 1 0 Belt1b 4 0 1 0 ArRmr3b 4 0 1 0 Bcrwfr ss 4 0 0 0 EHerrr 2b 3 0 1 1 Pagancf 4 1 2 0 Maldndc 3 0 0 0 M Duffy3b 3 0 1 0 Fiersp 10 0 0 Vglsngp 3 0 0 0 HGomzph 1 0 0 0 Strcklnp 0 0 0 0 Blazekp 0 0 0 0
Day at Howe Field against No. 18 California on May 3, Takeda became Oregon's runs leader. She set a school recordfordoubles during Oregon'sregional victory over No. 25 North Dakota State on May 15.
"Just ablessing with that triple threat
— the speed, the ability to hit for pow-
er,her slap game," White said."Even when Janie was hurt and couldn't be in the outfield, she was helping the other outfielders out there in practice, just
talking to them and telling them situatiorts. She's helping with base running;
Jenna stole quite a few bases. I think that really helps Jenna, seeing Janie's experience." Oregon's regular-season showdown with UCLA in early April was the seriesTakeda missed aftershe separated
a shoulder laying out for a line drive deep in the outfield against Washingtort at Howe Field. The Ducks and
Bruins will meet again tonight in the Women's College World Series (6:30, ESPN2). "For me, if we win a national championship, I want to know that we beat the best teams in the country," Take-
da said, "and UCLA is definitely one back pitches against No. 9 Louisiana of the best teams in the country. I'm Lafayette on April 24. During Senior excited." for hits and stolen bases on back-to-
Beavs
fun." This young team is going into Continued from C1 uncharted waters in the postseaIthas been a specialseason for son, but that has been the case coach Pat Casey, who now has since the team's first game back in guided the Beavers to the postsea- February. son 10 of the past 11 seasons. So Casey does not plan to "As many kids as we lost and make arty changes to the Beavers' bringing in the new guys, there approach. was certainly a lot of uncertainty He points to the big games they in how the things would turn out," have won on the road — at UCLA Casey said Monday. "They have and at Arizona State, for example just been fantastic. — as experiences that should give "They have been a fun group to them confidence. "It's the game of baseball and coach. They show up to play artd they'vewon some big games.And we've got to play the game of baseboy they had a heck of a run down ball and we've got to do it at a high the stretch. Very happy artd proud level," Casey said. "Now it's just a of them." little more exciting, hopefully." Freshman K.J. Harrison, who has had a sensational rookie cant-
Junior Andrew Moore has been
the right time, that's for sure," he
"The freshmen need torealize
through it before as a starting paign with 10 homers and a Pac- pitcher his first two years when 12-leading 58 RBIs, said it just the Beavers hosted regionals. took some time to mesh. He has a simple message for the "As a team we just matured at newcomers. said. "It took us a while to get go- it's the same, it's baseball," Moore ing, but as a young team we all said. "You don't need to outperstarted to fill our roles artd I feel form anyone. It's the same thing like just as we got on that win we've been doing all season. I'm streak we built up our confidence. excited for them to finally get their We are playing loose and having ftrst taste of tt."
C4
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, MAY 28, 2015
PREP ROUNDUP
ava ears ro to irst-roun victor Bulletin staff report from first base. The mantra for Bend High is With the win, Bend advancsimple: Survive and advance. es to the Friday's quarterfinal
the game in relief of starting pitcher Zach Morgan, who exited the game in the third
who managed just three hits.
The No. 6 Hornets (19-8) scored the only run they would The Lava Bears did just that round, where the Lava Bears inning after a line drive struck need in the second inning on a on Wednesday. w ill visit No . 1 L i b erty o f him i n t h e a n k le. H a rrer double by Maddie Hilyard, a A six-run fifth inning and Hillsboro. logged a hit and an RBI at the fielder's choice and a throwing a stout pitching performance Also on Wednesday: plate. error — Crook County's only by Kota Carter lifted No. 8 error of the game. McKenna Softball Bend to an 8-1 victory over Baseball Armantrout hit a two-out RBI ninth-seeded Wilsonville in Molalla 10, Sisters 5: SISHenley 2, Crook County 0: double in the third inning to the first round of the Class 5A
TERS —
baseball state playoffs.
Indians scored a combined
T h e 1 5 th-seeded KLAMATH FALLS — Crook
County's bats went cold, and Carter went all seven inseven runs in the final two in- the Cowgirls missed some earnings for t h e L a v a B e ars nings to upset No. 2 Sisters in ly scoring opportunities in the (19-9), striking out four and the first round of the Class 4A Class 4A first-round playoff allowed zero earned runs. state playoffs. loss. With Carter on the mound, M olalla scored four of it s Bend l i m i ted W i l s onville, f ive sixth-inning runs w i t h
which recently scored 25 runs, to just six hits. It was just the fifth t ime that t h e
Wildcats (18-10) were held to one run or fewer.
The Bears were ledby apair of seniors offensively, as Jacob Parsons went 2-for-2 with an RBI and Hunter McDonald belted tw o r u n -scoring
two outs, and Sisters coach Steve Hodges noted that base
hits and two Sisters errors as the most damaging factors of the inning. "They capitalized on hits in the (sixth) inning," said Hodges. "They did a good job at the plate." Ben Larson led the Outlaws (22-4) with two hits and two
doubles. Each of McDonald's doubles score Cameron Himes RBIs. Justin Harrer entered
account for
H e nley's other
run. Sophomore Mckuenzie McCormick pitched the distance
for the Cowgirls, finishing with a five-hitter that included
one strikeout, no walks and first and third bases with one nine infield pop-fly outs. The out in the second inning and other Crook County hit was failed to score. In the third, by Emma Ackley, a freshman singles by Aspen Christian- and one of the many undersen and Ashley Bond helped classmen expected to return to the Cowgirls fill the bases, a team that finished this seabut again they could not score son 17-9. "We had a really special against Henley pitcher Alexis Virtue. season, and we can only go "It wasn't anything we hav- up from here," said Cross. "As en't seen, we just couldn't hit," much as we progressed this said Jessica Cross, coach of year,we're really excited for the No. 11-seeded Cowgirls, next year." The visitors had runners on
I
j F
Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin
Summit's Alex Bailey (3) is greeted by his teammates as he enters the dugout after scoring in the fourth inning against Crater
on Wednesday.
Storm
out of it. And when we come
the 13th-seeded Comets to
Garcia finished 2-for-4 on the afternoon for Summit, while Alex Bailey went 2-for-3 with a double and a
to bat, we know our offense Continued from C1 can take over too." Mason, th e S t orm's Two of Crater's five hits starting pitcher who broke came off the bat of Avery h is n o n -throwing a r m Martin, while Dylan Morgan during basketball season and Dylan Pearce each had and missed several weeks a hit. Gunnar Asher doubled of the baseball schedule, in the sixth inning and scored went all seven innings for on an infield grounder by Summit (23-3), limiting Jake Ireland.
Ridgeview's Sara McKin-
ney delivers a pitch to a Sandy batter during the first round of the Class 5A
playoffs on Wednesdayin Redmond.
just five hits while striking out eight.
Joe Kline I The Bulletin
"He was a l i t tle over-
amped to start the game, run scored. Troy Viola also to say the least," Embree smacked a ground-rule dousaid of his hurler, who ble for the Storm, and Colby threw a total of 107 pitches — 22 in the first inning
alone. "He hasn't been
Scott and B axter H a lligan
each singled and scored a run.
"I have a lot of confidence in the boys," Embree said. composure and manage "They're still fairly young, the game, he did a great but they're dangerous. As job." long as they don't beat themThe C omets (11-17) selves, I think they're going to t hreatened to b reak put themselves in a position through several t i mes to be successful." throughout the contest but In the state playoffs for the stranded runners in scor- first time since appearing in ing position in five of the the state championship game game's seven innings. three years ago, the InterS ummit, howev e r , mountain Conference-chamout there a lot. For him to come in and keep his
Ravens
t hrived w it h
t w o o u t s . pion Storm advance to Frid ay's quarterfinals w it h a four r un s c am e a c ross chance to further their postwhile facing the end of season run. " In my mind, I t h ink w e an inning, including Garcia's two-run double in the can go all the way," Garcia
er said. "I think they're a qual- league. This team set a stanity team, and I think we are a dard so high I don't think we Continued from C1 opportunities, and I think San- quality team, and we were two can match it in th e future," H errington, h owev e r , dy's well-coached, and they teams going at it nip-and-tuck Fischer said. "I'm sad to see it was stranded when the next never stopped pressing and we and somebody was going to be end for them because I think two batters popped out and never stopped pressing, and lucky. It happened to be them they could have gone farther. grounded out, respectively. it's just one of those things." and not us." But bottom-line, I think this With two outs in the sixth in-
any given inning it could've been," Fischer said. "We had
Fischer said the lack of va-
ning, Fern Spencer knocked riety in th e Ravens' scheda double into center field ule made it more difficult to but ended the inning when face an unfamiliar team like she was tagged out trying to Sandy. "I do not think they were a stretch a double into a triple. "We felt confident all the better team (than Ridgeview's way through the order, and conference opponents)," Fisch-
Three of the Storm's first
knocked out in the first round a part of. And the reason for of the playoffs after reaching that is the quality of the kids
fourth that was preceded added. "If we keep this up, if by a bases-loaded walk we keep the energy up, if we drawn by Noah Yunker in keep the bats going and our the third. defense plays great, I think "We're just confident in we can go all the way."
the Class 4A state semifinals
our defense," Garcia said.
While th e
R avens w ere was the best season I've been and the parents. They were all
"When they had runners in scoring position, we know our defense is good enough to get ourselves
last spring, Fischer said she quality, and that makes coachstill considers the season to be ing something you want to do." a "1,000-percent success." "We're 22-2, and 16-0 in
— Reporter: 541-383-0305, vj acobsenibendbulletin.com
— Reporter: 541-383-0307, glucas®bendbulletin.com.
SWElE!N !EIsY"S Snowmobile, Small Engine Repair 8 More
PREP SCOREBOARD Class 6A State playoffs Secondround Wednesday'sresults No. t Clackamas 3, No.16 Jesuit 2 No. 240regon City3, No.8Westview2
No. 1Henley5,No.16Cascade1 No. 8NorthBend1,No.9 Sweet Home4 No.5Astoria u, No. 12Estacada2 No. 4HiddenValley 9, No.13Philomath6 No.3Gladstone4,No.14Mazama0 No.11 NorthMarionu, No.6 Baker2 No.10Scappoose15,No.7 Newport 9 No. 15 Molala10, No.2Sisters 5
No. 4Sheldon14,No.13McNary 2 No. 3 CentralCatholic 3,No.14 Lakeridge 2 (10in-
Molalla Sisters
Baseball
No.5 Beavertott 2,No.12Lincoltt 1
nings)
No. 6westLintt10, No. 0 Tualatitt 7
Quarlerfittals Friday's games
No. 7 McMinnville 3,No.23Grants Pass2 (10in-
nings) No.2 NorthMedford 9,No.18Sherwood0 Qttartettinals
Friday's games No.240regonCityat No.1Clackamas No.5Beavertott at No.4 Sheldott
No. 6WestLinnat No.3Central Catholic No. 7McMinnville atNo.2 NorthMedford
Tuesday,June 2
Semifinals
Championship Friday,June6at VolcanoesStadiuminKeizer Class 5A State playoffs Firstround Wedttesday's results No.1Liberty15,No.16Silverton 7 No. 8Bend8, No.9Wilsottville1 No.5NorthEugene3, No.12St.Helens1 No.4Summit4,No.13Crater1 No.14Pendleton10,No.3Corvalis 3 No. 6crescentvalley 7, No.u Marist1 No. 7HoodRiverValley5,No.10Dallas0 No. 15Putnam7, No. 2Churchil 6 Crater Summit
ItoIt1 0 — 1 5 2 001 201 x — 4 9 3
Wilsonville Bend
OtI1tI 0 — 1 6 2 010 061 x — 8 10 3
Gttarlerfinals
Friday's games
No. 8Bend at No.1Liberty No.5North EugeneatNo.4 Summit No.14Pendletonat No.6Crescent Valley No.15 Putttam atNo.7Hood RiverValley
Tuesday,June 2
Semifittals
Championship Friday,June6at VolcanoesStadiuminKeizer Class 4A State playoffs Firstround Wednesday'sresults
030 005 2 — 10 12 2 001 130 0 — 5 8 4
No. 8NorthBendatNo. 1Henley No.5Astoria at No.4HiddenValley No.11 NorthMarionatNo.3 Gladstone No.15MolalaatNo.10 Scappoose
Tuesday,June 2
Semifinals
Championship Friday,June6at VolcanoesStadiumin Keizer Class 3A State playoffs Fitslround Wednesday'sresults No. 1CascadeChristian13, No.16Scio2 No. 8Stanfield/Echo17, No.9 PleasantHil 3 No.5 HorizonChristian (Tualatimj16, No.12Salem Academy4 No. 4Glide14,No.13Vale3 No. 3Clatskanie16,No.14Harrisburg1 No.11 Rainie6, r No.6BlanchetCatholic 5 No.10St.Mary's7, No.7Taft1 No. 2SantiamChristian 5,No.15Nyssat
Quarlerlinals Friday's games No. 8Stanfield/EchoatNo.1 CascadeChristian No.5 HorizonChristian (Tualatinj atNo.4Glide No. 11Rainierat No.3 Clatskattie No.10St.Mary'sat No.2SantiamChristian Tuesday,June 2
Semifinals
Championship Thursday, June5at VolcanoesStadiumin Keizer Class 2AltA State playoffs Firslround Wednesday'sresults No. t Monroe/Alsea 33,No.16Glendale3 No. 8PilotRock/Nixyaawii 7, No.9Kennedy4 No.5 Re edsport 3, No.12Yoncalla/Elkton1 No. 4Burns23,No.t3 Faith Bible4 No. 3Regis16, No.14GrantUnion 3 No. 6NorthDouglas 7,No. 0 CountryChristian 4 No.7 Dufur16,No.tOToledo3 No. 2Knappa19, No.15 LostRiver 2
Guarlerlittals Friday's games No. 8Pilot Rock/Nixyaawii at No.1Monroe/Alsea No.5Reedsport at No.4Burns No. 6NorthDouglasat No.3Regis No. 7DufuratNo.2Knappa Tuesday,June 2
Semifinals
Championship Thursday, June5 at VolcanoesStadiuminKeizer
Softball Class 6A Secondround Wednesday'sresults No.1Westview10,No.16Clackamas1 No. 9Wes t Salem3, No.8Tigard0 No.12 Barlow 7, No.5Jesuit 3 No. 20SouthSalem7, No. 4Sprague6 No. 3GrantsPass3, No.14 Roosevelt 1 No.11 McNary12,No.6North Medford 2 No. 23Reynolds8, No.7Southridge4 No. 2Tualatin 3, No.15West Albany200 innings) Ouarterlittals Friday's games No. 9Wes t Salemat No. 1Wesiview No. 20South Salemat No.12 Barlow No.11McNaryat No.3Grants Pass No. 23Reynoldsat No.2Tualatin
Tuesday,June2
Semifinals
Championship Friday,June6at OSUSoftball Complex Class 5A State playotfs Firstround Wednesday'sresults No.1Putnam2,No.t6NorthEugeneO No. 8St. Helens9,No. 9Lebanon2 No.12Sandy2, No.5Ridgeview0 No. 4Marist1, No.13LaSalle 0(8innings) No. 14Hilsboro4, No.3 Churchill t No. 6Silvertott 9, No.11Crater2 No.10 Liberty6,No.7Eagle Point 1 No. 2Pettdletott14, No.15Central3(6 innings)
Sandy Ridgeview
000 000 2 — 2 4 0 000 000 0 — 0 4 1 Qttatterlinals
Friday's games No. 8St. HelensatNo.1 Putnam No.12SandyatNo.4 Marist No.14 Hillsboro at No.6Silvertott No.10 Liberlyat No.2 Pendleton
Tuesday,June2
Semifinals
Championship Friday,June6at OS USoftball Complex Class 4A State playoffs Firstround Wedttesday's results No. 1Banks5,No.160ntario 1 No. 9Scappoose12, No.8 Elmira 3 No.12 Maz ama7, No.5 Marshfield 3 No. 4Newport13, No.13NorthValey5 No. 3Yamhil-Carlton 8, No.14Corbett 1 No. 6Henley2, No.11 CrookCounty 0 No.10Douglas/CamasValley4,No.7Gladstone3 No. 2McLoughlin10, No.15Cascade0(5innings) CrookCounty Henley
000 000 0 — 0 3 1 011 It0 x — 2 5 1
No. 4Bonanza 4, No.13 Reedsport 3 No. 3 Pilot Rock/Nixyaawi12, i No. 14Riddle/Days
Creek0(5innings) No. 6Knappa 4, No.1I Prospect/Butte Fals1 No. 7GoldBeach 6,No.10 Gastott 4
Guarterlinals Friday's games No. 8NorthDouglasat No.1Union/Cove No. 5Weston-McEwenatNo.4Bonanza No. 6Knappaat No.3Pilot Rock/Nixyaawi No. 7GoldBeachat No. 2Central Linn Tuesday,June 2
Class 3A State playoes Firstround Wednesday'sresults No. 1Dayton12, No.16 Lakeview0(5 innings) No. 9Echo/Stanfield11, No.8RogueRiver4 No.5 Pleasant Hil 3,No.12SalemAcademy0 No. 4Taft9, No.13Clatskanie1 No. 3Scio13, No.14Amity 3(6innings) No. 6Vale12, No.11Glide4 No. 7Harrisburg11, No.10Elgin/Imbler 0 (5innings) No. 2Rainier11, No.15Colton0(5innings) Qttarterrtnals
Friday's games
No. 9Echo/Stanfield atNo.t Dayton No.5 PleasantHil at No.4Taft No. 6Valeat No.3Scio No. 7Harrisburgat No.2Rainier Tuesday,June 2
Semitinals
Championship Thursday, June5atOSUSoftball Complex Class 2iVIA State playoffs Firstround Wednesday'sresults No. 1Union/Cove16,No.16Waldport 0(6innings) No. 8NorthDouglas 6, No.9 Kennedy3 No.5Westott-McEwett9, No.12Oakland2
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Qttarterfinals Friday's games No. 9ScappooseatNo. 1Banks No.12MazamaatNo.4Newport No. 6HenleyatNo.3Yamhil-Carltott No.10 Douglas/Cama sValey at No.2McLoughlitt
Tuesday,June 2
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C5 THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, MAY 28, 2015
18,162.9 "9
+'
O» To look upindividual stocks, goto bendbugetin.com/business. Also seearecap in Sunday's Businesssection.
N ASDAQ ~ 7 3 84
S&P500 ~
5,106.59
TOdap Better outlook?
2 120.
GameStop reports financial results for its fiscal first quarter today. Investors will be listening for an update onthe video game retailer's sales outlook this year. In March,the company gave a disappointing forecast, saying it expected sales of games for older video game consoles to remain weak. The stronger dollar also has weighed onGameStop's sales. $39.47
GME
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
2,150," 2,100:"
I
1Q '14 1Q '15
"
18,400 .18,000:"
"
2,000 ',"
17,200 '.
"
Source: FactSet
Labor market beltwether Economists predict that unemployment benefit applications edged lower last week. The Labor Department reports today its latest weekly figures on the number of people who applied for unemployment aid. The number of applications has remained at a historically low level that is consistent with a healthy job market. When fewer people seek benefits, it suggests that employers are keeping their workers. Initial unemployment benefit claims seasonally adjusted in thousands 300 296
274 270
est.
265 264
250 5 / 8 5 / 1 5 5 /22
Week ending Source: FactSet
Retail angst Abercrombie & Fitch has been struggling with changing fashion tastes among teens. The teen-clothing retailer has posted 12 straight quarters of declines in revenue at stores open at least a year. That's a key indicator of a retailer's health because it excludes the impact from recently opened or closed stores. Wall Street expects that the company will report today that its loss in the first quarter widened from a year ago.
HIGH LOW CLOSE CHG. 18190.35 18045.08 18162.99 +121.45 DOW Trans. 8460.29 8348.59 8444.32 +93.82 DOW Util. 587.26 583.14 586.21 +1.82 NYSE Comp. 11155.19 11069.15 11143.36 +78.04 NASDAQ 5111.54 5039.37 5106.59 +73.84 S&P 500 2126.22 2105.89 2123.48 +1 9.28 S&P 400 1538.68 1524.48 1537.63 +1 2.93 Wilshire 5000 22447.60 22224.39 22422.94 +198.55 Russell 2000 1255.05 1237.61 1254.36 +1 5.60
DOW
%CHG. WK MO QTR YTD t0.67% L +1.91% -7.61% t1.12% t0.31% -5.16% t0.71% L +2.81% t1.47% L L L +7.82% t0.92% L L +3.14% t0.85% L L +5.87% t0.89% L L +3.48% t1.26% L L +4.12%
TIF
Ciose $94 54+9 0 The luxury jeweler reported better-than-expected first-quarter profit and revenue results and a positive earnings outlook. $95 90 85
M A 52-week range $82.64~
$110.60
WDAY Close:$82.00 V-10.49 or -11.3% The human resources software company reported positive quarterly financial results, but a disappointing billings outlook. $95
A LK 40.69 ~ 71.40 63. 4 0 + 1.03+1.7 T T T +6.1 +28 . 5 1 2 20 1 3 0 . 8 0 A VA 30.35 ~ 38.34 32. 0 9 +. 2 0 +0.6 L T T - 9.2 + 4 . 8 3 4 5 1 0 1 . 3 2 BAC 14 . 84 ~ 18.21 16. 7 4 + . 2 4 +1.5 T L L -6.4 +13.2 68409 25 0 .20 BB S I 1 8 .25 ~ 63.45 36 . 0 9 + . 5 6 +1.6 L T T +31.7 - 22.2 145 d d 0 . 88 90 BA 116.32 ~ 158. 8 3 14 3.00 + . 20 +0.1 T T T +10. 0 +1 0 .3 2 712 18 3 . 6 4 85 CA C B 4 . 11~ 5.65 4.95 +.0 7 + 1.4 T T L -4.6 +14.0 77 55 COLB 2 3.90 ~ 3 0.7 2 30.48 +.33+1.1 L L L +10.4 +27.0 138 19 0.72f M A M COLM 34.25 ~ 64. 9 2 56.56 +.82 +1.5 L T T +2 7.0 +34.9 141 28 0.60 52-week range CO S T 113.51 ~ 1 56.8 5 14 5.42 +2.17 $.1.5 L L T + 2.6 +30 . 3 2 8 78 28 1 . 60f $74.32 ~ $97.40 B R EW 9.89 ~ 17.89 10. 8 2 +. 2 4 + 2.3 L T T -18.9 -7.8 36 98 Vol.:9.1m ( 5.7x avg.) P E: . . F LIR 28.32 ~ 36.36 31.0 7 +. 0 7 t0 . 2 T L T -3.8 - 8.6 54 8 2 0 0 . 44 Mkt. Cap:$8.77 b Yield:.. H PQ 31. 00 ~ 41.10 33.7 8 +. 4 0 +1.2 T L L -15.8 + 0.9 13506 14 0 . 64 I NTC 26.18 ~ 37.90 33.7 1 +. 6 1 t1 . 8 L L L -7.1 t 2 9.5 24096 14 0 . 96 Brown Shoe BWS KEY 11.55 — 0 15.11 14 .95 + . 13 +0.9 L L L +7.6 +12. 3 8 7 93 1 4 0 . 30f Close: $31.41L1.25 or 4.1% -.04 -0.1 T L T +15. 5 +6 0 .0 3 395 22 0 . 7 4 K R 4 6 .50 ~ 77.74 7 4. 1 9 The retailer that owns Famous LSCC 5.87 ~ 8.50 6.26 +. 2 1 + 3.5 L L T -9.1 -23.5 121 9 dd Footwear shoe stores reported betL PX 12.46 ~ 18.49 18. 3 9 +. 1 8 +1.0 L L L +11. 1 +2 4 .1 2 098 d d ter-than-expected first-quarter profit MDU 19 . 88 o — 35.4 1 20. 87 + . 1 8 +0.9 T T T -11.2 -37.2 886 15 0 . 7 3 and revenue results. MEN T 18.25 — o 26.00 26 .28 + . 43 +1.6 L L L +19. 9 +1 9 .4 63 2 2 2 0. 2 2 $34 M SFT 3 9 .81 ~ 50.05 47. 6 1 + 1.02+2.2 L T L +2.5 +19 . 1 25719 20 1 . 2 4 32 NKE 73.14 ~ 105. 5 0 10 2.84 -.58 -0.6 T L L +7.0 +37. 7 3 9 99 2 9 1. 1 2 30 J WN 64.92 ~ 83.16 7 3. 9 8 -.04 -0.1 T T T -6.8 + 1 1.6 1 186 20 1. 4 8 28 N WN 41.81 ~ 52.57 44.5 8 +. 1 3 + 0.3 T T T -10.7 + 4 . 0 89 2 1 1.8 6 M A M P CAR 55.34 ~ 71.15 66.2 0 +. 7 9 +1 .2 L T L -2.7 +6 . 9 1 51 7 16 0.88a 52-week range PLNR 2.12 ~ 9.17 4.47 +. 1 5 $.3.5 L T T - 46.6 +98.2 2 7 5 1 3 $25.30~ $33 .67 P CL 38.70 ~ 45.45 41.5 3 +. 1 5 +0 .4 T T T -2.9 - 1.2 63 0 3 3 1 . 76 Vol.:830.2k (2.3x avg.) PE 16.6 : PCP 186.17 ~ 275. 0 9 21 6.61 -1.18 -0.5 T L L -10.1 -12.5 1201 17 0 . 12 Mkt. Cap:$1.38 b Yie l d: 0.9% SCHN 1 5.06 ~ 28.44 1 8. 4 5 -.18 -1.0 T L L -18.2 -24.0 191 dd 0. 7 5 SHW 201.36 — o 29 4.35289.74 +3.35 +1.2 L L L +10. 2 +4 2 .7 64 0 3 2 2. 6 8 Meru Networks MERU SFG 59.28 — 0 75.24 74 .58 + . 6 1 +0.8 T L L +6.8 +25. 4 96 14 1.3 0 f Close:$1.61 L0.23 or 16.7% SBUX 35.38 ~ 52.0 9 51. 5 9 +. 7 5 +1.5 L L L +25. 8 +4 3 .0 6 092 30 0 . 6 4 The networking technology compaUM P Q 14.70 ~ 1 8.3 9 17.68 +.27+1.6 L L L +3. 9 +8 .4 1323 21 0.60 ny is being bought by cyber security U SB 38.10 ~ 46.10 43. 8 6 +. 4 9 +1.1 L L L -2.4 + 7 . 0 5 753 1 4 0 . 98 company Fortinet for $44 million in WA F D 19.52 ~ 2 3.4 3 22.02 +.28+1.3 L L - 0.6 + 7 . 2 3 9 6 1 4 0 . 5 2 a cash deal. $3 WFC 46.44 — o 56.70 56 .07 + . 4 1 +0.7 L L L +2.3 +13. 8 11436 14 1 .50f WY 3 0 .50 ~ 37.04 33. 0 0 + . 0 4 + 0.1 L L T - 8.1 + 9 . 6 4 376 2 7 1 . 16
M A 52-week range $7.20~
:::"'."" Michael Kors shares plunge and $4.50 per share and revenue between $4.7 billion and $4.8 billion. The retailer forecast first-quarter earnings between 74 cents and 78 cents per share on revenue in a range of $930 million to $950 million. That fell far short of market forecasts. Analysts polled by FactSet were anticipating earnings of $4.67 per share on revenue of $5.03 billion for the year and first-quarter earnings of $1.03 per share on revenue of $1.09 billion.
Wedn e sday's close: $45.93 Price-earnings ratio:11
52-WEEK RANGE
99
P ftce change YTD -38.8% KORS
(B a sed on past 12-month results) *annualized
AP
AmdFocus Mairs & Power Growth replaced a comanager on Jan. 1, but Morningstar says that rather than signaling a concern, it was a strong example of succession planning.
SelectedMutualpunds
M A 52-week range $45.88~
PE 11.1 : Yield: ...
DSW DSW Close:$35.15 %0.90 or 2.6% The footwear and accessories retailer reported better-than-expected first-quarter profit results, but revenue fell short. $40 38 36 M
A
M
52-week range $23.45~
$3 9.58
Vol.:3.9m (3.5x avg.)
PE:2 0 . 8
Mkt.Cap:$2.83 b Yield: 2.3%
Hydrogenics HYGS Close:$11.10 L2.08 or 23.1% The hydrogen power company signed a 10-year deal to supply Alston Transport with fuel cells for commuter trains in Europe. $20 15
10
M
A
M
52-week range $8.57 ~
$25.88
Vol.:558.9k (7.6x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$112 m
P E: . . . Yield: ...
Globelmmune
GBIM Close: $4.01 V-4.23 or -51.3% The biot echnology company's hepatitis B drug, in development with Gilead Sciences, failed to meet a key study goal. $15 10
M
J A S 0
I3I D J F M A M
52-week range $4 .50
Vol.:10.3m (31.8x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$39.1 m
M $ 97.60
Vol.:7.2m (4.2x avg.) P E: 25.4 Vol.:69.1m (17.7x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$12.22 b Y i e ld: 1.6% Mkt. Cap:$9.22 b
Workday
DividendFootnotes:a - Extra dividends werepaid, ttut are nct included. tt - Annualrate plus stock. c - Liquidating dividend. 8 -Amount declaredcr paid in last 12 months. f - Current annual rate, whichwasincreased bymost recentdividendannouncement. i —Sum cf dividends paidafterstock split, ro regular rate. I —Sumcf dividends paidthis year.Most recent dividend wasomitted cr deferred. k - Declared or paidthis year, acumulative issue with dividends in arrears. m — Current annualrate, which wasdecreasedbymost recentdividend announcement. p — Initial dividend, annual rate nct known, yield nct shown. r —Declared cr paid ic preceding 12 months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, approximate cash value cn ex-distrittuticn date.PEFootnotes: q —Stock is 8 clcsed-end fund - nc P/E ratio shown. cc —P/Eexceeds 99. dd - Loss ic last12 months.
Michael Kors KORS Close: $45.93V-14.66 or -24.2% The seller of handbags and clothing reported positive fiscal fourth-quarter financial results, but issued a weak outlook. $70 60
M
NAME
$46
+.0018
50
Alaska Air Group Avista Corp Bank of America Barrett Business Boeing Co Cascade Bancorp ColumbiaBnkg ColumbiaSportswear Costco Wholesale Craft Brew Alliance FLIR Systems Hewlett Packard Intel Corp Keycorp Kroger Co Lattice Semi LA Pacific MDU Resources Mentor Graphics Microsoft Corp Nike Inc B Nordstrom Inc Nwst Nat Gas PaccarInc Planar Systms Plum Creek Prec Castparts Schnitzer Steel Sherwin Wms StancorpFncl StarbucksCp umpqua Holdi ngs US Bancorp WashingtonFedl WellsFargo & Co Weyerhaeuser
Michael Kors Holdings' shares plunged 24 percent Wednesday after the handbag and clothing maker reported slower sales trends and issued a weak outlook. The company reported a jump in fourth-quarter profit and revenue. But sales at stores open a year, an important measurement for retailers, fell 5.8 percent during the period. Michael Kors also said it anticipates fiscal 2016 earnings between $4.40
+
1.0890
Stocksbounced back Wednesday from a steep stumble the day before. Technology stocks were among the biggest gainers in the Standard & Poor's 500 index. The index's energy sector stocks declined for the second day in a row as the slide in crude oil prices deepened.Concerns overGreece's debtproblems remained on investors' radar. The nation might miss a debt payment on June 5 if it fails to receive bailout funds from creditors, who are demanding that the country make reforms to its economy. Beyond that, the market is waiting for more clarity on when the Federal Reserve plans to start raising interest rates for the first time in almost a decade.
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
Michael Kors (KORS)
AP
+ -.52 '
StoryStocks
Tiffany
NorthwestStocks
Dividend: $1.44 Div. yield: 3.6%
$57.51
.
16,800
1,950
Price-earnings ratio: 11
4/17 4/24 5/ 1
"
.
17,600::"
based on past 12-month results
262
'
"
2,050:"
StocksRecap
-.09
$16.64
" " "" " ........... Close: 18,162.99 Change: 121.45 (0.7%)
is,iso
17,960" ""' 10 DAYS "
"
NYSE NASD
$38.43
275
GOLD ~ $1,185.90 ~
Dow Jones industrials
... Close: 2,123.48 Change: 19.28 (0.9%)
Vol. (in mil.) 3,031 1,761 Pvs. Volume 3,242 1,683 Advanced 2307 1914 Declined 8 31 8 4 0 New Highs 64 87 New Lows 45 49
30
EPS
.
2,080' " ""'10 DAYS
, ''15 40
Operating
10 YRT NOTE 2.14% •
S8$P 500
Thursday, May 2S, 2015
$50
1 92 8
2,123.48 ~
PE:. Yield:.
$333 ~ Vol.:1.5m (41.8x avg.)
$7500 P E: . . .
Mkt. Cap:$23.07 m
Yield: ...
SOURCE: Sungard
InterestRates
SU HS
The yield on the 10-year Treasury held at 2.14 percent Wednesday. Yields affect rates on mortgages and other consumer loans.
AP
NET 1YR TREASURIES YEST PVS CHG WK MO QTR AGO
3 -month T-bill 6 -month T-bill
. 0 1 .01 . 0 8 .0 8
...
L
5 2-wk T-bill
.21
...
L T
L L
L L L L
L .35 L 1.53 L 2.52 L 3.36
.21
L
2-year T-note . 6 5 .64 + 0 .01 L 5-year T-note 1.53 1.52 +0.01 T 10-year T-note 2.14 2.14 ... T 30-year T-bond 2.88 2.90 -0.02 T
BONDS
.02 .04 .08
NET 1YR YEST PVS CHG WK MOQTR AGO
Barclays LongT-Bdldx 2.75 2.77 -0.02 T L L 3.17 Bond Buyer Muni Idx 4.42 4.42 . . . T L L 4.51 Barclays USAggregate 2.23 2.28 -0.05 T L L 2.22 PRIME FED Barcl aysUS HighYield 5.96 5.98 -0.02 T L T 5.07 RATE FUNDS MoodysAAACorpldx 3.98 4.07 -0.09 T L L 4.19 Source: FactSet YEST3.25 .13 Barclays CompT-Bdldx 1.87 1.89 -0.02 T L L 1.78 6 MO AGO3.25 .13 Barclays US Corp 3.12 3.18 -0.06 T L L 2.90 1 YRAGO3.25 .13
1 -yr -52.0
3- y *r 3.7
PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1YR 3YR BYR 1 3 5 Commodities MarhetSummary American Funds AmBalA m 25 . 22 +.14+2.7 +8.4 +14.3+12.7 A A A Most Active CaplncBuA m 61.31 +.39 +3.8 +4.9 +11.7+10.8 8 8 A The price of CpWldGrlA m 48.76 +.33 +6.2 +5.1 +17.0+12.5 D 8 C U.S. crude fell NAME VOL (00s) LAST CHG EurPacGrA m 51.92 +.33 +10.2 +4.5 +15.0 +9.9 C 8 C Wednesday for S&P500ETF 833746 212.70 +2.00 FnlnvA m 54. 1 9 +.52+5.6 +12.0 +19.5+15.3 C C C the second day BkofAm 684092 16.74 +.24 GrthAmA m 45.74 +.47 +7.2 +13.8 +20.9+15.7 C A C tn a row. In MKors 624973 45.93 -14.66 Mairs & Power Growth Inv. (MPGFX) IncAmerA m 22.05 +.13 +3.0 +6.1 +13.2+12.2 D 8 A trading of Broadcom 607440 57.16 t10.24 InvCoAmA m 38.19 +.33 +4.1 +10.4 +19.5+15.1 D 8 C precious and VALUE B L EN D GR OWTH CSVLgCrde 494726 3.13 -.11 NewPerspA m39.48 +.42 +8.8 +10.1 +17.8+13.8 A 8 8 industrial Apple Inc s 447357 132.05 +2.43 oWAMutlnvA m41.67 +.30 +2.0 +9.0 +17.9+15.8 C C A metals, gold, FrontierCm 388183 5.28 +.36 03 8 iPVixST 386067 18.69 -.70 Dodge &Cox Income 13.83 .. . +1 .1 +2 . 5 + 3.9 +4.8 C A 8 Cc silver and iShEMkts 341244 42.07 +.01 Cc IntlStk 45.60 +.50 +8.3 + 1 .5 +19.2+11.4 C A A AbbVie 334431 67.38 +1.28 Stock 184.92+1.87 +3.5 +10.3 +23.3+16.5 8 A A copper oFidelity Contra 103. 2 1+1.08+6.4 +14.8 +18.7+16.4 C C 8 declined. Gainers 03 ContraK 103 . 17+1.08+6.4 +14.9 +18.8+16.5 C C 8 C3 NAME L AST C H G %C H G LowPriStk d 52.95 +.37 +5.4 +11.3 +20.0+16.1 8 C 8 Fideli S artan 500 l dxAdvtg 75.14 +.69 +4.0 +13.3 +19.7+16.4 8 8 A Ceres rs 2 .93 +1 . 2 5 +7 4 .4 ATRM Hld 3 .87 +1 . 1 9 +4 4 .4 FrankTemp-Frank li n IncomeC m 2.44 ... +2.3 -0.1 +10.2 +9.5 E A A OneHorizn 2 .02 +.50 +32 . 9 03 IncomeA m 2. 4 2+.01 +3.0 + 0.4 +10.8+10.1 E A A GtBasScin 3 .77 +.85 +29 . 1 Oakmark Intl I 25.49 +.20 +9.2 + 0 .5 +19.8+12.4 D A A Hydrognc 1 1.10 + 2 . 0 8 +2 3 . 1 0O Oppenheimer RisDivA m 20 . 42 +.19+2.4 +11.2 +16.5+14.1 C E D Broadcom 5 7.16 t 1 0 .24 +2 1 .8 MorningstarOwnershipZone™ RisDivB m 18 . 03 +.16+2.1 +10.3 +15.5+13.1 D E E MiratiTher 3 3.75 +5 . 4 1 +1 9 . 1 RisDivC m 17 . 90 +.16+2.1 +10.3 +15.6+13.2 D E E Sevcon 1 1.45 +1 . 8 2 +1 8 . 9 OeFund target represents weighted SmMidValA m50.70 +.50 +4.2 +11.1 +20.6+13.8 8 B D OrionEngy 2 .62 +.41 +18 . 6 average of stock holdings SmMidValBm 42.57 +.42 +3.9 +10.3+19.6+12.9 C C E Emerld0 rs 6 .10 +.89 +17 . 1 • Represents 75% of fund's stock holdings Foreign T Rowe Price Eqtylnc 33.27 + .21 +1.8 + 5 .9 +16.9+13.3 E D D Exchange Losers GrowStk 56.7 8 + .66 +9.3 +18.7 +20.9+18.1 A A A The dollar CATEGORY:LARGE BLEND NAME L AST C H G %CHG HealthSci 81.1 2+1.01+19.3 +47.5 +38.9+32.4 8 A A extended its Newlncome 9. 6 9 ... +1 .1 + 2 .8 + 2.7 +4.0 C C C gains -4.23 -51.3 BIORNINGSTAR Globelm n 4.01 MKors 45.93 -14.66 -24.2 BATINB~ ****6 Vanguard 500Adml 196.45+1.81 +4.0 +13.3 +19.7+16.4 8 8 A Wednesday -1.04 -18.0 Nexvet n 4.74 500lnv 196.42+1.81 +3.9 +13.2 +19.6+16.2 8 8 8 after a surge ASSETS $4,215 million EKodak wt 4.80 -.92 -16.1 CapOp 55.85 +.84 +5.9 +19.3 +27.2+17.9 A A A the previous EXPRA TIO .65% -12.07 -14.1 ShakeShk n 73.69 Eqlnc 31.98 +.25 +3.1 +9.5 +18.0+16.7 C C A day. The ICE MIB.INIT.INVES T. $2,500 IntlStkldxAdm 28.42 +.20 +9.6 +1.1 +13.4 NA C C L.S. Dollar PERCEN T L O A D N/L Foreign Markets StratgcEq 34.43 +.37 +7.0 +15.4 +24.6+19.1 A A A index, which HISTORICALRETURNS TgtRe2020 29.65 +.15 +3.8 +7.2 +12.0+10.4 A A A compares the NAME LAST CHG %CHG TgtRe2035 18.73 +.13 +5.0 +8.4 +15.5+12.6 8 8 8 value of the Return/Rank Paris 5,182.53 +98.99 +1.95 Tgtet2025 17.23 +.10 +4.2 +7.6 +13.2+11.2 A 8 8 dollar to a London 7,033.33 +84.34 +1.21 YEAR-TO-DATE +1.6 TotBdAdml 10.85 +0.8 +3.0 +2.2 +3.8 8 D D basket of key Frankfurt 11,771.13 +1 46.00 +1.26 1- YEAR +8.1/E Totlntl 16.99 +.12 +9.6 +1.0 +13.3 +8.5 C D D currencies, fell. Hong Kong28,081.21 -1 68.65 -.60 3-YEAR +18.2/D TotStlAdm 53.61 +.49 +4.4 +13.2 +19.9+16.5 8 8 A Mexico 44,682.59 +281.19 + . 63 5-YEAR +15.4/C Milan 23,861.07 +534.12 +2.29 TotStldx 53.69 +.49 +4.4 +13.1 +19.8+16.3 8 8 A -1.27 -.01 Tokyo 20,472.58 3and5-yearretsttts aresnnuauzec. USGro 32.15 +.34 +7.5 +18.2 +21.4+17.6 A A A Stockholm 1,664.08 +25.59 +1.56 Rank:Fund'sletter grade comparedwith others in Fund Footnotes: tt - Feecovering marketcosts is paid from fund assets. d - Deferredsales charge, cr redemption -46.20 -.80 the same group; an Aindicates fund performed in Sydney 5,724.20 fee. f - front load (salescharges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually amarketing feeandeither a sales or Zurich 9,396.24 +1 23.56 +1.33 the top 20 percent; an E, in the bottom 20 percent. redemption fee.Source: Morningstar. FAMILY
h5Q HS
FUELS
Crude Oil (bbl) Ethanol (gal) Heating Oil (gal) Natural Gas (mmbtu) UnleadedGas(gal) METALS
Gold (oz) Silver (oz) Platinum (oz) Copper (Ib) Palladium (oz)
CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD 57.51 58.03 - 0.90 + 8 . 0 -6.0 1.53 1.55 -0.06 1.86 1.90 - 2.29 + 0 . 5 -2.6 2.82 2.82 -0.25 1.94 2.00 -2.69 +35.5
CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD 1185.90 1187.20 - 0.11 + 0 . 2 16.64 16.73 - 0.57 + 6 . 9 -7.4 1119.00 1124.10 -0.45 2.82 2.85 -1.31 -0.8 785.00 780.40 +0.59 -1.7
AGRICULTURE Cattle (Ib)
CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD -8.0 1.52 1.52 +0.44 Coffee (Ib) 1.25 1.24 +0.36 -25.3 -1 2.0 Corn (hu) 3.50 3.55 -1.55 Cotton (Ih) 0.63 0.63 - 0.41 + 4 . 6 Lumber (1,000 hd ft) 274.40 276.20 -0.65 -17.1 Orange Juice (Ih) 1.13 1.15 -1.40 -19.4 Soybeans (hu) 9.27 9.23 +0.49 -9.1 Wheat(hu) 4.88 4.93 -1.17 -17.3 1YR.
MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.5341 -.0046 -.30% 1.6812 Canadian Dollar 1.2 469 +.0038 +.30% 1.0857 USD per Euro 1.0890 +.0018 +.17% 1.3637 JapaneseYen 123.84 + . 7 9 + .64% 1 01.97 Mexican Peso 15. 2977 -.0330 -.22% 12.8705 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.8777 -.0059 -.15% 3.4806 Norwegian Krone 7 . 7720 +.0153 +.20% 5.9539 South African Rand 12.0435 -.0427 -.35% 10.4533 Swedish Krona 8.5 0 8 9 + .0360 +.42% 6.6216 Swiss Franc .9512 -.0015 -.16% . 8 967 ASIA/PACIFIC 1.2947 +,0015 +.12% 1.0800 Australian Dollar Chinese Yuan 6 2019 -.0016 -.03% 6.2475 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7590 +.0064 +.08% 7.7533 Indian Rupee 63 918 -.042 -.07% 59,025 Singapore Dollar 1.3521 +,0022 +.16% 1,2563 South KoreanWon 1110.70 +3.36 +.30% 1023.40 Taiwan Dollar 3 0.67 + . 0 2 + 07% 30.16
© www.bendbulletin.com/business
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, MAY 28, 2015
BRIEFING Deschutes to add warehouse Deschutes Brewery plans to break ground on 57,593 square feet of new warehouse space on Shevlin Hixon Drive adjacent to its existing warehouse in Bend, the brewery announced Wednesdayin a news release. The new building will include 5,000 square feet of cooler space for kegs and room to store 3,000 oak barrels used to age Deschutes Brewery reserve series beers. Those barrels are currently warehoused elsewhere due to space limitations, according to the company. Blaise Cacciola Architect, of Bend, designed solar-energy capability; high-efficiency heating, ventilation and air conditioning; and other energy-efficient and sustainability features into the building. The building is scheduled for completion in spring 2016. — From wire reports
DESCHUTES COUNTY
r o as o u i o essra e new ea uar ers Is e since
• The Bend company says it's "simply running out of space" By Joseph Ditzler The Bulletin
The Bend-based maker of
those seemingly ubiquitous stainless-steel, vacuum-insulated bottles that keep bev-
By Stephen Hamwny
erages hot or cold is building itself a new home. Hydro Flask, founded six years ago in Bend, announced plans
The Bulletin
Wednesday to build a new,
ratessince before the reces-
12,000-square-foot head-
sion, according to the Oregon Employment Department's monthly unemployment update. Deschutes County posted
City of Bend • Legacy Builders Inc., 550SW Bond St., Bend, $2,700,000 •TennantDevelopment LLC, 20367 Travelers Place, Bend, $194,002 • Pahlisch Homes Inc., 60354 Hedgewood Lane, Bend, $256,029 • Triad Homes Inc., 21338 Livingston Drive, Bend, $195,202 • PacWest II LLC, 63352 NE Lamoine Lane, $264,934 • Glenco Investments lnc., 21111 Azalia Ave., Bend, $201,817 • Hayden Homes LLC, 21141 Azalia Ave., Bend, $301,930 • Glenco Investments lnc., 19903 Alderwood Circle, Bend, $238,475 • Timothy Lunney, 21274 SE Golden Market Court, Bend, $202,988 • Pahiisch Homes inc., 3121 NW River Trail Place, Bend, $277,133 • Pahlisch Homes Inc., 3057 NW River Trail Place, Bend, $277133 • PahlischHomesInc., 3129 NW River Trail Place, Bend, $260,971 • John Arriagada, 19999 Badger Road, Bend, $168,216 • PacWest II LLC, doing business as Montevista Homes, 61932 SELorrin Place, Bend, $178,942 • PacWest II LLC, doing business as Montevista Homes, 61936 SELorrin Place, Bend, $178,942 • Rivers Edge Investments LLC, 2638 NWBoulder Ridge Loop, Bend, $223,612 • Pahlisch Homes Inc., 2544 NW Majestic Ridge Drive, Bend, $279,296 • Rivers Edge Investments LLC, 2551 NWMajestic Ridge Drive, Bend, $288,173 • Rivers Edge Investments LLC, 2552 NWMajestic Ridge Drive, Bend, $365,329 • Westerly II Bend LLC, 63280 NW Rossby St., Bend, $229,703 • Hayden Homes LLC, 21129 Azalia Ave., Bend, $255,006 • Craig D. and Lori A. Hutchens, 3351 NW Panorama Drive, Bend, $368,583 • Westerly II Bend LLC, 63288 NW Rossby St., Bend, $229,690 • Robert W. Taylor, 63281 Cherokee Lane, Bend, $121,942 • Rivers Edge Investments LLC, 2536 NWMajestic Ridge Drive, Bend, $264,t86
quarters at NW York and NW Lolo Drives in North-
West Crossing. It will double the size of its current home nearby. Construction should start in summer, with the building ready to occupy next year. A company news release
an unemployment rate of
Runberg, regional economist for the Oregon Employment the lowest monthly rate since jobs that were lost, and then some," Runberg said. Runberg credited the re-
duction to a more balanced
west will co-own the facility
with Hydro Flask, according HydroFlask announces plansWednesday to build anew Bend
cilit y encourages cross-func-
headquarters in NorthWest Crossing.
Andy Tullis/The Bulletin file photo
tional collaboration," Allan
said. "What we wanted was something that encouraged
"It's important that the facility
that type of interaction, but
encourages cross-functional
ummi High chool
collaboration. What
Site ot future Hydro Flask headpuarters
employees who take breaks
Pete Smith /The Bulletin
to bike or run, Allan said.
Inside will be beverage taps and coffee equipment that pour the drinks commonly found in consumers' Hydro Flasks. "The team's under a lot of
pressure managing growth, keeping high standards, quality and reliability," Allan said. "So when they can go have fun together, blow off a little steam and come
back refreshed, it's an important part of our relationship with our staff."
Plans for a new company home fall in line with a rash of new hiring — 25 employees in the past year — and plans to expand into markets abroad.
Mike Wallenfels, co-founder and former president of outdoor gear and
apparel maker Mountain Hardware, came aboard Hydro Flask this month as vice
president of worldwide sales. His first target will be Germany, followed possibly by the Scandinavian countries, Allan said. "Now we're looking at Canada, Europe, Asia," Al-
we wanted was something that encouraged that type of interaction,
but encouraging that interaction as much around values and culture." — Scott Allan, CEO of Hydro Flask
lan said. "We're excited that
a relatively small company in Bend might touch the lives a lot of the hiring we've done of lifestyle consumers on a
in the last six months."
global basis." Hydro Flask grew its
A decision to build a new headquarters came naturally. For example, the research and design section is housed in a separate building near-
domestic market by first
providing retailers like local gear shops and breweries with its product, then chains like Whole Foods and REI,
by. That will come under the
he said. The company does very little advertising, for now relying on social media and word-of-mouth, said Lucas Alberg, Hydro Flask communications manager. Wallenfels' hiring, "it's definitely a big deal," Alberg said. "But it goes in line with
workforce has doubled to 50
new roof. And the company since January 2014, Alberg said. "We're simply running out of space for the number of employees we have," Alberg sald. — Reporter: 541-617-7815, jditzler@bendbulletin.com
BEST OFTHEBIZ CALENDAR TODAY • Launch Your Business: Learn about starting or being in theearly stages of running a business; 6 p.m.; $199; registration required; COCC Redmond Campus Technology Education Center, 2324SE College Loop,Redmond; www.cocc.edu/sbdc or 541-383-7290. • EDCO PubTalk: Featuring keynote speaker Don Megrath ,managing director at VectorPoint Ventures; 5 p.m.; $20 for EDCOmembers, $30 for nonmembers; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW BondSt., Bend; 541388-3236, ext 3. • Financial Workshop: Get Out of Debt, Stay Outof Debt: Learn to manageyour debt, understand your credit report, how to rebuild good creditandmore;6p.m.; Mid Oregon Credit Union, 1386 NE Cushing Drive, Bend,or 541-382-1795. FRIDAY • Contractors CCB Test
7%
s.7%
6%5.6% 5.4% 5.2%
April 2014
April 2015
Source: Oregon Emplayment Department Pete Smith /The Bulletin
ty had before the recession, when Central Oregon was
rate in Deschutes County
reliant on construction and tourism.
matches the story in Oregon, which also recorded
While both of those indus-
to a news release. "It's important that the fa-
ers and showers, benefits for
s.3%
economy than whatthe coun-
more specific. Bend builder and developer Taylor North-
corporate open space, along with a bike corral, gear lock-
g
November 2007. "We've added back allthe
said Hydro Flask CEO Scott Allan, who declined to be
Architects, of Bend, will in-
-
Department. He said that was
factures the bottles in China.
So the new building, designed by Steele Associates
10%-
2014, according to Damon
to accommodateproduct design, testing and company managementand theworkforce. The company manu-
culture."
11% unemployment--
5.6 percent in April, down from 7.4 percent in April
described the new facility as state of the art, designed
encouraging that interaction as much around values and
Crook County Jefferson County Deschutes County Oregon Uniterf Qntes
In April, both Deschutes County and Oregon overall posted their lowest seasonally adjusted unemployment
The building will cost several million dollars to build,
PERMITS
Unemployment rates
Prep course: Two-day live class to preparefor the state-mandated test to become alicensed contractor in Oregon; 8:30 a.m.; $299 or $359 with required manual; registration required; Central OregonCommunity College Redmond Campus —Technology Education Center, 2324SE College Loop,Redmond; www.cocc.edu/ccb or 541-383-7290.
GreenwoodAve., Suite109, Bend or 541-480-8835. TUESDAY • What's Brewing? Bend's Town Hall: Clearing the Haze Around Measure 91: Looking at howMeasure 91 will impactyour workplace, the black market, taxes, economic developmentand law enforcement; 5 p.m.; Deschutes Brewery &Public House, 1044 NWBond St., Bend; 541-382-3221. WEDNESDAY SATURDAY • Real World Project • Business Startup: Cover Management: Learn to the basics in this two-hour navigate all phasesof classand decide if running a project managementand business is for you; 11a.m.; apply industry-accepted $29; registration required; best practices; 8:30 a.m.; COCC Chandler Lab, 1027 $125; registration required; NW Trenton Ave.,Bend; Central OregonCommunity www.cocc.edu/sbdc or College, 2600 NW College 541-383-7290. Way, Bend;541-383-7270. • What's Hot in Franchising: Explore the MONDAY possibility of owning your • Career in Real Estate own franchise; 6 p.m.; $29; Workshop: Jim Mazziotti, registration required; COCC Exit Realty Bendprincipal managing broker, to discuss Chandler Lab, 1027NW Trenton Avenue,Bendor careers in real estate; 6 p.m.; Exit Realty, 354 NE 541-383-7290.
THURSDAY • Nonprofits Open Lab: Search for grants using Foundation Directory Online with assistance from staff; 1 p.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave.,Redmond or 541-617-7089. • Real World Project Management: Learn to navigate all phasesot project managementand apply industry-accepted best practices; 8:30 a.m.; $125; registration required; Central OregonCommunity College, 2600 NW College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270. • Team Development for Greater Productivity: Explore teamdevelopment, the keyto high-performing teamworkand steps to creating synergy; 1 p.m.; $95; registration required; Central OregonCommunity College, 2600 NW College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270. • For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday'sBulletin or visit bendbulletin.com/bizcal
The lower unemployment
tries have grown since last
its lowest unemployment rate since 2007. The state-
year, health care, along with wholesale and retail trade, provided a larger portion
wide mark of 5.2 percent is the lowest monthly figure since July 2007, according
of the 4,160 jobs Deschutes
to David Cooke, economist
County has added since April
for the Oregon Employment Department. Cooke said that "Today, it's a different econ- Oregon has added more than omy than before the reces55,000 jobs since April 2014, sion," Runberg said. "Today's with health care and manunot just a short-lived bubble." facturing as the two largest While Deschutes County segments. "The rate has dropped featured a lower seasonally adjusted unemployment substantially and fairly ratethan Crook or Jefferson consistently," Cooke said. "We're fairly close to what counties, they saw declines as well. Jefferson County's economists would call full rate dropped almost three employment." percentage points since April Still, the acceleration of 2014, from 9.6 percent to 6.7 growth could have negative percent. Runberg attributed side effects for the economy. the decline to gains in the Runberg said the high rate manufacturing and local of employment has made it government sectors, includmore difficult for Deschutes ing tribal governments on County employers to fill the Warm Springs Indian vacancies. "It's arealconcern foremReservation. "Jefferson has been doing ployers," Runberg said. exceptionally well," Runberg For now, however, Desald. schutes County continues to Crook County saw imgrow, which he said gives emprovements as well, though ployers the ability to hire new they were more muted than arrivals. And after trailing in Deschutes or Jefferson the statewide unemployment counties. The seasonally ad- rate since the recession took justed unemployment rate in hold, Runberg added that Crook County dropped from Deschutes County's unem10.9 percent in April 2014 ployment rate of 5.4 percent is to 8.3 percent last month, virtually identical to Oregon's though Runberg added that as a whole. "We haven'tbeen able to the closure of Woodgrain Millwork in November parsay that for a while," Runberg tially obscured solid gains sald. in the business and tourism — Reporter: 541-617-7818, 2014.
sectors.
shamway@bendbulletin.com
How a text messagecan shut down youriPhone By Hnyley Tsukayamn
structive. Your phone doesn't
The Washington Post
become inoperable, it just
In weird Apple news today, it turns out there's a text mes-
sage that you can send iPhone users that will shut down their
phones. Just sending the message, which includes Arabic and other non-Roman char-
reboots. You can even open your messages again, as long as your prankster sends you another message (your enemies, of course, may not be so obliging). But the whole affair is
acters, causes the recipient's phone to restart and makes it
somewhat baffling: How can
difficult for them to open their
shut downyour device? The working theory, via a
Messages app. An Apple spokeswoman said in a statement, "We are
aware of an iM essage issue causedby a specificseriesof unicode characters and we will
make a fix available in a software update." While it's alarming to think
that someone can attackyour device this way, sending the message isn't exactly de-
a string of text automatically Reddit thread on the subject, is
that the phone struggles with displaying the non-Western characters in banner notifica-
tions, a.k.a. the alerts you get that pop down from the top of the iPhone screen. Eventually,
that causes the phone to reboot. This kind of problem has shown up before, in iOS 6, numerous Reddit posters said.
IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Fitness, D2 Nutrition, D3 Medicine, D4 THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, MAY 28, 2015
O www.bendbulletjn.com/health
MEDICINE
Wide use of antibiotics allows bacteria toflourish
Health caredusinesses
• About 89 percent ofeligible medicalfacilitiesandpharmacies in Oregondon't discloseerrors that canhurt patients
that failed to report
safety issues
By Jane E. Brody
898 of the 1,014eligible facilities in Oregon havenot disclosed if any patient injuries occurred. Thebulk of these were the result of nonreporting by 719 pharmacies throughout Oregon.But 116 facilities, or 11percent of all the state's eligible health care facilities, disclosed any safety issues related topatient care in 2014.
By Tara BannoweThe Bulletin
Hospitals ~
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lected the reports since 2006 and publishes annual data on the types of errors that ocMONEY c urred and the factors that contributed to them. The idea is that by divulging what went wrong, providers will learn from
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each other's mistakes.
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there are similarities," she said. "Everyone is strug-
gling with falls. Everyone is struggling with medication errors." All 59 hospitals in Oregon regularly submit reports, but other types of facilities haven't been so diligent.
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ty Reporting Program. Oregon is the only state whose reporting program includes pharmacies, which might explain the facilities' reluctance to report, Walmsley said. "We know that we're fighting kind of a steep hill already," she said. Nationally, adverse event reporting began in
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programs. Over time, that's shifted to include ambulatory surgery centers. The value of pharmacies
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HARM OFEVENTSREPORTEDBYALL OREGON HEALTHCARE FACILITIES, 2014 Serious harm or death 45%
---------- - --. Unsafe condition or near-miss 7%
No harm 35%
Less serious harm 13%-----
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TOP FOURSAFETY ISSUES REPORTED IN 2014 BY EACH FACILITy Surgery center
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care delay
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disease, but a month later
at Loyola University Chicago, said in an interview: "C. diff. is found in soil and water, even chlorinated
the gut infection recurred. Epstein was given another
water, and is a low-level contaminant in food. Most of us
antibiotic, but within days
ingest C. diff. every day." In most people, the microorganisms that normally reside in the gut protect against C. diff. infection, he
seemed to eradicate the
developed a fatal combination of kidney failure, low blood pressure and gastrointestinal bleeding.
Source: Oregon patient Safety Commission
tibiotics disrupt the healthy balance of microorganisms.
given rise to a virulent, antibiotic-resistant strain of C.
Freed of competition, C.
diff spores can germinate and reproduce unchecked, es close to 500,000 new cases and not only in people with and 30,000 deaths a year in compromised immune
Pete Smith / The Bulletin
When the recession hit,
needing help, and they were breaking down in the offices and crying," she said.
people in Deschutes County
Circumstances have im-
The Bulletin
focked to government food asl sistance faster than in any other county in
NUTRITION Oregon, said Belit Burke, manager of the state's Supplemental Nutrition Assistance
Program, formerly known as food stamps. She expects that's
because of the particularly hard toll the housing market crash took here.
"You had people who had been making six-figure incomes that suddenly were
proved in many respects, but thenumber ofpeoplewho rely on SNAP has not changed significantly. About 18 percent of people in Deschutes
seeing them stay on." Use of the program in Crook
Agriculture.
and Jefferson counties is even
many of their neighbors use theprogram simply because
higher: 24 percent and 32 percent, respectively. That's why when people from community organizations and the state's Depart-
See C. diff. /D4
Solving soreness after a break fromworkouts soreness," Ibrahim says. That Beach season is right impact will be more dramatic around the corner, and you're and jarring in a weakened hustling to get muscle (makes sense!), which FITNESS your bottom is why a sudden uptick in exinto shape. ercise can be quite painful. "This is also the reason Problem is, you started late, ramped up fast and now spring training camps are you're hurtin'. so painful. Having been inSo, what to do about this volved in preseason training type of post-exercise painfor NFL, NHL, NBA and oftenreferredto asdelayed MLS players, I can assure onset musde soreness? you even the elite athletes are It might sound counternot immune," Ibrahim says. intuitive, but one of the best In terms of the type of imways is to keep moving, says pact, eccentricstrain seems Victor Ibrahim, a team physi- to cause the most soreness, cian for the soccer team D.C. says Matt Fitzgerald, a United. running coach, sports nutri"Light movement — for tionist and author of dozens example, a cool-down after of training books, including "The New Rules of Maraworking out — is very helpful," Ibrahim says. thon and Half-Marathon In fact, one study says that exercise is the most
Nutrition."
effective means to alleviate pain during DOMS, which appears between 24 and 72 hours after exerdse.
when a muscle tries to resist
from the U.S. Department of
See SNAP /D3
the word about SNAP to those
"Eccentric strain occurs
What kind of exercise causes this pain and what exactly is happening in the body when the pain occurs? "Generally, the more im-
its own lengthening," Fitzgerald says. For example, when you run, he says, the quadriceps (front thigh) stretches when the foot lands and at the same time resists the stretch to keep the knee from
buckling. See Workouts /D2
~ E 8 CVb FARP~
/ rgAou more fAlri dlrkPWW~P
no one talks about it, said
data provided to The Bulletin
ment of Human Services,
which administers the federally funded program, spread
pact on the muscle, the more
People don't realize how
Annie Kirschner, program director for the nonprofit advocacy group Partners for a Hunger-Free Oregon. About two weeks ago, Kirschner and her colleagues visited Warm Springs for a focus group with locals who rely on the program. "People in that room said, 'I havenevertalked aboutthese things, even with my family,'" she said. "Talking about hunger in general, it tends to be a very private struggle. It's not out in public."
County relied on the program who might be eligible, they in April to help pay for food, stress how common it is. One and they're staying on the in 5 Oregonians relies on program longer than in pre-re- SNAP, and food purchases cession years. through the program have "This is kind of new territory exceeded $1 billion in the for us," Burke said. "We used to state in at least each of the see that people would drop off past five years, according to at recertification or midpoint in the six months. Now we're
systems.
C. diff. is a spore-forming,
es wor tO remove sti ma rom aue tin Oo assistance By Tara Bannow
explained. That is, until an-
ly the result of inappropriate use of antibiotics, which has
Which raises the question:
0 20 40 60 80 0 10 20 30 4050 0 20 40 60 80100 "Becausepharmacies only report medication or other substanceissues,their results werenot charted
• About 18% inDeschutesCounty useSNAP
fectious diseases specialist
Clostridium difficile, or C. diff. Another antibiotic
Special to The Washington Post
hospitals, and much of the focus when it comes to
said. Nonetheless, dispensing medications is a crucial
diarrhea caused by a nasty intestinal bacterium called
By Gabrlella Boston
ila aa W ik
& W W & Sa.W & W Sa W W i er W W Sa W W
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Health Policy, which researches states' reporting
za, recalled that within a week her father developed
sistant to heat, acid and anti-
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mistakes is on hospitals, said Jill Rosenthal, program director for the National Academy for State
hand sanitizers widely used in health facilities. Thus, poor bathroom hygiene can spread the organism. Dr. Dale Gerding, an in-
the United States.
4k Sa
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ik Sa mr Sa ik Sa S a ik Ck S a S a Sa Sa ma W i k
the commission's 2014 summary of its Patient Safe-
mon hospital practice.
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away with soap and water but not the alcohol-based
there, causing frequent watery stools and severe dehydration. The spores are re-
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Less than 1percent of pharmacies — seven out
of 726 eligible statewide, none of them in Central Oregon — submitted reports last year, according to
biotics; they can be washed
an antibiotic to prevent postoperative infection, a com-
diff., an organism that caus-
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Ck Sr~ &
reset the bone, he was given
w im
sion's executive director.
"Even though we like to say we're unique and different, you'll see with different kinds of events,
intestine and wreak havoc
Epstein's demise was real-
H W 4l a H S a &
SaW
You might say Jacob Epstein, a lean, healthy, 88-year-old Floridian, died in early May from a broken arm. Following surgery to
His daughter, Beth Fidan-
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patient safety, down from 13 percent
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mistakes last year to a group the
toxin-producing bacterium that can colonize the large
New Yorh Times News Service
-~>tcoolsculpting. Cool Night Out Thursday, June 4, 2015 Seatings at 6 and 7pm Chance to Win TwoFree Coolsculpting Packages Q&A CoolsculptingPresentation• RefreshmentsServed• Special EventPricing!
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D2 THE BULLETIN• THURSDAY, MAY 28, 2015
FmVESS
Swappingpavementfor trails may be thechangeyouneed trast to the major road mara- plore running trails, TrailLink, The Washington Post thons, trail races may have 100 a website and s martphone The slogan on the shirts pro- racers or fewer. app hosted by Rails-to-Trails vided by the North Face EnThose smaller fields are due Conservancy, covers every duranceChallenge Seriessaid to distance, both in the length trail and multiuse trail in the it all: "Dirt, the original prov- of the courses and the location country, and includes photoing ground." of the races. Many of the ultra- graphs and reviews. Also, the Among the hills of the Po- marathon races are on trails in Trail Run Project highlights tomac Heritage Trail and the more remote areas. Plus, the the technical difficulty of trails rocks of Great Falls in Virgin- logistical challenges of trail and has runner reviews as ia, what with the unexpected racing can make it harder to well. heat,uprooted trees splayed have multiple aid stations like Whether it's a race or a quiacross the trail and the threat a typical road race. et jaunt, look for a trail to take of snakes, this trail race truly you out of the city and into nawas a test of endurance and Better workout ture. Take the time to connect. By Mike Plunkett
strength.
I competed in the 50K race at Algonkian Regional Park in Northern Virginia on April 18. Officials said about 3,000 people participated in the different running categories in the area
Trail runners also tout the
whole-body workout and the Trail running tips demand to be fully present in Trail running can seem a the moment.They treasure the
bit daunting at first. Here are
ability to escape city life, to ex- some tips. change the sounds of cars for Repetition, repetition, repethe murmur ofcreeks and to
tition: Successful trail running
will require some changes to your running style. You're The Endurance Challenge out on the trails, like I've be- running for feel, not pace, and Series, which started in 2007, come part of them." you have to be diligent about is one of the larger trail race Cassaro, 29, an Arlington, knowing your surroundings. series, with six U.S. locations, Virginia, resident and coach "Just like anything else, repplus one in Ontario. The se- with the DC Road Runners, etition is important," Cassaro riesreflects a growing sense who ran his second 50K En- said. "Get out on the trails ofof runners' wanting to ditch durance Challenge race and ten so you can adjust to this the roads and race on trails fourth trail race overall at the style of running. The more instead. event, prefers trails to roads comfortable you are on the — from a 5K to the 50-miler over the weekend.
have, as Doug Cassaro put it, "this primal feeling when I'm
and has taken on hefty trail
trails, the stronger a trail run-
new thing: There are more
challenges such as 100-mile
than 60,000 miles of scenic,
races. C atherine Rehm,
ner you will be." Mete out your effort: The focus should be on having a
Trails,of course, are not a
historical and recreational na-
57 , o f
Gaithersburg, Maryland, says, consistent effort, not a con"The trails don't punish the sistent pace. The terrain can asts hike, bike, walk and run legs as much as asphalt and be unsteady an d a r duous, them year-round. The solitude concrete and give you a whole- and trying to run at your road and the chance to connect body workout — core training marathon pace will lead to to natureare big drivers for that doesn't seem like core problems. If you have to walk trail-lovers. training." up the hill or run it at a much Rehm, 57, who doesn't de- slower pace, then walk or go Gaining traction scribe herself as a competitive slower. As a competitive sport, trail racer yet helps train hopeful Be patient:Single-use trails racing is following the steady marathoners with Fleet Feet may get crowded at times. growth in popularity of run- Gaithersburg, ran the Endur- Powell said to let other running, yet it retains the inti- ance Challenge half-marathon ners who are going slower macy and collaborative feel with a cast on her left arm. know you're there. Pass them that trail runners love. The She told me she prefers trails only when you have sufficient trails attract all kinds of run- because they force runners room. Don't fight the obstacles: ners,from speedy collegiate to focus on their surroundathletes to those who barely ings. They demand complete The obstaclesare part of the make the time cutoffs on road attention. fun, but they can be hazard"Your mind, as well as your ous if you're not mindful. On races. "The background of the core, needs to stay engaged the more difficult sections, sport in the U.S. and around 100 percent of the time just to don't try to keep an unrealistic the world has always been in- stay vertical," Rehm said. and possibly dangerous pace. credibly accommodating toThat concentration means "The more relaxed you are, ward people of all talents and the pace will be different. Cas- the easier it will seem and the physical abilities," Bryon Pow- saro told me that dealing with safer you will be. If you fall, ell said. the different kinds of terrain you'll be more apt to injure Powell, a Washington law- and natural obstacles slows a yourself if you're not going yer who gave up his job to start runner down. with the flow," trail r unner Irunfar.com, a website dedicatBut that means more time Bryon Powell said. ed to trail running, has been a to take in the beauty. As PowDo the research on aid statrail runner for more than 20 ell told me, trails are a "mag- tions:There won't be as many years. Even though trail races ical transport to something stations in a trail race as in have existed for decades — the that envelops and frees you a typical road marathon, so JFK 50-miler, the first ultra personally. know where they are and how "Trailrunning means so many miles you have to travel trail race established in the United States, started in 1963 much to me that I choose those before you start the race. And — Powell has seen an explo- locations that inspire me on a if you're just out on a trail run, sion in the popularity of trail daily basis. But you can find know where the bathrooms running and races the past that inspiration anywhere." are, if they're available on or tional trails across the United States, and outdoor enthusi-
seven to eight years. In con-
Workouts
For those who want to ex-
fective type of massage for DOMS because it is especial-
Continued from 01 ly beneficial for improving "So in essence the muscle blood circulation. is being pulled in two differB ut P u l ok a s a y s e v e n ent directions at once, which though a massage is helpful, causes microscopic tearing of she would personally "attack muscle fibers and subsequent the muscle soreness from as soreness," he says. many angles as possible." "I would encourage moveThe exact physiological cause of delayed onset mus- ment," she says, echoing Ibracle pain is still under debate, him. "Movement is essentially but mostresearchers believe an internal massage for the it's a result of muscle trauma body." repair, Ibrahim says, adding She also recommends apthat isometric (static) mus- plying heat, which has been cle exercise can also cause shown to reduce soreness. DOMS, while it seems that Ibrahim agrees: "Improving circulation is concentric (dynamic) contractions (such as the up phase in helpful. A hot shower or hot a biceps curl) do not. tub does the trick for most of Many t h i ng s h a p pen our athletes," he says, adding, during muscle trauma repair, "Always make sure you are including inflammation (part well hydrated before hitting a of the body's healing pro- hot tub post-exercise." cess) — which is why taking But how about the ice-tub anti-inflammatories can help submersions that seem to be with the initial pain reduction all the rage among athletesbut does not seem to help in do they work'? muscle repair long term. The jury is out. But let's get back to you I t seems that ice — l i k e and your pain and ways you anti-inflammatory medication — is helpful in the short might get rid of it! How about a m assage, term, Ibrahim says, but does foam rolling and other ways not have long-term therapeuto "rub out" the pain? tic effects in terms of muscle "Massage can be really repair. helpful, especially if you get This is why some doctors it early on," says Liz Puloka, such as Ibrahim say that ana Washington massage ther- ti-inflammatory meds such apist."Massageincreases the as ibuprofen (though they blood flow — it brings in fresh give you immediate pain reblood and lymph to the affect- lief) are not great in the long ed area." run because they hamper the She says Swedish mas- inflammation phase of the resage — which uses five styles pair work. of strokes — is the most efIn terms of home remedies,
near the trail.
does specific nutrition help prevent or reduce DOMS? Fitzgerald says that because post-exercise muscle soreness is due partly to oxidative stress (free radical damage), a diet that is rich in antioxidants can help reduce soreness by protecting the muscle fibers from this type of damage. Protein also seems to help, he says. "Consuming protein with carbohydrates soon a f ter completing a workout will accelerate the healing of damaged muscle fibers and the dissipation of soreness," Fitz-
gerald says. Caffeine also seems to help. But while you are striving to get rid of the aches, just remember the pain is not necessarily a bad thing, Ibrahim says. It usually indicates — unless it goes on for more than
a few days and is acute (time to see a doctor) — that you are
making progress, that your muscles are adapting to the increased demands and are
getting stronger. "For the vast majority of us, exercise will require some soreness until t h e m u s cle
reaches its steady state," Ibrahim says, adding that even brief periods of inactivity are enough to weaken muscles and thus require the "pain of
rebuilding." As the saying goes — no pain, no gain. But at least now
you have some tools — and not bad ones at that: massage, hot tub and latte, anyone?
HEALTH EVENTS
TODAY HEALTHYBACKCLASS: A weekly class that will introduce a self-treatment system to eliminate and prevent chronic pain and erase the signs of aging; 7:30 a.m.;$30 permonth, $9 for drop-in; Hawthorn Healing Arts Center, 39 NW Louisiana Ave., Bend; www. hawthorncenter.com or 541-330-0334. LIVING WELLWITH DIABETES WORKSHOP:A workshop, held weekly for six weeks; 10 a.m.; $10; Deschutes County Health Services Building, 2577 NE Courtney Drive, Bend; 541-322-7446. AMERICANREDCROSS BLOODDRIVE: Identification required, call for appointment; 10 a.m.; Warm Springs Community Center, 220 Hollywood Ave., Warm Springs; www.redcrossblood.org or 800-RED-CROSS. LIVING WELLWITH DIABETES: Join us for this Living Well with Diabetes workshop, held weekly for six weeks; 2:30 p.m.; $10; Redmond Senior Center, 325 NW Dogwood Ave., Redmond; 541-322-7446. LOCAVORE FOODSCHOOL: HEALTHY FATSANDHOW TO IjSE THEM:Learn about healthy sources for fats, the best ways to use them in cooking projects and how to render lard, with Anna Witham of The Root Cellar;
4:30 p.m.; $5 for member, $8 for nonmembers; Central Oregon Locavore, 1216 NE First St., Bend; 541-633-7388. LIVING WITHALZHEIMER'S: FOR CAREGIVERS —MIDDLE STAGE: A three-part class series to learn helpful strategies to provide safe, effective and comfortable care in the middle stage of Alzheimer's; 6 p.m.; free, registration required; St. Charles Bend, Heart Center Conference Room, 2500 NENeff Road, Bend; www.alz.org/oregon or 800-272-3900.
815 SW Bond St., Suite110, Bend; www.redcrossblood.org or 800-RED-CROSS.
TUESDAY AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required, call for appointment; 11 a.m.; Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, 450 SW Rimrock Way, Redmond; www.redcrossblood.org or 800-RED-CROSS. AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required, call for appointment; 12:30 p.m.; Bend Blood Donation Center, 815 SW Bond St., Suite 110, Bend; www.redcrossblood.org or 800-RED-CROSS.
FRIDAY AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required, call for appointment; 9 a.m.; Bend Blood Donation Center, 815 SW Bond St., Suite110, Bend; www.redcrossblood.org or 800-RED-CROSS.
WEDNESDAY AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required, call for appointment; 9 a.m.; St. Charles Madras, 470 NE ASt., Madras; www.redcrossblood.org/ or 800-RED-CROSS. AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required, call for appointment; 9 a.m.; St. Joseph Catholic Church, 150 SEFirst St., Prineville; www.redcrossblood.org or 800-RED-CROSS. AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required, call for appointment; 10 a.m.; Bend Blood Donation Center, 815 SW Bond St., Suite110, Bend; www.redcrossblood.org or 800-RED-CROSS.
MONDAY AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required, call for appointment; 8 a.m.; Bank of the Cascades, 555 NWThird St., Prineville; www.redcrossblood.org or 800-RED-CROSS. AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required, call for appointment; 1 p.m.; Sisters Community Hall, 301 SEElm St., Sisters; www.redcrossblood.org or 800-RED-CROSS. AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required, call for appointment; 1 p.m.; Bend Blood Donation Center,
FITNESS EVENTS
TODAY HEALTHYBACKCLASS: A weekly class that will introduce a self-treatment system to eliminate and prevent chronic pain and erase the signs of aging; 7:30 a.m.; $30 per month, $9 for drop-in; Hawthorn Healing Arts Center, 39 NW Louisiana Ave., Bend; www.hawthorncenter.com or 541-330-0334. MOMS RUNNING GROUP:All moms welcome with or without strollers for a 3-4.5-mile run at 8-12-minute mile paces, meet at FootZone at 9:15 a.m., rain or shine; 9:30 a.m.; FootZone, 842 NW Wall St., Bend; www.footzonebend.com or 541-317-3568. PILATESFOR GOLF: A six-
weekseries of classesdesigned specifically for golfers who want to improve their game through increased strength, power and flexibility; 4:30 p.m.;
$229 for the series, $20per class; Bend Pilates, 155 SW Century Drive, Suite104, Bend; 541-647-0876. LAST THURSDAYGROWLER RUN:Featuring live music, local artwork and a 3-5 mile group run, with beer from Growler Phil's/Primal Cuts, music at 5:30 p.m., run starts at 6 p.m.; 5:30 p.m.; Fleet Feet Sports, 1320 NW GalvestonAve.,Bend; www.fleetfeetbend.com or 541-389-1601. RUNNING PERFORMANCE AND BIOMECHANICSCLASS: Featuring drills, lifts, and stations to make you a stronger, faster, more efficient runner, for runners of every ability; 5:30
p.m.; $96, $64 for high school
trails, groomed paths and paved surfaces; women and girls can choose from half-marathon, 10K and 5K distances; 9 a.m.; $40-$90; Riverbend Park, 799 SW Columbia St., Bend; www.happygirlsrun.com/ registration or 541-323-0964. FOAM ROLLERCLASS: Learnto
help decreasemusclesoreness, improve flexibility and even build core strength using a foam roller; 10 a.m.; $15; Bend Pilates, 155 SW Century Drive, Suite104, Bend; 541-647-0876.
TUESDAY PERFORMANCE+ BIOMECHANICS CLASS:Featuring drills, lifts, and stations for runners of every ability; 6 a.m.; $96 for adults, $64 for high schoolers; Rebound Physical Therapy and Biomechanics Lab, 1160 SW Simpson Ave., Suite 200, Bend; 541-419-8208. PILATESFOR GOLF: A six-
week series of classesdesigned specifically for golfers who want to improve their game through increased strength, power and flexibility; 4:30 p.m.; $229 for the series, $20 per class; Bend Pilates, 155 SW Century Drive, Suite 104, Bend; 541-647-0876. TUESDAYPERFORMANCE RUNNING GROUP:An intervalbased workout to help you get
541-383-0351.
Announcements:Email information about local people or organizations involved in health issues to health©bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0351.
OSPICE
o f Re d m o n d
541-317-3568.
I II I
FRIDAY
HAPPY GIRLSRUNBEND:The route starts on the Deschutes River and includes a mix of
NOON TACO RljN: Order a Taco Stand burrito when you leave and have it when you return; meet at FootZone a few minutes before noon; noon; FootZone, 842 NW Wall St., Bend; www.footzonebend. com or 541-317-3568. BROLATES:A challenging workout focused on improving strength, flexibility and power; 5:30 p.m.; $20; Bend Pilates, 155 SW Century Drive, Suite104, Bend; 541-647-0876. WEDNESDAYGROUPRUN: Featuring a 3-5-mile group run; 6 p.m.; Fleet Feet Sports, 1320 NW GalvestonAve., Bend; fleetfeetbend.com or 541-389-1601. SUMMER RACES TRAINING GROUP:Group training for summer races, meets twice a week and includes road/trail runs, interval training, nutrition and core strength; all abilities welcome; 6 p.m.; $40 for eight sessions; Integrate Fitness, 62477 Eagle Road, Bend; 541-598-6401.
Events:Tosubmit an event, visit bendbulletin.com/events and click "Add Event" at least10 daysbefore publication. Ongoing listings must be updatedmonthly. Questions: health©bendbulletin.com,
www.footzonebend.comor
SATURDAY
WEDMESDAY
How to submit
students; Rebound Physical Therapy and Biomechanics Lab — Westside, 1160 SW Simpson Ave., Suite 200, Bend; 541-419-8208. "AH, FUDGENUTS!" FljN RljN:A fun run for all paces and abilities; 5:30 p.m.; free, registration required; FootZone, 842 NW Wall St., Bend;
PSALM YOGA:A class that infuses spiritual strength and focus, set to Psalms; 8:30 a.m.; Victor School of Performing Arts International, 2700 NE Fourth St., Suite 210, Bend; www.victorperformingarts.com or 269-876-6439. COMMUNITY HEALINGFLOW YOGA CLASS:A gentle yoga class that anyone can follow and enjoy, to benefit a local charity; 4 p.m.; donations accepted; Bend Community Healing, 155 SW Century Drive, Suite113, Bend; www. bendcommunityhealing.com or 541-322-9642.
the most out of your running, distance and effort vary according to what works for you; 5:30 p.m.; FootZone, 842 NW Wall St., Bend; www.footzonebend.com or 541-317-3568.
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Attirming Life •
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541. 548.7483 www.hospiceof red mo nd .o rg Servlng Bend I Redmond I Slsters I PowellButte I Prlnevllle I Crooked Rlver Ranch I Terrebonne I Madras
THURSDAY, MAY 28, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
D3
TION
ure es O, r is ssi r emain
sva in By Mike Hendricks
this: Vaping has gone mainstream in the last couple of K ANSAS CITY — Li k e years, spawning a more than many a hardcore smoker, Can- $3 billion-a-year industry in
At the same time, though, dustry's products are safe, the number of high school vaping juices are not tested or smokers had dropped from 16 regulated. At least one study percent in 2011 to 9 percent in found that some liquids said
The Kansas City Star
di McCann found it a bear to
better for you than smoking."
Options galore
Open systems allow users to customize their vaping keepscustomers coming back experience. to the more than three dozen They can choose among a vape shops that have set up in wide array of flavored liquids the metro area since 2013. Be- — from bubble-gum-flavored fore, there were few or none. to hazelnut butter cream Then there's the social as- each of which has various pectthathas seen some vap- levels of nicotine to none at ing stores, like Waldo Vapes, all. Drops of that "e-juice" are becoming something akin to dripped into battery-powered java-free coffee shops, where gadgets that look nothing like people gather to shoot the cigarettes. breeze, play games and chalThey range from rechargelenge each other to see who able vaping pens, called that can blow out the biggest cloud because they look like writing of scented vapor. instruments and cost about "It's becoming a communi- $25 for a starter kit, to so-called ty," Levi Fields, a 20-year-old modified systems. Mods, for Whether that stat is true or not, that's one selling point that
student at the culinary school
at Johnson County Community College, said as he took a toke in Waldo Vapes' livingroom-like setting. "It's getting really, really big." Supporterssee e-cigarettes as a godsend for people trying to reduce or quit smoking, which kills 480,000 Americans
~
the United States. Two-thirds
quit. Nothing worked. Not the of sales are online, but increaspatch. Not those blue smok- inglythere are brick-and-moring cessation pills her doctor tar stores like the dozens of prescribed. outlets that have been cropping Then she tried those elec- up across the nation. You've seen them on street tronic cigarettes that produce a steamy vapor instead of corners and in strip centers smoke. Click, just like that, she with names like KC Vapes, went from more than a pack of Vape Up, Vape Room and smokes a day to becoming the CigaWatt. Kansas City area's leading vapUntil recently, e-cigarettes ing evangelist. were synonymous with the Finally shed of her 21-year cigarette look-a-likes sold smoking habit, the 42-year-old alongsideregular smokes in McCann now preaches about gas station convenience stores the latest vaping gear on her — "cig-a-likes," they're called. YouTube channel. She helps M arketed by Big Tobacco,they organize"vape meets" of fel- are an acceptable alternative low enthusiasts through the to smoking for many smokers, Fountain City Vapor Club. And while others dismiss brands more recently she has turned like Blu, Vuze and Njoy as unher passion into a full-time job, satisfying substitutes for the hiringon as manager at the Va- real thing. por World store near her home But that is not the segment in Lenexa, Kansas. seeing the biggest growth and "April 9, 2012, that's my getting the most buzz. Instead, vape-versery," she said, tak- it's the refillable "open system" ing a drag from a mouthpiece vaping product category that is sticking out of a boxy contrap- driving an industry that within tion in her palm that was about a decade, one prominent Wall the size of an eyeglass case. Street analyst predicts, will see "I'm not going to tell you this more Americans vaping than is healthy," McCann said."But I smoking tobacco. can tell you that it is 99 percent
e~ i!
2014.
R
C~
a
'
elz
David Pulliam/Kansas City Star
Jonathan Brower Is the owner of Waldo Vapes, which sells high-
end vapIng products, In Kansas City. ties that have extended pro-
hibitions already imposed on smoking to vaping. It's not allowed in indoor public spaces, confounding smokers who had been vaping in bars rather than stepping outside to light up. That makes it hard sometimes for
ping store operators welcome.
A minor problem "The main thing we're fighting now is we're getting a lot of minors trying to buy," said Aaron Todd, who owns
the Vapur of KC store. "I even had one kid come in with his
t h e 8 0 0-member dad, point out what he want-
Fountain City Vapor Club to rent space for its occasional
ed and slide his dad a $20 bill, and I wouldn't sell it to him."
More than anything, it's "The meets we hold every that concern for minors that few months are free to attend," is driving opposition locally she said. "We invite local shops and nationally. to set up tables. There are usuA recent study by the Cenally raffle and door prizes." tersfor Disease Control and meets, McCann said.
Also, both M i ssouri a nd
Prevention found that the use
Kansas are among the states of e-cigarettes by teenagers that forbid the sale of e-ciga- had risen sharply, with 13 rettes and vaping gear to mi- percent of high schoolers renors, a restriction that local va- portedly using them in 2014.
to contain no nicotine did, in
"They (teenagers) believe fact, have nicotine in them. it's a safe alternative because Many i n t h e i n d ustry that's what they are being wouldn't mind the FDA gettold," said Kevin Kufeldt, who ting involved for that very runs a regional drug treat- reason. One of the biggest imment center that serves ado- pediments to further growth lescentsfrom across Kansas. in the category is the loss of Many adults, she said, be- consumer confidence in the lieve they are doing their vapor people are breathing in teens a favor by allowing placeoftobacco smoke. "We believe it's imperative them to v ape, rather than smoke, when the better alter- these factors are addressed native is to do neither. promptly," three analysts who The campaign, paid for by follow the industry at Wells a grant from the Health Care Fargo Securities said in a Foundation of Greater Kansas January report. "If not, we're City, also includes an educa- concerned that vapor categotional component for teachers ry growth could continue to so they can recognize signs moderate." that kids are vaping in class. McCann would be sad if Johnson County has the regulation damaged what she same challenge, Matson said. considers to be an industry "Kids are doing it in their that has helped a lot of people cars," she said. "Kids are do- like her cut back on or quit ing it in the hallways and the cigarettes entirely. "It meets my n eed," she classroom if they think they can get away with it." said. "I don't smell like smoke Some school districts have anymore. I don't get bronchichanged their regulations re- tis anymore." cently to prohibit all nicotine And she'd miss the folks products, rather than just to- she's met at v ape meets, bacco, because of the trend, where there's always a bit of Peterson said. horse trading amid the vapor Another area where reg- rings and billowing clouds of ulation is coming involves mist. "We swap juices and show the products themselves. No quality control s tandards off our mods," she said. apply. While manufacturers And surely, she said, there's and shop owners say the in- no harm in that.
short, are built from mix-andmatch components that can
cost as little as $40 to as much as a few hundred dollars. The
price goes up along with the wattage options. The more power, the more vapor. Customers range in motivation, too. Some stop in only when they need to feed their
a year, according to the Cen- nicotine habit. "They buy their juice coils ters forDisease Control and Prevention.
Not so fast
once a week and go about their
day," McCann said. But there is also a dedicat-
But the trend concerns some ed bunch who consider themselves hobbyists. They enjoy sampling different flavors and the health effects of electronic buyingbetterand more expencigarettes, which are largely sive vaping equipment. unregulated and the subject of And yet as big as vaping has competing claims. become in a short amount of Critics also contend vaping time, it's far from being widely is tradingone form of addiction accepted outside the subculhealth advocates. Scientists don't yetknow much about
for another, and that the safer-than-cigarettes claims are
ture that has grown up around it.
convincingteens to adopt anicWhich is why shop owners otine habit they might not have such as Jonathan Brower, ownotherwise. er of Waldo Vapes, arew ary of "It is a way to get kids addict- and bracing for new rules that ed to nicotine," said Sue Mat- are sure to come down the pike son, substance abuse preven- eventually. "People have a hard time tion coordinator at the Johnson County Mental Health Depart- wrapping their head around ment. "I'm concerned about the the fact that we're not smoking possibility of r enormalizing anything," he said. behavior that we have spent a There may not be smoke, but long time getting away from." local, state and federal officials As the federal Food and are fired up about the need to Drug Administration weighs regulate e-cigarettes. those argumentsin advance Overland Park and Columof imposing greater regulatory bia, for example, are among control, there is no debating a number of local communi-
SNAP Continued from 01 Kirschner also tries to dis-
pel the myth that only people living in big cities struggle with poverty. In Oregon, she saidrural counties such as Crook and Lake have the
inbulk. "That's the way that they're able to stretch their limited
dollars as far as they can is to drive that far," she said. "They
might have a convenience store to get food from, but it's not giving them access to fruits and vegetables, the kind
highest rates of food insecu- of things they want to eat." rity, a problem fueled in part A big contributor to how by the loss of manufacturing long people are staying on jobs, like the recent mill clo- SNAP is the types of jobs sure in Prineville, according they're getting: part time, temto state data. In areas like porary or seasonal — and ofthat, it's not only that jobs are ten they don't allow people the tougher to come by, it's often flexibility to add on another the sheer distance to the near- one, Burke said. "It's not that people aren't est grocery store. In Warm Springs, for exam- wanting to go to work, it's that ple, Kirschner found that some they're having a hard time people would buy groceries finding full-time employment only once every two weeks, that will help them leave the and when they did, they'd program." drive more than 80 miles to — Reporter: 541-383-0304, the WinCo in Gresham to buy
tbannow@bendbuIIetin.com
yourself and your family from sun damage. We love our sun here butCentralOregonhasoneof the highest rates of newmelanomadiagnoses in the country. Melanoma is the most deadly form of skin cancer.
Babies and children are much more sensitive to sun than adults.Just one blistering sunburn in childhood more than
doubles aperson's chancesof developingmelanomalater in life. Stay covered.Apply sunscreengenerously andoften, wearprotective CIOthing and aVOideXCeSSiVe SLIneXPOSure betWeen 10 a.m. and 4 P.m.
St. Charles HEALTH SYSTEM
iZ bmc
"';:-' Total Care
D4
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, MAY 28, 2015
MEDICINE
ee sino ea rains z eimer's cu 0 un
Fewer kidssuffer from severemental problems By Marilynn Marchione
health service rose from 9
The Associated Press
percent to 13 percent. The rise
Contrary to public percep- was greatest for severelytroution and horrific cases that bled kids, and went from 26
By Lauran Neergaard The Associated Press
make headlines, serious men-
percent to 44 percent — from
tal problems are dedining amongthe nation's youth, and there has been a big rise in how many are getting help, a new study finds. The study is mostly good news: More children and teens are taking mental
1.56 million annually to 2.28 million. Among kids with less or no impairment, the portion getting treatment went from
— the gunky amyloid in those brain plaques or tangles of a
percent, or from about 2.74 million kids a year to 4.19 health medicines than ever million. before, but more also are getMedication use is up: The ting therapy, not just pills. The use of any mental health drug
protein named tau that clog dy-
biggest rise in treatment rates
rose from about 6 percent to 9
ing brain cells. New imaging can spot those tangles in living brains, providing a chance to finally better understand what triggers dementia. Now researchers are adding tau brain scans to an ambi-
has been among the most troubled kids.
percent. Among youths with severe problems, medication
WASHINGTON — Sticky
plaque gets the most attention, but now healthy seniors at risk
of Alzheimer's are letting scientists peek into their brains to see if another culprit is lurking. No one knows what actually causes Alzheimer's, but the
Biograp,
suspects are its two hallmarks
"There's a
and adolescents are receiving mental health treatments, Evan Vucci 1 The Associated Press
experimental drug might help Judith Chase Gilbert, of Arlington, Virginia, is loaded into a PET scanner by Nuclear Medicine healthybut at-riskpeople stave Technologist J.R. Aguilar at Georgetown University Hospital in Washington. Gilbert shows no signs off Alzheimer's. Whether that medication works or not, it's
slips. "The combination of amy-
search, too. or similar dementias, including about 5 million in the U.S.
and Women's Hospital and
good treatment. Today's me¹i
HarvardMedicalSchool,who is leading the so-called A4 study. "To see it in life is really striking." The A4 study — it stands
cations only temporarily ease symptoms and a ttempts at
new drugs, mostly targeted at sticky amyloid, have failed in recent years.
Maybe that's because treatin Asymptomatic Alzheimer's ment didn't start early enough. — aims to enroll 1,000 healthy Scientists now think Alzheiseniors like Judith Chase Gil- mer's begins quietly ravaging bert, 77, of Arlington, Virginia. the brain more than a decade The recently retired govern- before symptoms appear, ment worker is mentally sharp much like heart disease is trigbut learned through the study gered by gradual cholesterol that her brain harbors amyloid buildup. Brain scans show buildup that might increase many healthy older adults quiher risk. Researchers slid Gil- etly harbor those sticky amybert into a doughnut-shaped loid plaques, not a guarantee PET scanner as she became that they'll eventually get Alzone of the first study partici- heimer's but an increased risk. for Anti-Amyloid Treatment
point, and we do not know should know," said chief science officer Maria Carrillo of the Alzheimer's Association,
which is pushing to add tau scans to other dementia re-
powerful drugs," said Dr. Gabrielle Carlson, a child
atrist at Columbia University Medical Center and the New York State Psychiatric Institute. Instead, the results suggest
Those numbers are expectic duo," predicted Dr. Reisa ed to rise rapidly as the baby Sperling of Boston's Brigham boomers getolder.There is no
when. We do not know how that interaction happens. We
little children are on these
Dr. Mark Olfson, a psychi-
loid and tau is really the tox-
pants to also have their brains scanned for tau. "We know that tau starts entering the picture at some
for conditions such as atten-
brains to check for clues about Alzheimer's disease.
More than 35 million people adults before memory ever worldwide have Alzheimer's
Yet more recent research, in-
from 4percent to 6percent.
tion deficit hyperactivity disorder,said the study's leader,
ers begin building up in older
32 percent. Among therestmild or no problems — it went
particularly medications, that Some people complain, they don't need," especially "Oh my goodness, these poor
of memory problems but volunteered for a new kind of scan as part of a study peeking into healthy
the first drug study where scientists can track how both of Alzheimer's signature mark-
c o ncern out use went from 18 percent to
there that a lot of children
tious study that's testing if an
about 7 percent to nearly 10
and adolescent psychiatrist at Stony Brook University
School of Medicine on New York's Long Island. "But most
cells transport food and other molecules. But in Alzheimer's,
that in turn reins in toxic tau. In
previous studies, solanezumab the protein's strands collapse failed to help full-blown Alzinto tangles and eventually the heimer's but appeared to slow cell dies. Most healthy people mental decline in patients with have a small amount of dys- mild disease,raisinginterestin functional tau in one part of testing the still healthy. "We're trying to remove the brain by their 70s, Sperling said. But amyloid plaques amyloid's downstream effects somehow encourage this bad on tau formation," said Dr. R. tau to spread toward thebrain's Scott Turner of Georgetown memory center, she explained. University M e dical C e nter, The A4 study, which is en- where Gilbert enrolled in the rolling participants in the U.S., study. Australia and Canada, may Seeing how amyloidand give some clues. tau interact in living brains "is The goal is to check up to opening a whole new chapter 500 people for tau three times into possible therapies," Tinner over the three-year study, as added. researchers tease out when For Gilbert, learning she had and how it forms in those who amyloid buildup "was distressare still healthy. They won't ing," but it has prompted her to be told the results — scientists take extra steps, in addition to
ofthekidsofferedthese drugs have big, powerful problems," "that at least in some ways, and the real issue is finding we're moving in the right more effective drugs and getdirection," by getting help ting more kids the help they to kids who need it most, he need, she said. sard. Not just pills:The percentThe dark doud: More than age of youths getting therapy half of severely troubled kids rose from 4 percent to 6 perget no help at all. cent. That may reflect more The study used nationwide access to care in general: surveys done by the federal Other research shows that Agency for Healthcare Re- medicalvisits of all kinds rose search and Quality over three fortheseagegroups overthat periods from 1996 to 2012, time. covering more than 53,000 The ADHD situation: Use youths ages 6 to 17. Results of stimulants such as methylare in last Thursday's New phenidate, sold as Ritalin and England Journal of Medicine. other brands, rose from 4 perSome highlights, which cent of youths to 6.6 percent. compare the first survey to These drugs are often given
don't know enough yet about what the scans portend.
the study, to protect her brain.
Severe mental problems more than 1in 10 children, acdeclining:The percentage of cording to the Centers for Disyouths with serious impair- ease Control and Prevention. ments dropped from 13 perMany kids get no help:
drug — Eli Lilly 8t Co.'s solanezumab — or a placebo as re-
no lessons.
On her doctor's advice, she's At the same time, study par- exercising more, and exercisticipants will receive either an ing her brain in a new way by experimental a n t i-amyloid buying a keyboard to start pia-
cluding a large autopsy study from the Mayo Clinic, suggests searchers track their memory. that Alzheimer's other bad ac- The $140 million study is fundtor — that tangle-forming tau ed by the National Institutes protein — also plays a big role. of Health, Lilly and others; The newest theory: Amyloid the Alzheimer's Association sparks a smoldering risk, but helped fund the addition of the later spread of toxic tau speeds tau scans. the brain destruction. The idea: If the drug proves Normal tau acts sort of like to be helpful, it might be tamprailroad tracks to help nerve ing down amyloid formation
"It's exciting to be part of something that's cutting edge," said Gilbert, who had never
heard of tau before. And she has a spot-on question: "So what's the medication
for the tau?" Stay tuned: A handful of
infected. Even after infected
individuals recover, about 5 percent continue to harbor the toxic strain in their stool for
six months, and if they take another antibiotic during that time, the illness can recur,
Gerding said.
for ADHD,
cent to 11 percent.
w h ich a ffects
About 56 percent of youths
"There's a public percep- with serious troubles were not tion that there are more and incare. more kids who have these
"There's a
tr e m endous
disorders, and the new re- amount of unmet need," said port challenges that," Olfson Dr. Brady Case, a child psysaid. Other r esearch has
chiatrist at Bradley Hospital
found drops in rates of binge in East Providence, Rhode Isdrinking and dropping out of land. It's possible that one rea-
drugs to target tau also are in
school, so the new study"does fit with other trends," he said.
son serious impairment rates are falling "is that treatment
development but testing will take several years.
More are getting care:Use
is working" for those who get
of any
cals), Dr. Deborah Molrine of of arecurrence,risesw ith age. MassBiologics at the UniverIn a study of an outbreak in a sity of Massachusetts Medical Quebec hospit al,people over School and their colleagues 65 were 10 times as likely as d emonstrated t h a t mo n o younger patients to become clonal antibodies created to C. diff. infection, and the risk
the most recent one:
o u tpatient mental it, he said.
now under study involves an are trying to isolate the orinjectable antitoxin vaccine. ganisms in feces from healthy Because it can take weeks to people that are most effective, months for vaccine protec- with the hope of incorporating tion to take effect, one of the
them into a capsule that could
temporary measures could be be taken orally as a treatment attack the C. diff. toxins reused in the interim, Gerding or preventive. duced the risk of a recurrence sard. Gerding foresees the possito 7 percent from 25 percent. Well-publicized treatments bility that people taking an anThis, too, is a stopgap measure using fecal transplants from tibiotic might simultaneously designed to provide time for healthy individuals are re- receive a dose of live therapeuthe restoration of normal gut served for patients who have tic bacteria that can prevent microbiota. experienced multiple recur- colonization b y ha z a rdous A more permanent solution rences of C. diff. Researchers organisms.
Although often associated
with hospitals and other medical facilities, C. diff. infections acquired o u tside
h o spitals
have "increased dramatically in the past decade and may now account for up to a third Paul Rogers/The New YorkTimes
Because of the wide use of antibiotics, hospitals have reported drastic increases in severe infections caused by the bacterium Clostridium difficile, but new treatments offer hope.
C. diff.
HEALING BRIDGE PHYsIcAL THERAPY Is PLEAsED To wELcoME
Joyce Steele PT, CEEAA, BCB-PMD, PRPC
of new cases," Leffler and Lamont wrote. B ut G e rding
s aid t h at
among those infected outside hospitals, "about 80 percent
r j Joyce is a licensed physical therapist
had a recent health care expo-
who is board certified in biofeedback for pelvic muscle dysfunction and is Pelvic Rehabilitation Practitioner Certified.
sure," for example, at a clinic or a doctor's office, where they Continued from D1 prevalent in decades past. may have been prescribed an"The healthy gut microbio"The most important risk tibiotics and exposed to the ta has threefeatures: a large factor for C. difficile infection spores. number of microorganisms, a remains antibiotic use," the The good news, he said, is largenumber of differentspe- doctors w r ote. "Ampicillin, that new treatment approachcies, and an increased repre- amoxicillin, cephalosporins, es are proving capable of presentation of certain bacterial clindamycin and fluoroquino- venting recurrences, and may phyla and a decreased repre- lones are the antibiotics that be able to prevent an initial insentation of other phyla," Maja are most frequently associated fection in the future. Rupnik wrote in The New En- with the disease, but almost T his m o nt h i n JA M A , gland Journal of Medicine last all antibiotics have been asso- Gerding and his colleagues month. "The disruption of any
high as that associated with the less virulent forms most
ciated with infection."
Joyce will be providing physical therapy services to women with pelvic floor dysfunction. Joyce is currently accepting new patients and looks forward to providing compassionate, professional, and individualized care.
described treatment using a
Gerding said most antibiot- nontoxin-producing strain of ics "are being used inappro- C. diff. in patients who initially priately, for things like upper recovered from an infection. respiratory infections that are While not a permanent solucaused by viruses." Eating yo- tion, the strain persists in the pitals have reported drastic in- gurt or taking commercially intestine long enough to allow creases in severe C. diff. infec- available probiotics while on the normal healthy microbitions, Dr. Daniel Leffler and an antibiotic have not proved ota to repopulate the gut and Dr. J. Thomas Lamont of Beth protective, he said. But in En- greatly reduce the risk of a Israel Deaconess Medical gland, where a program of recurrence. Center in Boston reported in more judicious use of antibiotIn another approach, Dr. the journal. The predominant ics was put into effect, C. diff. Israel Lowy of M edarex in virulent strain, NAP1, has a infections have declined. Princeton, New Jersey (now mortality rate three times as The risk and severity of a with Regeneron Pharmaceutiof thesefeatures can result in increased susceptibility to the growth of C. difficile," she added. Since the early 2000s, hos-
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THURSDAY, MAY 28, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
D5
MoNEY
omevisitsan ot er e or irst-timemot ers a o By Michelle Andrews Special to The Washington Post
Symphonie Dawson was studying to be a paralegal while working part time when
she learned that the reason she kept feeling sick was that she was pregnant. Living with her mom and
two siblings near Dallas, Dawson, then 23, worried about her pregnancy and what giving birth would be like, not to
mention how to juggle having a baby and being in school. At a prenatal doctor visit, she
learned about a group that offers help for first-time mothersto-be called the Nurse-Family
Partnership. Aregisterednurse named Ashley Bradley began to visit Dawson at home every
week to talk with her about her
hopes and fears about preg- came engaged. such models approved by the nancy and parenthood. Meanwhile, Bradley will Department of Health and HuBradley helped Dawson sign keep visiting Dawson until An- man Services, and Congress up for the Women, Infants and drewturns 2. reauthorizedthe program in Children Program, which proHome-visiting p r o grams April with $800 million for the vides nutritional assistance to that help low-income, first-time next two years. low-income pregnant wom- mothers have a healthy pregT he N u rse-Family P a r ten and children. They talked nancy and develop parenting nership, which operates in about what to expect every and other skills have been 43 states, is one of the largest month during pregnancy and around for decades. Lately, and best-studied programs. watched videos about giving however, they're attracting new Decades of research into how birth. After Dawson's son, An- fans. Such programs appeal families fare after participatdrew, was born in December to people of all political stripes ing in it have documented re2013, Bradley helped her figure because the good ones manage ductions in the use of social out how to manage her time to help families while reducing programs such as Medicaid so she wouldn't fall behind in government spending. and food stamps, reductions in school. In 2010, the federal health child abuse and neglect, better Dawson graduated with a law created th e M a ternal, pregnancy outcomes for mothbachelor's degree this month. Infant and Early Childhood ersand betterlanguage develS he's looking forward t o Home Visiting program and opment and academic perforspending time with Andrew provided $1.5 billion for ev- mance for their children. and looking for a job. She and idence-based home-visiting But some experts say that Andrew's father recently be- programs. There are now 17 only a handful of the ap-
Reporting
however, facilities would report with a phone call — and find theirerrorsto both programs, out why, she said. Continued from 01 Walmsley said. Oftentimes it's because adA patient died at St. Charles One-quarter of all errors ministrators left facilities and Bend in December after the reported last year were falls, forgot to tell their successors hospital' s pharmacy acciden- according to the commission's about the program, Walmsley tally dispensed a paralyzing report, followed by medication sald. agentinsteadof the anti-seizure errors at 18 percent. Errors Contacted by phone, a handmedication the patient's phy- during surgery and other in- ful of administrators at Central sician had ordered. A mistake vasive procedures were 15 per- Oregon nursing homes listed like that would be reported by cent of the reports, and delayed as "participating facilities" the hospital, as in-house phar- care was another 8 percent. said they weren't familiar with macies areconsidered part of Much larger than the group the Patient Safety Reporting hospitals, Walmsley said. of facilities who reported er- Program. The Patient Safety Reporting rors last year is the group that Anne Mattson said she just Program is designed to take in years ago signed agreements took over as administrator of mistakes of all severity levels, to participate in the program. the Cascade View N ursing from events that merely cre- They're listed in the report as Center in Bend last July. Her ated the potential for harm to "participating facilities," and predecessor did not tell her those that resulted in patients' theycomprise34 percentofel- about the program, but she deaths. But perhaps because igible facilities statewide. saidshe has received emails "There are a percentage of about renewing the facility's of the heightened attention to serious events,45percent of the facilities in each health care membership. "I hadpulled it up andyester624 total mistakes reported last segment who sign the particiyear resulted in serious harm pation agreement and agreed day was a busy day. I didn't get or death. to do this, and then we don't around to it," she said. Conversely, th e c o m mis- hear much from them," WalmsNot surprisingly, the most sion's Early Discussion and leysaid. common error reported at Resolution Program, which One of the commission's big nursing facilities was falls, at just started last July, is aimed goals this year is to reach out to 55 percent. Medication errors only at errors that resulted in each participating facilitythat's were the second most common, serious harm or death. Ideally, not reporting errors — usually at 14 percent.
•
•
•
The most common error at
ambulatory surgery centers — facilities that perform sameday surgeries — was (also not surprisingly) surgical errors, at 53 percent. Below that: infections, at 12 percent, followed
by deep vein t hrombosis, life-threatening blood clots, at 11 percent.
proved models have as strong cal trials starting in 1977 and a track record as that of the continues to conduct follow-up Nurse-Family P a r tnership.research. They say the standards for w hat c o nstitutes a n evi -
A study by the Pacific Insti-
tute for Research and Evalua-
dence-based program are too tion found that the Nurse-Famlenient. ily Partnership reduced Medic"If the evidence requirement aid spending on a first child by stays as it is, almost any pro- 8 percent, resultingin a savings gram will be able to qualify," to Medicaid of$12,308per famsays Jon Baron, vice president ily served. After adding in cost of evidence-based policy at the reductions in food stamps, speLaura and John Arnold Foun- cial education, child protective dation, which helps encourage services and criminal justice, policymakers to make deci- total government savings are sions based on data and other doser to $19,000 per family, the reliable information. study found. "We think this is an importNurse-Family Partnership founder David Olds, a profes- ant program," Baron says. "I sor of pediatrics at the Uni- testified for its reauthorization. versity of Colorado at Denver, We just think that as it goes began testing the model in forward, the loophole needs to randomized controlled clini- be adjusted."
are techniques," she said. They currently. include how to wash, how long The commission also is reto wash, when to do it and what questing a larger allocation to use. Some patients come in from the Legislature: $2.1 milwith "dirty infections," wounds lion compared with about $1.7 with contaminated particles in them that make them even
more prone to infection, GilstI'ap sald. The commission, which re-
million in the previous bienni-
um. Judging by the way things are going in Salem, Walmsley said she doesn't foresee lawmakers granting the full re-
Cammy Gilstrap, director ceives nearly half of its funding of the Cascade Surgicenter, an from the state and the other half ambulatory surgery center lo- from a combination of fees from cated inside The Center: Ortho- facilities and grants, wants to pedic 8 Neurosurgical Care 8 increase the mandatory fees Research in Bend, said before facilities in Oregon are required patients come in, staff mem- to pay in the 2015-2017 bienbers thereget their records nium by morethan $425,000. from their primary care pro- Oregon is among seven states viders to assess any risk factors whose adverse event reporting that could contribute to adverse systems are funded in part by events. They make sure none of mandatory fees on facilities, actheir current medications will cording to the National Acadehave negative interactions with my for State Health Policy. medications they'll need for the Walmsley said the commissurgery, she said. sionhas never raised its fees, When it comes to infection which it began collecting in
quest, which is part of the rea-
control, handwashing is the
"'You don'twant to make a
2005. In the 2015-2017 bienni-
son the organization budgeted for a roughly $134,000 surplus. "I think it's unrealistic to assumethatwewon'tgetalittlebit
of a haircut," she said. "Frankly, I think everybody will." When mistakes happen, it's not only the patients that suffer. For the nurses and other care-
givers that contributed to an error, it can be career-ending, Gilstrap said. "That's what I tell my staff downstairs is that, 'This is for our patients for the most part,
but it's also for you,'" she said.
most important measure to
um, nursing homes will pay mistake. That's why we have take, Gilstrap said. $800, compared with $700 cur- to do what we do.'" " You wouldn't think y o u rently. Large hospitals will pay — Reporter: 541-383-0304, have to teach people, but there $9,750 compared with $8,500 tbannow@bendbulletin.com
•
•
•
•
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D6
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, MAY 28, 2015
ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT
usiness
n erns i rin s ve s in o TV SPOTLIGHT By Dave Philipps New Yorh Times
During the surge in Iraq in et of villages rife with insurgents and roadside bombs. What he really wants to do
is direct. Or maybe write — or produce. "Anything with movies was always the dream," said Witmer, who left active duty in Like many troops leaving Todd Heisler/The New YorkTimes the military, he was steered Jon Stewart and his show developed a program over the last three instead toward jobs in gov- years designed to bring youngmilitary veterans into the television ernmentagenciesthatoffered business. preferential hiring or with big veterans, and he assumed his hope of working in show business would remain only that.
But after selling medical equipment for two years, he had the chance to join a fiveweek industry boot camp designed to bring young veterans into the television business. To
his surprise, it was run by one of theIraq war's fiercest critics, Jon Stewart, the longtime
host of Comedy Central's "The Daily Show." "It was actually inspirational," said Witmer, who went on to work at Fox News and then
found a job as a "Daily Show" associate field segment producer. "We hear 'Thank you for your service' all the time, but here was concrete action, people working to really make
military out here; it's so mis-
wing and help find that person a job in television, which involved making a few calls. "Jon said he wanted to help
nonprofit group, asked Stewart to take a veteran under his
Efforts to b r ing v eterans into the field have included
2010.
r e cruited
In 2013, American Corporate Partners, a m e ntoring
understood," Kraft, a former soldier who became a producer in Los Angeles, said of Hollywood. "It's a c r eative but wanted to do more than industry, and they tend to see just drop his name," said Sid military people as a bunch of Goodfriend, who runs the rule followers." program.
2008, Nathan Witmer led an Army scout platoon in a thick-
corporations that
and-tight world of the military from connecting. "Sometimes people want to apologize for being in the
Instead, the staff of " T he
TV TODAY • More TV listingsinside Sports 8 p.m.on2,9,"500 Questions" — After a run of just over a week, thenewgame show reachesits conclusion, with contestants still vying to answer the most general-interest queries without getting three in a row wrong ... which gets them ejected from the proceedings. CNNnewsman Richard Quest is the host of the competition, developed by television titan Mark Burnett ("Survivor," "Shark Tank") and Mike Darnell, who was the chief of unscripted series at Fox for many years.
Daily Show" developed an
workshops by the Writers intense five-week immersion Guild of America and projects program to give veterans a by big-name producers and crash course in their business, directors, among them Bruce with behind-the-scenes looks Cohen and Judd Apatow, that at areas including talent bookinvolve young veterans. ing and editing. Stewart may at first seem
They put out word to veter-
an unexpected bridge for a a difference. And it changed struggle to find work after war Hollywood-military d i v ide. — their unemployment rate For years the host built his lives. I'm proof of that." "The Daily Show" devel- has been lower than the com- audience by playing straight oped the program over the parable civilian rate for years man to the often absurd truths past three years without pub- — but few land in the enter- of the global "war on terror," licizing it, but now, because tainment industry, according serving up scathing satire on Stewart is preparing to leave to the industry group Veterans U.S. involvement in the Middle the show, he has taken it into in Film and Television. East in his longstanding segthe open, urging other shows Karen Kraft, a board mem- ments "Mess o'Potamia" and to develop their own programs ber of the group, which tries "Crisis in Israfghyianonanaq."
ans' groups but did not mention that the boot camp was at
"The Daily Show," an attempt to weed out fans and focus instead on veterans who really wanted to work in the industry.
"There are well-worn chan-
nels into this industry that
are closedoff to veterans," Stewart said. "You get into the television industry generally to bring more veterans into the to draw more veterans into At the same time, though, by going to certain colleges industry. the industry, said the small he has been an advocate for known for having good tele"This is ready to franchise. number of military veterans troops, visiting the wounded vision programs, getting inPlease steal our idea," Stew- in show business was part- at hospitals, visiting Arling- ternships and getting to know art said in an interview at his ly because military service ton National Cemetery and in people who work in the indusManhattan studio recently. "It supplanted the years of in- 2011 doing a comedy tour of try. A lot of veterans never had isn't charity. To be good in this ternships and entry-level jobs bases in Afghanistan. that opportunity because they "I knew I had very strong were busy at war. This is a business you have to bring in often required to establish a different voices from differ- beachhead in t h e i n dustry. opinions about what we were way to give them that chance." ent places, and we have this The phenomenon may also be doing over there, and I wantHe added that the veterans wealth of experience that just connected to a cultural divide ed to visit the individuals who he had hired had been assets wasn't being tapped." that has kept quirky, left-lean- were part of the effort to gain a and "way less whiny" than Veterans are less likely to ing Hollywood and the high- perspective on it," Stewart said. most of his hires.
8 p.m. on 6, "TheBig Bang Theory" —It's no mystery to fans of this comedy that the brainy fellows normally do what theychoose to,butin"TheSpace Probe Disintegration," they let the ladies in their lives do the deciding. It's a nice gesture, but it hasa big cost since Leonard and Sheldon (Johnny Galecki, Jim Parsons) end up at loggerheads with each other over it. Kaley Cuoco-Sweeting, Simon Helberg, Kunal Nayyar and Mayim Bialik also star. 8 p.m. on10, "Bones" — Collecting cookie jars seems like an
innocuoushobby,but someone
who has practiced it falls prey to a killer in the new episode, "The Woman in the Whirlpool." The team investigates others with similar collections in an effort to solve the murder. Personal matters also have animpact, since Brennan (Emily Deschanel) wants
Booth (DavidBoreanaz)to move out because ofhis gambling, and Aubrey (John Boyd) takes an interest in a "squintern." 8:31 p.m. on 6, "TheOddCouple" —Felix (Thomas Lennon) isn't as much help as hewants to be when he interferes with
Mom worries aout in-aws' riving
MOVIE TIMESTOQAY • There may bean additional fee for3-Oand IMAXmovies • Movie times are subject to change after press time. t
Dear Abby:My in-laws are fab-
child independently. But I
c a n't for work in the mornings and he
put my daughter in a dangerous holds my hand when we walk. world of our 2-year-old daughter, situation. Any thoughts would be But when we go to bed at night, he "Hayley." They do anything to sup- appreciated. turns his back to me, reaches be— Fearful Mom in San Antonio port Us. hind him, pats me on the arm and Recently, they asked to take Dear Fearful Mom: Your fears says goodnight. There is no cudHayley overnight and drive a num- appear to be well-founded.r Your dling and no sweet-talk with me. "fabulous" i n-laws ber of places with Sometimes I would like a little her. My concern is cannot be trusted to scratchbehind MY ears.We marthe driving part. My transport your little ried late in life, so maybe the sex DFP,R at e aw d o es t girl. is out, but my late husband used to ABBY believe in car seats. My first thought hold me and make me feel special. On a few occasions w as that yo u a n d I'm only 62 and I can't imagine livhe has asked me to your husband could ing this way for the rest of my life, just hop in the car with Hayley buy them a car seat and have it but I love this man, so divorce is without a car seat. I refused. Aninstalled. But if y o u c an't trust out. Any advice? — "Meow" on Ogden, Utah other time, they had a circa-1980 your father-in-law to use it, or your Dear "Meow":Was your husband car seat and asked to take Hayley mother-in-law to devote her full with them to church. When I went attention to her driving when her like this before you married him'? to put her in the seat, the buckles grandchild is in the car, then the If so, did you accept his proposal wouldn't work. When I r eached child's safety must come first. As thinking you could change him? If ulous. They love me and think the
over to the other side, the seat fell
a mother, your job is to be consci-
over. It wasn't even strapped in! Now for my biggest fear: My
not, then it appears you have a seri-
entious, even if it makes you less popular. And your husband should mother-in-law is a notorious dis- back you up 100 percent. tracted driver — she applies makeDear Abby:My husband is very up, eats food, talks on the phone affectionate. He loves to cuddle, and texts. I am not comfortable snuggle and sweet-talk mornwith her taking Hayley in the car ing, noon and night. However, he with her. doesn't do it with me — he does it How do I approach this with with our cats. Don't get me wrong — he's a them? I don't want to harm our r elationship, and I ' d l i k e t h em good husband, and I get a quick to spend time with their grand- hug and kiss goodbye when I leave
ous communication problem. Ifyou haven'talready,you need
HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORTHURS-
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.21)
DAY, MAY 28, 2015:This yearyour creativity merges with your curiosity. You might be inspired to produce something that can be put on display for the public or perhaps justyour immediate circle. Harnessing your creativity will take some understanding of how to use your self-discipline. If you are single, romance will be a frequent Btars showtite ging visitor in your life. of dsyyou'Ilhavs P«some a new ** * * * D ynamic loved one could ** * * Positive serve as a muse. If ** * Average youare attached, ** So-so the two ofyou can be seen out * Difficult and about during the summer, but a strong nesting instinct is likely to take over in the fall. LIBRA knows how to divertyour attention!
ARIES (March21-April19) ** * * Follow someone else's lead, even if he or she suggests something that confuses you. You will gain clarity quickly. News from a distance will make you feel very cared about. Know what you need to do to push a project to the finish line. Tonight: Just say "yes" to an invitation.
YOURHOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar
answer to, as he or she could be sending you mixed messages. Dealwith whatyou know, and add enthusiasm to your interactions. Tonight: Cheer up a loved one.
CANCER (June21-July 22)
you both need marriage counseling because I can't imagine you living the rest of your life starved for affection. As you said, you're only 62. — Write toDear Abbyat dearabbycom or P.o. Box 69440, LosAngeles, CA90069
** You might choose to play it low-key right now. You'll need some downtime, as you have done more than your fair share on several different projects. Everyone needs to recharge his or her batteries — including you! Use this period well. Tonight: Vanish into the night.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec. 21) *** * You need to focus onyour de-
LEO (July23-Aug.22)
** * * You might want to let others run the show, especially as you recognize how compli catedan issue seems to be. You tend to be negative when dealing with those in a higher position of authority. Avoid getting into a power play. Tonight: A loved one reels you in.
** * * * L i sten to news more openly. You might want to reorganize your schedule in order to make more time for a creative project. Lady Luck could make an appearance today. Still, use care with taking risks. Make sure you can handle the outcome. Tonight: Visit over dinner.
VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) ** * Be aware of the costs of proceeding on your present course. A friend who means to be helpful just might not be.
Tension buildsaroundsomeone'sexpectations, which you are inclined to meet. Your ingenuity can't be tamed. Tonight: Schedule some downtime.
pletely. A project appears to be moving on its own. You might want to assess certain items, like the projected cost. Detaching from a hot situation could be difficult. Tonight: Squeeze in some exercise.
the cats. And if that doesn't work,
sires. You could have a difficult exchange with a partner who seems to want to shut you down. Glide past this problem, and keep your eye on the big picture. Once you
** * *
works, yet yourarely expressthemcom-
to feel as loved and cherished as
** * * You'll be coming from an anchored point of view, but getting others to respond might be difficult right now. Write down your thoughts, and then go off and find someone upbeat who wants to smile more than grumble. Tonight: The moment leads to a fun happening.
TAURUS (April 20-May20) You have ideas about what
to tell him what you need in order
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
** * * You seem to be on the right path, despite a mild fog of confusion that surrounds you. You might want to handle a GEMINI (May 21-June 20) matter that involves travel and/or a matter ** * * * Y our creativity pops up in that you'll need an expert for. Recognize nearly every situation today. You might be that there are no shortcuts to resolving feelin g confusedbysomeone you must this particular situation. Tonight: Out late.
have amorecomplete perspective, you'll know what to do. Tonight: Accept an offer.
GAPRICORN (Dec.22-Jan. 19)
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.18) ** * * * S low down and detach from the here and now. You need to get a better perspective of what is happening around you and of the people you need to involve in order to realize a goal. A friend who wants to be helpful could prove to be the exactopposite.Tonight:M akeweekend
plans. PISCES (Feb.19-March20) ** * * Relate to a friend on a one-onone level, as this person often supports you through difficult times. Your creativity surges when dealing with others, especially a close loved one. Listen to an offer that might seem too good to be true. © King Features Syndicate
I
I I
Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • THE AGE OFADALINE(PG-13) l2:05, 3: l0,9:40 • ALHOA(PG-13) 7, 10:15 • AVENGERS: AGEOFULTRON(PG-13) 11:55 a.m.,12:25, 3:40, 4:05, 7:25, 10:05 • FARFROM THE MADDING CROWD (PG-13)12:40,3:35, 6:40, 9:30 • HOME (PG) 1 1:40 a.m., 2:15 • HOT PURSUIT(PG-13) 3:55 • MAD MAX:FURYROAD(R) 12:20, 3:20, 7:45, 1 0:50 • MAD MAX: FURY ROAD3-0 (R) 11:30 a.m., 12:10, 3:50, 4:45, 7:05, 7:35, IO:25, 10:35 • PAULBLART: MALL COP 2(PG)6:I5 • PITCH PERFECT 2 (PG-13) noon, 12:30, 2:20, 3, 3:30, 6:30, 7:15, 9, 10:15 • POLTERGEIST(PG-13) 11:50 a.m., 7:40,10:30 • POLTERGEIST3-0(PG-13) 12:15, 2:20,2:55, 4:45, 6:45, 10 • SAN ANDREAS (PG-13) 7:30, 10:35 • SAN ANDREAS 3-0 (PG-13) 8, 10:45 • TOMORROWLAND (PG) 11:45 a.m.,12:45, 3:15, 3:45, 7, 7:30, 10:20,10:45 • TOMORROWLAND IMAX(PG)11:35a.m.,2:45,6:45, 9:55 • WOMAN INGOLD(PG-13) I • Accessibility devices are available forsome movies.
Oscar's (MatthewPerry) assignment in "The Ghostwriter." A retired baseball player (guest star Geoff Stults, "The Finder") preps his autobiography with Oscar's help, but Felixsuggests the book take a different path. Oscar is not happy about it. DaveFoley
("NewsRadio") alsogueststars.
Wendell Pierce and Lindsay Sloane also star. 10 p.m. on FX, "TheComedians" — A new episode called "Charity" finds Billy (Billy Crystal) inadvertently thrust into a very awkward interaction with a man who is homeless. Meanwhile, Josh (Josh Gad) — obviously hoping that charity begins at home — goes to a charity event in an attempt to impress a woman on whom hehas acrush. o zap2it
• E555!5 Up to $1000 Mastercard® . Prepaid Card Rebate by mail with the
purchase of
B
saie~ Mart r applisnces. jbbend.com 541-382-6223
McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 NWBond St., 541-330-8562 • THE DIVERGENT SERIES: INSURGENT(PG-13) 6 • THE LONGEST RIDE(PG-13) 9:15 • Younger than 21 may attend all screeningsif accompanied byalegalguardian.
JOHNSON BROTHERS A P P L I A H C E S
WILSONSsf Redmond 541-548-2066
Tin Pan Theater, 869 NWTin PanAlley, 541-241-2271
~e<"'6
• THE SALTOFTHEEARTH (PG-13) 5:30 • WELCOMETOME(R) 8 Redmond Cinemas,1535 SWOdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777 • AVENGERS: AGE OFULTRON (PG-13)5:15,8:15 • MAD MAX:FURYROAD(R) 4:30, 9:30 • PITCH PERFECT 2 (PG-13) 4:15, 6:45, 9:15 • TOMORROWLAND(PG)5:15,8
\ slrrcs
158'TREss
G allery-Be n d 541-330-5084
SUN FoREsT
Sisters Movie House,720 DesperadoCourt, 541-549-8800 • AVENGERS: AGE OFULTRON (PG-13)6 • FARFROM THE MADDING CROWD (PG-13)6:15 • PITCH PERFECT2(PG-13) 6:30 • TOMORROWLAND (PG)6:15
DESIGN I BUILD I REMODEL
Madras Cinema 5,1101SWU.S. Highway 97, 541-475-3505
eoa sw lndustrial way, Bend, 0R
CoNSTRUcTION
PAINT
• AVENGERS: AGE OFULTRON (PG-13)3:20,6:30 • MAD MAX: FURYROAD(R) 4:30, 7:10 • PITCH PERFECT 2 (PG-13) 4:25, 7 • POLTERGEIST(PG-l3) 5:20, 7:30 • TOMORROWLAND(PG)4:05,6:50 Pine Theater,214 N. MainSt.,541-416-1014 • MAD MAX:FURYROAD(Upstairs — R) 6:15 • TOMORROWLAND(PG)6:30 • Theupstairsscreening room has limitedaccessibility.
O
Find a week'sworth of movie times plus film reviews in Friday's 0 GQ! Magazine
TOUCHMARK Sleos 1980
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ON PAGES 3R4 COMICS & PUZZLESM The Bulletin
Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.com To place an ad call 541-385-5809
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, MAY 28, 2015 206
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Pets & Supplies
Pets & Supplies
Furniture 8 Appliances
Crafts & Hobbies
Golf Equipment
Misc. Items
uu.u'F Adopt a great cat or Crafters Wanted CHECK YOUR AD $1.00 Porch Sale two! Altered, vacciOpen Jury Sat. 5/30, 10-noon! nated, ID chip, tested, Sat., May. 30th,9:30am ITEMS FORSALE 264- Snow Removal Equipment more! CRAFT, 65480 Highland Baptist Church, Redmond. Klite r9peat 201 - NewToday 78th, Bend, Sat/Sun, 265 - Building Materials ibt' Jan 541-350-4888, 1-5p.m. 541-389-8420 202- Want to buy or rent 266- Heating and Stoves Standard Poodles, Tina 541-447-1640 or www.craftcats.org PATIO TABLE 203- Holiday Bazaar & Craft Shows 267- Fuel and Wood on the first day it runs 950 SE 3rd St., Bend www.anowflakebousque.org Beautiful black grand between Wilson & 204- Santa's Gift Basket Deposit c a n s/bottles champion bred pups. 54" Tropitone table to make sure it is cor268- Trees, Plants & Flowers Reed Mkt. 4 chairs, tilt Two V i king s e wing rect. uSpellchecku and 205- Free Items 269- Gardening Supplies & Equipmen needed for local all 13 weeks, fabulous awning, $350. /quilting m a c hines volunteer, non-profit human errors do oc208- Pets and Supplies 270- Lost and Found c oats, heathy a n d Buying Diamonds 541-382-6664 with extras. Very good cur. If this happens to cat rescue. Donate at happy. Will bring great 210 -Furniture & Appliances GARAGESALES condition. $700 each /Gold for Cash Jake's Diner, Hwy 20 joy to y our h ome. your ad, please con211- Children's Items Call 541 - 706-0448 tact us ASAP so that Saxon's Fine Jewelers 275 - Auction Sales E, Bend; Petco in $2000. 541-601-3049 212 -Antiques & Collectibles eves or weekends. 541-389-6655 R edmond; Smi t h corrections and any 280 - Estate Sales 215- Coins & Stamps adjustments can be Sign, 1515 NE 2nd, Yellow Lab, AKC Reg281 - Fundraiser Sales BUYING 240- Crafts and Hobbies 241 made to your ad. Bend; CRAFT in Tu- istered, 3M.; $700/ea, Lionel/American Flyer 282- Sales NorlhwestBend 241 -Bicycles and Accessories 541-385-5809 malo. Can pick up Ig. 4F; $750/ea, all yelBicycles & trains, accessories. 284- Sales Southwest Bend 242 - Exercise Equipment amounts. 3 89-8420. low. Parent g r eat The Bulletin Classified 541-408-2191. Accessories 286- Sales Norlheast Bend 243 - Ski Equipment www.craftcats.org hunters. Avail. to go Queen bed Se aly 246 BUYING & SE LLING 288- Sales Southeast Bend Posture-Pedic Excep244 - Snowboards July 4th. 541-934-2423 Santa Cruz Solo All gold jewelry, silver tional Plush with bed 2013 Guns, Hunting 245 - Golf Equipment 290- Sales RedmondArea Find exactly what mtn. racing bike, med. and gold coins, bars, 210 f rame, $400, e x c . full-suspension, good & Fishing 246-Guns,Huntingand Fishing 292 - Sales Other Areas you are looking for in the rounds, wedding sets, cond., cas h o n l y. cond, must sell, $2800. 247- Sporting Goods - Misc. Furniture & Appliances FARM MARKET CLASSIFIEDS rings, sterling silBuyers will need to Bend local dealer pays class 541-480-2652 248- HealthandBeauty Items ver, coin collect, vin308- Farm Equipment andMachinery move items. Other CASH!!for firearms 8 5000 series M aytag 249 - Art, Jewelry and Furs tage watches, dental German Shepherds 316- Irrigation Equipment furniture avail. ammo. 541-526-0617 like new, 4000 large 251 - Hot TubsandSpas gold. Bill Fl e ming, www.sherman-ranch.us dryer, including queen Flex325- Hay, Grain and Feed series Maytag dryer, CASH!! 541-382-9419. Quality. 541-281-6829 253- TV, Stereo andVideo will hold 2 queen size isteel slumber sofa, 333- Poultry,RabbitsandSupplies For Guns, Ammo & 255 - Computers exc. cond., $ 3 50. quilts. $850. Brand 341 Horses and Equi p ment Reloading Supplies. I TURN THE PAGE 256 - Photography Large desks, patio new, still under war- swing 541-408-6900. 345-Livestockand Equipment set, etc. MornFor More Ads 257 - Musical Instruments ranty, Whirlpool con347 - Llamas/Exotic Animals Bow w ith 258 - Travel/Tickets vection 5 burner glass ings only ( T erreb- RANS Wave recum- Compound The Bulletin 350 - Horseshoeing/Farriers bent. 60" WB, older case, practice and 259 - Memberships top stove with warm- onne) 541-504-0056. hunting arrows, like Digital film s c anner, 358Farmer's Column model some wear on ing station. Has Aquo260- Misc. Items Washer/dryer Combo $240. scan color or monoHavanese rare list technology. $700. unit for RV or small frame. W e l l main- new, 375 - Meat andAnimal Processing 261 - Medical Equipment 541-233-6520 chocolate color. Partained. New: chain 1 909 $ 2 .5 0 go l d c hrome f i l m an d 383- Produce andFood a partment. $50 0 . 262 - Commercial/Office Equip. ents are our pets. 2 piece, $400. 2 viles of 541-460-1853 r ings, t i r es , se a t Need help fixing stuff? mounted slides. Never 263- Tools b oys available o n cushion. Cateye Velo Call A Service Professional used. gold nuggets, a little $60 6/13. 503-812-9217 7 computer/odometer. find the help you need. over a gram ea. $45. The Bulletin 541-382-6816 203 208 $350 541-504-5224 Sterling silver, 24 recommends extra www.bendbulletin.com Mastiff AK C f e male ea. Holiday Bazaar • P ets & Supplies Hovtr to avoidscam earrings, still I cautt t e pu pup, 7 wks. Call for diamond and fraud attempts g & Craft Shows in box, $200. 2 (set) chasing products or c info. 541-536-7869 cubic zirconia sterling services from out of I YBe aware of internaThe Bulletin recomPatchwork Antiques silver e n gagement the area. Sending I Queensland Heelers tional fraud. Deal lomends extra caution I 2nd Annual Summer cally whenever poswhen purc has- Standard & Mini, $150 rings, sizes 7 and 8, cash, checks, o r ~ DO YOU HAVE Sale 8 up. 541-280-1537 $50 e a . Mi c haelf credit i n f ormation sible. ing products or serSOMETHING TO Antiques, vintage, Y Watch for buyers vices from out of the www.rightwayranch.wor 541-589-3092 may be subjected to ROCKY M O U NTS SELL shabby & rustic finds, area. Sending cash, dpress.com who offer more than telescoping R4 bike FOR $500 OR Deep fryer, E meril,f FRAUD. For more furniture, quality your asking price and checks, or credit ininformation about an I rack. Carries single, LESS? electric. $50 handmade crafts, 202 who ask to have f ormation may b e advertiser, you may I tandem or recumbent Non-commercial 541-312-2448 jams, baked goods, money wired or subjected to fraud. Want to Buy or Rent I call t h e Or e g on I bikes up to 78" WB. advertisers may and more! For more informahanded back to them. ' State Atto r ney ' Pivoting, push-button place an ad 29th-31st, Fri-Sat 9-6, Fake cashier checks tion about an adverWanted: $Cash paid for / General's O ff ice axle; easy load/unwith our Sun 10-4. 797 C. Avand money orders tiser, you may call vintage costume jewelry. Consumer Protec• load. Fits Thule and "QUICK CASH enue, Terrebonne. are common. Top dollar paid for the O r egon State Standard Poodle puption h o t line at I Yakima crossbars. SPECIAL" 541-419-8637 or Attorney General's YNever give out perGold/Silver.I buy by the pies, 5 w eeks old. Used twice. $250. i 1-877-877-9392. 1 week 3 lines 12 541-480-8469 Estate, Honest Artist Office C o nsumer M om is r e d A K C sonal financial infor541-504-5224. ot' Elizabeth,541-633-7006 Protection hotline at mation. purebred, da d is FUTON (dbl bed) and I TheBulletin I g e eka g u! 205 ~ gernng Central Oregcn ttnte t903 1-877-877-9392. YTrust your instincts champion ap r icot. chair (twin bed) origi242 Ad must Items for Free and be wary of Pups are dark apricot nally purchased from include price of Exercise Equipment Find exactly what 212 someone using an and red. B oth par- Rising Star. $400 for u n te temctgeac ~ you are looking for in the Free roll top desk, free gereingCetttrar Oragun slncetgte escrow service or ents a r e fr i e ndly, both. 541-815-0395 Antiques & or less, or multiple Pre-core EFX 5.17 elagent to pick up your CLASSIFIEDS sweet and very athitems whose total liptical fitness cross Collectibles 4 turkeys, 2 male, 2 fe- letic. B o t h parents G ENERATE SOM E merchandise. trainer. Excellent condoes not exceed m ale, $35 ea . 1 2 genetically EXCITEMENT in your Antiques Wanted: tools, dition. t e s ted, $500. $899. Free use of 1 acre WANTEDwood dresschickens, laying, $5 passed hips, eyes, neighborhood! Plan a The Bulletin gernng Central Oregon rtnre tggg 360-921-4408 furniture, marbles, ers; dead washers & sprinkler i r r igate ea. 8 geese, African etc. Puppies will be garage sale and don't Call Classifieds at beer cans, fishing/ and white, $30 ea. dryers. 541-420-5640 pasture, now thru Infrared Sauna, 220-V socialized, c hipped, forget to advertise in sports gear. pre-'40s P recor Model 9 . 33 541-385-5809 hook-up, no building, vaccinated and have classified! Oct. 2015. Prefer 541-815-0686 T readmill, $25 0 0 . www.bendbulletin.com B/W photography. $3000 value asking 1-year health guar- 541-385-5809. Vectra Model Alpaca, sheep or FIND IT! 541-389-1578 Find It in $1000. 541-536-7790 a ntee. $2,00 0 . VFT-100 Multi-station WANTED: Collector Call BLIY IT! The Bulletin Classifieds! goats. Call Ron at Grill, 18 inch, charbroil, Commemorative S i sweight mac h i ne, Rainbow play structure seeks high quality fish541-382-7795 afSELL IT! 541-480-3378, or electric. t ers R o de o Be l t $2000. Very little use. ing items & upscale fly 541-385-5809 - super sized castle, ter 10am. The Bulletin Classifieds ron.guiley©gmail.com $85.541-312-2448 Buckles. 18 buckles in 541-382-6664 rods. 541-678-5753, or $4000 new, n eeds all, ranging from 1993 some care, you haul, 503-351-2746 - 2011. One for every 246 $800. 541-815-2505. 255 year $500 for entire Golf Equipment set. Serious inquiries Computers only. 541-548-7154 I 3 gas golf carts: 2006 The Bulletin reserves Y amaha, $200 0 . T HE B ULLETIN r e Hyun d a i, quires computer adthe right to publish all Older 'c c,ads from The Bulletin $1000. 1996 vertisers with multiple $2000. ad schedules or those newspaper onto The Easy-Go, TRAEGER TEXAS Bulletin Internet web- Good carts - can de- selling multiple sysELITE GRILL liver within reason. tems/ software, to dis280 282 286 286 290 site. close the name of the Like new, 646 sq. 541-576-2477 Estate Sales Sales Northwest Bend Sales Northeast Bend Sales Northeast Bend Sales Redmond Area business or the term inch grilling area, The Bulletin Sereing Central OtagonsinceIgte "dealer" in their ads. bronze color, comESTATE SALE - Final Multi family, 1696 NW Sat. only 9-4. 3337 NE MOVING SALE! Sat. USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! Private party advertis- plete with c o ver, 215 Mendenhall Dr., May 30th, 9-2. 3392 day, let's make a deal. City View Dr, 8-2 Sat., ** FREE ** ers are defined as digital t h e rmostat Door-tc-docr selling with Sat. 9-2. 1239 NE 8th 9-2 Sun., bikes, Bob Garage Sale Kit women's clothes SW Metolius Meadow Coins & Stamps those who sell one and cookbook. St., Bend strollers for 1 and 2 Place an ad in The (M&L), girls clothes Court. fast results! It's the easiest computer. $695! kids; kids, XL mens, (under 6) , k i tchen Private collector buying Bulletin for your gaway in the world tc sell. 541-480-7837 Thurs. Fri., Sat., May ladies clothes, toys. 292 items, household, fur257 postage s t amp a l bums & rage sale and re28, 29 & 30. Tools, Sales Other Areas niture, elect. blanket, collections, world-wide The Bulletin Classified Musical Instruments Wanted- paying cash camping, c onstruc- SHMEGA garage sale: ceive a Garage Sale new small charcoal and U.S. 573-286-4343 tion, automotive, and Tires, prop. t a nk, Kit FREE! 541-385-5809 Grandma's Downsizing! for Hi-fi audio & stugrill, much more! (local, cell phone). The Drum & Guitar household. 7am -5pm. compressor, x2 sofas, Antiques: buffet, madio equip. Mclntosh, KIT INCLUDES: Shop now open! 1711 Saddlehorn Ct., chair & 1/2+ ottoman, • 4 Garage 240 ALL CLUBS R IGHT 63830 NE Clausen hogany side t able, JBL, Marantz, DySale Signs 266 La Pine. (Wagon Trail bed, heater, air cond., • $2.00 Off Coupon H AND F R FL E X , Rd., Suite 103, Bend chest, dishes; Crafts & Hobbies naco, Heathkit, SanoffMasten Rd.) fridge, much more. Use Toward Your To Sales Southeast Bend cedar G RAPHITE. 201 5 Fostoria, depression sui, Carver, NAD, etc. 541-382-2884 1929 NW Vicksburg, Next Ad m int T / M spe e d Call 541-261-1808 tiara, serving COMPLETE POT281 Fri.-Sun., 9-4 9-3 Saturday 2 1034 glass, • 10 Tips For "Garage blades, 6-SW, 7 pcs., 256 dishes. Holiday decor, TERY SET UP InFundraiser Sales W oodhaven Ave . office desk, day bed WHEN YOU SEE THIS Sale Success!" Call a way Skutt kiln, two $440. Travel/Tickets BULLETINCLASSIFIEOS Multi-family, h o use- frame & mattress. Sat. cludes clays, glazes, Driver, x2hot, 12-15, LOTS OF STUFF FOR Search the area's most hold, garden, tools, only, 8-2, 17999 SW wheels, small library shelves, a djustable-h.c p l u sSisters Rodeo Tickets, EVERYONE! Two life comprehensive listing of PICK UP YOUR kids items, and more. Baxter Drive, Powell scales, heat e rs, tool, $140. Callaway 10 box seats. SaturGARAGE SALE KIT at groups from H i gh classified advertising... Butte, 1/2 mile no. of tables, booth and too Titanium five wood, day night, June 13th, On a classified ad Lakes Chri s tian real estate to automotive, 1777 SW Chandler Brasada Ranch, off much to list. $2,500 or $100. Mizuno J PX 2015. Get your friends go to Church in La Pine are merchandise to sporting Ave., Bend, OR 97702 QAwesomeGarageg Alfalfa Road. wedges 54-60, $80 best offer. Contact together and enjoy www.bendbulletin.com Sale! having a HUGE yard goods. Bulletin Classifieds ea. All c lubs obo. Rodney at this g r ea t ro d eo. to view additional The Bulletin I Saturday, May30th I May 30-31. 9am-4pm. 541-728-0604 sale. Fr i 8 Sat. appear every day in the 951-454-2561 gen ingCentral Oregonsince fgla $320. 541-410-5970 photos of the item. from 8am to 3pm. Back yard at 55928 5/29-30, 8-4. 1 6 047 print or on line. ~ Clothing, household ~ W ood Duck Dr. i n Dawn Road, La Pine. Call 541-385-5809 Fri. & Sat., 8-? 26690 items,and much OWWII. H o usehold www.bendbulletin.com H orsell Road, 2 nd 282 more. No reasonitems, fishing gear, road east past Alfalfa able offer refused! fabric, baby i t ems, Sales Northwest Bend The Bulletin Serving Central Oregon sincetgtg Store. Antique hay Address: 20886 Wll, Media cabinet. rake, yard art, r eI Desert Woods Drive I Lots more. Rain or MOVING/DOWNSIZ286 stored horse powered ING SALE! 35 yrs acshine. Don't miss! gard e n cumulation Sat. 9-4, Sales Northeast Bend m ower, Moving sale! E verybenches, old barn and 541.610.9366 Sun. 9-1, 1145 NW thing goes! Roll top house doors, garden L Kingston. No e a rly BIG GARAGE SALE, desk, oak wall phone, birds! 9-drawer oak Sat 8 Sun, 8-5, 2400 gates, iron bed, plaslots of f r e e i t ems. tic p i pe , w o oden 290 dresser 8 small furn., N E Rosemary D r . wagon wheel, wooden Sales Redmond Area Fri-Sun, 8-4. 146618 TV, books, dishes, Formal dining set, 6 Junos Rd. Jackpine a rtwork, pict u r e chairs, 2 bdrm. sets, wheel barrow, picket frames, collectibles, many wood working fenced, wooden cow Fri. & Sat., 8-5, 1517 Village, Gilchrist. sin g le clothes, linens, bas- tools, other house- s tanchions, Sale: Redwood. Riding Moving kets,lots of misc.! hold items. t rees, phone p o le NW dozer blade, Sisters/Cloverdale crossarm, high chair, mower lawn mowers, tools, area, 69875 Goodrich Phyllls Gore wooden, game table fishing poles, genera- Rd. Fri-Sun, 9-5. ESTATE SALE a nd c h airs, l a w n tors, c o m pressors, 621 SE GLENCOE Dr. mower, old c h airs, weed eaters, and lots NOTICE rockers, old screen more! Friday MAY 29 • Saturday MAY 30 Remember to remove 9;00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. door, o l d sc h ool your Garage Sale signs CROWD CONTROL Admittance NUMBERS desks,antique buffet, Moving sale lots of ev(nails, staples, etc.) at 8:00 a.m .Friday old wood stove, cof- erything, all priced to after your Sale event fee table, newel posts, (From 3rd St. in Bend, take Wilsoneast to Cenis over! THANKS! home with you! tennia/. Turn south and follow to Glencoe) a mmo box, d e c k take t I From The Bulletin Fri.-Sat. 8-3 1608 NW FORD TAURUS SE 2002 WITH 24,000 MILES!. bench, chest of drawand your local utility Ivy Ave Square Oak dining table with four chairs, one ers, brass bed, ironcompanies. leaf; Brown and Beige wing back chairs; Swivel ing board, oak ice Moving Sale: May Rocker;Coffee Table; End Table; Lamps: sev- box, end tables, bed- 29th-31st, 9am-5pm. The Bulletin Serving Central Oregnn sincetgla eral floor and table; Large TV Armoire'; 8' Tall room set, patio swing, Everything must go! mirror; Lovely 54 piece set of Carnival glass;; set of 4 chairs, old www.bendbulletin.com Furniture, b e droom Service for 12 of fine china; Few old bottles; wooden cupboards. set, kitchen i tems, FIND IT! Nice Costume jewelry; Sterling and Silverplate Huge GARAGE SALE• s• • • AOAMS GOLFCLUBS BUY IT! items; Sterling flatware-Silver Spray by Towle; Moving into M otor camping, c l o thing, grill. 1131 21st Place, P ud $6P9 Aski n g $55 o Silverplate set "Reverie" by Nobility; Twin Bed; Home. Tools, EverySELL IT! Brand newAdamsladles Double dresser, 5 drawer chest and nitestand; thing Goes! House- Redmond. The Bulletin Classifieds Pine dresser;Bookcases; BOOKS:: BOOKSgogclubswithbzg.Woods: hold, Furniture, VinBOOKS - VCRS - DVDS. Records; Puzzles; tage ESTATE/MOVING/DOWNSIZING SALE! 1 3 5 7 wtthheadcovers Item Priced af: Your Totol AdCoston: Jewelry, Contents of 4500 sq. ft. home, plus home & garSmall patio set; Few tools and fishing poles; Hybritis: 5 L 6 withheadEmptying all den store, 3 sofas, king 8 twin beds, lots of • Under $500.................. .................................................$w Three sets of Studded tires: two with winter rims Antiques, cupboards! Patio covers Irons 7pW+SW furniture, kitchenware, artwork & decor, all like new 215/70/16, 215/60R/16, 206/55/R16; my • $500 to $999.............. .................................................$4ql Furniture, Microwave, other & putter LadiesLinkscart RCA older stereo set; Pots and Pans; Three Mi- C lamps, mirrors, 3 dish sets. hristian Boo k s , • $1000 fo $2499......... .................................................$5qf ANTIQUES include oak piano, round & square bag &rainhood. crowaves; Ice Cream Maker; Grills; Electric Fry- T eacher s , oak dining tables 8 chairs, 2 armoires, oak pans and Can-Openers; Kitchen tools; Toaster Clothing! 8 — 5,Item • $2500 and over.......... .................................................$69 541-000-000 china cabinet, dressers, rockers, mahogany oven; Coffeepots; Ladies Clothing, medium; Sat. May 29, 30Fri. at Includes: 2" in length, with border, full color photo, bold Linens; LOTS of nice Christmas items; Vacuum; 542 NE Soaring Ct. dressers, small furniture pieces, records, Fostoria American, Lladro's. OUTDOOR ITEMSinLuggage; Two 19u TV's; One 29" TV; One 21I Bend headline and price. clude 6 patio/bistro sets, iron 8 bronze statuary TV; Two computers; Three old monitors; Two newer Monitors; Printers; Keyboard; DVD and Neighborhood yard sale some large pieces, fountains, unique pots of all Your ad will a/so appear in: VCR Players; Older sewing machine and sew- 21685 Obsidian Ave., sizes, benches, decorative pieces of all kinds, Serving Central Oregon since 1903 many imported from Europe, beautiful outdoor ing items; Very nice sale with large variety!!!!! Bend, Fri-Sat, 9-3. 541-385-5809 • The Bulletin • The Central Oregon Nickel Ads Antiques, lig h ting, decor, 2 gazebos, loads of misc, very large sale! Deedy, Norm, Ken Fri-Sat 9-4. Numbers Fri 8 a.m. Handled by saddles 8 tack, furni• Central Oregon Markelplace • bendbulletin.com Some reslricrions apply Deedy's Estate Sales Co. LLC 22122 Rickard Rd,just past Knott landfill. ture, Karaoke m aInfo Call- 541-419-4742 chine, motorized www.atticestatesandappraisals.com *privote party merchandise only - excludes petsL livestock, autos, RVs, motorcycles, boats, airplanes, ond garage sale categories. estatesales.net for pictures and info scooter, misc. 541-350-6822 —
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E2 THURSDAY, MAY 28, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
541-385-5809 or go to www.bendbulletin.com
AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES Monday • • • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri • Tuesday.••• • • • .Noon Mon. Wednesday •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Tues. Thursday • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Wed. Friday. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate.. . . . . . . . . . 1 1 :00 am Fri.
Saturday • • • Sunday. • • • • PRIVATE PARTY RATES Starting at 3 lines
• . 3:00pm Fri. • • 5:00 pm Fri • Place aphotoin yourprivate party ad foronly$15.00par week.
*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)
*llllust 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
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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. 261
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BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS Have an item to • Medical Equipment Gardening Supplies Search the area's most sell quick? & Equipment comprehensive listing of If it's under classified advertising... real estate to automotive, '500you can place it in For newspaper merchandise to sporting delivery, call the The Bulletin goods. Bulletin Classifieds Circulation Dept. at appear every day in the 541-385-5800 Classifieds for: print or on line. Hoyer Classic Lift with To place an ad, call sling. Will lift up to Call 541-385-5809 541-385-5809 '10 - 3 lines, 7 days www.bendbulletin.com 400 lbs. $125. Temor email '16 -3 lines, 14 days claeeified@bendbulletimccm pur-pedic twin electric The Bulletin (Private Party ads only) bed & remote. Top The Bulletin Serving CenlralOn.'gon sinceate mattress has a water-proof mattress cover. SOLD. 4 wheel Long roller, 50 gallons Scooter. New batter- of wat e r $75 ies purchased April 541-312-2448 • • l 2 015, charger i n cluded. SOLD! Plant sale, perennials, al -38 — 8 9 $1-3. Locally grown. 541-317-1188 t o r om o te ou r se r v i c e 5 /30-31. 1435 N W 263 Galveston. Building/Contracting Landscaping/Yard Care • Toois
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Farm Equipment & Illachinery
Employment Opportunities
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Can be found on these pages: CASE 530 diesel trac- Duck Delivery Protor with backhoe atduce has immediate FINANCEANDBUSINESS tachment, $4500. openings for e ner- EMPLOYMENT 541-389-7669. 507- Real Estate Contracts getic and motivated 410 - Private Instruction L ocal A, B a n d C 421 - Schools andTraining 514 - Insurance 325 class Delivery Drivers! 454- Looking lor Employment 528- Loans andMortgages (Experience Re- 470- Domestic & In-HomePositions 543- Stocks andBonds Hay, Grain & Feed quired) 558- Business Investments Wheat Straw for Sale. We offer competitive 476 - EmploymentOpportunities 573 - BusinessOpportunities c ompensation a n d 486 - IndependentPositions Also, weaner pigs. 541-546-6171 benefits inc l uding 476 476 476 medical/dental. $13/hr. Employment Employment Employment Looking for your Compensation: C Class / $15/hr. B Opportunities Opportunities Opportunities next employee? Class / $18-$19.50/hr. Place a Bulletin A Class. help wanted ad Qualifications: 2 yrs. HOUSEKEEPERS! Landscaping Sisters Landscaping SalesManager today and or 50,000 miles verifiTourism Walla McMenamins Company has open- Join reach over able experience drivWalla as the new ings in all phases of Old St. Francis 60,000 readers ing a box truck. SatTour Sales NOyf/HIRING landscaping. Willing to Group each week. isfactory background train, experience wel- Manager. This posiYour classified ad check. Negative drug Qualified app l icants come. Call for appt. tion is responsible test. Ability to lift 50 will also must have an open 8 sisters for sales and marpounds, walk for ex- flexible schedule in- 541-549-3001. appear on landscape@gmail. com keting activities to t ended periods o f bendbuHetin.com cluding, days, evepromote Walla Walla t ime, and must b e to meeting planners which currently nings, weekends and Look at: able t o dr i v e a h olidays. W e ar e and tour product dereceives over manual/stick-shift. Bendhomes.com velopers. Activities looking for applicants 1.5 million page APPLY TODAY! Once include i dentifying who have previous or for Complete Listings of views every you have completed potential target marexp. related exp. and month at no the questionnaire, we enjoy working in a Area Real Estate for Sale kets, collecting, orextra cost. will contact you to set busy customer serganizing and pursuBulletin up an interview. i ng l e ads, an d v ice-oriented e n v i- Medical Reception/ Classifieds B/C Job Code: 2245. MedicalRecords making local referronment. We are also Get Results! A Class Code: 0915. willing to train! We Bend Urology Associ- rals. The successful Call 541-385-5809 www.tsjobs.net/duckoffer opportunities for ates, LLC is seeking candidate will be a or place your ad delivery s e l f-moti- resident expert on advancement and ex- positive, *Duck Delivery P r o- cellent benefits for eli- vated front office per- the travel industry in on-line at duce is an equal opfor phone, recep- order to promote the bendbuHetin.com gible employees, in- son portunity employer.* as s i st cluding vision, tion a n d me d ical area a n d medical, chiropractic, records. Candidates travel b usinesses. 341 Wildland dental and so much must exhibit excellent For complete job Horses & Equipment more! Please apply communication skills, d escription go t o : Firefighters 24 /7 at have electronic medi- http://bit.ly/1 EatkcS To fight forest fires must online www.mcmenamins.co cal record experience, be 18yrs old & Drug .• . I4 m or pick up a paper be able to multi-task free! Apply 9am-3pm multiple phone Mon-Thurs. Bring two a pplication at a n y with McMenamins location. l ines and h ave a forms of ID fill out Get your Mail to 430 N. Killing- knowledge of medical Federal 1-9 form. business sworth, Portland OR, terminology. No ID = No Application Deluxe showman 97217 or fax: This is a full time posi 3-horse trailer Siltion in a fast paced 5 03-221-8749. C a l l verado 2001 29'x8' 503-952-0598 for info environment with mul- e ROW I N G 5th wheel with semi o n other ways t o tiple providers. Cusliving quarters, lots of a pply. Please n o tomer service is high with an ad in extras. Beautiful conphone calls or emails priority. This position dition. $21,900 OBO The Bulletin's PatRick Corp. offers a full benefit to individual locations! 541-420-3277 1199 NE Hemlock, p ackage. Ple a s e "Call A Service E.O.E. Redmond send your resume and Professional" 541-923-0703 EOE cover le t t e r to Directory jenniel ©bendurology. People Look for Information c c com. Call The Bulletin At About Products and 541-385-5809 Services Every Daythrough Place Your Ad Or E-Mail The Bulletin Classlfieds Special Project Manager At: www.bendbulletin.com
421
Schools & Training HTR Truck School REDMOND CAMPUS Our Grads GerJobs! 1-888-438-2235 WWW.HTR.EDU 476
Employment Opportunities
FINGERJOINT AND LAMINATION PRODUCTION We are seeking experienced operators, feeders, graders and stackers in both our Fingerjoint and Lamination plants. If you have a good work history and attendance record please come apply with us. Starting pay is commensurate with experience beginning at $10.00 to $15.00 or more. We offer medical, dental, vision and life insurance the first of the month following 60 days of employment. We have a profit sharing plan and vacation time is available after 6 months.
Add your web address NOTICE: Oregon state to your ad and read- We are a family owned wood remanufacturer Delta Drill Press, home in business for over 50 years. Learn more law requires anyone ers on The Bullefin's w orkshop. $15 0 . + Peat Mixes aboutour company and the products we make who con t racts for web site, www.bend541-389-4079 + Juniper Ties at www.brightwood.com. Please respond to construction work to bulletin.com, will be Serving Central + Paver Discounts this ad or if you in Central Oregon please apbe licensed with the 265 able to click through Oregon Since 2003 + Sand + Gravel Construction Contracply in person at our main office located in the automatically to your • Building Materials + Bark tors Board (CCB). An Residental/Commercial Madras Industrial Park. website. instantfandscaping.com l active license Bend Habitat Sprinkler means the contractor Bright WoodCorp. Good classified adstell RESTORE is bonded & insured. Activation/Repair 335 NyyHess St the essential facts inan Building Supply Resale Back Flow Testing Verify the contractor's 270 Madras, OR 97741 541-312-6709 interesting Manner. Write CCB l i c ense at Lost & Found Maintenance 224 NE Thurston Ave. from the readers view -not www.hirealicensedMust pass apre-empioyment ~Thatch & Aerate Open to the public. the seller's. Convert the contractor.com drug screen. Found: 5 /2 6 Si l v er • Spring Clean up facts into benefits. Show or call 503-378-4621. ~Weekly Mowing Sisters Habitat ReStore charm bracelet (four the reader how the item wi l l The Bulletin recomBuilding Supply Resale r ound charms) o n help them insomeway. mends checking with & Edging Quality items. Home Delivery Advisor boat ramp at Sparks the CCB prior to con- •Bi-Monthly & Monthly This LOW PRICES! The Bulletin Circulation Department is seeking Lake. Call to identify tracting with anyone. Maintenance advertising tip 150 N. Fir. a Home Delivery Advisor. This is a full-time 541-385-6206 Some other t rades •Bark, Rock, Etc. 541-549-1621 brought to youby position and consists of managing an adult also req u ire addiFOUND: Child's campOpen to the public. carrier force to ensure our customers receive ~Landsca in tional licenses and •Landscape The Bulletin ing-type folding chair superior service. Must be able to create and servingcentral creganslnce rae certifications. 266 on Hunnel Rd. on the perform strategic plans to meet department Construction 22nd. 541-389-1449 • Heating & Stoves objectives such as increasing market share ~Water Feature ©s UB A R U. and penetration. Ideal candidate will be a Installation/Maint. Found: May 18th, very Find It in NOTICE TO self-starter who can work both in the office •Pavers nice fly rod and reel at Auto - Sales ADVERTISER and in their assigned territory with minimal The BuHetlnClassigedsl •Renovations Crane Prairie, call to Sales professional to Since September 29, supervision. Early a.m. hours are necessary •Irrigations Installation 541-385-5809 identify. 541-317-0730 Join Central 1991, advertising for •Synthetic Turf l a r gest with company vehicle provided. Strong used woodstoves has FOUND: Pocket knife in Oregon's service skills and management skills new ca r de a ler customer Senior Discounts been limited to mod- DRW, describe it to are necessary. Computer experience is Subaru of B e n d. Handyman Bonded & Insured els which have been claim it. 541-389-0185 Offering 401k, profit required. You must pass a drug screening 541-815-4458 certified by the Orand be able to be insured by company to drive sharing, m e d ical Lost blue key case with LCB¹8759 I DO THAT! egon Department of vehicles. This is an entry-level position, but we split shifts and Home/Rental repairs NOTICE: Oregon Land- Environmental Qual- 3 keys inside on Wed. plan, b elieve in p r omoting from w i thin, s o paid vacation. Expe5/20 at Macy's or in Small jobs to remodels advancement within company is available to scape Contractors Law ity (DEQ) and the fed- parking lot, or vicinity rience or will train. Honest, guaranteed eral E n v ironmental the right person. If you enjoy dealing with (ORS 671) requires all 90 day $2000 guarof Bed Bath & Bework. CCB¹151573 Protection A g e ncy people from diverse backgrounds and you are businesses that ada ntee. Dress f o r Dennis 541-317-9768 energetic, have great organizational skills and vertise t o pe r form (EPA) as having met yond. 541-923-4384 success. P l e ase interpersonal communication skills, please Landscape Construc- smoke emission stan- LOST: Fly rod and reel apply at 2060 NE cer t ified at send your resume to: tion which includes: dards. A lava lake . Hwy 20, Bend. See Landscaping/Yard Care l anting, deck s , w oodstove may b e 541-593-5847 The Bulletin Bob or Devon. ences, arbors, identified by its certific/o Kurt Muller cation label, which is water-features, and inPO Box 6020 stallation, repair of ir- permanently attached Bend, OR 97708-6020 rigation systems to be to the stove. The BulTick, Tock or e-mail resume to: Zoped Qua/rrp licensed w i t h the letin will not knowkmuller@bendbulletin.com TiCk, Tock... Landscape Contrac- ingly accept advertisZa~<0e r , . No phone calls, please. tors Board. This 4-digit ing for the sale of Full Service ...don't let time get The Bulletin is a drug-free workplace. EOE Lost: longhaired/wirenumber is to be in- uncertified Pre-empioymenf drugscreen required. haired mix d a chsLandscape cluded in all adver- woodstoves. away. Hire a hund, near S pring Management tisements which indiprofessional out 267 River (Sunriver area), cate the business has Human Resources Manager on May 16th. Last of The Bulletin's a bond, insurance and • Spring Clean Up Fu e l & Wood spotted near USFS 41 workers compensa•Leaves "Call A Service The Human ResourcesManager supports the tion for their employroad. Please keep •Cones overall HR functions of Western CommunicaProfessional" your eyes peeled for ees. For your protecWHEN BUYING •Needles tions. Primary responsibilities include emher she probably is tion call 503-378-5909 Directory today! •Debris Hauling FIREWOOD... ployee relations, benefits, payroll, safety, reor use our website: very scared and won't cruiting, tr a i ning and perf o rmance To avoid fraud, www.lcb.state.or.us to come to you but even Need Free Bark management. The Bulletin check license status just telling us where Caregivers & Flower Beds before contracting with recommends payshe is sighted would w anted t o j o i n If you have a passion for improving the workthe business. Persons ment for Firewood h elp. C a l l Gr e t a our Lawn Renovation caring place and want to take Western Communicaonly upon delivery doing land scape 425-501-4416. Aeration - Dethatching m emory c a r e tions to the next level as an employer of maintenance do not and inspection. Overseed choice, come join our team. Lost wedding rings, 55 r equire an LC B l i - • A cord is 128 cu. ft. c ommunity. A l l Compost 4' x 4' x 8' yrs. o f m e m ories, shifts a vailable. cense. Top Dressing Mid-May, no idea Minimum requirements: • Receipts should CPR Property • 5-7 years HR experience with thorough w here. REW A RD Must be reliable. include name, Maintenance Landscape 541-316-1736 Also needed part knowledge of HR functions phone, price and Landscaping Maintenance t ime c hef. F o r • Experience in employment law and regulakind of wood & Painting Full or Partial Service purchased. more inf o r ma- tory compliance CCB¹204254 • Bachelor's Degree in Human Resources or •Mowing ~Edging • Firewood ads tion, or any REMEMBER: If you Business preferred • Pruning ~Weeding • Spring clean ups MUST include questions, have lost an animal, • Background in employment, compensation, Water Management • Aeration/de-thatching species & cost per • Lawn repairs don't forget to check please call benefits, employee relations and training / cord to better serve The Humane Society 541-385-4717 development Fertilizer included • Weekly maintenance our customers. • Bark mulch Bend • Well organized and detailed-oriented with with monthly program Call 978-413-2487 541-382-3537 strong communication skills The Bulletin DisbursementAgent servfng centralomyonslnce ras Redmond • Work with management to determine recruitWeekly,monthly Aerate/Thatching C onstruction Ris k ment needs and staffing objectives 541-923-0882 or onetime service. Weekly Service Management firm lo- • Develop recruitment programs to attract apMadras Bend, Redmond, and All year Dependable cated in Sunriver is plicants, identify a n d s o u rce q u alified 541-475-6889 Managing Eagle Crest. Firewood: Seasoned; seeking highly moti- candidates Prineville COLLINS Lawn Maint. Lodgepole, split, del, Central Oregon vated individual to as- • Recruit for key positions through interviews 541-447-7178 Ca/I541-480-9714 B end, 1 f o r $ 1 95 Landscapes sist with construction and sourcing or Craft Cats or 2 cords for $365. funds disbursements. • Help resolve concerns and issues between Since 2006 541-389-8420. Painting/Wall Covering Multi-cord discounts! Position is Full-Time. managementand employees 541-420-3484. Senior Discounts Individual should have • Identify, develop and implement training proKC WHITE a minimum of t wo 541-390-1466 269 grams PAINTING LLC Same Day Response year experience in • Recommend improvements to HR policies, Gardening Supplie Interior and Exterior construction adminis- benefits and training programs, etc. Family-owned • & E q uipment tration or commercial • Local candidates strongly preferred Residential & Commercial lending. Construction • Experience with California laws and regulaHave an item to 40 yrs exp.• Sr. Discounts Chain saw Worx, electerminology and ac- tions a plus 5-vear warranties sell quick? tric. $65. counting experience SPRING SPECIAL! 541-312-2448 needed. Must be pro- We offer benefits including paid vacation and If it's under Call 541-420-7846 ficient in Microsoft Ex- sick time, 401(k), life insurance and limited CCB ¹20491 8 '500you can place it in cel. Excellent com- medical, dental, vision benefits. Take care of 308 All About Painting munication, w r i ting EOE/Drug Free Workplace The Bulletin your investments Farm Equipment Exterior, interior, and or g anizational Classifieds for: deck seal, light maint. with the help from & Machinery skills required. Com- If interested please submit your resume and Free Estimates. petitive salary DOE & letter to: Heidi Wright, CFO/HR Officer, The Bulletin's '10 - 3 lines, 7 days 60" Landpride weed benefit pkg. Firm is cover CCB ¹148373 Western Communications, Inc., PO Box 6020, 541-420-6729 "Call A Service cutter, 3ptto, u s ed an EOE. e-mail to: '16 -3 lines, 14 days Bend, OR 97708 or e-mail hwright@wescom10% Off exterior or $1100. CRR, ali.schaal ©tetra newspapers.com.No phone calls,please. (Private Party ads only) Professional" Directory once. interior job booked. 503-936-1778 tech.com
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The Bulletin Serving Central Oregon since 1903
The Special P rojects M anaging E ditor manages the day-to-day, project-to-project editorial content of The Bulletin's special projects.
Duties include: • Development of all editorial budgets in collaboration with special projects manager and/or event promoters. This includes content outlines, story direction, image collaboration and design consultation. • Management of editorial assignments to free lance writers. • Edition of all special projects editorial content. • Edit content collaboration when needed with various event promoters and directors. • Manage inner department editorial and image to maximize excellent content and design on deadline. • Manages special projects on-line content. • Manages the special projects image and special projects photographer positions within the department. Must have dependable transportation. Able to lift up to 40lbs. Pre-employment drug screen required. Please send cover letter, resume and references tomrogers@bendbuHetin.com EOE MAINTENANCE ELECTRICIAN
Bright Wood Corporation, a 50+ year old wood remanufacturer located in Madras, Oregon is looking fo r a mai n tenance E lectrician reporting to the Maintenance Supervisor. The shift Electrician is a key member of the Maintenance team which is responsible for repairs and maintenance for all machinery and equipment such as conveyor systems, hydraulic components, machine control, and much more. May be required to work any shifts including swing, grave, and/or weekend coverage as needed. RESPONSIBILITIES to include repair, maintain, and troubleshoot electrical and mechanical equipment such as AC motors, DC motors and servo motors, servo controllers, variable frequency drives, AC and DC control circuits, PLC communications networks, pneumatic components,hydraulic components, conveyor systems, and other interrelated process equipment.
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• Shall perform a variety of electrical/mechanical tests to determine exact cause of issue; • Performs unscheduled maintenance to the equipment and machinery to repair or replace defective parts; • Perform adjustments and calibration procedures on various forms of process equipment; • Perform scheduled maintenance as instructed on all equipment/machinery/facility; • Shall track labor, parts, and machine history in plant CMMS; • Make necessary temporary or permanent electrical installations, repairs, or modifications in line with plant policies; • Works with each department providing necessary support to ensure day-to-day maintenance issues are resolved. • Maintain a written log of any highlights occurring during shift coverage in conjunction with proper CMMS entries.
The position responsibilities outlined above are in no way to be construed as all encompassing. Other duties, responsibilities, and qualifications may be required and/or assigned as necessary. EDUCATION/EXPERIENCE AS SHOWN BELOW IS REQUIRED:
• Must have Oregon Electrician license, General Journeyman or Limited Manufacturing Plant Journeyman; • At least 3 years Industrial Electrical experience or equivalent combination of education and experience; • Allen-Bradley PLC and automation experience a plus; • Proven experience and ability in mechanical, electrical and electronic troubleshooting and maintenance techniques; • Must have the ability to demonstrate working knowledge of mech a nical/electrical principles/concepts; • Have the ability to read and comprehend instructions given via OEM or third party operation and/or technical/installation literature. We offer a competitive compensation plan that includes medical, dental and vision benefits; profit sharing plan; Paid vacation and holidays; Life insurance; Disability Income Protection; Flexible Spending A c counts; E mployee Assistance Program.
Please send your resume or apply in the Personnel Department, Bright Wood Corporation, 335 NW Hess St., Madras OR 97741. Wage is DOE. Pre-employment drug testing.
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TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, MAY 28, 2015
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFED• 541-385-5809
NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD ~jii shpttz
DAILY BRI DG E C LU B Thursday,May28,2015
Do you sympathize?
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By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency Cy the Cynic says that to err is human and t o f o r give is superhuman. I d o n' t s u ppose i t ' s e asy t o sympathize with a partner who has j ust lost a g r and slam, but h o w forgiving would you be of South in today's deal? At seven diamonds, South took the ace of hearts and cashed the king of t rumps. I f bo t h d e f e nders h a d followed, 13 tricks would have been all but cold, but East discarded a heart. South then took the K-A of c lubs and led a t h ir d c lu b f r o m dummy. When East followed with the nine, declarer ruffed low ... and West overruffed. Down one.
d iamond, your p artner b id s o n e spade, you raise to three spades and he tries four clubs. What do you say? ANSWER: Spades is the agreed trump suit, so partner's four clubs is a c ontrol-showing cue bid to try f or slam. Since your values are slammish — good trumps and controls — cuebid four hearts. Even if partner signs off at four spades, you can try once more by cue-bidding five clubs. South dealer N-S vulnerable NORTH 437
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4 IA J8 3 2 CLEAR ERROR WEST EAST I can feelfor South, but he made a 45 K964 45 J1083 clear error. He must start the trumps Q KQ102 6 J 97 6 5 by taking dummy's ace. When East 0 1085 0 None shows out, South continues thus: 4105 4Q976 K-A of clubs, club ruff with the king of trumps, heart ruff, club ruff with SOUTH the queen. South can then lead a 4b AQ52 trump to dummy's nine, take the jack 9A43 and claim. 0KQ73 If East had 10-8-5 of trumps, South 4K4 would still be safe. He could ruff South We s t Nor t h East clubs in his hand with no fear of 1O Pass 24 Pass being overruffed. 3 NT Pas s 60 Pass
DAILY QUESTION Youhold: 4 5 A Q 5 2 Q A 4 3 0 K Q 7 3 4 K 4 . Y o u open one ( C ) 2015 Tribune ContentAgency, LLC
Seeking a friendly duplicate bridge? Find five gamesweekly at www.bendbridge.org. BIZARRO
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ANSWER TO PREVIOUSPUZZLE:
S T O M P E A W A R E W K I S S T H contests 24 It was originally R D E N RO named Brad's O O S T I L Drink T H I T C H E D 25 Indian E MO O R 26 Bust gp. W H I T E G O 27 Bronze 31 Champagne component C I AO WA C label word 28 Orchestra section M O N Y B R I G H 32 Olympic hawk 29 Madonna and A VA L I E N S 33 Reunion Lady Gaga attendee S 30 Gabrielle's friend R E D I A L S 34 3-Down is in it C R A Z Y E I G H T 31 Hotel freebie 36 Arafat of the PLO 35 Collection to burn O U Z O S S E E Y 39 Broadway feature 37 eNow seen S P E D T E N E 40 Carne everything!" xwordeditorINaol.com 42 Pupil's place 44 Letters from your 1 2 3 4 5 6 9 10 parents? 15 16 45 Fish with a linear 14 pattern? 17 is 19 49 Snaps 50 Much 20 21 51 College milieu 55 Ghoulish 22 23 59 Volume with a 24 25 26 27 plaid pattern? 61 Son of Abraham
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19 Streetcar relative V C R
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T U B S N O V A E E G I R L X A N N E T D O C B E N T S A X E L D O H M O T E Y E D D D A Y P U R N S S A D S A N E E T T R Y 05/28/15
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By DaVid PDOIe
©2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
63
05/28/15
E6 THURSDAY MAY 28 2015 • THE BULLETIN
•fj
I
•
•
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 • •
•
BOATS 8 RVs 805- Misc. Items 850 - Snowmobiies 860 - Motorcycies And Accessories 865 - ATVs 870 - Boats & Accessories 876 - Watercraft 880 - Motorhomes 881 - Travel Trailers 882 - Fifth Wheels 885- Canopies end Campers 890- RVs for Rent
AUTOS8ETRANSPORTATION 908 - Aircraft, Parts and Service 916 - Trucks and Heavy Equipment 926 - Utility Trailers 927 - Automotive Trades 929 - Automotive Wanted 931 - Automotive Parts, Service and Accessories 932 - Antique and Classic Autos 933 - Pickups 936 - Sport Utility Vehicles 940 - Vans 976 - Automobiles
885
932
933
Canopies & Campers
Antique & Classic Autos
Pickups
975
975
975
975
Sport Utility Vehicles
Automobiles
Automobiles
Automobiles
Automobiles
Automobiles
Ford Explorer XLT 2012, 4x4, 56K mi. VIN:A41532. $23,995 AAA Auto Source Corner of West Empire & Hwy97 541-598-3750 aaaoregonautosource. com. DLR¹ 0225
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Chevy fyfafibu2012, (exp. 5/31/1 5)
Vin ¹299392 Stock ¹44256A
$15,979 or $189/mo.,
$ 2500 down, 84 r n . , 4 .49% APR o n a p proved credit. License and title i ncluded in payment, plus dealer installed options.
(Photo forillustration only)
541-389-7234.
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Estate Sale Olds Cutlass Calais 1981. 14,500 orig. miles, new transmission w/warranty new tires, battery and fluids. Factory bucket seats, console shift, Beautiful condition. Drives like new! $7900.
877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354
SMOLICH
V Q LV Q
541-419-7449
908
& Service
CHEVELLE MALIBU 1971 57K original miles, 350 c.i., auto, stock, all original, Hi-Fi stereo $15,000
1/3interestin
Columbia400,
Financing available.
$125,000
(located O Bend) 541-288-3333
541-279-1072
Garage Sales Garage Sales Garage Sales Mustang Hard top 1965, 6-cylinder, auto trans, power brakes, power steering, garaged, well maintained, engine runs strong. 74K mi., great condition.$12,500. Must see! 541-598-7940
HANGAR FOR SALE. 30x40 end unit T hanger in Prineville. Dry walled, insulated, and painted. $23,500. Tom, 541.788.5546
auawr
Save money. Learn to fly or build hours with your own airc raft. 1968 A e ro Commander, 4 seat, 150 HP, low time, full panel. $21,000 obo. Contact Paul at 541-447-5184.
Just bought a new boat? Sell your old one in the classifieds! Ask about our Super Seller rates! 541-385-5809
Superhawk N7745G Owners' Group LLC Cessna 172/180 hp, full IFR, new avionics, GTN 750, touchscreen center stack, exceptionally clean. Healthy engine reserve fund. Hangared at KBDN. Oneshare available,$13,000. Call 541-815-2144 925
Utility Trailers Tow Dolly, new tires, 2 sets of straps, exc. c ond., capable o f p ulling a f u l l s i z e pickup truck. If interested we will send pictures. $1000 obo. 951-961-4590 931
Automotive Parts, Service & Accessories New
LT- 2 25-75-16"
$8999 -1600cc, fuel injected, classic 1978 Volkswagen Convertible. Cobalt blue with a black convertible top, cream colored interior 8 black dash. This little beauty runs and looks great and turns heads wherever it goes. Mi: 131,902. Phone 541-382-0023
Vin ¹212960 Stock ¹83174
(exp. 5/31/15) DLR ¹366
SMOLICH V Q L V Q
$2800 down, 72 mn., 4 .49% APR o n a p proved credit. License and title included in
4 .49% APR o n ap proved credit. License and title i ncluded in
541-385-5809 Nissan Murano SL
payment, plus dealer installed options.
541-749-2156
smolichvolvo.com
payment, plus dealer installed options.
Want to impress the relatives? Remodel your home with the 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. help of a professional 877-266-3821 877-266-3821 from The Bulletin's Dlr ¹0354 Dlr ¹0354 "Call A Service Professional" Directory
®
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SUBA R Ll suuusuouuuuuuou
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541-749-2156
V Q LV Q
proved credit. License and title included in
541-749-2156 payment, plus dealer smolichvolvo.com Ford Fusion SEL2012, installed options. (exp. 5/31/1 5) Sport Utility Vehicles Vin ¹117015 S UBA RU sususuoussuu.uou Stock ¹44382A Jeep Grand Chero- $15,979 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. or $199/mo., kee Laredo 2004. $ 2400 down, 84 r n . , Scion TCcoupe 2007, 877-266-3821 (exp. 5/31/1 5) 4X4, trailer hitch. Ex- 4 .49% APR o n a p Dlr ¹0354 Vin ¹198120 cellent car with lots of proved credit. License Stock ¹44193B TLC. 161,000 road and title included in Toyota Corolla2013 miles. $500 0 .00 payment, plus dealer in- $10,379 or $149/mo., (exp. 5/31/1 5) $ 2800 down, 80 r n . , BMW X3 35i 2010 541-350-8849 stalled options. Vin ¹053527 4 .49% APR o n a p Exc cond., 65K Stock ¹83072 S UBA R U . proved credit. License miles w/100K mile Just too many $15,979 or $199 mo., and title included in transferable war2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. payment, plus dealer in$2000 down, 84 mn., collectibles? Subaru Legacy ranty. Very clean; 877-266-3821 4 .49% APR o n a p stalled options. LL Bean 2006, loaded - cold proved credit. License Dlr ¹0354 Sell them in (exp. 5/31/1 5) weather pkg, preS UBA Ru and title included in UUBBBUUSBSUS.UUU Vin ¹203053 mium pkg 8 techThe Bulletin Classifieds payment, plus dealer in2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. stalled options. Stock ¹82770 nology pkg. Keyless 877-266-3821 $16,977 or $199/mo., access, sunroof, ru 541-385-5809 S UBA R U Dlr ¹0354 $2800 down, 84 mo. at navigation, satellite 4 .49% APR o n ap - 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. radio, extra snow The Bulletin's Jeep Grand Cherokee (Photo for illuatration only) proved credit. License tires. (Car top car877-266-3821 and title included in Overland Trail Rated Ford Mustang 2001, "Call A Service rier not included.) Dlr ¹0354 payment, plus dealer 2014 MSRP $47,585+ Professional" Directory installed options. $22,500. 2 door coupe, = list $1,400 options 541-915-9170 is all about meeting of $48,985 4500 mi., Find exactly what © s uUUBBBUoususu.uou a A Ru your needs. asking $42,000 firm. you are looking for in the Dr. Roy: 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Call on one of the U~ UU CLASSIFIEDS 541-419-8184 877-266-3821 professionals today! Dlr¹0354 ~
Need to get an ad in ASAP?
935
®
Fax it to 541-322-7253 The Bulletin Classifieds
®
©
©
Chevy Silverdo2013, 4.8L V-8 cyl VIN ¹295291. $28,770
(exp. 5/31/1 5) DLR ¹386
541-548-1448 smolichmotors.com IHGEOMetro1991 5 speed manual trans., 3 cyl., 40+ mpg, 115k miles, a little rough looking but runs really good. $1800 OR 1000 best offer OR trade. Legal Notices pix o n cra i gslist 541-419-5060, Ron LEGAL NOTICE Lexus RX 350 2012, Notice of Intent to Black, 47K miles. Award Sole Source VIN:125152. $32,995 Contract AAA Auto Source The Sunriver SerCorner of West Empire vice District intends 8 Hwy97 to make a purchase 541-598-3750 w hich ha s b e e n aaaoregonautosource. determined to com. DLR¹ 0225 qualify as a "Sole Source" purchase FIND IT! made i n ac c o rSUY IT! d ance with O A R SELL IT! 137-047-0275 Sole The Bulletin Classifieds Source P r ocurem ents. Th e p u r pose of this "Notice of Intent to Award" is to publicly announce the District's intent to award a Sole Source ConNercedesBenz CL t ract for one ( 1 ) 2001, 2016 Pierce Veloc(exp. 5/31/1 5) ity PUC P u mper Vin ¹016584 NH489. The p r oStock ¹83285
Jeep Grand Cherokee Overland 2012, 4x4 V-6, all options, running boards, front guard, nav., air and heated leather, custom wheels and new tires, only 41K miles, $31,995 541-408-7908
Lexus 400H 2006, premium pkg., sunroof, hitch, heated leather, DVD, no accidents, kids, smoke or pets. K eyless, NAV, 28/31 Hybrid M PG, exc. cond., all records, Car f ax, garaged, new tires, Reduced to $13,750. 541-410-1452
I
1 9 78
(exp. 5/31/1 5)
WHEN YOU SEE THIS & Hwy 97. 541-598-3750 Ford Focus 2 0 05, aaaoregonautosource. 61,000 miles + snow Subaru lmpreza2013, com. DLR¹ 0225 Toyota Camry Hybrid t ires. $ 3 ,450 o b o (exp. 5/31/1 5) 415-279-4229 Vin ¹0271 74 2012, 2.5L 1-4 cyl On a classified ad Porsche Cayman S Stock ¹83205 VIN ¹005123. $23,995. go to 2 008, L i k e new , 14,500 miles, $20,358 or $249/mo., (exp. 5/31/15) DLR ¹368 www.bendbulletin.com to view additional $ 2800 down, 84 r n . , $35,000. SMOLICH 4 .49% APR o n a p photos of the item. 360-510-3153 (Bend)
( '.
VW CONV.
VolvoXC60 2014, 3.2L 1-6 cyl VIN ¹522043. $36,997.
Subaru Outback XT 2006, (exp. 5/31/15) VIN ¹313068 Stock ¹44631A
Corner of West Empire
541-548-1448 smolichmotors.com
F35 Bonanza. Aircraft is in exc. cond., w/ good paint & newer interior. Full IFR. Auto pilot, yaw d amper, engine monitor. 6485TT, 1815SMOH, 692STOH. Hangered in Bend. $32,000 or $16,000 for Va share. Call Bob Carroll 541-550-7382 arcarroll9Ogmail.com
What are you looking for? You'll find it in
smolichvolvo.com
Bfvfyy X3 Sl 2007, Low Miles - 68,500, AWD, leather Interior, sunroof, bluetooth, voice command system, and too much more to list here. $15 , 900. Please call Dan at 541-815-6611 F ord pickup 1 9 5 1 c ustom, o a k b ox. AM/FM cassette, new Find It in brakes, 289 V-8, '67 Mustang engine in this. The Bulletin Classifieds! Edelbrock intake and 541-385-5809 carb CFM. 10,461 mi. on engine. $12,500. 541-610-2406.
1/5 share in v ery nice 150 HP Cessna 150; 1973 C e s sna 150 with Lycoming 0-320 150 hp engine c onversion, 400 0 hours. TT a irframe. Approx. 400 hours on 0-timed 0-320. Hangared in nice (electric door) city-owned hangar at the Bend Airport. One of very few C -150's t h a t ha s never been a trainer. $4500 wi ll consider 380SL 1982 trades for whatever. Mercedes Roadster, black on Call J i m Fr a z ee, black, soft & hard top, 541-410-6007 exc.cond., always garaged. 155K miles, $11,500. 541-549-6407
Subaru GTLegacy 2006,
$14,972 or $179/mo., $11,999 or $149/mo., $ 2500 down 8 4 m o
2009, leather, 48K VIN:105908 $19,895 AAA Auto Source
Need to get an ad in ASAP? Ford F-350 Super Cab You can place it 2013, 6.7L V-8 cyl online at: VIN ¹A92462. $39,997. (exp. 5/31/1 5) DLR ¹386 www.bendbulletin.com SMOLICH 541-385-5809 V Q LV Q
Aircraft, Parts
Mustang Conv. 2011, 6 speed auto, pony pkg. 1 5 , 00 0 mi. $20,000. 541-330-2342
HyundaiVeracruz © s u a A Ru The Bulletin Classifieds 2008, 63.8L V-6 cyl VIN ¹061266. $17,997. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. (exp. 5/31/15) DLR ¹366
smolichvolvo.com
box, lined interior, green, good locking system. excellent shape. $995.
541-385-5809
975
541-749-2156
Canopyfor short
Find them in The Bulletin Classifieds
935
$8,979 or $169/mo.,
$ 1800 down, 48 r n . , 4 .49% APR o n a p proved credit. License and title included in payment, plus dealer installed options.
Toyota FJ Cruiser 2012, 64K miles. all Chevy Tahoe 1995, 4 hwy, original owner, dr. 4x4, auto, tow pkg, never been off road leather, a/c, like new or accidents, tow tires. reg. to 10/16. pkg, brand new tires, Runs great, very good very clean. $26,000. c ond., $4800 . Call or text Jeff at 541-385-4790 541-729-4552
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S UBA R U .
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354
posal p r ice
being p u r chased through HGAC. This pricing is only valid for an HGAC purchase on contract FS12-13 which expires November 30, 2015.
Any contractor who
940
Vans
of
$603,794.00 is based on the unit
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Mercedes Benz E Class 2005,
SXT 2014, AWD, auto (exp. 5/31/1 5) VIN ¹193140. $22,888 VW SunBug 1 974 Vin ¹688743 for illustration onlyl exc. cond. Total inte- (exp. 5/31/1 5) DLR ¹366 (photo Stock ¹82316 Dodge Grand rior refurbish, engine Caravan 2007, $11,979 or $155/mo., OH, new floor pan, $2500 down, 72 mo., auto, 133K mi. plus lots more! Sun4 .49% APR o n a p VIN ¹192261. $6,888. r oof. C l ea n ti t l e. credit. License (exp. 5/31/1 5) DLR ¹366 proved $9500. 541-504-5224 and title included in payment, plus dealer in541-548-1448 933 stalled options. smolichmotors.com Pickups S UBA R U . Dodge Journey Crew 2012, V-6, 12k mi., 1 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. owner Sr. $19 800. 541-548-1448 877-266-3821 541-388-2026 smolichmotors.com Dlr ¹0354
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from the records of the court, the P e rsonal Representative, or the Attorney for the Personal RepresentaRausch Elsom, Jr. Case Number tive. Dated and first 15PB0058. N o t ice: published May 28 The Circuit Court of 2015. Personal Repthe State of Oregon, resentative: Monica for the County of Des- Massari-Elsom, 60997 Pl a c e, chutes, h a s ap- Snowberry Bend, Oregon 97702. pointed Monica Elsom a s Pe r sonal Attorney for Personal Representative of the Representative: John S o r lie , OSB Estate o f G e o rge D. Rausch Elsom, Jr., ¹95045, Bryant, Lovlien 8 Jarvis, P.C., deceased. Al l p ersons having claims 591 SW M il l V i ew against said estate Way, Bend, Oregon are r e q uired to 97702, T e l ephone: present the s a me, 541) 382-4331, Fax: 389- 3 386, with proper vouchers 541) to the Personal Rep- Email: sorlie@bljlawresentative, c/o John yers.com. Sorlie, Bryant, Lovlien & Jarvis, PC, 591 Call a Pvo SW Mill View Way, Whether you need a Bend, Oregon 97702 within four m onths fence fixed, hedges from the date of first trimmed or a house publication of this nobuilt, you'll find tice as stated below, professional help in or t he y m a y be barred. All persons The Bulletin's "Call a whose rights may be Service Professional" affected by this proDirectory ceeding may obtain additional information 541-385-5809
does not agree that t he apparatus i s available only from Pierce Manufacturing — determined to be the sole sourcem ay protest t h e "Notice of Intent to Award" by contacting th e S u n river Service Dis t r ict within seven (7) calendar days of the
LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE TO INTERESTED P ERSONS. Estate o f Ge o r ge
date this Notice is
posted. Your protest must be in writing and describe the basis for the protest Please submit your protest, via e-mail a nd i nclude t h e words "PROTEST OF NOTICE OF INTENT TO AWARD SOLE SO U RCE C ONTRACT TO P IERCE UM A N UFACTURING and
your company name
on the subject line. If you have questions, please contact the S u nriver Service Dis t rict. phone 541-585-3720 email ssdadminOsunriversd.org
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FORM La-1
Dodge Journey
Looking for your next employee?
Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com
NOTICE OFBUDGET HEARING
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Chevrolet Silverado 2009 1500 Crew Cab, 4x4, 5.3 Itr, 6 speed auto, HD t r ailering pkg, black int, remote start, 68k, 24 m pg hwy. $25,900. 541-382-6511
YOUR /io WILL RECEIVE CLOSETo 2,000,000 EXPOSURESFOR ONLY$2SO! OU C I a & A d N B N N B
BBB IB A
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RMANCIIL SUMMARY -RECIUIREINaaTS AND FULL-TIME ECIUIVALENT EMPLOYEES Ft a au ORGANIZATIONAL UMIT OR PROGRASt * Name ofouno'Ustossl Unit ol plugrsm
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Serving Central Oregon since 1903
541-385-5809
CALLcx TODAYA
Chevy Pickup 1978, long bed, 4x4, frame up restoration. 500 Cadillac eng i ne, fresh R4 transmission w/overdrive, low mi., no rust, custom interior and carpet, n ew wheels a n d tires, You must see it! $25,000 invested. $12,000 OBO. 541-536-3889 or 541-420-6215.
Vlh o u, U N u
Weekof May 25, 2015
cs I 0 Oubt Ssouos
DIVORCE$155. Complete preparation. Includes children, custody, support, property and bills division. No court appearances. Divorced in 1-5 weeks possible. 503-772-5295.www.paralegalalternatives.com legalalt@msn.com
I MEDICAL BILLINGTRAINEESNEEDED! Train at home to process Medical Billing & InsuranceClaims! NOEXPERIENCENEEDED! Online training at Bryan University! HSDiploma/GED&Computer/Internet needed! 1-877-259-3880
I
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TBssl rta ataraNIENTOF CHAaaaa IN ACTNITlaa Sud SOURCES or FINANCIN6 Thls Is IhssstyssroiaUB Uaso Rssswsl Agency, atssB ls oo pest hlstoly. Thereare so FTE ursmpluysus ofany asd.
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DISH TVStarting at $19.99/month(for 12mos.) SAVE!Regular Price $32.99. Call Today andAskAbout FREESAMEDAY Installation! CALL Now!855-849-1815
I Struggling with DRUGS or ALCOHOL?Addicted to PILLS? Talk to someone who cares. Call theAddiction Hope &Help Linefor a free assessment. 855-978-9402 PRO E
Dodge Ram 2500 1998,
8.0L V-10 cyl VIN ¹217888. $7,588
(exp. 5/31/1 5) DLR ¹366
~OMQ4
Sears R oadhandler tires with 8-hole GMC rim, from Class C m otorhome. $ 1 2 5 . 541-548-1448 541-280-0514. smolichmotors.com
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PROBLEMSwith the IRS or State Taxes? Wall 8 Associates can settle for a fraction of whatyouowe! Results mayvary. Not asolicitation for legal services. 844-886-0875 I I
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