Bulletin Daily Paper 07-28-15

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TUESDAY July28,2015

Serving Central Oregon since 1903$1

AT HOME• D1

Dun er or ll S

t

IN SPORTS: Ex-ELKCAVANESSRISESFROM HUMBLEROOTSTOPRO BALL, C1 W '

bendbulletin.corn

TODAY' S READERBOARD Garden profile — Bend man puts his colorful garden on display every year,sharing his expertise in the process.D1

o ea en sa n v i imsai 0 By Claire Withycombe

Executive File —Bend

The Bulletin

jeweler aims to blend fashion with an active lifestyle.C6

Two days after Bend Police found Andrew Cordes dead in a northeast Bend duplex, the victim's friend of

leg ach urches-

They' re verymuch aglobalphenomenon.A3

e'i e e

from the Deschutes County Norquist, was arraigned on a jail, where he has been held more than 10 years, Daniel

murder charge in Deschutes

since Saturday afternoon.

County Circuit Court. Norquist, 34, appeared

Police responded to the duplex shortly after midnight Saturday, finding

in court Monday via video

Fees fuel airlines' S profits, fliers' ire

CCllSe,

Ie I 1

Cordes, 30, dead in a unit he'd rented to Norquist for about two years, according to Cordes' father, Steve Cordes. SeeSlaying/A6

By Martha C. White Norquist

As a frequent business traveler, Wayne Miller, a

Plus: Digitizing art — A startup's ambitious goal: to catalog every piece of art ever created.A3

Governor'smansionto

the White House —Governors running for president face quite the balancing act.A4

New York Times News Service

distributor for an ethnic foods com-

pany, often pays extra to stretch his

AT ISSUE:IS THERE A PLAN FORJUNIPER GOLF COURSE? AREREDMOND TAXPAYERSSTILLONTHEHOOKTOPAY?

legs. When he paid $38 for a window seat with extra legroom on a recent

cross-country flight, though, Miller was upset to find out,

when he boarded,

Virtual football — some

that the seat didn' t

NFL teamsareturning to a futuristic new practice tool: virtual reality.C1

actually have window access. "Nowhere in paying for the upgrade did it say, 'That's a

And a Web exclusive-

windowless seat,'?"

Controversialrapper Chief Keef's appearancevia hologram at an Indiana hip-hop festival is shut down bypolice. beetlbelletie.cern/extras

he said. SeeAirlines /A4

Is it time

EDITOR'SCHOICE

for term limits for justices?

Odds are

you' ll be

Jarod Opp erman/The Bulletin

Poor at some point

By Emma Baccellieri McClatchy Washington Bureau

WASHINGTON — Less than a week

By Emily Badger and Christopher lngraham The Washington Post

WASHINGTON — The

poor in America are not a permanent class of people. Who's poor in any given year is different from who's poor a few years later. Census data on who participates in assistance

programs suggests as much. But Mark Rank, a

sociologist at Washington University, has for several years been compiling far more comprehensive evidence of this pattern. He and colleagues have been studying the economic fortunes of several thousand

By Beau Eastes eThe Bulletin

REDMOND — When Juniper Golf Course moved from north of the Redmond Airport to south of the Deschutes County Fair 8r Expo Center in 2005, it instantly became one of the premier municipal courses in

when its contract with the air-

after the Supreme Court's landmark rulings on same-sex marriage and health care, Sen. Ted Cruz came out swinging against the courtproposing a consti-

port expired in 2006.

tutional amendment

laws, though, require airports tochargefair-market ratesfor their lands, meaning Juniper was looking at a rent increase

of approximately $300,000

the Pacific Northwest — and a massive money pit for city of Redmond

imous backing of the 2003

taxpayers.

Redmond City Council — the course moved to its current

site on land donated by the city

"We need to be creative about how we use that facility," Redmond FinanceDirector

Jason Neff said about Juniper,

designed to hold justices accountable through judicial elections every eight years.

Instead — with the unan-

ments alone. "It's primary use —golf— isdecreasing nationwide."

In 2003, the golf course took

old site to its current spot near the fairgrounds. Juniper's original home was on land owned by the Redmond Airport,

and the Bureau of Land Man-

A backlash was not

agement. Juniper also took out a second city-backed loan in

surprising from the Republican, coming in the wake of rulings that were widely praised by liberals.

conservative Texas

the golf course that is cost-

out a $5.93 million construction

which the airfield leased to the

2006 for another $800,000 to finish construction work on the

ing the city approximately $405,000 a year in debt pay-

loan — which was backed by the city — to relocate from its

golf course for $1 a year. Fed-

new course. SeeJuniper/A5

eral Aviation Administration

See SCOTUS/A6

families in the longest run-

ning longitudinal survey in America, going all the way back to 1968. Follow

people over a really long period of time, they' ve found, and an incredible

number of them experience economic insecurity

Vegas locks te reversedownward wedding trend By JohnM. Glionna

at some point.

Los Angeles Times

In fact, a vast majority do.

LAS VEGAS — The King did it with his Priscilla.

By the time they' re 60

years old, Rank has found, nearly 4 in 5 people experience some kind of eco-

So did Mia Farrow and Ol' Blue Eyes; Richard Gere and Cindy Crawford; Demi Moore and Bruce Willis. Mickey

Rooney did it twice, with two women.

They all got married in Las Vegas, an indulgence that has long been considered the epitome of reckless romance for celebrities and average folk alike.

At its peak, Sin City was

home to 1 out of every 20 weddings nationwide; quickie nuptials with an Elvis im-

personator officiating and in helicopters hovering above the Strip.

No more.

In recent years, weddings have been leaving Las Vegas. In the last decade, the

number of "I dos" has fallen like the water levels at nearby Lake Mead: about 47,000

fewer couples tied the knot in

nomic hardship: They' ve gone through a spell of unemployment, or spent

time relying on a government program for the poor, or lived at least one year in

poverty or very close to it. SeePoor /A4

TODAY'S WEATHER ~r

Pleasant High 80, Low 47

pt Tii

Page B6

The Bulletin

INDEX At Home Business Calendar

D1-6 Classified E1 - 6 Dear Abby C5-6 Comics/Pu zzles E3-4 Horoscope B2 Crosswords E 4 L o cal/State B1-6 N'/Movies

An Independent

the glittery hotels and walk-in chapels that line Las Vegas

Boulevard. That's a 37 percent

drop and a loss of $1 billion annually. But officials vow to reverse the trend.

SeeLas V egas/A5

Q I/i/e use recycled newsprint

vol. 113, No. 209,

D5

ssections

O 88 267 0 23 2 9

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