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PLUS:ASHTONEATON BEGINSDAY ’I OFDECATHLONIN BEIJING, CI SISTERS MAGAZINE: THE FOLKFESTIVAL EDITION
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bendbulletin.corn TODAY' S READERBOARD Family caregivers — The number of family members taking care of aging relatives or spouses in Oregon is nearing half a million.D1
us season: coac ou soccer earns By Scott Hammers eThe Bulletin
Every August, when it comes time for the Bend Park 8 Recreation District to draw up schedules Animal roommates-
for the district’s youth soccer season, they start with Mehdi Salari’s teams.
Livingwith someone else’s pet can be difficult: a few tips.D1
ELECTION 2016' TREASURER
ans to oin race By Taylor W.Anderson The Bulletin
School lunches —Areall
SALEM Chris Telfer, a former Republican state
those healthier options just ending up in the garbage?A3
senator and accountant from Bend, told The Bulle› tin on Thursday she plans to run for treasurer as a newly regis›
Campaign roundupPaulon wildfires; Clinton’s emails; Trump’s hair.AS
tered member of the Inde›
And a Wed exclusiveA Japanesecampaign wants to rewrite the global rules of escalator etiquette. bentfbuffetin.corn/extras
Telfer
focus on an
anticipated difficulties in state’s next budget from rising Medicaid costs and other potential shortfalls. She said her run as an Independent is an attempt to return the state to mid› dle and "to try to keep the politics" out of the state
EDITOR'5CHOICE
Research finds studies often can’t be repeated
treasury.
uig’
"In 2017, we’ re looking at
about a $3 billion crisis at the state level," Telfer said. "I’ ve been encouraged by people because of the skill I have (is) the skill set that’ s
h II
,! 3
needed to be able to see this Photos by Joe Kline/The Bulletin
Coach Mehdi Salari talks to players during the first practice for a fifth-grade boys Bend Park & Recreation soccer team on Wednesday evening at Harmon Park in Bend.
By Benedict Carey New York Times News Service
The past several years have been bruising ones for the credibility of the social sciences. A star social psy› chologist was caught fabri› cating data, leading to more than 50 retracted papers. A top journal published a study supporting the exis› tence of ESP. The journal Science pulled a political sciencepaper ontheeffect of gay canvassers on voters’ behavior
also because of
concerns about fake data. A University of Virginia psychologist decided in 2011 to find out whether
such suspect science was a widespread problem. He and his team recruited more than 250 researchers, identified 100 studies that
had each been published in one of three leading jour› nals in 2008, and rigorously redid the experiments in close collaboration with the
original authors. The results are now in:
pendent Par› ty of Oregon. Telfer said she would
Salari, a Bend dentist and father of three, is the district’s most prolific volunteer coach, heading m ore than 30 teams over the last20 orso years.Rich Eckman, sports program organizerforthe district, said though the district has many coaches who come back year after year, few have done at as long as Salari, and for as many teams. To keep him coming back, the district adjusts its game
through. "The other two potential candidates just don’t have that skill set," she said. "I
just made this decision Monday." Telfer, an Oregon Lottery commissioner, describes herself as a social liberal
and fiscal conservative. SeeTelfer /A4
and practice schedules so Salari can juggle as many as three teams in a season. Eckman said Salari’s ap› proach to the game matches
Shah in 1979, Salari’s father
up well with that of the district.
ing increasingly unstable and fled with his family for
"He buys into our goals,
for kids to have fun, improve
their soccer skills and be› come better people not just better soccer players but
better people for their entire life." Salari, 47, first played soccer as a child growing up
the United States.
Salari’s family ended up in Utah, where he continued to playsoccerfora few years before giving it up. "It was so aggressive and so rough," he said.
Not long ago, the Unit› ed States was considered the tortoise of the world economy. Lately, however, slow but steady seems to be winning the race. The
pounds in high school, and I wasn’t having a lot of fun."
a small company importing medical supplies and other items. Two years before
After graduating from dental school in 1993, Salari
toppled the U.S.-backed
By Nelson D. Schwartz New York Times News Service
"I weighed less than 100
in Iran, where his father ran
Iran’s Islamic Revolution
Economy turns out to be tough
sensed his homeland becom›
was offered a job at a dental
practice in Bend. SeeCoach/A4
ASStl ’
I
Coach Mehdi Salari chases after RyanJacobson while playing a game of freeze tag during the first practice for a fifth-grade boys Bend Park & Recreation soccer team.
More than 60 of the studies did not hold up. They in›
U.S. economy continues to
chug along, while the one› time hares in Asia, South America and elsewhere are
clude findings that were cir›
flagging. The latest evidence of this
culated at the time
shift came Thursday, as the
that
a strong belief in free will increases the likelihood of cheating; that physical dis› tances could subconscious› ly influence people’s sense
New Orleans' recovery: 10years after Katrina
of personal closeness; that
By Chris Adams
attachedwomen aremore attracted to single men when highly fertile than when less so. The new analysis, called the Reproducibility Project and posted Thursday by Science, found no evidence of fraud or that any origi› nal study was definitively
McClatcky Washington Bureau
false. Rather, it concluded that the evidence for most
published findings was not nearly as strong as origi› nally claimed. See Studies /A5
Virginia; and Charleston,
to the place that is blighted and dysfunctional and infu›
wonderfully distinctive. Ten years ago Saturday, Hurricane Katrina swamped New Orleans and surround› ing areas and forced away hundreds of thousands of residents, Herzenberg among
riating yet at the same time
them. Over the resulting
magical and musical and
decade, he went to Norfolk,
the city’s levees failed, flooding 80 percent of New Orleans
NEW ORLEANS
David
Herzenberg is back in the city he once called home
back
TODAY’S WEATHER ~ C l ouds and sun High 81, Low 60 Page B6
with some neighborhoods
timate of economic growth
in the second quarter to a healthy annual pace of 3.7 percent, from an initial
South Carolina; and Tacoma,
under 10ormore feetofw ater.
estimate of 2.3 percent. At
Washington.
Although precise numbers
the same time, the Labor
He is now hard at work in the Upper Ninth Ward, one of
aren’t available, at least 986
Department, in reporting another drop in weekly un› employment claims, provid› ed further evidence the job market is on the mend. SeeEconomy/A4
the neighborhoods hit hard when Katrina came ashore and
Louisiana residents died from drowning, injuries, heart con› ditionsand other causes,nearly half of them 75 or older.
INDEX All Ages Business Calendar
Commerce Department re› vised sharply upward its es›
01-6 Classified E1 - 6 Dear Abby 06 Obituaries B5 C5-6 Comics/Pu zzles E3-4 Horoscope 06 Sports C1-4 In GO! Crosswords E 4 L o cal/State B1-6 TV/Movies 06, GO!
SeeKatrina/A6
The Bulletin An Independent Newspaper
Vol. 113, No. 240,
e2 pages, e sections
Q I/i/e use recycled newsprint
’: IIIIIIIIIIIII o
8 8 267 02329
A2
TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, AUGUST 28, 2015
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rane iseruin awin or as-oo wor ers By Noam Scheiber and Stephanie Strom New York Times News Service
WASHINGTON › The National L a b o r Re l ations
Board, in a long-awaited rul› ing, made it easier on Thurs› day for unions to negotiate on behalf ofworkers at fast-food
Migrant deathS —A truck filled with the decomposing bodies of as manyas50smuggledmigrantswasfoundabandoned onthe outskirts of Vienna onThursday. Thediscovery camejust as Euro› pean leaders weremeeting in anearby palace to devise newways to cope with the migration crisis. Newsabout the corpses instantly overshadowed themeeting andtransfixed Europe with fresh worries that the scopeand complexity of the crisis had escalated. The people in the truck were thought to havebeenamong the migrants on their way through Central Europeandtoward the wealthier countries› particularly Germany in thenorth. The precise death toll had yet to be determined byThursday night.
changed the definition of a relationships." crucial e m ployer-employee For example, if employ› relationship that had held in ees ata fast-food restaurant some form since the Reagan run by a franchisee were to era of the 1980s. unionize › something al› Now, a company that hires a most none have succeeded in contractor to staff its facilities doing to date they would may be considered a so-called immediately be entitled to ne› joint employer of the workers gotiate not just with the owner
chains and other companies at that facility, even if it does relying on contractors and not actively supervise them. franchisees. A union representing those The ruling, adopted in a 3-2 workers would be legally enti› vote along partisan lines, was tled to bargain with the parent immediately attacked by busi› company, not just the contrac› ness groups, who called on the tor, under federal labor law. "The decision today could Republican-controlled Con› gress to overturn it. be one of the more signifi› Employers like McDonald’s cant by the NLRB in the last and Yum! Brands are also 35 years," said Marshall Bab› likely to challenge the decision son, a lawyer who helped if unions manage to organize write a brief opposing the a group of employees at one or rule for the U.S. Chamber of more of their franchises, if not Commerce. "Depending on well before that. how the board applies its new The labor board, which ’indirect test,’ it will likely en› is charged with protecting snare an ever-widening circle workers’ rights to organize, of employers and bargaining
COIOmbia anII VeneZuela —I-lundredsof Colombiansare fleeing across the border, running from a crackdown on immigrants initiated by Venezuela’s president, Nicolas Maduro. Last Friday, Mad› uro ordered troops to close the border at SanAntonio del Tachira, shutting bridges to almost all traffic and commercewith Colombia. And he declared astate of emergency in a stretch of territory along the border, allowing warrantless searchesandplacing restrictions on public gatherings or protests. Officials said that more than 1,000 people were deported. Maduro said the border shutdown would last indefinitely, and heplanned to expandthe state of emergency to other areas of the country.
of the individual restaurant but also with the corporate
headquarters. Ifthe corporate parent were
to agree to pay higher wages or provide better benefits, it would only apply to that par›
HOng KOng Sit-iu —Three student leaders of last year’s pro-de› mocracy Umbrella Movement in HongKong including the rail-thin teenager who at17 became the face of the protests werecharged Thursday over their roles in events that set off the hugerallies and sit› ins. JoshuaWong, now18, was charged with unlawful assembly and inciting others to takepart in the assembly. Wong,who co-founded a youth protest group called Scholarism, faces amaximum of five years in prison if convicted. AlexChow, aformer leader of the HongKong Federation of Students, wascharged with unlawful assembly. Nathan Law, the federation’s current leader,was charged with incitement.
ticular restaurant, in the same
way that concessions granted to employees in a single union› ized portion of a national com› pany that is not franchised only apply to that portion. At the same time, however, the concessions may give union› ized employees at other lo›
cations practical leverage in their negotiations with the company.
IS reCruiter repOrted dead — A21-year-old hacker from Bir› mingham, England, whotapped into U.S. military networks and wasa central figure in the Islamic State militant group’s online recruitment campaign has beenkilled in Syria by a U.S. airstrike, according to three senior U.S. officials. Junaid Hussain was aleading member of the CyberCaliphate, an Islamic State unit that broke into the U.S. Central Military Command’s Twitter andYouTubeaccounts this year. He was considered to bethesecond-most prominent British member of the Islamic State. TheU.S. officials, speaking on thecondition of anonymity to discuss confidential intelligence reports, said Hussain had been killed in anairstrike Tuesday outside Raqqa, Syria.
e Oh AN.
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ADMINISTRATION Chairwoman Eliz abethC.McCool ..........541-383-0374 Publisher John Costa........................ ManagingEditor Denise Costa.....................54t-383-0356
CalifOrnia drOught —Californians cut water use by more than 31 percent in July, the largest savings the state haslogged since a drought emergency wasdeclared last year. It was the second month of mandatory 25 percent statewide cutbacks, compared with July 2013, and residents again surpassed thetarget set by Gov.Jerry Brown, an indication that Californians understand the severity of the drought and that conservation tactics are working. Onthewhole, each resident used anaverage of 34.9 fewer gallons of water per day than in July 2014, whenthe drought had already begun.
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Emmett Till anniVerSary —Sixty years after a black Chicago teenager was killed for whistling at a white woman in Mississippi, rel› atives and civil rights activists are holding church services andmovie screenings to rememberEmmett Till. They’ realso trying to continue the legacy of his late mother, MamieTill Mobley, who worked with young people andencouraged them to challenge injustice in their everyday lives. It’s a message that Deborah Watts, a distant cousin of Till’s, sees as relevant amid the killings in recent years of young black men such asTrayvon Martin in Florida and Tamir Rice in Ohio.
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SteveHelber/The Associated Press
WDBJ-TV7 newsmorning anchor Kimberly McBroom, center, gets a hugfrom visiting anchor Steve Grant, left, as meteorologist Leo Hirsbrunner reflects after their early-morning newscast at the station Thursday in Roanoke, Virginia. Reporter Aliaon Parker and cameraman Adam Ward were killed during
SChOOI IuIIChOS — The humble school lunch, that staple of most every American child’s diet, has becomehealthier. That wasthe con› clusion of a federal report releasedThursday that showed that the nutritional profile of school meals in theUnited States hadimproved substantially since higher government standards went into effect in 2012. Nearly 80 percent of schools offered two or morevegetables per meal in 2014, thedatashowed, upfrom 62 percent in 2000. Two or more fruits were offered in about 78percent of schools, up from 68 percent in 2000. About athird of schools now havesalad bars.
a live broadcast Wednesday, while on assignment.
On-air shooter threatenedto make ’headlines,’showedanger By Adam Geller and Alan Suderman On the day he was fired from a Vir›
2013 lawsuit against the televi› sion station. "Your Honor, I am not the monster here." The lawsuit was dismissed in July 2014. But in r ecent
photographer of trespassing on private property. He con› fronted an anchor over a sto› ry and attempted to reach the company’s CEO to complain.
ginia TV station, Vester Fla›
w eeks,Flanagan lai d careful
He filed a complaint with the
The Associated Press
ROANOKE, Va.
nagan pressed a wooden cross plans for retribution. He con›
Equal Employment Opportu›
into his boss’ hand as two
nity Commission, as well as the lawsuit.
tacted ABC News about what
police officers walked him to he claimed was a story tip the door. "You’ ll need this," he and filled his Facebook page sard. with photos and video mon› More than two years lat› tages seemingly designed to er, Flanagan fulfilling a introduce himself to a larger threat to put his conflict with audience. co-workers into "the head› On Wednesday, Flanagan lines" gunned down two killed 2 4-year-old A l ison station employees during a Parker, a reporter for WDBJ, live morning broadcast, one of and cameraman Adam Ward, them a cameraman who had
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Flanagan’s joking and smil› •
ing one minute could turn to
•
• • • K
anger in the next, a former col› league, Justin McLeod, said in
• •
an interview.
•
•
•
investigators wrote in a search
whose hair-triggered temper warrant. He turned the gun on was increasingly set off by himself when police caught up slights that were more often to him a few hours later. Inside imagined than real. his rental car, investigators A former co-worker at a call found extra license plates, a center where he worked until wig, shawl, sunglasses and a late 2014 recalled how her off› hat as well as some stamped hand comment that the often
•
•
27, while the two conducted a
filmed his firing. live interview for the station’s But as station employees morning broadcast, then went struggled Thursday to explain online to claim that they had the events that framed Flana› wronged him in the past. gan’s anger, others who had After the killing, Flanagan run across the gunman in the texted a friend suggesting he had "done something stupid," time since he lost his job at WDBJ-TV described a man
•
•
letters and a "to do" list.
boisterous Flanagan was act› Colleagues of the journal› ing quiet led him to try to grab ists shot to death returned to herbythe shoulder, and tell her their morning show Thursday, never to talk to him again. in a broadcast that opened At a bar in Roanoke, the with images of Parker and manager recalled Flanagan Ward. "We c ome to y o u w i t h was so incensed when no one thanked him as he left that heavy hearts. Two of our own he sent a nearly 20-page let› were shot during a live shot ter, lambasting employees’ yesterday morning," said Kim behavior. McBroom, the anchor whose As Flanagan encountered open-mouthed shock was seen repeated tensions with oth› around the world Wednesday ers around him, he described afterWard's camera recorded himself as the aggrieved and the attack. unappreciated victim. Later, during an afternoon "How heartless can you be? news conference, the station’s My entire life was disrupted general manager, Jeffre y after moving clear across the Marks, recal led a series of country for a job only to have problems with Flanagan while my dream turn into a night› h e worked at W D B J f r o m mare," Flanagan wrote in a let› March 2012 to February 2013. ter to a judge filed as part of his Flanagan accused a news
•
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•
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FRIDAY, AUGUST 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 Friday, Aug. 28, the 240th
day of 2015. Thereare125 days left in the year.
DID YOU HEAR?
HAPPENINGS
aIi ioAS ma
DIETIC — Democratic National Committee meetings will con› tinue in Minneapolis.
HISTORY
0 e c3 BIAS S I’IAe
Apparitions that appear on a schedule in a tiny town in Bosnia-Herzegovina draw millions of believers. on the apparitions through global speaking tours and in›
They also draw suspicion from skeptics, a crowd that appears to include Pope Francis.
vestments in the local tourism
Highlight:In 1955, Emmett
Till, a black teenager from Chicago, wasabducted from hisuncle'shomeinMoney, Mississippi, by two white men after he hadsupposedly whistled at a white woman; he was found brutally slain three days later. In1609,English sea explorer Henry Hudson andhis ship, the Half Moon, reachedpres› ent-day DelawareBay. In1862, the Second Battle
of Bull Run (also knownas Second Manassas) began in Prince William County, Virginia, during the Civil War; the result was aConfederate victory. In1922,the first-ever radio commercial aired on station WEAF in NewYork City; the 10-minute advertisement was for the Queensboro Realty Co., which had paid afee of $100. In1944, during World War II, German forces in Toulonand Marseille, France, surrendered to Allied troops. In1945,the Allies began occupying Japanattheend of World War II. In1963, more than 200,000 people listened asthe Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. de› livered his "I Have aDream" speech in front of the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, D.C. In1964,two days of race-re› lated rioting erupted in North Philadelphia over afalse rumor that white police officers had beaten to death apregnant black woman. In1968, police andantiwar demonstrators clashed in the streets of Chicago asthe Dem› ocratic National Convention nominated Hubert Humphrey for president. In1988,70 people were killed when three Italian stunt planes collided during an air showat the U.S. Air Base inRamstein, West Germany. In1990, an F5tornado struck the Chicago area, killing 29 people. In1995, a mortar shell tore through a crowdedmarket in Sarajevo, Bosnia-Herzegov› ina, killing some threedozen people and triggering NATO airstrikes against the Bosnian Serbs. Ten years ago:NewOrleans Mayor RayNagin ordered ev› eryone in the city to evacuate after Hurricane Katrina grew to a monster storm. Five years ago:Conservative commentator GlennBeckand former AlaskaGov. Sarah Palin headlined a "Restoring Hon› or" rally attended bytens of thousands in Washington. U.S. and Afghan forces repelled attackers wearing American uniforms and suicide vests in a pair of simultaneous assaults before dawn onNATObases near the Pakistan border. One year ago:Acknowledging he "didn’t get it right" with
a two-game suspension for Ravens running backRay Rice, NFLCommissioner Roger Goodell announced tougher penalties for players accused of domestic violence, including six weeksfor a first offense and at least ayear for a second.
BIRTHDAYS Actor Sonny Shroyer is 80. Ac› tor Ken Jenkins is 75. Former MLB managerand player Lou Piniella is 72. SingerWayne Osmond is 64. Actor Daniel Stern is 58. Olympic gold med› al figure skater Scott Hamilton is 57. Actor John Allen Nelson is 56. Actress EmmaSammsis 55. Actress Jennifer Coolidge is 54. Movie director David Fincher is 53. Actress Amanda Tapping is 50. Country singer Shania Twain is 50. Actor Jack Black is 46. Actor Jason Priest› ley is 46. Country singer LeAnn Rimes is 33. Actor Armie Ham› mer is 29.ActressQuvenzhane Wallis is12. Reality TV star Alana Thompson,AKA "Honey Boo Boo," is10. — From wire reports
industry. By Elisabetta Povoledo New York Times News Service
M EDJUGORJE,
"You have to bear in mind that the visionaries have built
of the divine. Bos›
nia-Herzegovina At exactly 6:40 p.m. one sultry day this month, the peal of church bells rang though the main square of this town, bringing count› less pilgrims instantly to their knees.
The ringing marked the moment, 34 years ago, when a group of six youths say the Vir› gin Mary appearedto them. Three of them say she has con› tinued to do so, usually at the
same time, every day since. Over that period, the sched› uled apparitions have drawn millions of believers to this small town, and a good dose of suspicion from skeptics, including, perhaps, Pope Francis. In what was inter›
preted as a thinly veiled jab at the daims, he recently joked during a morning hom› ily about "visionaries who can tell us exactly what message Our Lady will be sending at 4 o’ clock this afternoon."
Soon the Vatican is expect› ed to make public the findings of its own investigation into the
reported apparitions, which was concluded 18 months ago.
Though the inquiry was start› ed by Francis’ predecessor, Benedict, if the conclusions are
doubtful, as some speculate, they could pit a populist pope against a popular shrine. At the very least, many here fear, the Vatican’s ruling could upend what has become a
thriving local industry around the claims. They have made
"All Christians know that economic interests here," said God can appear at any time," one skeptic, Marco Corvaglia, said Antonio Socci, a j our› a high school teacher who nalist and author who covers chronicled what he claims are the Roman Catholic Church. the visionaries’ conflicts of in› But he added, "experiencing terest on his blog. a supernatural event that’ s He started his blog, he said, ongoing and in the here and out of concern that millions the now" is what has lured so were being duped by the many. collective power of sugges› "Medjugorje is a huge mass tion. The Medjugorje appari› phenomenon," Socci said. tions, he and other skeptics Even so, the reported appa› believe, are nothing other ritions have also fueled contro› than an "instrument of mass versy, in large partbecause of manipulation." their duration and clockwork Nearly all of the six who regularity. Though the church claimed to have seen the Vir› has recognized many dozens gin still live in or near Med› ZiyahGafic/The New YorkTimes of apparitions of the Virgin jugorje, at least during the Roman Catholic pilgrims pack the hill above the small Bosnian Mary in the course of its his› summer, the pilgrimage high town of Medjugorje, where in 1981 a group of six children said the tory, rarely have such claims season. Residents say that they Virgin Mary appeared to them in Bosnia-Herzegovina. Scheduled lasted as long. have stopped speaking to the apparitions of the Virgin Mary in Medjugorje have drawn tens of The longest apparitions are news media, and have kept millions of believers and suspicion from skeptics, including, per› those said to have occurred a relatively low profile since haps, Pope Francis. in Laus, France, from 1664 to Francisappeared to dismiss 1718, when Mary appeared to their claims during the morn› Dominican sister Benedicta ing homily at his residence on Medjugorje an enormously Italian married to a pilgrim Rencurel. The church did not June 9. popular religious destination, guide in Medjugorje. approve them until 2008, 290 Until now, the Vatican has " From the point o f v i ew years after Rencurel’s death. transforming this once-poor not taken an official position village of rustic stone houses of the p i lgrimage supply The six youths who first re› on the apparitions. into a beehive of hotels, prix chain," he added, "it’s been a ported seeing Mary, in 1981, But two years ago, the Con› fixe menus and souvenir shops catastrophe." when they ranged in age from gregation for the Doctrine of catering to more than l million visitors a year.
10 to 17, are known as the vi›
the Faith, which is now review›
of a town that once barely sur› sionaries. Three of the six say Already, since the pope vived on tobacco plantations that since then, they have had a nnounced in J une t hat a and vineyards, the claims of only periodic visits. Skeptics decision was imminent, the appariti ons have been an irre- raise eyebrows not least be› numbers of Italians once futable blessing. cause, at times, the visionar› the bulk of the pilgrims here› Millions of believers have ies have promised apparitions have fallen by half. found spiritual solace in Med› duringpublic appearances in "Whatever the verdict turns jugorje, with dozens of reports advance. out to be, this wait is creating of miraculous healings, con› Doubters accuse the vi› a state of uncertainty for the versions and religious callings, sionaries of blurring the line pilgrims, and that affects the as pilgrims are drawn here by b etween the s p iritual a n d season," said Sante Frigo, an the promise of the immediacy the material by capitalizing
ing the internal Vatican inves› tigation, told bishops in the
RESEARCH
Are healthyschool lunches leading towastedveggies’? By Ariana Eunjung Cha
sumption of produce and the
The Washington Post
amount of new waste created,
W ASHINGTON In t h e war to get America’s children to eat healthier, things are not
but Amin’s study is perhaps
going well. Student E114 is a case in point. E114 the identifica›
tion code she was assigned by researchers studying eating habits at her public elemen› tary school somewhere in the
the first to try to detail exact›
ly what is happening on the ground. The design of the exper› i ment wa s s i mple. I n t h e
spring of 2012, before the
Faith aside, for the residents
United States that Catholics should not take part in meet›
ings at which "the credibility of such apparitions would be taken for granted," until they are definitively authenticated. Those guidelines have been interpreted by some Vatican experts as a possible blueprint for what is to come.
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two elementary schools and Northeast left the lunch assigned each third-, fourth› line one day carrying a tray and fifth-grader a number full of what looked like a bal› and took digital pictures of anced meal: chicken nuggets, theirtrays before and after some sort of mushy starch, they ate and then went back green beans and milk. and tried to quantify what
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she was done. The chicken nuggets and the starch were gone. But the green beans? Still there in a neat pile and headed straight for the trash.
w as eaten an d w h a t w a s thrown away. Then they re›
peated the experiment the following school year, which was the first year of the new
requirement.
In a study published Tues› What they found was wor› day in Public Health Reports, risome on several fronts. Be› r esearcher Sarah Amin r e › cause they were forced to do ports that such waste has it, children took f r uits and become he a r tbreakingly vegetables— 29 percent more common since the Agricul› in fact. But their consumption ture Department rolled out
of fruits and vegetables ac›
new requirements in the 2012 tually went down 13 percent school year that m andated after the mandate took effect that children who were tak›
and, worse, they were throw›
ing part in the federal lunch program choose either a fruit or vegetable with their meals.
ing away a distressing 56 percentmore than before. The waste each child (or tray) was producing went from a quarter of a cup to
The USDA
m a n date
championed by f i rst l ady Michelle Obama has been highly controversial. Some school officials had warned that picky eaters would just throw the additional food away, but proponents said they should give kids more credit and that they would
more than a 39percent of a
cup eachmeal.In many cases, the researchers wrote, "children did not even taste
the (fruits and vegetables) they chose at lunch."
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While the r esearch w as limited to two schools with a
make the right choice with
high percentage of students
some nudging. "The basic question we
on free or reduced meals and
therefore may not be gener› alizeable to other parts of the requiring a child to select a country, the findings provide fruit or vegetable actually an important data point as correspond wit h c o nsump› Congress prepares to vote on tion. The answer was clearly whether to r eauthorize the no," Amin, the lead author of Healthy Hunger-Free Kids the study, said in a statement. Act of 2010 which provides There has been some re› funding and sets policy for wanted to explore was: does
search over the years to es› the USDA’s child n utrition timate the amount of c o n› programs.
•
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' ;
'
•
•
•
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•
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A4 T H E BULLETIN • FRIDAY, AUGUST 28, 2015
Economy
week to 271,000
Continued from A1 Stocks o n
a level that
suggests the labor market re› mains on a solid footing.
Wa l l St r e et
When the Labor Department
jumped nearly 2.5 percent Thursday, following a broader
reports the latest figures for hiring and the unemployment
4 percent rebound Wednesday.
next Friday, Wall Street is look›
Oil prices also rallied almost 10 percent to settle above $40 a
ing for a gain of about 200,000 jobs and expects the unemploy›
barrel after sinking to post-re›
ment rate to remain flat at 5.3
cession lows earlier in the week.
percent. Normally, that might be enoughto nudgetheFed into
"The United States relies
action, but the plunge in over›
more thanany otherdeveloped economy on demand within
seas markets and the correc› tion on Wall Street has blurred
our own borders," said Carl
that timeline.
Tannenbaum,chiefeconomist Richard Drew /The Associated Press Many experts now expect at Northern Trust in Chicago. Andrew Silvermen, left, end a fellow trader work on the floor of policymakers to wait until De› "While the focus in the past
the New YorkStock Exchange on Thursday. U.S. stocks closed
cember. The uncertaintyover
three weeks has been on inter› sharply higher after China’s main stock index logged its biggest national instability, this should gain in eight weeks.
the central bank’s course has prompted investors and econ›
position us to withstand the
omists to put each new data
consequences of recent market volatility." With m a rkets
on edge, investors are already trading desks in New York, turning their attention to com›
many U.S. executives in the
ing data about the economy’s business trenches report that course, which will help deter› growth has not wavered in serve will make its long-await› picked up in some cases. "We have returned to pre-re› ed move to raise interest rates in September or wait until later
cession levels, and we expect
meetings. Moreover, the impact of the recent plunge in stock prices on the broader economy will not be known for some time.
volume for the entire year to be above where it was back then,"
said Jon Slangerup, chief exec› utive of the Port of Long Beach
second-largest port. "There is quarter will be released in late tremendousconsumer demand October. And the cutoff date here, and we’ re seeing a real for data for the Labor Depart› surge in volumes." ment’s report on hiring and Much of the jump in overall unemployment in August, due economic activity during the next Friday, was this month, second quarter from an ini› before the stockmarket correc- tial estimate of a 2.3 percent Growth data for the current
of economic data over the past
couple of years, the underlying growth rate has not deviated much from about 2.5 to 3 per›
cent annually, according to „ ports unproved, and mcreased riman Behravesh,chiefeconogovernment spending, espe› mist at IHS, a private research cially at the state and local and forecasting firm. "Historically, this is a modest levels. Companies also added to growth rate," he said, explain› their stockpiles of goods, which ing that the U.S. economy now could weigh on growth in the faces what he termed "speed months ahead. Real private in› limits," including the retirement ventories increased at a $121.1 of the baby boomers, slower billion pace in the second quar› population growth and weak ter, adding a little more than 0.2 productivity gains recently. "Would we like to see faster percentage point to overall eco› nomic activity. growth’? Of course," Behravesh In a separate report Thurs› said. "But ... for a mature econ› day, the Labor Department omy, this is about as fast as we said initial claims for unem› can grow, and it’s something ployment benefits fell 6,000 last we can feel good about." better trade picture, as net ex›
mine whether the Federal Re› recent months, and has even
in California, the c ountry’ s
point under a microscope. Yet for all the zigs and zags
growth rate came from strong spending by businesses looking to expand factories, buildings and other physical structures. Other tailwinds included a
tion took hold. r emaining Still, far from the anxious
Coach
all kindergarten really is," he referee "until I drop." said. Refereeing in a small town is Continued from A1 Salari’s wife, Jennifer, said both challenging and reward› Shortly after arriving in the soccer season is a busy but ing, Salari said. While it’s fun town, he began edging his way fun time for their family. to see kids he once coached "He loves it. This is his fa› grow up and compete at a back to soccer,firstas a referee for the park district’s adult vorite season between reffing higher level, that familiarity leagues, and later as a youth and coaching," she said. "We means parents and spectators coach. He took a few years off don’t see him in the fall." will sometimes call him out by after the birth of his daughter Salari said it’s too soon to name if he misses a call. "Over the years it’s been Kenzie, now 12, then returned know if he’ ll continue coach› to the field to coach her team. ing as his kids get older or if heated on the field, and the As his family has grown, they give up on soccer but said next day, we’ re all friends," he so too have the soccer re› he hopes to keep working as a said. "It’s never gone beyond sponsibilities he’s taken on. This year he’ ll coach each of
that, and thank goodness."
Parent Stephanie Jacobson credits Salari with keeping her son Ryan interested in soccer,
and said coaches like him are few and far between. "Anyone who can make the
time, can teach the kids, and make them enjoy it, that’s the trifecta of magic there," she
said. "He’s awesome. I love him." — Reporter: 541-383-0387, shammers@bendbulleti n.corn
Telfer
islator in th e session that
Continued from A1
a bill late last session that
She ran and lost to Trea› surer Ted Wheeler, a Dem›
would have suspended the
adjourned in July. He filed personal income tax rebate,
ocrat, in the 2010 race to re› also known as a kicker, that place former Treasurer Ben state economists announced Westlund, of Bend, who died Wednesday will give Ore› in office. gonians a median $124 next Telfer was elected to the year. Read’s concept would have Senate in 2008 and served one term before she was un› diverted the money to the seated in a primary election state’s public schools and a by Bend Republican Tim savings account. The kicker is a longtime Knopp, who is still a senator. Candidates can’t officially bane for Democratic law› declare until Sept. 10, and un› makers, who say the nation’s til then are only announcing only income tax rebate sys› their intention to run. Telfer tem has forced the state to joins Rep. Tobias Read, a send much-needed money Democrat from Beaverton, to taxpayers at times when and Jeff Gudman, a Republi› heading into difficult budget can city councilor from Lake years. "I’m sponsoring a bill that Oswego, who have stated they plan to run for the office. will use a portion of this While Wheeler will have revenue to bolster K-12 and served only six years by the higher education, and to set time his term is up, term lim› some money aside in the re› its prevent him from running serve fund," Read said at the for treasurer again in 2016. time. "I hope all of my col› He endorsed Read’s candida› leagues are willing to join me cy in July. to make these investments in "Tobias Read has been a Oregon’s future." champion for making the Read also helped create a economy work for all Ore› law that will offer some re› gonians," Wheeler said in cent high school graduates a statement sent by Read’s
waivers for community col›
campaign July 30. "He’s been lege tuition starting during one of the ’go-to’ legislators the 2016-17 school year. when it comes to policy on Read has gotten out to a the economy, innovation and commanding start in rais› ing campaign cash. He had job creation." Read helped shepherd nearly$70,000 from his2014 Wheeler’s landmark policy re-election campaign and last session that will offer a now reports $113,000 in his statewide retirement account
account.
to most Oregon workers by Gudman i s re p orting July 1, 2017. about $6,500 in his camTelfer said that although paign account. While the she didn’t support that con› leaders of the Independent cept, her focus i f e l ected Party of Oregon have advo› would be on making sure the cated for limits on campaign law is cost effective for em› contributions, Telfer said she ployees in the system. plans to raise money to run "I’ ve been around state an effective campaign. She government long enough to will set up an account in the know that state government coming days. doesn’t necessary do things If elected, Telfer would be more cost effectively or ef› the first treasurer who wasn’ t ficiently than the market," a Republicanor Democrat Telfer said. "I’m opposed to it. since the office became parti› san in 1851. — Reporter: 406-589-4347, Read was an active leg› tanderson@bendbulletin.corn
People have that option and it’s not difficult."
his children’s teams, Kenzie,
10-year-old Drew, and 4-year› oldTrevor.
•
•
•
•
Salari said he tries to re›
member the advice an older coach once shared with him about avoiding friction when
coaching your own child’ s
Give $5 to benefit the March of Dimes at any Macy’s store and
team. "The minute your kid is the
best, or the worst, somebody’ s going to have a problem," he SBld.
A t H a r m o n Pa r k on Wednesday, Salari’s 2015 soc›
cer season opened with two back-to-backpractices for his two oldest children’s teams. Taking the field, it wasn’t ob›
SHQP FORA
CAUSE
vious which of the 11 boys was Salari’s son.
He commended one player for riding his bike to practice, complimented another on his haircut Drew, it turned out
— and greeted the team'snewest player with a warm hand›
shake. In a short meeting with the boys’ parents, Salari said he doesn’t plan to get overly wrapped up m wnmmg and losing so long as his team
all day
works harder than their oppo›
nents, he’ ll consider it a win. For the next hour, Salari and
on select regular, sale & dearance items, includinghome -even save on most brands usually exduded!
the team of fifth-grade boys ran through a series of drills, practicing their dribbling and shooting. Salari lined up to take a f ew shots on goal with t h e
team, earning a good-natured chorus of "you missed, you missed!" from the boys when his shot went bouncing off the
crossbar. The coach broke into a sheepish smile. At the close of practice, Sal› ari issued his players their uni› forms, and handed out small
polished blue stones to the boys who most impressed him over the last hour. The newest boy
on the team earned astone,and praise for his passing during a short scrimmage. Before the boys gathered up their balls and water bottles, Salari had already turned his
•
•
attention to the circle of middle
school girls who had begun as› sembling for his second prac› tice of the day. After a few min› utes of introductions with the girls’ parents, Salari was back on the field. The soccer season will soon get much busier for Salari. In addition to practices and games for Kenzie and Drew’s teams, he’ ll be refereeing local high school games this fall, and coaching Trevor’s first season of team soccer. Taking on hi s youngest son’s team shouldn’t be much
of a burden, Salari said. "Tying a lot of shoelaces is
•
•
•
•
•
•
o
J
• I • I
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FRIDAY, AUGUST 28, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
IN FOCUS:PRESIDENTIAL CAMPAIGN
Studies
Rand PaulBi : ggovernment botcheswildfire
Continued from A1
By David Weigel
who have been c rusading, f or
• Some relief from the smoke? Plus: area fire map,B1 y ears, fo r t h e government to • The latest on fires around the hand over much state and region,B2-3
The Washington Post
SPOKANE, Wa.
In Local
When
Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., land› ed in eastern Washington on Wednesday, a light brown Paul o f the l an d i t haze and a smell of smoke per› owns in western meated the air. His plane land› states. Activists in Utah and
be a good comparison. In the
tices that are circumventing our sovereignty," said Didier. "You go talk to the older for› est management people and they’ ll tell you, you can’t fight forest fires without heavy equipment. We don't use
heavy equipment anymore. We let the fires burn. How do raging forest fires of the Pacif› campaign this week, have de› on. In the West, the feds have you protect these endangered ic Northwest had limited visi› manded that the federal gov› kept a lot of it. I think there’ s species if their forests are bility. Signs along the roads ernment stop taking over land a way to transfer some of it burning down’ ?" a movement that gained na› over." Rep. Raul Labrador, R-Ida› warned of the fire danger, or At least one Paul supporter ho, another Paul endorser who thanked the firefighters who’ d tional attention after Nevada come fromas farasAustralia rancher Cliven Bundy’s stand› linked the federal policies to is accompanying him to most and Massachusetts to battle off with the feds. Western leg› the international green move› of his final Western campaign the blazes. islators like Rep. Ryan Zinke, ment’s crusade for "sustain› stops, agreed that the fires ability." Clint Didier, a former could be controlled or prevent› Paul saw the heavy, stum› R-Mont., have gotten behind blebum hand of government legislation to allow more log› Washington Redskins tight ed more easily if Washington end who has made several just backed off. at work. ging on federal land. "The problem," said Labra› "Justice Brandeis said that "You have federal people runs for office as a Republi› the most cherished of rights who aren’t from here come in can, spoke at Paul’s Spokane dor, "is a federal bureaucracy among civilized people is the to manage the forests," Paul rally then explained that the that doesn’t understand what’ s United Nations was issuing happening on the ground. right to be left alone," Paul said said in an interview after his to an audience of around 700 Spokane speech. "The rules orders that bureaucrats were They’ re not allowing people to people in Spokane. "I think if that they’ re bound by are sort using t o w r e c k A m e rica’ s graze on their lands. We can’ t do reforestation as quickly as you were left alone, you might of mandates, one size fits all. west. "We’ ve got all these federal we want to. All of that is build› manage your forests a little bit It probably would be a good study to compare privately agencies going to these U.N. ing up the fuels for natural better." The gallows humor struck owned timberforests to feder- conferences and b r inging disasters like what we’ ve just it would back thesemanagement prac- had." a chord with c onservatives ally owned forests ed with the warning that the
Idaho, states where Paul will
East, the federal government owned land but sold it early
Clirrton frustrates Dems in handling email issue New York Times News Service dent Joe Biden and handed Re› Democratic leaders are in› publicans new ammunition for creasingly frustrated by Hil› attacks on her character should lary Rodham Clinton’s failure she become the nominee. to put to rest questions about Among some of C linton’s her State Department email advisers, discussions recently practices and ease growing turned to whether she should doubts among voters about her offer a more forceful acknowl› honesty and trustworthiness. edgment of regret if not the On top of that, many say, her actual words "I’m sorry" that repeated jokes and dismissive might help the campaign move remarks on the email contro› on. versy suggest that she is not Clinton took a s tep on treating it seriously enough. Wednesday by saying at an Interviews with more than Iowa campaign stop that she 75 Democratic governors,law- took "responsibility" for con› makers, candidates and par› ducting government business ty members have laid bare a as secret ary ofstate using her widespread bewilderment that personal email, and that "it Clinton has allowed a lingering dearly wasn’t the best choice." cloud to settle over her candida› Yet many Democrats worry cy by using a private email that this newly contrite tone server in the first place, since it was likely to raise questions
is too little and too late to quell
questions, and that it may not
aboutherjudgment, and by not last given that her responses defusing those questions once up to now been so varied, and and for all when the issue first her irritation with the issue so emerged in March. thinly veiled. With A m ericans register› ing their mistrust of Clinton in
"They’ ve handled the email
issue poorly, maybe atrocious› opinion polls, anxious support› ly, certainly horribly," said ers are starting to speak bluntly
Edward Rendell, a
f o r m er
of fears that she has inadver› governor of Pennsylvania and tently opened the door to a pos› a supporter of Clinton’s candi› sible challenge for the party’ s dacy. "The campaign has been nomination from Vice Presi› incredibly tone-deaf."
The act of double-check› ing another scientist’s work
that about half of published
with less expertise, would
economics, neuro science,
%HO W
T HE
retractions o f
pub l i shed volved in any of the 100 stud›
papers is rising sharply in wide variety of disciplines.
ies that were re-examined, said that the replication stud›
Scientists have pointed to
ies themselves were virtually
a hypercompetitive culture
nevervetted forerrorsin design or analysis.
across science thatfavors
novel, sexy results and pro›
Nosek’s team addressed
vides little incentive for re› searchers to r eplicate the
this complaint in part by requiring t h e r e search›
findings of others, or for journals to publish studies that fail to find a splashy
ers attempting to replicate
result.
"We see this is a call to
action, both to the research
8t ROC
story. Strictly on the basis of
of Virginia and executive director of the Center for
significance a statistical measure of how likely it is
n o n › that a result did not occur
The center has begun an effort to vet widely cited re› sults in cancer biology, and experts said that the project could be adapted to dou›
ble-check findings in many sciences. Republican presidential hopeful Donald Trump presents his
In a conference call with reporters, Marcia McNutt,
hair to supporter Mary Margaret Bannister so she can check
the editor-in-chief of Sci›
to see if it is real Thursday in Greenville, South Carolina.
ence, said, "I caution that this study should not be re›
Trump in SOuth CarOlina
garded as the last word on
by chance 36 of the stud› ies held up, and 64 did not. The overall "effect size," a
measure of the strength of a finding, dropped by about half across all of the studies.
Yet very few of the redone studies contradicted the original ones; their results
were simply weaker. "We think of these find› ings as two data points, not
in terms of true or false," Nosek said. Extending the p r oject to other fields will require many adaptations, not least because ofthe cost of run-
ning experiments in med› icine and brain science. To beginning." check cancer biology results, In May, after two grad› for instance, the Center for uate students raised ques› Open Science will have spe›
terview Thursday that hewould soon decide whether to sign a pledge to support the ultimate Republican presidential nominee, something the South Carolina Republican Party is requiring to compete in the state’s critical primary. Trump, the only one of10 Republican candidates in aFoxNews debate this month who refused to rule out a third-party bid, said that he expected his showing in polls to "go up 10or15 percent" if he signs the pledge. Headded that if he did sign but lost the nom› ination, he would not run as anindependent, a concern among many Republicans. "I don’t make commitments and breakthem," Trump saidafter speaking at anevent in Greenville, South Carolina, hosted by local chambers of commerce. If he violates the contract, he said, "they should sue. I would go before the court and say, ’I’m guilty.’" At one point, he invited the wife of a local elected official on stage to yank his hair ("I don’t wear atoupee, it’s my hair," he said.) and mockedSen. Lindsey Graham,the South Carolina law› maker who is also running for president, for how little support he is getting.
reproducibility but rather a
t ions about the data in a
cialists reanalyze the raw
widely reported study on how political canvassing af› fects opinions of same-sex m arriage, Science retracted the paper. The new analysis fo› cused on studies published
data, not attempt to duplicate the original work. S tefano B e r tuzzi,
the
executive director of t he American Society for Cell
Biology, said that the effort was long overdue, given in three of p s that biology has some of the top journals: Psychologi› same publication biases as cal Science, the Journal of psychology. "I call it cartoon biology, Personality and Social Psy› chology, and the Journal of where there’s this pressure Experimental Psychology: to publish cleaner, simpler Learning, Memory, a nd results that don’t tell the en› Cognition. The studies in› tire story, in all its complexi› cluded research into topics ty," Bertuzzi said.
sychology’
— New Yortr TimesNews Service
Cary
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professor at the University
W H Y N S
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the findings to collaborate closely with the original au› thors, asking for guidance on design, methodology and
community to do more rep› cations also included more lication, and to funders and subjects than the original journals to address the dys› studies, giving them more functional incentives," said statistical power. Brian Nosek, a psychology The numbers told a mixed
L IV I N G T R I B U T E
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ilante exercise," said Nor›
clinical medicine and ani› bert Schwarz, a professor of mal research. psychology at the Universi› The report appears at a ty of Southern California. time when the number of Schwarz, who was not in›
the Laura and John Arnold Foundation.
U LT I M A T E
nior researchers resent the
results acrossmedicinewere critique work that often has inflated or wrong. Ioannidis taken years of study to pull said the problem was hard› off. "There’s no doubt repli› ly confined to psychology and could be worse in other cation is important, but it’ s fields, including cell biology, often just an attack, a vig›
profit data-sharing service that coordinated the proj› ect published Thursday, in part with $250,000 from
DonaldTrumpsaid inan in›
has been divisive. Many se›
idea that an outsider, typ› Center, who once estimated ically a younger scientist,
J USTI N S H A N D O R IN
T HE
like mate preference, deci› sion-making, word memory and willpower.
"Less than half even lower than I thought," said Dr. John Ioannidis, a direc› tor of Stanford University’s Meta-Research I n novation
O pen Science, th e
Richard Shiro/The Associated Press
A5
•
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TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, AUGUST 28, 2015 II
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RECLAIMINGPOPULATION The city lost more than half its residents after Katrina; it has regained 79%
WHO LIVESINNEW ORLEANS + 2000
’05
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years ago onAug. 29, 2005. Somemeasuresof life in the Crescent City before and after the storm: What the
storm did • At least 986 people died in Louisiana; nearly half were older than 74
Q U.S.
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2004
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• Total damage from Katrina $135 billion
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HIGH RENTS Percent of households paying more than 35 percent of income on rent
New Orleans
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INCARCERATIONRATES DECLINING, BUT STILL HIGHER THAN U.S. AVERAGE R New Orleans
Source: The Data Center Research,The New Orleans Index atTen Graphic: Staff, Tribune News Service
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For evidence you can ask the mayor, Mitch Landrieu, who
talks of an "ascendant city" that hascome back unevenly
but has basically come back everywhere. uYou see kind of a m ish› mash," he said in an interview at City Hall, down the street from two of the iconic images of Katrina destruction: the Su›
perdome-turned-evacuation center and the Hyatt Regency hotel with its blown-out win›
dows. "It’s not really a tale of two cities. Most of the city›
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Odama in NeWOrleanS Visiting residents on tidy porch stoops and sampling the fried chicken at acorner restaurant, President BarackObamaheld out the people of NewOrleans on Thursday as anextraordinary example of renewal and resilience 10 years after the devastation of Hurricane Katrina. "There’s something in you guys that is just irrepressible," Obama told hundreds of residents assembled at abustling new community center, above, in anarea of the Lower 9th Wardthat was once under 17feet of water. "The people of NewOrleans didn’t just inspire me, you inspired all of America." He held out the city’s comeback as ametaphor for what’s hap› pening all across a nation that has moved from economic crisis to higher ground. "Lookatwhat'shappened here,"hedeclared,speakingofa transformed American city that was once"dark andunderwater." Still, Obamaacknowledged that much remains to be done. And after walking door to door in the historic Tremesection of a city reborn from tragedy, hecautioned that "just becausethe housing is nice doesn’t mean our job is done." Areas of the city still suffer from high poverty, he said, and young people still take the wrong path. There is more to bedone to confront "structural inequities that existed long before the storm happened," headded.
in most of the neighborhoods is moving back in the right
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You can ask health, educa› tion, demographic and eco› nomic experts. They regularly catalog the progress the city has made, while also docu› menting some of the very se› rious problems that remain. Some ofthose are because of
trina levels "and is now a been fortified by $14.5 billion crushingly high 27 percent." in federal and state money,
Katrina, but many existed long
Violent crime rates are still
1
and experts say the protection
roughly double national aver› they provide is substantially ages,despite a reduction from stronger than it was. But the pre-Katrina levels.
city needs to be vigilant about
Like the rest of the country, the city is also contending with
maintaining the system. Asked if she was confident
the hangover of the Great Re›
about the levee flood walls
before the storm chugged its cession, which officially lasted way across the Gulf of Mexico. from December2007 to June coming right as the Or you can ask the residents. 2009 They live in neighborhoods New Orleans’ economy was re› pockmarked with p overty gaining its footing. The econo› and still-abandoned proper› my stalled here, as it did every› ties; they drive over cracked, where, but since then measures warped and p o thole-filled of job growth and business
that tower above her backyard, Juanita Doyle who lives in the Lakeview section of New
Orleans laugh?"
said: "Do I get to
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streets to get to their homes.
Choosing to return
startups show a n
e n trepre› optimistic about the town he
neurial spirit alive and well.
"Katrina was a major force in But for many, it was a choice New Orleans, but it was not the
they made. "Initially, I didn’t think I was
coming back," Her zenb erg said on a sweltering August day as he oversaw a small crew of workers on the corner of Alvar and North Derbigny streets. His neighborhood con› tains both the famed, colorful
was forced to temporarily leave. But he remains wary
3I r
about the flood wall directly
growing much more strongly
2000 population of 1.3 million
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than it did pre-Katrina. We had
meaning the storm is only people. partly responsible for the de› But concerns remain and cay still very much evident. among the biggest are those The Data Center, a research levees and flood walls that center that has exhaustively bracket canals throughout the chronicled New Orleans’ re› city. birth, notes that the city’s pov› It was those levees and walls erty rate has risen to pre-Ka› that failed. They have since
$18,995
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Warrington Drive is still in›
complete. Vacant, overgrown lots compete with empty Ka› a weak economy, pre-Katrina. t rina-damaged homes a s The city was losing popula› well as those that have been tion. The region had very slow rebuilt. On the corner of War› population growth. And now rington and Mirabeau Avenue, houses of the post-Katrina Mu› the economy is very strong› a plaque commemorates the sicians’ Village and other, still much stronger than the nation. levee breach. A few house up, vacant ones. So our economy was weak an open-air display shows im› Herzenberg evacuated the compared to the nation pre-Ka› ages of the flood and diagrams city Sunday, Aug. 28, 2005, one trina, and now it’s strong com› of the levee failures; the Levee day before the storm’s Monday pared to the nation." Exhibit Hall and Garden, as it’ s landfall. He left behind a Mid› called, is run by an organiza› Cityneighborhood and ahome A return, but issues remain tion dedicated to educating the he sold during his post-Katrina, Overall, the city has re› public about Katrina. cross-country wanderings. g ained 79 percent of i t s St. Martin has a small role "It’s taken me 10 years to get pre-Katrina population. The in the endeavor: One night a back," he said. "But I am." census stood at 485,000 in week, he waters the exhibit’s The rest of the city is, too› 2000,dropped to an estimated flower garden. sort of. 230,000 in 2006, and was back As for the repaired levee D rive around today a n d to 384,000 by 2014, according walls looming behind him: you’ ll find t hose cracked to the Data Center. The broad› uAm I confident? No,u he said. streets and abandoned houses er metropolitan area is back to uIf they broke, would I be sur› and vacant properties. Those 93 percent of its pre-Katrina, prised? No." things existed before Katrina,
'' erd
only force," said Allison Plyer, behind his Warrington Drive executive director of The Data home. Center. "The city was and it is
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small price to pay for coming home. "You fight the devil you know," St. Martin said. "Cali›
fornia, you have earthquakes. The Midwest, tornadoes. At least with h u r r icanes, you
have a few days to leave."
aaaeaeta3
• Ulea
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•
Obituaries, B5 Weather, B6
' www.bendbulletin.corn/local
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, AUGUST 28, 2015
a 0
Weekend
r oo e i v eris
storm may clear tbe
smoky air I
h F Ils~ o i L~ s
50
By Dylan J. Darling
• The area ofthe river near Postisflowing at the samerate as adrinking fountain
The Bulletin
After days of hazy skies, this weekend could bring some smoke relief for Cen› tral Oregon. A cold front is expected to start moving in today
FIRE UPDATE By Dylan J. Darling sThe Bulletin Reported for Central and Eastern Oregon.For more information, visit the Northwest Interagen› cy Coordination Center’s webpage:bit.ly/bbfires 1. County Line 2 • Acres: 65,800 • Containment: 72% • Cause: Unknown 2. Canyon Creek Complex • Acres: 84,960 • Containment: 44% • Cause: Lightning 3. National Creek Complex • Acres: 12,504 • Containment: 25% • Cause: Lightning Note fire news, B2, B3
BRIEFING
Spot fires now under control Firefighters on Thursday were able to contain spot fires from Wednesday at the County Line 2 Fire. Now they wait for a change in weather expected this weekend to again directly attack the main wildfire on the Warm Springs Indian Reservation, Doug Ep› person, spokesman for an interagency team managing the fire, said Thursday night. Fire crews hope to stop the westward movement of the fire up Shitike Creek Can› yon and have the more than 2-week-old fire contained Monday. The fire started Aug. 12 and is now 65,800 acres and 72 percent contained, Epperson said. There are 553 firefighters battling the blaze. Spotting is when a fire sends out embers, which are caught by the wind and carried across containment lines. The embers then start new fires ahead of the main fire. Spot› ting was a problem Wednesday, Epperson said, on the fire’s west› ern flank. Anyone interested in helping the displaced families affected by the fire is asked to send monetary do› nations to: County Line 2 Fire Relief, Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs Finance Department, PO Box C, Warm Springs, OR,
The Crooked River near Post this year is down to a trickle. The sobering sight
Lowflow
with the brunt of it likely
hitting Saturday afternoon, said Jim Smith, a meteo›
The Crooked River near Post has virtually dried up this year due to drought, low snowpack and little rainfall.
rologist with the National
of the dwindling stream symbolizes the
Weather Service in Pendle› ton. Coming off the Pacific
Prineville
ongoing drought and tough times for
Ocean, the cold front could
Ochoco Reservoir
irrigators dependent on the river.
bring rain and wind to Central Oregon. Bend, Redmond, Madras
The flow is just a fraction of normal,
and other cities around Central Oregon could see
Gangingstation
said Jeremy Giffin, Deschutes Basin
southwest winds between
25 and35 mph, with gusts up to 45 mph.
watermaster. He went to check on the
"It’s a pretty strong
Post
river early this week after a gauge near the tiny Crook County town stopped
Crooke River
indicating any flow at all on the river.
Cr
Prineviiie Reservoir
cold front that is coming through," Smith said Thursday. The change in weather
oge~ Wive
could clear out wildfire
Reservoir Rd.
"And it was virtually dry. It was
smoke hanging over Central Oregon. Over thepastcoupleofweeks smoky skies have been commonplace. "We are just looking for an improvement this week› end," he said.
C Fi 0 C NATIONAL FOREST
flowing at about a gallon per minute
A
Mean daily flow atgaugingstation
at our gauge, so about the same flow
3 cubic feetper second
as a drinking fountain," he said. As
2cfs
watermaster, Giffin is often out in the
With the smoke in Bend
on Thursday afternoon, air quality was moderate, according to the Oregon
1 cfs
field, checking on gauges and water June 21, 2015
delivery systems. SeeDry river/B2
July 5
J u l y1 9
Source: Oregon Department of Water Resources
Au g . 2
Department of Environ›
Aug. 23, 2015
mental Quality. Today could see more smoke roll
Greg Cross / The Bulletin
into town before the cold front arrives.
The smoke may come from wildfires near Crater Lake, Southern Oregon and even California, said
Mark Bailey, eastern re› gion air quality manager for the Oregon Department
of Environmental Quality in Bend.
"I don’t see anything re› ally heavy (smoke) coming into Bend," he said.
To find updated infor› mation about air quality in Central Oregon and other parts of the state, go online to the department’s Air Quality Index page at www.deq.state. or.us/aqi. City, county, tribal, state and federal agencies in Oregon have also joined together to post smoke updates on the Oregon Smoke Information blog at oregonsmoke.blogspot. corn.
Air quality information may differ as the updates on the blog come from the U.S. Environmental Pro›
tection Agency. "(The EPA) doesn’t use the same exact equation as ours, so sometimes (its air quality rating) is different than ours," Bailey said.
JeremyGiffin /Oregon Water Resources Department / Submitted photo
The Crooked River near Post in Crook County has recently run so Iow that the Oregon Water Resources Department gauge, in
the background onthe left, has read zero. In a check of the flows Monday, Deschutes Basin Watermaster JeremyGiffin, who
— Reporter: 541-617-7812, ddarling@bendbulletin.corn
took this photo at the time, found the river to be flowing at a gallon per minute.
97761.
Celebration planned for opening Psychologictesti al ng for
2 arrested in meth trafficking
of roundabout onBrookswood
COCCstabbing defendant
By Tyler Leeds
By Ciaire Withycombe
Two men were arrested Wednesday night in Redmond on suspicion of metham› phetamine trafficking, according to a news re› lease from the Central Oregon Drug Enforce› ment team. Jose Ramon Cas› telo, 30, of Federal Way,Washington, and 26-year-old Yahir Acosta, a transient, were arrested by CODE detectives around 9 p.m.Wednesday following a traffic stop in the parking lot of the Walmart Supercenter. SeeLocal briefing/B5
The Bulletin
Bend’s newest roundabout
is set to open at Brookswood Boulevard and Larkwood
Drive next week, a welcome event for the businesses oc› cupying the nearby Brooks› wood Plaza. The Oregon Department of Transportation began build› ing the roundabout May 4, with the official opening set for next Friday. The roughly $2 million project is part of ODOT’s larger $27.5 million effort to extend Murphy Road
and create new ramps onto U.S. Highway 97 on the city’ s south side.
Much of the project has
one, but we decided to focus
on making this a good thing." per-gallon gas tax the state The construction, which adopted in the 2009 Oregon made driving to the plaza Jobs and Transportation from the north more of a has› Act, according to Bulletin sle, impacted businesses dif› archives. ferently, Kadoch said, noting Cricket Kadoch is in charge a number thrived. "Some wereimpacted,but of community relations at Brookswood Plaza, a shop› some I think really saw an in› ping center in southwest crease in business," she said. Bend that includes a grocery A number of events, in› store,restaurants and other cluding a kids carnival and a businesses. series of beer gardens at C.E. "The goal of the plaza was Lovejoy’s Brookswood Mar› to face this in a super posi› ket helped keep the neigh› tive way," Kadoch said of the borhood interested and bring closure, which some worried others from across the city, been funded through a 6-cent›
would hurt business. "It’s been
an inconvenience for every›
Kadoch said. SeeRoundabout /B5
Nov. I after allegedly stab› bing then-18-year-old James Bri l es in the dorm room they sha r ed in Juniper Hall. Fle m ing said during a court hearing Thurs›
The Bulletin
A Bend man accused of stabbing his roommate at Central Oregon Community College underwent a psychological evalu› . ation Thursday at the
OregonStateHospi› tal, though the results
›
.
~gW ,' ’›
›
day in Deschutes Cou n t y Circuit Court
thatNorgaardwas at the state hospital
as a condition of his according to his attor- Norgaard re l ease from jail. The ney, Timothy Fleming. terms ofhisrelease Eric Norgaard is facing are that he reside in the state one count each for attempted hospital, Fleming said. murder, first-degreeasAfter reviewing the re› sault and unlawful use of a s u i ts of the exam, Fleming weapon. said, he and the state will are not yet known,
Norgaard, at the time 22
years old, was arrested early
disc u ss how to proceed.
SeeNorgaard/B5
B2
TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, AUGUST 28, 2015
WEST NEWS
as in ton overnor ca s wi ires’sow-motion isaster’ • 1,150 square miles have beenburned, nearly thesizeof Rhode Island
fighters last week and have
The governor met with
burned at least 40 homes and
about 20 members of the
40 outbuildings. Heavy smoke that h ad
National Guard fighting a fire near Lake Chelan. They
grounded aircraft this week lifted a bit T hursday morn›
worked to p r otect about a
ing and helicopters were able to drop water on the flames,
By Rachel La Corte and Nicholas K. Geranios
Isaacsonsaid. Aircraft were expected to drop retardant in
The Associated Press
the afternoon. More than
CHELAN, Wash.
Fire›
half-dozen homes. "Trying to predict what the fire is going to do is one of the hardest things," guardsman Casey Stockwell said.
Homeowner Jake Kneisley, 1 ,150 square 41, leaned against a car down miles of Washington are on a hill from his two-story home.
fighters were holding their own Thursday against the fire, nearly the size of Rhode largest wildfire on record in Island, the state Department of Washington state, even as Natural Resources said. rising temperatures and in› Gov. Jay Inslee visited cen› c reased winds s t oked t h e tral Washington on Thursday. flames. He spoke in Chelan before The National Weather Ser› traveling to meet firefighters vice had issued a red-flag on the lines. "They know they’ re in dan› warning earlier in the day for the fires near Okanogan, say› ger and this danger is per› ing weather conditions had the sistent," Inslee said. potential to spread the flames. Inslee said the fires were "All the lines are holding," more spread out across the Bernie Pineda, spokesman for state than last year. "This is not just a local fire, the 450-square-mile fire, said it’s a statewide slow-motion di› Thursday afternoon. The blazes killed three fire› saster," he said.
Kneisley said he was up all night watching the fire near his home. "I feel incredibly lucky these people are here for us," Kneis› ley said as firefighters worked nearby. In other developments in the
’I
West, people in west-central
’,e’to
Idaho near the town of Riggins havebeen told to evacuate due to a wildfire that expanded
to 40 square miles Thursday. Nearly 600 fire fighters are
Mark Mulligan/The (Everett, Wash.) Herald via The Associated Press
working to protect structures
Dennis Godfrey, with the Great Basin Incident Management Team 4, walks across s bridge from the along U.S. Highway 95 and the Gorge Powerhouse on Wednesday near Newhalem, Washington. Smoky conditions threatened air Salmon River. quality and grounded helicopters and airplanes that had been fighting the OkanoganComplex of fires.
Agriculture secretary promisesmore
sage grousespending acrossWest By Matthew Brown and Gosia Wozniacka The Associated Press
PORTLAND
The feder›
al government plans to spend more than $200 million over the next three years on pro› grams to protect the greater sage grouse in Western states
regardless of whether the bird recei ves federal protections, U.S. Agriculture Secre›
tary Tom Vilsack said. Vilsack told The Associated Press that he wants to almost
double protected habitat for the elegant chicken-sized bird, to 8 million acres by 2018. He
also promised more will be done to limit residential devel› opment in sage grouse habitat and torestore wetlands used by the birds. Nearly half of the roughly $211 million the government plans to invest over the next
three years will go toward buying conservation ease› ments, Vilsack said at a formal
announcement of the program in Portland. Land under ease› ment can only be used for
grazing but can’t be developed for other purposes.
Another $93 million is slat› the federal Endangered Spe› million has been spent on 178 cies Act. sage grouse-rel ated projects, said, and $18 million will pay Sage grouse were proposed officials said. Participating for technical assistance to for protections under the act landowners have received landowners. in 2010, but they were not assurances from the govern› "Landowners are stepping put in place because of other ment that if they participate up; they’ re doing their part, priorities. and invest in sage grouse con› and we’ re already seeing the Estimates of number of sage servation now, they won’t have benefits," Vilsack said. More grouse have varied widely, to face new restrictions if the than 1,100 private landowners from 200,000to 500,000 birds bird is listed as endangered. have signed up thus far for the throughout the U.S. The birds Roaring Springs Ranch in program across 11 states, he once numbered in the millions. southeastern Oregon has gone sa1d. Vilsack said the adminis› a stepfurther.Theranch hired T he effort i s p ar t o f a n tration was seeking to balance a wildlife biologist and is con› ongoing campaign by the concerns over the bird’s future ducting its own research to O bama a d m inistration t o with economic reality. figure out which parts of the demonstrate its commitment Under a court settlement ranch provide good habitat for to staving off further declines with environmentalists, the the sage grouse. in grouse populations and to U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service The ranch also cuts down avoid a proposal to list the bird faces a Sept. 30 deadline to de› juniper trees to improve habi› as endangered. cide if protections are needed. tat and uses prescribed burns The bird'sfate has become The future spending Vil› and fire breaks to stop wild› a potential political liability sack described is in addition to fires that can be devastating heading into the 2016 elec› more than $400 million spent to the birds, said biologist tion. F e d eral pro t ections on sage grouse conservation Andrew Shields. This year, could prompt limits on ener› since 2010. Future spending the ranch saw a 25 percent gy drilling, grazing and other pledges › and additional increase in sage grouse on activities across the grouse’s money from states, conser› 250,000 acres of its private 11-state range. vation groups and others› land. "Doing t h ese i n i t iatives Republicans have seized on would bump the overall tally the issue as supposed evidence to more than $750 million for from the ground up is a lot of wildlife protection laws run sage grouse through 2018, ac› more effective," Shields said. "This could be a new way of amok. They say it underscores cording to federal officials. the urgentneed to scale back In Oregon, more than $18 doing conservation." ed for habitat restoration, he
LANE COUNTY
Retired judgewins gun licensingdispute The Associated Press state, unless the license has EUGENE A judge has been revoked." ruled that L ane C ounty
officials were wrong in de› nying a retired judge a con› cealed handgun license. Lane County C ircuit Judge Mustafa Kasubhai i ssued an
K asubhai
sai d
that
Hargreaves had the law on his s1de. "At the end of the day, the
plain meaning of the statute places no limitations on when
o r der i n fa › the license had been obtained
vor of 72-year-old James inordertodemonstratecompeHargreaves on Tuesday, tency," Kasubhai wrote in the reported The ( E ugene) order. Register-Guard. Trapp said after having the Hargreaves, in a petition judge’s guidance, he is ready to the court, said that he
to provide Hargreaves with a
proved his competence with concealed gun license. "I am glad to issue it," Trapp handheld firearms when he told Sheriff Byron Trapp in said. "I just needed these ques› June that he had held a con› tions addressed first." cealed handgun license in Hargreaves was a L ane the 1970s and 1980s. County judge for 18 years and Trapp, after consulting retired in 1995. He now runs with County Counsel Steve
a consulting firm that works
Dingle, denied Hargreaves’ with courts i n license application, saying countries. the former judge need› ed other evidence prov› ing he’s experienced with handguns. Oregon law says there are several ways an appli›
d eveloping
cant can show they are a
competent handgun user, induding completion of a training course that covers
Dry river
known for big flows in late winter and spring and dwin› Continued from B1 dling flows in the summer. Flows along the Crooked Those flows may spike up to River upstream of Prineville 10,000 cfs. The river’s rhythm
hundred acres supplied with water from the Crooked Riv›
er. His family’s ranch has stopped drawing from it for the year. "There was no water to Reservoir often drop low, he contrasts the Deschutes Riv› said, but not usually as low as er, which has springs feed› re-irrigate," he said. they are now. ing it at a fairly constant rate Wood said the river is the The lowest flows typically year-round. driest he has seen it in 23 are around one-half to 1 cu› L ow snowpack i n t h e years. bic foot per second, said Kyle Ochoco Mountains prompted The Ochoco Irrigation Dis› Gorman, region manager for Gov. Kate Brown in April to trict in Prineville relies on wa› the Oregon WaterResourc- declare a drought emergency ter from Prineville Reservoir, es Department in Bend. One for Crook County, the second where Crooked River water cfs is the same as 449 gallons year in a row for a drought is stored. This has lessened passing by per minute. declaration. Before that, the the blow of the drought, but The river at the gauge near last year the county asked less water is available than Post has dropped so low that the statefor help because of normal this summer in the the state’s gauge is not pick› drought was 1992. district, which serves 862 cus› ing up the flow. T he current state of t h e tomers onmore than 20,000 "It is really, really low," Crooked River mainly affects total acres around Prineville. Gorman said. irrigators who rely on the T he customers, most o f Ongoing drought, resulting river upstream of Prineville whom are farmers, normal› in a slight snowpack this win› Reservoir. ly are allowed 4 acre-feet of ter and even less this spring, This year Jim Wood, own› water each year per acre. An has left the upper reaches er of Aspen Valley Ranch acre-foot is enough water to of the Crooked River w ith in Post, said he only cut hay submerge an acre of land un› less water than normal, he once. Normally he is able der a foot of water. This year said. The Crooked River is to cut hay at least twice in a the allocation is 2/2 acre-feet, a "flashy" system, typically growing season on a couple said Mike Kasberger, district
manager. He said the low flows on the Crooked River above the res›
handgun safety and proof that the applicant is "li›
ervoir are a concern.
to carry a firearm in this
"Next year’s season relies
censed or has been licensed
on how much water is in the
reservoir," Kasberger said. Boat ramps around Prine› ville Reservoir closed for the
season early this year be› cause of low water levels. The
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reservoir was 41 percent full
as of Thursday, according to data from the Bureau of Rec› lamation. Data show the res›
ervoir typically starts refill› ing near the end of each year. If the weather turns wet
any time soon, it could revive flows along the Crooked Riv› er, Giffin, the w atermaster,
said. Possible rain this week› end couldadd more water to the trickle near Post.
"If it stays hot and dry I would not be surprised to see
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— Reporter: 541-61 7-7812, ddarling@bendbulletin.corn
.4 v
XEws OF REcoRD of driving under the influence of intoxicants at1:33 a.m. Aug. 23, In the area of NWBond Street and NW The Bulletin will update items In Wall Street. the Police Log when such a request DUII —Seth Peter MornIngsun, 35, Is received. Any new information, was arrested on suspicion of driving such as the dismissal of charges under the influence of intoxicants at or acquittal, must be verifiable. For more information, call 541-633-2117. 9:18 p.m. Aug. 23, In the 61500 block of S. U.S. Highway 97. Theft —A theft was reported at BEND POLICE 11:24 a.m. Aug. 24, in the 21200 DEPARTMENT block of Hurlta Place. Theft —A theft was reported at Dljll —TravIs James Coons, 33, was arrested on suspicion of driving 11:32 a.m. Aug. 24, In the 1000 block of Galveston Avenue. under the influence of IntoxIcants at12:41 a.m. Aug. 23, In the area Theft A theft was reported and an of SE Second Street and SE Wilson arrest made at 5:17 p.m. Aug. 24, In Avenue. the 300 block of NESecond Street. DUII —Damian Martinez Mendez, Theft —A theft was reported at 21, was arrested on suspicion 11:24 a.m. Aug. 25, in the 2500 block
POLICE LOG
of NE U.S. Highway 20. Theft —A theft was reported at 6:10 p.m.Aug.25,Inthe200 blockofNW Riverside Boulevard. Burglary A burglary was reported at 8:13 a.m. Aug. 26, in the 2400 block of NE LyndaLane. Theft —A theft was reported at 9:48 a.m. Aug. 26, In the 1700 block of NE Wells Acres Road. Theft —A theft was reported at 10:02 a.m. Aug. 26, in the 21200 block of Darnel Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at 10:12 a.m. Aug. 26, in the 21200 block of Darnel Avenue. Unlawful entry —A vehicle was reported entered at 8:45 p.m. July 30, In the 61100 block of S. U.S. Highway 97.
HIGH DESERT
•+
DESCHUTES COUNTY SHERIFF'S OFFICE Theft —A theft was reported at 1:02 p.m.Aug.25,In the 56000 blockof Snow Goose Court. Theft —A theft was reported at 2 p.m.Aug.25,In the 52400 blockof River Pine Road. Theft —A theft was reported at 2:26 p.m. Aug. 25, In the area of U.S. Highway 97 near milepost 153. Theft —A theft was reported at 3:15 p.m.Aug.25,In the 59900 blockof Cheyenne Road. Theft —A theft was reported at 5:50 p.m. Aug. 25, in the 15700 block of Burgess Road.
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FRIDAY, AUGUST 28, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
B3
RKGON
olcsc 00 c an es 0 I On a irin a er ac as By Steven DuBois The Associated Press
PORTLAND A Roman Catholic school in Portland
on suspicion of raping awomanand posing as alaw-enforcement officer. TavonDorsey-Hurtt, 25, was arrested Tuesday. Hehas plead› ed not guilty to multiple charges related to last Thursday’s alleged incident, including first-degree rapeand criminal impersonation of a police officer. Theman is accused of using abadge andidentification card to appear as apolice officer. Authorities have kept information related to the casesecret, saying releasing details could potentially hurt the investigation.
the uproar over its decision to
withdraw a job offer to a les› bian woman.
The St. Mary’s Academy board votedfor the reversal Wednesday night, about 24 hours after it became public that the school rescinded the
Mill City fire —Linn County Sheriff Bruce Riley said a building in Milly City housing asheriff’s substation andvarious city government offices hasbeendestroyed by fire. Thesheriff’s office says a city public works employeenoticed asmall fire had started next to equipment he’d just parked inthe building Thursday morning. Twodeputies werewriting reports in the building whenthey heard poppingsounds. They reported that the wall turned orangebeforeflames started coming through. The building wasevacuated. It housesthe Mill City public works shop, library and an archivestoragearea. No injuries werereported.
offerto 27-year-old Lauren Brown, a college counselor. St. Mary’s had also offered Brown six months of pay .r
to not disclose the terms of
ei rt~’ Q
the proposed settlement and refrain from criticizing the school.
In an email to parents, St. Mary’s president Christina
.ii i
assi
~artsFo
Friedhoff said the school›
though still "deeply commit›
+ Fil’-Q~T ~
— From wire reports
.’ :~~~ - ~-’ s’
r iytA
Torrid
ted" to its Catholic identity
'Iotttr& Vt-/p
was immediately adding sexual orientation to its equal employment o p p ortunity policy. "St. Mary’s is a diverse
Wo reit Ai
TOINsrttoa
LE’ADm e
i*
e. c>t*’ee
i r tF
r
Don Ryan I The Associated Press
w e l comes A statue of Mother Marie Rose Durocher, founder of Sisters of the Holy Names of Jesus and Mary, is
and includes gay and lesbian students, faculty, alumnae, parents and friends, includ› ing those that are married,"
adorned with rainbowcolored symbols in front of Saint Mary's Academy inPortland on Thursday. The Roman Catholic school hss changedits policy on hiring gay employees after it received backlash over its decision to withdraw a job offer to a lesbian.
Canyon CreekFire
could growbigger The Associated Press
she wrote. T he
POrtland laWSuit —A former executive assistant to Portland Mayor Charlie Hales is suing thecity and the mayor’s former chief of staff for at least $350,000 in damages.CeveroGonzalezfiled the lawsuit Tuesdayalleging that Gail Shibley andthe city harassedand discriminated against him before and after learning of his disability. The 51-year-old has identified his disability as being HIV-positive. According to the suit, Gonzalez’s work duties wereassigned to other employees and he wasn’t afforded the same benefits as other workers after he disclosed his disability to Shibley. Gonzalezalleges hewasleft out of policy meetings and "treated hostilely" by Shibley.Shibley in an email Wednesdaysaid the lawsuit is "groundless" and that previous complaints by Gonzalezproduced nofindings of wrongdoing.
ImPerSOnating an OffiCer — A Portland manremains injail
has changed its policy on hir› ing gay employees following
community t h a t
AROUND THE STATE
the newspaper reported.
P ORTLAND
offe r e d lash in progressive Portland
p os i t io n
to Brown has since been filled, but the school says it will reach out to her and
her attorney for a possible reconciliation.
icized St. Mary’ s, including
sages such as "Where’s the administration’s decision to SMA we k now an d l ove’ ?" reject Brown. The hashtag "„fightforsma" Stacey Ufer said her daugh› emerged on Twitter. ter, Sabrina, was shocked be› "St. Mary’s flunks a basic cause it went against every›
Columbia Sportswear CEO
test of fairness. I stand with
was immediate. Students, alumni and peo› ple throughout the city crit›
Brown’s attorney, Gloria Trainor, did not immediate›
Tim Boyleand Mayor Char- Lauren Brown," tweeted City lie Hales. Boyle is a major do› Commissioner Nick Fish. ly return a message seeking nor to the all-girls school his P arents i nterviewed b e › comment. wife attended. fore Wednesday’s reversal T he W i l l a mette W e e k Girls festooned a statue said their daughters love the newspaper posted a story outside the downtown school school and are encouraged to about the rescinded job offer with rainbow colors, a quote be outspoken. They said stu› Tuesday night, and the back› from Pope Francis and mes› dents were bewildered by the
thing she learns at school.
"My religion teacher tells me to accept everybody› my religion teacher," Ufer was told by her daughter. " She couldn’t process it i n h er 16-year-old b r a in . I t
didn’t jibe with her reality of what the school promotes."
Oregon’s first In-N-OLjBurger t toopen in Medford
A l a r ge At one point, a commandwildfire near John Day has er asked for four additional
jumped in size, and fire› water tankers and was fighters were concerned told none was available. He about explosive growth a sked dispatchers to f i n d Thursday afternoon. some. Infrared mapping Thurs› Local crews got help late day morning showed the Wednesday when engines fire has burned 134 square arrived f ro m e l sewhere miles a 15 percent in› in Oregon. The state fire crease since Tuesday. marshal's office ordered Local f ir e d e partments 15 engines and crews from from around Grant Coun- Deschutes, Clackamas and ty were pressed into duty Washington counties. W ednesday to prot e c t The forecast calls for high scores of h omes. Most temperatures, low humidity c rews were staffed b y and winds. Crews had been v olunteers w h o w or k e d told to expect "explosive fire through the night, The Ore› growth" Thursday after› gonian reported. noon, Traci Weaver, public The fire caused alarm in information officer for the Prairie City, a town of about Canyon Creek Complex 900 that is 15 miles east of
By Damian Mann
"The first T-shirts sold
The Associated Press
MEDFOR D
—
I n -N-Out out
Burger fans are counting the days until their favorite
fast-food restaurant opens in Medford, with many unoffi› cial reports indicating Sept. 9 might be the magic day. "It’s going to be (awesome) when this thing opens up," said Sam Garrett, a Grants Pass resident wearing an In› N-Out T-shirt who watched
workers put the f inishing touches on the building near
the Rogue Valley Mall on Wednesday. It also could be a t r affic
nightmare, as cars filled with hungry patrons eager to try the first In-N-Out in Oregon
back up onto Highway 62 on opening day.
of here will say 'Oregon' on them.
They will be collector' s items."
equipmentat$386,095.
resident said he probably
The layout inside the build›
won’t come around for t he
ing, which already is fitted with tables and stainless steel cooking equipment, is almost identical to the Red› ding In-N-Out, which previ›
opening because the store expectsto be slammed.
" It’s good, but i t ’s not worth waiting in line for," Starr said.
John Day. Mayor Jim Ham› sher asked residents there to water dry yards to guard against burning embers. Emergency radio traffic Wednesday night reflected the struggle faced by crews,
Fire, said.
The Canyon Creek com› plex started as two smaller
fires ignited by lightning Aug. 12. The blaze has w recked 3 9
h o me s a n d
more than 50 barns, shops and other outbuildings.
ously was the closest location
— Sam Garrett to Medford. Grants Pass Resident names for the items that ar›
en’t listed on the menu board. His burger of choice tops out at more than 1,000 calories and contains nearly 2,400 milligrams of sodium. In-N-Out corporate of › f icials won’t say when t h e
opening will take place, but the website says, "Coming Soon." Various social media
Garrett, a Southern Cali›
sites indicate the opening will take place Sept. 9, which
fornia transplant, noted his
is also the date many work›
At other In-N-Out restau› rants, the first few days after
opening usually bring a rush of traffic, and a plan is re› portedly in place to deal with the amount of cars heading into the Rogue Valley Mall from Highway 62. Saul Cervantes with Nat› ural Systems Landscape of
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Medford said he just had an In-N-Out burger in San› ta Rosa, California, about a
week ago and thinks In-N› Out is his favorite fast-food restaurant.
The 23-year-old W hite ers indicated as well. City resident said he’s a fan Officials wouldn’t disclose of menu item No. 1, which "The first T-shirts sold out the starting hourly wage ei› is a double-double burger, of here will say ’Oregon’ on ther, but the website indicates fries and a drink. But Cer› them," he said. "They will be $11, plus employees get a free vantes likes "animal-style" collector’s items." burger every day they work. fries and a vanilla shake. Medford is the first city to According to the website, In› "Animal style" refers to fries get an In-N-Out in Oregon, N-Out is looking for store as› with grilled onions, cheese though the California-based sociates and custodial work› and Thousand Island-style chain is l ocated in several ers. The company expects to dressing. There’s also an an› imal-style burger with pick› other states. An In-N-Out of› hire 50-60 associates. ficial previously indicated his The M e d for d I n - N -Out les, extra spread, grilled on› company wants to open other is 3,750 square feet with 51 ions and mustard fried into locations in Oregon. parking spaces and is similar each meat patty. T-shirt has "California" writ› ten on it.
Garrett’s favorite meal at In-N-Out is the "4 by 4," or
in style to its other restau›
Scott Starr, also with Nat›
rants, featuring white stucco ural Systems Landscape, "quad," with four meat pat› walls and a red tile roof. Ac› said he enjoys In-N-Out, but tiesand four slices ofcheese. cording to documents filed it’s not at the top of his list for Like many of the restaurant’s with the city, the building places to eat. fans, Garrett knows all the is valued at $853,905, the The 43-year-old Medford
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O •
I(lamath Countysheriff calls for deputies PLit On leaVe tOgiVe LIPbadgeSand gunS The Associated Press K LAMATH FALLS K lamath C o u nt y She r i f f
Instead, on Thursday he
any of his deputies have been
released acopy of a letter he
involved in any misconduct re›
sent to the county’s lawyer quiring disciplinary action. Frank Skrah is not respond› suggesting eight patrol dep› Earlier this week the state ing to a call from county com› uties who asked to be put on Department of J ustice said missioners that he go on leave leave over alleged retaliation it was conducting a crimi› pending the outcome of a by him should give up their nal investigation on S k r ah criminal investigation of him badges and guns, because he but wouldn’t say what it by the state attorney general’ s can’t properly supervise them. was about. He has not been office. He also said neither he nor charged.
+
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The Bulletin
B4
TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, AUGUST 28, 2015
EDj To
The Bulletin
s
IC eF cIW IS OO, U I
c ou e e e r regon’s kicker law is going to kick this year for the first time since 2007. The average kicker payout will be $244. The kicker law is one of a kind in the nation. If the state gets more than 2 percent
THREE BOYHOODFRIENDS...
in revenue than it planned in a two-year budget cycle, the surplus heads back to voters.
lg
We like the kicker, but it could i n the mail anytime soon. Expect use a couple tweaks. some help on your taxes. The kickeris one way Orego- W e can' tseeabig push to getrid nians put a lid on state spending. If of the kicker. It seems too popular. lawmakers would get more money But people are constantly looking than they expected, they would al- at changing it. For instance, people most certainly find a way to spend have suggested the personal kicker it. With the kicker, it goes back to be dedicated to funding education, which is the way the corporate Oregonians. The reason Oregon’s kicker is We would rather see the kicker not copied in other states might be that it is also something of a mess. changed so it only kicks back the over the 2 percent thresh› t c eates a d’ ’cu t guess’ g revenues old That’s the wiggle room m the game or state o ’cia s as t eyes› kicker law. It seems odd to kic timate state revenues. Budgeting b ack the "surplus" revenue the state revenues is trickY enough one kicker defmes as OK to have. year in advance. It’s trickier over And as much as it creates a two years. hassle for the state, we prefer the And then there’s the waY the state sending Oregonians a chec kicker works. It kicks all the sur› to having to wait on getting a tax Plus back, not just the money over credit. We can’t say what most the 2 percent. Oregonians would do with their The state used to send voters a k i cker check. But if the state says it kickercheck. That changed in2011 has money due to Oregonians, get when the Legislature shifted it to a it out to them quickly and directly, tax credit. So don’t expect a check not through a tax credit.
O
regon students have shown About 75percent of Oregon high
school graduates who go straight to community college need reme› dial coursework. When students graduate from high school, they should be able to go to community college without remedial work, or the K-12 system is not getting the job done. Teachers know that. School of› ficials know that. But look what legislators did. Their big education reform of the past session was to try to provide free community col› lege education to Oregon students. Give them free education that they aren’t ready for’? How does that help’ ? Oregon’s K-12 education needs to ensure students arrive at col› lege without having to do remedial work. Not every student needs to go to college, of course. But they will likely need advanced training of some sort. If they aren’t ready to go to college, many are likely not ready toearn any kind ofpost-secondary credential.
Too many of Oregon’s high that say many Oregon high school schoolstudents graduate not ready graduatesare not college ready. for the future.
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How wi
serve I erent stu ents’? By Celeste Brody IN MY VIEW he debate over the location of the OSU-Cascades branch focus our investment, not out-of-state campus is not about the merits and international students who have of higher education in Central Ore› the least ~ for t he community gon. In its 14-year presence in Cen› where they study and more than like› tral Oregon, Oregon State University ly will move away when they finish has served us well, particularly in its their programs. collaboration with Central Oregon How will we serve these differ› Community College. More than 1,000 ent audiences on a 10-acre campus’? mostly adult, nontraditional students (The pumice mine that has not yet arepursuing some 30 majorsleading been demonstrated to be viable for to bachelor' s degrees or one offour development under the appraisal in› professi onalmaster'sdegrees. dustry’s guidelines for determining What will change with the project› fair market value.) In the early 2000s, ed growth of 3,000 to 5,000 students COCC invited OSU into its mas› (and possibly 8,000 to 10,000, as per ter planning with an eye to serving Dr. Ray) by 2025? We will see a dif› OSU-Cascades’ needs. In 2011, the ferent kind of student, and most will Higher Education Assessment Team not be from Central Oregon as they for Central Oregon extended the idea are now. Enrollments are capped that sharing resources and land with at the Corvallis campus because, it COCC could bea productive,effi should be noted, that community has cient and cost-effective venture. OSU demanded it. OSU is looking to Bend declined both offers. Many believe as a relief valve for growth. To afford being associated with COCC affects a pricey west-side campus given de› OSU’s "brand" for attracting the lu› clining state support for higher edu› crative four-year student. That’s too cation, OSU will likely follow nation› bad given that college-age students al trends as it does in Corvallis and are quite capable of distinguishing target out-of-state and international between the different educational students with their heftier tuition (in goals of their compatriots who share the 2014 enrollment report, 49 per› a common campus; many benefi t cent of Corvallis’ students are out-of› from the association.
T
Many Oregonhighschool graduates aren't prepared some modest improvement in college readiness, but there’s little reason to celebrate. The Oregonian reported the ACT test results show 31 percent of Oregon test takers demonstrat› ed they were ready for college in multiple subjects. "For the past five years, Oregon teachers have been implementing higher standards designed to bet› ter prepare students for life after high school,"Salam Noor, Oregon’s new state schools chief, told The Oregonian. "These results in› dicate that their hard work is pay› ing off with improved outcomes for some of our most historically underserved students." We don’t want to downplay a ny improvement, but look at that number. It’s 31 percent. That means less than a third of Oregon students who take the test are be› lieved to be ready for college work. Nobody should be satisfied with that performance. It’s not only the ACT results
I
students "step out" and use commu› nity colleges when they recognize they can obtain the same quality low›
er-division coursework for signifi› cantly less. Oregon’s fiscal realities make this
a good time for institutions to collabo› rate to serve students and our state. If
the OSU student-body count is going to remainat3,000 fortheforeseeable future, why not extend the collabora› tion between COCC and OSU? Why
not take advantage of COCC’s avail› able land and demonstrate out-of-the›
box thinking pursuing OSU expan› sion on the COCC campus? But if all parties and the commu›
nity want a "stand-alone" campus with the potential to serve 10,000 students that is an inviting option for local, state and national students, we
need to take the time to figure this out properly. Develop the Chandler Avenuecampus asprojected,butstop there. Or better yet, find another buy› er forthe land before further devel-
opment occurs. Solve the inevitable parking, housing and infrastructure issues. Drop the expansion into the
pumice mine and now the brownfield expansion. Explore expanding on COCC’s campus. Or consider other
locations where there is an opportu›
In-state students have demonstrat› nity to acquire land through donation OSU’s branch campus was orig› ed across Oregon that they want the or ata more reasonable costprefera-
state or international).
inally intended to serve Central Or› egonians who are "place bound." Students who live and work in our region need the opportunity to gain the knowledge and skills needed to create a vibrant economy. They are the population in which we should
flexibility to move "sideways" be› bly in a less dense area than the west tween a community college and the side. Finally, speak up to our legisla› main university campus for course› tors. Let them know you oppose the work. Out-of-state and international current location and its potential fis› students will expect a more tradition› cal irresponsibility. al campus experience given the price — Celeste Brady is a retired COCC tag of their education, but even these
instructional dean. She livesin Bend.
Letters policy
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We welcomeyour letters. Letters should be limited to one issue, contain no more than 250words and include the writer’s signature, phonenumber and address for verification. Weedit letters for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. Wereject poetry, personal attacks, form letters, letters submitted elsewhereandthose appro› priate for other sections of TheBulle› tin. Writers are limited to one letter or Op-Ed pieceevery 30 days.
In My View submissions should be between 550and 650 words, signed and include the writer’s phone number and address for verification. Weedit submissions for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. Wereject those published elsewhere. In My View pieces run routinely in the space below, alternating with national colum› nists. Writers are limited to one letter or Op-Ed pieceevery 30 days.
Please address your submission to either My Nickel’s Worth or In My View and send, fax or email them to The Bulletin. Email submissions are preferred. Email: letters'bendbulletin.corn Write: My Nickel’s Worth / In MyView P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708 Fax: 541-385-5804
Helping victims of the Canyon Creek Complex Fire T
wenty-five years ago, when the Awbrey Hall Fire burned its
way through southwest Bend,
my best friend returned from a day
at a nearbylaketodiscoverherhouse destroyed and her cat missing.
JANET
STEVENS
Scoots was not among the 46 dogs
and cats that took temporaryhelter s at the Humane Society of Central Oregon, but she was lucky none› theless. Her human family found her quickly, had her scorched paws treated and took her home.
But if smaller communities some› times get into bigger fights about schools, taxes and the l i ke, they
also beat out their larger brethren in a more positive way. Everyone knows everyone in places like Grant County, with just more than 7,000
This summer, missing pets in Grant County have no shelter to go residents, and when disaster strikes, to. Nor do their cousins in nearby
they reach out to one another in re›
Baker County, where there also have markable ways. That’s happening now. New Hope been evacuations and homes lost. That’s a problem. for Eastern Oregon Animals, a Bak› In Grant County alone, says Scot› er City nonprofit that has a commit› ta Callister, my former college room› tee in John Day, has been hard at mate, there are at least 30 homeless work collecting the sorts of things dogs, thanks to the Canyon Creek that allow people to keep their pets Complex Fire,and about as many even if t h eir h omes have disap› cats. To date, the fires have de› peared. The idea, says Callister, who stroyed 39 homes and another 41 serves on the New Hope board, is to other buildings. give pet owners what they need for
their animals and remove at least one burden from their overloaded plates in doing so. Locals have been generous, even those who’ve suffered in the disas›
There have been private dona› it union says it will set up a special tions as well, Callister says. A pair
of Central Oregon women showed up recently with a stack of clothing, some new, some slightly used, all ter. Thus the owners of the local Pi› clean, labeled and packaged. oneer Feed, themselves now home› In fact, neighbors and outsiders less, have donated pet food to the alike have donated so many things cause. And another local resident that a building at the Grant County has found a flatbed truck to haul fairgrounds has become a super› supplies from Bend. market of sorts, with everything Central Oregonians also are from appliances to clothing to food, helping. Costco made a donation. Callister says. There’s a roster of dis› Another gift came from PetSmart, placed families, some of whom have one of two large chain pet stores in lost homes and others who have Bend. PetSmart Charities arranged been evacuated, and those on the list with the Bend store to donate four have access to the goods. Though pallets of goods, from crates to bed› some ofthose displaced are relucding, leashes and other necessities. tant to ask, the help is there if they Because food was not an issue, no
pet food will be included. More› over, while the Bend PetSmart is helping out in Grant County, other
small-loan fund to cover the cost of
such things as temporary housing and insurance deductibles. Those
who qualify will see subsidized in› terest rates and delayed payment schedules, among other things. As for New Hope for Eastern Oregon Animals, any money it collects will go to a fund to build the only animal shelter in the two counties, in Baker
City. In a perfect world, this display of hospitality, from both within and outside Grant County, would never have come about because no fires
would have left people and animals in dire straits. At the same time, however, I suspect that years from
now people will recall how will› With the distribution center burst› ing their neighbors were to help
want it.
ing at the seams, what the commu›
and how grateful they were for the
nity needs now is cash donations, assistance. PetSmarts in Washington, Califor› Callister says. The Old West Federal — Janet Stevens is deputy editor nia and Idaho are making similar Credit Union in John Day has creat› of TheBulletin. donations to fire-stricken communi› ed a special account for donations, Contact: 541-617-7821, ties in their areas. she says. At the same time, the cred› jstevens@bendbulletin.corn
FRIDAY, AUGUST 28, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
B5
campus will be working in Redmond and Bendand can Continued fiom Bt be reached by email, the news said. Both men were lodged at the release All COCC campuses will be Deschutes County jail on sus› closed Labor Dayweekend, picion of possession, manufac› Sept.4 through Sept. 7, and ture and distribution of meth› Sept. 17 for the annual all-col› amphetamine, while Acosta was also arrested on suspicion lege meeting. Fall classes begin the week of possession of cocaine. of Sept. 28. For information, The two men had been the call 541-383-7700. subject of a CODE investiga› tion into the transportation of Redmond taphouse methamphetamine from the settles with OLCC Portland area to Deschutes County. A Redmond taphouse has Detectives found approx› reached a settlement with imately a pound of metham› the Oregon Liquor Control phetamine concealed in the Commission after one of its vehicle’s dashboard, with employees was caught without an estimated street value of a service permit. $16,000. According to the OLCC, an employee at The Lifeline
LOCAL BRIEFING
BITUARIES FEATURED OBITUARY
DEATH NOTICES Ronald "Hollywood" J. Carranza, of Bend Mar. 28, 1949 - Aug. 24, 2015 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home of Bend is honored to serve the family, Please visit our website to share con›
dolences and sign our
online guestbook 541-382-0903 www.bend@bairdfh.corn Services: A Celebration Of Hollywood’s Life will be held this Saturday, Au› gust 29, 2015, 1:OOPM at Mt. Bachelor Resort’s Sunrise Lodge. A special request for the celebra› tion-Hawaiian attire, and bring a chair. Contributions may bemade
COCCMadras campus closed this weekend
re
4lr
to:
Partners In Care, 2075 NE Wyatt Ct., Bend OR 97701, www.partners› bend.org,
Eleanore Karen Sloper, of Bend Aug. 2, 1930 - Aug. 23, 2015 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home of Bend is honored to serve the family, Please visit our website to share
Frank Johnston /The Washington Post file photo
Frank Petersen Jr., the first black general in the U.S. Marines, died Tuesday at 83. He distinguished himself as an aviator in Korea and Vietnam and was promoted to general in 1979.
Nor aar
condolences and sign our
online guestbook 541-382-0903 www.bend Ibairdfh.corn Services: Family have services planned for a later date. Contributionsmay be made
a ane
an in on a star
to:
Charity of one’s choice.
By Adam Bernstein The Washington Post
DEATHS
ELSE% THERE Deaths ofnote from around
Frank Petersen Jr., who be› came the first black Marine
Corps pilot and general officer, took the Navy’s entrance exam
in 1950. The questions, he lat› er recalled, were "relatively
"Platoons that were 80 percent minority were being led by lieutenants from Yale who had never dealt with ghetto blacks. Soldiers were angry. Martin Luther Kingwas killed. tt all came together. It was a mess." Gen. Frank Petersen, on race relations in the military
unremarkable."
The petty officer third class Lou Tsioropoulos, 84: A overseeing the test called member of Kentucky’s 1951 him a few days later, asking, 1970s, he took administrative Petersen and Frank Petersen NCAA national championship "Would you mind retaking the jobs and began his rapid ascent III, both of Washington D.C.; team and theunbeaten '53-54 examination?" through the ranks, working a stepdaughter he adopted, squad who went on to win two It was not hard for the future to recruit more black officers Monique Petersen of Wash› NBA titles with the Boston three-stargeneral to decode and holding a command post ington D.C.; a brother; a sister; Celtics. Died Saturday in Lou› the reason for the request His at Marine Corps Air Station four grandchildren; and five isville, Kentucky. score was high, and the impli› Cherry Point, North Carolina. great-grandchildren. Joseph Traub, 83: Professor cation was that he had cheated. In 1979, he was promoted Petersen died at his home who founded the computer sci› Again, he aced the test, and the to brigadier general and was in Stevensville, on Maryland’s petty officer exdaimed: "Pe›
University and who helped de› velop algorithms used in sci› entific computing in physics and mathematics as well as on
tersen, my boy, the Navy has opportunities for guys like you. ... My, God, man, what a great steward you’d make!" Wall Street. Died Monday in The remark was particularly Santa Fe, New Mexico. painful for Gen. Petersen, who Marcy Borders, 42: Former said he had turned to the mili› employee of Bank of Ameri› tary because he hoped it would ca who became known as the an escape from pervasive "dust lady" from a defining racial prejudice in his native picture of her covered in ash Kansas. and grime on Sept. 11, 2001. Gen. Petersen, who d i ed Died Monday in New Jersey of Tuesday at 83, joined the Navy stomach cancer. in June 1950 as a seaman ap› Robert Beavers, 71: Busi› prentice and the next year en› nessman who began his 37› tered the Naval Aviation Cadet year career with McDonald’s Program. He was motivated by as a $ 1-an-hour restaurant
the recent Korean War combat
employeeand became a top
death of Jesse Brown, the „
executive and the first Afri› can-American to serve on the
vy’s first black aviator.
"Quite frankly, I didn’t even corporation’s board of direc› know blacks were allowed into tors. Died Aug. 19 while vaca› the program," he later said. tioning in Tibet. President Harry Truman — From wire reports had ordered the armed forc› es to desegregate in 1948, but Gen. Petersen later wrote that
Obituary policy Death Notices are freeand will be run for oneday, but specific guidelines must be followed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or fu› neral homes. Theymaybe submitted by phone, mail, email or fax. TheBulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information on anyof these services or about the obituary policy, contact 541-61 7-7825.
Deadlines: Death Notices are accepted until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and by 4:30 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication. Obituaries must be receivedby5p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the sec› ond day after submission, by1 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication, and by 9a.m. MondayforTuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; pleasecall for details.
I think this will m ake it
screens, shade structures. Sun when yorJ wantif, shade when yorJ needit.
his return from Korea, when
he continued to face vicious discrimination. He said he wore his uniform everywhere, figuring that if anyone at› tacked him, it would be a feder›
in 1987 of passing secrets to So› al offense.
Tensions exploded during
I r
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View our presentation at Tompklnswealthpresents.corn CharlesTomltklfts, CFPI 541-20446$7 securltlas a Advisory sarvlcss offered throuph KMS Rnanclsl Sarvlcem, Inc. MemberFltfWSIPC
In the second matter, Gen. the Vietnam War, when strife Petersen cited new, exculpato› over perceived racism in as›
ISI I I II V
CI
O >N DEMA N D
541-389-9983 www.shadeondemand.corn
ry evidence in his decision to signments, military justice and convene a second court-mar› promotion at times seemed to tial of Lindsey Scott, a black
threaten the military’s ability
Marine corporal who had been to carry out its missions. "Platoons that were 80 per› convicted by a military court in 1983 of having raped and cent minority were being led attempting to murder a white by lieutenants from Yale who woman. The highest military had never dealt with ghetto
00
court overturned the initial de› blacks," he told The Post in
cision, citing an inadequate de› 1990. "Soldiers were angry.
were "the last to even entertain
fense, and Scott was acquitted in 1988.
the idea of integrating their forces." And whenever he left The cases, Gen. Petersen the flight training base in Pen› told The Post, had been "very sacola, Florida, he was subject› emotional and very difficult." ed to the indignities of the Jim He soon retired from active Crow South. duty, after receiving the Dis› Bus drivers ordered him to tinguished Service Medal for the back of the coach, and he exceptionally meritorious ser› was barred from sitting with vice, and spent many years in white cadets in restaurants charge of corporate aviation and movie theaters. He largely for the Delaware-based chem›
Martin Luther King was killed. It all came together. It was a
Premier Money Market Account
mess." He said he once encountered
a cadre of eight black dissi› dents who felt so mistreated and their chance of being killed in Vietnam so high› that they threatened to assas›
fi
©O®
sinate a white military official.
Gen. Petersen said he de› fused the situation by asking who among the eight would swallowed the treatment, he ical giant DuPont. later told The Washington Post, Frank Emmanuel Petersen volunteer to pull the trigger; no because he could not fight two Jr. was born in Topeka, Kan› one raised a hand. He report›
• J •
sas, on March 2, 1932. His fa› ed the plot and was named a ther, a native of St. Croix in the special assistant on race re›
U.S. Virgin Islands, owned a lations to the Marine Corps radio repair shop. The young› commandant. Citing Marine figures, The One instructor tried to mini› er Peter sen grew up enthralled mize his performance in the air with flight, watching B-29 Post reported in 1988 that there giving him lackluster ratings bombers take off at a nearby were 195,719 Marines, 36,882 of whom were black. Of 20,163 but he said white peers came air field during World War II. to his defense. Upon comple› While in the Marines, he re› officers, 960 were black. At tion of his flight training, he ceived a bachelor’s degree in present, there are 184,355 ac› was commissioned a second 1967 and a master’s degree in tive duty Marines, of whom lieutenant in the Marine Corps. international affairs in 1973, 19,017 are black. There are He flew 64 combat missions in both from George Washington 20,924 officers, of whom 1,115 Korea in 1953 and earned the University. He graduated from are black. For years, Petersen was the Distinguished Flying Cross, the National War College in Marine Corps’ only black ac› among other decorations. 1973. In 1968, he did a tour of duty His marriages to Eleanor tive-duty general. He chroni› in Vietnam, where he com› Burton, Alicia Downes and cled his struggles in a memoir, manded a tactical air squadron Jonnie Robinson ended in di› "Into the Tiger’s Jaw" (1998), and served in more than 250 vorce. Last year, he remarried written with J. Alfred Phelps. that, as opposed to getting my wings," he said.
missions. He received the Pur›
Email: obits'bendbulletin.corn Fax: 541-322-7254
ple Heart for wounds suffered Besides his wife, of Stevens› Gen. Petersen if his military when he ejected after his plane ville, Maryland, and Wash› career had realimpact for
Mail:Obituaries
was struck by anti-aircraft fire
ington D.C., survivors include
over the demilitarized zone.
four children from his first marriage, Dana Moore of Bal› philosophize and say that it
In all, he accumulated more than 4,000 hours in fighter and
attack aircraft. In the early
Downes.
In 1988, The Post asked
Phone: 541-617-7825
P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708
Roundabout
za has a lot to offer, and
the Navy and Marine Corps
battles at once. "I knew that I couldn’t win if I were to tackle
plaints or concerns made by studentsorothers regarding Meanwhile, an a t torney Norgaard. representing Briles filed a Norgaard is scheduled for notice of intent to sue the col› a plea hearing Sept. 14, elec› lege in March, seeking infor› tronic court records show. mation about Norgaard’s ad› — Reporter: 541-383-0376, mission to COCC and "what, cwithycombe@bendbultetin.corn
southwest side. The pla›
Late in his career and in re› tirement, the general often was
viet agents.
olence," as well as any com›
and society at large. He recalled the years after
spent the next two years as
convening authority for two highly publicized trials. One was the case of Sgt. Clayton Lonetree, who was convicted
if any, due diligence was performed by COCC regard› ing Mr. Norgaard’s mental health and propensity to vi›
relations in the armed forces
Eastern Shore. The cause was
5,930 civilians, but he drew wider media attention as the
— Bulletin staff reports
asked about progress on race
named the NAACP’s man of
the year. He became a lieu› complications from lung can› tenant general in 1986 and cer, said Dana Moore. commanding general of the Combat Development Com› mand at Quantico, Virginia. At Quantico, he oversaw 7,010 military personnel and
Continued from B1 "He should not be in jail," Fleming said. Court records show Norgaard intends to rely on an insanity defense.
inRedmond,wasfoundto be mixing selling or serving alcohol, or supervising those who do, without a valid service permit. Lifeline has agreed to pay a fine of $1,155 or serve a sev› en-day liquor license suspen› sion. The commission ratified the agreement at its meeting Thursday in Portland. A spokeswoman for the com› mission said it was unclear how the incident was reported.
more convenient for a lot of people." Continued from B1 To celebrate the opening, Carole DeRose, owner the plaza is hosting the sum› of the Mexican restaurant mer’s last beer garden begin› L a Rosa, said she w a s ning at 5 p.m. Thursday. pleased to see the inconve› The city ofBend and ODOT nience of driving through will also host an ice cream the neighborhood resulted party in the plaza from 4:45 to in more people from the 5:15 p.m. on the same day. immediate vicinity stop› — Reporter: 541-633-2160, ping by her business. tleedsibendbulletin.corn "I am happy it’s over though, I think the open› ing will be a good thing," See us for retractable she said. "It will connect awnings, exterior solar the southeast side to the
the world:
ence department at Columbia
The Central Oregon Commu› nity College campus in Madras will be closed for maintenance today through Monday. For assistance, students can call or visit the COCC campuses in Redmond, Bend or Prineville, according to a news release from COCC. The Madras campus phone number will be redirected to the Redmondcampus duringthe closure. Staffers at the Madras
Taphouse,at249 NW 6th St.
timore, Lindsay Pulliam of Al›
African-Americans. "As much as I would like to hasn’ t," he said, "it has made a
exandria, Virginia, and Gayle difference."
HIGH DESERT BANK 1000 SW Disk Drive, Bend, OR 97702
www.highdesertbank.corn ... c,
B6 T H E BULLETIN • FRIDAY, AUGUST 28, 2015
W EAT H E R Forecasts andgraphics provided byAccuWeather, inc. '2015
I
I
i
’
I
TODAY
rI
TONIGH T
HIGH i 81' I I ’
ALMANAC TEMPERATURE Yesterday Normal Record 88 55’
Low
79 44’
98’ in 1 9 15 27’ in 1960
PRECIPITATION 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.00" Record 0.44" in 1985 Month to date (normal) 0.0 3" (0.41 ") Year to date(normal) 6.56 " (6.69") Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 30 . 0 7"
SUN ANDMOON Today Sat. Sunrise 8:23 a.m. 6 : 2 4 a.m. Sunset 7:49 p.m. 7: 4 7 p.m. Moonrise 7 :05 p.m. 7:44 p.m. Moonset 5:0 2 a.m. 6:1 7 a.m.
•
High: 98’
Bandon
Bro ings 70/5
2 p .m. 4 p .m. City Asturis Baker City
35 Moderate; 6-7High;8-10 VeryHigh; 11+ Exlrems.
H i/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W 74/50/0.00 68/57/sh 67/52/r 87/44/0.00 89/54/pc 80/43/pc 74/52/Tr 7 0/59/c 68/55/sh 90/43/0.00 88/53/pc 77/38/pc 92/50/0.00 80/61/c 77/55/r 86/45/0.00 82/54/pc 71/39/sh 88/45/0.00 83/58/pc71/41/pc
Riley 88/53 86/59
78/54 •
Beaver Marsh
Chr i stmas alley
82/Bf
90/6
• Lakeview
82/54
90/65
90/65
• Burns Jun tion 94/68 Rome 95/63 McDermi
• Paisley
•'' Klamath • Ashl nd F a l l s
Jordan V gey
Frenchglen
Fields•
83/58
91/63
Yesterday Today Saturday City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Ls Grande 90/ 59/0.00 87/61/pc 82/43/pc Ls Pine 83/43/0.00 79/55/pc 66/47/c M e diord 91/5 6/0.00 91/61/pc 80/55/r N ewport 70/4 8/0.00 66/54/c 63/51/r NorthBend 72/54/0.00 70/58/c 68/54/sh Ontario 94/63/0.00 94/64/pc 87/56/pc Pendleton 94/60/0.00 85/65/pc 80/55/pc
Yesterday Today Saturday City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Portland 88/5 9/0.0075/63/c 73/58/r Prinevige 90/ 48/0.0085/62/pc 66/48/c Redmond 90/ 5 1/0.0086/57/pc72/45/ c Roseburg 92/ 5 7/0.0086/63/c 81/57/r Salem 90/51/0.00 79/60/c 73/56/r Sisters 86/47/0.00 82/58/pc 70/49/c The Dsges 9 6 /63/0.00 84/64/pc 77/58/c
Brookings Gums Eugene Klsmsth Falls Lakeview Weather(WHs-sunny, pc-partly cloudy,c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rsin, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow l-ice, Tr-trace,Yesterdaydata ssoi 5 p.m. yesterday
POLLEN COUNT T r ee s Lo~w g Lo~w
• Fort Rock Greece t • 81/57
• Silver Lake 78/53 82/59 Chiloquin Medfo d ’81/57
Yesterday Today Saturday
S
The highertheAccuWsather.rxrm tiy Index number, the greatertheneedfor eyesndskin protscgun.0-2 Low
G rasses
Gra a
65/
UV INDEX TODAY I
86/63
Po 0 65/ Gold
0’
/62
Roseburg
68/60
Source: JimTodd,OMSI
~ S
81/61
70 9
Wee d s Abs ent
Source: OregonAgergyAssociates 541-683-1577
NATIONAL WEATHER
WATER REPORT
0
220 65
Crooked R. near Terrebonne Dchoco Ck.below DchocoRes.
7
4/4
Anchorage 9744~ es/44
FIRE INDEX
ants
Homa Ci
• 8 46 ai lngh m
0
• usga str
Partly sunny
Mostly sunny and nice
Today Saturday
City Hi/Lo/Prec. HiRo/W Hi/Lu/W Abilene 98/71 /0.00 101/73/pc97/71/s Akron 76/59/0.00 80/60/s 85/66/pc Albany 75/62/0.00 79/56/s 84/65/pc Albuquerque 86/63/0.02 88/65/pc 87/65/1 Anchorage 64/55/0.00 62/44/s 61/44/pc Atlanta 85/67/0.00 87/71/pc 83/69/1 Atlantic City 80/62/0.00 80/67/s 83/69/s Austin geno/o’.oo 97/68/s 96/68/s Baltimore 80/57/0.00 83/61/s 87/64/s Billings 87/69/0.00 90/61/s 95/63/s Birmingham 87/60/0.00 89/71/s 83/69/s Bismarck 86/58/Tr 92/56/s 95/63/s Boise 93/70/0.00 96no/pc 89/58/pc Boston 82/65/0.00 77/64/s 82/67/s Bridgeport, CT 82/62/0.00 80/65/s 84/70/s Buffalo 68/55/0.00 75/57/s 79/64/pc Burlington, VT 75/61/Tr 78/57/s 81/62/pc Caribou, ME 75/59/0.10 76/55/s 78/59/pc Charleston, SC 84n2/0.07 85/72/pc 87/72/t Charlotte 86/66/0.00 88/67/pc 89/70/t Chattanooga 85/66/0.00 88/68/s 84/69/1 Cheyenne 79/64/Tr 83/52/s 85/56/s Chicago 76/51/0.00 77/65/pc 78/65/1 Cincinnati 77/60/0.00 82/63/s 86/67/pc Cleveland 71/60/0.01 77/60/s 83/66/pc ColoradoSprings 83/59/0.02 83/55/pc 84/56/pc Columbia, Mo 77/57/0.00 82/67/t 85/65/pc Columbia, SC gon4/o’.oo 90/71/pc gonzn Columbus,GA 89/68/0.00 89nz/pc 84/71/t Columbus,OH 77/61 /0.00 81/62/s 85/68/pc Concord, HH 79/55/0.00 81/51/s 85/57/pc Corpus Christi 93n1/0.00 94/71/s 94/73/s Dallas 97/72/0.00 99nwpc 95ne/s Dayton 77/60/0.00 80/62/s 86/67/pc Denver 89/56/Tr 87/58/s 91/60/pc Des Moines 76/57/0.03 77/63/r 81/64/s Detroit 69/54/0.00 76/63/pc 78/67/1 Duluth 72/45/0.00 74/56/pc 75/58/pc El Paso 95n4/Tr 96nz/pc 95nz/pc Fairbanks 48/47/0.24 45/37/ah 46/33/r Fargo 79/58/0.00 84/61/pc 86/64/s Flagstaff 78/49/0.14 78/50/t 78/51/s Grand Rapids 71/51/0.00 74/62/c 75/64/1 Green Bay 75/47/0.00 69/60/r 70/57/sh Greensboro 84/63/0.00 85/66/pc 87/69/pc Harrisburg 75/58/0.00 82/61/s 87/65/s Hsrffurd, CT 78/55/0.00 82/56/s 85/65/pc Helena 87/60/0.00 90/58/pc 89/55/pc Honolulu 89/76/0.19 90nwpc gone/s Houston 93/69/0.00 94/69/pc 92/70/s Huntsville 88/58/0.00 87/69/s 84/69/s Indianapolis 78/58/0.00 82/65/pc 86/68/c Jackson, MS 88/58/Tr 95/67/s 95/69/pc Jacksonville 89n1 /0.00 87/71/pc 87/72/t
Cairo Calgary Cancun
v. v. v, + v.v.v. ’+
• ST
Dublin Edinburgh
1
5:.
Source: USDA Forest Service
46'
63/61/0.95 68/55/pc 88n3/0.00 89/75/s 57/43/0.00 59/47/pc 111/82/0.00 112/81/s 91/81/0.31 94ng/c 90/68/0.14 91/67/1 90/81/0.00 88/77/s 82/62/0.09 70/56/pc 66/46/0.03 64/48/t 82/55/0.00 90/65/s 66/48/0.00 72/59/s
71/61/pc 89n5/s
75/52/0.00 77/54/c
77/48/pc 92/78/pc 65/48/sh 64/50/pc 85/64/s 83/54/s 89/80/1 86/73/s 87/66/s 82/57/s 72/64/pc
~
60/53/r 112/80/s 95/80/t 88/65/1
Sans/s
78/63/pc 68/47/t 91/64/s 76/59/s
95ne/o’.o4 gsnT/t 95nT/I 97/80/0.00 95ns/s 95nws
89/69/pc 67/57/sh
97no/pc 89nT/I
Yesterday Today Saturday
City
Juneau Kansas City Lansing Lss Vegas Lexington Lincoln Litue Ruck Lus Angeles Louisville Madison, Wl Memphis Miami
Milwaukee Minneapolis Nashville New Orleans New YorkCity Newark, NJ Norfolk, VA OklahomaCity
Omaha Orlando Palm Springs Peoria Philadelphia Phoenix
Hi/Lu/Prec. Hi/Lo/W HiRo/W 55/51/1.03 55/47/r 57/47/ah 77/63/0.01 84/64/t 82/62/s 68/49/0.00 76/63/pc 75/64/1 102/81/0.00 104/81/s 103n8/s 79/54/Tr 84/65/s 86/67/pc 87/67/0.03 82/5811 86/60/s 88/63/0.00 88/66/pc 91/69/s 93/71/0.00 94/69/s 89no/s 81/60/0.00 86/70/s 88/71/pc 75/50/0.00 69/61/r 75/59/eh 85/62/0.00 89n0/s 91n1/pc 90/76/0.41 88n9/t 91n9/t 73/53/0.00 73/64/r 72/63/ah 76/59/0.00 67/581r 79/65/pc 84/58/0.00 89n0/s 88no/pc 87/73/0.00 91n3/s 90n3/s 82/67/0.00 84/68/s 87/72/s 84/64/0.00 85/661s 89/69/s sonwo.oo 82/68/pc 84/69/pc 94/67/0.00 93no/t 93/69/s 84/65/Tr 80/60/1 83/63/s 85/73/0.84 89//4/t 91n5/t
112/86/0.00 112/85/s 110/80/s 77/54/0.00 83/68/pc 83/67/pc 81/64/0.00 85/67/s 89/70/s 108/87/0.15 110/88/s 109/86/s Pittsburgh 70/59/0.00 81/59/s 86/65/pc Portland, ME 79/61/0.00 76/58/s 81/62/pc Providence 82/61/0.00 81/61/s 85/67/s Raleigh 84/68/0.00 85/641pc 88/68/pc Rapid City 82/60/1.60 88/59/s 93/63/s Reno 94/61/0.00 92/63/pc 81/54/c Richmond 84/64/0.00 85/63/pc 88/66/pc Rochester, NY 69/59/0.01 76/57/s 79/63/pc Sacramento 102/64/0.00 97/66/pc 85/58/pc St. Louis 80/59/0.00 86n1/pc 89n1/pc Salt Lake City 88/65/0.00 94nO/pc 94/69/s Ssn Antonio 96ns/0’.00 98/t2/s 96n2/s San Diego 89/73/0.00 86n2/pc 84n1/pc San Francisco 86/61/0.00 79/65/pc 75/61/pc San Joss 92/64/0.00 86/65/pc 77/61/pc Santa re 85/56/Tr 82/55/pc 82/56/1
Savannah Seattle Sioux Falls Spokane Springfield, Mo Tampa Tucson Tulsa Washington,Dc Wichita
Yskims
Turns r
90n5/0.08 90n5A 63/50/0.06 64/50/sh u xx Str/7 1 Paso its Orle ns 61/54/0.05 64/51/pc ss/4 CNX 72 91 Geneva 86/57/0.00 85/64/s Harsre qa;. 78/50/0.00 80/53/s vu/I ~ ~ 4/69 Hong Kong 88/80/0.12 89/80/1 Chihuahua Istanbul 84/72/0.00 84/73/s 93/41 Mimi Jerusalem 87/67/0.00 87/66/s Monte y 8877u u 97/41 Johannesburg 78/50/0.00 78/58/pc Lima 71 /62/0.00 72/64/pc Lisbon 81 /66/0.00 86/66/s Shown are today’s noonpositions of weather systemsand precipitation. Temperature bandsare highs for the day. London 66/57/0.17 69/54/pc T-storms Rain S h owers S now F l urries Ice Warm Front Sta t ionary Front Madrid Cold Front 91/61/0.00 95/67/pc Manila 88/79/0.06 89/76/t n
8 /72
Bend/Sunriuer ~ V e ry high ~ Redmond/Madras High Sisters ~M o d~crate ~ Prineuige ~V e ry~high ~ La Pine/Gilchrist High
Phoen • 110/8
0
r
Yesterday
~ os ~ f oe ~ 20 8 ~ a g s ~ dos ~SOs ~ace ~ 708 ~ a os e gos ~fOOs ~ f f cs ~ f gs ~ o s As ul 7 s.m. yesterday Reservoir Acr e feet Ca p acity NATIONAL cue c 84/ 73/8 C rane Prairie 285 0 8 48% EXTREMES der Bay Wickiup 38454 19% YESTERDAY(for the sliaur Te/6 Port 7/eo , t 75/43 Crescent Lake 5 8 9 59 88% 48 contiguous states) a is m k 7 8 ronto • Billings ~ Dchoco Reservoir 13828 31 Yo National high: 118 tra/Se u Amsterdam < Bois Athens Prineville 81157 41 Yo at Death Valley,CA • 94/70 Rs G t y .x '• x x x ’ ukn /44 Auckland • ss/ 9 River flow Sta t io n Cu. f t./sec. National low: 33 Baghdad Deschutes R.below CranePrairie 171 at Embarrass, MN Bangkok Deschutes R.below Wickiup 1440 Precipitation: 2A4" Beijing 132 at Chanute, KS Beirut Deschutes R.below Bend an nnasco Se a Lnkn 7 94/70 Berlin 9/65 ington Deschutes R. atBenhamFalls 1830 87/5 us tte Se Las V ss Bogota Little Deschutes near LaPine 124 seno 104/ Budapest srluu C rescent Ck. below Crescent Lake 1 2 3 84 BuenosAires • svhvn SS/ex j Crooked R.above Prineville Res. 0 ss/es Los An tss Csbo SsnLoess 89/7 Crooked R.below Prineville Res.
74
TUESDAY
TRAVEL WEATHER
•
Aug 29 Sepa S e p 1 2 S ap 21 at Hermiston Low: 42’ Tonight’s uhy: Capricornus,oneof the at Meacham constellations of the zodiac, stands low in the southeast at mid-evening.
S 1~5
Variable clouds with a couple of showers
Shown is today’s weather.Temperatures are today’s highs andtonight’s lowe. EAST: Dryweather ria 5 will continue with a umatiga Seasid Hood 87/62 mixture of clouds and 67/58 RiVer Rufus • ermiston sunshine aswell as Cannon lington 87/62 portland so/63 Mesc am Lost;ne areas of smokeand 65/58 74/5 ee • W co 87/58 Enterprise haze. dleten 79/5 he Daa • • 87/57 Tigamo • 85/ CENTRAL: Partial andy• 84/64 68/eo Mc innvig Joseph 5/62 Gove nt • upi • He p pner Grande • sunshine todaywith Condon 6/62 87 61 Cam • 83 areas of smokeand union Lincoln 71/ haze. It will turn much 66/58 Sale Granitee • pray cooler tomorrow with 79/6 /64 a ’Baker C Newpo 83/56 showers possible. BB/54 • 84 62 8/61 • Mitch g 89/54 0a mPSh mau Ret I I \ WEST: Showers will 8 4 / 6 8 0 r V RSI eu Yach so/ss • John affect the northwest 65/57 80/60 • Prineville Day 7I60 tario coast today; plenty 85/62 • P a line 8 7/ 6 6 64 of clouds elsewhere. Floren e • Eugene ’Re d B rothers 8364 Vates Widespread showers 68/59 Su lucre Sf/BO • 62 95/67 late tonight. Nyssa • 8 0 / 7 • La pine Ham ton Grove Oakridge • Burns Juntura OREGON EXTREME$ Co 91/60
YESTERDAY
n'
10 a.m. Noon
69' 43'
Cooler; a passingmorning shower
Cloudy and mild
MONDAY
OREGON WEATHER
Bend Municipal Airport through 5 p.m.yest.
High
SUNDAY
69' 49'
LOW 60'
Timesofcloudsand sun
I
SATU RDAY
S
89nwo.oo 86n3/pc 87n2/t
85/58/0.00 68/59/r 66/55/r 78/64/0.20 74/56/pc 84/63/s 88/62/0.00 84/641pc 74/52/pc 81/61/0.00 82/67/pc 85/67/pc 87/76/0.10 89n6/t 92n6/t 101/75/0.00 102/77/s 101/77/t 83/67/0.44 89/6911 90/68/s 82/63/0.00 86/68/s 89no/s 89/71/0.00 87/67/1 88/65/s 95/59/0.00 83/59/c 74/51/sh 108/86/0.00 111/87/s 110/85/s
I
Mecca Mexico City
108/84/0.00 110/76/t 73/54/0.14 75/55/1 Montreal 72/61/0.01 76/59/s Moscow 73/56/0.00 74/62/c Nairobi 79/54/0.00 80/55/pc Nassau 91/80/0.17 92/81/pc New Delhi 97nwo.oo 97/81/1 Osaka 90/73/0.00 90/73/s Oslo 63/57/1.22 64/53/pc Ottawa 70/55/Tr 77/55/s Paris 59/57/1.41 72/57/pc Rio de Janeiro 86/66/0.00 74/64/c Rome 82/63/0.00 83/65/s Santiago 61/46/0.00 67/47/pc Sau Paulo 67/61/0.74 70/57/pc Sap porn 72/63/0.11 72/61/pc Seoul 84/65/0.00 83/66/s Shanghai 89/73/0.02 87/72/sh Singapore Ssnwo.oo 88n8/t Stockholm 73/59/0.40 68/53/pc Sydney 72/54/0.03 66/48/pc Taipei stn5/0’.80 87/76/r Tel Aviv 91/74/0.00 9OnT/s Tokyo 78/70/0.16 75/72/sh Toronto 66/55/0.00 76/57/pc Vancouver 75/61/0.00 67/58/r Vienna 82/61/0.00 89/66/s Warsaw 86/54/0.00 86/58/pc
•
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IN THE BACK BUSINESS Ee MARUT NEWS W Scoreboard, C2 M L B, C3 Sports in brief, C2 Golf, C3 Track and field, C2 College football, C4 THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, AUGUST 28, 2015
O www.bendbulletin.corn/sports
WCL BASEBALL
NFL
PREP GIRLSSOCCER PREVIEW
Elks' players named all-league
Saints reca roe in I(atrina
After putting together a roster and coaching staff that produced the franchise’s first division title and WestCoast League championship, Bend Elks general manager CaseyPowell has been namedWCL co-executive of the year. Powell shares the honor with Mark Nions, general manager of the Kelowna Falcons, who reached theWCLcham› pionship series for the first time before being swept by the Elks in two games. First basemanBilly King, second baseman
• New Orleans playersproudto help with hurricane recovery in2005
West Tunnell, third
basemanTyler Davis and starting right-hand› ed pitcher Patrick McGuff were all named to the all-WCL first team for the Elks. Also from Bend, shortstop Cadyn Grenier, outfielder Chris› tian Cavanessand utility player Cooper Hummel were selected to the second team. Honorable mentions include Elks pitchers Daniel Bis, Sam Boone, NateHunter, Aaron Leasher and Jordan Wilcox, along with Bend catcher Louis Wolf. Kelowna’s Hunter Vill anuevawasnamed the league MVP,and teammate Brady Miller was chosen asthe pitcher of the year.The Falcons’ Billy Clontz was voted the league’s coach of the year. For a complete list of the all-league teams, visit www.westcoas› tleague.corn. — Bulletin staff report
NBA Former star Dawkins dies Darryl Dawkins, whose backboard-shat› tering dunks earned him the moniker "Chocolate Thunder" and helped pave the wayfor break› away rims, has died. He was 58. The LehighCounty, Pennsylvania coroner’s office said Dawkins died Thurs› day morning at a hospital. Dawkins No cause of
By Brett Martel The Associated Press
NEW ORLEANS› Coming off a career-threat› with a downtrodden fran›
chise in a disaster zone. Sean Payton became coach of the New Orleans Saints
only after being passed over for the job he really wanted in Green Bay.
Receiver Marques Colston and linemen Jahri Jared Opp erman/The Bulletin
Bend High seniors, from left, Amidee Colleknon, Karah McCulley and Meagan Bakker look to lead the Lava Bears back to the Class 5A
girls soccer state final and perhaps a state championship.
• With strong returning players,Bendlooks to avengelast year’s state final lossto Summit Inside
By Grant Lucas The Bulletin
The bus ride home that mid-Novem›
• A breakdown of all Central Oregon girls soccer teams competing this season,C4
ber night was no doubt emotional. Of course it was, Mackenzie Grosho›
ng assures. Last season, Bend High had reached the girls soccer state champi› onship final for the second time in six
years. The Lava Bears went 15-2-2, their highest victory total since claiming the Class 5A title five years earlier. But last
season, at Salem’s Willamette Universi› ty, Bend players watched as crosstown rival Summit celebrated a 2-1 overtime win in the state final.
So of course that bus ride home was
Meagan Bakker recalls. "We played our hearts out, and we left everything we had on the field." The Lava Bears relived that game for
only a moment, recounts Groshong, but it is in their rearview mirror. Now, Bend is using that heartbreak as motivation.
Says Groshong: "I think the driving force is stronger than ever to get back there." And with the kind of arsenal the 2015 Lava Bears have at their disposal,
way we played together and the effort that everyone put in, playing or on the sideline, you can’t be disappointed. "It just makes us strive to want to do better this year."
Six all-Intermountain Conference playersfrom 2014 are back forBend this season, including second-team all-state selection Tayla Wheeler and second-team all-league players Karah McCulley and Sienna Wall. While the Lava Bears boast a younger squad than in recent years (just three seniors on the roster), they more than make up for their lack of seasoning, Groshong says, with strong team chemistry, a relentless
Lava Bears’ coach, that night is also in the past.
they could be poised to return to the big stage. "It sucks being second (place)," says
work ethic, and a combination of size, athleticism and speed that was uncom›
"That was a hard game," Bend senior
Bend senior Amidee Colleknon. "But the
SeeBears/C4
emotional. However, says Groshong, the
Evans and Zach Strief all
arrived via the 2006 draft, wondering what they were getting into as New Orle› ans struggled to recover from Hurricane Katrina. In the 10 years since the
August 2005 storm, the Saints helped the region find something to celebrate, and the longtime Saints are humbled and proud to have been part of the recovery. "When I went there, it was like, ’Man, sorry
that you’ re stuck going to New Orleans,’" said Strief, who played in college at Northwestern.
SeeSaints/C3
TENNIS
mon among recent Bend teams.
PREP VOLLEYBALL
u awsswee o i n o ener
death was immediately announced and an autopsywas scheduled fortoday. Dawkins spent parts of 14 seasons in the
ships, Sisters opened the 2015 CORVALLIS There was campaign with back-to-back arguably no better way for Sis› three-set sweeps at Santiam ters to begin its volleyball title Christian on Thursday.
NBA with Philadelphia,
defense.
New Jersey, Utahand Detroit. He averaged12 points and 6.1 rebounds in 726 career regu› lar-season games. He was selected No. 5 in the 1975NBAdraft by the 76ers. "A great man, enter› tainer, athlete andfero› cious dunker," former NBA guard Kevin John› son wrote on Twitter in tribute to Dawkins. "He will be missed but not forgotten." Dawkins was asre› vered off the court as he was on it. He remained enormously popular af› ter his playing dayswere done, evenduring his stint as a member of the Harlem Globetrotters. He would namehis dunks the "look out below," the "yo-mama" and the "rim wrecker" among them and often boasted that he hailed from the "Planet Lovetron." Injuries plagued him late in his NBAcareer, and he went overseas for several more years to play primarily in the Italian league.
Playing against Astoria, a perennial Class 4A state-plac›
the second time in six years,
ing team, and Santiam Chris›
dispatched Astoria 25-11, 25-8,
— The Associated Press
ening injury, Drew Brees had little choice but to sign
O cger securer
John Minchillo / The Associated Press
Bulletin staff report
The Outlaws, who last sea› son won the 4A state title for
25-16.
"Our middles played really strong, and our libero was picking up everything.... We just did really well tonight," said first-year Sisters coach Jason Myhre. "We saw there was a lot of distribution; the
tian, which has claimed five of 25-7 before squeaking past ball was going to all different the past six 3A state champion› Santiam Christian 25-21, 25-21, hitters. It was really good to
EATON OFF TO FASTSTART American Ashton Eaton competes in the men' s 100-meter decathlon at the IAAF World
Championships in Beijing today. Eaton, a graduate of Bend's Mountain View High, won the event in 10.23 sec-
onds, a championship record for the 10-discipline event. Eaton went on to win the long jump and placed ninth in the shot put to rack up 2,830 points
through three events as he continues his quest toward his own world-record 9,039 points, a total he reached at the U.S. Olympic trials in 2012. Canada's Damian Warner was in second place with 2,747 points. The second day begins with the 110 hurdles, which is scheduled to start at 6 p.m. PDT today. For a related story, see C2.
see that today." Thursday marked the first
Serena Williams looks to
day of contests for fall sports in
victory at the U.S. Open in New York starting Monday.
Oregon. Action continues to›
day and Saturday, leading into the beginning of the boys and girls soccer seasons, which are scheduled to kick off Tuesday. The first games of the football season are set for next Friday.
get a calendar sweepwith a
Bank only place Serena not No. 1 By Danielle Rossingh Bloomberg News
Serena Williams is on
the cusp of making sports history, yet she is still not No. 1 with marketers.
That could change with a victory at the U.S.
Open, which would secure tennis's first
’" S Open draw,C4
calendar-year sweep of the four Grand Slam champi› onships since Steffi Graf did it in 1988. Williams is the first No. 1 player to
have twice as many rank› ing points as the No. 2 while her 21 major singles championships equal the rest of the women’s field combined. Even with her domi›
nance and longevity, the David J. Phillip /The Associated Press
33-year-old Williams is not
the highest earner in the women’s game. SeeSerena/C4
C2
TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, AUGUST 28, 2015
ON THE AIR
COREB DARD
TODAY GOLF
EuropeanTour, CzechMasters LPGA Tour ,LPGA Classic PGA Tour,TheBarclays
Time TV/Radio 8 a.m. Golf 8:30 a.m. Golf 1 1 a.m. Go l f
TENNIS
WTA, Connecticut Open, semifinal ATP, Winston-SalemOpen,semifinal WTA, Connecticut Open, semifinal
BASEBALL
11:30a.m. NBCSN 1:30 p.m. NBCSN 11:30 a.m. FS1 2:30 p.m. Pac-12 5 p.m. P a c-12 4:45 a.m. NBCSN
BASEBALL
MLB, Colorado at Pittsburgh MLB, Seattle at ChicagoWhite Sox MLB, St. Louis at SanFrancisco
4 p.m. 5 p.m. 7 p.m.
MLB Roo t MLB
TRACK ANDFIELD
IAAF World Championships
4:30 p.m. USN
FOOTBALL
NFL Preseason, Detroit at Jacksonville High School, Booker T.Washington (Fla.) vs. St. ThomasAquinas (Fla.) CFL, Toronto at Edmonton High School, Oxford (Miss.) at Starkville (Miss.)
5 p.m.
CBS
5 p.m. E S PN 6 p.m. E SPN2 6 p.m. E SPNU
GOLF
4 a.m. Golf 1 0 a.m. Go l f noon CBS noon Golf 2 p.m. Golf 4 p.m. Golf 3:30 a.m. Golf 8 :20 a.m. F S 2 7 a.m. USA 7 a.m. N BCSN 9 :20 a.m. F S 2 9:30 a.m. NBC 4 p.m. P a c-12
AUTO RACING
NASCAR,Truck Series, Mosport, practice NASCAR,Truck Series, Mosport, practice NASCAR,Xfinity, Road America 180, qualifying IndyCar, GrandPrix of Sonoma, practice NASCAR,Xfinity, Road America 180 NASCAR,Truck Series, Mosport, qualifying IndyCar, GrandPrix of Sonoma, qualifying FIA World EnduranceChampionship
8 :30 a.m.
FS 1
8 :30 a.m. F S 1 9:15 a.m. NBCSN 10:30a.m. NBCSN noon N B CSN 2 :30 p.m. F S 2 3 p.m. NBCSN 4 a.m. (Sun.) FS2
FOOTBALL
High school, MiamiCentral (Fla.) atDeMatha(Md.) High school, Spartanburg (S.C.) atWakulla (Fla.) College, North Dakota State at Montana High school, Benedictine (Ohio) at C. Catholic (Ohio) NFL preseason, Pittsburgh at Buffalo High school, Arlington (Texas)vs. DeSoto(Texas) ArenaBowl, Jacksonvillevs.SanJose High school, PeachtreeRidge(Ga.)at Archer (Ga.) NFL preseason Seattle at SanDiego NFL preseason, SanFrancisco at Denver High school, De LaSalle (Calif) vs. Trinity (Texas) High school, Chandler (Ariz.) at B.Gorman (Nev.) Australian, Fremantle vs Melbourne
9 a.m. ES P N 10 a.m. ESPNU 12:30 p.m. ESPN 1 p.m. E SPNU 1 p.m. NFL 2 p.m. E SPN2 4 p.m. E S PN 4 p.m. E SPNU 5 p.m. CBS 8 p.m. NBC 6 p.m. E SPN2 7 p.m. E SPNU 11:30 p.m. FS2
BASEBALL
LLWS, Japanvs. Mexico MLB, Detroit at Toronto LLWS, Lewisberry vs. Pearland MLB, Boston at NewYork Mets MLB, Seattle at ChicagoWhite Sox MLB, NewYork Yankeesat Atlanta MLB,ChicagoCubsatLosAngelesDodgers
9:30 a.m. ABC 1 0 a.m. ML B 12:30 p.m. ABC 1 p.m. FS1 4 p.m. Roo t 4 p.m. FS1 7 p.m. MLB
TENNIS
ATP, Winston-SalemOpen,final WTA, Connecticut Open, final
10 a.m. E SPN2
noon
E S P N2
1 p.m.
NBC
HORSERACING
Travers StakesandSword Dancer Invitational TRACK ANDFIELD
IAAF World Championships
4:30 p.m. USN
BOXING
Premier Boxing Champions
LLWS LITTLELEAGUE WORLD SERIES At South Wiffiamsporl, Pa. AH TimesPDT
Thursday'sGames MexicalBaj i aCalifornia11, Barquisimento0, Barqui› simentoeliminated Pearland 9, Bonita7, 8innings, Bonita eliminated Saturday’sGames International Championship Game 27 Tokyovs. Mexicali BajaCalifornia, 9:30 a.m. United StatesChampionship Game28 Lewisberry vs. Pearland, 12:30p.m.
7 p.m.
WTA Tour Connecticut Open Thursdayat NewHaven, Conn. Quarterfinals LesiaTsurenko,Ukraine,def. Karolina Pliskova(5), CzechRepublic, 6-2,6-2. LucieSafarova(4), CzechRepublic, def. Dom inika Cibulkova,Slovakia,6-7(4), 6-4,7-5. PetraKvitova(2), CzechRepublic, def.Agnieszka Radwanska (7), Poland,7-5, 6-4. CarolineWozn iacki (3), Denmark, def. Caroline Garcia,France,6-3, 6-0.
ATP Tour Winston-SalemOpen Thursday atWinston-Salem, N.C. Quarterfinals SteveJohnson(13), UnitedStatesdef. Yen-hsun Lu, Taiwan, walkover. Pierre-Hugues Herbert, France,def. PabloCarreno Busts,Spain,4-6, 7-6(5), 6-2. KevinAnderson(2), SouthAfrica, def.BornaDoric (8), Croatia6-2, , 7-6 (1). MalekJaziri, Tunisia, def. ThomazBeffucci (6), Brazil, 6-3,6-2.
GOLF
NFL preseason NATIONALFOOTBALL LEAGUE
Today’sGames NewEnglandatCarolina,4:30p.m. Tenne sseeatKansasCity,5p.m. Detroit atJacksonvile, 5p.m. Saturday’sGames PittsburghatBuffalo,1 p.m. Minnesota at Dallas, 4p.m. Cleve landatTampaBay,4p.m. Atlantaat Miami,4p.m. N.Y.JetsatN.Y.Giants,4 p.m. Chicago at Cincinnati, 4:30p.m. Washingtonat Baltimore, 4:30 p.m. SeattleatSanDiego,5 p.m. Philadelphiaat GreenBay,5 p.m. IndianapolisatSt. Louis, 5p.m. SanFranciscoat Denver,6p.m. Sunday’sGames HoustonatNewOrleans,1 p.m. Arizonaat Oakland, 5 p.m.
SOCCER MLS MAJORLEAGUE SOCCER AH TimesPDT
GA Tour
TENNIS
FOOTBALL AH TimesPDT
SATURDAY EuropeanTour, CzechMasters PGA Tour,TheBarclays PGA Tour,TheBarclays Champions Tour, Dick’s Sporting GoodsOpen LPGA Tour ,LPGA Classic Web.corn Tour, Portland Open EuropeanTour, CzechMasters SOCCER Bundesliga, Stuttgart vs. Eintracht Frankfurt England, Chelsea vsCrystal Palace England, TeamsTBA Bundesli ga,Bayern MunichvsBayerLeverkusen England, TottenhamHotspur vs Everton Men's college,New MexicoatUCLA
Today Volleyball: Oakridge at LaPine,530p m.;TriangleLake at Trinity Lutheran,1pm.;CrosshigChristianatTrinity Lutheran, 4p.m.;Mitchell/SprayatGilchrist, noon
10 a.m. ESPN2 Saturday noon E S P N2 Volleyball: Culverat Warrenton Tournament, 8a.m. 4 p.m. E SPN2
AUTO RACING
NASCAR,Xfinity, Road America 180, practice NASCAR,Xfinity, Road America 180, practice SOCCER Bundesliga, Wolfsburg vs. Schalke Women’s college, FresnoState at Oregon State Men’s college, Marquette at OregonState England, Newcastle United vs Arsenal
ON DECK
PGA Tou Barclays Thursday At PIainfield Count ry Club Edison, N.J. Puree: $8.25 mi Hion Yardage:7,012; Par:70(34-36) Firet Round lea ders BubbaWatson 34-31 SpencerLevin 30-35 CamiloVilegas 31-34 TonyFinau 31-34 DannyLee 32-34 JasonDufner 34-32 Cameron Tringale 31-35 RusselKnox l 32-34 PaulCase y 32-34 BryceMolder 33-33 DanielSummerhay 33-34 Will Wilcox
Johnson Wagner Nick Taylor StewartOink Matt Jones KevinKisner AlexCejka Pat Perez Phil Mickelson
RickieFowler PatrickReed JasonDay EasternConference udsonSwafford W L T P t s GF GA H LeeWestwood D .C. United 1 3 9 5 44 35 3 1 Rye Ishikawa NewYork 1 1 7 6 39 4 0 2 8 KyleReifers C olumbus 10 8 8 38 43 4 3 Sean OH ’ air T oronto FC 1 0 1 0 4 3 4 4 2 4 1 Henrik Stenson N ew England 9 9 7 34 34 3 6 Jim Furyk Montreal 8 10 4 2 8 2 9 3 2 RobertStreb N ew YorkCity FC 7 12 7 2 8 3 7 4 4 angmoon Bae O rlando Cit y 7 12 7 28 3 2 4 6 S Hahn P hiladelphia 7 13 6 27 3 3 4 3 James Charl e y Ho ff man Chicago 7 13 5 2 6 3 0 3 7 HidekiMatsuyam a WesternConference JohnSenden W L T Pts GF GA Jim Herm an L os Angele s 1 3 7 7 46 49 3 2 GregOwen V ancouver 14 9 3 45 38 2 6 Jeff Overton S porting KansasCity 11 6 7 4 0 3 9 3 3 RyanPalmer Portland 1 1 8 7 40 2 8 3 0 ZachJohnson F C Dallas 11 8 5 38 33 3 0 KevinNa Seattle 1 1 13 2 3 5 3 0 2 9 GaryWoodland SanJose 1 0 10 5 3 5 3 1 2 9 BenMartin Houston 8 10 8 3 2 3 3 3 4 Zac Blair R eal Salt Lake 8 1 0 8 32 2 9 3 8 J.J. Henry Colorado 7 9 9 30 2 3 2 6 Scott Pinckney KevinStreelman Today’sGame Brendon Todd Los Angeleat s SanJose, 8p.m. DavidHearn Saturday’sGames J.B. Hol mes ColumbusatNewYorkCity FC,1 p.m. DustinJohnson MontrealatTorontoFC,1p.m. Colt Knost NewEnglandatPhiladelphia, 4p.m. Morgan Hoff mann Chicagoat OrlandoCity,4:30p.m. CharlesHowell gl Vancouver atHouston, 6p.m. JohnPeterson RealSalt LakeatFCDallas,6p.m. Vijay Singh SportingKansasCity at Colorado, 6p.m. ChadCampbel Sunday’sGames Keegan Bradley PortlandatSeattle, 2 p.m. Brendon deJonge D.C.UnitedatNewYork,4 p.m. JustinThom as Matt Kuchar Steven Bo w di tch BASKETBALL Jason Gore RorySabbatini WNBA GeorgeMcNeil WOMEN'S NATIONAL BASKETBALLASSOCIATION BrianHarman AH TimesPDT FabianGomez TroyMerritt EasternConference WebbSimpson W L P c t G B Shawn Stefani NewYork 18 8 . 6 92 BrandtSnedeker Indiana 17 10 .630 1H JasonBohn Chicago 1 7 11 .607 2 Bill Haas Washington 15 11 . 5 77 3 AdamScot Connecticut 1 2 16 .429 7 KenDuke Atlanta 11 16 .407 7r/r MarkWilson WesternConference Martin Laird W L P c t G B ChessonHadley x-Minnesota 19 9 . 6 79 BrooksKoepka x-Phoenix 17 11 . 6 07 2 Jimmy Walker Tulsa 13 14 .481 5’/z ChartSchwartzel Los Angeles 1 1 17 .393 8 KevinChapel Seattle 7 20 .2 59 11’/~ ChrisStroud SanAntonio 7 2 1 . 250 1 2 JonasBlixt x-clinched playoffspot PadraigHarrington DanielBerger Thursday’sGame ScottPiercy Phoenix81, Connecticut 80 CarlosOrtiz Today’sGames BooWeekley PhoenixatWashington, 4p.m. RusselHenl l ey Atlantaatlndiana,4 p.m. AdamHadwin MinnesotaatNewYork, 4:30p.m. SteveWheatcroft LosAngelesatTulsa,5p.m. LukeDonald SanAntonioatSeatle, 7p.m. JasonKokrak Saturday’sGames NickWatney NewYorkatConnecticut, 4p.m. MareLeishman ChicagoatAtlanta, 4 p.m. JordanSpieth
34-33 34-33 33-34 31-36 34-33 36-31 36-32 34-34 36-32 32-36 30-38 33-35 34-34 33-35 34-34 34-34 34-34 36-32 34-34 34-34 36-33 35-34 31-38 34-35 35-34 33-36 34-35 34-35 34-35 36-33 35-34 34-35 34-35 36-33 35-35 33-37 36-34 35-35 37-33 32-38 33-37 34-36 34-36 35-35 37-33 37-33 35-36 33-38 33-38 36-35 35-36 36-35 35-36 35-36 35-36 37-34 36-35 33-38 36-35 34-37 36-35 36-35 33-38 36-35 32-39 36-36 34-38 36-36 36-36 36-36 36-36 36-36 36-36 35-37 36-37 34-39 37-36 38-35 36-37 34-39 37-36 39-34 35-38 38-36 36-38 38-36 40-34
65 65 65 65 66 66 66 66 66 66 67 67 67 67 67 67 67 68 68 68 68 68 68 68 68 68 68 68 68 68 68 69 69 69 69 69 69 69 69 69 69 69 69 69 69 70 70 70 70 70 70 70 70 70 70 70 70 71 71 71 71 71 71 71 71 71 71 71 71 71 71 71 71 71 71 71 72 72 72 72 72 72 72 72 72 73 73 73 73 73 73 73 73 73 74 74 74 74
Champions Tour
arne TireClassic Thursday At RobertTrentJonesGolf Trail, Capitol Hill, The Senator Prathriffe, Alar Purse: $1.3million Yardage: 6,607;Par: 72(36-36) (a-amateur) First R ound leaders 31-34 65 BrittanyLang 34-33 67 Tiffany Joh 35-32 67 Sydnee Michaels 32-35 67 RyannOToole HyoJooKim 35-33 68 AriyaJutanugarn 35-33 68 35-33 68 Therese Koelbaek JulietaGranada 33-35 68 SiminFeng 36-32 68 LauraDiaz 32-37 69 GarlicYadloczky 36-33 69 Wei-LingHsu 35-34 69 Sei Young Kim 33-36 69 Lexi Thom pson 34-35 69 KatherineKirk 35-34 69 JackieStoelting 36-33 69 a-JanieJackson 37-32 69 CandieKung 35-34 69 Xi YuLin
AustinErnst Ally McDon ald Ji Young Oh Dori Carter StacyLewis YaniTseng PaolaMoreno Sadena AParks JaneRah RachelRohanna Lee-AnnePace Kris Tamulis Kim Kaufm an Min SeoKwak Alena Sharp BrookeM.Henderson MiHyangLee AshleighSimon VictoriaElizabeth Nannette Hil JayeMarieGreen SakuraYokomine Karlin Beck KellyTan MinjeeLee MarinaAlex MinaHarigae Angela Stanford ThidapaSuwannapura BrookePancake Ju Young Park YueerCindyFeng DewiClaireSchreefel JeongEunLee Haeji Kang Jing Yan Cydney Clanton DefineHerbin ChristinaKim HaruNom ura Shanshan Feng AnnaNordqvtst BeckyMorgan GiuliaSergas SooBin Kim NontayaSrisawang Sarah JaneSmith JenniferSong MoriyaJutanugarn CarolineMasson Lisa Ferrero Jodi EwartShadoff Julie Yang DemiRunas Kelly WShon HeeYoungPark EmmadeGroot LaetitiaBeck Ashli Bunch MeenaLee P.K.Kongkraphan Min Lee SueKim StaceyKeating ChellaChoi KarineIcher BrittanyLincicome MiJungHur KatyHarris FelicityJohnson BelenMozo SophiaPopov a-Emma Talley KendagDye NicoleJeray JeeYoungLee ElizabethNagel AmyAnderson VickyHurst SarahKemp Chic Arimura NatalieSheary KatieBurnett LisaMccloskey BeatrizRecari Ai Miyazato PernillaLindberg PazEcheverria Luciane Lee PaulaReto MariaHernandez LouiseStahle MarissaLSteen Cheyenne Woods JennyGleason KristyMcPh erson MoiraDunn MartaSanzBarrio AlisonWalshe JacqutConcolino Sara-Maude Juneau Sandra Changkija KristaPuisite MalloryBlackwelder JennySuh JenniferKirby DanahBordner HeatherBowieYoung Susana Benavides AyakoUehara
36-34 70 34-36 70 36-34 70 36-34 70 34-36 70 35-35 70 34-36 70 36-35 71 37-34 71 33-38 71 34-37 71 35-36 71 36-35 71 33-38 71 35-36 71 34-37 71 35-36 71 35-36 71 37-34 71 37-34 71 37-34 71 36-35 71 34-37 71 36-36 72 35-37 72 37-35 72 37-35 72 36-36 72 35-37 72 35-37 72 34-38 72 36-36 72 34-38 72 36-36 72 34-38 72 35-37 72 37-35 72 41-31 72 38-34 72 39-33 72 35-37 72 36-36 72 38-34 72 36-36 72 36-36 72 37-35 72 36-36 72 36-37 73 36-37 73 36-37 73 36-37 73 37-36 73 38-35 73 35-38 73 35-38 73 36-37 73 38-35 73 38-35 73 37-36 73 36-38 74 35-39 74 37-37 74 36-38 74 37-37 74 34-40 74 36-38 74 36-38 74 37-37 74 36-38 74 36-38 74 35-39 74 37-37 74 37-37 74 35-39 74 39-35 74 39-35 74 37-37 74 38-37 75 38-37 75 38-37 75 38-37 75 40-35 75 39-36 75 36-39 75 39-36 75 36-39 75 38-37 75 38-37 75 37-38 75 38-38 76 39-37 76 37-39 76 35-41 76 39-37 76 38-38 76 38-38 76 38-38 76 35-41 76 38-38 76 40-36 76 38-38 76 38-38 76 40-37 77 39-38 77 38-39 77 39-38 77 37-40—77 37-40 77 37-40 77 36-41 77 39-38 77
STATISTICS ThroughAug.23 Charles SchwabCup 1, ColinMontgom erie, 2,873Points. 2, JeffMag› gert, 2,707.3,Bernhard Langer, 2,604.4, MarcoDaw› son, 1,332.5, Billy Andrade,1,071.6, KevinSuther› land, 1,070.7,JoeDurant,937.8,WoodyAustin,844. 9, LeeJanzen,831. 10,EstebanToledo,827. ScoringAverage(Actual) 1, BernhardLanger, 68.91. 2, Colin Montgomerie, 69.12. 3,KennyPerry, 69.47. 4, JeffMaggert, 69.64. 5,Kevin Sutherland,69.71.6,Tom Lehman,69.90.7, WoodyAustin, 69.92.8 (tie), TomPerniceJr. andMi› chaelAllen,70.00. 10,BartBryant, 70.08. Driving Distance 1, JohnHuston,298.1. 2, KennyPerry, 296.8. 3, GrantWaite,295.9. 4,JesperParnevik, 294.8.5, John Riegger,291.9. 6, SandyLyte, 287.9.7, Kevin Suther› land, 287.6.8,WoodyAustin,287.4.9,WesShort,Jr., 286.9.10,FrankEsposito, 282.9. Driving Accuracy Percentage 1,Jeff Hart,81.78%.2,JoseCoceres,75.48%. 3 (tie), FredFunkandWayne Levi, 74.86%.5, Joe Durant ,74.40%.6,Corey Pavin,74.17%.7,Jay Haas,73.63%.8, BobGilder, 72.73%.9, Larry Mize, 72.69%.10,OlinBrowne,72.66%. Greens inRegulation Percentage 1,Joe Durant,77.10%.2,Tom Lehman,76.94%. 3, BernhardLanger, 76.13%.4, Colin Montgomerie, 75.40%. 5,KevinSutherland,75.34%.6,JeffMaggert, 7526%.7, Scott Dunlap, 7412%.8,BartBryant, 73.23%. 9,TomPernice Jr., 72.73%.10,Michael Allen, 72.60%. Total Driving 1, JoeDurant,23.2, MichaelAllen, 26.3, Bernhard Langer ,27.4,StephenAmes,28.5,JeffMaggert,38. 6, TommyArmour ffl, 42. 7 (tie), Scott Dunlapand KevinSutherland,44.9, MarkO’Meara, 49. 10, Kirk Triplett, 51. Putting Average 1, Bernhard Langer,1.726. 2,LeeJanzen,1.727.3, RoccoMediate,1.730. 4, Olin Browne,1.734. 5, Kirk Triplett, 1.735. 6(tie), Bart Bryant andDavid Frost, 1.743. 8 (tie), ScottHoch,Jeff MaggertandMark O’Meara,1.747. AH-AroundRanking 1, BernhardLanger,58. 2, Michael Allen, 82. 3, KennyPerry, 105.4, Jeff Maggert, 110.5, Kevin Sutherland,151.6, Colin Montgomerie, 153. 7,Gene Sauers ,173.8,Tom PerniceJr.,176.9,Tom Lehman, 177. 10,Scott Dunlap,181.
DEALS Transactions BASEBAL L AmencanLeague TAMPABAYRAYS— PlacedOFDesmondJennings onthe15-dayDL.Recalled OFJoeyButlerfrom Durham (IL). TEXASRANGERS— OptionedRHPSpencerPatton toRoundRock(PCL). Recaled RH PNickMartinez from Round Rock. Sent 18-OFKyle Blanksto Round Rock(PCL)andINFJuricksonProfar to Hickory(SAL) on rehab assignments. National League CHICAGODUBS— AcquiredRHPFernandoRodney fromSeattle forcash. FOOTBA LL National Football League NFL— SuspendedGreenBayDTLetroyGuionfor the firstthreegamesof theregular seasonfor violating the NFL Policy andProgramfor Substancesof Abuse. ReinstatedAtlantapresidentRickMcKay aschairman of the Comp etition Com mitee aftersuspendinghim from thepostfor theuseof artificial noise at Atlanta homegames. BALTIMOR ERAVENS SignedS Wil Hill to a two-yearcontract. CLEVELAND BROWNS — SignedQBPatDevlin. Waived OLRyanSeymour. GREENBAY PACKERS — Si gned WR James Butler. NEWENGLANDPATRIOTS Waived OTMark Asper andLBCameronGordon.ReleasedDTAntonio Johnson. NEW YORKJETS— SignedQBJoshJohnson. WaivedQBJakeHeaps. TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS— Agreed to terms with PK Connor Barth onatwo-yearcontract. Signed LS Br andonHartson.Waived PK Brandon Bogotay. Rele asedLBOrieLemon. HOCKEY National HockeyLeague CAROLINA HURRICANES Agreedto termswith FEliasLindholmonatwo-yearcontract extension. LOSANGELES KINGS— SignedDDamirSharipzyanovtoathree-year contract. COLLEGE FRESNOSTATE— SuspendedLBMichaelLazarus and RB Chris Moligafromits Sept.3 opener against AbileneChristian for violationsof athletic department policy. LOYOLA OFCHICAGO Named Bennie Seltzer men’sbasketball assistantcoach. MIDDLE TENNESSEE— AddedtransfersFJacorey Williams(Arkansas)andGAldonis Foote(Trinity Val› ley CC) tothe men’sbasketball program. NC STAT E Suspended RBShadrachThornton two games for aviolation ofathletic departmentrules. NOTRE DAME AnnouncedDEIshaqWiliams has beenruledineligible fortheseasonbytheNCAA, endinghiscollegeplayingcareer. PENN NamedAndrewBlumwomen’sassistant rowingcoach. RHODEISLANDCOLLEGE— NamedJoeCabral men’sassistantbasketball coach.
FISH COUNT Upstreamdarly movement of adult chrnook,lack chinook,steelheadandwild steelheadat selectedCo› lumbia Riverdamslast updatedWednesday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd B onneville 7,167 43 6 1 , 541 4 9 3 T he Daffes 2,807 289 1 ,781 6 4 1 J ohn Day 1,262 12 6 1 , 168 4 7 1 M cNary 1,191 1 2 0 1 , 340 5 2 4 Upstream year-to-date movement ofadult chinook, jack chinook,steelheadand wild steelheadat selected ColumbiaRiverdamslastupdatedWednesday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wsghd Bonneville 441,916 36,060 172,739 71,035 The Daffes 350,354 31,193 68,131 32,798 JohnDay 296,308 24,617 32,348 16,032 McNary 268,966 18,880 26,516 12,984
E S PN
Listingsarethe mostaccurate available. The Bulletin is not responsible for latechangesmadeby 7Vor /adio stations.
TRACK AND FIELD: IAAF WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS
SPORTS IN BRIEF
Photographeronly manwho cantopple Bolt
CYCLING
By Christopher Clarey
ChaveS winS6th Stage, takeS Overall lead — Esteban
BEIJING U.S. sprinters like Justin Gatliyk’? Usain Bolt
New Yorfa Times NewsService
Chaves of Colombia timed his final charge perfectly to win theSpanish Vuelta’s sixth stage in Sierra DeCazorla, Spain, notching up his sec› ond stage win to taketheoverall race leadThursday. Martin finished second, five seconds behind, andDumoulin third on thesametime.
BASEBALL CudSget StrugglingrelieVer RodneyfrOmMarinerS
The playoff-contending ChicagoCubs haveacquired struggling reliever FernandoRodneyfrom the Seattle Mariners for cash. The trade was announcedThursday. The 38-year-old Rodney hadbeen designated for assignment by Seattle last Sunday. Rodneywas 5-5 andhadgone16for22insavechancesthisseason.
Philadelphia fan hurt dy fOul ball —AwomanwasIn)Dred by a foul ball at a Philadelphia Phillies game Thursday night, hours after the Major LeagueBaseball commissioner was at thestadium and spoke about increasing fan safety. Commissioner RobManfred said there was achance that extra safety nets could be put up around the majors as early as next season. In the second inning, a fansitting five rows off the field was hit in the forehead by afoul off the bat of Freddy Galvis of the Phillies. Theteam said shewas evaluated and didn’ t need to go to ahospital. — From wire reports
ing a cautious back somersault to get back to his feet. "He took me out," Bolt said
later, uninjured and smiling. keeps beating them and then "The rumor I’m trying to start beating his chest, as he did in right now is that Justin Gatlin winning his latest gold medal, paid him off." in the 200 meters at the world Gatlin’s deadpan response: track and field championships. "I want my money back. He But Bolt d i d e v entually didn’t complete the job." get taken down on the track It was a lighthearted coda Thursday night. to a duel that had generated While Bolt was taking his much weighty discussion this latest victory lap in the Bird’ s week as Gatlin, twice sus› Nest stadium with a Jamai› pended for doping violations, cart flag wrapped around his faced off in two races against neck, a cameraman riding a Bolt. Segway scooter ran over a bolt Gatlin, 33, arrived in Beijing of all things protruding with the fastest times of the from atrackside camera raiL season in both the 100 and the That caused the scooter to
veer abruptly to the right and clip Bolt from behind. Bolt, taken by surprise, fell backward, landing on t he cameraman’s legs. He ended up flat on his back before do›
final, perhaps because Bolt put an index finger to his lips be›
200, but as it turned out, there was still no beating Bolt in the
Bird’s Nest, the modernistic stadium where he became a star.
Bolt was 3 for 3 in his finals at the 2008 Summer Olympics,
fore settling into the blocks.
But there were only roars and camera flashesafter the
starting gun sounded, and al› though Bolt and Gatlin quick› ly made up the stagger on the sprinters in adjacent lanes, Bolt, as usual, had the edge coming out of the curve. He crossed the finish line in 19.55
seconds, with Gatlin in second Andy vvong / The Associated press
Jamaica's Usain Bolt greets
the crowd as hecelebrates
in 19.74.
Bolt had beaten Gatlin by just one-hundredth of a sec›
after winning the gold in the men's 200-meter final at the
ond to win the 100, but the 200
the crowd as the eight finalists
the 2013 world championships
was a much less suspenseful world championships in Beijing affair as Gatlin was unable to Thursday. approach his top time earlier this season of 19.57. "He came through when it and heis2for2 so farin these was time to come through," world championships. said Gatlin, who was also sec› There was near silence from ond behind Bolt in the 100 at prepared for Thursday’s 200 in Moscow.
FRIDAY, AUGUST 28, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
C3
GOLF ROUNDUP
OR LEAGUE BASEBALL Angels 2, Tigers 0
cata ndings All TimesPDT AMERICANLEAGUE
Toronto NewYork Baltimore Tampa Bay Boston Kansas City Minnesota Chicago Cleveland Detroit Houston Texas Los Angeles Seattle Oakland
East Division W L
71 56 69 57 63 64 63 64 58 69
Central Division W L 78 49 65 62 60 66 60 66 60 67 West Division W L 71 57 65 61 65 62 59 69 55 73
PM GB .559 .548 1’/r .496 8 .496 8 .457 13
Pct GB .614 .512 13 476 17r/r .476 17’/r
.472 18
Pct GB .555 .516 5 512 5r/r .461 12 .430 16
Thursday’sGames
L.A. Angel2, s Detroit 0 Texas 4, Toronto 1 Kansas City5, Baltimore 3 TampaBay5,Minnesota4 Chicago WhiteSox4, Seattle 2
Today’sGames
Detroit (Boyd1-4) atToronto (Dickey8-10), 407 pm. Boston(Owens2-1) at N.Y.Mets(Harvey11-7), 4:10
p.m. KansasCity (Volquez11-7) atTampa Bay (E.Ramirez 10-4), 4:10p.m. LA. Angels(Heaney5-2) atCleveland(Salazar11-7), 4:10 p.m. N.Y. Yankees (Tanaka 9-6) at Atlanta (W.Perez4-4), 4:35 p.m. Baltimore (Gausman2-5) atTexas(Hamels1-1), 5:05 p.m. Houston(Kazmir 7-8) at Minnesota(Gibson8-9), 5;10 p.m. Seattle (TWalker9-7) at ChicagoWhite Sox(Joh. Danks6-11), 5:10p.m. Oakland (S.Gray12-5) at Arizona(Ch.Anderson6-5), 6:40 p.m. Saturday’sGames Detroit atToronto,10:07a.m. Bostonat N.Y.Mets, 1:05p.m. Kansas CityatTampaBay,3:10p.m. Houston at Minnesota,4:10p.m. L.A. Angelat s Cleveland,4:10p.m. N.Y.YankeesatAtlanta, 4:10p.m. Seattle atChicagoWhite Sox, 4:10p.m. BaltimoreatTexas,5:05 p.m. OaklandatArizona,5:10 p.m. Sunday’sGames Detroit atToronto,10:07a.m. Bostonat N.Y.Mets, 10:10a.m. KansasCityatTampaBay,10:10a.m. L.A. Angelat s Cleveland,10;10a.m. N.Y.YankeesatAtlanta, 10:35a.m. Houstonat Minnesota,11:10a.m. SeattleatChicagoWhite Sox,11;10a.m. BaltimoreatTexas,12:05p.m. Oakland atArizona,1:10 p.m.
DETROIT Matt Shoemaker pitched one-hit ball into the eighth inning in his hometownballpark, Albert Pujols drove inonerun and scored another andthe LosAnge› les Angels beatDetroit. The Angels began thedaytrailing Minnesota by one gamefor the second American League wild-card spot, with Texas also a half-gameaheadof them.
National League Giants 9,Ctlbs1 SAN FRANCISCO Kelby Tom› linson hit a grandslamfor his first career homerunand Marion Byrd added a three-run shot, leading Madison BumgarnerandSanFran› cisco over theChicagoCubs. The win moved the Giants within 5f/z
games of theCubsfor the second NL wild-card spot.
Cardinals 5, Diamondbacks3 PHOENIX Brandon Moss hit his first home runwith St. Louis and Tony Cruzhit his first of the season, leading theCardinals to awin over Arizona to complete a four-game sweep. It wastheCardinals’ fifth straight win overall andthey finished 7-0 against the Diamond› backs this season.
St. Louis Arizona ab r hbi ab r hbi Los Angeles Detroit Chicago San Franci s co M crpnt1b-3b4 1 1 1 Inciartrf 3 0 2 2 ab r hbi ab r hbi ab r hbi ab r hbi Pham cf-If 4 0 1 0 Pollock cf 4 0 0 0 Calhonrf 3 1 0 0 Kinsler2b 4 0 0 0 D enorfilf 4 0 0 0 Aokilf 3 1 1 0 Heywrdrf 5 0 1 0 Gldsch1b 3 0 0 0 Troutcf 3 0 1 0 Tycgnslf 3 0 0 0 JRussgp 0 0 0 0 Brodwyp 0 0 0 0 J hPerltss 4 0 0 0 DPerltlf 4 1 1 0 Puiolsdh 3 1 1 1 Micarr1b 3 0 0 0 S chwrrc-If 4 0 0 0 Osichp 0 0 0 0 Wong2b 4 1 2 1 Wcastgc 4 1 1 0 Cron1b 4 0 2 0 VMrtnzdh 3 0 0 0 Bryantrf-cf 4 0 1 0 MDuffy3b 4 1 1 1 Mosslf 2 1 1 2 JaLam3b 4 0 2 1 Aybar ss 4 0 2 0 JMrtnz rf 3 0 1 0 R izzo1b 4 1 1 0 Belt1b 2 2 0 0 Choate p 0 0 0 0 A.Hill 2b 3 1 0 0 Victornlf 3 0 0 1 Cstllns3b 3 0 0 0 Stcastr2b 4 0 1 1 Poseyc 4 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 Owingsss 3 0 0 0 C .Perezc 4 0 1 0 Avilac 3 0 0 0 A Russgss 3 0 0 0 Byrdrf 3 2 1 3 Broxtnp Cishekp 0 0 0 0 RDLRsp 1 0 0 0 Cowart3b 3 0 0 0 Jlglesisss 3 0 0 0 Szczurcf 1 0 0 0 Tmlnsn2b 4 2 2 4 Manessp 0 0 0 0 Tomasph 1 0 0 0 G reen2b 3 0 0 0 Gosecf 2 0 1 0 Coghlnph-rf 1 0 0 0 J.Perezcf 4 0 2 1 Rosnthlp 0 0 0 0 MtRynlp 0 0 0 0 RJcksn 2b 0 0 0 0 Harenp 1 0 0 0 Adrianzss 3 0 0 0 Tcruzc 4 1 1 1 A.Reed p 0 0 0 0 Totals 3 0 2 7 2 Totals 2 70 2 0 Rosscpp 0 0 0 0 Bmgrnp 2 0 1 0 Molinac 0 0 0 0 Sltlmchph 1 0 0 0 Los Angeles 00 0 001 601 2 LaStell ph-3b 1 0 0 0 Kontosp 0 0 0 0 GGarci3b 1 1 0 0 DHdsnp 0 0 0 0 Detroit 000 000 Bgg 0 2 0 0 0 Maxwllph-If 2 0 0 0 MrRynlph-1b2 0 1 0 Zieglerp 0 0 0 0 E Casteganos (7). DP Detroit 1. LOB Los JHerrr3b MMntrph-c 1 0 0 0 Angeles5, Detroit 1. 38 J.Martinez (2). CS Trout Totals 3 0 1 3 1 Totals 3 19 109 CMrtnzp 2 0 0 0 Ahmedph 1 0 0 0 Bourioscf 1 0 0 0 (6), Cron (1), Gose(10). SF Victorino. 610 Bgg BBB 1 Totals 33 5 8 5 Totals 3 2 3 6 3 IP H R E R BBSD Chicago 9 San Francisco 614 Bgg B4x St. Louis 126 6 2 6 DBB 6 Los Angeles E S ch w a rber (5). DP C h ic a go 1. LO B C hi› 636 Bgg DBB 3 ShoemakerW,6-9 71-3 1 0 0 1 5 cago 4,SanFrancisco 3. 2B St.castro (14), Posey Arizona DP S t . Loui s 1, Arizona 1. LOB S t. Loui s J.SmithH,29 2 3- 1 0 0 0 1 J.P erez (1). 3B Aoki(3). HR Byrd(21), Tom› 8, Arizona8. 28 M.carpenter (30), Wong(23). StreetS,31-35 1 0 0 0 0 2 (li22), nson(1).SB Aoki (14). HR Moss(1), T.cruz(1). CS Bourios (7). S C. Detroit IP H R E R BBSD Martinez. Wolf L,0-2 7 5 1 1 2 5 Chicago IP H R E R BBSD B.Hardy 1 0 0 0 0 2 HarenL,8-9 61- 3 6 5 5 3 4 St. Louis B.Rondon 1 2 1 1 1 0 Rosscup 2-3 1 0 0 0 0 C.MartinezW,13-6 6 4 3 3 2 6 T 2:39. A 36,198(41,574). J.Russeg 1 3 4 4 2 0 Choate 0 1 0 0 0 0 San Francisco BroxtonH,14 1 0 0 0 0 2 BumgarnerW,16-6 6 2 1 1 2 12 Cishek Rangers 4, BlueJays1 0 0 0 0 3 0 Kontos 1 0 0 0 0 1 ManessH,17 1 0 0 0 0 2 Broadway 1 0 0 0 0 2 RosenthalS,41-43 1 1 0 0 1 2 ARLINGTON, Texas— YovaniGal- Osich 1 1 0 0 0 1 Arizona lardo earnedhis 100th careervic› WP Bumgarner. R.De LaRosaL,11-6 5 5 5 5 4 4 Mat.Reynold s 1 2 - 3 10 0 2 0 tory, Delino DeShields had a part in T 2:36.A 41,847(41,915). A.Reed 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 all the Texasrunsevenwithout an 1 1-3 1 0 0 0 1 D.Hudson Dodgers 1, Reds0 2-3 1 0 0 0 0 Ziegler RBI and theRangersstopped To› Choatepitchedto 1batterin the7th. ronto’s five-gamewinning streak. CINCINNATI Zack Greinke Cishekpitchedto 3batters in the8th. The AL East-leading BlueJays lead and two relievers combined on Balk R.DeLa Rosa. a T 3:24. A 22,036(48,519). the majors with 5.4 runspergame,
and had outscored opponents 54› 19 during their recent string. Toronto
Texas
ab r hbi ab r hbi Tlwtz kdh 5 0 0 0 DShldscf 2 2 2 0 D nldsn3b 3 0 0 0 Choorf 5 0 1 0 B autistrf 2 1 1 0 Strsrgrlf 0 0 0 0 Encrncfb 4 0 1 1 Fielderdh 4 0 1 0 DNavrrc 3 0 1 0 Beltre3b 3 0 1 0 Pigarcf 4 0 0 0 Morlnd1b 4 0 1 1 Reverelf 4 0 3 0 Andrusss 4 0 2 0 Pnngtn2b 3 0 0 0 Venalelf-rf 4 0 1 0 Goinsss 4 0 2 0 BWilsnc 3 1 1 0 Alberto2b 4 1 1 0 Totals 3 2 1 8 1 Totals 3 34 111 Toronto 0 00 000 610 1 4 Texas 100 000 Sgx E Bautista (3). DP Texas3. LOB Toronto 9, Texas10.28 Encarnacion (26), Andrus(24). SB›
four-hitter and theLosAngeles Dodgers completed athree-game sweep of reeling Cincinnati.
Los Angeles Cincinnati ab r hbi ab r hbi
JRollnsss 2 0 0 0 Schmkrlf 4 0 1 0 Utley2b 2 0 1 0 Frazier3b 4 0 0 0 A Gnzlz1b 2 0 0 0 Votto1b 2 0 0 0 VnSlyk1b-rf 2 0 0 0 Phillips2b 4 0 0 0
Nets 9, Phillies 5 (13 innings) PHILADELPHIA Daniel Murphy hit a go-ahead,two-run double in the 13th inning after making a spectacular defensive play toend the 10th, leading the New York
JuTrnr3b 3 1 1 0 Suarezss 4 0 0 0 Mets to their seventh straight victo› E thierlf 3 0 3 0 Brucerf 3 0 0 0 East Division ry. Reliever CarlosTorres led off the KHrndzph-If 1 0 0 0 Bourgscf 4 0 1 0 W L Pct GB P uigrf 4 0 2 0 Brnhrtc 3 0 2 0 13th with a single to center, went NewYork 71 56 .559 Nicasiopr 0 0 0 0 DeSclfnp 2 0 0 0 Washington 64 62 .508 6’/r Ellisc 0 0 0 0 B.Penaph 1 0 0 0 to second onCurtis Granderson’s Atlanta 54 73 .425 17 Grandlc-1b 4 0 0 0 Hooverp 0 0 0 0 single to left and theybothscored Miami 51 77 .398 20r/r Pedrsncf 3 0 0 0 Achpmp 0 0 0 0 on Murphy’s opposite-field hit off Philadelphia 50 78 ,391 21 ’/i Greinkp 2 0 0 0 Central Division Hector Neris (2-2). Crwfrdph 1 0 0 0 W L Pct GB Hatchrp 0 0 0 0 St. Louis 82 45 .646 Donaldson(5), Bautista (6), Revere(1), Andrus (12). Guerrrph 1 0 0 0 New York Philadelphia Pittsburgh 77 49 .611 4’/e CS DeShields (6). JiJhnsnp 0 0 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi Chicago 73 53 .579 Br/r IP H R E R BBSD Totals 30 1 7 0 Totals 3 1 0 4 0 Grndrsrf 6 2 4 0 CHrndz2b 6 0 2 0 Milwaukee 53 74 .417 29 Toronto LosAngeles 610 Bgg BBB — 1 Cespdscf-If 6 1 1 2 ABlanc3b 5 1 0 0 Cincinnati 52 74 413 29r/e EstradaL,11-8 6 4 1 1 3 6 Cincinnati B g gBgg BBB — 0 DnMrp1b 6 1 3 2 OHerrrcf 2 1 0 0 Hendriks 1 6 3 3 0 0 West Division E Philips (7). DP Cincinnati 5. LOB Los D Wrght3b 6 2 2 0 Giles p 0 0 0 0 2-3 1 0 0 2 1 Angeles W L Pct GB Hawkins 8, Cincinnati 7.SB Bruce(9). KJhnsn2b 6 1 1 1 DBrwnph 1 0 0 0 Aa.Sanche z 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Los Angeles 70 56 .556 IP H R E R BBSD dArnadc 5 1 1 2 Arauiop 0 0 0 0 SanFrancisco 68 59 .535 2’/r Texas Los Angeles Confortlf 7 0 2 1 LuGarcp 0 0 0 0 0 3 2 GreinkeW,14-3 7 Arizona 62 65 .488 Br/r GallardoW,11-9 51-3 3 0 4 0 0 2 9 F amilip 0 0 0 0 Nerisp 0 0 0 0 2-3 0 0 0 1 2 SanDiego 62 65 .488 8’/r Kela H,16 HatcherH,B 1 0 0 0 1 1 Teiadass 6 0 0 0 DeFrtsp 0 0 0 0 1 3- 2 0 0 1 1 Jir Johnson Colorado 51 74 408 18’/2 DiekmanH,6 S,10-16 1 0 0 0 0 0 Niesep 3 0 1 0 Howardph 1 0 0 0 S.DysonH,6 1 2 - 3 2 1 1 0 2 Cincinnati V errettp 0 0 0 0 Francrrf 5 0 2 2 Thursday’sGames Sh.Togeson S,26-28 1 1 0 0 0 0 DeSclafaniL,7-10 7 6 1 1 1 6 Cuddyrph 1 0 0 0 Altherrlf-cf 6 1 2 1 PB B.Wilson. LA. Dodgers1,Cincinnati0 Hoover 1 0 0 0 2 1 R oblesp 0 0 0 0 Ruf1b 6112 T 3:40. A 17,884(48,114). SanFrancisco9, ChicagoCubs1 A.chapma n 1 1 0 0 1 1 G lmrtn p 1 0 0 0 Ruizc 4000 N.Y.Mets9, Philadelphia5, 13innings HBP byHoover(Utley), byDeSclafani (utley). CTorrsp 1 1 1 0 Galvisss 4 0 0 0 Washin gton4,SanDiego2 T 2: 5 4. A 25,5 29 (42,31 9). Lagarscf 0 0 0 0 Harangp 2 1 1 0 Royals 5, Orioles 3 Pittsburgh2, Miami1 Sweenyph 1 0 0 0 St. Louis5,Arizona3 JGomzp 0 0 0 0 Nationals 4, Padres 2 Today’sGames KANSAS CITY, Mo. Yordano A schelf 2 0 0 0 Colorado(J.Gray0-0) at Pittsburgh (Liriano 9-6), Ventura struck out acareer-high 11 Totals 54 9 168 Totals 4 5 5 8 5 4:05 p.m. WASHINGTON Jayson Werth New York 000 23B Bgg 000 4 — 9 in just six innings, PauloOrlando Miami(conley1-1)atWashington(Scherzer 11-10), Phila delphia 006 ggg Bgg 000 0 — 6 and RyanZimmermanhomered, 4:05 p.m. E d’Arnaud(3), Galvis(15), Neris 2(2). DP› homered and Kansas Ci t y hung on SanDiego(Kennedy8-11) atPhiladelphia (Nola4-1), and starter Joe Ross al l o wed only a New York 2, Philadelphia 2. LOBNew York 14, to beat struggling Baltimore. Ven› bunt single in six innings asWash› Philadel 4:05 p.m. phia 7. 28 Granderson (27), Dan.Murphy Boston(Owens2-1) at N.Y. Mets(Harvey11-7), 4:10 tura (9-7) allowed two hits andfour (30), Conforto(8),Altherr2 (4). HR Cespedes(8), i n gton beat San Di e go. p.m. K.Johnson(12), d’Arnaud(9), Ruf(6). SB C.Her› N.Y.Yank ees(Tanaka 9-6) at Atlanta (W.Perez4-4), walks to improve to 5-0 in his past nandez (19). 4:35 p.m. seven starts. San Diego Washington IP H R E R BBSD Cincinnati(R.lglesias3-5)at Milwaukee(Jungmann ab r hbi ab r hbi New York 7-5), 5:10p.m. Jnkwskrf 4 0 0 0 Werthlf-rf 4 2 2 1 Baltimore KansasCity Niese 6 5 5 5 5 5 Oakland (S.Gray12-5) at Arizona(Ch.Anderson6-5), Spngnr2b 3 2 1 0 Rendon2b-3b5 1 2 0 Verrett ab r hbi ab r hbi 1 0 0 0 0 1 6:40 p.m. Solarte3b 3 0 0 1 Harperrf-cf 3 0 2 0 Robics MMchd3b 4 0 1 1 AEscorss 4 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 1 ChicagoCubs (Hammel 7-5) atL.A.Dodgers(Kershaw GParrarf-cf 5 0 0 0 Zobristdh 4 1 2 0 Uptonlf 3 0 0 0 YEscor3b 2 0 1 1 12-3 0 0 0 0 3 Gilmartin 10-6), 7:10p.m. Alonso1b 3 0 1 1 Espinos2b-If 1 0 0 0 AJonescf 0 0 0 0 KMorls1b 3 0 1 0 C.TorresW,5-5 2 1-3 1 0 0 0 1 St. Louis(Wacha15-4) atSanFrancisco(Leake9-6), Janishph-ss 3 0 2 0 Hosmerpr-1b 0 1 0 0 UptnJrcf 4 0 1 0 Zmrmn1b 4 1 2 2 Familia 1 1 0 0 0 1 7:15 p.m. Amarstss 2 0 0 0 Dsmndss 4 0 1 0 C.Davis1b-rf 3 0 0 0 Mostks3b 4 1 3 2 Philadelphia Saturday’sGames Gyorkoph 1 0 0 0 WRamsc 4 0 1 0 Wietersdh 4 0 0 0 SrPerezc 4 1 1 1 Harang 6 9 5 5 3 0 Bostonat N.Y.Mets, 1:05p.m. Qcknshp 0 0 0 0MTaylrcf 2 0 0 0 J.Gomez P earcelf 3 0 0 0 Riosrf 4030 12-3 2 0 0 1 2 St. LouisatSanFrancisco, 1:05p.m. Hedgesc 3 0 0 0 TTurnr2b 1 0 0 0 S choop2b 4 1 1 0 Orlandlf 3 1 1 2 2 1-3 1 0 0 0 2 Giles Colorado at Pittsburgh,4:05p.m. Cashnrp 2 0 0 0 J.Rossp 2 0 0 0 Flahrlyss-1b 4 1 1 1 Infante2b 4 0 0 0 Arauio 0 0 0 0 1 0 Miami atWashington, 4:05p.m. BNorrsp 0 0 0 0 CRonsnph 1 0 0 0 Josephc 4 1 1 1 JDysoncf 4 0 0 0 Lu.Garcia 1 0 0 0 2 1 SanDiegoatPhiladelphia, 4:05p.m. Totals 34 3 6 3 Totals 3 4 5 12 5 Barmesss 1 0 0 0 Janssnp 0 0 0 0 12-3 4 4 2 0 1 Neris L,2-2 Cincinnatiat Milwaukee,4:10p.m. Fisterph 1 0 0 0 B altimore 000 0 0 0 102 3 De Fratus 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 N.Y.Yankeesat Atlanta, 4:10p.m. 5 Storenp 0 0 0 0 Kansas City 0 0 0 2 1 1 10x Arauiopitchedto 1batterin the11th. OaklandatArizona,5:10 p.m. Papelnp 0 0 0 0 E J.Dyson (2). DP Baltimore 1. LOB Bal› HBP by Niese (Ruiz), byNaris (d’Arnaud).WP J. ChicagoCubsat L.A. Dodgers, 6:10p.m. 3 44 1 1 4 Gomez. timore 8,KansasCity 7. 28 Schoop (10), Joseph Totals 2 9 2 3 2 Totals Sunday’sGames B g g 1 0 0 BB1 2 T 4:32. A 22,526(43,651). (15), Zobrist (27),K.Morales(35), Moustakas(25), San Diego Bostonat N.Y.Mets, 10:10a.m. B g g 6 2 1 1gx 4 Rios (16). 38 Rios (1). HR Flaherty (6), Orlando Washington Coloradoat Pittsburgh,10:35a.m. E— W.Ramos(5).LOB— SanDiego4,Washington (5). SFOrlando. Miami atWashington, 10:35a.m. Leaders IP H R E R BBSD 11. 38 UptonJr. (3). HR Werth (4), Zimmerman N.Y.Yankeesat Atlanta, 10:35a.m. Baltimore (11). SBDesmond (12). SF Solarte. AMERICAN LEAGUE SanDiegoatPhiladelphia, 10:35a.m. IP H R E R BBSD BATTING TillmanL,9-9 6 9 4 4 1 1 —Kipnis, Cleveland, .325;Ncruz, Se› Cincinnatiat Milwaukee,11:10a.m. J.Rondon 2 3 1 1 0 0 San Diego a ttle, .320; Brantl e y, Cl e vel a nd,.320; Fielder,Texas, St. LouisatSanFrancisco, 1:05p.m. CashnerL,5-13 5 2-3 9 3 3 3 6 .316; Bogaerts,Boston,.315; KansasCity Lcain, KansasCity, Oakland atArizona,1:10 p.m. 13 0 0 0 0 1 .311;Hosmer,KansasCity,.311. VenturaW,9-7 6 2 0 0 4 11 BNorris ChicagoCubsat L.A. Dodgers, 5:05p.m. Quackenbush 2 2 1 1 0 2 K.Herrera 1 1 1 1 0 0 RUNS — Do na ld so n, T or on to, 97; Dozier,Minnesota, W.Davis 1 0 0 0 0 2 Washington Bautista,Toronto, 85;Kinsler, Detroit, 82;Trout, Los 1 1 0 2 7 87; G.Holland 1 3 2 2 0 1 J.RossW,5-5 6 ngeles,81;Gardner, NewYork, 79;Lcain, KansasCity, American League Janssen H,12 1 1 0 0 0 2 A WP Ventura. 78; Hosm er,KansasCity, 78;MMachado, Baltimore, 78. StorenH,3 1 0 0 0 0 0 T 2:46. A 31,155(37,903). RBI — Donaldson, Toronto, 101; CDavis, Balti› White Sox 4, Mariners 2 PapelbonS,21-21 1 1 1 1 1 1 more, 91; Bautista, Toronto, 87;JMartinez, Detroit, 87; HBP by B.Norris (Harper), byCashner (YEscobar). KMorales,Kansas City, 87; Ncruz,Seatle, 82;Encar› Rays 5, Twins 4 WP Cashner.Balk Papelbon. CHICAGO Carlos Rodontook nacion,Toronto,80. T 3:01.A 28,908 (41,341). HITS — Ncruz, Seattle, 155;Kinsler, Detroit, 154; a shutout into the seventh inning, ST. PETERSBURG,Fla. Reliev› Altuve,Houston,151;Fielder,Texas, 150; Bogaerts, Adam Eatonhadthree hits and Boston,149;MMachado, Baltimore,147; Donaldson, ersBrandon Gomes,AlexColome Pirates 2, Marlins 1 Toronto,146;Hosmer,KansasCity, 146. scored three runs,andthe Chicago and Brad Boxberger combinedfor DOUBLES —Brantley, Cleveland, 38; Kipnis, White Sox beatSeattle. JoseAbreu 4Ys scoreless innings andTampa MIAMI Gerrit Colesnapped Cleveland,35;KMorales, KansasCity,35; Donaldson, and TrayceThompson hadRBI the longest winless drought of his Toronto,34;Kinsler, Detroit, 32; Dozier,Minnesota, BayendedMinnesota'ssix-game Cano,Seattle, 30. doubles forChicago.Thompson career, PedroAlvarezhomered and 31;HOME winning streak. Theloss dropped RUNS—Ncruz, Seattle, 39;CDa vis,Balti› had two hits andAvisail Garcia had the Twins ahalf-game behind Texas Pittsburgh held on tobeat Miami. more,35;Donaldson, Toronto, 34;JMartinez, Detroit, 34;Puiols,LosAngeles,34;Trout,LosAngeles,33; two RBls for theWhite Sox, who for the second ALwild-card spot. Teixeira,NewYork, 31. Miami Pittsburgh had lost three of their previous four. STOLENBASES—Altuve, Houston, 33;Burns, ab r hbi ab r hbi Minnesota TampaBay Oakland,25;Lcain, KansasCity, 24;JDyson, Kansas GPolnc rf 2 0 1 0 DGordn 2b 4 0 1 0 Seattle Chicago ab r hbi ab r hbi SMartelf 4 0 0 0 ISuzukirf 4 0 0 0 City, 23;DeShields, Texas, 22;Gose, Detroit, 19;RDa› ab r hbi ab r hbi B uxtoncf 4 0 0 0 Guyerrf 3 1 0 0 Mcctchcf 2 0 1 0 Prado3b 4 1 2 0 vis, Detroit,18;Gardner, NewYork,18. K Martess 4 0 0 0 Eatoncf 3 3 3 0 Hrmnnph 1 0 0 0 Nava1b 4 0 2 0 A rRmr3b 3 0 1 0 Bour1b 4 0 0 0 AJcksncf 4 0 2 0 Mecarrlf 4 0 0 0 Dozier2b 3 1 1 0 Longori3b 3 0 0 1 NATIONAL LEAGUE JHrrsnpr-3b 0 0 0 0 Ozunacf 4 0 2 0 N.cruz rf 4 0 1 0 Abreu1b 4 1 2 1 Mauerdh 4 0 1 0 Forsyth2b 4 2 2 1 BATTING —Harper, Washington, .334;DGordon, Cervellic 2 1 1 0 Dietrchlf 2 0 0 1 Cano2b 2 1 1 0 AvGarcdh 3 0 1 2 Sano3b 4 0 2 1 Acarerss 4 0 0 0 Stewartc 2 0 0 0 Hchvrrss 3 0 0 0 Miami, .333; Goldschmidt,Arizona,.329; Pollock, G utirrzlf 3 1 1 2 TrThmrf 4 0 2 1 P louffe1b 3 0 0 0 JButlerlf 4 1 2 1 P Alvrz1b 3 1 1 1 Mathisc 2 0 0 0 Arizona,.319;Posey,San Francisco, .315; LeMahieu, Trumo1b 4 0 1 0 AIRmrzss 4 0 0 0 TrHntrrf 4 0 0 0 TBckhdh 2 1 1 0 SRdrgz1b 1 0 0 0 Realmtph-c 1 0 1 0 Colorado,.311;Panik, SanFrancisco, .309. JMontrdh 2 0 00 Saladin3b 3 0 0 0 EdEscrss 4 2 2 1 Jasoph-dh 2 0 0 0 RUNS —Harper, Washington, 89;Pollock, Arizo› NWalkr2b 3 0 0 1 Nicolinp 1 0 0 0 S.Smith ph-dh2 0 1 0 CSnchz2b 3 0 1 0 KSuzukc 4 1 2 1 Kiermrcf 2 0 2 0 Mercerss 4 0 1 0 Gigespiph 1 0 0 0 na, 89; Fowler,Chicago,84; Goldschm idt, Arizona, B Miger3b 4 0 0 0 Flowrsc 3 0 0 0 SRonsnlf 3 0 1 0 Arenciic 2 0 0 1 G.colep 2 0 1 0 Brrclghp 0 0 0 0 81; Granderson,NewYork, 75; Votto, Cincinnati, 75; Zuninoc 3 0 0 0 ERosarph 1 0 0 0 Watsonp 0 0 0 0 BMorrsp 0 0 0 0 Mcarpenter, St. Louis,74. Seagerph 1 0 0 0 RBI — Goldschmidt, Arizona,94; Arenado, Colora› Totals 3 5 4 9 3 Totals 3 05 9 4 Morseph 1 0 0 0 Roiasph 0 0 0 0 Totals 3 3 2 7 2 Totals 3 14 9 4 Minnesota 0 1 1 2 0 0 Bgg 4 M elncnp 0 0 0 0 Dunnp 0 0 0 0 do,92;Mccutchen,Pittsburgh,85;Posey,SanFranSeattle OBB OBB 200 2 5 Tampa Bay 2 0 0 0 1 2 Bgx Totals 2 9 2 7 2 Totals 3 01 6 1 cisco ,80;Kemp,SanDiego,78;Bryant,Chicago,77; 4 Chicago 162 016 Ogx E A.cabrera(6). DP Minnesota 1, Tampa Bay Pittsburgh 6 1 0 1 0 0 BBB — 2 Rizzo,Chicago,77. E B.Miger (14). DP Seattle 2. LOB Seattle 7, 1. LOB Minnesota6, TampaBay5. 2B Mauer (25), Miami HITS — DGordon, Miami, 157;Pollock, Arizona, Bgg Bgg 1BB 1 Chicago5. 28 S.Smith (26), Abreu(27), TrThomp› Sano(13),K.Suzuki 2 (15), Forsythe(23), TBeckham DP Pittsburgh 1, Miami 2. LOB Pittsburgh 153; Goldschm idt, Arizona,149;Markakis, Atlanta, son 2(4). HR G utierrez (9). SF Av.Garcia. (7). HREdu.Escobar(8), Forsythe(15). SF Lon› 7, Miami 4. 38 Cervegi (5). HR PAlvarez (21). 147; Blackmon,Colorado,140; LeMahieu, Colorado, IP H R E R BBSD goria Arencibia CS G.Polanco (10). S G.cole, Roias. SF N. 140; Posey,SanFrancisco, 139. Seattle IP H R E R BBSD Walker,Dietrich. DOUBLES —Frazier, Cincinnati, 38;Mccutchen, 62-3 9 4 3 0 3 Minnesota Elias L,4-7 IP H R E R BBSD Pittsburgh,32;Arenado,Colorado,31; Pollock,Arizo› 1 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Kensing MiloneL,6-4 51 - 3 8 5 4 1 2 PiNsburgh na, 31;Mcarpenter, St. Louis,30;Harper,Washington, 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 G.coleW,15-7 7 1 -3 5 Chicago Boyer 1 1 0 4 30; MarkakisAtl , anta,30; DanMurphy, NewYork, 30; RodonW,6-5 6 3 2 2 3 5 Cotts 1 0 0 0 1 2 WatsonH,33 2 - 3 0 0 0 0 1 Rizzo,Chicago,30. 11-3 1 0 0 0 0 MelanconS,41-43 1 Petricka 0 1 0 0 0 0 Fien 1 0 0 0 0 HOME RUNS—Harper,Washington,31;Arenado, DukeH,22 1 1 0 0 0 2 TampaBay Miami Colorado,30;CaGonzalez,Colorado,30; Frazier, Cin› 41-3 8 4 3 2 5 NicolinoL,2-2 6 N.JonesH,3 1 2 0 0 0 1 Smyly 6 2 2 4 1 cinnati,29;Stanton,Miami, 27;Goldschmidt, Arizona, Dav.RobertsonS,27-331 0 0 0 0 0 B.Gomes W,2-4 1 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 Barraclough 1 0 0 0 1 2 25; Rizzo,Chicago,25. Rodon pitchedto2 baters inthe 7th. ColomeH,2 2 1 0 0 0 2 B.Morris 1 1 0 0 0 0 STOLENBASE S—BH amilton, Cincinnati, 54; Petrickapitchedto 1batter inthe7th. BoxbergerS,31-35 1 0 0 0 0 3 Dunn 1 0 0 0 0 2 DGordon,Miami,45; Blackmon, Colorado,33; Pollock, HBP byElias(Eaton). PB K.Suzuki. WP Nicolino. Arizona,33;SMarte, Pittsburgh,25; Revere, Philadel› T 2:39.A 15,076 (40,615). T 2:49. A 9,375(31,042). T 2:46.A 19,950 (37,442). phia,24;Maybin,Atlanta, 21;GPolanco, Pittsburgh, 21. NATIONALLEAGUE
Spieth stumblesearly, Watson, Finaustart fast The Associated Press EDISON, N.J.
The start
with two shots to spare. That was pressure. Now he feels
of the FedEx Cup playoffs as though he has nothing to brought out the worst score lose as he tries to get into the from Jordan Spieth in three top 100 who advance to the months. second event next week at In his first tournament as
the TPC Boston.
"Last week was an import› No. 1 in the world, Spieth had a pair of three-putt bogeys, ant week," said Villegas, who hit a tee shot in the water,
is No. 123. "It hasn’t been
shot 40 on his back nine and the best of years, and just to wound up with a 4-over 74 be able to sneak in here and in the opening round of The give myself a chance ... I get Barclays. It was his highest off to a good start, and three score since a 75 in The Play› more rounds to go and keep ers Championship, the last it going." time he missed a cut. Also on Thursday: "Just lost a little bit of fo› Lang shoots 65 to take cus," Spieth said."All in all, Classic lead: PRATTVILLE, I’m just going to take today Ala. Brittany Lang birdied as a fluke round. I still be›
five of the first seven holes in
lieve I’m playing well. It just windy conditions and shot a happened to be an off day on 7-under 65 to take the first› a day where it counted."
round leadin the Yokohama
Bubba Watson and Tony Finau powered their way
Tire LPGA Classic. Lang had a two-stroke lead over Tiffa›
ny Joh, Sydnee Michaels and Club and each had a 5-under Ryann O’ Toole. 65. They were in a four-way Two share Czech lead: around Plainfield Country
tie for the lead that included
VYSOKY U J EZD,
Spencer Levin and Camilo Villegas, players who are in dire need of a good week. Villegas only got into the
Republic
C zech
t op 125 to qualify for t h e
Matt Fitzpatrick, Sam Hutsby,
Spain’s Eduardo
De La Riva and Italy’s Rena› to Paratore shared the Czech
Masters lead at 7-under 65.
playoffs last week at the Pelle Edberg and Thomas Pi› Wyndham Championship, eters were tied for third at 66.
Saints Continued from C1 "Now I think the city’s had
leaks. The stadium, which
had been used as a storm shelter, also had to be sani› tized because tens of thou›
such a renaissance, and the sands of evacuees were growth is kind of exploding stranded in sweltering con› right now. It’s fun to be a part of it, and it’s fun to see that
ditions there without elec›
of one of the most devastat›
when the Saints thrashed ri›
tricity or plumbing for nearly city you feel like you kind of aweek. grew up with expand and get Renovations were not en› so much respect." tirely finished, but enough The 10-year anniversary was done to host football ing hurricanes in U.S. his› val Atlanta, 23-3, on Sept. 25, tory is a time of reflection 2006. for many connected to the Saints, whose return to New
Strief still vividly remem›
Orleans in 2006, following
bers looking into the faces of Saints fans as he savored
one season of displacement
a celebratory walk t o
the
to SanAntonio,became one tunnel. "The amount of emotion of the best feel-good stories in NFL history. Rebuilding in those people and those residents, who had been wor› were the ones you could see, ried they might lose the team so you’ ve got to imagine it for good, widely credited the was behind them as w ell club’s triumphant return for it was so evident," Strief lifting spirits at a time when
recalled. "Who’s emotional
life was particularly hard. "What happened was you saw people come togeth› er, you saw the city come together. It made us as a
after becoming 3-0 like re› ally emotional? And I think in that moment you realized, man, this is so much more."
Three seasons later, in
2009-10, came the Saints’ great for them," said Evans, only Super Bowl title, which
team want to do something
who helped out on Habitat set off raucous block par› for Humanity projects in ties rivaling anything seen flood-ravaged n e i ghbor›during Mardi Gras. hoods where many resi› The MVP of that Super dents otherwise could not
Bowl was Brees, whose suc›
afford to rebuild. "It just felt good to see those people happy, to see the people of New Orleans happy when we have success, and just by doing what we love." Payton was hired to his first head coaching job in
cess was hardly assured when he first landed in New
N ew Orleans about f i v e months after Katrina, when
Orleans because of the sur›
gery required to repair the tom labrum in his right shoulder.
"As confident a person as
I was, I knew the severity of that deal," Brees said. "I
some traffic lights at what
was like tricking myself into believing that I was going to
had been busyintersections
come back,and itwas kind
still did not work, and lines of like, ’Fake it ’til you make were long at the few pharma› it.’ cies that had reopened. Chil›
"I needed somebody to
dren wererelatively scarce, believe in me, and Sean was with many finishing the that person, the Saints were school year in the commu›
t hat organization and t h e
nities they had evacuated to, city of New Orleans was that while local neighborhoods place," Brees added. and schools remained in var› Brees and his wife settled ious states of ruin. in New Orleans’ historic "There were still so many Uptown district, extensive› questions with t h e i n f r a› ly renovating their new
structure, the
s chooling, home while their foundation poured millions of dollars recognized very q u ickly into ambitious projects pro› that it was much bigger than viding area children places football." to learn and play. Payton’s first Saints team Brees’ charitable legacy was not his best, but it was includes the Lusher Charter arguably his most extraor› School, whose high school dinary. Not only was Pay› football team plays at Brees ton a rookie coach, but he Family Field. hospitals," Payton said. "You
had replaced more than half the roster of a team that had
"New Orleans empowered
me by bringing me in to say, 'We believein you and we gone 3-13 a season earlier. New Orleans improved to need you.’ So I felt a great 10-6, earning the No. 2 seed responsibility to the city, like in the NFC and winning a Brittany and I can be a big playoff game against Phil› part of this recovery," Brees adelphia to advance to the said. "There were all these franchise’s first NFC Cham› people waiting to come back pionship game. and there was nothing to The season began with come back to and they need› two road victories, followed ed to know that somebody by a n
e m o t ional h o m e› cared.
"I don’t know if I could coming to the Superdome which had undergone have gone anywhere else fast-tracked repairs in less
and had the same results, or
than one year to replace its storm-damaged roof and
the same feeling or become the same player," Brees said.
mitigate mold i n festations
"So I’m very much indebted
caused by gaping water
to the city of New Orleans."
C4
TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, AUGUST 28, 2015
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
Prep girlssoccerataglance
rea o a enex se By John Marshall The Associated Press
TEMPE, Ariz. Arizona State coach Todd Graham is eternally
positive, whether it is praising his football team to the media, boosting the morale of a player or praising an assistant coach. Sometimes there is a little hy› perbole that comes with it, but that
is part of Graham’s charm, what makes him such a good salesman of his players and his program. His sales pitch on this year’s team might be right on the mark. "I’ ve got a tremendous belief in this
football team," Graham said. "It’s the best football team that we’ ve had
ArizonaStateschedule *
Sept.5 TexasA8M 4 p.m.
Sept. 12 Cal Poly 8 p.m. Sept. 18New Mexico 7 p.m. Sept. 26 US C Oct. 3 a t UCLA
TBA TBA
O ct. 10 Colorado
TB A
Oct. 17 at Utah
TBA
Oct. 29 Oregon 7:30 p.m. Nov. 7at Washington St. TBA N ov. 14 Washington
TBA
Nov. 21 Arizona TBA N ov. 28 at California T BA
Pac-12previews Aug. 24: Colorado Aug. 25: Utah Aug. 26: Arizona
our fourth year, it’s just a special time
and special group of young men." He has plenty ofreasons to be optimistic.
Arizona State has gone through a revitalization since Graham arrived, setting a school record with 28 wins
in its first three seasons under the fast-talking Texan. The Sun Devils
won 10 games in consecutive sea› sons and played for the Pac-12 cham› pionship in 2013. Last season, Arizo› na State beat Duke in the Sun Bowl
and finished 12th in The Associated Press Top 25, its highest season-end›
Today: Arizona State Saturday: Southern Cal Sunday: Washington State Monday: Washington Tuesday: California Wednesday: Stanford Thursday: Football preview section featuring Oregonand Oregon State
’At Houston
backers. Arizona State has depth on cerns is who is behind Bercovici. the defensive line and playmakers in A year ago, he was not worried the secondary. becauseBercoviciwas behind KelPut them all together, and it is no ly and played well when Kelly got wonder Graham is touting this team hurt. This season, Arizona State’ s so much. roster has three unproven players "Our playersunderstand that be- behind the starter: redshirt fresh› ing the Pac-12 champions is the min› man Manny Wilkins and freshmen imal expectation; and that’s exactly Bryce Perkins and Brady White. the way I want it," Graham said. Should Bercovici get hurt, one of "We haven’t won it yet. We’ ve won those players will have to step up in the Southand we've competed every a hurry. year, but to me, how you win it is ex› pecting to win it. I think our guys be› Foster's role lieved they could win up to until this Foster bounced around to sever› point. I think there’s an expectation al positions in his first two seasons
now." ing ranking since 1996. Expectations are even higher this A few other things to know about season.
Arizona State heading into the 2015
The Sun Devils still have dynamic season: offensive players, led by quarterback Mike Bercovici, who proved to be
Bercovici's turn
ready for the spotlight when called Bercovici lost a tight battle with into action last season. Versatile se› Taylor Kelly and spent the past two nior D.J. Foster skipped a shot at the seasons as Kelly’s backup. But it NFL for another season at ASU, and was not all just mop-up duty. When running back Kalen Ballage could Kelly injured his right foot against turn into a star after a solid freshman Colorado, the big-armed Bercovici season. filled in nicely, setting an NCAA re› There are some questions at re› cord by passing for 998 yards in his ceiver, particularly w i t h J a elen first two career starts. He ended up Strong gone. But Graham’s high-oc› starting three games and passed for tane offense rarely fails to put up big 1,445 yards and 12 touchdowns on numbers. the season, so the Sun Devils should The big diff erence could be on be in good hands. defense. The Sun Devils have nine return›
ing starters, including all four line›
BackupQB
CLASSSA BEND Coach:Mackenzie Groshong (fifth season) 2014:15-2-2 overall, 6-1-1 IMC (second); lost in state championship game Outlook:Six all-league players return for the Lava Bears, including second-team all-state selection TaylaWheeler and second-team all-IMC players Karah McCul› ley and SiennaWall. In its past two playoff appearances, Bend has beenelimi› nated by crosstown foe Summit. But with athleticism and speed, the LavaBears could be poised to wrestle the IMCtitle away from the Storm and make arun at the state crown.
Aug. 27: UCLA
since we’ ve been at Arizona State.
The character, the discipline, the speed, the athleticism, just being in
A look at the Central Oregon teamscompeting in girls soccer this fall:
and started last season as Arizo›
na State’s primary running back, though he still moved around quite a bit. The big-play threat will move to slot receiver this season, but ex› pect him to get touches all over the field.
Schedule Arizona State has the type of schedule that could put it in the Col›
lege Football Playoff hunt. The Sun Devils have a big neutral-site game out of the gate, facing Texas A&M in Houston on Sept. 5. Arizona State plays its three toughest conference
games at home, against USC, Ore› gon and rival Arizona. Get through that in decent shape, and the Sun
Devils should be in position to reach Graham’s goals of winning Pac-12
MOUNTAINVIEW Coach:Donnie Emerson (third season) 2014:7-7 overall, 4-4 IMC (third); lost in play-in round Outlook:The Cougars return first-team all-IMC selection Rosalee Mendezand all-conference honorable mention recipient Abby Nopp as they look to finish in the top three of the IMCstandings to earn at least a play-in berth. Mountain View basketball players Kylee Reinwald and Hailey Goetz havebeenadded to the mix for the Cougs, who havefallen in the play-in round each of the past two seasons. REDMOND Coach:John Gripe (fourth season) 2014:1-11-1 overall, 0-8 IMC (fifth) Outlook:Gripe expects the Panthers to be "hungry and ready to find some success" this season as Redmond returns a squad packed with varsity ex› perience. Back for the Panthers is Sophia Hamilton, an all-IMC honorable mention recipient last year, who, according to Gripe, brings leadership and confidence to this year’s team. "Many of these players have played varsity for multipl eseasons,"theRedmond coach says,"and know what they needtodo to win." RIDGEVIEW Coach:Kyle Chown(second season) 2014:4-9-1 overall, 2-6 IMC (fourth) Outlook:The Ravensgraduated just three seniors from last year’s team, and they return 12 of the 16players from the 2014 roster, including sophomore all-IMC selections AspenJeter (first team) and Saylor Goodwin (second). With strong senior leadership from TatumCarlin, Bethany Hamptonand Erica Nadermann, all of whom are four-year varsity players, the Ravensenter their second season in the IMC with increased confidence asthey strive toward a potential state playoff berth.
SUMMIT Coach:Jamie Brock (11th season) 2014:15-2-2 overall, 7-0-1 IMC (first); won state championship Outlook:TheStorm have wonfour of the past five 5A state titles, including each of the past three. Led byreigning state player of the year Christina Edwards, Sum› mit returns eight all-IMC players from last season, including first-team all-state selection Camille Weaver. Brock says theStorm should be asgood, if not better, than last year’s squad, which went unbeaten in IMCplay for the third straight season. Although Summit may be the favorite for yet another state crown, Brock knows her teamneeds to earn its keep. "We’ regoing to betough to knock off. However, it’s high school girls soccer. Wehaveto earn every minute of it, and they know that," Brock says. "How do webegood ANDget better? Weneedto get better throughout the season, immediately."
One of Graham’s biggest con› and national titles. CLASS 4A
CROOKCOUNTy
Serena Continued from C1 That title belongs to Maria Shara› pova, who made $23 million in en› dorsements in the year ending in June to Williams’ $13 million, ac› cording to Forbes. "This Grand Slam year will be a game changer for Serena and I do hope corporate America steps
up," Stacey Allaster, chairman and chief executive officer of the wom› en’s WTA Tour, said in an interview this month in Stanford, California.
"I think we’ re going to see a signif› icant increase."
A fourth consecutive U.S. Open title would tie Graf’s profession› al-erarecord of 22 majors and leave
Williams two shy of the overall mark of 24 held by Australian Mar› garet Court since 1973. No male
player has swept all four Grand Slam events in a calendar year since another Australian, Rod Laver, did
it for the second time in 1969. The women’s final, scheduled for Sept. 12, sold out before the men’s fi›
nal probably for the first time this century, U.S. Open organizers said. Trying to complete the Grand Slam was "definitely a goal of mine when I was younger," Williams said in an interview with a small group of reportersa few hours after her Wimbledon victory in July. "Since then, it’s become more of a distant dream, afable,because I've never been this close."
"If she brings her A game, she’ s going to win this," four-time U.S. Open men'swinner John McEnroe
Serenacouldface Sharapovainsemim nal NEW YORK Serena Williams could play anAll-American U.S. Open. As she seeksthe first Grand Slam since 1988, the top-ranked Williams might find herself com› peting against the past and future of her country’s championship hopes. A potential third-round opponent is 22-year-old SloaneStephens, who beat her in the 2013Aus› tralian Openquarterfinals and is coming off her first WTA title in
Washington this month. A possi› ble fourth-round foe is 20-year› old Madison Keys, who reached this year’s Aussie semifinals. Then in the quarterfinals, she could face her sister, seven-time Grand Slamwinner VenusWil› liams. Serenahad to beat Venus in the fourth round at Wimbledon on the way to hersecond "Serena Slam" four major champion› ships in a row, but just not in the same year. Now Williams is attempting to complete the first Grand Slam since Steffi Graf 27 yearsago. Asked about the potential match› up with her sister after Thursday’s draw ceremony, Williams laughed and said: "It’s better than the round of 16, so that’s how I look at it."
Another potential quarterfinal op› ponent is12th-seededSwiss teen Belinda Bencic, who recently up› set Williams in Toronto en route to a breakthrough title. Williams could face Maria Sharapovafor the second straight major semifi› nal after beating her Russian rival
nies including Nike and Gatorade. In the past year, she has added JP Morgan Chase and Swiss luxury watchmaker Audemars Piguet, while PepsiCo is using her to help relaunch the Pepsi Challenge. Both women trail the sport’s big› gest earner, 17-time Grand Slam
winner Roger Federer, who made $58 million from endorsements alone.
"We’ re seeing interest from a much broader range of brands," Jill Smoller, a partner at WME and Wil›
liams’ long- time agent, said in an interview. "Some are not necessar› ily tennis focused, and some aren’ t
even necessarily sports focused. They’ ve gotten on the ride of her po› tential history-making run here." Although Williams is known by 67 percentof the U.S. population compared with 39 percent for
Sharapova, the Russian "appeals much more to male sports fans while Serena has a much stron›
ger appeal to female sports fans," Schafer said. In addition, the third› ranked Sharapova "has a much stronger appeal to sports fans with a household income over $100,000." Forbes attributed the difference
between the two biggest stars of the women’s game to "race, corporate bias, likability and beauty." "If they want to market someone who is white and blond, that’s their choice," Williams told the New York
Times this week, when asked about the difference. "I can’t sit here and
say I should be higher on the list be› cause I have won more." W illiams added that she w a s
said on an ESPN conference call this week. "To me, she’s the greatest female player that ever played." Williams’ winning streak in the majors the past 12 months has not only impressed former champi› ons, it has also boosted her appeal for the 17th consecutive time at among U.S. consumers because she Wimbledon. has become "more of an iconic fig› There are nine U.S. players in ure" who transcends the sport, ac› all in Williams’ quarter of the cording to Henry Schafer, executive bracket. Based on recent results, vice president at The Q Scores Co. in facing the young Americans Manhasset, New York, which mea› early in the tournament could sures consumer appeal. help keep Williams sharp under "If you wanted to appeal not just the pressure of her Grand Slam to sports or tennis fans, but just pursuit. the population at large, Serena — The Associated Press has a stronger profile than Maria," "She’s much more Schafer said. recognizable." as the world’s best-paid female ath› A win in New York would put the lete since she stunned Williams in American "in an extremely elite the 2004 Wimbledon final. Williams group," Schafer said. has beaten her 17 times in a row Although Williams has won a since that year. women’s record $73 million in prize Sharapova has deals with compa› money twice as much as Shara› nies including Nike, Samsung Elec› pova she is the second-high› tronics, German carmaker Porsche est-paid female athlete after the five› and her own candy brand, Sugarpo›
"happy" for Sharapova to top the list "because she worked hard, too.
time major winner from Russia.
when assessing the next 10 years of
Sharapova, 28, has been ranked
va, Forbes said.
There is enough at the table for
Coach:Richard Abrams (fourth season) 2014:2-10-1 overall, 2-7-1 TVC(fifth) Outlook:It has beenfour years since the Cowgirls last appeared in the postsea› son, the last being asecond straight season of falling in the play-in round. After a third two-win season in four years, CrookCounty looks to climb up theTri-Valley Conference standings andput ahalt to its postseason drought. Despite their fifth› place finish in the TVC last season, the Cowgirls allowed 54goals, the fewest they have ceded in aseason since 2009. MADRAS Coach:Krista Hayes(second season) 2014:1-12-1 overall, 0-9-1 TVC (sixth) Outlook:Led bysecond-team all-TVC selection Kalan Wolfe and all-league honor› able mention Coral Reyes, theWhite Buffaloes return a chunk of their 2014 roster as they look to climb out of the TVC cellar. Hayes says her squad hasalready showed strong teamchemistry, and that, combined with the arrival of talented freshman Erika Olivera, has thesecond-year Madras coach excited about the 2015 campaign. SISTERS Coach:Thomas Draxler (first season) 2014:12-4 overall, 10-0 Sky-Em (first); lost in quarterfinals of state playoffs Outlook:TheOutlaws have wonfive straight Sky-Em League titles, running up a 49-1 league record in that span. Under first-year headcoach Thomas Draxler, JV coach at Sisters since 2012, theOutlaws look to continue that leaguedomination and carry it into the playoffs. Five all-league players, including first-team selection Michaela Miller and second-team players AnnaOrtegaand HannahCeciliani, highlight eight returning players for Sisters.
CLASS 3A/2A/1A LA PINE Coach:Scott Winslow (12th season) 2014:6-7-1 overall, 3-7 SD4 (fifth)
Outlook:Dueto graduation or family relocation, the Hawks will be without three players who accounted for 20 of the team’s 29goals last season. Returning for La Pine aresecond-team all-league keeperSydney Bright and honorable mention player Olivia Ramirez. But with only four starters back, Winslow says, the Hawks will be looking for contributions from their underclassmen in order to find suc› cess on the field.
everyone." Serena and her older sister Venus,
Bears
herself a seven-time Grand Slam
Continued from C1 eryone on the team wants it bad. I "We’ ve had quick players, but not think that want is the strive that ev› necessarily all around," Groshong eryone will take, and I think we can says. "I see that more of a strength do it again." of our team because we do have The Bears have the weapons, that speed to recover easy. The girls which include all-league players came in great shape this year. I Colleknon, Lacey Adye and Jasmine think that’s really going to be one of Chapman. They have the leadership, our strong suits." in seniors McCulley, Colleknon and No doubt Summit will continue to Bakker.They have the playoffexbe a primary figure in Bend’s cross perience. Now if they can combine hairs not only because the Storm all that with execution, perhaps a have won four of the past five 5A state championship, the program’s
singles winner, were taught the game on public courts in Compton, California, by their father, Richard.
Serena won her first major at the U.S. Open in 1999. Last month at Wimbledon, she completed the "Ser›
ena Slam" of all four majors in a row for the second time in her career. "The interest is not just from For›
tune 500 brands," Smoller said. "It’ s tech, media companies. It’s entities that want to integrate her unique
voice and story. "We’ ve been very
state titles, including the last three,
s elective
about who her partnerships have
been with, and continue to be," Smoller said, adding that future deals could include "taking equity pieces of businesses and building companies." Williams’
ag e n t
con t i nued:
"We’ re looking at the whole picture
Williams has deals with compa› her business and her future."
ly what gets you there," says Bend senior Karah McCulley. "I think ev›
fourth, will be the result.
"I think it’s just around the cor› but also because in the Lava Bears’ past five trips to the playoffs since ner," Groshong says. "I think it’s go› 2009,three of their postseason runs ing to be another fantastic season. have been cut short by Summit. I don’t want to stretch the luck on That includes in the 2013 semifinal that one, but I think this is a really round, and, of course, last year’ s goal-driven group. With that being championship final. said, there’s more of an urgency to "I think if th e same passion as
want it. And they want it more. They
last year comes along ... as much as want it more than ever." skill matters, the passion, heart, and — Reporter: 541-383-0307, how much you put out there is real›
glucas®bendbulletin.corn.
C5 THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, AUGUST 28, 2015
O» To look upindividual stocks, goto bendbugetin.corn/business. Also seearecap in Sunday’s Businesssection.
S&P 500 1,987 . 66+47.15
16,654.77 4 DOW , +369.26 ~ .
NASDAQ 4 , 4,812.71+115.17 .
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10-YR T-NOTE 2.19%+ . 01
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GOLD $1,122.40-2.20
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Friday, August 2S, 2015
Cash in, cash out
980.
A measure of income growth has been rising much of this year, reflecting solid gains in employ› ment. Economists anticipate that the latest government data on incomes will show personal income rose 0.4 percent in July. That would be the fourth consecu› tive monthly increase this year, but a smaller gain than June’s 0.5 percent increase. The Commerce Department delivers its July personal income data today.
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StoryStocks The stock market soared on Thursday as markets around the world rebounded in a volatile week. Major indexes started higher in morning trading after the government reported that the U.S. economy grew at a 3.7 percent pace in the spring quarter, much higher than estimates. Major markets in China and Europe re› bounded, closing with big gains. The encouraging economic news helped send crude oil prices higher. Chevron led the way up for all 30 big companies in the Dow Jones industrial average. All 10 sec› tors of the Standard & Poor’s 500 index finished with gains, led by energy companies and material producers.
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St. Jude Medical
STJ Tiffany & Co. TIF Close:$72.43%3.09 or 4.5% Close:$83.29 V-1.79 or -2.1% Abbott is preparing a takeover bid of The luxury jeweler reported worse› up to $25 billion for the medical de› than-expected fiscal second-quarter vice maker, according to The Finan› profit and revenue and a weak full› cial Times. year profit outlook. $80 $100
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WSM Close:$76.70T-6.42 or -7.7% The seller of cookware and home furnishings reported positive sec› ond-quarter financial results, but its outlook fell short. $90
Freeport-McMoRan
FCX
Close: $10.19 L2.27 or 28.7% The copper producer is cutting spending, production and jobs as it deals with declining copper prices and a soft economy. $30 20
65
80 J
A
J 52-week range $$2.$$~
$$$.$$
10 0
J A J 52-week range $$.$$ ~ $36.48
Vol.:5.1m (6.9x avg.) P E: 23.6 Vol.:106.0m (4.0x avg.) PE: . . . Mkt. Cap:$7.02 b Yie l d : 1.8% Mkt. Cap:$10.6b Yiel d : 2 .0%
Yahoo
YHOO Close:$33.69%1.17 or 3.6% The search engine company is hosting a mobile developer confer› ence as part of a move to focus more on mobile applications. $45 40
Sirius XM Holdings
SIRI
Close:$3.79 %0.07 or 1.9% The satellite radio service company approved an additional $2 billion in stock buybacks, bringing the pro› gram to $8 billion. $4.0 3.8 3.6
35
J J 52-week range $2$.$0~ Vol.:19.0m (1.5x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$31.62 b
A
3.4
J J 52-week range
A
$$2 .$2 $$.14~ $4 .$4 PE: 4 .7 Vol.:28.3m (1.0x avg.) P E : 4 3.7 Yield: ... Mkt. Cap:$20.74 b Yield: ...
SOURCE: Sungard
SU HIS
The yield on the 10-year Treasury rose to 2.19 per› cent Thursday. Yields affect rates on mort› gages and other consumer loans.
Thursday’sclose:$10.19
*annualized
A
Vol.:8.8m (5.5x avg.) P E: 2 0.2 Vol.:5.8m (4.8x avg.) PE:23.4 Mkt. Cap:$20.37b Yie l d: 1.6% Mkt. Cap:$10.76b Yie l d: 1.9%
52-WK RANGE o CLOSE Y TD 1YR V O L flat NAME TICKER LO Hl CLOSE CHG%CHG WK MO QTR %CHG %RTN (Thous) P/E DIV F M A M J J Alaska Air Group A LK 40.69 ~ 82.15 7 6. 2 4 -.08 -0.1 A A A +27. 6 +6 6 .5 1 332 16 0 . 8 0 2015 -9.4 + 2 . 3 38 1 1 8 1. 3 2 Aviate Corp A VA 30.10 ~ 38.34 32. 0 1 +. 3 7 +1.2 T T A -8.1 -0.4120800 18 0.20 Source: Faotaet Bank of America B AC 14. 60 ~ 18.48 16. 4 4 +. 3 8 +2.4 A T T Barrett Business BBS I 18.25 ~ 6 3.4 5 34.58 +.30+0.9 T T T +2 6.2 - 43.9 100 d d 0 . 88 Boeing Co BA 115.14 ~ 158. 8 3 13 1.87 +2.53 + 2.0 A T T +1.5 +3.3 56 7 8 1 8 3. 6 4 Spotlight on Regis A A +1.7 +2. 9 43 22 Cascade Baacorp CA C B 4 . 14~ 5.69 5.28 -.02 -0.4 T Beauty salon operator Regis ColumbiaBokg COL B 23.90 ~ 3 3.7 0 30.85 +.37+1.2 T T T +8. 8 +17.7 313 19 0.72a reports its latest financial results today. ColumbiaSportswear COLM 34.25 ~ 74. 7 2 61.65 +.79 +1.3 T T A + 38.4 +57.6 140 31 0.60 The company, which owns and Costco Wholesale CO ST 117.03 ~ 1 56.8 5 14 0.21 +2.05 +1.5 A T A -1.1 +1 9.5 2570 27 1 . 6 0 franchises hair salon chains under Craft Brew Alliance BR EW 7.00 o — 5 2 95 17.8 9 7.56 +. 1 9 + 2.6 A T T -43.3 -43.9 several brands, including FLIR Systems F LIR 26.34 ~ 34.46 28. 6 2 +. 9 9 +3.6 T T T -11.4 -17.4 2011 18 0 . 44 Supercuts, MasterCuts and Regis Hewlett Packard H PQ 24 . 85 ~ 41.10 27.7 9 +. 6 9 $ -2.5 A T T -30.8 -26.6 16743 11 0 .70 Salons, has been struggling as Intel Corp INTO 24.87 ~ 37.90 27. 7 2 +. 4 2 +1.5 A T T -23.6 -18.8 37814 12 0.96 less spending by it customers cut Keycorp K EY 11.55 ~ 15.70 13. 8 8 +. 4 5 +3.4 A T T -0.1 -0.3 16461 13 0.30 into Regis’ revenue earlier this Kroger Co K R 2 5 .01 ~ 39.43 35. 5 3 +. 4 5 +1.3 A T T +10. 7 +4 0 .5 8 935 19 0 .42f year. Did the trend continue in the LSCC 3.25 ~ 7.79 4.25 +. 1 1 + 2.7 A T T -38.3 -44.9 1565 dd April-June period? Regis delivers Lattice Semi LA Pacific L PX 1246 ~ 18 64 1612 + 30 +1 9 A A T - 27 + 88 2 8 7 9 d d its fiscal fourth-quarter earnings MDU Resources MDU 1 6 .28 o 31. 7 3 1 7 .60 + .88 +5.3 T T T -25.1 -44.0 1224 dd 0 . 73 today. MentorGraphics ME N T 18.25 ~ 2 7.3 8 25.32 +.36+1.4 A T T +1 5.5 +17.0 849 19 0.22 Microsoft Corp MSFT 39.72 ~ 50.0 5 43. 9 0 + 1.19+2.8 A T T -5.5 -2.3 49810 30 1 .24 Nike Ioc 8 NKE 78.27 ~ 117. 7 2 11 2.62 +3.86 +3.5 A T A +17. 1 +3 8 .2 6 461 30 1 . 1 2 -7.6 + 7 . 1 1 974 2 0 1 . 48 NordstromInc J WN 66.08 ~ 83.16 7 3. 3 2 -.11 -0.1 T T T Nwst Nat Gas NWN 42.00 ~ 52.57 44. 1 9 +. 2 2 +0.5 T L A -11.4 + 1 . 8 11 7 2 4 1. 8 6 Paccar lac P CAR 53.45 ~ 71.15 59.5 8 + 1.30 $.2.2 A T T -12.4 -4.1 2879 13 0 .96f Planar Syslms PLNR 3.02 ~ 9.17 5.78 -.02 -0.3 T > A - 30.9 +18.6 2 2 3 1 9 -8.8 -1.2 1841 36 1 . 76 Plum Creek P CL 38.07 ~ 45.26 39.8 1 +. 4 0 $ .1.0 T T T -4.7 - 6.1 4155 1 9 0 . 12 Prec Castparts PCP 186.17 ~ 249. 1 2 22 9.44 + . 56 +0.2 T A A SchoitzerSteel S CHN 1 5.06 ~ 28.44 16. 7 8 + . 8 9 +5.6 A A T -25.6 -41.0 295 d d 0 . 75 Sherwin Wms SHW 202.01 ~ 294. 3 5 25 9.37 +3.82 +1.5 T T T - 1.4 +18.5 6 6 6 2 6 2 . 68 StaocorpFoci SFG 60.17 ~ 114. 7 7 11 3.77 + . 40 +0.4 A A A + 62. 9 +7 4 .9 3 3 8 2 0 1 . 30f StarbucksCp SBUX 35.38 ~ 59.32 55.9 5 + 1.99 +3.7 A T A +36. 4 +4 0 .4 15733 26 0 . 6 4 UmpquaHoldings UM PQ 14.70 ~ 1 8.9 2 16.40 +.22+1.3 T T T -3.6 -5.0 2904 16 0 . 60 US Baocorp U SB 38.10 ~ 46.26 42. 5 8 + 1.17+2.8 T T T -5.3 ... 97 2 5 1 4 1 .02f Consumer bellwether WashingtonFedl WA F D 19.52 ~ 2 4.2 5 22.43 +.20+0.9 T T T +1. 3 +4 .1 886 14 0.52 -1.4 + 4 .2 25056 13 1 . 50 The University of Michigan WellsFargo & Co WF C 4 6.44 ~ 5 8.7 7 54.03 +1.73 +3.3 A T T Consumer Sentiment Survey Weyerhaeuser WY 2 6.84 a — 37.0 4 28. 00 + . 5 2 +1.9 T T T -22.0 -16.5 4351 27 1 . 16
index has been on a positive DividendFootnotes:a - Extra dividends werepaid, but arenot included. b -Annual rate plus stock. c - Liquidating dividend. e -Amount declaredor paid in last 12 months. f - Current annual rate, whichwasincreased bymost recentdividendannouncement. i Sum of dividends paidafter stock split, ro regular rate. I Sumof dividends paidthis year.Most recent streak this year. dividend wasomitted or deferred. k - Declared or paidthis year, acumulative issue with dividends in arrears. m Current annualrate, which wasdecreasedbymost recentdividend The index, which is due out announcement. p Initial dividend, annual rate not known, yield not shown. r Declared or paid in preceding 12months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, approximate cash value on ex-dissieution date.PEFootnotes: q Stock is a closed-end fund - no P/E ratio shown. cc P/Eexceeds 99. dd - Loss in last 12 months. today, has been above 90 for months. The trend reflects lower unemployment and stronger hiring. Economists expect that the index’s August reading will be Freeport-McMoRan is cutting 10 percent of its staff expects $4 billion in capital expenditures for 2016, down slightly down from the previous from a prior estimate of $5.6 billion. employees and contractors at L.S. mining operations. month. The copper production company also plans to reduce its The Phoenix-based company said that it will reduce spending and production to cope with copper sales by about 150 million pounds Consumer sentiment index not seasonally adjusted declining copper prices and soft per year in 2016 and 2017 and cut 2016 100 economic conditions worldwide. unit site production by 20 percent. It also The companysaid Thursday that plans to slash 2016 minerals exploration third-quarter copper prices are costs from $1 00 million to $50 million. currently about $2.25 per pound, Its shares rose 28.7 percent Thursday 96.1 g5 9 approaching a six-year low. but are down 56.4 percent over the past 95 Freeport-McMo Ran said that it year.
90
70
North westStocks
0.1
EURO M $ 1 .1263 -.0085
CRUDEOIL $42.56+3.96
Close: 16,654 77 Change: 369.26 (2.3%) "
DOW
NYSE NASD
seasonally adjusted percent change
"
SILVER $14.4 2 +.37
16,800::"
"
1,920:›
Personal income
'
~
AP
NET 1YR TREASURIES TEST PVS CHG WK MO QTR AGO
3 -month T-bill 6-month T-bill
. 0 5 .0 6 -0.01 A . 2 0 .19 + 0 .01 T A
52-wk T-bill
.34
.34
...
T
2-year T-note . 6 9 .68 + 0 .01 A 5-year T-note 1.50 1.48 +0.02 A 10-year T-note 2.19 2.18 +0.01 A 3 0-year T-bond 2.93 2.93 ... A
BONDS
~
A A A
T T T T
A .52 T 1.64 A 2.36 A 3.10
NET 1YR TEST PVS CHG WK MOQTR AGO
Barclays LongT-Bdldx 2.74 2.77 -0.03 A T T Bond Buyer Muni Idx 4.42 4.43 -0.01 A A A
Barclays USAggregate 2.38 2.38 ...
A T
TEST3.25 .13 6 MO AGO3.25 .13 1 YR AGO3.25 .13
A A MoodysAAACorpldx 4.17 4.08+0.09 A A A Barclays CompT-Bdldx 1.75 1.74 +0.01 A T T Barclays US Corp 3.46 3.46 ... A L L
Commodities
FUELS
The price of crude oil leapt more than 10 percent, its big› gest percent› age gain in a day since March 2009. Prices for natu› ral gas and gold both fell.
Crude Oil (bbl) Ethanol (gal) Heating Oil (gal) Natural Gas (mmbtu) UnleadedGas(gal)
PRIME FED Barcl aysUS HighYield 7.42 7.42 ... A A RATE FUNDS
Foreign Exchange The dollar rose against the euro, Japanese yen and other currencies after a report suggested the U.S. economy grew faster last quarter than initially estimated.
h58 88
METALS
Gold (oz) Silver (oz) Platinum (oz) Copper (Ib) Palladium (oz)
.03 .05 .09
CLOSE PVS. 42.56 38.60 1.43 1.42 1.50 1.38 2.68 2.69 1.46 1.35
CLOSE PVS. 1122.40 1124.60 14.42 14.05 1006.00 980.20 2.33 2.25 568.30 529.35
2.93 4.4 4
2 25 . 5.22 4.0 3 1.91 2.91
%CH. %YTD +1 0.26 -20.1 +0.07 -1 2.2 +8.34 -1 9.0 -0.67 -7.4 + 7.52 + 1 . 5 %CH. %YTD -0.20 -5.2 +2.68 -7.4 +2.63 -1 6.8 +3.69 -1 7.8 +7.36 -28.8
AGRICULTURE Cattle (Ib)
CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD 1.45 1.42 +1.57 -1 2.7 Coffee (Ib) 1.21 1.19 +1.98 -27.3 -8.4 Corn (bu) 3.64 3.62 +0.55 Cotton (Ib) 0.64 0.63 + 2.03 + 5 . 9 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 246.90 242.50 +1.81 -25.4 -7.2 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.30 1.25 +3.71 Soybeans (bu) 8.86 8.78 +0.97 -1 3.1 Wheat(bu) 4.84 4.90 -1.12 -1 7.9 1YR.
MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.5426 -.0044 -.29% 1.6580 Canadian Dollar 1.3 2 30 -.0108 -.82% 1.0840 USD per Euro 1.1263 -.0085 -.75% 1.3196 JapaneseYen 120.68 +1.22 +1.01% 103.88 Mexican Peso 16. 8781 -.2576 -1.53% 13.1004 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.9181 -.0139 -.35% 3.5648 Norwegian Krone 8 . 2962 -.0892 -1.08% 6.1800 South African Rand 13.1519 +.0329 +.25% 10.6149 Swedish Krona 8.4 7 18 -.0310 -.37% 6.9449 Swiss Franc .9649 +.0128 +1.33% . 9147 ASIA/PACIFIC Australian Dollar 1.3954 -.0132 -.95% 1.0708 Chinese Yuan 6.4091 -.0010 -.02% 6.1435 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7502 -.0020 -.03% 7.7501 Indian Rupee 65.976 -.234 -.35% 60.350 Singapore Dollar 1.3993 -.0089 -.64% 1.2468 South KoreanWon 1173.15 -13.94 -1.19% 1014.17 -.20 -.62% 2 9.88 Taiwan Dollar 32.27
' www.bendbulletin.corn/business
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, AUGUST 28, 2015
CentralOregon fuel prices Price per gallon for regular unleaded gas and diesel, as posted Thursday at AAA Fuel Price Finder (aaa.opis net.corn): REGULARUNLEADED: • Space Age,20635 Grandview Drive, Bend............ $2.77 • Fred Meyer,61535 S U.S. Highway97, Bend............ $2.78 • Valero,712 SWFifth St., Redmond.... $2.87 • Shell,722 NW Sixth
St., Redmond.... $2.87 • Ron's Oil,62980 U.S. Highway97, Bend............ $2.88 • Chevron,61160 S U.S. Highway97, Bend............ $2.89 • RiverwoodsCountry Store,19745 Baker Road, Bend....... $2.89 • Chevron,3405 N U.S. Highway 97,Bend $2.95 • Chevron,2005 S U.S. Highway97, Redmond ....... $2.95 • Shell,981 NWGalves› ton Ave., Bend.... $2.99 • Chevron,1400 NWCol› lege Way, Bend.... $2.99 • Texaco,2409 Butler Market Road, Bend............ $2.99 • Texaco,178 SWFourth St., Madras...... $2.99 • Chevron,1210SW U.S. Highway97, Madras ......... $2.99 • Chevron,398 NW Third St.,
Prineville........ $2.99 • Chevron,1501SW Highland Ave., Redmond ....... $2.99 • Chevron,1001 Rail› way, Sisters...... $2.99 • Safeway,80 NECedar St., Madras...... $3.02 DIESEL: • Space Age,20635 Grandview Drive, Bend............ $2.67 • Chevron,3405 N U.S. Highway97, Bend............ $2.85 • Denny'sExpressway, 999 N. Main St., Prine›
ville............. $2.85 • Chevron,2005 S U.S. Highway97, Redmond ....... $2.89 • Quick WayMarket, 690 NE Butler Market
Road, Bend...... $2.95 • Texaco,178 SWFourth St., Madras...... $2.99 The Bulletin
DISPATCHES • Hydro Flask,561 NW York Drive, Bend, has been named to Inc. magazine’s 500 list of fastest-growing private companies for the second straight year. • Full Circle Sewing and Production,a custom design, sewing and manufacturing services company, has relocated to a larger facility in Bend, at 61568 American Lane, No. 900. • Bouquet of Beer, a custom beer-bouquet delivery service, has started operations in Bend. • SoupCycle,a company that delivers organic soup by bicycle, has announced its expansion into Bend. • Illlajesty's Animal Nutrition,a health supplement company for dogs and horses, received an outstanding designation for its new Grab and Goequine treats at SuperZoo 2015, a national show for pet retailers. Majesty’s Animal Nutrition is located at 60973 Creekstone Loop, Bend. • Anytime Self Storage, a storage facility company, plans to open locations in Bend, 64435 O.B. Riley Road, and La Pine, 52650 U.S. Highway 97, on Sept. 12.
row un in our 0 e inin en By Stephen Hamway
up to $250,000 from inves-
The Bulletin
tors without registering the security.
Since he began selling his specialized wooden baseball Unfortunately for MacDou› bats in 2010, John MacDougall, gall and other crowdfunding owner of MacDougall& Sons business owners, raising Bat Co. in Bend, has struggled awareness about the new rules to raise money through tradi› has been a challenge. Because tional channels.
"If you’ re not an app, an in› surance company or a medical device, the regular investment
community would not even look at you," MacDougall said. As a result, when the state
changedit srulesin January to allow Oregon residents to invest in Oregon companies
Pearl, who helped craft the exemption last summer, said
the nonprofit started focusing on alternative paths to funding
potential investors about the new exemption. The first event
on the nine-stop, two-month
Dougall started pursuing the
Amy Pearl, founder and executive director of Hatch Innovation, said the tour would
highlight companies in the middle of their community
cu ieswi
starting a community public cracking or shattering, he said. offering to first meet with a Pearl added that companies
Small Business Development
would have time for an addi› tional question-and-answer
Center representative. While Curley said the regulation does
session after the event.
not require entrepreneurs to
Pearl said.
with various small business
During the Bend event, each of the five companies, indud› ing MacDougall & Sons Bat
development centersacross Oregon. In Bend, she reached
ly just to be a sounding board," Curley said. Ultimately, Pearl said, the goal of the tour is to help po›
out to the Small Business De›
tential investors realize their
Co., will have about 15 minutes
to pitch their products to the
velopment Center at Central Oregon Community College.
entire audience, rather than a
Steve Curley, the development
increased role in the local economy. "There’s quite a bit of curi› osity, because people didn’ t
streams of revenue.
access capital, plans to embark on a tour of Oregon to educate
entrepreneurs interested in
"We’ re focused on filling the gaps of capital in this state,"
Oregon nonprofit founded in 2004 to help companies better
drone in the barrel which makes them more resistant to
"(The events) are not like an› gel conferences; (companies) can pitch to anybody," she said. In order to set up the tour, Pearl said, Hatch partnered
as the recession took hold and
limited access to traditional
with fewer restrictions, Mac›
ly. Under the new exemption, Oregon companies with 50 or fewer employees can raise
12 months.
of that, Hatch Innovation, an
tour is scheduled for 6-9 p.m. ’Ittesday at Tetherow resort in Bend.
new option almost immediate›
public offerings, during which they can raise money for up to
select group of investors. Mac› center director, said the center Dougall will seek investors for would be acting as a host, his baseball bats, made from setting up and arranging the two types of wood hickory event. in the handle and Pacific ma› The exemption requires
submit anything for review, they must provide a business
plan during the meeting. "The intent for SBDC is real›
know they couldn’t do it be›
fore," Pearl said. — Reporter: 541-617-7818, shamway@bendbuIIetin.corn
Tesla busts Consumer Reports’ ratings scale
son oo s c i c e n arm
By Greg Trotter Chicago Tribune
CHICAGO Mc Donald’s
By Mark Clothier Bloomberg News
and supplier Tyson Foods have made moves to sever ties with
This score is kind of
a Tennessee chicken farm after
insane.
the restaurant chain found
Tesla Motors Inc.’s all›
itself in the crosshairs of an animal rights group one
wheel-drive version of the battery-powered Model
that uses hidden cameras to
S, the P85D, earned a 103
document abusive practices in the farmed animal industry› for sourcing poultry from the farm the group says mistreats chickens.
out of a possible 100 in an evaluation by Consumer Reports magazine. The combination of pow› er and efficiency was so
4
A Mercy for Animals under›
off-the-chartthatthegroup
d
cover "investigator" worked
had to recalibrate its rat› ings methods "to account
at the T&S Farm in Dukedom, Tennessee, for about four
for the car’s exceptionally
weeks in July and August, the group said, capturing video
strong performance," ac› cording to a statement. Ul›
with a small camera. T&S
timately, the car was given
Farm raises chickens for the 7yson Foods slaughterhouse
/
i.
'I
plant in Union City, Tennessee,
EricRisberg /The Associated Press
which in turn supplies meat for Fast-food giant Mcoonald's and Tyson Foods severed ties with TSS Farm in Tennessee after a video McNuggets, according to the released by an animal rights group documented mistreatment of chickens. group. InimagesreleasedThursday, chickens at the farm are seen suppliers, saying Tyson had cut Tyson followed with a state› more than 40 similar investiga› being beaten and stabbed with ties with the farm. ment from spokesman Gary tions, Cooney said. The practic› "We believe treating animals Mickelson, confirming the a pole with a spike on it. The es captured on video at the T8 S video also shows what appear with care and respect is an move to sever its relationship Farm are not unusual, accord› tobesic k anddeformed chickintegral part of a responsible with the farm. ing to Cooney, and an industry "Based on what we current› ens among those held in a vast supply chain and find the be› leader like McDonald’s should and crowded holding area. havior depicted in this video ly know, we are terminating help change that, he added. "These are not new issues. to be completely unacceptable. the farmer’s contract to grow McDonald’s has made some They’ ve been on McDonald’s We support 7pon Foods’ deci› chickens for us. There are cur› changes in response to past radar," said Nick Cooney, sion to terminate their contract rently no chickens on the farm," animal cruelty reports, like the organization’s director of with this farmer," McDonald’s Mickelson wrote. vowing to phase out farms that Tyson’s alleged practic› education. "We’ re hoping this statementread."We' rew orking usegestation cratesforpreginvestigation will help them with Tyson Foods to further es have been the subject of nant sows by 2022. It also cut commit to phasing these prac› investigate this situation and protests in other cities this ties with a major egg producer tices out." reinforceour expectations summer. in 2011 after a Mercy video Cooney said Mercy for around animal health and wel› McDonald’s, based in sub› captured cruelty to hens and Animals had contacted Mc› fare at the farm level. urban Chicago, is the latest of chicks. "We’ re committed to work› Donald’s about its investigation several high-profile companies After each investigation, but the burger giant had made ing with animal welfare and thatLos Angeles-based Mercy Mercy for Animals doesn’t wait no commitment to changing industry experts to inform our for Animals has targeted to long before going to the press practices. policies that promote better reform their practices by releas› with its videos, Cooney said. "By and large, we want the But on Thursday, McDon› management, strong employee ing video footage captured by ald’s released a statement education and verification of undercover operatives. public to know as soon as pos› regarding its expectation for practices." Mercy for Animals has done sible," he said.
BEST OFTHEBIZ CALENDAR SUNDAY • Career in Real Estate Workshop: Jim Mazziotti, principal managing broker at Exit Realty, will talk about starting a career in real estate; free; 6p.m.; Exit Realty, 354 NE Greenwood Ave. Suite 109,Bend, 541-480-8835. MONDAY • Pitch YourBizwith Passion, Prowessand Persuasion:Learn to deliver your pitch to investors with engagement that highlights your passion andyour expertise; 6:30 p.m.; Bend Creative Space,19855 Fourth St., Suite 105,Bend; https://pitchbizpersuasion. eventbrite.corn or 541-617-0340. TUESDAY • What's Brewing?Gaining Strength inSalem: Learn how tospeakup on issues that will impact your business, including transportation, living-wage bills, employer mandates and technical education; 5
p.m.; Deschutes Brewery & Public House,1044 NW BondSt., Bend, 541-382-3221. • Hatch Oregon'sRockstar EntrepreneursLaunch Party:First stop on a statewide tour to discuss and feature companies taking part in community public offerings; free; 6p.m.; Tetherow Resort’s Fireside Room, 61240Skyline Ranch Road, Bend,503-452-6898, http://tiny url.corn/nkmjhtf. WEDNESDAY • BusinessStartup Class: Cover the basics in this two-hour class anddecide if running abusiness is for you; $29; 6 p.m.;COCC Chandler Lab,1027 NW Trenton Ave.,Bend,541› 383-7290, http: //www.cocc. edu/sbdc. SEPT. 8 • CLA EstateServices Workshop: Aworkshop for seniors about estateand retirement planning; free, but seating is limited; to register, call 1-866-252›
8721 between7a.m. and 3 p.m.; 2 p.m.; Comfort Suites Redmond Airport, 2243 SW YewAve., Redmond, 866-252-8721. • SCOREBusiness Counseling:Business counselors conduct free one-on-oneconferences for local entrepreneurs; 5:30 p.m.; DowntownBend Public Library, 601 NWWall St., Bend, 541-706-1639. • LaunchYourBusiness: Three one-on-one daytime businessadvising sessionscombined with three Wednesdayevening workshop presentations, plus peer support; $199; 6 p.m.; COCC Chandler Lab, 1027 NWTrenton Ave, Bend, 541-383-7290, http: //www. cocc.edu/sbdc. SEPT. 9 • CLA EstateServices Workshop: Aworkshopfor seniors about estate and retirement planning; free, but seating is limited; to register, call 1-866-252› 8721 between 7a.m. and 3 p.m.; free, registration
required; 9:30 a.m.;Awbrey Glen Golf Club,2500NW Awbrey GlenDrive, Bend, 866-252-8721. • Pints withOurPillars: The BendChamberof Commerceevent features Michael LaLonde,president of Deschutes Brewery Inc.; $15, chambermembers; $20 nonmembers; 5p.m.; Deschutes Brewery &Public H ouse,1044 NWBond St., Bend, http: //business. bendchamber. org/events/. SEPT. 12 • Homebuyer EducationWorkshop:A Neighborlmpact workshop to help prospective homeowners understand the home-buying process; $45 per household; 9a.m.; Bend Neighborlmpact Office, 20310EmpireAve., Suite A100,Bend, 541-323› 6567, www.neighborimpact. org/homebuyer-workshop› regis tration/. • For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday’sBulletin or visitbendbullegn.corn/bizcal
a score of 100 that set a new standardforperfection. The Tesla sedan is
the quickest Consumer Reports ever tested, accel›
erating to 60 mph from a stop in 3.5 seconds using the car’s "insane mode."
(CEO Elon Musk has since released an even-faster "lu› dicrous mode.") The P85D isahigh-performance, all-wheel-drive version of the all-electric Model S that achieved the equivalent
of 87 miles per gallon of gasoline. "This is a glimpse into what we can expect down the line, where we have
cars with the performance of supercars and the com› fort, convenience and safe›
ty features of a luxury car while still being extremely energy efficient," Jake Fisher, the magazine’s head of automotive testing, said in an interview. "We hav›
en’t seen all those things before."
Facebook hits 1 billion
users in asingle day The Associated Press NEW YORK
For the
first time, a billion people used Facebook in a single day Monday. CEO Mark Zuckerberg marked the occasion with a post on his Facebook page, saying that one out of seven
people on Earth logged in to the social network to connect with their friends and family.
The I billion figure is dif›
ferent from the daily user numbers Facebook discloses each quarter when it reports
its financial results. Those are the average number of daily users, counted over a 30-day
period. Facebook had 968 mil› lion daily active users in June. Overall, Facebook has near›
ly 1.5 billion users who log in at least once a month. It hit the I billion user milestone in
October 2012. Facebook CEO Mark
Zuckerberg said one out of seven people on Earth
logged into the site Monday. Eric Risberg /The Associated Press
IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W 50-PILls, D2-3
Parents & Kids, D4 Pets, D5 THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, AUGUST 28, 2015
O< www.bendbulletin.corn/allages
BRIEFING
KID CULTURE
Some advice for college students
Children’s narrated e-books available
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j~j.
,
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A freshman’s first year in college is atime of changes andchal› lenges. Manyfreshmen collegegoers encounter serious problems, and close to 40 percent won’t graduate. Here’s three piecesof advice for success: 1. Take care of your› self. Young people fail in college primarily be› cause of mental health problems. If you work hard and stay focused, you’ ll do fine in your classes. The tougher part of school is maintaining mental wellness. This means dealing with feel› ings of depression, anxi› ety and managing stress
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Deschutes Public Li›
brary now loans streaming electronic picture books
and easy readers featuring narration. Download the free
OverDrive app, sign in to your library account and enjoy great books with your child on your tablet or computer. You don’t even need to make a trip to the
library. Here are a couple suggestions:
without resorting to the
plethora of mood-alter› ing substances you’ ll be offered. The phrase "to party" means to chemically manage your feelings by drinking alcohol or tak› ing drugs. Manyover› estimate self-control to handle these situations. The risks to your mental health are not
RyanBrennecke /The Bulletin
Mary Lou Miller works on cutting her husband Dale's hair in their Powell Butte home. Mary Lou has been the primary caregiver for her husband since he was diagnosed with Alzheimer's in 2008.
Chick@ Cbickcf
Boom
poem
ey ee iignlh 31' «~g iahn A whamb>u1I
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worth the short-lived
pleasant feelings. 2. Stay focused on what’s important. You’re going to college to learn new skills, get a good job and makemoney. When you takeyour first psychology class, you’ ll learn a lot about the science of happi› ness. Living a happy life is all about surrounding yourself with good and loving people. 3. Learn to bea better you. Avoid the natural inclination to stay around others who share your interests and values. Beyourself, but challenge what you think
Submitted photo
"Chicka Chicka Boom Boom" By Bill Martin and John Archarnbault A favorite alphabet book
since its publication in 1989 gets another dimension
with narration by Ray Charles. "A told B, and B told C, ’I’ ll meet you at the
top of the coconut tree.’" Word gets around and soon all the little letters are
• Family members taking careof aging relatives or spousesin Oregon isnearing 500,000 The reasons why family members are taking care of loved ones is becoming increasingly common is threefold: Aging baby boomers, ary Lou Miller uses these five words the expense of 24-hour care and a strong desire by those who become sick wanting to to explain why she’s spent nearly stay in their homes.
By Mac McLeane The Bulletin
and feel. Listen to oth›
ers’ perspectives. Ask lots of questions and try to understand and learn from experiences of others. — Dayton (Fla.) Daily News
Drinking among older adults A study published in The BMJwarns low-in› come white men intheir early 70s might havea drinking problem. A team of researchers at King’s CollegeLondon divided 27,991 inner-city London residents who were 65 or older into three groupsdepending on their alcohol con› sumption. The study usedunits to measure drinks. A single unit of alcohol equaled ashot of whis› key, 8 ounces ofbeer or 2.5 ounces ofwine. Excessive drinking was defined asmenhaving more than 21units of alcohol per weekand women having 14units of alcohol perweek. The study found67 percent of thesepeople did not drink, 26 percent of these peopledrank and another 6.4percent drank to excess. Men made up46 percent of the study population. Sixty percent of them weredrinkers and 65.1 percent of the dangerous drinkers were men. Most of the study’s participants werewhite 59.1 percent, which accounted for 67.9per› cent of thosewhodrank and nearly 80percent of the excessive drinkers. The averagestudy participant was74.7 years old. Adrinker’s age averaged73.7.Theaver› age age of adangerous drinker was72.1. — From wire reports
nine years caring for a husband who has Alzheimer’s disease: till death do us part. "That’s part of the commitment you make when you get married," said Miller, a 74-year› old Powell Butte resident whose husband, Dale, 77, started showing signs of Alzheimer’s in 2006. "It’s for life," she said. "It’s for better or for worse. It’s in sickness, and it’s in health."
The AARP Public Policy Institute released a study last month that estimated
A majority of those receiv› ing care 65 percent are women nearing age 70; nearly
Oregon's 469,000 family half of them live in their own caregivers would have earned home. $5.7 billion if they were paid The reasons why family for taking care of their loved members are taking care of ones in 2013. loved ones is becoming in› The study offered a snap› creasingly common is three› shot of caregivers nationwide: fold: Aging baby boomers, the A majority are females taking expense of 24-hour care and care of one person most a strong desire by those who often a spouse or parent. Care› become sick wanting to stay givers are 49 years old, on av› in their homes. erage; 1 in 10 are 75 or older. /D2 See C
aregivers
racing to the top of the tree. "Chicka Chicka Boom Boom, will there be
enough room?" Lois Ehlert’s illustrations sup› port the light and funny tone, especially when the little letters end up in a hi› lariously battered heap to
be collected by their upper› case parents.
Ray Charles reads with a distinctive cadence that works well with the rhythmic text. If you’ re
among the generation who enjoyed the song or video, though, don’t expect even Charles to be able to get that catchy tune out of
your head.
The Book With No Pictures BA. Novalg
Submitted photo
Havin canine roommates can east ications By Alison Bowen Chicago Tribune
So you’ re moving in with someone, and it turns out he
"The Book with No Pictures"
By B.J. Novaya The author makes the reader a comedian. Savvy
might see the pet as just an animal, but they might see it as a family member."
parents and caregivers may not want to give up the privilege of bringing gales of laughter to their children. Still, when multi›
Cat Warren, the Durham,
ple readings do not satiate
or she already has a room› mate one that is sometimes
North Carolina-based author
a child’s appetite for this
of "What the Dog Knows"
book, B.J. Novak’s narrat›
smelly and at times quite
(Touchstone), has been both the one moving in and the one
ed e-book may keep your whole family happy. Novak opens the book by explaining that while a book with no pictures seems boring and serious,
charming. In furry form, that is.
with an at-times rascally pet. When she moved in with
What happens when your new roommate whether a friend, significant other or family member has a pet? Navigating someone else’ s adoration for an animal can
her husband while they were dating, her asthma com›
pelled him to find another home for his two cats. But
add a thorn to communica›
tion in the kingdom of living together. Tread carefully, experts advise, whether Fluffy be› longs to a platonic roommate or a romantic interest. People
can have emotional attach› ments to a cat or dog that
rival similar feelings toward
Courtesy Fotolia via Tribune News Service
Navigating someone else's love for an animal can causepotential rifts between roommates. kids, said Dr. Jeremy Mar› tinez, a Los Angeles-based psychiatrist. "Some people will see their
pets like children and may tie a lot of importance to that pet, more than you might realize," Martinez said. "You
the rule is that the person
years later, when they took
reading has to say all the words in the book. No mat›
in her parents’ dog, an Irish setter named Megan, he ad-
ter what. Even if the words start with "BLORK" and
opted her as his own, albeit
get sillier, goofier and more
reluctantly. "She really was a complete
preposterousfrom there. Even if there are mon›
pill," Warren said. But when
key robot voices and ridic› ulous songs. Enjoy.
Megan died 12 years later, she recalled, "we actually both cried."
SeePet roommates/D5
— Submitted by Julie Bowers, Deschutes Public Librarysystem
D2 THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, AUGUST 28, 2015
-Pr,vs
To submit an event for the Activities Calendar, visit bendbulletin.corn/events and click "Add Event" at least10days before publication. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Questions: communitylife@bendbulletin.corn,541-383-0351.
swor ers ea retirement, osses ecome exi e "They simply don’t want an› other benefit that may be sub›
By Kerry Hannon The New York Times
Corliss Fanjoy is turning 65
ject to laws and regulations,
this year, but she is not ready for retirement. And at a small
as a formal program probably would," Rix said. "Employers
handbag-maker in Maine, where Fanjoy spends her work› ing hours cutting intricate pat› terns in leather, she is not alone.
want to keep certain workers, but they don’t want to offer a
new benefit to everybody, and in fact, they probably couldn’ t. It can be expensive from both
Most of her co-workers are
over 55. One of them is her boss, Susan Nordman, 60, who bought the then-strug› gling company, Erda, based in
an administrative and benefits
Dexter, in 2013. She inherited a mostly older workforce; Nord›
retirement for its older work›
perspective." The federal government has plans to ease the transition to ers. But the program is off to a halting start. Three years ago, Congress approved legislation for an employee phased retirement program. Under the program, federal workers who take
man was determined to keep those workers on the job. "Preserving critical knowl› edge is vital to the longevity of any business," she said. "The skills that my employees pos› sess require hands-on learning.
p hased retirement work 2 0
With time and training, new workers can learn these skills,
hours a week and agree to mentor other workers. During
but only if someone is there to
that time, they receive half
teach them.
their pay and half their retire› ment annuity payout. When
"Yes, you have to accom› modate older workers’ needs,"
workers r e t ir e c o m pletely, their annuities will i n clude
Nordman added, "but they’ re
an asset, and you have to take care of an asset." One way that Nordman has been able to retain her older
an increaseto account forthe Craig Dilger /The New York Times
most of Erda's employees are 60 years or older, the companyhasimplemented a flexible scheduling system and invested in moreergonomic machines to accommodate an agingworkforce.
workers is by offering more flexibl ework arrangements. "At Erda, everyone has a key to the office, so workers can are informally introducing work the hours that fit their
retirement, more
e mployers the oldest ages
Caregivers Continued from D1 The A AR P s t udy f o und more than half the country’ s
family caregivers
partic›
ularly those who care for a loved one with dementia felt
overwhelmed by the complex nature of their tasks as well as
their personal and emotional feelings. " You’ re pretty m uc h
on
all day," said Bill Fischer, 68, a Redmond resident whose wife, Carol, 63, was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease in 2010. "It’s 24/7. Well, pretty close to it."
Fisher said his wife could take care of herself during the early stages of her dementia. Her condition really started to go downhill a little more than
a year ago.
75 and above
money is the fundamental fac› tor. "Financial necessity dic› tates the need to work for most
of my older workers," Nord› man said. In June, the Senate Special
Committee on Aging held a hearing to investigate the topic: "Work i n R etirement: Career Reinventions and the
New Retirement Workscape." Sen. Susan Collins, a Repub› lican from Maine and chair›
but it is not mandatory and those that introduce it are able
to limit the jobs that are eli› gible and how long someone work into their 60s and 70s can retain a partial retirement may face and the value that status, among other options. older workers can add to the And some agencies, including workplace.) the U.S. Postal Service, have Although having flexible announced that they will not a tsunami of retirees who will work schedules and phased-in adopt the program now. Rix argues that far more find that they are going to out› retirement programs is pop› live their savings, that they ular with workers, employers attention needs to be paid to have not prepared for their have been slower to adopt olderworker training and reretirement." them in a formal way. training than in the past. "I worry about tomorrow’s Nordman, Rix and James A majority of employers Godwin Jr., vice president of with 50 or more employees do generationof older workers human resources at the non› offer flexible work options to ending up just as badly off as profit Bon Secours Virginia some of their workers. But few some of today’s older workers Health System, testified at the do for all. are if we don’t start thinking hearing. (This reporter also With l abor s t il l r e lative› about expanding work life and spoke at the hearing, after ly plentiful, most employers what that means for lifelong being invited to testify on the don’t feel compelled to do so. learning," she said.
people are more likely to be woman of the committee, has flexibility into their schedules in the labor force today than been aleading voice advocator allowing employees to step they were 20 or 30 years ago." ingthevalue ofolderworkers. "The face of our nation’s slowly out of th e workforce D elayed retirement i s a with a phased retirement ar› consideration for an array of workforce is changing," Col› rangement. It can be a win-win reasons,butfor many people, lins said. "I think we’ re facing
needs," she said. "Some elect to come as early as 5:30, and oth› ers work nine-hour days and take a half day on Friday. I’ ve always felt the more autonomy for both. But there are plenty of that you give someone, the bet› challenges toovercome. ter job they’ re going to do." From 1985 to 2014, the rate of The extra effort has paid off, participation in the labor force according to Nordman. This for people 65 to 69 increased to year, the company, which sells almost32 percent from about to about 700 stores, will pro› 18 percent, according to the Bu› duce nearly 16,000 bags, up reau of Labor Statistics. "That’s a w hopping in› from 9,000 in 2013. Erda, she said, is now turning a profit. crease," said Sara Rix,a former As more workers like Fanjoy senior adviser with the AARP are saying no to a traditional Public Policy Institute. "Even at
part-time service.
Agencies could start accept› ing applicants last autumn,
Scott Mayer, co-owner of Erda, repairs a sewing machine at the company's production facility in Dexter, Maine early this month. Since
"If I had still been working, I than 25 percent of unem- due to challenging behaviors don’t know what I would have ployed people between 45 and associated with this condition. done," said Fisher, who retired 70 left their jobs to become a Sandy Gnann said her 92-year-old mother, who was in January 2014. loved one’s caregiver. Not every caregiver is in a In either case, caregivers diagnosed with Alzheimer’ s position like Fisher where they and employers suffer losses as diseaseabout five years ago, can ret ire orstop working and a result. started experiencing one of fully devote their time and On average, a family care- these challenging behaviors energy toward meeting their giver who left the workforce recently. loved one’s needs. misses out on $303,000 in Gnann’s mother sometimes The institute found 60 per› wages and benefits, accord› asks when her husband Bill, cent of family caregivers a ing to the study. Businesses Gnann’s father, who died more term defined as "any relative, experienced a $25 billion loss than 20 years ago, is coming partner, friend or neighbor ... in productivity when full-time home at night. She said her who provides a broad range of employees missed work to mother gets agitated when assistanceforan olderperson carefora loved one; the loss someone tells her that Bill is or an adult with a chronic, dis› was $3 billion for businesses dead. She wants to know why abling or serious health condi› with part-time employees who nobody told her the bad news. tion" still worked a full- or also are being a family mem› "(She’s also) starting to get ber’s caregiver. part-time job. up at odd hours thinking it’ s The study a lso r evealed Stress and poor health was morning, and that it’s time more than one-fifth of current common among caregivers for breakfast," Gnann said, retirees nationwide had left included in the study. These is› describing the phenomenon their jobs earlier than planned sues were highest for those car› known as sundowning, which to carefor a loved one. More ing for a person with dementia is when a person with Alzhei›
challenges Americans who
mer’s disease gets increasing› vided for her children.... I ly agitated or experiences a just can’t see her in a nursing surge of energy when it gets home." dark. — Reporter: 541-617-7816, The Redmond woman has
mmclean@bendbuIIetin.corn
figured out ways to convince her mother it’s still dark out›
side so she’ ll go back to bed, get some rest and more impor› tantly, give her a chance to do
the same. Gnann has also had to come to grips with the fact her moth›
er thinks she is three care› givers one who cleans the
Free pipeinstallation estimates
house, one who helps her take
her medicineand a daughter who comes to visit and the fact "when she thinks I’m a
stranger she’s more open to help." "She was a good mother," Gnann said when asked why she puts up with all of these behaviors. "She always pro›
AGTIvITIEs CALENDAR TODAY HIGH DESERTSECTIONAL BRIDGETOURNAMENT: A bridge tournamenthosted by Cascade Bridge Club, Redmond Bridge Club and Ace of Hearts; all duplicate players are welcome; 10 a.m. and 3 p.m.; $9 for ACBL members; $11 for nonmembers; Bend Senior Center, 1600 SE ReedMarket Road, Bend; 916-838-1643.
SATURDAY SATURDAY BIRD WALKS:Join the Nature Center for guided Saturday morning bird walks; bring binoculars; 8:30 a.m., registration required; Sunriver Nature Center & Observatory, 57245 River Road, Sunriver; 541-593-4394. HIGH DESERTSECTIONAL BRIDGETOURNAMENT: A bridge tournamenthosted by Cascade Bridge Club, Redmond Bridge Club and Ace of Hearts; all duplicate players are welcome; 10 a.m. and 3 p.m.; $9 for ACBL members; $11 for nonmembers; Bend Senior Center, 1600 SE ReedMarket Road, Bend;
916-838-1 643.
SUNDAY OLD MILL BIRDWALKS:Join a SunrIver Nature Center Naturalist for Sunday morning bird walk along the Deschutes in the Old Mill DIstrict, meet at the ticket mill; brIng binoculars; 7:30 a.m., donations accepted; Old Mill DistrIct, 450 SW Powerhouse DrIve, Suite 422, Bend; www.sunrivernaturecenter.org or 541-593-4394. HIGH DESERTSECTIONAL BRIDGETOURNAMENT: A bridge tournamenthosted byCascade Bridge Club, Redmond Bridge Club and Ace of Hearts; all duplicate
players arewelcome; 10a.m.;
$9 for ACBL members; $11 for nonmembers; Bend Senior Center, 1600 SE ReedMarket Road, Bend; 916-838-1 643.
PINOCHLEANDBRIDGE: Pinochle and Bridge; noon; The Golden Age Club, 40 SEFifth St., Bend; 541-382-7552. BEND/SUNRISELIONS CLUB MEETING:Weekly scheduled meeting; noon; Jake’s Diner, 2210 NE U.S. Highway 20, Bend; 541-382-5376. TRIVIA TUESDAYS:Bring a team or join one; 8 p.m.; The Astro Lounge, 939 NW Bond St., Bend;
www.astroloungebend.corn or 541-388-0116.
WEDNESDAY REDMOND AREATOASTMASTERS: Learn to become more effective communicators and leaders; noon; Church of Christ, 925 NW Seventh
St., Redmond; 541-876-7198. PINOCHLEAND BRIDGE: Pinochle and Bridge; noon; The Golden Age Club, 40 SEFifth St., Bend; 541-382-7552. WEEKLY CRUISE-INAND SHOW 'N' SHINE:Bring your classic cars and trucks for a weekly cruise-in and show ’n’ shine; 5:30 p.m.; Jake’s Diner, 2210 U.S. Highway 20, Bend; 541-647-1769. GEEKS WHO DRINKPUB TRIVIA: Trivia hosted by Ryan Traughber; 7 p.m.; The Summit Saloon & Stage, 125 NWOregon Ave., Bend; www.facebook.corn/GWDBend; 541-419-0111.
THURSDAY
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FRIDAY, AUGUST 28, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
secre s or navi a in e a By Sarah Klein ~Prevention magazine
in s urance explain any financial stress
~gO
you’ re under. But instead of
asking for the entire bill to be waived, offer to pay a sizeable portion (say 50 to 60 percent). At the very least, you could get a more reasonable pay› ment plan, says Savastano.
ailing your health insurance provider is right up on the Most Dreaded List with
pe
yg09+
getting a colonoscopy. But there will come
Setup aconferencecall
a day when you can’t avoid calling that toll-free
There are strict rules pro›
~e'
number, pushing 2 for English, 4 for Claims,
0
P
keying in your 47-digit Group ID number, having
tecting your privacy when it comes to health care and health i n surance
'~9 9~
Change
your 47-digit Group ID number electronically read back to you and then (finally!) being told your wait
4
o
99
time is 50 minutes. But there is a better way. We
2 0
actually got through to these insurance people
Q~
r/1
(and other experts) and asked how to make this whole process more efficient. Here’s what they told
Thinkstock
Knowing some key tips when dealing with your health insurance provider can save you time, money
us:
D3
and headaches.
›
and
rightfully so. But things can get frustrating when you’ re trying to help, say, an aging parent. Savastano suggests a conference call between you, your parent and the in› surance company so the rep can validate your parent’s information and get her okay to speak with you. If this is something you’ ll be doing regularly on behalf of a par› ent, consider filing a power of attorney with the company.
Stopusing out-of-network Don'tcallon M onday
Understand your plan
This is like trying to get through to the Heavenly Ham store the week before Easter. You’ ll be on hold forever, along with everyone else who had questions arise over the week›
version of their benefits, typ› ically a pamphlet or PDF summarizing coverage. But if you’ re contesting something,
end, says Elisabeth Schuler
Russell, founder and presi› dent of Patient Navigator LLC.
Try Wednesdays, Thursdays or early Friday before peo› ple start wrapping up for the weekend, she says.
Be preparedbefore youcall Have your insurance card
making an exception to cov› pl'ovldefs • Medically necessary: the erage rules, get that agree› Obviously, in an emergen› health care services that meet ment in writing. Dreher had cy you go where you must. your insurance company’s a client in Illinois who needed But when it’s not, using an standards of what medicine a complicated surgery that o ut-of-network h ealth c a r e is truly needed for diagnosis no in-network, local provid› provider is a sacrifice, Jo› and treatment. er couldperform. The most sephs says. "For out-of-net› experienced surgeon was work providers, your deduct› Get somerespect out-of-network in California. ibles and coinsurance are Once you’ ve mastered The patient’s insurance com› often higher, and they haven’ t some insurance jargon of pany verbally agreed to cover gone through the rigorous your own, use it. Using the the procedure, but afterward quality criteria that we have proper terminology can com› he received a bill that didn’ t for in-network providers," he municate you mean business, line up with what had been explains. All of which may Savastano says. "Could you promised. Fortunately, he add up to more expense and please walk me through how had documentedevery detail, headaches for you. this claim was processed?" is and Dreher helped him file Know what you' re buying a good start. Or "Could you an appeal. please detail how this claim Half of those surveyed by was adjudicated according Don'tpay untilthe Cigna in a recent poll admit› to the benefits’?" You’ ll get numbers match ted to spending less than one some satisfaction regardless After a medical appoint› hour deciding on their health of how the conversation turns ment or procedure, you’ ll insurance coverage. You out. receive an "explanation of wouldn’t buy a car or even benefits" from your insur› plan a vacation with that little Ask to speak with a nurse ance provider as well as a bill sweat. If you get your insur› That’s right, many case from your doctor. Both docu› ance through an employer, managers at insurance compa› ments will specify how much you’ re probably guilty of this,
i s co r › ample: 20 percent.
A nother o p tion
responding via email. You won’t have to take (as many) notes if everything is in writ› ing. Ask the rep if you can follow up via email and, if he you’ ll want to have the "201" agrees, ask if you can send version, says Russell. This is a note summarizing your calledthe "evidence of cover- phone conversation, says age" or "certificate of insur› Savastano. ance," and it’s typically much heftier sometimes up to Insist they speak English 200 pages. It may be mailed to Insurance-world j a r gon your home or posted online, can be intimidating, so don’ t but sometimes you have to re› be embarrassed to say to a quest it. Then you can ask the rep, "Help me understand rep, "Could you please point w hat t h a t me a n s," s a y s m e to thedocument you're Scott Josephs, MD, national referencing?" says Dianne medical director for Cigna Most people read the "101"
and the document in ques› tion (medical bill or insurance company statement) handy. If Savastano, founder of Massa› Health Insurance. Here are you’ re calling to see if an up› chusetts-based Healthassist, some common terms and coming treatment will be cov› which helps patients navigate their meaning (find more at ered, have the diagnostic and the insurance system. Healthcare.gov/glossary): procedural codes from your • Deductible: the amount doctor. Being prepared also Record everything you will pay before your plan means having something to do The automated voice that kicks in at the rate outlined in while on hold. Multi-tasking says, "this call may be moni› your benefits summary. • Out-of-pocket maximum: will ease your stress. tored." is good advice for you, too. Note the date and time, the most you will pay before Sweet-talk'em the name of whomeveryou your plan covers 100 percent Even though your incli› spoke with and any details of your charges. nation may be to curse and about what they said, so you • Copay: a fixed amount scream when someone finally have a documented version of you’ re charged for health picks up the phone, remem› the conversation just like the care covered by your plan, for ber that’s a human being and insurance company does. In example: $15. this isn’t her fault. "Be collab› fact, you can record the con› • Al lowed amount: the orative and never throw gaso› versation as well. maximum your plan allows "Very few insurance-relat› a doctor to charge for pay› line on a fire," says registered nurse and patient advocate ed calls are resolved in one ment oncovered health-care Teri Dreher, CEO of N orth phone call," says Russell, so services, for example, $100 it’s likely you’ ll need to ref› for an in-office visit. This is Shore Patient Advocates in Chicago."Be exceedingly po› erence this info when you sometimes also called the lite; say ’thank you.’ Use their call back. "If you can say, ’I eligible expense, payment al›
nies are registered nurses, ex›
money you owe the doctor.
says Savastano.
plains Dreher, and they’ re usu› In a perfect world, these two ally more knowledgeable and numbers should match, says sometimes even more sympa› Russell. If they do, pay that thetic to your cause. So if you amount. If there’s a big dis› need assistance with a medical crepancy,callthe doctor's of-
"Spend the time to make the choices that are right for you," says Josephs. Be aware that choosing the employ› er-offered plan with the low›
question and your customer
fice to make sure it billed the
est premium might not save
service rep isn’t being helpful, ask politely for an RN.
insurance company correct› you money. It depends on ly. Just because $600 may be what kind of care you need,
Follow up
If the insurance company promises to get back to you by a certain date, put a re› minder in your calendar to name, and show the impact talked to Jasmine on June 6 lowance, or negotiated rate. follow up immediately after their assistance had, if you at 3 o’ clock, and she told me • Coinsurance: a percent you hang up, says Savastano. can." Being nice makes it more this,’ you may not have to ex› you are charged of the al› likely they’ ll go the extra yard plain the whole thing from lowed amount for health care Always get it in writing for you. scratch." covered by your plan, for ex› If the insurance company is
the average rate for that pro›
such as behavioral health ser›
cedure, a doctor could charge vices or prescription meds. $1 000simply because shedid Open enrollment season it at a different hospital
will start soon. Don’t blind›
While insurance compa› ly go with last year’s choice. nies generally won’t budge Investigate the changes and on discrepancies like t h i s, any new options. Having the hospitals and doctors might, right plan and knowing it is the best way to remove says Dreher. Ask to speak with a medical advisor at the
this chore from your M o st
hospital or doctor’s office and Dreaded List.
Proie: ournaistMi eWa aceIeeases r m ste nove By Wallace Baine
but no one quite believed it."
Santa Cruz (Calif) Sentinel
WATSONVILLE,Calif.
Get toknow Nike Wallace
These days, Wallace is If
m a k i n g his name in another
you’ re a novelist who happens line of work altogether. The to be named Stephen King, or former journalist has turned a young quarterback who hap- into a mystery writer. His third pens to be named Tom Brady, self-published mystery novel then you could probably relate "Not Death, But Love" has just to Aptos, California, resident b e en released under the name Mike Wallace. Michael Wallace. "Not Death" is his third nov› As a longtime reporter and editor for the Watsonville Reg- el , and the third in a series of
ister-Pajaronian, Wallace always had the option to expe› N Ot Declt~ rience the distinct ts Qts tQtyQ thrill of leaving a g p y e l g g d ’, message for some unsuspecting city ti v e t l1lld official that a re- t f I cI S eytes porter named Mike Wallace wanted to
Of t OokS
talk to him. But he fe a t u r ing his didn’t quite have the g etup QUtII heart.
"Back when peo› ttlose pie used the phone to c o m municatefg m j l jg y yyjtg in the days before f I f t ~ II ~ + e mail, I u sed t o leave a m essage I'eCOgfI IZe flee with s o mebody’sfl @me pf g secretary saying I w as Mike-Wallace- ~
like-the-guy-on›
~ ’
"~
books featuring his hero, Quill Gordon, — thos e f a m iliar with fl y-fishing will recog n ize the name of a popular fly. As estab l ished in Wallace’s two pre› v rous o o ks ’ T h e M cHenry In h e r i›
Kevin Johnson / Santa Cruz (Calif.) Sentinel
tanc e" and "Wash Longtime Watsonville journalist Mike Wallace sits at Anna Jean Her Guilt
A w ay," Cummings Park in sequel with his latest novel "Not Death, But
Gordon is a former Love." stockbroker and investor from San
Fran c isco w h o se records of the time, what if we a lth allows him somebody who set out to write to take exotic fish› a family history who thought in g trips. He is, said it was going to be a feel-good his creator, a "mag› history of the family stumbled net for trouble," a into something that happened man who doesn’ t go looking for mys›
"60-Minutes"-but› teries to solve, but I’m-not-him." finds them anyway. The second m os t w e l l Sinc e h i s r etirement from known Mike Wallace in San- t h e R-P in 1991, Wallace has
i
supposed to find out about."
with the family history on a
named Charlotte London in "Not Death, But Love." While
on (Amazon’s self-publishing platform), and the response in the 1990s, but it was the In› was good enough I decided to ternet that sparked his career keep writing."
That’s exactly what hap› floppy disk. pened to the schoolteacher Wallace wrote his first novel
believing in it, so I put it out
Art Makes the World Go Round Did you knOW Art StatiOn haSyear rOund artS PrOgramSfOr kidS of all ageS?
e c t where the idea for the new
constantly, but he also remind- book came from. "When you' re doing a famed people that he was born with the name, unlike that oth- ily history, you’ re looking at er guy who was named Myron a l o t o f public documents, whose Russian-born parents and one of the things that oc› anglicized their surname from curred to me, as I (was) going the original Wallik. through and looking at these "I always told people that, newspaper articles and court
•
writing a family history, Char› as a novelist. "I couldn’t get lotte ends up dead in a house an agent or publisher (for that years ago that no one was ever fire, and Quill Gordon ends up first book), but I didn’t stop
...All Year Round.
ta Cruz County worked in d one a number of writing jobs, journalism throughout the i n cluding one that involved 1970s and ’80s, the heyday of putting together a family his› the scariest journalist in the t ory. It was during this proj› world. He was ribbed about it
Age:65 Home:Aptos, California Grew up in: Altadena/Glendale, California Family:Heand wife Linda Or› gren haveoneson, Nick,who is Blackhawkcrewchief with the U.S. Army’s101st Airborne. Educati on:GraduatedUCSanta Cruz in 1972 Newspapercareer: First hired on as areporter covering farm labor for theWatsonville-Pa› jaronian (interviewedCesar Chavez)androse upthe ladder to becomethe paper’s editor. HIs tenure aseditor included the
1989 LornaPrieta Earthquake which devastateddowntown Watsonville. The first editIon of the paperhit thestreets 24 hours after the earthquake. "I will still have someonein Watsonville tell me thatwhenthey heardthat newspaperhit thefront porch, they weretotally shocked and when theysawit, they thought, ’Things aregoing to beall right.’" He retired in1991. Novels:Hestarted writing his first mystery novel inthe mid› 1990s, but only released it in recent years. Histitles include "The McHenry Inheritance" (2012j, "WashHerGuilt Away" (2014) and"Not Death, But Love" (2015).
From after school classes to weekend workshops, our new fall catalog is filled with fantastic new classes.Register early and watch your kids fall in love with art!
AS
Artists inSchools
r
I
' l l
I
I
Arts Matter te Grey Matter: Bring anartist to your school.
ART STATION
D4
TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, AUGUST 28, 2015
PARENTS + KIDS
To submit an event for the Family Calendar, visit bendbulletin.corn/events and click "Add Event" at least 10 days before publication. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Questions: communitylife@bendbulletin.corn, 541-383-0351.
FAMILY CALENDAR
TODAY SMART ATTHELIBRARYREDMOND:Learnm oreabout volunteering for SMART; 10:30 a.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave., Redmond; 541-355-5600. AIRSHOW OFTHE CASCADES: Featuring an airshow with current and historic flight and static aircraft displays, fireworks and more; 4 p.m.; $15; free for veterans and kids 12 and under; Madras Airport, 2028 NW Airport Way, Madras;
www.cascadeairshow.corn or
541-475- 4899. "YOU'RE A GOOD MAN CHARLIE BROWN" THEMUSICAL: Featuring a family-friendly musical by Runaway Stage Theatrics; 7 p.m.;
$10, $6 for studentsandseniors; Crook County High School, 1100 Southeast Lynn Blvd., Prineville; 541-903-0913. "PETER PAN":Featuring an adaptation of the Disney story, with flying cast members, a full orchestra and more; 7:30 p.m.; $25, $20 for children and seniors; Summit High Theater, 2855 NWClearwater Drive, Bend; www.tmpbend.corn or
818-419-7089. 2ND STREETTHEATERPREVIEW: Featuring a 2016 season preview; 7:30p.m.;$10 plusfees inadvance, $15 at the door; 2nd Street Theater, 220 NE Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-312-9626.
SATURDAY THIRD ANNUALPIONEER SUMMER FESTAND HIGHLAND GAMES:Featuring the Highland Games, see athletes throw, flip and toss heavy items as they did in the old Celtic times; 8 a.m.; $5 suggested donation; Les Schwab Fields, 1751 S. Main St., Prineville;
www.pioneersummerfest.corn or 541-788-3179. AIRSHOW OFTHE CASCADES: Featuring an airshow with current and historic flight and static aircraft displays, fireworks and more; 9 a.m.; $15; free for veterans and kids 12 and under; Madras Airport, 2028 NW Airport Way, Madras;
www.cascadeairshow.corn or 541-475- 4899. CENTRAL OREGONGREAT GIVEAWAY — REDMOND:Come receive donated clothing and
household goods for free; for individuals only; 9 a.m.; Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, 450 SW Rimrock Way, Redmond; www.cogga.net or 541-241-6733. KIDS' ANIMAL SIGNS: METOLIUS PRESERVE:Ages 3 to 5 with parent, join the Deschutes Land Trust and Kelly Madden to investigate the world of animals; 10 a.m.; Metolius Preserve, Forest Service 2064, Sisters; 541-330-001 7. SHIRE OFCORVARIA HARVEST TOURNEY:A nonprofit educational society dedicated to Middle Ages re-enactment with archery, a heavy fighting tournament, children’ s activities, storytelling and more; 10:30 a.m.; $5; $3 for children; Petersens Rock Garden, 7930 SW 77th St., Redmond; www.corvaria. antir.sca.org/ or 971-207-9786. "PETER PAN":Featuring an adaptation of the Disney story, with flying cast members, a full orchestra and more; 3 and 7:30 p.m.; $25, $20 for children and seniors; Summit High Theater, 2855 NW Clearwater Drive, Bend; www. tmpbend.corn or 818-419-7089. "YOU'RE A GOOD MAN CHARLIE
BROWN" THE MUSICAL:Featuring a family-friendly musical by Runaway Stage Theatrics; 3 and 7 p.m.; $10; $6 for students and seniors; Crook County High School, 1100 Southeast Lynn Blvd., Prineville; 541-903-0913. LAST SATURDAY:Featuring local art and culture with art openings, live music, food carts, workshops and more.; 6 p.m.; The Old Ironworks, 50 SE Scott St., Bend; 347-564-9080. TWILIGHT CINEMA: REMEMBER THE TITANS:An outdoor screening of the 2000 film about a integrated football team; 6 p.m.; The Village at Sunriver, 57100 Beaver Drive, Sunriver; 541-585-3333. 2ND STREETTHEATERPREVIEW: Featuring a season preview of the 2016 season; 7:30 p.m.; $10 plus fees in advance, $15 at the door; 2nd Street Theater, 220 NE Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-312-9626.
SUNDAY "PETER PAN":Featuring an adaptation of the Disney story, with flying cast members, a full
orchestra and more; 3 p.m.; $25, $20 for children and seniors; Summit High Theater, 2855 NW Clearwater Drive, Bend; www. tmpbend.corn or 818-419-7089. "YOU'RE A GOOD MAN CHARLIE BROWN" THEMUSICAL: Featuring a family-friendly musical by Runaway Stage Theatrics; 3 p.m.; $10, $6 for students and seniors; Crook County High School, 1100 Southeast Lynn Blvd., Prineville; 541-903-0913.
$90 Art Station 313 SW Shevlin Hixon Drive, Bend; 541-617-1317. GREEN TEAM MOVIENIGHT:A showing of "Slavery by Another Name" gives voice to the largely forgotten victims and perpetrators of forced labor and includes interviews of their descendants; 6:30 p.m.; First Presbyterian Church, 230 NE Ninth St., Bend; 541-815-6504.
MONDAY
DREAMTIME PAINTING:Bring your dreams to reality as you portray your world on paper using various tools and techniques, while developing skills in perspective,
WEDNESDAY
DREAMTIME PAINTING:Bring your dreams to reality as you portray your world on paper using various tools and techniques, while developing skills in perspective, shapeand composition;9 a.m .; $90; Art Station, 313 SW Shevlin Hixon Drive, Bend; 541-617-1317.
TUESDAY DREAMTIME PAINTING:Bring your dreams to reality as you portray your world on paper using various tools and techniques, while developing skills in perspective, shapeand composition;9 a.m .;
shapeandcomposition;9a.m.; $90; Art Station, 313 SW Shevlin Hixon Drive, Bend; 541-617-1317.
THURSDAY DREAMTIME PAINTING:Bring your dreams to reality as you portray your world on paper using various tools and techniques, while developing skills in perspective, shapeand composition;9 a.m .; $90; Art Station, 313 SW Shevlin Hixon Drive, Bend; 541-617-1317.
Tantrum proo: How to raise chil ren who on’t eel entitle By Allson Bowen
have empathy for that mom
Chicago Tribune
or dad. You have no idea what
ing bullied becausethey’ re the one kid in school without the
happenedthree hours before latest thing? that happened.And if it’s ap• First, I a l w a ys s ay, propriate, offer some help: • d emonstrate e m p a › a restaurant or throwing a "Can I hold something for thy. Be cause i t tantrum in the cereal aisle. you? Is there is hard to be the So how canparents form a anything that I kid who is drivfoundation that fights back can do?" Come ing the beat-up against a culture in which from a place of clunker w h e n it seems kidsare entitled to empathy rather everybody else anything’? AmyMcCready, than judgment. has brand-new founder of Positive Parent› cars for th e ir ing Solutions and author of W hat if 16th birthday. No one wants to be the
A
parent of a child going viral in a video, screaming in
Thinkstock
With many areas of thecountry experiencing droughts, the topic of water and whogets It, where to
"The ’Me, Me, Me’ Epidem-
store it and how much it should cost have become relevant topics.
ic: A Step-by-Step Guideto Raising Capable, Grateful
tist e oorw osu er w en water is scarce By Judy Belk
could be taken for gr anted. months after that, my father
Los Ange(es Times
Too much of each day was Drought-shaming c ou l d consumed with securing and becomea popular pastime in allocating our sc arce water California's driest summer. supply. The water level in the Egregious water wasters, es- well fl u ctuated, especially pecially the oneswith massive during the summer, requiring lawns and highpublic profiles, ever more stringent restricare getting called out by re- tions onwater usage. portersand humbled on social As soon as we w e re old media. There's something to enough to carry a pail, my be said for bringing the heed- older sister Vickie and I took less well-to-do low, but make turns goingto the well and lugno mistake, it is the poor and ging home two heavy buckets disadvantaged who are truly of water for cooking, drinkdemeaned as water becomes ingand bathing.We dreaded more precious. all the extra trips required on In California's most mar- laundry day. ginalized communities, esMy siblings and I we re pecially in rural parts of the scarred in different ways by Central Valley,the drought is the smelly and scary outcompounding a groundwater house.I willed myself to develcontam› op a strong bladder. 1would go COMMENTARY ination thirsty rather than risk needc risi s . ing a trip to the outhouse after Backyard and community dark. Vickie was so scared of wells are running dry. The the outhouse that she was conAmerican RedCross is poised stantly constipated and forced to deliver emergency drinking to swallow spoonfuls of castor water in some counties. Mean- oil. A younger sibling — whose while, water bills are going bunk was above mine — beup faster than inflation and camea chronicbed wetter. reaching unaffordable levels In elementary school I befor the poorest. Researchers came a water thief. I kept a call this water poverty — a small mayonnaise jar in my struggle to meet one’s daily lunch box that I would fill at water needs — and by some the school's drinking fountain estimates, 1 million people in when no one was looking. I California lack accessto safe hid my personal water stash andaffo rdablew ater. under my bed to drink when I know from personal ex- the family’scommunal supply perience the physical and got low. Water was so precious emotional toll water poverty that I wo r ried I'd be found exacts. Forthe first 12yearsof
my life, my family lived with› out running water or indoor plumbing. We lived just 10 miles from the White House in a black neighborhoodin Alexandria, Virginia, and in the late 1950s and ’60s,segregation extended beyond public
out and thrown in jail. Then I learned that even prisoners had toilets.
had to load up the family car with jugs to fill at my grandparents' house2 miles away. Our water poverty nearly derailedmy education, too. My sister and I were plaintiffs in a lawsuit to desegregate our all› white neighborhood schooL Tutors volunteeredto cometo our house to prepare us to at›
tend what was amore rigorous schooLBut my mother balked. Pressed by a young, black community organizer to explain her resistance,she said, "What am I supposedto do
when one of them white folks asks touse the bathroom?" Shame aboutour living conditions nearly eclipsedmy mother's commitment to the civil
rights movement.(A compromise was found: Most of the tutoring sessionswere held at volved inthe court case. Still, 1 rarely invited friendsfrom my new school over, sharing my mother’s embarrassment.) I was 12 years old when we moved to a brand-new house
with running water. I remember turning the faucet on and
off, on and off, just to make sureit really worked. I fought with my siblings over whose turn it was to take a bath. I
hung out for the hours in the bathroom. I could finally get past our daily needs — and dare to dream for something more than water.
California's historic drought has us talking about accessto water
who gets it, where to
st u nted m y
cost — for the first time in 50
dreams. I’m not sure what years. Many of us have taken other 8-year-old girls imag- water for granted and can use ined for their future, but I was much less. At the same time, intent on two things: running empty wells and desperate schools and mo vie th eaters water and an in d oor bath- drilling should remindus how and where you could live. It room. Every wish I made on vulnerable many households also meant that the city had my birthday, in my bedtime are. Access to water is a hu› never brought water or sewer prayers or in a note to the man right, even in a drought. pipesto our neighborhood. Easter Bunny or Tooth Fairy Where people live, their race was aplea for a life with ad› or their economic condition Instead,we had an outhouse in the backyard and got water equate water and no outhouse. shouldn't determine whether from a small well we shared My prayers got particularly they have water todrink, clean with another family. Water desperate when we pulled a air to breathe, food to eat or was a commodity that never dead cat from the well. For dreamsto dream.
So (say), "I’m
else is allowing an entitled atmo-
•
Kids in an Ov e r-Entitled sphere for your World," talked to us about c hild, whe t h -
tamping down the scourge
er
of entitlement. This is an
ter, te acher o r
edited transcript.
a
a
~
,~
sure that would be greatto have
•
6 i~ ~ ~
~ ~
~
a
br a n d-new
car, but that’ s not something
bab y sit-
that we can do
our family." (Then), what› What inspired you to • Recognize that you are ev e rthe thing is, "Let’s talk • write this book? • the greatest influence abouthow we can make that • Most of my work has onyour child's life. So if you’re happen." You can brainstorm • beenaround teaching doing your best to un -enti- wi t h t h e child how they can parents how to bring out tie your kid, and they go to m a ke money, how they can the bestin their kids. Over grandma'sand eat marshmal- have a part -time job. Or you wel l- m e a ning
Courte sy Tarcher Booksin
friend?
Q•
A
the years, this topic of en›
lows for dinner, who cares? c a n u s e a ool t that I call "state
titlement kept coming up. Parentstold me about kids
However,if grandma is a pri- wh at you can spend." Your marycaregiverand issortof job as a parent is to clothe undermining what you’re try- yo urkid. That doesn't mean ing to accomplish, well, then the most expensive clothes. it’s time to have aconversation (S ay,) "I’mwilling to spend withgrandma aboutthat and $40 on apair of jeans. If you encourageher to get on the want toget the XYZ jeans, same page with you and use you'rewelc ome to pay the dif› the same tools that you’ re us- fe r e nceout of your allowance ing. Or consider another op- or make extra money." There tion for day care. will always be something that somebody elsehas that Howdo you react if your is better or cooler, and that’s • child is the only one just the way life is. That’s an without something, or is be- important lesson.
not being able to take "no"
for an answer, expecting bribes or rewards for expected behavior, kids who werenot willing to help out at home, not takingpersonal responsibility. The one thing I have found with all of thesepar› ents is that no one intends
to raise an entitled child. It happensout of love. And it happens when we’ re sort
Q•
of doing thingsfor our kids that they’ re actually per-
fectly capable of doing for themselves. Or we don't want them to experience
disappointment, sowe step in and rescue.
the home of another family in-
But more than anything, store it, how much it should water poverty
Q •• someone
• What can parents do • to curb this, for all
1/2 Price Patio Clearance
ages? are a c t ually A •• There 35 tools in the book. That is not to sound over-
whelming, just to let par› ents knowthere are different ways. The mostimportant thing that we have to do
is give our kids what they are truly entitled to: our one-on-one time and atten›
tion. If you' re giving kids that time an d
a t tention,
they’re much less likely to throw a fit in the grocery store. They' re much less likely to pull these antics.
Another piece is making sure all family members, toddlers to teens to adults,
everybody
c o n tributes.
It’s not a free ride for kids. From the time the kids are
1/2 off all Patio Sets over $'7.500 List Price
little, they need to understand that their contribu-
tionsmake a difference. should you do Q •• What as a bystander, if a child ishaving a meltdown’ ? • It’s notappropriate or • helpful to discipline another person's child. What is appropriate is to
222 SE Reed Market Road, 541-388-0022 Mon-Sat 9:30-5:30 Sun 10-5 vvww. PatioWorldBend.corn
FRIDAY, AUGUST 28, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
PETS
D5
Tosubmit an event for the Pets Calendar, visit bendbulletin.corn/events and click "Add Event" at least 10days before publication. Ongoing listingsmust be updated monthly. Questions: communitylife@bendbulletin.corn, 541-383-0351.
Mascot ig etween school,Ohiogoes own to wire By Kantele Franko •The Associated Press
in creatures that no one else wanted. One World Conservation,
Pro
COLUMBUS, Ohio-
,Dele
high school football team that has
a nonprofit based in San An›
PEI.>
' ECI
to end the tradition, said the group’s CEO, Karrie Kern. A noisy football game, she said, is no place for a big cat with sensitive hearing and poten› tially dangerous instincts.
Ip
fl (~
o
featureda tigercub atgames fordecades
tonio has called members of the school board to urge them
FE P ~ EO
might kick off the season without its
r
beloved mascot as boosters try to meet state rules ' wi,
enactedafterthe bizarrerelease ofdozens of dangerous animals from a suicidal man’s farm in
"I’m from Texas. You know, we’ re all about football, too, and I get that, but what that
~P
cub is experiencing is unbe›
~ i l hW :
lievable," Kern said.
2011.
The booster club has indi› cated it won’t easily give up on
Boosters typically lease a cub called Obie each
the cub, which isn’t funded by
the school. "We could have put this to
year to play the mascot of Massillon’s Washington
bed and said ’no,’ and that
High School Tigers, whose rich football tradition
would have been the easy
includes helping launch the career of Cleveland
I
route, but we don’t want to do that," president Matt K eller
I
told The (Canton) Repository recently. "We want to keep the Glenn B. Dettman/The (Ohio) Independent via The Associated Press program going." Keller didn’ t Brown. Supporters of the football team at Washington High School in Massillon, Ohio, collect donations at the respond to messages from The high school's Paul BrownTiger Stadium to care for a tiger cub leased to serve as the team's mascot, Associated Press. "Obie." The football team has had a live tiger cub mascot at games for decades, but the team's 2015 The boosters have signifi› Ohio began requiring own› tigers will live at an accredit› season may begin without a tiger cub at games unless state officials receive an affidavit required by cant support from fans. Just ers to register exotic animals ed facility when they’ ve out› Ohio's revised wildlife regulations enacted in 2012, attesting tiger cubs leased to serve as mascots across the street from the after authorities, out of fear grown their job as mascots will live at an accredited facility and be cared for throughout their lives. school, the sportswear shop McG’s T’s started selling a for the public’s safety, killed and that the school ensures "Save Our Obie" shirt at a cus› nearly 50 of the bears, lions, they’ ll be cared for through› tigers and other animals that out their lives. The state Ag› Boosters have been trying well cared for during their animals are treated and what tomer’s request. were released by their owner. riculture Department, which vigorously to find a way to le› stints as mascot, when they h appens to them a fter t h e If there’s no live tiger, "I’m The law includes one limited oversees permits for exotic gally meet requirements, dis› are kept in a cage but in view football season. A few former sure there’d be initial disap› exemption the Massillon animals, hadn'treceived such trict Superintendent Richard of spectators. Animal wel› Obies were among animals pointment," said shop owner schooL documentation as of Tuesday, Goodright said. But, he noted fare organizations and others removed this year from an un› Mark McGeorge, an alumnus. The boosters have been spokeswoman Erica Hawkins last week, "the clock’s ticking." have raised safety concerns licensedToledo-area sanctu- "How much it would affect, I asked to prove that the school’s said. Locals say the tigers are and questions about how the ary whose owner said he took wouldn’t want to guess."
Browns and Cincinnati Bengals founder Paul
pep
oun o wi c ewan t in i no oun ariesareset By Mare Morrone
the toy, then how is she sup› toys, she no longer thinks of posed to tell the difference? To them as one of life’s options. • What can we do about her, both things are just there She sounds like a smart dog, • a 14-month-old golden for her amusement. and it should take only a few retriever that bites and chews She cannot d i f f erentiate weeks of this close confine› anything and everything› when you chastise her for ment for her to get the idea. from shoes to furniture to our chewing one thing and not outside deck? We keep her the other. That being said, if • My African grey par› well supplied with chew toys you correct her every time she • rot is 12 years old, and and marrow bones, and she chews on the shoe, she will get I notice that for the last year Newsday
Q
• Well, none of us can go A ter how much we may want
ger and spend quality time
of their lives, they are bright
• back in t i me, no mat› with him on his own terms.
red and live in the forest under wet leaf litter, where they eat
Then, when everything is cool again, you can try to see if his behavior has changed. If not, please do not take it personal›
to, and all our relationships change as the years go on. First of all, he still loves you. The fact that he bows his head ly as it is not a reflection of his to you to be scratched proves feelings of friendship toward that. (The back of a bird’ s you. head is the most vulnerable the idea this is not a thing she he does not want me to pet spot, and he would not expose • M y c h i l dren c a m e can play with. Since she does him anymore. I got him when that part of himself to you un› • back from camp in the not get corrected when she he was only 4 weeks old, and less he trusted you.) He just Catskills with five little red plays with a dog toy, then she we have been best friends all does not want your hands on salamanders that they found will get the idea that this thing this time. I could cuddle him his body and feathers. in the woods. We went to the is OK to play with. and kiss him, and he always When my kids were small, pet store and were sold a lit› You never said if she was liked me better than other they would happily walk hand tle plastic tank to keep them crated as a puppy, but the fact members of my family. How› in hand with me through the in and some moss that we that she is chewing on every› ever, now he will step up on mall. Now that they are teen› were told to keep wet. We also thing in the house indicates my finger just fine, and he agers, I am only allowed to bought Newt andSalamander she is not crated now. So this will put his head down for walk six feet behind them, Bites to feed them, but they i s what you must do for a me to scratch it, but if I try to otherwise they may not look are not eating these pellets. Is while. When she is not being pet him he will back away. If cool. However, they still love there anything else we could watched, she must stay in a I keep trying, then he will bite me. The parrot is telling you feed them’? crate with some toys she can me hard. I talked to a "parrot politely that he no longer feels • Those salamanders are chew on. That way, she gets in behaviorist" who told me to comfortable with your hand • t he larval form of t h e the habit of only chewing on try to desensitize him to allow on his body, and when you Eastern Newt, and they are those particular items when me to pet him again by trying push the issue, he gets upset called Red Eft. Adult Eastern she is free to roam about and to pet him with a chopstick, that you are not respecting his Newts are olive green and you are watching her and but the bird just grabs it out of feelings. totally aquatic. They live in correcting her every time she my hand and throws it across If you insist on trying to pet ponds and lakes and never chews on a household object. the room. Is there any way to him, I suggest that you stop come out of the water, and Since she no longer has the make him love me again like trying at all for a few weeks. they will eat those pellets that opportunity to chew on non› he used to? Just let him step on your fin› you bought. For the first year
Q
also will chew through most
toys she has. She gets plenty of exercise and playtime with us.
She’s in perfect health. We completed a training program and were assured that with
time and techniques she’ d stop. We can’t leave her alone, and it’s very f r ustrating. If
there’s nothing around for her to chew, she’ ll chew one of us.
She is the third golden we’ ve had, and we’d never had this happen.
A • you have a 14-month-old dog that has been allowed to • The problem here is that
pick and choose whatever she
wants to play with and chew on. If there is a dog toy that you boughtforheron thefloor and a shoe that you bought for yourself on the floor next to
ADOPT ME
Q
A
feelings and toward more ra› Pet roommatestional discussion." Continued from 01 If you’ re moving in with someone who expects you to be a pet parent
Submitted photo
Nolo Meet MoMo, a5-year-old male tabby. Hehas noretinas and is totally blind but hasadapted well. MoMo needs asafehomeindoors with a loving family. Tomeet MoMo and other adoptable cats, contact the CatRescue, Adoption and Foster Team,541-389-8420, email info'craftcats.org or visit www.craftcats.org.
PETS CALENDAR
TODAY SIXTH ANNUALFUR BALL: Featuring a silent auction, a dog fashion show, raffle drawing, food, live music and more; benefits Bend Spay and Neuter Project; 6 p.m.; $60 per person, $350 for a table of six; Aspen Hall, 18920 NW Shevlin Park Road, Bend; www.bendsnip. org/event/2015-furball-dogs› catwalk or 541-617-1010.
or
if you are deciding how much of arole you want to play in the pet’s life experts offered some guidelines: •
C ommunicate. A n
animal, which should be a spirit lifter, can, in fact, become a wedge. Before moving boxes in, make sure to sit and speak. Just as you would talk about
and live blackworms or tubi›
fex worms that are sometimes sold as food for aquarium fish. H owever, i n
New Y ork
State, it is not legal (or, in my opinion, moral or ethical) to keep wild-caught native am› phibians. That’s because the habitat of these animals is
shrinking yearly, and they are not as common as they used to be. Many native am› phibians in the state are now
endangered. So, even if you could get the live foods that Red Efts
need to eat, you would be do› ing them a better service and
performing alif e lesson for your children by making a day trip of returning them to the area where the kids found them. Since they are not na› tive to Long Island, turning them loose in a park near here would not work, and they would just die there.
key. "Kneel down; let the pet
that does require a discussion want to come home? Either get smell your hand," Reed said. of those feelings between the home to make sure you can • Take care of your own pet. "Don'tcome looming over." two individuals, so that they feed your cat or say to your don’t harbor resentment." At least in the beginning, the Pet owners need to g ive roommate, ’Do you mind feed› responsibilities of pet owner› their new roommate as much Recognize that this doesn’ t ing my cat?’" Reed said. "Don’ t ship feeding, walking, trips time as needed to get to know have to turn into a negative assume anyone is going to take to the vet, purchasing food their pet. "Try to remember situation. Warren and Reed care of your responsibility." and other supplies should back towhen that dog came both said that when their sig› Reed had a friend who lived be the primary pet owner’s into your life and what you did nificant others embraced their in an apartment where her responsibility, said C h ar› to bond with that dog," War› pet equally, it became another roommate’s cat cried all the lotte Reed, a self-described ren said. member of the family. On the time and was often left by it› "petrendologist" who offers • Be open to change. "Very other hand: self for days. • Be prepared to walk away. "She had to move," Reed pet etiquette advice. often in n e w r e lationships, " Don’t expect y our n e w the person who has the pet is Sometimes, living with some› sard. • Life lessons: Whatever boyfriend to want to walk loath to give over any control," one who has a pet reveals a your dog," she said. Warren noted. "They have to different side of the pet own› happens, experts say, cohabi› And if your pet briefly turns be willing to give over some er. What if the person doesn’ t tating with a pet will lend les› into a monster, "You should control." take good care of the pet’? sons about the strength of a • Understand that your rou› What if he thinks having a friendship or relationship. expect to pay for anything that "Sometimes, dogs are great your pet destroys," she add› tines might change. For start› roommate means he can abdi› ed. "If your cat pees on your ers, let the new person feed cate some responsibility’ ? sort ofbarometers," Warren "You have a date and don’ t SBld. roommate’s bed, expect to buy the dog, if he’s willing. Have your roommate a new bed." him set the food down, then C onsider investing in a quietly stand behind the ani› dog trainer to scope potential mal, Warren advised. (Unlike a nnie Green, r O e r problems. "We never truly un› standing in front of the dog
bills, discuss who will care for the pet and where it is allowed. "Dogs are really good at invading space," War› ren said. "Are you going to allow the dog to be in the bedroom when you have sex, much less on the bed?" derstand what our own bad And when issues arise habits are and what we tol› cats urinating outside erate versus what somebody their litter box, dogs chew› coming into this relationship ing favorite shoes in› might tolerate," Warren noted. • Don’t force someone to stead of blaming or attack› ing the pet or person, use love your pet. If you were "I" statements, Martinez coming into a relationship in suggested: "’This is how I which a significant other had feel about the animal.’ In› a child, you would need to stead of placing the blame let that relationship develop on the other person, this
termites and other tiny crea› tures. They will only eat live foods and, in captivity, they will eat wingless fruit flies
naturally, Martinez said. The
technique allows people to same is true where a pet is really redirect those strong concerned. e motions t o war d t h o s e The first meeting can be
and its food, this reassures the
pet that the new person won’ t be taking the food away)
Cel I 541-815-0097 vonniegreenemsn.corn
• R ealize that y o ur p e t
might love the new addition more than you expect. Sure, one fear is a dog growling at the new roommate, boyfriend or girlfriend. But what hap› pens if the pet actually likes the new person more? "That can be very discour›
aging, and we see that hap› pen with actual children, too," Martinez said.
"Oftentimes
I working evenings and weekends I Will always answer my phone and return calls promptly s My goal ... clients for a lifetime, built on confidence
L L E D A R EA L
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DG
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, AUGUST 28, 2015
ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT
o
e a r ac on' e i e w'
TV SPOTLIGHT
By Lynn Elber The Associated Press
talk show since the departure
sticking my two cents into the
of "Good Morning America"
of co-creator and on-airleader
hot topics, especially now that
in 2014.
"The View"
LOS ANGELES
Joy Be›
har is returning to "The View"
Another f amiliar
Barbara Walters in 2014. Behar, Cameron Bure and
Hillary and the Donald are in
19th season that begins Sept.
on Bure starred as D.J. Tanner
"View"
as it is but they may get a new source, thanks to one of the
entrepreneurs. Theperson is a
Rating:R for language throughout, of female nuditY, references to sex Gppdlesspns/badlesspns Always druguse,sexualcontentand some throughout and a nongraPhicsex stick together, listen to your parents nudity. scene. and family above all else. What it's about:An aspiring DJ D rug s : Copious and casual con› Pursues his Passion along with his s umPtion of drugs, including ecsta› de s pf jnnpcent victi three childhood friends. sy,PCP,marijuanaandcocaine. The kid-attractor factor:Star Zac Pa r ents advisory: The darker p hysi c al attacks and threat of rape. Efron; an electronic music club the m es and adult content make this Lan ua e, Mild ""gMg' " Ian ' n g u'g" 0' setting. film OK for older teens but not kids profanity. Good lessons/badlessons:Drugs Sexuality:Aside from a threatened and partying are very fun but very Rating:R for strong violence sexual attack, none. dangerpus and can lead tp death. throughout, and for language. shoot for the stars, pursue your ’ Drugs:None. dreams and work hard. What it's about:An American fam› Parents advisory:The subject iiymus«scaPe a bloodycpuP " Violence:A couple of violent bar matter of this violent film is too Southeast Asian country. fights. much for the kids on screen and too Submitted photo Language:Sporadic profanity The k i d-attractor factor: Not much much for any kids in the audience. Zac Efron stars as anaspiring DJ pursuing his passions in "We the film stars two young girls as Would be OK for teens, though. throughout. Are Your Friends." The film is OK for older teens.
Sister-in-awsto to untrut u
MOVIE TIMESTOOAY • There may be an additional fee for 3-D and IMAXmovies. • Movfe times are subject to change after press time. I
Dear Abby:My sister-in-law quit with her parents in order to save her job and moved into my in-laws’ face after having been asked about basement six years ago. 1 think why she was living in their base›
— Borrowing Trouble in the Midwest
Dear Borrowing Trouble:It is a
there may have been an emotion- ment. Because you have dealt with
fact of life that when cloth is excised
al breakdown having to do with this with your daughter and the her work. 1 also think it upsets my subject is a sensitive one with your
so a garment can be made "several sizes smaller," it cannot be put back
mother-in-law to have her adult
in its original condition. If that was the expectation of the owner, it was
mother-in-law, my advice is to let it
go
told my 10-year-old daughter that
Dear Abby: Can unrealistic. The bride did the right you please help me thing by having the wedding gown understand the rule professionally cleaned and boxed, of etiquette when and it shouldn’t be necessary for borrowing a w ed› her to make any apologies. ding dress’? The own› Dear Abby:A few years ago, my er was fully aware that the bride sister-in-law gave me a beautiful
she lives with her parents because
intended to alter it. It was obvious
situation. This was fine un› til m y s i ster-in-law
ABBY
"they need her to take care of them." Nothing could be further
from the truth! My in-laws are fine on their own. My concern is that this is send›
watch for Christmas. It became my
that it would need to be made sev› favorite accessory for any dressy eral sizes smaller and shortened. occasion. However, a year ago her Also, the bride stated clearly that
brother and I divorced. 1 still have
she intended to lower the neckline and remove the sleeves. Everyone ing a bad message to my daughter, seemed happy the gown was being and she will think she will need to used again after 25 years of being take care of her father and me in in a box. 30 years. 1 have told my daughter After the wedding, the dress was that kids do not need to move back professionally cleaned, boxed and in with their parents even if they returned to the owner. She is now need help. livid and contends that the dress My question is, should 1 tell my should have been returned in its
the watch and would love to wear it, but 1’m not sure if it would be ap› propriate or if 1 should give it away. Thanks for your input. — Tom in Decatur, 1ll. Dear Tom:The watch was given
mother-in-law about this or j u st drop it’? — Taken Aback in Nevada
from. Because you like it, wear it and enjoy it. There is nothing inap› propriate about doing so.
original state loaned.
just like it w as
1’d appreciate your help settling Dear Taken Aback:Your sister› this family dispute. How should in-law may have justified her living this work’ ?
HAPPY BIRTHDAY FORFRIDAY, AUG. 28, 2015:This yearyouwil be on a more adventurous track than usual. You often seem calm, cool and collected, yet others around you tend to beunpredictable and full of fun. You could find the structure of your days challenged. Though you might want to resist this change, you might not have a choice. If you are single, you will
meet someone of Stars sbpwtbe kind significance. In fact, pfdayypa'ghave you might discover ** * * * D ynamic that you haveyour ** * * p psltlve choice of wannabe ** * Average swe eties. If you ** So-so are attached, you’ ll turn a major page * Difficult in your relationship this year. Youwill walk hand in handwith your partner into a major new phase.AQUARIUSteaches you how to be agood friend.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) ** * You might have anunusual amount of demands coming from others. You will want to confirm that you are onthe same page as them; otherwise, you could witness some uproar. A meeting will be the perfect way to makewhatyouwanthappen.Tonight: TGIF!
TAURUS (April20-May20) ** * * You might feel as if you are being pulled in two different directions. You have the ability to charm someone into following your chosen path. Despite this ability, give this person the space to makehis or her own choices. Bewilling to listen. Tonight: You are the leadactor.
to you with affection, and even if
you wear it in your ex-husband’ s presence, the chances are small that he would realize who it was
— Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.corn or P.o. Box69440,Los Angeles, CA 90069
SCORPIO (Oct.23-Nov.21)
YOURHOROSCOPE
** * * You could be in the position of handling a lot of personal matters. Why they By Jacqueline Bigar have landed onyour plate might be less im› portant than the reason for their existence in from a different angle. If you are careful and the first place. Put out the fire, then find out choose the right words, you will be suc› who set it. Remain centered in the midst of a cessful in getting this person to seeyour mini-crisis. Tonight: As you like it. vision. Tonight: Try a newapproach.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) ** * * * One-on-one relating will reveal manydifferencesbetweenyouandsomeone else. Respect your different views, and know that all of them are coming from a grounded place. Understand what your lim› its are with this person. Tonight: How about a close encounter?
LEO (July23-Aug. 22) ** * * Defer to others. If you think an idea is off, listen to the logic behind it. If you still feel the same, howyou share it will de› termine its fate. You might want to rethink your approach. Others respond better to you because of your unique style. Tonight: Join a loved onefor TGIF!
VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) ** * * Your originality marks your deci› sions. You don’t need to get to the bottom of a problem right now; just accept it and move on. Letothersfuss.Scheduleanappointment to get your hair cut or a checkup with your dentist. Focus onyourself right now. Tonight: An easypace.
LIBRA (Sept.23-Oct. 22)
** * * * You have an idea that you might not want to share yet, but somehow it could get out. Recognize howmanydifferent GEMINI (May21-June29) ways you can handle this information leak. ** * * You could be in the position of You also might want to find out the source. having to explain your perspective to some› Tonight: Dip into the social whirlwind one who has chosen to look at asituation around you.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec.21)
** * * * Conversations swirl around you. Some of the talk might be negative, while some commentaries will express confidence andcaring.W hatyouchoose to listen to will indicate what kind of mood you are in. Open up tonewpossibilities. Tonight: Party the night away.
CAPRICORN (Dec.22-Jan.19) * *** You have a solidunderstanding of finances that generally saves youand points to making good choices. However, what sounds good could turn out to be di› sastrous. Your antennaemight not be pick› ing up the implications of what is occurring. Tonight: Treat a pal.
AQUARIUS (Jan.20-Feb.18) ** * * Use the day and the upcoming Full Moon to energize yourself to the max. When you are positive and revitalized, you’ ll feel as if you canaccomplish anything. Do your best to remain upbeat no matter what comesdown yourpath.Tonight:Head ina new direction.
PISCES (Feb.19-March20) * ** Youcould bepickingup onso much pessimism that you might want to disap› pear. Isolating yourself will help, yet you will have little say in the events that follow. What is more important to you being involved, or staying away from negativity? Tonight: Vanish if you want. ' King Features Syndicate
said.
don’t feature enoughcorpses,
Sex uality: At least three instances daughters in the family.
DFP,R
chor for the weekend edition
8p.m. on 2,9, "SharkTank" It’s not that crime shows
This guide, compiled by Orlando Sentinel film critic Roger Moore, is published here every Friday. 1t should be used with the MPAA rating system for selecting movies suitable for children. Films rated G, PG or PG-13 are included, along with R-rated films that may have entertainment or educational valuefor older children with parental guidance.
daughter living this life. Mom isn’t willing to ask her to move out
Faris, an ABC News corre› spondent, was named co-an›
TV TOOAY • More TV listingsinside Sports
PARENTS'GUIDE TO MOVIES 'IE ARE YQIIR FRIENDS'
House" Netflix sequel.
Shepherd will join w ith the spotlight," she said, refer› fellow contributors Padma hauled panel that also will Faris will join returning mod› ring to presidential candidates Lakshmi, Stacy London, Ana include newcomers Candace erator Whoopi Goldberg and Hillary Rodham Clinton and Navarro and Molly Sims to Cameron Bure a n d P a u la co-hosts Raven-Symone and Donald Trump. weigh in on topics including Faris. Michelle Collins for the show’s Actress and writer Camer› politics, style and health, ABC as a co-host, part of an over›
Dario Cantatore/The AssociatedPress
on the sitcom "Full House" and is part of the upcoming "Fuller
Shepherd, will be back as a Behar, a co-host from sea› contributor. sons one through 16, said in a ABC has been trying to statement that she’s happy to find the right formula and im› be "back home." "And 1’m looking forward to proved ratings for the daytime
11a.m. weekdays, ABC
Along withJoy Behar, newcomers Candace Cameron Bure and Paula Faris will return to "The View."
face, former co-host Sherri 8.
I
I
I
Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 &IMAX, 680 SWPowerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • AMERICANULTRA(R) 3:15, 6:50, 9:30 • ANT-MAN(PG-13) 12:15, 3:10, 7:05, 10:10 • THE DIARYOFATEENAGEGIRL (R) 11:45 a.m., 2:15, 4:45, 7:15, 9:55 • THE GIFT(R) 11:55 a.m., 2:35, 5:10, 7:50, 10:35 • HITMAN:AGENT47 (R) 11:50 a.m., 2:15, 4:50, 7:20, 9:50 • INSIDE OUT(PG)12:10, 2:40 • JURASSICWORLD(PG-13) 4:25, 7:25, 10:25 • JURASSICWORLD IMAX 3-D(PG-13)noon,3,6:45, 9:45 • THEMAN FROM U.N.C.L.E.(PG-13)11:35 a.m.,2:05, 4:55, 7:40, 10:40 • MINIONS(PG) 11:40 a.m., 2 • MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE — ROGUENATION(PG-13) 12:15, 3:35, 6:55, 10 • NO ESCAPE (R) 11:45 a.m., 2:20, 4:50, 7:45, 10:25 • RICKI AND THEFLASH (PG-13) 12:20, 2:55, 5:15, 8, IO:30 • SHAUN THESHEEPMOVIE (PG)11:35 a.m. • SINISTER 2(R) 11:50 a.m., 2:20, 5, 7:30, 10:05 • STRAIGHTOUTTACOMPTON(R) 12:05, 3:30, 7,10:15 • TRAINWRECK (R) 6:40, 9:45 • WAR ROOM(PG)11:30 a.m.,2:30,7,9:50 • WE AREYOURFRIENDS(R) 12:25, 3:05, 5:25, 7:55, 10:20 • Accessibility devices are available for somemovies.
Tampa, Florida, scientist who has created a synthetic and realistic cadaver the actual purpose of which is to aid med› ical testing. Also, two Seattle residents put forth their idea for personalized action figures, and several Philadelphia wom› en pose a concept for online interior design. 8 p.m. on CW, "Masters of Illusion" —In a new episode called "Gravity Defiers, Com›
pactors andTransformations," host DeanCainwelcomes featured magicians Nathan Burton, Tom Burgoon, Greg Frewin, Arthur Trace, Matt Mar› cy, Les Arnold and Dazzle, and Tommy Wind, who show off their diverse skills ranging from interactive mind magic to more conventional comedy routines as they perform feats of magic in front of a studio audience.
9 p.m. on10, "Gotham"There'splenty of suspicion to go around the city in "Everyone Has aCobblepot," as Gordon (Ben McKenzie) investigates Commissioner Loeb (guest star Peter Sco› lari) and Fish Mooney (Jada Pinkett Smith) is thought to be in cahoots with Dr. Dulmacher (guest star Colm Feore). The young Bruce Wayne (David Mazouz) gets a new reason to pursue his own campaign against crime. Nicholas D’Agosto (as Harvey Dent) and Nicholle Tom ("The Nanny" ) also guest star. ct zap2it
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Sisters Movie House,720 DesperadoCourt, 541-549-8800 • THEMAN FROM U.N.C.L.E.(PG-13)4:15,7 • MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE — ROGUENATION(PG-13) 4, 6:45 • MR.HOLMES (PG)4:30 • RICKI AND THEFLASH (PG-I3) 4:45, 7:15 • SHAUNTHE SHEEP MOVIE (PG)6:45 • t
Madras Cinema 5,1101 SWU.S. Highway 97, 541-475-3505 • HITMAN:AGENT47 (R) 2:40, 5, 7:20, 9:35 • MINIONS(PG) 5 • NO ESCAPE (R) 2:20, 4:45, 7:15,9:30 • SHAUN THE SHEEP MOVIE (PG)2:50 • STRAIGHTOUTTA COMPTON (R)3:25,6:30,9:25 • VACATION(R) 7:05, 8:20 • WAR ROOM (PG) 1:30,4: I5, 7,9:40
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O
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Redmond Cinemas,1535 SWOdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777 • AMERICANULTRA(R) 6:45, 9 • HITMAN:AGENT47 (R) 12:15, 2:30, 4:45, 7, 9:15 • THEMAN FROM U.N.C.L.E.(PG-13)11:30 a.m .,2,4:30, 7, 9:30 • SHAUNTHE SHEEP MOVIE (PG)12:45,2:45,4:45 • STRAIGHTOUTTACOMPTON(R) 11:45 a.m., 3,6:15, 9:30
•
SUN FoREsT
Find a week’sworth of movie times plus film reviews in today’s 0 GD! Magazine
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ON PAGES 3&4: COMICS & PUZZLES M The Bulletin
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Full s ize ing in six states - AK, 1-800-879-3312 to Want to Buy or Rent Vintage wash bowl & HAWK 357 3 screw 4 800-285-4609 Original Karastan bed w/like new Sim› pitcher set, large, $75 5/8" barrel & mini 14. cations of trailers. ID,MT, OR & WA. For start your application collection, 9’x5.9", (PNDC) mons pillow top mat› a free rate brochure today! (PNDC) obo 541-419-6408 Cash paidfor wood exc. condition. H &H Firearms & Tack Chihuahua pups tea› tress & box springs. call 916-288-6011 or dressers; dead wash› cup 1st shots, dew› 249 A $2000 value, 541 -382-9352 Wonderful bas e ball Night stand and 45" email Sunvision tanning bed, ers and dryers selling for $1000 ormed, $ 2 00-$250. dresser. $400 for all Art, Jewelry card coll e ction! CASH!! cecelia@cnpa.corn 541-420-5640 541-788-4229 must see to appreci› 541-420-1068 1978-91. Topps, full including bedding. For Guns, Ammo & & Furs (PNDC) ate! 325 hrs. on 1500 Wanted: $Cash paid for 541-548-8425 sets, + many other Reloading Supplies. h r. l a mps. $ 5 0 0. vintage costume jew› sets, individual cards 541-408-6900. Desperately Seeking Brand new p edestal of Mantel/Mays, Ar› Reduce Your Past Tax 541-385-9318 elry. Top dollar paid for Missing 1940s dia› sink, never removed ron + o t her s tars. Coast 12 gauge 28" Bill by as much as 75 Gold/Silver. I buy by the m ond ring sold a t Illlisceuaneous from box! Paid $325, $950. pump, $200. Good. Estate, Honest Artist e q uip- Percent. Stop Levies, The Bulletin Offers Call Bend Pawn approx. camping asking $200. Win. „100 22" 308, Liens and Wage Gar› Free Private Party Ads Elizabeth,541-633-7006 541-729-1677 or Sept.13-17, 2014 has ment & Competitor 541-536-5578 $450. Good. School Muscle exer› nishments. Call The • 3 lines - 3 days Dachshunds mini l ongemail central diamond and 2 203 Tax DR Now to see if • Private Party Only haired AKC. $500 & up Chocolate m icro-fiber dbwassom Ogmail.corn. Savage 99 300 w/3x9 little side stones, one cise bench c o m› scope, $400. Fair. Qualify • Total of items adver› you Holiday Bazaar 541-598-7417 men’s recliner, $150. is missing. Sz. 7.5. plete with weights. 215 OBO, call Jim 1-800-791-2099. tised must equal $200 541-213-1221 Please Call f o r pr i ces & Craft Shows Deere Chihuahua/Pom 541-546-6529 541-977-3091 (PNDC) or Less Coins & Stamps keep trying! Will pay and/or p i ctures. mix, wellness exam + Dining room set, ebony FOR DETAILS or to any reasonable price. 702-249-2567 (Sun› Central Oregon f irst s h ots, $ 3 5 0. table ha s b e v eled Private collector buying PLACE AN AD, river). Saturday Market Sell your s t ructured 541-550-0933 glass cover, 36" high, postagestamp albums 8 Call 541-385-5809 Fine art, gallery quality, "Where the seller is settlement or annuity x41" widex57" long. certified a ppraisals, Fax 541-385-5802 For Sale: collections, world-wide the maker" since 1974. payments for CASH under table for and private col l ector, Maltese/Cocker mix shelf U.S. 573-286-4343 DO YOU HAVE Open this Sat. from NOW. You don’t have or kn i c k› (local, cell phone). dealers welcome! Call Oneida King C e dric to wait for your future FIND IT! SOMETHING TO shots, storage puppies, 10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, to set up appointment. sterling silverware, 30 payments any longer! 541-815-8147 or knacks 4 upholstered SELL in Downtown Bend, BUY IT! stools. Almost new, 240 541-548-7860 p ieces. $140 0 . Call 1-800-914-0942 541-536-5844. FOR $500 OR across from the Public SELL IT! p aid $900 sell f o r 541-475-4618 Crafts & Hobbies LESS? Library. The largest German S h epherds, $450. 541-953-9256 (PNDC) 253 The Bulletin Classifieds Non-commercial selection of local AKC, gorgeous, 6 wk., Doll clothes: fit Cab› advertisers may TV, Stereo & Video artists and crafters, 3 females, 3 males, bage Patch, orig pkg place an ad East of the Cascades. vet checked, wormed, $3 ea. 541-419-6408 with our DIRECTV Starting at Call (541) 420-9015 or parents on site. Call "QUICK CASH $19.99/mo. FREE In› visit us on Facebook 541-771-4857 for info. 245 SPECIAL" s tallation F RE E 3 205 German Shepherds Golf Equipment 1 week 3 lines 12 months o f HBO oi' www.sherman-ranch.us Frigidaire- Gallery SeS HOWTIME CIN › Items for Free Quality. 541-281-6829 ries gl a ss-top self CHECK yOURAD ~2 e eks 2 | « EMAX, STARZ. FREE cleaning range, like Ad must HD/DVR U p grade! Jack Russell Fox Ter› new $300. include price of Notice to our 2015 NFL S u nday r ier pups, 8 w k s . Whirlpool refrigerator, Ticket Included (Se› valued readers! s~il e t e o f «5«0 $100. 541-604-9781 260 266 292 cubed or crushed ice or less, or multiple lect Packages) New and water in the door, items whose total C ustomers Onl y . Estate Sales Sales Northeast Bend Sales Other Areas For newspaper Find It in like new, $5 50 . In does not exceed CALL 1-800-410-2572 delivery questions, on the first day it runs The Bulletin Classineds! Madras, please call $500. (PNDC) Sparks Estate Sale MULTI-FAMILY Com› please call the ESTATE OF to make sure it is cor› 541-419-8035 given by Farmhouse munity yard sale Sat., 54 1 -385-5809 Circulation Dept. rect. "Spellcheck" and ARLENE SHAW Call Classified at Dish Network G et 9-3. Items galore, die Estate Sales at 541-385-5800 G ENERATE SOM E human errors do oc› M ORE fo r LE S S ! Friday - Saturday, 9-4. cast models. Native Local artist 8 art 541-385-5809 Looking for a standard EXCITEIIIIENT in your cur. If this happens to teacher. bendbulletin.corn Starting $19.99/month 980 NE Sunrise St., Sun Apts., 2775 NE To place an ad, call poodle to breed my neighborhood! Plan a your ad, please con› Complete house (for 12 months.) PLUS Prineviue. East of old Boyd Acres Road. female t o . Call 541-385-5809 arage sale and don’ t tact us ASAP so that Bundle 8 SAVE (Fast Prine vi//e hospital. packed with e very› 541-576-2809. or email orget to advertise in corrections and any USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! Internet f o r $15 Entire household, ga› t hing plus 100s o f 288 classified @bend› adjustments can be Poodle/Bichon puppies classified! more/month.) CALL rage full of q uakty Sales Southeast Bend p aintings, 100s o f bulletin.corn 541-385-5809. made to your ad. 8 wks. Apricot, first Door-to-door selling with Now 1-800-308-1563 tools, still unpacking frames, art supplies, 541 -385-5809 shots. 1 male and 1 bunkhouse with an› NEED TO CANCEL The Bulletin fast results! It’s the easiest (PNDC) household See list & Classified Se«««nyCe««« «al Oregon sin«e Sta f emale. $60 0 e a . t iques, old j a r s 8 , YOUR AD? pix at farmhousees› way in the world to sell. MOVING SALE: 559-359-0066, after 4 255 bottles, farm r elics, The Bulletin tatesales.corn LIKE NEW" 2 rounds 221 SE Airpark Dr. Home Brewers! Free cross cut saws, tools, Classifieds has an Computers POODLE pups, played Adam’s Idea The Bulletin Classified (Saturday only 8-1) knives, 1984 Jimmy hops! You pick. 282 "After Hours"Line toy or mini, Combo irons. 3-4-5 Tons of great stuff: 541-385-5809 541-548-71 37 and 2005 Buick Cen› Call 541-383-2371 HP color wireless office Sales Northwest Bend furniture, toys, 541-475-3889 H.B. 6-TW GRPH SR tury, loads of misc 24 hrs. to cancel ’et, spare cart. like new s hafts, $360 o b o . books, jewelry, 208 Fri.-Sat. 9-4 Queensfand Heelers your ad! 50. Bob 425-941-5388 Community Sale at 60 household goods, 951-454-2561 Pets & Supplies n mbers«r. 8:30a.m. Standard 8 Mini, $150 Unit RV storage facil› dog crate, a BOB, 8 up. 541-280-1537 WHIRLPOOL CABRIO T HE B U LLETIN r e › ity. Sat., 9-1 Garaj› bikes, craft sup› 246 1168 Wild Mustang washer and d r yer, quires computer ad› mahal RV/Boat Stor› plies and clothes. Gilchrist, OR. The Bulletin recom› www.rightwayranch.wor Guns, Hunting never used, still in dpress.corn vertisers with multiple Hwy 97 about 10 mi. age Facility, 63083 mends extra caution boxes. $1000 for both. & Fishing ad schedules or those south of L aPine 8 H owa 1 5 0 0 30 0 Crusher Ave., Bend. when purc has› Siberian Husky pup› Antique wicker baby multiple sys› follow signs Multi- family Win. Mag. New, never selling ing products or ser› pies, AKC, shots, bassinet/buggy, $100. 286 www.atticestatesan› yard sale fired. W ood stock, tems/ software, to dis› vices from out of the $1000+. 541-815-8147 Call 541-408-9813, or 3 salmon, steelthe name of the Sales Northeast Bend dappraisals.corn Saturday only, 8-3. 541-536-5844. head fishing poles, stainless barrel and close area. Sending cash, 706-85’I -7881 or the term 541-350-6822 21038 Juniperhaven. action. Great deer or business checks, or credit in› Abu Garcia, "dealer" in their ads. 210 Browning 8 Berkley, elk g un , b a r gain Private party advertis› 2 family garage sale! f ormation may be The Bulletin Lots of misc. Friday 8 N eighborhood S a l e :Friday & Saturday 8-5, Furniture & Appliances recommends extra ’ $40 each.3 casting priced-wife says sell ers are defined as subjected to fraud. :-) $6 5 0 . Call those who sell one Saturday, 8-3. 63367 Yard, fishing, guy For more i nforma› reels, Daiwa, Abu Lg. roll-away Snap-On i caution when pur› stuff. 132 SE Airpark tool 541-389-3694, leave Majestic Loop. tion about an adver› b o x , we l der, chasing products or • Garcia, $25-$35 computer. Dr. Fri. 8 Sat. 8-4. message. tiser, you may call each. Call for de› router 8 table, new services from out of I the O regon State ~ the area. Sending ~ tails. 503-936-1778 256 ** FREE ** YARD SALE misc, and twin box springs & Attorney General’ s John Wayne com› ’ cash, checks, o r ’ tools, Sat. and Sun., mattress, b athroom Photography Garage Sale Kit Office C o n sumer memorative holster i credit i n f ormation 9-4. 61044 Chucka› vanity, old Fairbanks Place an ad in The Protection hotline at F eed scale, m i n i may be subjected to and gun belt set, Camera tripod Bushnell B ulletin fo r yo u r nut Drive. 1-877-877-9392. NASCAR collectibles, Model JW81, unit „ 3-piece hardwood wall i FRAUD. For more fully adj. height w/case, sale and receive a 711 of only 3,000. $35. 541-408-4528 much much m ore! unit, 91 "Lx79"H, glass information about an f 290 G arage Sale K i t The Bulletin 6936 SW Mustang New in box w/ all shelves, $400 obo. advertiser, you may i ServingCentral Oregon since«««9 FREE! Sales Redmond Area orig. printed mate› 541-526-1879 t call t h e Ore g ont 260 ’ State Atto r ney ’ 50 BM G A r malite rial incl. certificate KIT INCLUDES: Aug. 28-29, 8-4. 3048 Garage Sale, Fri. 8 Sat. Misc.Items rifle, single shot bolt signed by Michael 7 piece be droom i General’s O f fi ce • 4 Garage Sale SW 36th St. Cascade 8-3, 196 SW Ivy Ct., gun, exc. cond., low Wayne. Perfect con› Consumer Protec• set, $350. 1 roll top Signs View Estates, boys (off Meadow Lakes American Optical Pe› md. count. Very accu› dition. $795. tion h o t line at I desk & chair, $300. apparel: infant-sze 16, Dr.) Pnneville. An› r imeter, lik e n e w , • $2.00 Off Coupon rate, great m uzzle 541-420-5184 i 1-877-877-9392. 1 hall tree, $200. 2 To Use Toward Misses sz. 4-6, books, tiques, trunks, electric $190. 541-536-3797 break, light recoil, 20 leather chair reclin› Your Next Ad lawn mower & tools. bedding + more. gauge maybe, HD t The Bulletin > AKC English Springer e rs, $30 0 Spotting scope Win. • 10 Tips For b o th. 5«n int«Central Oregon since«9IB bi-pod 8 H D c a rry WT-631, 15/45x 60mm, BOXES-Great for mov› "Garage Sale Spaniels, parents w/ 541-504-9945 Big yard sale! Many ing/storage, $25 cash. bag. 60 loaded rnds. $45. 541-408-4528 hunting backgrounds. Call 541-318-4577. Success!" clothing & toys, high HUGE LIVING ESTATE 212 included. C o mplete Ready as early 8/28. Armoire, good cond. c hairs, bunk b e d , sporting goods, vin› loading set up avail. WANTED: Collector Antiques & $ 800 M, $ 85 0 F . $200. Text for photos Diamonds PICK UP YOUR misc. 749 NW Quince tage, antiques, furni› w/ comp o nents.seeks high quality fish› Buying 541-480-9848 t ure, lots o f co l › /Gold for Cash GARAGE SALE KIT Ave. Fri. 8 Sat. 8-5. 541-480-0009 Collectibles $2,950. 503-781-8812 ing items & upscale fly Saxon’s Fine Jewelers lectibles, Fri.-Sat. 8-4, at 1777 SW Chan› rods. 541-678-5753, or Barrel chair, b e ige/ Antiques Wanted: Old NW Ochoco West, 541-389-6655 dler Ave., Bend, OR Fri, 8-4, Sat., 8-noon. 503-351-2746 tweed, o ver-stuffed. tools, beer cans, fish› AR-15 St a garms 2415 SW Phlox Pond Prineville well marked. 97702 $150. 541-546-6529 BUYING 5.56, long range bar› 541-385-5809 Dr., tables, chairs, ing/sports gear, 247 Lionel/American Flyer rug, bike, dishes, Pre-’40s B/W photog› rel with BDX scope Massive Moving Sale! Sporting Goods The Bulletin trains, accessories. raphy, marbles, Breyer + ammo. $1,000. ServingCentral Oregon since «903 Fn. & Sat. 8-? 15520 - Misc. 541-408-2191. 11-87 Rem i ngton "Bug" Puppies for animals. 541-389-1578 I Wicked Garagel SW Culver Hwy. Hwy Premiere 12 gauge sale. Father is AKC BUYING & SE LLING Moving Sale! Furniture, Sale!! Satu r day 97 N, past winery to The Bulletin reserves auto-load, 2 stocks, 1970 Pool table, All registered Boston ter› Park Ln., follow signs. gold jewelry, silver household items, etc. l August 29th from the right to publish all (camo & wood), like rier and mother full like new. Balls and Everything must go! and gold coins, bars, Friday-Saturday, 9-5, i 8-2. Nice items... No ads from The Bulletin new, $650. Call Mike Pug. Vet check and Beautiful designer Tools, garden equip., 4 cue sticks rounds, wedding sets, 2785 NE Faith Dr. Junk! 3358 SW 35th newspaper onto The at 541-610-7656 first shots, available sectional included. Slate top, class rings, sterling sil› I Street, Redmond. I riding lawn mower, Bulletin Internet web› after Labor Day. $450 Excellent condition b edroom set c o m › ver, coin collect, vin› MOVING SALE Sat,. site. felt is in new each. See JZ Pups $850 Bend local dealer pays tage watches, dental 8/29 & Sun. 8/30, 9 to plete w/ mattress 8 condition. $750. facebook site for more 503-781-5265 CASH!!For firearms & gold. Bill Fl e ming, 2. All must go! 882 NE box springs, q uilt, The Bulletin i«««i««««Central Oregon «Inc«Ste ammo. 541-526-0617 541-388-6910 541-382-9419. Hidden Valley „2, furn., and much more! pics. 541-589-0171
The Bulle6n
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E2 FRIDAY, AUGUST 28, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
541-385-5809 or go to www.bendbulletin.corn
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
• . 3:00 pm Fri. • • 5:00 pm Fri •
476
Hay, Grain & Feed
Employment Opportunities
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.corn which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 541-385-5809
or place your ad on-line at ben dbulletin.corn
Place a photo inyourprivate 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 26 days .................................................$61.50
4 lines for 4 days ................................. $20.00
(call for commercial line ad rates)
*llllust state prices in ad
325
341
Horses 8 Equipment
Horse Trailer Goose-
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
neck
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CAUTION: Ads published in "Employment Opportunities" include employee and inde› pendent positions. Ads fo r p o sitions that require a fee or upfront investment must be stated. With any independent job opportunity, please i nvestigate tho r › oughly. Use extra c aution when a p › plying for jobs on› line and never pro› vide personal infor› mation to any source you may not have researched and deemed to be repu› table. Use extreme c aution when r e › s ponding to A N Y online employment ad from out-of-state. We suggest you call the State of Oregon Consumer Hotline at 1-503-378-4320 For Equal Opportu› nity Laws c ontact Oregon Bureau of Labor 8 I n d ustry, Civil Rights Division, 971-673- 0764.
Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
RBEIIIICC)
fi RIKlhZM
OREGON MEDICAL CDL Truck Driver TRAINING Needed. Phlebotomy Classes (54K per year) CDL Sept. 1 to Nov. 23, Truck driver needed. www.oregonmedical Our wood chip and training.corn lumber drivers aver› 541-343-3100 528 age 54K annually Loans & Mortgages (.48 cent ave). Off The Bulletin’s weekends, paid va› "Call A Service WARNING cation, health insur› Professional" Directory The Bulletin recom› ance. For 35 years is all about meeting mends you use cau› we have serviced tion when you pro› Eastern O r e gon, your needs. vide personal Central Or e gon, Call on one of the information to compa› Southern O r egon nies offering loans or and the Boise Val› professionals today! credit, especially ley and you can live those asking for ad› in any of these loca› Plumber, Journeymen vance loan fees or Needed for new con› tions. We run late struction. Start immedi› companies from out of model Petes a nd state. If you have ately! Good pay/benefits Kenworths all 550 concerns or ques› cats with 13 speeds, tions, we suggest you our trailers are Cur› consult your attorney tin vans (no tarps to or call CONSUMER deal with) 4 0’-23’ HOTLINE, doubles year around caution when pur› 1-877-877-9392. work. We our look› chasing products or l ing for long term services from out of • drivers, our average I the area. Sending BANK TURNED YOU DOWN? Private party employee has c ash, checks, o r will loan on real es› w orked for us f o r I credit i n f ormation tate equity. Credit, no over 8 years. So if • may be subjected to problem, good equity you are looking for a I FRAUD. home, give us a call For more informa- I is all you need. Call 541.523.9202 tion about an adver- • Oregon Land Mort› gage 541-388-4200. I tiser, you may call the Oregon State I Attorney General’s LOCAL MONEY:We buy secured trust deeds & t Office C on s umer a note, some hard money l Protection hotline atl loans. Call Pat Kelley I 1-877-877-9392. 541-382-3099 ext.13. JOB FAIR LThe Bulletin g Hiring for Customer Account Advisors Truck Drivers •Starting Wage: Immediate opening $13.50 - $14.25 for a class A CDL • Full Benefits pkg driver with double When: August 31, 2015 (Monday) endorsements. Time: 10am to 2pm New or near new Where: 2999 SW equipment wit h Sixth St., Redmond t rucks b ased i n
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Bulletin Gooseneck dual axle The Serving central oregonsince res donated to E q uine 541-385-5809 O utreach. 12, 0 0 0 GVW, 7X16, 23’ over› your web address all length, 6 1/2’ tall, Add to your ad and read› slider/swing rear door, tack shelf, mid-swing ers on The Bulletin's web site, www.bend› door, padded walls with new PT d eck. bulletin.corn, will be able to click through $4,295 Cal l G a r y automatically to your 541-480-6130 website. Aquatics Program TURN THE PAGE PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction Administrative For More Ads Assistant is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right The Bulletin to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these $27,842-$39,158 (Off Airport Way in the Madras, O r egon. Full-Benefits newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Business Park) Non-Mgmt, We have never had Rental Alternatives I Classified ada running 7 or moredays will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday. 383 Regular, Full-Time a layoff. Home evProduce & Food DID Y O U KNO W eryday. Come and House i n S t a rwood! 263 263 266 269 Newspaper-gener› This position is located 1600+ sq. ft., 3 bed, 2 w i t h us. bath, a ted content is s o drive Tools Tools • Heating & Stoves Gardening Supplies THOIIIIAS ORCHARDS 1 level, open in Chiloquin. Kimberly, Oregon 5 41-419-1125 o r valuable it’s taken and & Equipment For more information view in back, fenced, repeated, condensed, 541-546-6489. U-PICK Craftsman Heavy duty NOTICE TO N OT n o rmally a contact: Milling Machine broadcast, t weeted, c onstruction ta b l e ADVERTISER Freestone Canning r ental, this i s o u r The Kfamath Tribes TRUCK DRIVER Clausing 3/4HP, 3 discussed, p o sted, saw, used very little. Since September 29, BarkTurfSoil.corn home. Furnished for Peaches: Improved PO Box 436 WANTED phase, speeds 180 copied, edited, and S ell for $300 . 1991, advertising for Elberta, Z-Lady, Ange› Chiloquin, OR 97824 $1995, u n furnished to 3250, 3" spindle Must have doubles emailed c o u ntless 541-280-5114. used woodstoves has PROMPT DELIVERY f or $ 1 6 95 . Cal l lus, Monroes. 60S lb. www.klamathtribes.org endorsement. Local travel, 6"x24" bed, times throughout the been limited to mod› 541-771-5552 Nectarines, 70S lb. jobs ' klamathtribes.corn day by others? Dis› 54XN89-9663 run. 541-475-4221, has approx. dimen› els which have been Bartlett pears, 65S lb. 541-783-2219 x 113 I eves 541419-7247 sions 36"x40". cover the Power of certified by the Or› Asian Pears $1.00 llb. $2500 Newspaper Advertis› egon Department of Take care of For newspaper 503-866-8858 LABOR DAY ing in FIVE STATES Looking for your next Aptmultiplex GeneralI Environmental Qual› EVERY BUSINESS has delivery, call the Monday, Sept. 7 your investments with just one phone employee? ity (DEQ) and the fed› Circulation Dept. at a story to tell! Get CHECKYOUR AD Local Vendor Fair at call. For free Pacific Place a Bulletin help eral E n v ironmental your message out with the help from 541-385-5800 Thomas Orchards, Northwest Newspa› wanted ad today and Protection A g e ncy To place an ad, call with California’s PR› The Bulletin’s 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. per Association Net› reach over 60,000 Media Release - the (EPA) as having met 541-385-5809 work brochures call BRING CONTAINERS! readers each week. smoke emission stan› "Call A Service only Press Release or email or dards. A cer t ified classified itbendbulletimccm Open 7 days a week, Professional" Directory 916-288-6011 Your classified ad Service operated by email will also appear on woodstove may be 8 a.m.to 6 p.m. only the press to get press! cecelia@cnpa.corn identified by its certifi› The Bulletin bendbulletin.corn on the first day it runs For more info contact 541 -934-2870. sewine centraloregon since rsa CDL DRIVERS (PNDC) which currently cation label, which is to make sure it is cor› Cecelia @ MIXER mortar, con› Weare af the Bend WANTED crete, etc. 12 cu. ft., permanently attached receives over 1.5 rect. "Spellcheck" and 916-288-6011 or Farmer's Nfarkef We have i mmediateDrivers Needed! Full w / 1 3HP to the stove. The Bul› million page views human errors do oc› http: //prmediarelease. towable, on Wednesdays. openings a t ou r time day shift, apply at Honda gas, hydrau› letin will not know› every month at cur. If this happens to corn/california (PNDC) Visit us on Facebook P rineville, OR a n d 1919 NE Second St. lic dump, used once, no extra cost. ingly accept advertis› your ad, please con› for updates! + Peat Mixes Portland, OR l o ca› l ike n ew . I M E R ing for the sale of Bulletin Classifieds tact us ASAP so that Fishing • ~ I t + Juniper Ties tions. Full or part time Henchman 4HSM-4, Get Results! uncertified corrections and any + Paver Discounts positions offering op› Fishing Alaska - at sea new $5000, s e l l wood stoves. Call 385-5809 adjustments can be Bering Sea/Gulf of AK + Sand + Gravel portunities in multiple or place c c made to your ad. Meet singles right now! $3950. E mployment Info . + Bark divisions, competitive 503-781-8812 267 your ad on-line at 541-385-5809 No paid o perators, Instantlandecaping.corn I hourly wages, flexible Meeting Sept. 4, Noon bendbulletin.corn The Bulletin Classified • just real people like Fuel & Wood 541-389-9663 work schedule, paid Comfort Inn & Suites you. Browse greet› Shopsmith cover $25; Q vacation, bonus pro› Redmond, OR Airport ings, exchange mes› manual, new c ond. gram, medical/dental 2 243 SW Yew Ave › 270 WHEN BUYING sages and connect $50. 760-486-6860 benefits & 401K more info on Twitter, General Lost 8 Found live. Try it free. Call FIREWOOD... w/employer m a tch. ' FishFinest now: 8 7 7-955-5505. 265 We are a family ori› To avoid fraud, Fluvial FOUND fishing tackle at (PNDC) 421 ented company and Building Materials The Bulletin Geomorphologist Crane Prairie ' out› * work hard to get our recommends paySchools & Training let/dam, the week of / * Great Supplemental Income!! Find exactly what drivers home most MADRAS Habitat ment for Firewood $49,541 - $77,184 August 21st. Call to ID nights and weekends. you are looking for in the only upon delivery RESTORE I The Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our Satur- I HTR Truck School Benefits 541-419-1407 Call or e-mail for more Prof.Full Building Supply Resale and inspection. REDMOND CAMPUS Mgt., Regular, I day night shift and other shifts as needed. WeI CLASSIFIEDS information, p hone: • A cord is 128 cu. ft. Found. Motorbicycle. Quality at • currently have openings all nights of the week.• Our Grads Get Jobs! Full time 4’ x 4’ x 8’ 541-977-6362, e-mail: LOW PRICES Bend 3rd St. 1-888-438-2235 / Everyone must work Saturday night. Shifts SBM, 40, pro. seeks lindseyw'whhsmaf • Receipts should 84 SW K St. 08-12-2015. Call WWW.I1TR.EDU start between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and This position is located SF, friendship ' C,S. .corn include name, 541-475-9722 541-788-8795 to I.D. in Chiloquin. / end between 2:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m. AllpoWimberly „10571327, phone, price and Open to the public. • sitions we are hiring for, work Saturday nights.• For more information 3920 E. Ashwood Rd., FOUND o n Fr i day, kind of wood FiREFiGHTERS NEEDED NOIN! contact: I Starling pay is $9.25 per hour, and we pay aI Madras OR 97741 young female calico, purchased. BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS The Klamath Tribes I minimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shiftsI Immediate need for short-haired. Call to • Firewood ads • are short (11:30 - 1:30). The work consists of• PO Box 436 St. Jude's Novena Search the area’s most ID. 541-330-6923 Wildland Fjrefjghters MUST include Chiloquin, OR 97624 / loading inserting machines or stitcher, stack› May the Sacred Heart comprehensive listing of to fight forest fires. Must be 18 species & cost per jobs'klamathtribes.corn ing product onto pallets, bundling, cleanup and of Jesus be adorned, classified advertising... 2 kayak paddies cord to better serve LOST: www.klamathtribes.org I other tasks. years old and Drug Free! glorified, loved and real estate to automotive, at South Twin Lake on our customers. 541-783-2219 x 113 preserved throughout merchandise to sporting Saturday 8/22. Please Apply 9am-3pm Mon-Thurs. IFor quahfytng employees we offer benefttsl the world, now and goods. Bulletin Classifieds call 541-536-5578 Bring two forms of ID fill out Federal Media The Bulletin forever. Sacred Heart appear every day in the I including life insurance, short-term 8 long-term servfng centralem@onsince ras l-9 form. No ID = No Application The Source Weekly is Lost: Aug. 8 from Em› disability, 401(k), paid vacation and sick time. of Jesus, pray for us. print or on line. Expanding! pire near OB Riley St. Jude, worker of Call 541-385-5809 We are currently look› I Please submit a completed application peach-faced Lovebird, miracles, pray for us. www.bendbulletin.corn All year Dependable PatRick Corp. ing for additional Full St. Jude help of the attention Kevin Eldred. Firewood: dry looks like small parrot, 1199 NE Hemlock, and Part-Time writers green body, answers Applications are available at The Bulletin hopeless, pray for us. Lodgepole, split, del, The Bulletin to "Wednesday". Redmond to join our journalistic serving central oregonsince sre Say this prayer 9 front desk (1777 S.W. Chandler Blvd.), or 1 /$195; 2/$3 6 5 . tour de force. Posi› 541-923-0703 an electronic application may be obtained times a day by the 8th Multi-cord discounts! 541-385-8367 tions pay well and are Prineville Habitat cash, check, Visa, MC Lost prescription glasses EOE request by contacting Kevin Eldred via day, your prayer will P ATRIc K based on experience. uponemail ReStore 541-420-3484, Bend (keldred@bendbulletin.corn). be answered, say it in black hard case in› Health insurance and for 9 days and it has Building Supply Resale side bright clip-on soft benefits are part of Ponderosa pine fire› No pho ne calls please never failed. Publica› 1427 NW Murphy Ct. case at a free garage Insurance/Sales the hiring package. I 541-447-6934 wood split, $160 or tion must be prom› AAA Oregon's Bend Service Center seeks a s ale, 8/21 O 6 7 7 7 Must be deadline ori› Open to the public. trade. 541-419-1871 * No resumes will be accepted * ised. MJ 66th Pl., Redmond, self-motivated and experienced Insurance ented and willing to 541-408-5136 Professional to join our Insurance sales team. work in beautiful Bend Drug test is required prior to employment. Property and Casualty license a must. Oregon. Digital, print, Lost: "Spencer", Male EOE. social, and e vents Golden Retriever off We write P&C Insurance for a number of the writing will be part of Brosterhous (on the best carriers in the business. If you have had the task a t h a n d. The Bulletin S. side o f B e nd). success in Insurance sales, apply those skills Send a resume, writ› servmg central oregon sinceaor Wearing silver choke to a dynamic and growing organization. The i ng s amples a n d chain. Reddish-golden base plus commission compensation plan cover letter to: color. Call/Text An› offers you the opportunity to earn the salary info Ibendsource.corn you deserve. drea 541.610.8871 www.ben dsource.corn We offer a competitive benefit package that Need help fixing stuff? Building/Contracting Landscaping/Yard Care Landscaping/Yard Care Call A ServiceProfessional includes medical/dental, 401(K), continuing educationand much more. We also offer a NOTICE: Oregon state NOTICE: Oregon Land› find the help you need. $250 per month English-Spanish salary law requires anyone scape Contractors Law www.bendbulletin.corn supplement. who con t racts for (ORS 671) requires all construction work to businesses that ad› Pleaseemail your resumeto be licensed with the vertise t o pe r form recruiter@aaaoregon.corn Construction Contrac› /~de ZQaafiep Landscape Construc› REMEMBER: If you Or fax (503) 222-6379. tors Board (CCB). An tion which includes: have lost an animal, AAA Oregon/Idaho is proud to promote and active license Za~<C’a r,, p lanting, deck s , don’t forget to check means the contractor fences, arbors, a drug-free workplace and pre› Full Service Society maintain is bonded & insured. water-features, and in› The Humane employment drug testing is required. Criminal Bend Landscape • e Verify the contractor’s stallation, repair of ir› backgroundcheck.EOE. Please no calls. 541-382-3537 Management CCB l i c ense at rigation systems to be Redmond www.hirealicensed› l icensed w it h th e 541-923-0882 contractor.corn Fire Protection Landscape Contrac› This position is full-time 4 days per week, Home Delivery Advisor Madras or call 503-378-4621. and Fuels Reduction tors Board. This 4-digit 10 hours per day, from 3:30 p.m. to The Bulletin Circu1ation Department is seeking 541-475-6889 The Bulletin recom› Tall Grass number is to be in› a Home Delivery Advisor. This is a full-time approximately 2:00 am on a rotating Prineville mends checking with •Low Limbs cluded in all adver› position and consists of managing an adult schedule that will allow for every other 541-447-7178 the CCB prior to con› •Brush and Debris tisements which indi› carrier force to ensure our customers receive weekend being 3 days off. or Craft Cats tracting with anyone. cate the business has superior service. Must be able to create and 541-389-8420 Some other t rades Protect your home with a bond, insurance and perform strategic plans to meet department ~70 v s ll also req u ire addi› defensible space workers c ompensa› objectives such as increasing market share • 1-2 years web press experience tional licenses and tion for their employ› and penetration. Ideal candidate will be a • Move and lift 50 Ibs or more on a cert ifications. ees. For your protec› Landscape self-starter who can work both in the office continuing basis tion call 503-378-5909 . • . . • and in their assigned territory with minimal Maintenance • Reaching, sitting, pushing, pulling, stooping, ' I or use our website: Full or Partial Service supervision. Early a.m. hours are necessary kneeling, walking and climbing stairs. Have an item to www.lcb.state. or.us to •Mowing ~Edging with company vehicle provided. Strong • Ability to learn and execute appropriate check license status sell quick? •Pruning .Weeding customer service skills and management skills safety practices before contracting with are necessary. Computer experience is Sprinkler Adjustments • Successfully pass a drug screen If it’s under the business. Persons required. You must pass a drug screening lan d scape '500you can place it in Fertilizer included with doing and be able to be insured by company to drive If you are a self-motivated, team› maintenance do not vehicles. This is an entry-level position, but we monthly program oriented individual and have a The Bulletin r equire an LCB l i › 325 b elieve i n p r o moting f ro m w i thin, s o cense. positive "Can Do" attitude Classifieds for: Hay, Grain & Feed advancement within company is available to Clean-V ps WE WANT TO TALK TO YOU! the right person. If you enjoy dealing with Its not to late to have a First Quality green grass people from diverse backgrounds and you are ’10 - 3 lines, 7 days Beautiful Landscape Send your resume to hay, no rain, barn stored, energetic, have great organizational skills and '16 -3 lines, 14 days anelson Obendbulletin.corn $250/ton. WeedFree Bark interpersonal communication skills, please Painting/Wall Covering (Private Party ads only) Call 541-549-3831 send your resume to: & Flower Beds Applications are also available at Patterson Ranch, Sisters The Bulletin, 1777 Chandler Ave. The Bulletin KC WHITE LawnRestoration S econd cu t t ing o r › c/o Kurt Muller Bend, OR 97702 PAINTING LLC Handyman Interior and Exterior chard grass mix, small PO Box 6020 Experienced Western Communications, inc. and their affiliated Family-owned bales, $220/ton, no Bend, OR 97708-6020 I DO THAT! Commercial companies, ls proud to be an equal opportunity Residential & Commercial rain. 5 4 1-420-9736 or e-mail resume to: Home/Rental repairs & Residential 40 yrs exp.• Sr. Discounts Madras, Oregon employer, supporting a drug-free workplace kmuller©bendbulletin.corn Small jobs to remodels Free Estimates 5-year warranties No phone calls, please. Honest, guaranteed Senior Discounts Wheat Straw for Sale. No agencies or telephone SUMMER SPECIAL! The Bulletin isa drug-free workplace. EOE 541-390-1466 work. CCB„151573 Also, weaner pigs. ca//s p/ease. Call 541%20-7846 Pre-employmenf drugscreen required. Dennis 541-317-9768 Same Day Response 541-546-6171 CCB ¹204916
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TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, AUG 28, 2015
DAILY B R I D G E
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFED• 541-385-5809
NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD willi’shortz
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Final decisions
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By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency
" When my p a rtner p l ays t h e dummy, I get as nervous as a man watching his stocks go down," a reader writes. "His final decision seldom agrees with the one he makes next." As North, my fan bid boldly to six hearts. West led a trump. "My partner stewed," North says. "Without a trump lead, he could have erossruffed for 12 tricks. He resolutely won the first trump in dummy, tookthe ace of clubs,ruffed a club,ruffed a spade in dummy and ruffed a club. "He had another spade out of his hand — and thenhe put itback and started to think again. I knew we were doomed."
he bids two diamonds. What do you say? ANSWER: You have the values to insist on game, but a jump to three hearts or three spades would only invite. To bid four hearts might work, but if partner'shearts are weak or the suit breaks badly, he might go down when 3NT would make. Bid three clubs, the "fourth suit," hoping to make a winning decision later. North dealer N-S vulnerable NORTH 43None
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FIFTH CLUB
WEST 43AKQ South eventually ruffed a second 9 5 3 2 spade and ruffed another club, setting 0 K 4 up dummy’s fifth club, but when he 4 9 4 2 drew trumps next, he ended a trick short. (Try it.) South must win the first trump in his hand. He proceeds thus: spade ruff,ace of clubs, club ruff, spade ruff,club ruff, spade ruff,club ruff. South can then draw trumps and go to the ace of diamonds to cash the good North 14 club: his 12th trick. 24 DAILY QUESTION 6y
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08/28/15
TO PLACE AN AD CALLCLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 632
pt./llllultiplex General
Manufactured/ Mobile Homes
Senior Apartment› Independent Living ALL-INCLUSIVE with 3 meals daily 2 Bedrooms Available NOW. Check it out! Call 541-460-5323
List Your Home JandMHomes.corn We Have Buyers Get Top Dollar Financing Available. 541-548-5511
634
Apt./Multiplex NE Bend
Onlya few left! Two & Three Bdrms with Washer/Dryer and Patio or Deck. (One Bdrms also avail.) Mountain Glen Apts 541.383.9313 Professionally managed by Norris & Stevens, Inc. 648
Houses for Rent General PUBLISHER’ S NOTICE All real estate adver›
:s.
®
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, AUGUST 28 2015 E5 870
Boa t s & Accessories Boats & Accessories
16'
Lowe,
„1 6 0 5
deep water, four-man bass boat with dual Cannon down-riggers for trolling to 100 feet. Excellent c o ndition
40 HP Johnson o u t board with automatic oil in› jection. E a g le-Elite fish finder and GPS to locate the "big ones". New trolling kick plate 805 + Minn Kota electric Misc.Items trolling motor. New 2-way radio. Water› 5250 Falcon tow bar, proof cover, life-jack› $150; Guardian, $75; ets, bumpers, and ex› box of misc. $60; 4 tras. All tuned and tire covers 22.5, $25; ready to go. $4,500. Will take $250 for ev› Phone (541) 593 7774 erything. - NW Bend. 541-852-5643
:OQ
850 tising in this newspa› per is subject to the Snowmobiles F air H ousing A c t which makes it illegal to a d vertise "any preference, limitation or disc r imination I’ based on race, color, religion, sex, handi› cap, familial status, 4-place enclosed Inter› marital status or na› state snowmobile trailer tional origin, or an in› w/ RockyMountain pkg, tention to make any $7500. 541-379-3530 such pre f erence, 860 limitation or discrimi› nation." Familial sta› llllotorcycles & Accessories tus includes children under the age of 18 living with parents or legal cus t odians, pregnant women, and people securing cus› tody of children under 18. This newspaper Harley 2003, Dyna will not knowingly ac› wide glide, 100th An› mod e l . cept any advertising n iversary for real estate which is 13,400 orig. mi., cus› in violation of the law. tom paint, new bat› O ur r e aders a r e tery, lots of e xtras, hereby informed that show cond. Health all dwellings adver› f orces s ale. W a s tised in this newspa› $11,000 OBO, now firm. per are available on $8,000 or an equal opportunity 541-633-7856 basis. To complain of 360-815-6677 d iscrimination cal l HUD t o l l-free at
880
881
908
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933
Motorhomes
Travel Trailers
Aircraft, Parts & Service
Antique & Classic Autos
Pickups
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with f as t
25' 2006 Crestliner p ontoon boa t , model 2485LSI An› gler Edition, 115 HP Mercury outboard, dual cano p ies, change room, bath›
room, all accesso› ries. $2 0 ,000. 702-249-2567 (Sun› river)
Ads published in the "Boats" classification include: Speed, fish› ing, drift, canoe, house and sail boats. For all other types of watercraft, please go to Class 875. 541-385-5609
The Bulletin
Sere ng Central Oregon since 1903
16' Navarro canoe, Loon 16. Fib e r› glass with lots of wood. $ 800 . 702-249-2567 (Sun› river)
Bay!incr 185 2006 open bow. 2nd owner low engine hrs. fuel injected V6 Radio & Tower. Great family boat Priced to sell. $11,590. 541-548-0345. 875
Watercraft
Owner illness forces Unique R-Pod 2013 sale of t hi s g o r› trailer-tent combo, geous & p r i stine f ully l oaded, e x › c ustom-built 2 0 12 tended service con› Nexus Ph a ntom tract and bike rack. Model 23P Class C $16,000. motor home (24’ 7"). 541-595-3972 or One owner and has 503-780-4487 under 11,000 miles. New Michelin tires Advertise your car! with less than 1,000 Add A Picture/ miles, with full spare Reach thousands of readers! tire. F o r d E -350, Call 541-355-5809 Triton 10 cylinder. The Bulletin Classifieds Features i n c lude Soft Touch leather Looking for your seats, 6-way power next employee? driver’s seat, power Place a Bulletin help mirrors, rear back-up wanted ad today and camera with alarm, reach over 60,000 Arctic package, dual readers each week. marine batteries and Your classified ad electric awn i ng. will also appear on Also has gas stove bendbulletin.corn and oven, dual pow› which currently re› ered frig., m icro› ceives over 1.5 mil› wave, Generac gen› lion page views ev› air› erator, ery month at no conditioner and extra cost. Bulletin Fantastic Fan. Classifieds Get Re› S leeps 6. Ful l y sults! Call 385-5809 loaded with all the or place your ad custom extras and on-line at c omes with a f u l l bendbulletin.corn
tank
of
gas!
$47,800.
ds published in "Wa› tercraft" include: Kay› aks, rafts and motor› Ized personal watercrafts. For "boats" please see Class 870. Pace A rrow V i sion 541-385-5809 1997, Ford 460 en› gine w/Banks, solar, walk-around q ueen serving central oregon since 19rs bed, 2 door fridge, mi› cro-convection oven, 880 WiFi, 1 00 k m i l es, Motorhomes needs work, (photo similar to actual rig) $9,500. 541-280-0797
16' Seaswirl Tahoe with trailer, 50 HP Evinrude, bimini top, excellent condition. $3,500 541-647-1918
The Bulletin
17" 2005 Alumaweld Talon, 60HP Merc 4 stroke, 55 lb. thrust Minnkota trolling mo› tor with r emote. 4
Check out the classifieds online www.bendbutfetin.corn Updated daily Winnebago Outlook pedestal seats with 2007 Class "C"31’, 1-800-877-0246. The clean, non- smoking storage, E-Z loader RV toll free t e lephone trailer. This boat is in exc. cond. Must See! CONSIGNMENTS number for the hear› exc. cond. throughout, Lots of extra’s, a very WANTED ing i m paired is has been used good buy.$47,900 We Do The Work ... 1-800-927-9275. H arley Road K i ng and little. Garaged. For more info call You Keep The Cash! Classic 2003, 100th very and full cover. 541-447-9268 On-site credit Anniversary Edition, Top T urn-key, all you approval team, 16,360 mi., reduced need is a f i shing web site presence. $9,999. 541-647-7078 pole! $1 6 ,200. [(pop +gag We Take Trade-Ins! 541-977-2972 People Lookfor Information BIG COUNTRY RV About Products and Bend: 541-330-2495 Services Every Daythrough Redmond: The ftvlletin Classifieds 541-548-5254 $45,000 Beautiful Beach Cottage, mil› 705 lion dollar view! 17’ Sun Craft, See Craigslist/Bend, Real Estate Services enter 5092619794. 2 motors. $1,400. 541-593-7257 Call 541-390-9723 For Sale by O wner: 1200 sq. foot home, Look at: attached garage on Moto Guzzi Breva Bendhomes.corn S outhwind F o r d large lot. 3 bedroom, 1 100 2007, o n l y for Complete Listings of 2 bath. Eastside off 11,600 miles. Fleetwood motorKeyte Ln. AS IS sale $5,500. Area Real Estate for Sale home, 19 9 4, 3 2’, 206-679-4745 asoline, 82K miles, $300,000. ood con d ition, 541-419-7428 Allegro 32' 2007, like obo. new, only 12,600 miles. $7,000 Call The Bulletin At I ~,= Chev 8.1L with Allison 60 503-807-5490 541-355-5509 dual ex› I =. =- = I transmission, Place Your Ad Or E-Mail haust. Loaded! Auto-lev› eling system, 5kw gen, Stow Master 5000 by At: www.bendbulletin.corn 18' 2 003 S u n power mirrors w/defrost, Tow Master. $350. 744 Victory TC 2 0 0 2, ( Cruiser - pontoon 2 slide-outs with aw› Generator exhaust boat, fully equipped. nings, rear c a mera, system, Gen Turi, Open Houses 40K mi., runs great, only been used I trailer hitch, driyer door with case. $ 7 5 . s tage 1 kit, n e w I Has handful of times & w/power window, cruise, 503-936-1778 FSBO: Open House tires, rear brakes & ~ ahas been in covered ~ exhaust brake, central Sat. 8 Sun., 1-3. more. Health forces satellite sys. RePopular River Wild For› s ale. $3,5 0 0 . ( storage. Asking vac, price: $64,950. est home, secluded, 541-771-0665 ~ $13,000. Call Wen- ~ duced 503-781-8812 upgraded, a must see! , • sac = = 2049 sq. ft., $609,000. = ' vv =~ 19645 Rollercoaster Ct. 702-239-0900 or 970-946-4194 Winnebago 22' Agents Welcome! 2002 - $28,000 Chevy 360, 745 Yamaha V Star 1100 heavy duty chassis, Beaver Contessa 40'Homes for Sale Classic, year 2004, 2008, four slide die› cab & roof A/C, 19’ Bayliner 1998, I/O, -Many extras. 17K tow hitch w/brake, sel pusher. Loaded, NOTICE miles. $4800. great shape, call for great condition. War› 22k mi., more! info. $65500. In Bend All real estate adver› 541-548-2109 541-280-3251 ranty. Pictures/info at 661-644-0384. tised here in is sub› www.fourstarbend.corn 865 ject to th e Federal 541-647-1236 F air H ousing A c t , ATVs Winnebago which makes it illegal The Bulletin Journey to advertise any pref› To Subscribe call 2001 36’ 2nd owner, erence, limitation or 541-385-5600 or go to 300 Cummins Turbo discrimination based diesel, Allison 5 spd, on race, color, reli› 19’ Classic 1 9 90 www.bendbulletin.corn ion, sex, handicap, Mastercraft ski boat. B ounder, 1999, 3 4 ’ , 80k miles. D river s ide s l ide, g a s jamilial status or na› Pro-star 190 conven› S p ortsman tional in-board, cus› one slide, low mile› stove, oven, 2 flat tional origin, or inten› Polaris very clean, lots screen TVs, refer, tion to make any such 500, year 2000-Tires tom trailer, exc. cond. age, storage, $28,500. generator, inverter, preferences, l i mita› tubed. 61 8 H o urs, $8,995. 541-389-6562 of 541-639-9411 King Dome, tow bar. tions or discrimination. 2900 miles. $3500. N on-smoker, n o We will not knowingly 541-548-2109 pets, no c h ildren. accept any advertis› 870 C lean, an d w e l l ing for real estate which is in violation of Boats & Accessories maintained, $43,000 541-390-1472. this law. All persons are hereby informed 12’ Valco alum. on that all dwellings ad› trailer 9.9 J o hnson 19' Willie Predator, Fleetwood D i scovery 881 vertised are available 0/B, plus amenities, 175 HP sport jet, 40’ 2003, diesel, w/all on an equal opportu› exc. shape. $1250. 160 hours. Also 9.9 Travel Trailers - 3 slide outs, nity basis. The Bulle› 541-549-8126 Yamaha tro l ling options satellite, 2 TV’s, W/D, tin Classified 14’ aluminum boat w/ motor with Garmin etc., 34,000 m iles. TR-1 aut o - pilot, Wintered trailer. Trailer has 2 in h eated 750 Scotty electric down brand new tires 8 shop. $76,995 obo. Redmond Homes riggers & accesso› wheels. Trailer in exc. 541-447-8664 cond., guaranteed no ries, dual batteries with selector switch. leaks. 2 upholstered 19’ Ampex. 2011. Slide Looking for your next swivel seats, no mo› Full canvas 8 stor› emp/oyee? out and other extras. age cover, always tor. $2,900. stored inside. Place a Bulletin help Tows well $12,500. 541-410-4066 wanted ad today and 541.316.1367 $19,500. reach over 60,000 541-480-9277 readers each week. Lexington 2006 Your classified ad 283TS class B+mo› will also appear on FUN & FISH! tor coach, full GTS bendbulletin.corn pkg, 19,352 miles. 3 which currently re› burner range, half ceives over 14' Lund aluminum J a F l i h t 26 4 B H time oven, 3 slides 1.5 million page fishing boat, 8 HP 2011. like new, sleeps w/awnings, Onan views every month Mercury e n g ine, gen., King Dome sat› 9, self contained, 1/2 at no extra cost. long shaft. $2,500. ton towable $13,900 ellite system, Ford Bulletin Classifieds 702-249-2567 (Sun› 2006 Smokercraft V10 Triton, auto-lev› OBO (541) 410-9017 Get Results! river) Sunchaser 820 eling system, new Call 385-5609 or model pontoon boat, tires, Falcon tow bar. place your ad on-line RV 75HP Mercury and Non-smoker, main› at CONSIGNMENTS electric trolling mo› tained in dry storage. bendbulletin.corn WANTED tor, full canvas and Can email additional We Do The Work ... many extras. pictures.$59,000. You Keep The Cash! 763 Stored inside 541-520-3407 On-site credit Recreational Homes $19,900 approval team, 16'2" 1984 Citation 541-350-5425 & Property web site presence. and trailer, I/O Alpha1 We Take Trade-Ins! Mercruiser outdrive, Cabin in the woods on 140 hop GMC 4 cyl trout stream, private, motor. good running BIG COUNTRY RV off the grid, 80 mi. Bend: 541-330-2495 boat asking $1995. Redmond: from Bend. 638 ac. 541-280-5114 Monaco Monarch 31 ' 541-548-5254 $849K. For d r o ne 2006, Ford V 1 0, 16’6" video li n k , cal l 2005 T r acker miles, 541-480-7215. Targa V16 boat. 60 2 3'10" S R 2 3 0 0 , 26,900 auto-level, 2 slides, HP 4-stroke Mercury '95, own with pride, 773 queen b ed & motor 8 8 HP 4-stroke always compliments, hide-a-bed sofa, 4k motor, Minnkota fowl no salt, head never Acreages gen, convection mi› mounted, foot con› used, due for 5 year trolled motor, Low› cooling 5 Acres - Corner Lot mai n t ., crowave, 2 TVs, tow ranges fish finder, top $9500 firm. Extras. package. RVision C r ossover Million Dollar View! & fold and close top. W eekend PRICE REDUCTION! Sisters School Dist., 2013, 19ft, exc. Well only . $325,000. $17,500. Ask about 541-678-3249 $59,000. equipped, $ 11,500. 541-389-9751 extras. 541-632-2676. 541-815-6319 541-604-5387
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882
541-504-2801
Fifth Wheels
1/5 share in very nice 150 HP Cessna 150; 1973 Cessna 150 with Lycoming 0-320 150 hp engine conversion, 4000 hours. TT air› frame. Approx. 400 hours o n 0- t imed 0-320. Hanga red in nice (electric door) city-owned hangar at the Bend Airport. One of very few C-150’s that has never been a t rainer. $ 4500 w i l l consider trades for whatever. C all J im Frazee, 541-41 0-6007
1974 Bejjanca
1730A 2180 TT, 440
SMO, 180 mph •Excellent condition •Always hangared •One owner for 35 years.
$40,000.
In Madras, call 541-475-6302
Dodge Big H o rn Ram 2500, 2005, 6 speed manual. Ex› tra tires and rims, canopy goes with. Excellent condition, well mai n tained, runs great. 160K miles. $2 8 ,500 541-620-1212
Ford Mustang Hard top 1965, 6-cylinder, auto trans, power brakes, power steering, garaged, well maintained, engine runs strong. 74K mi., great condi› tion. $12,500. Must see! 541-598-7940
Jeep CJ5 4x41967, first year of the orig. Dauntless V-6, last year of the "All metal" body! Engine over› hauled: new brakes, fuel pump, steering gear box, battery, al› ternator, emergency brake pads, gauges, warn hubs, dual ex› haust, 5 wide traction tires, 5 new spoke, chrome wheels. NO rust, garage stored. $7,495 OBO! (775) 513-0822
HANGAR FOR SALE. 30x40 end unit T
Mercedes 450 SL 1979 Roadster, soft & hard tops, always 541-280-5994 Redmond garaged 122k mi. e xtras, $9,7 0 0 . 541-548-5648
Bighorn 2012 f ifth
wheel, 35’, lots of extras. $4 9,750. 541-388-4905
Save money. Learn to fly or build hours with your own air› c raft. 1966 A e r o Commander, 4 seat,
/Photo for illustrationonly)
Ford F250 Crew Cab Harley Davidson Edition 2005, VIN „B29940 $22,988
150 HP, low time,
new, always stored inside, center island, fireplace, solar pan› els, 6volt batteries, auto leveling, sys› tem loaded, asking $62,000. MUST SEE!! 541-480-7930
Cameo LX1 2001, 32 ft. 5th wheel, 2 slides, A/C, micro, DVD, CD p l ayer, conv. an d i n vert. New batteries, tires and shocks. Quad carrier. Quad avail. $11,900 OBO. 541-390-7179
full panel. $21,000 obo. Contact Paul at 541-447-5184.
Superhawk N7745G Owners' Group LLC Cessna 172/180 hp, full IFR, new avionics, GTN 750, touch› screen center stack, exceptionally clean. Healthy engine reserve fund. Hangared at KBDN. One share available,$10,000 Call 541-815-2144
Pontiac 1966 Bon› neville Convertible. 389 Engine, 3 25 Horsepower $6500 Call John 541-389-6116
(exp. 9/30/1 5) DLR „366
541-548-1448
smolichmotors.corn
Chevy El Camino 1973 RARE!Manual trans. 4 spd, Exc. Cond. $7500. 541-389-1086
/Photo for illustrationonly)
Ford F250 Crew Cab Super Duty 2012, (exp. 9/30/1 5) Vin „C52424 Stock „63414
$33,999 or $449/mo.,
916
CHECKYOUR AD
Trucks & Heavy Equipment 1997 Utility 53’x1 02" dry
freight van. S liding axles, leaf springs, on the first day it runs good tires, body 8 to make sure it is cor› swing doors in exc. rect. "Spellcheck" and cond., has no dings, human errors do oc› road ready! $7500 cur. If this happens to o bo. Sisters, O R . your ad, please con› 541-719-1217 tact us ASAP so that 927 corrections and any adjustments can be utomotive Trades made to your ad. 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classified Laredo 31'2006, 5th wheel, fully S/C one slide-out. Awning. Like new, hardly used. Must sell $20,000 or refinance. Call 541-41 0-5649 RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do the Work,
You Keep the Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins!
541-548-1448
smolichmotors.corn
Ford F-250 1990 e xtended cab, v e r y clean, no d a mage 97,992 miles, 460 V6, 2WD tool box, auto 3 speed/OD. As k i ng $5000. Call Dennis at 541-548-8662 or
hanger in Prineville. Dry walled, insulated, and painted. $23,500. Tom, 541.788.5546
Bighorn 37’ 2 0 14, M3260Elite, like
Dodge Ram 3500 2005, VIN „851216 $24,888. (exp 9/305/1 5) DLR „366
2 013 7
f t .X18 f t .
Carry-On open car
hauler trailer. Used only three times to haul my 1967 Ca› maro, and looks like new. I had the front barrier made and in› stalled and added the tool box. It also has a mounted new spare tire. $4,800. 541-876-5375 or cell: 503-701-2256. 929
VW Beetle c lassic 1972, Exc. shape, no rust, very clean, fully restored, has had 2 o wners. $4,0 0 0. 541-815-8147 933
$2000 down, 84 mo., 4 .49% APR o n a p ›
proved credit. License
and title i ncluded in payment, plus dealer in› stalled options.
©
s u a ARU.
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr „0354
Pickups
CA L L vh.
TODAY%
ChevyPickup 1978, long bed, 4x4, frame up restoration. 500 Cadillac eng i ne, fresh R4 transmis› sion 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.
Ford F-350 XLT 2006, Crewcab, 150K mi., bed liner, good tires, exc. shape. $16,500. Please call, 541-350-8856 or 541-410-3292
Just too many collectibles?
Good classified adstell the essential facts in an interesting Manner.Write from the readers view -not the seller’ s. Convert the facts into benefits. Show the reader howthe item will help them in someway.
Sell them in The Bulletin Classifieds
541-385-5809
This advertising tip
brought to you by
Toyota T a coma 2006, reg. c a b, DONATE YOUR CAR, 4x4, 5 spd stan› TRUCK OR BOAT TO Redmond: dard 4 cyl engine, HERITAGE FOR THE 541-546-5254 2 2+ m pg , o n e BLIND. Free 3 Day s enior own e r , V acation, Tax D e › 885 non-srnkee, well ductible, Free Towing, All Paperwork Taken maintained, nearly Canopies & Campers I Care O f. CALL new tires, original Chevy S-10 1988 4.3L Lance Squire 4 000, 1-600-401-4106 spare near new, V-6, sunroof, many 1996, 9’ 6" extended (PNDC) runs ex c e llent. cab, bathroom w/ toi› Got an older car, boat custom features, su› $14,750. per clean, always ga› let, queen bed, out› or RV? Do the hu› raged. $3200 obo. 541-633-9895 side shower. $5,700. Automotive Wanted
BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495
Call 541-382-4572
amongc~e I oregonshee se
mane thing. Donate it to the Humane Soci› ety. Call 1› 800-205-0599
(PNDC) 932
Northlander 1993 17' camper,Polar 990, good shape, new fridge, A/C, queen bed, bath› room, indoor/out› door shower, lots of storage, custom› ized to fit newer pickups,$4500 obo. 541-419-9859.
o 00
I
The Bulletin
Antique & Classic Autos
541-388-0811.
A dcl co l o r
p hoto s
and
s ell y o u r
s tuff
fa st .
In print and online with The Bulletin’s Classifieds
CHEVELLE N/ALIBU 1971 57K original miles, 350 c.i., auto, stock, all original, Hi-Fi stereo $15,000 541-279-1072
GOLDEN RETRIEVER PUPPIES,we are three adorable, loving puppies looking for a caring home. Please call right away. $500
908
Aircraft, Parts & Service
CORVETTE 1979, glass top, 31k miles all original, silver 8 maroon. $12,500. 541-388-9802
1/3 interest in
Columbia 400,
Financing available.
$125,000
Say "goodbuy" to that unused item by placing it in The Bulletin Classifieds
(located I Bend) 541-288-3333
5 41-385-580 9
*Special private party rates apply to merchandiseand automotive categories.
Classifieds www.bendbulletin.corn
To place your photo ad,visit us online at i ftnftntf.ben d b u l l e t i n . c o r n
or call with questions,
5 41 -3 8 5 - 5 8 N
E6 FRIDAY AUGUST 28, 2015 • THE BULLETIN 935
935
Sport Utility Vehicles Sport Utility Vehicles
975
Auto m obiles
Automobiles
Kia Soul 2013, (exp. 9/30/2015) Vin „768357 Stock „45202A1
Volvo XC60 2014, V IN „522043
1977
F J40 Toyota Landcruiser with winch, $21,000. 541-389-7113, Michelle
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 975
$34,997 fexp. 9/30/1 5) DLR „366
Subaru lmpreza2013, (exp. 9/30/1 5) Vin „027174 Stock „83205
$13,779 or $215/mo., $20,358 or $249/mo.,
SMOLICH
V OL V O 541-749-2156 940
Vans
Dodge Durango SXT2013, VIN „583069
$29,888. (expg/30H/1 5) DLR „366
4
541-548-1448 smolichmotors.corn
Buick Le Sabre 2005 Custom. Clean, 96k miles. 32 mpg hwy, 22-25 in town. $4250 obo 54 1-419-5060
Ford Explorer Sport 2011, 6 cyl. auto., 4WD, 3rd seat, $21,995. 541-598-5111
(photo forillustration only)
Ford Focus 2012, VIN „367736 $13,997 fexp. 9/30/1 5) DLR „366
SMOLICH
V OL V O 541-749-2156
smolichvolvo.corn GMC Yukon SLT 2007 4x4 leather, loaded. „ 325813 $24,995 AAA Ore. Auto Source corner of West Empire 8 Hwy 97, Bend. Dlr 0225 541-598-3750
www.aaaoregonauto› source.corn. Honda Pilot 2012 LX Black, 36,870 miles,
Vin„056700 $23,795. AAA Ore. Auto Source corner of West Em› pire 8 Hwy 97, Bend. 541-598-3750
www.aaaoregonauto› source.corn Dlr 0225
Jeep Grand Chero› kee Overland 2012, 4x4 V-6, all options, running boards, front guard, nav., air and heated leather, cus› tom wheels and new tires, only 47K miles, $30,995 541-408-7908
Cadillac CTS 2010,
2015
GIJBARIJ.
City of La Pine P.O. Box 2460/ 16345 Sixth Street La Pine, OR 97739
City of L a P ine, Oregon, inv i tes Bids for the con› struction o f the Wickiup Lift Station Impr ovements 2015 p roject. Work i n › cludes the installa› $16,977 or $199/mo., tion of two vertical turbine pumps, a $2600 down, 84 mo. at 4 .49% APR o n a p › flowmeter, isolation proved credit. License valves, check and title i ncluded in valves, and the re› payment, plus dealer quired ele c trical installed options. equipment and con› Mercedes 380SL trols for the pumps. 1982 Roadster, An 8-foot diameter black on black, soft wetwell will be con› 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. & hard top, exc. s tructed with t h e 877-266-3821 cond., always ga› new building being Dlr„0354 raged. 155K miles, over the top of Toyota Avalon 2003, built $9,500. portion o f t h e 150K m i. , si n gle a 541-549-6407 etwell. A l l n e w owner, great cond., w electrical s e r vice new tires and battery, e quipment an d maintenance records, pump controls will leather seats, moon› be installed except roof, full set of snow for the existing au› tires on rims, $7000. tomatic tra n sfer 541-548-6181 switch (ATS), which MercedesBenz E will be used in the Class 2005, new system con› (exp. 9/30/1 5) trols. The existing Vin „688743 building will be re› Stock „8231 6 moved and the gen› $11,979 or $155/mo., erator w i l l be $ 2500 down 7 2 m o Toyota Camry 2007, equipped with an 4 .49% APR o n a p › (exp. 9/30/2016) outdoor weather en› proved credit. License Vin „534335 closure and remain and title included in Stock „45218A at its current loca› payment, plus dealer in› $14,779 or $215/mo., tion. stalled options.
© s um au
L’"" " " ’
J
SMOLICH
V OL V O 541-749-2156
smolichvolvo.corn (Photo for illusfrafiononly)
$2400 down, 84 mo., 4 .49% APR o n a p › proved credit. License and title included in payment, plus dealer in› stalled options.
LEGAL NOTICE
©
s u a a au
%® ~5@ ".
Lexus RX350 2013 AWD, 31,821 mi. „198432 $37,495 AAA Ore. Auto Source Ford Fusion SEL2012, corner of West Empire (exp. 9/30/1 5) & Hwy 97, Bend. Dlr Vin „117015 0225 541-598-3750 Stock „44382A www.aaaoregonauto› $15,979 or $199/mo., source.corn.
1000
Legal Notices
©
®
DLR „366
1000
Legal Notices
- WICKIUP payment, plus dealer OREGON LIFT STATION installed options. IMPROVEIIIIENTS-
V 6 I n jection, 6 Speed A u tomatic. Luxury series. Exte› rior Black Raven, Interior: Light Tita› nium/ E b o ny $2000 down, 72 mo., 2 2,555 m i les. 4 .49% APR o n a p › s uSUMkUO1%SHD.OOM a a au 4proved door. Excellent con› © credit. License dition all a r ound. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. and title included in Has Arizona plates. payment, plus dealer in› 877-266-3821 This is car is a great stalled options. Dlr „0354 mix of luxury, com› GIJBARIJ. f ort, s t y le , an d workmanship. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. $24,000.00 877-266-3821 Call 541-408-3051 Dlr „0354 Toyota Camry 2 0 07 78K m i . Lo a ded, fyfercedes-Benz leather heated seats, SLK230 2003, moo nroof, auto cli› CHECK YOURAD exc. cond., auto, mate control, studded on the first day of pub› convertible retract› tires, Bose s tereo, lication. If a n e r ror able hard top. great shape. $11,500 may occur in your ad, 54,250 miles, carfax 541-270-1337 p lease contact u s available. $13,000. and we will be happy 541-389-7571 to fix it as soon as we can. Deadlines are: Weekdays 12:00 noon for next day, S at. 11:00 a.m. for Sun› day; Sat. 12:00 for Toyota Corolla 1999 Monday. 4 cyl. 5 spd, 200K mi., 541-385-5809 M ini C ooper S new tires last spring. The Bulletin Classified Convertible 2013: studs incl.!! A/C, cas› sette, headliner needs DID YOU KNOW 7 IN Like new convertible only 18,600 miles. help. Runs G reat!! 10 Americans or 158 w/ All options incl. Chili $1800 541.480.9327 million U.S. A d ults Red paint w/ black read content f r om stripes, 17" wheels, newspaper m e d ia film protection, cus› each week? Discover tom f ront d r iving the Power of the Pa› lights, black leather cific Northwest News› seats. $2 2 ,500 paper Advertising. For 541-420-1659 or ida› a free brochure call homonteith'aol.corn Toyota Corolla 2013, 916-288-6011 or (exp. 9/30/1 5) email Vin „053527 Stock „83072 cecelia@cnpa.corn (PNDC) $15,979 or $199 mo., Vehicle? $2000 down, 64 mo., Call The Bulletin 4 .49% APR o n a p › and place an ad proved credit. License today! and title included in Ask about our payment, plus dealer in› "WheelDeal" ! stalled options. for private party (photo forillustration only) © sU B A RU, advertisers eusmuowsmrDaOM DodgeDart 2013, 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. VIN „219365 877-266-3821 $1 4,997 Dlr „0354 fexp. 9/30/1 5)
Jeep Wrangler Rubi› con 2 0 04, $17,500 Mileage: 065 , 154 Automatic, Cr u i se Control, Tow Bar, Air Conditioning, Power Door Locks, Alarm and much more. Call Gary: 541-280-0558.
1000
Legal Notices
$2600 down, 84 mo., ADVERTISEIIIIENT 4 .49% APR o n a p › FOR BIDS proved credit. License CITY OF LA PINE, and title i ncluded in
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 877-266-3821 VW Eurovan Camper BMyy X3 Sl 2007, Dlr „0354 Dlr „0354 1995, 5 spd manual Low Miles - 68,500 trans., 121K mi., good mi., AWD, leather w/ new clutch & Interior, su n roof, cond., timing belt, $22,500. b luetooth, voi c e 541-480-7532 command system, and too much more 975 to list here. $15,900. Automobiles Lexus ES350 2010, SubaruLegacy Please call Dan at Excellent Condition LLBean 2006, 541-815-6611 32,000 miles, $20,000 (exp. 9/30/1 5) 214-549-3627 (in Vin „203053 Bend) Stock „82770
Acura TL 06, 3.2L V6, auto, FWD , b l a ck color, A/C, 115,971 miles, clean title and carfax. Call or text 541-834-8469
1000
Legal Notices
$2000 down, 66 mo., 4 .49% APR o n a p › proved credit. License and title i ncluded in
payment, plus dealer in› stalled options.
smolichvolvo.corn
1000
Legal Notices
(photo for rllustraaon only)
Volvo S60 2004, V IN „015498 $7,997 fexp. 9/30/1 5) DLR „366
Nissan 350Z Convertible 2005, VIN „752136 $15,988 (exp. 9/30/1 5) DLR „366
SMOLICH
V Q LV Q 541-749-21 56
smolichvolvo.corn 541-548-1448
smolichmotors.corn
Looking for your next employee?
Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 © s u a a au readers each week. NissanRogue 2014 Your classified ad 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. VIN „799777 will also appear on Nissan Sentra2012, 877-266-3821 $21,997 bendbulletin.corn (exp. 9/30/2015) Dlr „0354 (exp. 9/30/1 5) which currently re› Vin „734544 DLR „366 ceives over 1.5 mil› Stock „44681C lion page views SMOLICH $11,979 or $199/mo., every month at $ 2500 down 7 2 m o V OL V O 4 .49% APR o n a p › no extra cost. Bulle› 541-749-2156 tin Classifieds proved credit. License smolichvolvo.corn and title included in Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place payment, plus dealer in› Honda Accord 2005, your ad on-line at V6, fully l o aded, stalled options. Nav, Moon roof, CD, © s u a a au bendbullefin.corn perfect leather inte› rior, one owner, full 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. I The Bulletin recoml 877-266-3821 maintained, always mends extra caution I Dlr „0354 garaged, never SubaruOutback when p u r chasing i wrecked, 143K road Porsche Cayman S Limited 2014, i products or services miles, $9,399. Great 2.5L H-4 cyl 2 008, L i k e new , from out of the area. car ready to drive. V IN „303724. $28,888. 14,500 miles, i S ending c ash , (exp. 9/30/1 5) DLR „366 Mike 541-499-5970 $35,000. checks, or credit in- q 360-510-3153 (Bend) formation may be I HUNTER SP E CIAL: i subject toFRAUD. Jeep Cherokee, 1990, For more informal4x4, has 9 t ires on i tion about an adver› wheels. $2000 obo. tiser, you may call 541-771-4732 I the Oregon State( 541-548-1448 g Attorney General’s g smolichmotors.corn I nfiniti I III37X 2 0 1 1 47,000 miles, AWD, Scion TCcoupe 2007, I Office C o n sumer I loaded, always ga› i Protection hotline at (exp. 9/30/1 5) 1-877-877-9392. raged, gorgeous dark Vin „198120 b lue, S p orty ca r Stock „44193B driven by retired folks. $10,379 or $149/mo., Serving CentralOregon since t9IB $24,500 obo. $2800 down, 60 mo., 541-382-6028 4 .49% APR o n ap › Toyota FJ Cruiser proved credit. License Need to get an 2012, 64K miles. all and title included in Kia Forte SX 2012 ad in ASAP? hwy, original owner, payment, plus dealer in› hatchback, $16,000, never been off road You can place it stalled options. 32,015 miles, still or accidents, tow online at: under 60k warranty, pkg, brand new tires, ® s u a a au exc. condition, see very clean. $26,000. www.bendbulletin.corn craigslist for full de› 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Call or text Jeff at tails. 541-948-7687 877-266-3821 541-729-4552 541-385-5809 Dlr „0354
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Sealed Bids for the described P roject will be received by the City of La Pine at the C it y H a ll, 16345 Sixth Street, La Pine, Oregon 9 7739, until 2 : 00 p.m., local t i me, September 16, 2015, at which time the Bids received will b e pub l icly opened and read. T he C o ntract i s subject to the appli› cable provisions of ORS 279 C .800 through ORS 279C.870, the Or› egon Pr e vailing Wage Law.
This Project is be› ing funded by the City of La Pine. Bid security shall be furnished in accor› dance with the In› s tructions to B i d › ders. The Issuing Office for t h e Bi d d ing Documents is: Anderson Perry & A ssociates, I n c . , P.O. Box 1107/1 901 N. Fir Street, La Grande, O r e gon 97850, 541-963-8309, Lyle Umpleby, lumplebyoander› sonperry.corn. Pro› spective Bi d ders may examine the Bidding Documents at the Issuing Office on Mondays through Fridays between the hours of 8:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. Bidding Documents a re available a t http: //www.ander› s onperry.corn u n › der the Bid D ocs link. T h e d i g ital Bidding Documents be d o wn› may loaded f or a non-refundable payment of $25.00 by inputting Q uestCDN e B i d› Doc Number 4065891 o n the w ebsite. Ass i s › t ance w it h fr e e QuestCDN m e m› bership registration, document d o wn› loading, and work› ing with the digital Project information may be obtained at QuestCDN.corn, at 9 52-233-1632, o r via e- m ai l at info@questcdn.corn. The Contr a ct Documents will be available for down› load after August 18, 2015. No paper sets will b e p r o› vided fo r b i dding
purposes.
Bidding Documents may also be exam› ined at the following locations: City of La Pine, Or› egon, 16345 Sixth Street, La Pine, Or›
egon
Anderson Perry 8 A ssociates, In c . , 267 N.E. Second Street, Suite 200, Prineville, Oregon Anderson Perry & A ssociates, I n c., 1901 N. Fir Street, La Grande, Oregon Anderson Perry 5 A ssociates, I n c . , 214 E. Birch Street,
Walla Walla, Washington. A pre-bid confer› ence will be held at 1:00 p .m., l o c al
all obligations se› cured by the Deed of Trust i mmedi› ately due and pay› able, including: the p rincipal su m o f $210,050.69 to› gether with interest thereon at the rate Owner: of 6 % per annum, City of La Pine, OR from 4/1/2011 until By: Rick Allen paid, plus all ac› Title: City Manager of Mortgage crued late charges, Date: Records where trust and al l t r u stee’s August 19, 2015 deed is recorded: fees, f o r eclosure LEGAL NOTICE Document No. costs, and any sums IN THE C I RCUIT 2014-07483 in the a dvanced by t h e COURT FOR THE official Records of MERRILL beneficiary pursu› S TATE O F O R › Deschutes County, O’ SULLIVAN, LLP. ant to the terms and EGON FOR T HE Oregon. 7.Date of S TATE O F OR › c onditions of t h e COUNTY OF DES› Recording of Trust EGON ss. County of D eed o f Tru s t C HUTES. I n th e D eed: March 1 3 , Deschutes, On this W hereof, not i c e Matter of the Estate 2014. 8.The benefi› 2 1 day o f A p r il hereby is given that of: Alberto Gonza› ciary and the trustee 2015, pe r sonally the und e rsigned lez, Sr., Deceased. have elected to sell appeared the t rustee, CLE A R Case No. the real property to above-named Ter› RECON CO R P ., 15PB02792. PUB› satisfy the obliga› rance O ’ Sullivan whose address is LICATION OF NO› tions secured by the and acknowledged 621 SW M o rrison TICE TO I N TER› trust deed and a no› the foregoing in› Street, Suite 425, ESTED PERSONS. tice of default has strument to be her Portland, OR 97205, NOTICE IS been recorded pur› voluntary act. Be› will on 12/29/2015, HEREBY G I V EN s uant t o ORS fore me: Janel M. at the hour of 11:00 that t h e un d e r› 86.752 (3); The de› Gillham, NOTARY AM, standard time, signed has b e en fault for which fore› PUBLIC FOR OR› as established by appointed personal closure is made is EGON, My Com› ORS 187.110, AT representative of the the following: Fail› mission E x p ires: THE BOND Estate of A l berto ure to pay monthly Oct. 6, 2017. If the STREET EN› G onzalez, Sr. A l l payments in accor› foregoing is a copy TRANCE S T E PS persons ha v i ng dance with the note to be served pursu› T O T H E DES › claims against the beginning March 31, ant to ORS 86.764 CHUTES COUNTY estate are required 2015. 9.By reason and ORS 86.774, COURTHOUSE, to present t hem, of the default, the the name and ad› 1 164 N W B O N D with vouchers at› beneficiary has de› dress of the parties S T., B E ND, O R tached, to the attor› clared all sums ow› to be served are: 97701, sell at public ney of the under› ing on all obliga› Name and L a st auction to the high› signed pe r sonal tions secured by the Known Address: est bidder for cash representative, trust deed immedi› Tenant/Current Oc› the interest in the whose office is lo› ately due and pay› c upants, 568 8 5 above-described cated at 1558 SW a ble. T h e s u ms Nest Pine Dr., Bend real property which Nancy Way, Ste. owing on all obliga› OR 97707. Nature the grantor had or 101, B e nd, OR tions secured by the of Right, Lien or In› had power to con› 97702, within four trust deed are: Prin› terest: Tenant/Cur› vey at the time it m onths after t h e cipal balance, inter› rent Occ u pant; executed the Deed date of first publica› e st, an d co s t s N ame and L a s t of Trust, together tion of this notice, or t hrough April 1 3 , Known A d d ress: with any i n terest the claims may be 2015, in the amount S tray C at , L L C , which the grantor or barred. All persons of $106,571.18, with 56875 Nest P i ne his successors in whose rights may interest accruing at Dr., B e nd , OR interest a c q uired be affected by the a rate of 9% per an› 9 7707. Nature o f after the execution proceedings may num. 10.Both Ben› Right, Lien or Inter› of the Deed of Trust, obtain ad d i tional eficiary and Trustee est: Grantor. to satisfy the fore› information from the have elected to sell going o b l igations LEGAL NOTICE records of the court, said real property to thereby secured and T RUSTEE’S N O › the personal repre› satisfy the obliga› the costs and ex› TICE OF SALE TS s entative, or t h e tions secured by of sale, in› No.: 01 8 2 77-OR penses lawyers for the per› said Trust D eed. cluding a r eason› Loan No.: sonal r e presenta› The u n dersigned ***** * 8516 R e f er› able charge by the tive, M a r i o F. trustee w i l l on t rustee. Notice i s ence is made to that Riquelme, El l i ot, Tuesday, Septem› further given that certain trust deed Anderson, Riquelme b er 15, 2 0 1 5 a t any person named (the "Deed of Trust" ) & Wilson, LLP, 1558 10:00 a.m., in ac› in ORS 86.778 has executed by TIMOSW Nancy Way, cord with the stan› the right to have the THY C. WALSTON, Ste. 101, Bend, OR dard time e s tab› U NMARRIED, a s f oreclosure pr o › 97702, (541) lished b y ORS ceeding dismissed Grantor, to FIDEL› 383-3755, Fax: 1 87.110, o n th e and the Deed ITY NAT I ONAL Trust reinstated of (541) 330 - ’I480. front steps of t he by TITLE, as Trustee, Dated and first pub› courthouse, located payment to the ben› in favor of MORT› lished on August 21, at 1164 NW Bond eficiary of the entire G AGE ELEC › 2 015. / s / Ma r i a Street, Deschutes then due TRONIC R E G IS› amount Laura G o n zalez, C ounty, C i t y o f (other than the por› TRATION Personal R e pre› Bend, State of Or› of principal that S YSTEMS I N C . , tion s entative, 938 N E egon, sell at public would not then be SOLELY AS NOMILena Pl., Bend, OR auction to the high› due had no default N EE F O R U S. 97701. est bidder for cash occurred), together B ANK, N.A., I T S LEGAL NOTICE the interest in the w ith t h e cos t s , SUCCESSORS described real prop› trustee’s and NOTICE OF AND ASSIGNS, as FORECLOSURE erty w h ic h the attorneys’ fees, and Beneficiary, dated curing any o t her S ALE O F PE R › grantor had or had 4/24/2008, re› S ONAL PRO P › power to convey at default complained corded 5/1/2008, as the time of the ex› of in the Notice of ERTY. High Desert Instrument No. Self-Storage, 52650 ecution by grantor of Default by tender› 2008-19109, Re-re› the trust deed, to› ing t h e per f or› Hwy 97, La Pine, corded on OR, shall sell the gether with any in› mance required un› 0 1/29/2009 as I n › t erest which t h e d er the D eed o f personal property of strument No. Tammy Ogle, units grantor or grantor’s Trust at any time not 2009-04023, in the successors in inter› later than five days F 4 and D2 , a n d Official Records of Kimberly Hays, unit est acquired after before the date last Deschutes County, the execution of the set for sale. With› B14, for failure to Oregon, which cov› trust deed, to sat› o ut l i miting t h e pay rental and de› ers the following de› isfy the f oregoing trustee’s disclaimer fault fees. A private scribed real prop› sale will be at High obligations thereby of r epresentations e rty s i tuated i n s ecured and t h e or warranties, Or› Desert Self-Storage Deschutes County, on September 14 at costs and expenses egon law requires Oregon: THE of sale, including a the trustee to state 9:30am. SOUTH HALF OF reasonable charge in this notice that THE NORTHWEST LEGAL NOTICE by the trustee. 11. some re s i dential QUARTER OF THE NOTICE OF SALE. Any person named property sold at a 1.Name of Grantor: SOUTHEAST in ORS 86.778 has trustee’s sale may QUARTER OF THE Stray Cat LLC. 2. the right, at any time have been used in NORTHEAST Name of Trustee: prior to five days manufacturing QUARTER TERRANCE B. (S12 before the date last methamphetamines, O ’ SULLIVAN O F NW1/4 SE1/4 set for the sale, to NE1/4) OF S EC› the chemical com› MERRILL have this foreclo› ponents of w hich O’ SULLIVAN, 805 33, TOWN› sure pr o ceeding TION a re known to b e SHIP 21 S OUTH, SW Industrial Way, dismissed and the toxic. P r ospective RANGE 10 EAST Suite 5, Bend, OR t rust d ee d r e i n› O F T H E WIL › purchasers of resi› 9 7701. 3.Name o f stated by payment dential pro p erty LAMETTE MERID› Beneficiary: Francis the beneficiary of should be aware of IAN, DESCHUTES Hansen & M a rtin to the entire amount this potential dan› L LP. 4.Legal D e › COUNTY, OR› then due (other than ger before deciding scription of the real EGON, E X CEPT› such portion of the to place a bid for ING THEREFROM property covered by principal as would this property at the THE W E S T 30 the trust deed: See not then be due had t rustee’s sale. I n FEET T H EREOF. attached Exhibit "A": no default occurred) construing this no› A PN: 14 0 85 3 / E XHIBIT A - LE › by curing any tice, the masculine 21’I033AOO’I501 GAL DES C RIP› and other default com› ender includes the Commonly known TION: Real prop› plained of h e rein as: 52662 RANCH eminine and the erty in the County of that is capable of neuter, the singular DR. LA PINE, OR DESCHUTES, State being cured by ten› includes plural, the 97739 The current o f O r egon, d e › dering the perfor› word "grantor" in› beneficiary is: U.S. scribed as follows: A mance required un› cludes any succes› TRACT OF LAND BANK N ATIONAL der the obligation or sor in interest to the ASSOCIATION LOCATED IN THE trust deed, and in grantor as well as Both the beneficiary NORTHWEST addition to paying any other persons and the trustee have QUARTER (NW said sums or ten› owing an obligation, elected to sell the 1/4) OF SECTION dering performance the performance of above-described 7, TOWNSHIP 20 necessary to cure which is secured by real property to sat› SOUTH, RANGE 11 the default, by pay› the Deed of Trust, isfy the obligations EAST O F THE ing all costs and ex› the words "trustee" WILLAMETTE ME› secured b y the and ’beneficiary" in› penses actually in› Deed of Trust and RIDIAN, DES› clude their respec› notice has been re› CHUTES COUNTY, the obligation and tive successors in corded pursuant to OREGON, DE› trust deed, together i nterest, i f any . SCRIBED AS FOL› ORS 86.752(3). The with truste e's and Dated: 8 / 1 4/2015 default for which the LOWS: COM› attorney’s fees not C LEAR RE C O N foreclosure is made MENCING AT THE exceeding the CORP 621 SW Mor› is the grantor’s fail› NORTH QUARTER amounts provided rison Street, Ste 425 CORNER OF SAID ure to pay w hen by sa i d ORS Portland, OR 97205 SECTION 7; due, the following 858-750-7600. 86.778. 12. In con› sums: D e linquent THENCE SOUTH struing this notice, 0 0’81’13" WE S T Payments: Dates: t he s i ngular i n › 05/01/1 1 ALONG THE FIND YOUR FUTURE cludes the p lural, 02/01/1 3; No.: thru 22; E ASTERLY L I N E HOME INTHE BULLETIN Amount: $1,671.59; OF THE NORTH› Total: $36,774.98. WEST QUARTER Your future is just apage OF SAID SECTION Dates: 03/01/1 3 thru away. Whetheryou’re looking 02/01/1 4; No.: 12, 7, A DISTANCE OF for a hat or aplace to hangit, Amount: $1,625.03; 1911.87 FEET TO A The Bulletin Classified is Total: $19,500.36. 1 /2 I NC H I R O N your best source. ROD BEING THE Dates: 03/01/14 thru Every daythousandsof 02/01/1 5; No.: 12; POINT OF BEGINbuyers andsellers of goods Amount: $1,627.65; NING; TH E N CE and services do business in Total: $19,531.80. CONTINUING these pages.Theyknow Dates: 03/01/1 5 thru SOUTH 0 0 ’ 51’13" you can’ t beat The Bulletin 0 8/01/15; No.: 6 ; WEST, A DIS› Classified Section for Amount: $1,638.50; T ANCE O F 55 0 selection andconvenience Total: FEET, MORE OR $9,831.00. -every item isjust a phone Late Charges: 0. LESS, T O THE call away. Beneficiary Ad› CENTER LINE OF vances: $0.00. THE DESCHUTES The Classified Section is Foreclosure Fees RIVER; T H ENCE easy to use.Every item NORTHERLY and Exp e nses: is categorizedandevery ALONG SAID CEN› $ 1,028.00. To t a l cartegoiy is indexed onthe Required to Rein› T ER LINE TO A section’s front page. state:$86,666.14. P OINT THAT I S Whether youare lookingfor N ORTH 87’ 3 6 ’ TOTAL REQUIRED a home orneeda service, Thousands of ads daily TO PAYO F F : WEST FROM THE your future is inthepagesof in print and online. $281,952.06. By POINT OF BEGINThe Bulletin Classified. reason of the de› NING; TH E N CE fault, th e b e n efi› S OUTH 87’ 3 6 ’ ciary has declared The Bulletin EAST, A DIS› SergCentralOregonsince m time, on September 9, 2015, at 16990 Burgess Road, La P ine, Oreg o n 97739. Bidders are highly encouraged to attend.
T ANCE O F 34 0 FEET, MORE OR LESS, T O THE POINT OF BEGINNING. THIS LEGAL DESCRIPTION WAS CR E ATED PRIOR TO JANU› A RY 1, 2 008. 5 . Date of trust deed: March 12, 2014. 6. Document Number
Where buyers meet sellers
Classyleds •
•
•
the word "grantor" includes any suc› cessor in interest to the grantor as well as any other person owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by the trust deed, and the words "trustee" and "beneficiary" in› clude their respec› tive successors in i nterest, i f any . D ated: April 2 1 , 2015. Terr a nce O’ Sullivan, Trustee,
YOUR WEEKLY GUIDE TO CENTRAL OREGON EVENTS, ARTS AND ENTERTAINMENT MUSIC: Country singer Frankie Ballard comes to town, PAGE 3
EVERY FRIDAY IN THE BULLETIN AUGUST 28, 2015
DRINKS: Caboost Kombucha aims to be a healthier alternative, PAGE14
PAGE 2 • GO! MAGAZINE
C ONTAC T
US
EDITOR
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, AUGUST 28, 2015
in ez
Cover design by Carli K rueger/The Bulletin
Jody Lawrence-Turner, 541-383-0308 jlawrence-turner@bendbulletin.corn
REPORTERS Kim Himstreet, 541-383-0350 khimstreet@bendbulletin.corn Brian llllcElhiney, 541-617-7814 bmcelhiney@bendbulletin.corn Sophie Witkins, 541-383-0351 swilkins@bendbulletin.corn
RESTAURANTS • 20
eAirshow of the Cascades
• A review of CafeSintra • More news from the local dining scene
ARTS • 11
DESIGNER Carli Krueger, 541-617-7857 ckrueger@bendbulletin.corn
SUBMIT AN EVENT GO! is published each Friday in The Bulletin. Please submit information at least 10 days before the edition in which it is printed, including the event name, brief description, date, time, location, cost, contact number and a website, if
appropriate.
Email to: events@bendbulletin.corn Fax to: 541-385-5804, Attn: Community Life LLS. Illlail or hand delivery: Community Life, The Bulletin 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, OR 97702
ADVERTISING
• High Desert ChamberMusic Concert Series OUT OF TOWN • 22 • Pendleton Round-Up DRINKS • 14 • A guide to out of town events •CaboostKombucha,acraftkombucha MUSIC • 3 • Frankie Ballald bringing country tunes to brewery MOVIES • 25 Century Center • "The Diary of a Teenage Girl," "Digging • Jay Tablet ending solo career,moving on for Fire," "No Escape,""War Room" and • Wilderness to releasevinyl Sept. 4 "We Are YourFriends," open in Central • Boston band Spiritual Rez to play Oregon McMenamin’s OldSt. FrancisSchool • "Aloha,""Lila and Eve,"and "Big Game"are • Red Lightwill keepthe music playing this fall out on Blu-rayand DVD • Portland duo Hilstomp is beating feet back • Brief reviews of movies showing in Central to Bend Oregon
CALENDAR • 16
GOING OUT • 8
541 -382-1811
• A week full of Central Oregonevents
eA listing of live music,DJs,karaoke, open mics and more Take advantage of the full line of Bulletin products. Call 541-385-5800. e
EVENTS • 10
e in
• A listing of upcoming events • Talks and classeslisting
MUSIC REVIEWS • 9 • Cally RaeJepsen, Pavement, Night Beds and Royal Headache
•
HIGH DESERT
PLANNING AHEAD • 18
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GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 3
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, AUGUST 28, 2015
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Courtesy of Warner Music Nashville / Submitted photo
Rising country star Frankie Bollard will play at the Century Center on Sunday.
ran ie a ar By Brian McElhiney The Bulletin
rankie Ballard is something
F
of a rarity in the country mu› sic world a triple threat.
r i n s count its
Ballard started out as a "cowboy Country chart in July 2011, was chord kind of strummer," as he peaked at 27 on the Billboard Hot
co-written by Ballard, and the singer also helped write the Big 8t
Rich song "I Came to Git Down." Ballard’s guitar playing sets him apart. The singer studied course, which isn’t so unusual in blues greats such as Stevie Ray today’s country industry. Ballard Vaughan and Buddy Guy during relies on the Nashville songwrit› his college years at Western Mich› ing machine often, with most of igan University, melding their the songs on his self-titled 2011 de› licks to his early influences› but album and its 2014 follow-up, Kenny Rogers, Elvis Presley to "Sunshine 5 Whiskey," written come up with his hard-driving, by outside writers. However, his guitar-heavy sound. early hit "A Buncha Girls," which But like many country singers, He’s a guitar player and a singer. And, he’s a songwriter, of
admitted recently between tour stops in Southern Texas. After
seeing Stevie Ray Vaughan on PBS one afternoon while growing up in Battle Creek, Michigan, he changed his outlook on guitar. "That really changed my gui› tar-playing life; I didn’t realize those things were possible," Bal› lard said. "... Of course, every gui› tar player goes through the jour› ney of discovering other guitar players, and I did that all through my college years and high school
as well. Guitar playing, for me, was always a parallel journey with songwriting and singing, but at times it was a very separate thing. I find it to be kind of cool
If youlo What:Frankie Ballard When:5 p.m. Sunday Where:Century Center, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend Cost:$25 plus fees Contact: www.bendticket.corn
how it’s sort of come together. As
far as being a songwriter and a guitar player, I have very different
between his opening slots on Flor› ida Georgia Line’s Anything Goes
influences, and sort of where they
Tour. He’ ll get to stretch out, but
meet is where my music happens, even as an opener, he still likes to I think." jam with his band. "To be honest, I actually do that Expect plenty of guitar heroics when Ballard plays the Centu› in the Florida Georgia Line sets," ry Center on Sunday night. The Ballard said. "I still try to cram show is one of a handful Ballard
is playing as a headliner, wedged
some licks in there."
Continued to page 5
music
PAGE 4 • GO! MAGAZINE
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, AUGUST 28, 2015
OW • Local rapper to drop his final solo record of ’Tab Triology’ Saturday at DominoRoom By Brian McElhiney
placements for his music in films
The Bulletin
and television. Last year, Tab› ay Tablet knew his 2011 de› let collaborated on a song, "Do but solo album, "Put it on My Thang," that was featured the TAB," would be the first in a trailer for the comedy film installment of a trilogy when he "Neighbors." released it. Tablet and the rest of Cloaked
J
He didn’t know the final album
Characters
ONEders and Da›
of that trilogy, this year’s "Pay vid Hastings, AKA Mr. E at› the TAB," would be his last solo tended high school together in album. Tracy, California. They began But after four years of solo making music in 2000, drawing touring and long hours logged influence first from gangsta rap, in independent studios across then from socially and political› Central Oregon, Tablet, born Jo› ly conscious rap groups such as seph Tavares, decided he’d had Oakland’s Hieroglyphics. "When I got into hip-hop, my enough. The Bend-based rapper, beatmaker and producer will first taste was Tag Team," Tab› tour the album for the next year let said. "I had the little yellow he’s already on the road for a walkman, I gota tape and heard three-week West Coast tour with
’Whoomp! There it is!’ and it hit
Canadian violinist and frequent
me, man, like whoa, what’s this’?" Cloaked Characters began playing shows in 2002 before
collaborator Kytami. He’ ll return
home in the middle of the run for an album release show at the Tablet relocated to Bend in 2004 Domino Room on Saturday. to help his grandmother out after "This time felt right to say, ’Hey, his grandfather passed away. "I was only supposed to be out man, I’m just gonna hang it up as a solo artist for albums,’" Tablet here for eight months, but I ended said just before heading out on up stuck," Tablet said. "It seemed like this place was it. The inspi› the road. "That doesn’t mean I won’t release singles or work with ration out here was way different other artists, but I’m not gonna sit from where I grew up more down for a year by myself and in the trees, fishing, hiking, the be a recluse (while recording an outdoors. The water’s clean, you know. Bend, Oregon. It sold me, album)." His show at the Domino Room and I sold (the rest of Cloaked will reunite Tablet with most of Characters), and they moved out his crew in the local musicians here in 2006, and we all rented collective ZonkedOut, including a house and put a studio in the guitarist and bassist Ken Bryant, house." who recorded live instruments Over the course of two albums, for "Pay the TAB." Other guests Cloaked Characters evolved from include DJ Harlo, singer Caitlin a group of friends freestyling Submitted photo Cardier and rapper Rory ONEd› over beats to a team that created Jsy Tablet will release his final solo album "Psy the TAB" at an album release show at 9 p.m. Saturday at the er, a member of Tablet’s hip-hop its own music. Tablet continued Domino Room. to explore different genres and group Cloaked Characters. "I’m just trying to get every› moods on his solo albums, includ› body in there: one set, everyone’ s ing 2013’s "TABLIFE," the second enced by anything popular or by as an artist, being able to take all music together," Tablet said. part of what Tablet calls the "Tab friends; I just wanted to be influ› who I am and be very vulnera› It’s for ’Pay the TAB,’ but every› Trilogy " and a handful of other enced by what I was feeling," Tab› ble," Tablet said. "I feel the songs What:Jay Tablet, with Kytami, one’s gonna get some shine." free releases available at zonked› let said. "I kind of was a recluse, are so honest people might not the Zonked0ut Squad so I could really concentrate on get why I did it. I feel like I let it The show may offer something out.bandcamp.corn. When:9 p.m. Saturday, doors On "Pay the TAB," Tablet used creating a sound." all out, that was it. Combined, the of a preview of where Tablet is open at 8 p.m. Taken together, the three al› albums, I feel like the sounds I headed next in his musical career. live instrumentation from Bryant Where:Domino Room, 51 NW He said he plans to focus his ener› for the first time, drawing on his bums in the "Tab Trilogy" tell the see music in colors, so I feel like Greenwood Ave., Bend gy on Cloaked Characters, which early classic rock and ’80s pop story of Tablet’s life. He describes the colors all blended. If you listen to the full trilogy from beginning was placed on the backburner in influences. However, he said he "Put it on the TAB" as the "party Cost:$10 2011 due to the birth of ONEder’s stopped listening to music during album," while "TABLIFE" focus› to end, you’ ll actually know me as Contact:www.zonkedout.net a person pretty well." first child, along with producing the eight months he spent record› es on love and settling down. or 541-408-4329 "’Pay the TAB’ is the full tes› ing the album in his home studio. — Reporter: 541-617-7814, other ZonkedOut artists such " I didn’t w ant t o b e i n f l u › tament of my growth, I feel like, as Cardierand seeking further bmcelhineyfibendbulletin.corn "
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musie
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, AUGUST 28, 2015
GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 5
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Saam Gabbay Courtesy of Yahoo Music / Submitted Photo
Rising country star Frankie Ballard will play at the Century Center on Sunday.
From page 3 Between dates, he’s also been
busy in the studio. He recorded 14 songs for his third album, which has yet to be titled, in Texas with pro› ducer Marshall Altman, who also
worked with Ballard on "Sunshine & Whiskey." Though the third single from "Sunshine & Whiskey," "Young &
"I thinkit's the lyric — what makes a country song is the lyric. If that lyric pierces the everyday life of the
middle class, the blue-collar people, and speaks to some of their experiences and emotions in life, then you' ve got country music."
AVENUE tt
"Will we be friends orsomething more?"
— Frankie Ballard, musician
it cur› lyrics Ballard offered on his previ› al; I never thought of music as a ca› rently sits at No. 2 on the Billboard ous albums. He’s also writing more reer because my dad and I were the Country Airplay chart Ballard is and has a couple of songs on the al› family entertainment at Thanksgiv› set to release a new single from his bum that he’s "really proud of." Still, ing," Ballard said. "I never thought untitled third album sometime in the his goal is to put the best songs on about making (music) for a living un› fall. It’s a hectic schedule that seems his albums, whether they’ re written til I started writing songs." to have worn down a bit on Bal› by him or someone else. He spent his college years playing "I think it’s the lyric w h at "local bars and honky tonks, clubs, lard, who said he wished he could have had moretime towork on new makes a country song is the lyric," weddings, whatever, chicken wing music. he said. "If that lyric pierces the ev› nights" and anything else he could "It was hard because there’s just eryday life of the middle class, the find in Southern Michigan. In 2008, not a lot of time, and the music de› blue-collar people, and speaks to he got his big break when he won serves the time," he said. "I need some oftheirexperiences and emo- an opening slot on Kenny Chesney’s the time to work on production, tions in life, then you’ ve got country tour through the singer’s Next Big songwriting, guitar playing, all that music." Star competition. "I entered it and won and got to stuff. It’s a little tricky, but that’s the Ballard speaks and writes› way it’s going. You gotta push hard from his own blue-collar experienc› open up for him, and that really if you want to move the rock up the es. He got his start in music playing was a turning point for me," Ballard mountain." and singing Presley songs with his said. "All of a sudden, I had a lot of It helped having Altman on board father at family holiday gatherings. confidence, like maybe I should try once again. "He’s a really smart cat; But baseball was his obsession as my hand at the next step; maybe the he knows how I like to work, and it’ s a child he played ball in college next level is not something that’s too easy to work with him," Ballard said. where he also began writing songs. farforme to reach." "Music had always been a big part — Reporter: 541-617-7814, Fans can expect more of the big guitars and down-home, storytelling of my life, but it was very recreation› bmcelhiney@bendbulletin.corn
—KateMonster &Princeton -•
Crazy," is still on the charts
I)HT
uc totts
SEPTEMBER 4 5
Avenu e Q Sneak Peek-FREE! Edwar d Curtis & the North American Indian 11-19 Avenue Q 25 High D esert Chamber Music
OCTOBER 2 6 13 21 22 30-31
W lid & Scenic Film Fest Hot T u n a Abbe y Road "Back to the Future Part II" COCC : Women Swimming Upstream Rocky Horror Show (, 541-317-0700
J5 TheTowerTheatre «www.towertheatre.org f h e Tower Theatre 8' 'towertheatrehnd
musie
PAGE 6 + GO! MAGAZINE
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, AUGUST 28, 2015
Spiritual Rez brings reggae blend toBend Spiritual Rez hails from Bos› ton, but the band’s funkified mix
of reggae, roots rock and ska could have come straight out of Southern California (or Bend, for that matter).
The sunny a n d c h eerful "ApocalypseWhenever," despite its heady title and lyrical forays into social consciousness, is a musical party. Songs swing from the band’s reggae base into free› form jazz freakouts one minute, Deadhead-style extended jams the next, all underscored with
the occasional thrashy guitar solo or chugging riff. The seven-piece band honed its self-described "volcanic reg› gae, rock, ska and jam" sound during a decade-plus of tour› ing. The group has shared stag› es with reggae elder statesmen Toots and the Maytals, gyp› sy-punk mainstay Gogol Bor› dello, funk i n stitution George Clinton and Parliament Funk›
adelic, and party-meister Jimmy Buffett, drawing influence from them all along the way. "ApocalypseWhenever" isthe result an album that manages to be all over the place while still delivering a sound that’s familiar and, perhaps more importantly, easy to dance to. The volcanic reggae-roots› rock dance party lands at Mc› M enamin’s
O l d S t.
Fr a n c i s
School in Bend on Wednesday. Spiritual Rez; 7 p.m. Wednesday; free; McMenamin's Old St. Francis School, 700NWBond St., Bend; www.mcmenamins.corn or 541-382-51 74.
RedLightkeepsmusic going in Bend Don’t fret: There’s still some
summer left, and plenty of music to see outdoors with two shows (Weird Al Yankovic and Ben Harper & Th e I nnocent Crim›
inals) left on Les Schwab Am› the Midtown Ballroom’s three
writer Everlast, known for jump›
phitheater’s schedule and more
ing around with House of Pain. He’ ll get introspective for an
venues, plus a few at Volcanic
shows coming to the Century Theatre Pub including Jerry Center and the various breweries Garcia Band’s Melvin Seals and in town. Grateful Dead-inspired group But the season is winding Terrapin Flyer on Nov. 16. down, and more slow weeks are Some more highlights, coming coming. Soon, it will be time to up fast: funked-out jazzheads move inside to get our music fix. Vinyl Gold play Astro Lounge Local musician, promoter and on Sept. 19; soulful psychedelic all around scene maven John Da› rockers pigWar take the Astro vis and his company Red Light Lounge stage on Sept. 25; and Productions are doing quite a bit Mother Falcon and cello prodigy to ensure the music will be there
this fall. Over the last few weeks, the company announced a slew of shows at Astro Lounge and
Ben Sollee will perform at the Domino Room on Nov. 15.
all-acoustic evening at the Domi›
Christian and percussionist John Johnson (he’s the one smash› ing buckets, which he uses as a makeshift drum set) were last here inJanuary, playing selec-
hooked listeners not just in Bend, but across the Pacific Northwest.
Local punk rockers Helga will join Hillstomp. Another good
no Room on Sept. 24. Keep up with Red Light Pro› tions from their l atest album, ductions’ upcoming shows at "Portland, Ore." Before that, the www.redlightpro.corn. band was on a lengthy hiatus. This thunderous group is no Hillstomp returns toBend stranger to Bend, but if you’ ve
reason to make it to this one: Hel›
missed them before, now’s your Bluesy, punky, bucket-smash› chance. It’s worth a ticket just to
Hillstomp, with Helga; 9 p.m. today; $10 plus fees in advance,
ing Portland duo Hillstomp are
see what kind of junk Johnson
headed back to town. The band
has assembled to bash away at› not to mention the actual bash›
plays the Volcanic Theatre Pub The crowning jewel, though, tonight. is r a p per-turned-singer-song› Guitarist/vocalist Henry
ing itself. There’s a reason the band’s raw, rollicking sound has
ga performances are a rare oc› currence nowadays. For fans of
catchy, scrappy pop-punk hooks and buzzsaw guitars, you can’ t do much better locally. $12 at the door; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www volcanictheatrepub.corn or 541-323-1881. — Brian McElhiney
musie
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, AUGUST 28, 2015
Sept. 4 Weird Al Yankovic
(parody-core),LesSchwab Amphitheater, Bend, www. bendconcerts.corn. Sept. 4 PunchBrothers
(progressiveacoustic), Athletic Club of Bend, www. peaksummernight s.corn. Sept. 4 Wilderness CD release party,with Thick Business (alt-rock), Volcanic Theatre Pub, Bend, www. volcanictheatrepub.corn. Sept. 5 Fortunate Youth, Ital Vibes (reggae), Volcanic Theatre Pub, Bend, www. volcanictheatrepub.corn. Sept. 6 BenHarper & The Innocent Criminals (rock),Les Schwab Amphitheater, Bend, www.bendconcerts.corn. Sept. 6 Sista Otis (soul), Volcanic Theatre Pub, Bend, www.volcanictheatrepub.corn. Sept. 7 Social Distortion (threadbare punk),Century Center, Bend, www.bendticket. corn. Sept. 9 Ira Wolf (india folk), Volcanic Theatre Pub, Bend, www.volcanictheatrepub.corn. Sept. 9 Popcorn (string band covers),McMenamins Old St. Francis School, Bend, www.
mcmenamins.corn. Sept. 10 Jerry Joseph and the Jackmormons (rock),McMenamins Old St. Francis School, Bend, www. mcmenamins.corn. Sept. 11 FunkVolume2015 Tour with Hopsin,Dizzy Wright, Jarren Benton, DJ Hoppa (funk), Midtown Ballroom, Bend, www. randompresents.corn. Sept. 11 Broken Down Guitars,Diego’s Umbrella (roots rock), Volcanic Theatre Pub, Bend, www.volcanictheatrepub. corn. Sept. 11-13 Sisters Folk Festival(folk),Sisters, www. sistersfolkfestival.org. Sept. 12 Five Pint Mary (Celtic),Achilles Wheel (roots), McMenamins Old St. Francis School, Bend, www.
mcmenamins.corn.
Sept. 16 LewiLongmire, Anita Lee Elliott (roots), McMenamins Old St. Francis School, Bend, www.mcmenamins.corn. Sept. 17 Dirty Revival CD release party (soulful hiphop),McMenamins Old St. Francis School, Bend, www. mcmenamins.corn. Sept. 19 Renegade String Band (Americana) at Pickin' &
Paddlin',Tumalo Creek Kayak 8 Canoe, Bend, www.tumalocreek. corn. Sept. 19 Dance Yourself Clean Tourfeaturing Body Language,Powers, Collaj (dance), The Domino Room, Bend, www.redlightpro.corn. Sept. 19 Vinyl Gold(jazzy funk),Astro Lounge, Bend, www.redlightpro.corn. Sept. 19 Oktoberfest with Whistlin' Rufus,Elektrapod (rock), McMenamins Old St. Francis School, Bend, www.
mcmenamins.corn. Sept. 23 HoneyDon't (Americana),McMenamins Old St. Francis School, Bend, www. mcmenamins.corn.
Sept. 24 Ev erlast (rapper turned popsinger), Domino Room, Bend, www.redlightpro. corn. Sept. 25 pigWar (rock and soul),Astro Lounge, Bend, www. redlightpro.corn. Sept. 28 Citizen Cope(folk 'n' soul),Midtown Ballroom, Bend, www.randompresents.corn. Sept. 30— Matthew Szlachetka (singer-songwriter), McMenamins Old St. Francis School, Bend, www. mcmenamins.corn.
GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 7
Wilderness leaps forward on ’Escape Was Narrow’ "Escape Was Narrow."Open- Chase" ). ing track "Afterlife Crisis" im› The band certainly has a end’s own Wilderness mediately introduces the lis› strong batch of songs here,
By Brian McElhiney The Bulletin
B
takes a musical leap or
t e ner to a more confident and but its the inter-band chem›
two forward on its soph- powerful Wilderness, offering omore album "Escape Was a compendium of nearl y every Narrow."
Just two years ago, Wilderness frontman
REyjEW
Jared Nelson Smith opened his band’s first album "Home›
istry and sonic evolution that impresses most, from the sound the band has bouncing organ textures Nora ex p erimented with up K.W. Smith floats just above to this point lilt› the taught rhythms of "What ing, jazzy melodies; Would Happen If I Never Did," harried fuzz guitar; to the armies of guitar Jared sprawling instru› Smith conjures on nearly ev›
ward From the Battle" solo, with the gentle
mental duels. From here, the
ery track. It’s the sound of a
acoustic strumming and in t r ospective singing of "On My
musical vocabulary
and it leaves open a number of paths for the four-piece to pur›
band coming into its own›
expands outward on the 10 tracks,
sue on future recordings. Wilderness album release party (yes, there will be vinyl),
Own." It was a fitting introduc›
incorporating Fugazi-esque tion at the time, easing the lis› rhythmic gymnastics (" Baby tener into the esoteric musical Blues" ), surf-tinged ballad› experiments and lengthy noise ry (" Sand," "The Right Time freak outs that have become is Right" ) and anthemic, fist-pumping folk rock (ma› Wilderness’ stock-in-trade. No such introduction on jestic album closer "Join the
with Thick Business; 9 p.rrL Sept. 4; $5; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; ww w v olcanictheatrepub.corn or 541-323-1881.
I O Q A
Oct. 2 Dilana (rock), Astro Lounge, Bend, www.redlightpro.
corn. Oct. 2 Summit Express Jazz Band(jazz),The Belfry, Sisters, www.belfryevents.corn. Oct. 6 HotTunaacoustic
Ch
(blues-rock jams), Tower
0 K Q O
Theatre, Bend, www. towertheatre.org. Oct. 7 The VonTrapps (pop),McMenamins Old St. Francis School, Bend, www.
mcmenamins.corn.
Oct. 7 Chelsea Grin andThe Plot In You(metal), Domino Room, Bend, www.redlightpro.
corn.
Oct. 9 SugarBeets (roots meets gospel),The Belfry, Sisters, www.belfryevents.corn. Oct. 17 Curtis Salgado (blues singer-songwriter),The Belfry, Sisters, www.belfryevents.corn. Oct.23— Thomas Mapfumo and the BlacksUnlimited (African Chimurengamusic), The Belfry, Sisters, www. belfryevents.corn. Oct. 30 David Jacobs-Strain and The CrunkMountain Boys Halloween party (blues-rock), The Belfry, Sisters, www. belfryevents.corn.
i I
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Sandboarding in Florence, Oregon
•
i g
•
MStKE /IDEA CNANSell OP
conneece
PAGE 8 e GO! MAGAZINE
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, AUGUST 28, 2015
going out Looking for something to do? Check out our listing of live music, DJs, karaoke, open mics and more happening at local nightspots.
Find lots more atH bendbulletin.corn/events. art and culture with art openings, live music, food carts, workshops and more.; 6 p.m.; The Old Ironworks, 50 SE BOBBY LINDSTROM:Rockand blues; Scott St., Bend; 347-564-9080. 12 p.m.; FatTuesdaysCajun and Blues, DON GIOVANNI:Featuring Mozart’s 61276 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; www. musical masterpiece about the fictional fattuesdayscajunandblues.corn or legends of Don Juan; 7 p.m.; $10 541-633-7606. suggested donation; Central Oregon FAMILIARSOULS: Funk-reggae;4:30 Community College, 2600 NW College p.m.; Country Catering Co., 900 SE Way, Bend; www.cascadiaconcertopera. Wilson Ave., Bend; 541-383-5014. org or 541-350-9805. FRANCHOT TONE: Rock and reggae; VICTOR JOHNSON:Rock; 7 p.m.; 6 p.m.; Zeppa Bistro, Sunriver portello winecafe, 2754 NW Crossing Resort, 17600 Center Drive, Sunriver; Drive, Bend; www.portellowinecafe.corn 541-639-3450. or 541-385-1777. OUT OFTHEBLUE:Dance covers; REND ANDCINDY HOLLER:Pop; 6 p.m.; $10; Faith, Hope and Charity 7 p.m.; Brassie’s Bar at Eagle Crest Vineyards, 70450 NW Lower Valley Resort, 1522 Cline Falls Road, Drive, Terrebonne; 541-526-5075. Redmond; 541-548-4220. MILL QUARTERBLOCK PARTY: HIGHWAY97: Rock; 8 p.m.; Bottoms Featuring music, drinks, food, an arcade Up Saloon, 1421 N. U.S. Highway 97, and more; 6:30 p.m.; ATLAS Cider› Redmond; 562-81 0-1 818. Old Mill Marketplace, 550 SW Industrial KYTAMI: Featuring Phonic Ops, Jay Way, Bend; 541-390-8096. Tablet and more; 8 p.m.; $10 plus DENNIS MCGREGOR ANDTHE feesinadvance„Domino Room, 51 SPOILERS:Folk; 7 p.m.; Angeline’s NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; www. Bakery 8 Cafe,121 W. Main Ave, bendticket.corn or 541-383-0800. Sisters; 541-549-9122. THE RIVER PIGS:Rock, blues and folk; REND ANDCINDY HOLLER:Pop; 8:30 p.m.; Northside Bar 8 Grill, 62860 7 p.m.; Brassie’s Bar at Eagle Crest Boyd Acres Road, Bend; 541-383-0889. Resort, 1522 Cline Falls Road, THE TWANGSHIFTERS:The rockabilly Redmond; 541-548-4220. band from Portland performs; 9 p.m.; RILEY'SRANGE BENDERS: Americana, $5 plus fees in advance, $7 at the door; blues and folk; 7 p.m.; The Blacksmith Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Restaurant, 211 NWGreenwood Ave., Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub. Bend; 541-31 8-0588. corn or 541-323-1881. THE RIVER PIGS:Rock, blues and folk; DJ DEENABEE:Hip-hop and R8 B; 9 8:30 p.m.; Northside Bar 8 Grill, 62860 p.m.; free; Dogwood Cocktail Cabin, Boyd Acres Road, Bend; 541-383-0889. 147 NW Minnesota Ave., Bend; www. NICE PRIVATES:Rock, reggae and ska; facebook.corn/farmtoshaker or 9 p.m.; Silver Moon Brewing, 24 NW 541-706-9949. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-388-8331. MC MYSTIC:EDM;10 p.m.; free; HILLSTOMP:The stomp-grass band The Astro Lounge, 939 NW Bond St., from Portland performs, with Helga; Bend; www.astroloungebend.corn or 9 p.m.; $10 plus fees in advance, $12 541-388-0116. at the door; Volcanic Theatre Pub, STRANGEROVERANDSTEREO 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www. TREASON:The local rock bands volcanictheatrepub.corn or 541-323› perform; 10 p.m.; Silver Moon Brewing, 1881. (Page6) 24 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; DJ NSTURE:Future funk; 9 p.m.; 541-388-8331. Dogwood Cocktail Cabin, 147 NW Minnesota Ave., Bend; www.facebook. SUNDAY corn/farmtoshaker or 541-706-9949. COYOTEWILLOW: Chamber-folk; 10 TOGA PARTY:Featuring a toga party, a.m.; Chow, 1110 NWNewport Ave., with prizes, raffles, music by MC Bend; 541-728-0256. Mystic and more; 10 p.m.; $5; The Astro Lounge, 939 NW Bond St., Bend; LA SERVA PADRONA: Featuring "La 541-388-0116. Serva Padrona," or The Maid Turned Mistress, about an old man, his maid and his servant; 3 p.m.; $10 suggested SATURDAY donation; Central Oregon Community ALLAN BYER:Americana; 10 a.m.; College, 2600 NW CollegeWay, Bend; www.cascadiaconcertopera.org or Chow, 1110 NWNewport Ave., Bend; www.allanbyer.corn or 541-233-3663. 541-350-9805. LAST SATURDAY:Featuring local BOBBY LINDSTROM:Folk;4 p.m.;10
TODAY
Barrel Brew Pub, 1135 NWGalveston St., Bend; 541-678-5228. ALLAN BYERPROJECT:Americana; 5 p.m.;The Pigand Pound Public House, 427 SWEighth St., Redmond; 541-233-3663. FRANKIE BALLARD: The country artist performs; 5 p.m.; $25 plus fees in advance; Century Center, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.bendticket.corn or 541-383-0800. (Page 3) RICKEY HAVERN: Rock-pop; 7 p.m.; BrokenTop Bottle Shop,1740 NW Pence Lane, Suite1, Bend; www.btbsbend.corn or 541-728-0703.
MONDAY OPEN MIC NIGHT:Featuring musicians, poetry reading, comedy and more; 8 p.m.,sign-ups beginat6:30 p.m .; The Astro Lounge, 939 NW Bond St.,
Bend; www.astroloungebend.corn or 541-388-0116.
TUESDAY BILL POWERS:Americana; 6 p.m.; Sip Wine Bar, 1366 NWGalveston Ave., Bend; 970-270-2276. DECO MOON:Jazz;6 p.m .;Northside Bar 8 Grill, 62860 Boyd Acres Road, Bend; 541-383-0889. BREAKERBREAKERONE NINER: The San Diego band performs, with Lysolgang; 9 p.m.; $5; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.corn or 541-323-1881.
WEDNESDAY AMERICANSONGBOOK:Jazz; 6 p.m.; Fat Tuesdays Cajun and Blues, 61276 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; www. fattuesdayscajunandblues.corn or 541-604-6055. HEART 8(SOULCONCERTSERIES: KC FLYNN:Acoustic rock and country, all ages welcome; 6 p.m.; Worthy Brewing Company, 495 NE Bellevue Drive,Bend; 541-639-4776. SPIRITUAL REZ:The reggae-funk band performs; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School,700 NW Bond St.,Bend; www.mcmenamins.corn or 541-382› 5174. (Page 6) KARAOKE UNDERTHE STARS: Hosted by A Fine Note Karaoke Too; 8 p.m.; The Alley Bar (behind SOBA), 932 NW Bond St., Bend; www.facebook.corn/ afinenotekaraoketoo or 541-350-2433.
Franchot Tone will perform at Zeppa Bistro at Sunriver Resort at 6 p.m. Friday.
THURSDAY
Bend; www.mcmenamins.corn or 541-382-5174.
BLUES JAM:A jam hosted byScott
GEOFF TATEAND EMMA ARNOLD:
Submitted photo
Foxx and Jeff Leslie, all musicians welcome, bring your instruments (drums provided); 6:30 p.m.; Fat Tuesdays Cajun and Blues, 61276 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-306-0797. JIVE COULIS:The rock-funk band performs; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St.,
Featuring the Cincinnati-based comedian; 8 p.m.; $8 plus fees in advance, $10 at the door; The Summit Saloon& Stage,125 NW Oregon Ave., Bend; www.bendcomedy.corn or 541-419-0111. • SUBMIT Att EVENTbyvisiting bendbulletin. corn/events and clicking "+ Add Event." Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Questions? Call 541-383-0351 or email communitylife@ bendbulletin.corn.
GO! MAGAZINE• PAGE 9
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, AUGUST 28, 2015
musie reviews Spotlight: Carly Rae Jepsen
Paul A. Hebert// The Associated Press
Carly Rae Jepsen performs during her album release show for "Emotion."
Pavement
and history that has already been Royal Headache
"THE SECRET HISTORY, covered and celebrated by fans VOL. 1" and journalists alike many times Matador Records over. As a vinyl-only reissue, Mat› Pavement’s "The Secret His- ador is focused a on a very spe› tory, Vol. 1 assembles cific and very curious B-sides, little-used stu› quadrant of consumers, dio tracks and live ma› but those that need what terial from the band’s is the first in many likely
1990-1992 period. It provides the listener with a bevy of great ma› terial, as Stephen Mal› kmus was still writing songs at a blazing pace but with a remarkably consistent quality. So many of the songs from the "Slanted" sessions (particularly the loner
volumes are assuredly still going to get their money’s worth. — Evan Sawdey, PopMat ters.corn
Night Beds "IVYWILD" Dead Oceans
The reference points for the first Night Beds album, 2013’s very good "Country Sleep," came from the world
lament "Mercy Snack:
Carly Rae jepsen
door cool-kid music.
"EMOTION" School Boy Records / I n t erscope Records
They both worked on the sinis› ter "All That," one of the album’s
highlights: slow-smolder ’80s Carly Rae Jepsen, of "Call Me R&B full of disembodied, percus› M aybe" mania spends much ofher sive guitar licks. Jepsen is at her ecstatic, slightly frizzy second ma› breathiest here. The synthesiz› jor-label album, "Emotion," trying ers gleam and sparkle but never to establish her bona fides in think› swell to a satisfying thickness. As ing-person’s pop, a fool’s task. mercenary and cocksure as this "Emotion" is full of pure cotton songwriting is, there’s a reluctance candy delicious, dis› that holds it or her› tractingly sweet and fill› back. This is the case ing, with a mildly suspi› throughout this album, cious aftertaste. Jepsen full of excellent songs turns to the synthetic, that seem to give up plastic part of 1980s pop about two-thirds of the for inspiration. way through. Jepsen has a sweet Maybe Je p sen’s voice, though not acomchoices merely rein› manding one. It makes sense that force the new centrist pop model her big hit was a halfhearted flirt of ’80s sleekness (Taylor Swift, the ending in "maybe" and that the Weeknd). It’s more likely, though, new album’s obvious attempt to that she hoped to put some dis› rebottle lightning, "I Really Like tancebetween her and her old pair You," repeats the "really" six times of goody two shoes. That’s a fine choice, of course. each go-round. To achieve this revisionist fan› But why fall under the spell of tasy, she worked with the pow› someone else’s cool when you can er team of Ariel Rechtshaid and luxuriate in the stink of your own Devonte Hynes, who over the last cheese? — Jon Caramanica, coupleof years have reinvented big-top 1980s synth-pop as back› New York Times
The Laundromat" and the amped-up "Baptist Blacktick") co u l d’ve made their way onto the album proper without anyone noticing. Even "Here," arguably "Slant›
"HIGH" What's Your Rupture? The first album by the Austra›
lian band Royal Headache was better than good
rushed, tre›
bly, volatile garage-punk, with a singer who took his job unusual› ly seriously. His name was Shogun, and he sounded close to the surface. He sang a lot about heartsickness
and a little about head-sickness. Excitingly, he seemed to be in the process of finding his voice he could settle in a vague midrange, or push it up high, heaving out bright lines full of chest and grit, getting at Sam Cooke via ear› ly Rod Stewart, or a second-tier British Invasion singer. "High" comes four years later: a long time for a band this scrap› py. Royal Headache had some success with the first record›
of a l t-country: F l eet Foxes, Bon Iver, Horse Feathers. "Ivywild," the not too much, but just enough to second album from the create internal problems.
project helmed by Win›
ed"’s most identifiable cut, is rec› ston Yellen, draws from different reated so perfectly it could easily wells: the contemporary R&B of
be mistaken for the original stu› the Weeknd and Rhye and the so› dio version. called chill wave of Washed Out The band’s adherence to such and Neon Indian. strict recreations serves as a de› Yellen has aptly called these songs "sad sex jams". They build lightful contrast to their f inal Brixton Academy show, which at
times threatens to go off the rails in a way that only young bands can get away with, messy but in a controlled fashion. The ranting at the top of "No
LifeSigned Her" turnseven more manic than it did in the studio version, the volume only fueled
by the eager crowd, creating an undeniable energy that is still
The standard narrative is that a band’s second record reflects
experience, wisdom or modera› tion, and "High" has a bit of that in a larger and more managed sound. There are more songs here about love and desire, but there arealso some with a new
stripe: outrage, possibly self-di› denselylayered with keyboards, rected. Two songs are better than strings that drift in and out of the anythingthe band has done yet. mix, and Yellen’s reverb-laden vo› "Another World" might, possibly, cals the atmosphere is airy and describe the mixed feelings of gauzy. an aspiring singer getting what Yellen’s yearning tenor voice is he wants. And "Garbage" be› the center of "Ivywild." He tweaks gins with the sounds of glass in on slow beats and
although
it with Auto-Tune, overlaps lines to turn it into a choir, and bolsters
a trash compactor before level›
ing intimate accusations of mor› it with female harmonies. Songs al failure. "You’ re as low as they captured in this set. These bits of such as "Love Streams" and come,"Shogun concludes early in "Tide Teeth" are full of desperate the song, arranging those words mania still contrast nicely with more carefully-structured mo› longing, mostly sexual. Although into a proper melody. "You’ re not ments like their set-dosing take "Ivywild" differs radically from punk; you’ re just scum." His star› on "In the Mouth of a Desert," "Country Sleep," Yellen’s new tling, frustrated roar, toward the arguably the band’s finest early persona is totally persuasive. end, sounds real. — Steve Klinge, — Ben Ratliff, pop achievement. Overall though, this is material The Philadelphia Inquirer New York Times
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PAGE 10 e GO! MAGAZINE
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, AUGUST 28, 2015
events
• Airshow of the Cascades offers aerobatics, history By Will Rubin The Bulletin
T
alkingon a cell phone and
driving is illegal in Oregon, but there’s no law against singing and flying an airplane. Rock ’n’ Roll Airshow Man Will Al›
len is one of the headlining aerobatic pilots at this weekend’s Airshow Of The Cascades at the Madras Munici›
pal Airport. M ore than 20performers and attractions will perform over the course
Nyougo: What: Airshow oftheCascades When:Today4to10p.m.,Saturday9 a.m. until 4 p.m. Where:2028 NWBerg Drive, Madras Cost:Single-day generaladmission tickets $15;kids 12and under arefree with paying adult; freefor veterans. Contact:541-475-6947 or cascadeairshow.corn
of two days, none more unique than Allen. While he pilots his high-perfor› public in conjunction with last year’ s mance biplane through a series of Airshow and features a B-17 Bomber tricky maneuvers, he sings via micro› along with other vintage artifacts and phone to original music tracks record› wartime aircraft.
ed in his home studio play didn’t fit in his plane.
the band
"After a year of advertising our›
selves and word-of-mouth, our pop›
"It’s one of those things where I’ ve ularity has picked up quite a bit this been an aerobatic pilot, but I’ ve also summer," said the collection’s assis› been a musician and been on stage," tant manager, Michelle Forester. said Allen, who often opens airshows This weekend, the center of the han› by performing the national anthem. gar will be home to a P-38 Lightning "There are parts of it that aren’t as dif› heavy air fighter; the same type of ficult as they might seem but others aircraft flown by Culver native Rex T. where you definitely have to figure out Barber when he shot down Japanese Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto during the workload." Allen and his crew structure their
performancetobe as close to a rock concert as
World War II. Rex Barber Jr. spoke about his late
p o ssible w it h T - shirt father’s exploits during the war at a
launchers and pyrotechnics accompa› nying his aerial song and dance. The act is made possible by a person controlling the music on the ground with specially programmed equip›
reception Thursday night to kick off a contest to name the P-38.
The reason the plane needs a new name is because of erroneous infor› mation about which P-38 the elder
Barber flew during the war. microphone secured to Allen’s helmet Historic accounts have long held the with rolls of surgical tape. plane he flew against the admiral was His ability t o c ontrol his v ocal the Miss Virginia, which was believed chords while subject to gravitational to be his usual plane. forces inside a spinning airplane is While he did fly the Miss Virgina, also crucial to the show’s success. historians have recently discovered "Some of the same techniques he called his plane Diablo; it was be› taught when I was learning to sing are ing repaired on the day of his famous similar to the ones I’ ve learned to deal mission. with the G-forces," Allen said. "I cer› The contest is open to submissions tainly did and do have to practice. tI) from the public. Forester said she’s in› do it a long time to build up tolerance terested to see if people want this air› to those forces." craft to have a name associated with a ment and a high-resolution wireless
Another big attraction at the air› port is the Erickson Aircraft Collec›
tion. The air museum opened to the
local hero or one unrelated to the past. — Reporter: 541-382-1811, wrubin@wescom papers.corn
Bulletin file photo
Aerobatic pilot "Super" Dave Mathieson performs in2012 in preparation for The Airshow of the Cascades at the Madras Municipal Airport. The show returns today at 4 p.m. and 9 a.m. Saturday. See
www.cascadeairshow.corn for more information.
GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 1 1
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, AUGUST 28, 2015
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Chandler Photography/ Submitted photo
Art in the High Desert looking to Old Mill District
Art in the High Desert returns to Bend By Brian McElhiney
myself I was going to do the erage sales total: $5,913. show," Holder said. "It was hard David Bjurstrom, an Oregon eani Holder loves Art in the coming back to reality to say, no, native and graphic pencil artist High Desert so much she al› I really don’t want to do the show, who draws hyper-realistic land› most came out of retirement because of how excited I was scapes, has lived in Austin, Tex› to be in this year’s show. about the quality of the art. And as, for the past eight years. De› The Elmira woman, who spent it is a good time. It’s enjoyable." spite the distance, he’s returned 14 years showing and selling her Holder isn’t alone in her love for Art in the High Desert three creations atart shows across for the small Bend art s h ow, times. This year marks his fourth the country, set up her final dis› which begins today and contin› appearance at the show. "Foremost for me, it’s a show play in 2012 for Art in the High ues through Sunday across the Desert. pedestrian bridge in the Old Mill that I feel like I’m cared about. This year, Holder served on District. The organizerstruly care about the four-person jury for Art in The Art Fair SourceBook, a me as an artist and all of us as the High Desert for the second n ational publication that p r o › artists; they take care of us and time. The quality of the work she vides information on art shows make sure we’ re happy," Bjur› judged led her to seriously think to artists across the country, strom said. "Beyond that, it’s a about doing the show herself. ranked Art in the High Desert good sales show. It’s dependable "There’s a lo t o f i n c r edible among the top 15 shows out of for me to be able to make the art being made, so much so that 600 in sales nationwide for the effort coming from Texas, and when I was driving home (from past two years. The show is now knowing I’m going to sell enough jurying the show), I convinced ranked 12th based on its 2014 av› to make it worthwhile."
The event, founded by artists
The Bulletin
David and Carla Fox in 2008, has
J
grown fast. The show’s success comes down to a number of factors, with
the jurying process being a key component,according to David Fox. Artists who work in all me›
If yougo What:Art in the High Desert When:10a.m.to 6p.m.today and Saturday; 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sunday Where:Old Mill District, 730 SW Columbia St., Bend Cost:Free Contact:www.artinthehigh› desert.corn or 541-322-6272
diums apply through ZAPP, an online, national artist registry cording to David Fox. "We’ re looking for people that ists to upload a library of imag› es of their work to submit to art are not only good in their media shows around the country. area, but we’ re also looking for While the show received 618 people who they’ re pushing it," submissions from across North Fox said. "They’ re going beyond America this year, only about what you kind of expect from a 115 artists will have booths in ceramicist or from a photogra› the show. The organizers have pher or from a jeweler. They’ re kept the show small to maintain not doing easy stuff; they’ re tak› accessibility another key com› ing some chances." ponent in the show’s success, ac› Continued next page based in Denver that allows art›
arts
PAGE 12 • GO! MAGAZINE
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From previous page
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, AUGUST 28, 2015
engaging customers in conver›
other shows in that jurors are allowed to discuss the artists’
Artist submissions were
sation. David and Carla Fox,
judged on four criteria by submissions with each other the four-person jury, which before passing judgment. changes every year. Accord› Jurying takes place in ing to the Art i n th e High March over two days at dif› Desert website, those criteria ferent locations in Bend each are: year; this year’s jurying pro› • Original thought and in› cess was held at the former tent, going beyond the norm, Ann Taylor Loft property in the expected;
as artists themselves, put the focus squarely on the artists,
with no vendors or background music allowed at the show. David Fox said the organiz› ers expect the artists to have
conversations about their work with other people at the show. Instead of the usual best-in›
the Old Mill District. The pub›
• Overall concept ex› lic was invited the day before tending further than just the jurying to view the work. "When we pick the jurors, technique and materials; • Demonstrated excellence we always try to pick jurors in craftsmanship; that give us a balance of a • Consistency of style and knowledge base," Fox said. presentation. If there’s an area in which ju› For 2015’s Art in the High rors are lacking the expertise Desert, jurors included Hold› necessary to determine who er, jeweler and previous AHD deserves to be in the show, Fox artist Amy Buettner of Port› might bring in a pro to help. land, painter and printmaker For example, say there’s a Patty Freeman Martin of Ter› lot of photography, Fox said. rebonne and sculptor and pre› "So we’ ll ask a profession› vious AHD artist Holly Rodes al photographer to come in Smithey of Bend. during that period, and then Besides the c riteria, the we can make those (decisions) is what this person’s doing anonymous jurying process for the event is different from really tough?"
show awards offered at oth› er art shows, AHD organiz›
ers give out five Benchmark Awards, which are gtven to artists who exemplify the stan›
dards of the show › "You’ re fun, you’ re helpful, you do David Bjurstrom from Austin, Texas drawing for the enjoyment and good work, you help others," wonder of the art patrons. Fox said. Three of this year’ s jurors Buettner, Holder and Submitted photo
Holder recalled jurying other log, and they’ re able to do that shows and having only 10 sec› because it’s a smaller show," onds to view an artist’s work Holder said. "... Most shows and make a snap decision. In jury art in a one-day session c omparison, jurying A H D only; Art in the High Desert allows for a more thorough has two days, and what that al› conversation about the work› lows is to have a quality juried although with the show’s popu› show, where you’ re going be› larity increasing, it’s becoming yond just a visceral response to more difficult to have longer an image in front of your eyes." dLscusslons. Beyond the jurying process, "Art in the High Desert actu› the artists work hard at AHD, ally wants to have a bit of dia›
setting up their own booths and
High Desert ChamderMusic Concert Series its eighth concert series at the Tower Theatre Players, Gold Coast Concert Artists and The
Crown City String Quartet & Friends round out the series, which concludes May 20, 2016. High Desert Chamber Music’s Spotlight Series, which raises funds for its Educational Outreach programs, will feature two recitals at the First United Methodist Church in Bend
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’-33 FRE ESLOTPLAY00ljpolii LEAVETHEDRIVINGTOUS!
(D
Bendbusrunsthefirst Mondayof themonth
l Callfor reservations, location & times: 541.183.7529 ext209 i
Valid forBend,LaPine andRedmond guests only;localzipcodesdo notapply. Limit one coupon per person per visit. Expires October6,2015
ate that. If we see any of that, we just go talk to the artist." — Reporter: 541-617-7814, bmcelhiney@bendbulletin.corn
mission, according to the release. High Desert Chamber Music will also hold its annual Benefit Gala, including a perfor› mance, dinner and silent auction, Nov. 14 at the Bend Golf & Country Club, 61045 Country Club Drive. Tickets for the gala cost $85. General admission tickets for the concert series and spotlight series shows cost $40 or release. $10 for children and students. The Valentine’s For more information or to purchase tick› Day show costs $48 or $15 for children and ets, call 541-306-3988, email info@highdesert› students. Season-ticket subscriptions, avail› chambermusic.corn, visit www.highde s e› able until midnight on the opening night of rtchamb ermu.corn or visit High Desert the season, include all concert series and spot› Chamber Music in person at 961 NW Brooks light series events at a 10 percent discount, and
34333HWV.97HQ RTH CHILOUII OII97624 541.783.7529 KLAM OVIICISIHO.COu
Fox said. "Well, we don’t toler›
Spotlight Series at First United Methodist Church, 680 ilWBondSt., Bend: Nov. 20, 7:30 p.m. (concert preview at 6:45 p.m.) Frank Almond April 23, 7:30 p.m. (concert preview at 6:45 p.m.) TheOrloff/Wnlz Ouo
tom treat from Goody’s Chocolates with ad›
U
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Frank Almond on Nov. 20 and the Orloff/
Walz Duo on April 23, 2016. The Valentine’s Day c oncert, featuring
Heiichiro Ohyama & SBCO Chamber Players, will include a complimentary rose and a cus›
Qc
pay they think, ’Well, my work’s really good, why don’ t you just buy it and leave me alone,I' m reading a book,'"
Concert Series at TowerTheatre, 835 BW Wall St., Bend: Sept. 25, 7:30 p.m. (concert preview at 6:45 p.m.) Catgut Trio Feb. 14, 8 p.m. (concert preview at 7:15 p.m.) Heiichiro Ohynmn8 SBCOChamber Players March 18, 7:30 p.m. (concert preview at 6:45 p.m.) GoldCoast Concert Artists May 20, 7:30 p.m. (concert preview at 6:45 p.m.) TheCrownCity String Quartet 8 Friends
with Los Angeles’ Catgut Trio on Sept. 25. Heiichiro Ohyama & S BCO Chamber
I
"We’ ve all seen artists who
come and they sit on their ass in their booth and they don’ t
HighDesertChamderMusic's schedule
High Desert Chamber Music will kick off
S
Smithey are previous Bench› mark Award winners.
seating in a reserved section, according to the
St. — Bulletin staff reports
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, AUGUST 28, 2015
arts
GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 13
A RT E X H I B I T S ARTISTS' GALLERY SUNRIVER: Featuring the works of 30 local artists; 57100 BeaverDrive, Bldg. 19, Sunriver; www.artistsgallerysunriver.corn or541-593-4382. THE ARTOFALFRED DOLEZAL: Featuring oil paintings by the Austrian artist; EagleCrest Resort, 7525 FalconCrest Drive, Redmond;541-526› 1185 or www.alfreddolezal.corn. ATELIER6000: "Play it as it Lays," featuring work by PaulaBullwinkel; through Saturday; 389 SW Scalehouse Court, Suite 120, Bend; www. atelier6000.org or 541-330-8759. BENDY DOG:Featuring dog-themed watercolors by Sarah B. Hansen; 112 MinnesotaAve.,Bend; 541-419-6463. CAFE SINTRA:Featuring "3 Points of View," acontinually changing exhibit of photographs byDianeReed, Ric Ergenbright andJohn Vito; 1024 NWBond St., Bend; 541-382-8004. CANYON CREEKPOTTERY: Featuring pottery by Kenneth Merrill; 310 N. CedarSt., Sisters; www.canyoncreekpotteryllc.corn or 541-549-0366. CIRCLEOFFRIENDSART8t ACADEMY: Featuring works by Barbara Berry, Brad Pinkert andCathy Willis; through August; 198898th St., Tumalo; 541-706-9025. FRANKLIN CROSSING:Featuring art by Janice Druian and Gilbert Dellinger; through Saturday; 550 NW Franklin Ave., Bend; 541-382-9398. GHIGLIERIGALLERY:Featuring original Western-themed and African› inspired paintings andsculptures by LorenzoGhiglieri; 200 W. Cascade Ave., Sisters; www.art-lorenzo.corn or 541-549-8683. HIGH DESERT CHAMBERMUSIC: Featuring photography by Stacie Muller and MichaelWheeler; 961 NWBrooks St., Bend; info' highdesertchambermusic.corn or 541-306-3988. HOODAVENUEART: Featuring Central Oregonlandscapes by Kathleen Keliher andOregonsunstone jewelry pieces by Elyseand Stephen Douglas; through Sept. 22; reception 4 to 7p.m. tonight; 357 W.Hood Ave., Sisters; www.hoodavenueart.corn or 541-719-1800. HOP N BEANPIZZERIA: Featuring landscapeart by Larry Goodman; 523 E.U.S. Highway20, Sisters; 541-719-1295. JILL'S WILD(TASTEFUL)WOMENWAREHOUSE:Featuring works by Jill Haney-MealTuesdays ; andWednesdays only; 601 N. LarchSt., Suite B, Sisters; www.jillnealgallery.corn or 541-617-6078. JOHN PAUL DESIGNS: Featuring custom jewelry and signature series with unique pieces;1006 NWBondSt., Bend; www.johnpauldesigns. corn or 541-318-5645. JUNIPERBREWINGCO.: "The Beauty Around Us," featuring fine art photography byScott McKenzie andJill L. Tucker; opens Saturday through Dct. 9; 1950 SW Badger Ave., Suite 103, Redmond; 541-526-5073. KARENBANDYDESIGNJEWELER: Featuring custom fine jewelry and paintings by KarenBandy;; 25 NWMinnesota Ave., Suite 5, Bend;www. karenbandy.corn or 541-388-0155. LA MAGIE BAKERY8 CAFE:Featuring landscape watercolors and pastels by Patricia W.Porter; 945 NWBondSt., Bend;541-241-7884. LUBBESMEYER FIBERSTUDIO: Featuring fiber art by Lori and Lisa Lubbesmeyer; 450 SW Powerhouse Drive, Suite423, Bend; www. lubbesmeyerstudio.corn or 541-330-0840. LUMIN ART STUDIOS:Featuring resident artists Alisha Vernon, McKenzie Mendel, LisaSipe and Natalie Mason; byappointment;19855 Fourth St., Suite 103, Tumalo; www.luminartstudio.corn. MOCKINGBIRD GALLERY:"Western Visions," featuring work by Bob Boomer, LisaDanielleandJohn DeMott; through August; 869 NWWall St., Bend; www.mockingbird-gallery.corn or 541-388-2107. PATAGONIA O BEND:Featuring photography by Mike Putnam; 1000 NW Wall St., Suite 140;541-382-6694. PAVEFINEJEWELRY: Featuring workbyPeggyOgburn,HazelReeves and Janet Rawlings; endstonight;101 NW Minnesota Ave., Bend; 541-617-0900. PEAPOD GLASSGALLERY: Featuring oil paintings and sculptures by Lori Salisbury; 164 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-312-2828. PRONGHORN CLUBHOUSE: Featuring photographyby Bearnard
I
re i<i BAGELBISTRO 4 CATERINGCO. serious food, not so serious people
t
Submitted photo
"Sparks Lake" by Scott McKenzie will be on display in the brewery taproom at Juniper Brewing Co. in Redmond from Saturday through Oct. 9.
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Gateau; throughSept. 21;65600 Pronghorn ClubDrive, Bend; 541-693-5300. IlUILTWORKS:Featuring quilts by Ruth Ingham andthe Sew-ciety of Redding, California; throughWednesday;926 NEGreenwood Ave., Suite B, Bend; 541-728-0527. RED CHAIRGALLERY:"Five Yearsand Counting," featuring art by Dee McBrien-Lee, LindaHeissermanand Julia Kennedy;through August; 103 NW Oregon Ave., Bend; www.redchairgallerybend.corn or 541-306-3176. REDMOND SENIORCENTER: Featuring the whimsical "Funky Chickens" series byLinda M. Shelton; through Monday;"Eyeof the Beholder: TwoPhotographic Perspectives," featuring work byShandel Gamer andJill L. Tucker;opensTuesday, through Sept.; 325 NW Dogwood Ave.,Redmond;541-548-6325. SAGECUSTOMFRAMINGANDGALLERY:Featuring oil paintings by Shelly Wierzba; throughSaturday; Featuring recent works bymembers of the HighDesert Art League;opening Wednesday,through Sept. 26; 834 NW BrooksSt., Bend;541-382-5884. SISTERSAREACHAMBEROFCOMMERCE: Featuring fiber art by Rosalyn Kliot; 291 E.Main Ave., Sisters; 541-549-0251. SOTHEBY'SREALTY:Featuring a variety of works by SageBrushers Art Society artists; endstonight; 821 Wall St., Bend;541-617-0900. ST. CHARLES REDMOND:"Through His Lens," featuring landscape and wildlife photography byGary Wing; through Sept. 30; 1253 NW Canal Blvd.; 541-548-8131. SUNRIVER AREAPUBLIC LIBRARY:Featuring watercolors by Liz Habermanandfused glass by JaneMorrow; through Saturday; 56855 Venture Lane,Sunriver; 541-312-1080. SUNRIVERRESORT LODGE BETTY GRAY GALLERY: "Rhythm in Vision," featuring thework of Cindy Briggs, HelenBrown, Patricia Clark, Cameron Kaseberg,DavidKinker, JacquelineNewbold, Vivian Dlsen, Janice Rhodes,BarbaraSlater andJorenTraveller; through Sept. 18; 17600 Center Drive,Sunriver; 541-382-9398 TOWNSHEND'SBENDTEAHOUSE:"Imagination Jones" featuring digital, penandink fantasy illustrations byTim Jones; through Wednesday; 835 NWBondSt., Bend;541-312-2001 or www. townshendstea.corn. TUMALO ARTCO.: "AWolf’s Garden," featuring mixed media paintings by Shelli Walters; throughAugust; 450 SWPowerhouse Drive, Suite 407, Bend;www.tumaloartco.corn or 541-385-9144. VISTA BONITA GLASSART STUDIOANDGALLERY:Featuring glass art, photography, painting, metal sculpture andmore; 222 W. HoodSt., Sisters; 541-549-4527 or wwwvistabonitaglass.corn. WERNER HOMESTUDIO 8 GALLERY:Featuring painting, sculpture and more byJerry Wernerandother regional artists; 65665 93rd St., Bend; call 541-815-9800 for directions. THE WORKHOUSE: Featuring the work of Sheila Dunn; 6-10 p.m. Saturday; 50SE ScottSt.,Bend;www.theworkhousebend.corn or 347-564-9080 THE WINESHOP:Featuring art by SueLever, LeeAugust andBarbara Shannon; endstonight;55NW MinnesotaAve.,Bend;541-389-2884.
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661 NE GreenWOOd Avein Bend( 541.318.8177
Rockin Oaves.corn II •
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RED CHAIR GALLERY 103 NW OREGON AVE • 541-306-3176
WWW.redChairgallerybend. Com SAGE CUSTOM FRAMING & GALLERY 834 NW BROOKS ST • 541-382-5884
WWW.Sageframing-gallery. Com MOCKINGBIRD GALLERY 869 NW WALL ST • 541-388-2107
WWW.mOCkingbird-gallery.Com KAREN BANDY DESIGN JEWELER 25 NW NIINNESOTA AVE ¹5 •541-388-0155
WWW.karenbandy. Com
Sat’ Il’ I
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PAGE 14 • GO! MAGAZINE
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, AUGUST 28, 2015
rinks • Transforming original flavor to tasty, healthier treats
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By Austin Schempp The Bulletin hyh
ris Romaine and Michael Eliot want to change the way people think about kombucha. As owners of Caboost Kombu›
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cha, a craft kombucha brewery
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that became licensed in October
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2014, Romaine and Eliot believe
they can turn people who con› sume sugary sodas and energy drinks on to a fermented concoc›
hhgeg
tion that’s made possible by a col›
ony of yeast and bacteria. Their confidence stems from personal experience. Two years ago, Romaine swapped her dai› ly cup of coffee for tea and then switched to kombucha. When she asked Eliot to try it, he thought
it was gross and tasted like wa› tered-down vinegar. "The first time (she) introduced me to it I thought it was the nasti› est stuff I ever tasted," said Eliot,
who was working at a food-pro› cessing plant making french fries. "It was bad. I couldn’t be›
lieve she was actually drinking it." The partners t h ought t h ey
could make a tastier kombucha so they started brewing their
Photos by Ryan Brennecke/ The Bulletin
Kris Romaine and Michael Eliot started a craft kombucha brewery in Bend called Caboost Kombucha, which recently opened a drive-thru.
own. After ayear and a half of ex› perimenting with different fruits, herbs and teas, they found the
right recipe and started selling. Demand has started to grow and two w eeks ago, Caboost
opened a drive-thru window on the corner of Eighth Street and
express, boxcar berry and ruby basil. Seasonal flavors such as "summer-thyme peach" are also available. The profiles range from sweet to spicy to herbal, all of which are meant to override the traditional
will also find their railroad spike taps (in line with the caboose logo) at Atlas Cider Co. and Riv› erside Market. The self-distributed, family-run company has two main goals: making access to their product convenient and brewing a drink
vinegar taste.
a
mainstream audience. Caboost has nine core fla› vors including hibiscus sangria, honey ginger jun, lemongrass
mond Farmers Market on Tues› days and th e Sisters Farmers
Market on Fridays. By offering free samples, Romaine and Eliot "We try to offer flavors that can usually hook skeptics. "Somebody will come up to us people haven’t seen before," Ro› maine said. and say, ’Well I don’t like kom›
Greenwood Avenue. Customers
w ith flavors that appeal to
growler s for $ 11, 3 2-ounce "growlettes"for $6 or grab a cup for $3, without leaving their car. Caboost also sells at the Red›
For those seeking a new alco›
bucha,’ and we’ ll say, ’What have
holic beverage, Caboost’s website you tried?" Nine out of 10 times, features recipes for "caboostails," we’ ll find something that they
•
•
Sht
or kombucha cocktails. like," Romaine said. Romaine t h i nk s k o m bucha In the last five years, kombu›
cha’s popularity has exploded and is offered in grocery stores across the U.S. customers can fill their 64-ounce Continued next page Sample bottles of the many flavors brewed by Caboost Kombucha in Bend. should be as easy as grabbing a
cup of Dutch Bros. Coffee on the way to work. At the drive-thru,
drinks
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, AUGUST 28, 2015
GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 1 5
From previous page Bend’s kombucha market took off after the founding ofHumm Kombucha in 2009.
what’s happening?
C
cs
Despite the spike in demand, there’s little research that substantiates the health ben› efits of the fermented tea.
FRIDAY WINE TASTING: Sample a selection of wines; 2 p.m.; Trader Joe’s, 63455 N. U.S. Highway 97, Suite 4, Bend; www.traderjoes.corn or 541-312-4198.
Romaine said they can’t make any claims on the health benefits of kombu›
cha itself, but the tea, herbs and ingredi› ents used in kombucha do have nutritional value. "I think the best thing is that it’s just a
good alternative to a lot of the beverag› es out there, it’s low in sugar and tastes
good," said Romaine, who is a respiratory therapist at St. Charles and certified health coach.
Eliot attributes losing 35 pounds and low› ering his cholesterol to drinking kombucha. In the future, Caboost would like t o
open drive-thru stands around Bend and reach customers in other ways like plac› ing mini-refrigerators stocked with their drinks in gyms. "It’s hard to get people to give up an un› healthy habit," Romaine said, "but if you can replace it with something, then it’s an easier transition."
Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin
Taylor Romaine pours a cup of Kombucha from one of the many flavors on tap
— Reporter: 541-383-0358, aschempp@bendbulleti n.corn
BEER ANDWINETASTING: Sample beers from Pelican Brewing and wine from Cline Vineyards; 3:30 p.m.; Newport Market, 1121 NWNewport Ave., Bend; www. newportavemarket.corn or 541-382-3940. MILL QUARTERBLOCKPARTY: Featuring music, drinks, food, an arcade and more; 6:30 p.m.; ATLAS Cider› Old Mill Marketplace, 550 SW Industrial Way, Bend; 541-390-8096. SATURDAY WINE TASTING: Sample a selection of wines; 2 p.m.; Trader Joe’s, 63455 N. U.S. Highway 97, Suite 4, Bend; www.traderjoes.corn or 541-312-4198. WINE TASTING: Sample wines imported by Mionetto USA; 3:30 p.m.; Newport Market, 1121 NWNewport Ave., Bend; www.newportavemarket.corn or 541-382-3940. WEDNESDAY CUPPINGSAND EDUCATION AT BELLATAZZA: Sample coffee and learn about harvesting, roasting and preparing coffee; 2 p.m.; Bellatazza Coffee, 869 NWWall St., Bend; 541-318-0606.
at the Caboost Kombucha last week.
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PAGE 16 + GO! MAGAZINE
Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-312-9626. HILLSTOMP:The stom p-grassband from Portland performs, with Helga; ART IN THEHIGHDESERT: Featuring 9 p.m.; $10 plus fees in advance, $12 more than 100 artists from across the country in Central Oregon’s premier juried at the door; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www. fine arts festival; 10 a.m.-6 p.m.; Old Mill volcanictheatrepub.corn or 541-323-1881. District, SW Columbia St., Bend; www. artinthehighdesert.corn or 541-322-6272.
SHIRE OFCORVARIA HARVEST TOURNEY:A nonprofit educational society dedicated to Middle Ages re-enactment, with archery, a heavy› fighting tournament, children’s activities, storytelling and more; 10:30 a.m.; $5, $3 for children; Petersens Rock Garden, 7930 SW 77th St., Redmond; www. corvaria.antir.sca.org or 971-207-9786. (Page 11) SATURDAY OUTDOOR STONESCULPTURE SHOW: HIGH DESERTSECTIONAL BRIDGE Featuring a sculpture show by the THIRD ANNUAL PIONEER SUMMER TOURNAMENT:A bridge tournament FEST ANDHIGHLAND GAMES: Northwest Stone Sculptors Association; hostedbyCascade BridgeClub,Redmond Featuring the Highland Games, see 11 a.m.; free; Suttle Lake Camp, 29551 Bridge Club and Ace of Hearts, all athletes throw, flip and toss heavy SW Suttle Lake Loop, Sisters; www. duplicate players are welcome; 10 a.m. items as in the old Celtic times; 8 a.m.; nwssa.org or 503-890-0749. and 3 p.m.; $9 for ACBL members; $11 $5 suggested donation; Les Schwab "PETER PAN":Featuring an adaptation for nonmembers; Bend Senior Center, Fields, 1751 S. Main St., Prineville; of the Disney story, with flying cast 1600 SE Reed Market Road, Bend; www.pioneersummerfest.corn or members, a full orchestra and more; 3 91 6-838-1 643. 541-788-3179. and 7:30 p.m.; $25, $20 for children and SISTERS FARMERSMARKET: Featuring MADRAS SATURDAYMARKET: seniors; Summit High Theater, 2855 NW fresh vegetables, fruits, locally made Featuring food, drinks, live music and Clearwater Drive, Bend; www.tmpbend. goods andmore; 2p.m.; Barclay Park, more; 9 a.m.; Sahalee Park, 241 SE corn or 818-419-7089. Hood Street, between Ash and Elm, Seventh St., Madras; 541-546-6778. "YOU'RE A GOOD MAN CHARLIE Sisters; 541-719-8030. AIRSHOW OF THE CASCADES: Featuring BROWN" THEMUSICAL: Featuring a AIRSHOW OFTHE CASCADES: An an airshow with current and historic, family-friendly musical by Runaway airshow with current and historic, flight flight and static aircraft displays, and static aircraft displays, fireworks and fireworks and more; 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.; $15, Stage Theatrics; 3 and 7 p.m.; $10, $6 for students and seniors; Crook County more; 4 to 10 p.m.; $15, free for veterans free for veterans and kids 12 and under; and kids 12 and under; Madras Municipal Madras Municipal Airport, 2028 NW Berg High School, 1100 Southeast Lynn Blvd., Prineville; 541-903-0913. Airport,2028 NW Berg Drive, Madras; Drive, Madras; www.cascadeairshow. HIGH DESERTRENDEZVOUS: Enjoy www.cascadeairshow.corn or 541-475› corn or 541-475-6947. (Page 10) hosted drinks, appetizers, gambling 6947. (Page 10) CENTRAL OREGON GREATGIVEAWAY and games, as well as a silent auction SIXTH ANNUALFUR BALL: Featuring — REDMOND:Come receive donated to benefit the museum; 5 p.m.; $150 a silent auction, a doggie fashion show, clothing and household goods for free, for members, $200 for nonmembers, a raffle, food, live music and more to for individuals only; 9 a.m.; Church of $350 per couple; High Desert Museum, benefit Bend Spay and Neuter Project; Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints,450 SW 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 6 p.m.; $60 per person, $350 for a table Rimrock Way, Redmond; www.cog ga.net www.HighDesertRendezvous.net or of six; Aspen Hall, 18920 NW Shevlin or 541-241-6733. 541-382-4754. Park Road, Bend; www.bendsnip.org/ CENTRAL OREGONSATURDAY LAST SATURDAY:Featuring local art and event/2015-furball-dogs-catwalk or MARKET:Featuring crafts, music, food 541-617-1010. culture with art openings, live music, food and more; 10 a.m.; Across from the carts, workshops and more.; 6 p.m.; The AUTHOR PRESENTATION:Evelyn Searle Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Old Ironworks, 50 SE Scott St., Bend; Hess will read fromandsign her new Wall St., Bend; 541-420-9015. 347-564-9080. book, "Building a Better Nest: Living NWX SATURDAYFARMER'S MARKET: Lightly at Home and in the World"; 6:30 TWILIGHT CINEMA: "REMEMBER Featuring local organic artisans THE TITANS":An outdoor screening p.m.; $5;Paulina Springs Books,422 SW Sixth St., Redmond; www.paulinasprings. in produce, meats, baked goods, of the 2000 film about a integrated skincare and more; 10 a.m.; NorthWest football team; 6 p.m.; The Village at corn or 541-526-1491. Crossing, NW Crossing Drive, Bend; Sunriver, 57100 Beaver Drive, Sunriver; "YOU'RE A GOOD MAN CHARLIE www.nwxfarmersmarket.corn or 541-585-3333. BROWN" THEMUSICAL: Featuringa 541-350-4217. AUTHOR PRESENTATION:Evelyn Searle family-friendly musical by Runaway Stage ART IN THEHIGHDESERT: Featuring Theatrics; 7 p.m.; $10, $6 for students Hess will read from and sign her new more than 100 artists from across the and seniors; Crook County High School, book, "Building a Better Nest: Living country in Central Oregon’s premier 1100 Southeast Lynn Blvd., Prineville; Lightly at Home and in the World"; 6:30 juried fine arts festival; 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.; 541-903-0913. $5;Paulina SpringsBooks,252 W. Old Mill District, SW Columbia St., Bend; p.m.; Hood St., Sisters; www.paulinasprings. "PETER PAN":An adaptation of the www.artinthehighdesert.corn or 541› corn or 541-549-0866. Disney story, with flying cast members, 322-6272. (Page 11) a full orchestra and more; 7:30 p.m.; $25, HIGH DESERTSECTIONAL BRIDGE DON GIOVANNI:Featuring Mozart’s musical masterpiece about the fictional $20 for children and seniors; Summit TOURNAMENT:A bridge tournament High Theater, 2855 NW Clearwater legends of Don Juan; 7 p.m.; $10 hostedby CascadeBridge Club,Redmond Drive, Bend; www.tmpbend.corn or suggested donation; Central Oregon Bridge Club and Ace of Hearts, all 818-41 9-7089. Community College, 2600 NW College duplicate players are welcome; 10 a.m. Way, Bend; cascadiaconcertopera.org or 2ND STREETTHEATER PREVIEW: A and 3 p.m.; $9 for ACBL members; $11 541-350-9805. season preview ofthe 2016season; for nonmembers; Bend Senior Center, 7:30 p.m.; $10plus fees in advance, $15 1600 SE ReedMarket Road, Bend; 2ND STREETTHEATER PREVIEW: A 916-838-1643. at the door; 2nd Street Theater, 220 NE season preview ofthe2016season;
TODAY
THE BULLETIN• F RID
I• FRIDAY & SATURDAY 2erl Street Theater Preview:Catch a sneak peak atthe 2016 season.
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FRIDAY-SUNDAY High Desert BridgeTournament: Calling all duplicate bridge players!
SATURDAY Oetrleer StoneSculpture Show:Stone sculpture by the lake!
TUESDAY Green TeamMovie Night: A showing of "Slavery by Another Name."
WEDNESDAY-THURSDAY Living Small:Two chances to learn about living off the grid.
THURSDAY Jive Caulis:The funky rock band per› forms.
7:30 p.m.; $10 plus fees in advance, $15 at the door; 2nd Street Theater, 220 NE Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-312-9626. KYTAMI:Featuring Phonic Ops, Jay Tablet and more; 9 p.m., doors open at 8 p.m. $10 plus fees in advance Domino Room, 51 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; www.bendticket.corn or 541-383-0800.
STRANGEROVERANDSTEREO TREASON:The local rock bands perform; 10 p.m.; free; Silver Moon Brewing, 24 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-388-8331.
(Page 4)
ART IN THEHIGHDESERT:Featuring more than 100 artists from across the country in Central Oregon’s premier juried fine arts festival; 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.; Old Mill District, SW Columbia St., Bend; www.artinthehighdesert.corn or 541› 322-6272. (Page 11)
THE TWANGSHIFTERS:The rockabilly band from Portland performs; 9 p.m.;
$5 plus fees inadvance, $7 atthe door; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub. corn or 541-323-1881.
SUNDAY
GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 1 7
AY, AUGUST 28, 2015
541-323-1881.
WEDNESDAY
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BEND FARMERSMARKET: Featuring food, drinks and more; 3 p.m.; Brooks Alley, NW Brooks St., Bend; www.bendfarmersmarket.corn or 541-408-4998. HEART 8( SOULCONCERTSERIES: KC FLYNN:Acoustic rock and country, all ages welcome; 6 p.m.; free; Worthy BrewingCompany, 495 NE Bellevue Drive, Bend; 541-639-4776. LIVINGSMALL: BUILDING AT BETTER NEST:Author Evelyn Hess will discuss sustainable living, living off the grid and her own adventures in "Building a Better Nest"; 6 p.m.; free; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St., Bend; 541-31 2-1034. SPIRITUAL REZ:The reggae-funk band performs; 7 p.m.; free; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St., Bend; www.mcmenamins.corn or 541-382-5174. "ALT-JAT THE HOLLYWOOD AMERICAN LEGION":Featuring alt-J’s private performance, with exclusive footage; 7:30 p.m.; $12.50; Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 and IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; www. fathomevents. corn or844-462-7342.
(Page 29)
THURSDAY
v
HIGH DESERTSECTIONAL BRIDGE TOURNAMENT:A bridge tournament hosted by Cascade Bridge Club, Redmond Bridge Club and Ace of Hearts, all duplicate players are welcome; 10 a.m.; $9 for ACBL members; $11 for nonmembers; Bend Senior Center, 1600 SE Reed Market Road, Bend; 91 6-838-1 643. "PETER PAN":Featuring an adaptation of the Disney story, with flying cast members, a full orchestra and more; 3 p.m.; $25, $20 for children and seniors; Summit High Theater, 2855 NW Clearwater Drive, Bend; www.tmpbend.
corn or 818-419-7089. LA SERVAPADRONA:Featuring "La Serva Padrona," or The Maid Turned Mistress, about an old man, his maid and his servant; 3 p.m.; $10 suggested donation; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NW College Way, Bend;
541-903-0913.
www.cascadiaconcertopera.org or
MONDAY
FRANKIE BALLARD:The country artist performs; 5 p.m.; $25 plus fees in advance; Century Center, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.bendticket.corn or 541› 383-0800. (Page 3)
541-350-9805. "YOU'RE A GOOD MAN CHARLIE NO EVENTSLISTED. BROWN" THEMUSICAL: Featuring a family-friendly musical by Runaway Stage TUESDAY Theatrics; 3 p.m.; $10, $6 for students and seniors; Crook County High School, REDMOND FARMERS MARKET: 1100 Southeast Lynn Blvd., Prineville; Featuring food, drinks and more; 3 p.m.;
Centennial Park, corner of SW Seventh Street and Evergreen Avenue, Redmond; 541-550-0066. GREEN TEAMMOVIENIGHT: A showing of "Slavery by Another Name" gives voice to the largely forgotten victims and perpetrators of forced labor and includes interviews of their descendants; 6:30 p.m.; free; First Presbyterian Church, 230 NE Ninth St., Bend; 541-815-6504. BREAKERBREAKERONENINER: The San Diego band performs, with Lysolgang; 9 p.m.; $5; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.corn or
LIVINGSMALL: BUILDING A BETTER NEST:Author Evelyn Hess will discuss sustainable living, living off the grid and her own adventures in "Building a Better Nest"; 12 p.m.; La Pine Public Library, 16425 First St., La Pine; 541-312-1034. BLUES JAM:A jam hosted byScott Foxx and Jeff Leslie, all musicians welcome, bring your instruments (drums provided); 6:30 p.m.; free; Fat Tuesdays Cajun and Blues, 61276 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-306-0797. JIVE COULIS:The rock-funk band performs; 7 p.m.; free; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St., Bend; www.mcmenamins.corn or 541-382-5174. GEOFF TATEAND EMMA ARNOLD: Featuring the Cincinnati-based comedian; 8 p.m.; $8 plus fees in advance, $10 at the door; The Summit Saloon & Stage, 125 NW Oregon Ave., Bend; www. bendcomedy.corn or 541-419-0111. • SUBMIT ANEVENTby visiting bendbulletin.corn/ events and clicking ee Add Event." Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Questions? Call 541-383› 035t or email communitylife'bendbulletin.corn.
PAGE 18 e GO! MAGAZINE
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, AUGUST 28, 2015
planning ahea SEPT. 4-10 SEPT.4-5— THELITTLEWOODY BARREL-AGEDBREW & WHISKEY FESTIVAL: Featuring small-batch aged beer, whiskey and cider;5 p.m.Sept.4;noon Sept. 5; $5 admission only,$12with tasting glass, $20 with tasting glassandeight tokens; Next to Deschutes Historical Museum,129 NW Idaho Ave.,Bend;www.thelittlewoody.corn or 541-323-0964. SEPT. 4-6 —DIXIELANDPARTYBAND AND FRIENDS: Featuring more than 25 musicians performing jazz; 1p.m. Sept. 4; noon Sept. 5;11 a.m.Sept. 6; free
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(donationsaccepted); LaPineMoose Lodge P2093, 52510Drafter Drive, LaPine; 541-536-3388. SEPT. 5-6 —SUNRIVERMARATHON FOR A CAUSE:Featuring a marathon, half marathon,5K andkids racebenefiting St. Charles CancerServices; 8:30 a.m. Sept. 5; 7a.m. Sept. 6;$15to $115; Sunriver Resort, 17600CenterDrive, Bend; www. sunrivermarathon.corn or 855-420-8206. SEPT.4— "FROM THE VAULT" EXHIBIT OPENING: Featuring rarely-displayed volumes of "TheNorth American Indian" from the inaugural exhibition, through Oct. 31; 9a.m.; $15, $12for seniors, $9 for ages 5 to12, free for 4and younger; High Desert Museum,59800 S.U.S.Highway 97,Bend;www.highdesertmuseum.cornor 541-382-4754. SEPT. 4 —SISTERSFARMERSMARKET: Featuring fresh vegetables, fruits, locally madegoodsandmore;2 p.m .;Barclay Park, HoodSt., betweenAshand Elm, Sisters; 541-719-8030. SEPT. 4 —FIRSTFRIDAYGALLERY WALK:Art exhibit openings, artist talks, live music, wineandfood indowntown Bend and the OldMill District; 5 p.m.; throughout Bend. SEPT.4 — PUNCHBROTHERS— PEAK SUMMERNIGHTS:Enjoythe progressive bluegrass bandwhose style is described by Rolling Stonemagazine as"afine pieceof art"; 5:30 p.m.; Athletic Club ofBend,61615 Athletic Club Drive, Bend;www.c3events. corn or 541-382-3940. SEPT.4— MUNCH AND MOVIES: "GUARDIANSOF THE GALAXY":W atch the 2014 liveaction superhero film, bring blanket sand low chairs;6p.m.;Compass Park, 2500 NWCrossing Drive, Bend; www. northwestcrossing.corn or 541-382-1662. SEPT. 5 —MADRASSATURDAY MARKET: Featuring food, drinks, live music and more; 9a.m.; Sahalee Park,241SE Seventh St., Madras; 541-546-6778. SEPT.5— SCAVENGING RAPTORS AND NONLEAD AMMUNITION: In recognition of International Vulture AwarenessDay, Leland Brown, wildlife andleadoutreach coordinator for theOregonZoo, will discuss lead poisoning in scavenging raptors; 9:30 a.m.; $15, $12for seniors, $9 children 5 to12, free for 4andyounger; High Desert
Bulletin file photo
The Sunriver Marathon for a Cause will include a 5K and kids race Sept. 5 and a full and half marathon Sept.6. The events start and finish at the Sunriver Resort. Museum, 59800 S.U.S.Highway97, Bend; www.highdesertmuseum.org or 541-382-4754. SEPT. 5 —CENTRALOREGON SATURDAY MARKET:Featuring crafts, music, food andmore; 10a.m.; Across from the Downtown BendPublic Library, 601 NW WalSt., l Bend;541-420-9015. NWX SATURDAYFARMER'S MARKET: Featuring local organic artisans in produce, meats, baked goods,skincareandmore; 10 a.m.; NorthWest Crossing, NWCrossing Drive, Bend;www.nwxfarmersmarket.corn or 541-350-4217. SEPT. 5 —SIXTHANNUALGRAPE STOMP:Featuring a grapestomp, live music and more; 11a.m.; $20for the romp and glass, $10without, free for children; Maragas Winery, 15523S.W.US.Highway 97, Culver; www.maragaswinery.corn or 541-546-5464. SEPT.5— JACK WILLIAMS HOUSE CONCERT: Thefolk artist performs; 7 p.m.; $10-$20 suggesteddonation; HarmonyHouse,17505Kent Road, Sisters; www.facebook.corn/ HarmonyHouseConcerts or 541-548-2209. SEPT. 6 — ALHAASANDBILL VALENTI HOUSE CONCERT: Thefolksinger-
songwriters perform; 7 p.m., potluck starts at6 p m.; $5-$10suggested donation; HouseConcerts in the Glen, 1019 NWStannium Road,Bend; www. houseconcertsintheglen.corn or 541-480-8830. SEPT. 8 —REDMONDFARMERS MARKET: Featuring food, drinks and more; 3 p.m.; Centennial Park, corner of SW Seventh St. andEvergreen Ave., Redmond; 541-550-0066. SEPT. 8 —NATURALHISTORYPUB: PALEONTOLOGYINTH EHIGH DESERT: Dr. EdwardDaviswill discuss the significant paleontological find of two relatively intact skulls of giant saber-toothed salmonfound near Madras, Oregon; 7p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NWBond, Bend; www.highdesertmuseum.org/rvsp or 541-382-4754. SEPT. 9 —BENDFARMERSMARKET: Featuring food, drinks andmore; 3 p.m.; Brooks Alley, NWBrooks St., Bend; www.bendfarmersmarket.corn or 541-408-4998. SEPT. 10 —AMY MILLERANDSEAN JORDAN:Comedyfeaturing a member of NBC’s Last ComicStanding Season 9 and the winner of Helium Portland’s
2015 Funniest PersonContest; 8 p.m.; $8 plus fees inadvance,$10at the door; The Summit Saloon &Stage,125 NWOregon Ave., Bend;www.bendcomedy.corn or 541-419-0111.
SEPT. 11-17 SEPT.11-12 —AVENUEO:Fromthe composerof"BookofMormon"and "Frozen" and theproducers of "Spamalot,"
amodernmusicalcomedyaboutagroup of 20-somethings in the big city, looking for love, jobs andtheir purpose in life; 7:30 p.m.; $27-$38 plus fees;TowerTheatre, 835 NW WalSt., l Bend;www.towertheatre. org or 541-317-0700. SEPT.11 — MUNCH AND MOVIES: "PITCHPERFECT":W atchthesinga-long version of "Pitch Perfect" in the park, with a performance bySeattle’s own acappella group,TheCoats, bring blankets andlow chairs;6p.m.;CompassPark, 2500 NWCrossing Drive, Bend;www. northwestcrossing.cor n/activities/munch› movies/or 541-382-1662. SEPT.12 — RAVENS RUN:5Krun orwalk to benefit the students of RidgeviewHigh School. Therunning coursewill include paved areas,parts of fields andthe track,
mostly flat, fast andfun; 9a.m.; $15,$20 for student with shirt, $25 for non-student with shirt; RidgeviewHighSchool, 4555 SW ElkhornAve.,Redmond;www. rave nboosters.corn. SEPT. 12 —9-11 MEMORIALPOKER RUN:Agroup ride/drive and poker to benefit local first respondersandveterans in need, andCentral OregonVeterans Ranch, all vehiclesandpatriots welcome; 9 a.m.; Wild RideBrewing Co.,332 SWFifth St., Redmond;www.ovma-hde.corn or 541-350-3802. SEPT.12— YOGIUNITEBEND — BEND'S YOGAFESTIVAL:Oregon’s largest outdoor yogaclass introduces yogato regular pracitioners and those who may have nevertried it before, while supporting local charities.;10a.m.; $15;Troy Field, Downtown,680 NWBondSt, Bend;www. visitbend.corn or 541-306-9583. SEPT.12— PACIFICGOSPEL MUSIC ASSOCIATION TOUR2015: Featuring The KnoxBrothers, Bethel Mountain Band, Cornerstoneandmore; 3p.m.; $12; RedmondHighSchool Auditorium, 675 RimrockWay,Redmond;www. pacificgospel.org or541-923-3085.
Continued next page
planning ahead
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, AUGUST 28, 2015
GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 19
Talks 8 classes For a full list, visit bendbulletin.corn/ events. KNOW FIRE:LIVING IN AFIRE ENVIRONMENT: Alison Green, program coordinator for Project Wildfire, talks about recent forest fire disasters and how to best defend your home against wild fires; 2 p.m. Saturday; Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave., Redmond; www. deschuteslibrary.org or 541-312-1032. INTRO TO SHIBORI DYEING:Learn about Shibori dyeing, a Japanese method of resist dyeing dating back to the 8th century; 11 a.m. Sunday; $125; registration required; The Workhouse at Old Ironworks, 50 SE Scott St., Bend; www.mkt.corn/the› workhouse or 347-564-9080. KNOW FIRE:LIVING IN AFIRE ENVIRONMENT: Alison Green, program coordinator for Project Wildfire, talks about recent forest fire disasters and how to best defend your home against wild fires; 2 p.m. Sunday; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NWWall St., Bend; www. deschuteslibrary.org or 541-312-1032. SPEAK MEMORY:BEGINNING YOUR MEMOIR:Beginning with warm-up
exercises thathelp peopleaccess important memories, this workshop leads participants in writing and editing their own short memoir; 12 p.m. Tuesday; Sisters Public Library, 110 N.Cedar St., Sisters; www.deschuteslibrary.org or 541-312-1032. OPEN COMPUTER LAB: Freetimeto practice your computer skills or get your questions answered. Bring your own
device or useoneof ourlaptops; 1:30p.m. Tuesday; Redmond Public Library,827 SW Deschutes Ave., Redmond; 541-617-7089. WHAT'S BREWING?GAINING STRENGTH INSALEM: Learnhow to speak up on issues that will impact your business including: transportation, living wage bills, employer mandates andtechnicaleducation;5 p.m .Tuesday; Deschutes Brewery & Public House,1044 NW Bond St., Bend; 541-382-3221. ROOT VEGETABLECOOKING CLASS: Learn to cook with root vegetables; 6 p.m.Wednesday; $55;North Rim, 3437 Greenleaf Way, Bend; www. welltraveledfork.corn or 541-312-0097.
From previous page SEPT. 12 — ANIGHT IN ETHIOPIA: Featuring the sights, sounds, colors and tastes in celebration of Ethiopian culture and cuisine, to benefit ReachAnother Foundation’s hydrocephalu scampaign;5 p.m.;$100 per
person, includingdinner, wine,andnohost bar.; St.Charles Bend,2500 NENeffRoad,Bend; www.anightinethiopia.org or 503-580-0088. SEPT. 13 —26THANNUALGREATDUCK RACE:Featuring music, food, activities and more; 11 a m.with kids race at noon, duck race at1:30 p.m.; $5 per duck, free for spectators; Drake Park, 777 NWRiverside Blvd., Bend; www.theduckrace.corn. SEPT. 15 —SINGHERENOW:A community
Submitted photo
Local educator and author Ellen Santasiero will lead a workshop on writing and editing a short memoir at the Sisters Public Library from 12 to
up to
4 p.m. Tuesday. CUPPINGSAND EDUCATION AT BELLATAZZA: Samplecoffeeand learn about harvesting, roasting and preparing coffee; 2 p.m. Wednesday; Bellatazza Coffee, 869 NWWall St., Bend; 541-318-0606. LIVINGSMALL: BUILDING AT BETTER NEST:Author Evelyn Hess will discuss sustainable living and living off the grid; 6 p.m. Wednesday; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NWWall St., Bend; www. deschuteslibrary.org or 541-312-1034. GLUTEN-FREEFALLFAVORITES: The author of "Living Luxe Gluten Free" reveals her secrets for making gluten-free and allergen-friendly cooking delicious and easy; 6:30 p.m.W ednesday;Natural Grocers, 3188 N. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; www.naturalgrocers.corn or 541-617-0200. A, B, C AND D'S OF MEDICARE: A class
to help seniors navigatethe process of
OFF Massive Blowouf Days Left (EndsAug. 31st)
~
enrolling in Medicare; 12 p.m. Thursday; Bend Senior Center,1600 SEReedMarket Road, Bend; 541-706-5056. LIVINGSMALL: BUILDING AT BETTER NEST:Author Evelyn Hess will discuss sustainable living and living off the grid; 12 p.m. Thursday; La Pine Public Library, 16425 First St., La Pine; www. deschuteslibrary.org or 541-312-1034.
Y e ars Big Opportunity
choir for people in theearly stages of Alzheimer’s disease, aswell as their care partners, no musical experience is necessary, screening and registration required; 10:30 a.m.; $30 for an individual, $50 for an individual and care partner; CascadeSchool of Music, 200 NW Pacific Park Lane,Bend;www.alz.org/oregon or 800-272-3900. SEPT.17— JEREMIAH COUGHLAN AND BEN HARKINS:Comedyfeaturing a finalist in the 2015 Oregon’s Funniest Comic contest and a semi-finalist in the 2014and2015 Portland’s Funniest Person contest; 8 p.m.; $8 plus fees in advance, $10 atthe door; TheSummit Saloon & Stage,125 NWOregonAve., Bend;www. bendcomedy.corn or 541-419-0111.
FINE JEWELERS 541.389.6655 Old Mill
www.s ax onsfinejewelers.corn
PAGE 20 + GO! MAGAZINE
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, AUGUST 28, 2015
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Andy Tullie/The Bulletin
Cafe Sintra chef, Marcelo Bento, from left in back, grabs bottles of wine, while his uncle, and the owner of Cafe Sintra, Manuel dos Santos helps customers as other patrons enjoy their meals at Cafe Sintra in Bend Monday afternoon.
Ol U By John Gottberg Anderson For The Bulletin
anuel dos Santos, owner of the popular Cafe Sin› tra, has done well serving breakfasts and lunches during his 11 years in downtown Bend. So when a unique opportunity pre›
M
CSC |’ 1 stan’;a Souta. Bento and Souta met w h i le
working t o gether a t the Ritz-Carlton Hotel Company’s Penha Longa Resort in Sintra,
"Marcelo is an excellent chef
and a great manager," dos San› tos said. "It’s really all him. He was motivated to create a menu and a concept that we felt with
Portugal. Sintra is dos Santos’ would go well (to complement) hometown. And Bento just hap› C afe Sintra’s b r eakfast a n d pens to be dos Santos’ nephew.
lunch.
"It was the perfect opportuni› Bento, 30, was trained as a ners, he couldn’t pass it up. chef and in hotel management. ty to expand our business with The key was a young man Before joining the Ritz, he had a family member who is cre› named Marcelo Bento, who ar› been manager of the acclaimed ative, passionate and has a back› rived in Oregon last year with Terreiro do Pat;o restaurant in ground in hospitality." his girlfriend (now fiancee), Con› the heart of Lisbon. Continued next page sented itself to add weekend din›
CAFESINTRA location: 1024NW BondSt.,Bend Hours:Breakfast and lunch 7a.m.to 3 p.m. everyday;dinner 5:30to 9:30 p.m. FridayandSaturday Cuisine:PortugueseandMediter› ranean Price range:Breakfast andlunch $6 to $14; dinnerappetizers $4 to$10, entrees $10to $17 Credit curds:MasterCard, Visa Kids' menu:Onrequest Vegetarian and gluten-free: Numerousoptions Alcoholic beverages:Fully licensed Outdoorseating:A few tables on front sidewalk
Reservat ions:Recommended inthe evening Contact:www.cafesintra.corn, 541› 382-8004
SCORE CARD Overall: AFood:A-. Delicious Portuguese cuisine features agenerous useof olive oil, garlic and paprika. Service:A. Warmth andenthu› siasm couple with fast, accurate service at this family-run cafe. Atmosphere:B+.Walls of photo› graphs and asoccer-friendly TV accent the simple decor. Value:A-. Prices are very moderate for generous meals of this quality.
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, AUGUST 28, 2015
From previous page
Family operation For now, at least since April 17, to be accurate dinners are served
only Friday and Saturday nights, from 5:30 to 9 p.m. To be sure, if they were ever to expand to addi›
tional days, I would probably be› come a regular visitor. The earlier meals, served daily, are dos Santos’ domain, but din› ners belong to Bento. With Souta and longtime family friend Luisa Benevento (whose husband, Joe, is executive chef at Mother’s Bistro) in the front of the house, and a single assistant in the kitchen, it’s a family
operation. There’s little or no formality but
a tremendous amount of warmth and enthusiasm. Cafe Sintra is decorated with photographs from local artists and a large television that’s turned on only for major soc› cer games, a huge draw for Bend’s community of international soccer fans. It feels more like a private den than a downtown restaurant, which
restaurants
GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 21
Small hite SpanlSh WlnI nlghtS —Birdies Cafe andthe Bend Wine Cellar are launch› ing a series of sevenMonday night wine dinners focusing on foods andwines from the regions of Spain. Eachmeal is priced at $70 per person, plus gratuity. Northern Spain’s Galician coast andBasqueCountry are the subjects of Mon› day night’s (Aug. 31) initial dinner; subsequent meals will feature the Duero River region (Oct. 5), the EbroRiver Valley (Nov. 2), the central Meseta (Dec. 7), the northern and southern Mediterranean coasts (Jan. 4and Feb. 1)and Andalucia (March 7). Reservations areessential. 1444 NWCollege Way, Bend; www.birdiescafebend.corn or www.bendwinecellar.corn, 541-728-0753.
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JameS Beard dinnorS —Bend 5 Fusion & Sushi Bar whose owner-chef, Joe Kim, has beennominated in each of the past two years as asemifinalist for "best chef Northwest" by the JamesBeard Foundation will host dinners three consecutive nights next month with a goal of raising $8,000 to benefit the CascadeCulinary Institutes’s scholarship fund. Partner Lilian Chusaid the restaurant had beeninvited to present a meal at theJames Beard House in New York City but decided the cost of doing so would bebetter spent in supporting the Central Oregon community. Thedinners will be served Sept. 28, 29 and 30 beginning at 6 p.m., andBeard Foundation visitors will be in attendance. High› lights of Kim’s wildly inventive menu include Alaskanhalibut paella; Japanese squash soup with crispy lamb sweetbreads; squabwith miso sage butter and roasted beets; andKorean-style buffalo rib-eye. Eachdinner is limited to 30 guests, with an all-inclusive price that includes wineandcocktail pairings and gratuity. Seats may bereserved by calling 541-848-2494 or emailing liliany› chu'g mail.corn.
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WATCH BATTERY
ODD INFINITY WATCHREPAIR
Facing the Atlantic Ocean from
the west end of the Iberian Peninsu› la, Portugal has a cuisine which is
There's little or no formality but a tremendous amount
not quite Spanish, not quite French,
of warmth and enthusiasm. Cafe Sintra is decorated
not quite Italian. It’s not technically a Mediterranean country, but it has elements thereof. To hear Bento tell it, "Modern Portuguese cuisine is similar to French." But its generous
use of olive oil, garlic and paprika, along with fresh seafood and port wines, give it a flavor all its own.
with photographs from local artists and a large television that's turned on only for major soccer games, a huge draw for Bend's community of international soccer fans. It feels more like a private den than a downtown restaurant, which I imagine is how it might
On a recent visit, my dining com› was performing, and the crowd of lingui’ assada. Imported directly sea-salt potatoes. Bento assured me under-age friends that he attracted from Portugal, two large pork sau› this is a very typical preparation in were noisy and took away from our sages were flavored with garlic and Portugal. If that’s true, I’m buying enjoyment of the meal. What’s more, the paella Valen› paprika, doused with olive oil and my ticket tomorrow. cooked at the table by Bento him› My companion’s main course ciana, a blend of rice with chicken self in a terra-cotta tray he called was again from the short list of and shellfish, was no better than an nassador de chourigos." nightly specials, a mix of tender average. But Bento apparently feels Translated, that means "sausage large prawns and pork tenderloin the same way; he is working on a grill." It sounds much more roman› on linguine noodles with a light new recipe, and has pulled that dish tic in Portuguese. But the flavor of tomato-based sauce. Combining from the menu until he’s satisfied. this meat transcended language. It chipotle peppers and coconut milk If it turns out as good as the oth› was absolutely delicious. with a light saute of onions and bell er food at Sintra, it will be a big Our second course was an eve› peppers, Bento’s scratch sauce had winner. — John Got tberg Anderson can be ning special, a pear salad. Thick equal elements of sweet and spicy. slices of Bose pear served with wal›
nuts and bleu cheese crumbles on a bed of fresh greens. The secret in› gredient here was a marvelous pop› py-seed dressing with just a hint of lemon. For my entree, I chose a creamy
and flour. It was served with baked
Three meals
with a generous portion of fresh
'•
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reachedat jaytderson@bendbulletiyt.corn
I always enjoy earlier meals at Cafe Sintra. Like many patrons, I’m
sure, I have my favorites. For break› fast, that would be an egg-and› spinach crepe; for lunch, a bowl of
mushroom steak from the every› Portuguese chicken stew with white day menu. A 7-ounce cut of sirloin, beans. cooked medium rare, was served
Stem & Crowns • Movements
be back in Portugal.
Delicious dinner panion and I started our meal with
503-887-4241 61405 S. Hwy. 97, Bend OR 97702 Office: 541.728.0411• Cell: 503.887.4241 Daniel Mitchell, Owner
But six weeks before our most
recent dinner, when we stopped by b utton mushrooms and a w h i t e for a First Friday paella, we were sauce of garlic, olive oil, white wine not so impressed. A young musician
NEXT WEEK: REGIO'SCAFE Il REDMOND For reviews of more than 150 Central Oregon restaurants, visit I bendbulletiILCOml
restaurants.
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PAGE 22 • GO! MAGAZINE
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, AUGUST 28, 2015
outa town e n eton oun › o ers more t an ro eo • American Idol-winner Scotty McCreery to perform By Kim Himstreet The Bulletin
D
on’t panic if you see a dust cloud head› ing towards Pendleton in the coming weeks. That’s just the crowd of 70,000
rodeo fans expected totravel there for the 2015 Pendleton Round-Up and its r elated
r
Pw~.<py~
events from Sept. 12 to 19. T he Pendleton Round-Up is one of t h e
largest outdoor rodeos in the world, attract› ing elite professional rodeo stars along with many talented up-and-comers. Around 750
competitors will compete in bareback riding, calfroping, saddle bronc riding, barrel racing, steer roping, team roping, steer wrestling and bull riding events. There are also relay races and a wild-cow milking competition
Sept. 7 Melvins, Wonder Ballroom, * Portland; TF Sept. 9 Machine GunKelly, Roseland Theater, Portland; CT* Sept. 9 Wavves, Wonder Ballroom, Portland; TF* Sept. 10 Elephant Revival, Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF* Sept. 10 George Winston, Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF*
Aug. 28-29 Pink Martini, McMenamins Edgefield, Troutdale; www.etix.corn. Aug. 28 RubyRose, Roseland Theater, Portland; CT* Aug. 28 Sublime with Rome, Cuthbert Amphitheater, Eugene; TW* Aug.29 — TheGipsy Kings,Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; P5* Aug. 29 The Led Zeppelin Experience featuring NoGuarter Rising — A Tribute to Ronnie James Dio:Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF* Aug. 29 Huey Lewis & the News, OregonZoo,Portland;SOLD OUT;TF* Aug. 29 Failure, Wonder Ballroom, Portland; TF* Aug. 29 Paul Anka, Spirit Mountain Casino, Grand Ronde; www. spiritmountain.corn. Aug. 30 Vince Gill, Britt Pavilion, Jacksonville; www.brittfest.org. Aug. 31 The GipsyKings, Britt Pavilion, Jacksonville; www.brittfest.
TF*
parade through the streets of Pendleton at 10
a.m. and a concert headlined by country star and American Idol-winner, Scotty McCreery at 7 p.m. The "slack" (qualifying) events for the Round-Up start Sept. 14 and continue through Friday. The U.S. Bank Professional John Laptad i Submitted photo Bull Riding Classic takes place at 8 p.m. Sept. Top professional rodeo stars will compete at the Pendleton Round-Up from Sept. 16-19 in Pendleton.
Sept. 16, and the Round-Up continues Sept. 17-18. This is all building to the finals Sept. 19. events run from Sept. 12 to 19. Tickets for the In addition to all the rodeo action in the Round-Up performances from Sept. 16 to 19 stadium, a number of other events add to range from $15 to $25 per day. Special family plan tickets for two adults and up to six chil›
parade at 10 a.m. Sept. 12 pays tribute to the dreninclude admission to therodeo,abarbeearly days in the West by allowing only non› que dinner (Wednesday only) and the Happy motorized transportation such as mules, bug› Canyon show for $107 Wednesday, or $72 gies and oxen-drawn covered wagons, along Thursday. Entry to the slack rounds are free, with Native Americans in their tribal finery, except Tuesday which costs $2 at the gate. riding groups and music furnished by numer› Tickets for other events during Round› ous marching bands from surrounding com› Up week are sold and priced separately.The munities. The Happy Canyon show at 7:45 U.S. Bank Professional Bull Riding Classic p.m. Sept. 16-19 recreates the early days of
CONCERTS
Sept. 1 Eagles of Death Metal, Wonder Ballroom, Portland; SOLDOUT;
ter-known rodeo events. Round-Up week kicks off Sept. 12 with a
the overall fun. The unique Westward Ho!
Sept. 5-6 Weird Al Yankovic, OregonZoo,Portland;SOLD OUT;
org.
that are just as fiercely contested as the bet›
14 and 15. The featured Pendleton Round-Up events begin with a wild west ride-in at 1:15 p.m.
The following is a list of other events "Out of Town."
on Sept. 14 to 15 costs $20 to $119. The Sat›
the American West, including Native Amer› urday evening concert costs $41 to $131 and ican culture, the arrival of Lewis and Clark, the Happy Canyon show costs $10 to $17. Ad› the Oregon Trail pioneers and a reenactment ditional fees apply for advance purchase of all of life in a frontier town. And you can see tickets. around 300 teepees pitched at the grand tribal For more information go to www.pendle› village hosted by members of the Confederat› tonroundup.corn or call 800-457-6336. — Reporter: 541-383-0350, ed Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation. The Pendleton Round-Up and its related khimstreet@bendbulletfn.corn
Sept. 1 Rebelution, Britt Pavilion, Jacksonville; www.brittfest.org. Sept. 2 Jujuba, Main Street, * Portland; P5 Sept. 2 — The PsychedelicFurs/ The Church,McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; www.etix.corn. Sept. 2 Weird Al Yankovic, Britt Pavilion, Jacksonville; www.brittfest.
www.zooconcerts.corn.
Sept. 10 Jackie Greene/Lauren Shera,Wonder Ballroom, Portland; TF* Sept. 10 Machine GunKelly, McDonald Theatre, Eugene; TW* Sept. 10 Marcia Ball, The Shedd Institute, Eugene; www.theshedd.org or 541-434-7000. Sept. 11 The Revivalists, Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF* Sept. 11 The Turtles/The Rogue Suspects,Britt Pavilion, Jacksonville; www.brittfest.org. Sept. 11-12 Brandi Carlile, McMenamins Edgefield, Troutdale; SEPT.12SOLD OUT;www.et ix.corn. Sept. 12 The Cribs, Wonder Ballroom, Portland; TF* Sept. 12 Everyone Orchestra, Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF* Sept. 12 Hopsin, Roseland Theater, Portland; CT" Sept. 12 Mad Decent Block Party: featuring Brazzabelle, Major Lazer,Oliver Heldens, RLGrime, What SoNot, and more; Cuthbert Amphitheater, Eugene; TW*
Sept. 13 Brandi Carlile, Britt Pavilion, Jacksonville; www.brittfest.
org.
or’g.
Sept. 3 Brandon Flowers, Roseland Theater, Portland; CT* Sept. 3 Kacey Musgraves, Britt Pavilion, Jacksonville; www.brittfest.
Sept. 13 Mark Knopfler, Keller Auditorium, Portland; P5* Sept. 13 Shania Twain, Moda Center, Portland; Www.ticketmaster.corn. Sept. 14 Foo Fighters, Moda Center, Portland; SOLDOUT;www. ticketmaster.corn. Sept. 14 Old 97's, Wonder Ballroom, Portland; TF* Sept. 15 Alpine, Star Theater, Portland; CT* Sept. 15 Ben Folds & yMusic, Roseland Theater, Portland; CT* Sept. 16 The Growlers, Wonder Ballroom, Portland; TF* Sept. 16 PRIMUS &The Chocolate Factory/The Fungi Ensemble,Britt Pavilion, Jacksonville; www.brittfest.
org. Sept. 4 Ariana Grande, Moda Center, Portland; Www.ticketmaster.corn. Sept. 4 Pat Benatar and Neil Girlaldo,Britt Pavilion, Jacksonville; CANCELLED; www.brittfest.org. Sept. 4 The White Buffalo, Wonder Ballroom, Portland; TF* Sept. 4 Yellow Claw, Roseland Theater, Portland; CT* Sept. 5 Ben Harper & The Innocent Criminals,McMenamins Edgefield, Troutdale; SOLDOUT;www.etix.corn. Sept. 5 Punch Brothers/Gabriel Kahane,Britt Pavilion, Jacksonville; www.brittfest.org. Sept. 5 Social Distortion, Roseland Theater, Portland; CT*
or’g.
Sept. 16 Ratatat, Roseland Theater, Portland; CT* Sept. 17 Flux PaviHion, Roseland
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, AUGUST 28, 2015 Theater, Portland; CT* Sept. 17 Neon Indian, Wonder Ballroom, Portland; TF* Sept. 18 Damian "Jr Gong"Marley, Cuthbert Amphitheater, Eugene; TW* Sept. 18 Destroyer, Wonder Ballroom, Portland; TF* Sept. 18 Empire of the Sun, McMenamins Edgefield, Troutdale; www.etix.corn. Sept. 18 Karla Bonoff, Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF*
Sept. 19— Audien /Jauz,Roseland Theater, Portland; CT* Sept. 19 Blonde Redhead, Wonder Ballroom, Portland; TF* Sept. 19 Kory Quinn, Balch Hotel, Dufur; www.balchhotel.corn. Sept. 19 Kraftwerk, Keller Auditorium, Portland; P5* Sept. 19 Merc Broussard, Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF* Sept. 19 The Music of Pink Floyd: A two-hour sonic blast celebrating the musical legacy of Pink Floyd; Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www.
orsymphony.org.
Sept. 20 Petti LaBeHe,Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www. orsymphony.org. Sept. 22 Clean Bandit, Wonder Ballroom, Portland; TF* Sept. 23 Madeleine Peyroux, Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF* Sept. 23 Vintage Trouble, Wonder Ballroom, Portland; TF* Sept. 23 ZeHa Day, Star Theater, Portland; CT* Sept. 24 Dark Star Orchestra, Cuthbert Amphitheater, Eugene; TW* Sept. 24 Dave Alvin and Phil Alvin with The Guilty Ones,Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF* Sept. 25 Citizen Cope, Wonder * Ballroom, Portland; TF Sept. 25 — Megan Nicole,Roseland Theater, Portland; CT* Sept. 25 Patchy Sanders, Britt Pavilion, Jacksonville; www.brittfest. org. Sept. 25 — The W ho/ Joan Jett and the Blackhearts,Moda Center, Portland; www.ticketmaster.corn. Sept. 26 Beth Hart, Roseland Theater, Portland; CT* Sept. 26 O.A.R, McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; www.etix.
corn.
Sept. 26 The OhHellos, Wonder Ballroom, Portland; TF* Sept. 27 Counting Crows, Cuthbert Amphitheater, Eugene; TW* Sept. 27 Marty Friedman,Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF* Sept. 27 Twiztid, Roseland Theater, Portland; CT* Sept. 27 Uncle Acid & the Deadbeats,Wonder Ballroom, Portland; TF*
Sept. 28 Chelsea Wolfe, Hawthorne Theater, Portland; CT* Sept. 28 George Thorogood & The Destroyers,McDonald Theater, * Eugene; TW Sept. 28 — Mew/The Dodos, Wonder Ballroom, Portland; TF* Sept. 28 Shamir, Star Theater, Portland; CT* Sept. 28 Theivery Corporation, Roseland Theater, Portland; CT* Sept. 29 Boz Scaggs, Hult Center for the Performing Arts, Eugene; www. hultcenter.org.
LECTURES8K
COMEDY Aug. 28 Garrison KeiHor's "A Prairie HomeCompanion," Oregon Zoo,Portland;SOLD OUT;www. zooconcerts.corn Aug. 28 My Brother, My Brother and Me:The McElroy Brothers are experts in nothing whatsoever, but that doesn’ t stop them from attempting to solve every question, query and quandary posed by listeners of their top-rated podcast, with Sawbones; Aladdin Theater, Portland; SOLDOUT;TF* Aug. 31 Gabriel Iglesias, LB Day Amphitheatre as part of the Oregon State Fair, Salem; wwworegonstatefair. Ol'g
Sept. 11 Kevin Hart, Moda Center, Portland; www.ticketmaster.corn. Sept. 11 Russell Peters, Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; P5* Sept. 12 Last Comic Standing, Britt Pavilion, Jacksonville; www.brittfest. Ol'g.
Sept. 18-19 RonWhite, Spirit Mountain Casino, Grand Ronde; www. spiritmountain.corn. Sept. 19 Sebastian Maniscalco, Newmark Theatre, Portland; P5* Sept. 25 Lewis Black, Craterian Theater at the Collier Center for the Performing Arts, Medford; www. craterian.org.of "Eat Pray Love" presents a talk based on her new book, "Big Magic: Creative Living Beyond Fear"; Newmark Theatre, Portland; P5* Oct. 5-April 28 Portland Arts & Lectures, Literary Arts Series:Five memorable lectures featuring authors Jane Smiley, Anthony Doerr, Adam Gopnik, Claudia Rankine, and Mohsin Hamid; Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www.literary-arts.org.
SYMPHONY 8K
OPERA Sept. 3 Waterfront Concert: A free festival featuring a concert by the Oregon Symphony with a spectacular fireworks display; Tom McCall Waterfront Park, Portland; www.
orsymphony.org. Sept. 12 Pablo Villages, Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www.
out of town *Tickets TW:TicketsWest, www.tickets›
west.corn or 800-992-8499 TF:Ticketfly, www.ticketfly. corn or 877-435-9849 CT:CascadeTickets, www. cascadetickets.corn or 800› 514-3849
P5:Portland’5 Centers for the Arts, www.portland5.corn or 800-273-1530 orsymphony.org. Sept. 17— "Pokemon: Symphonic Evolutions":Pokemon comes to life with all new musical arrangements and carefully timed visuals from recent and classic Pokemon video games; Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www.
orsymphony.org. Sept. 24 "An American In Paris": Two American works surround the music of two of France’s greatest composers, performed by the Eugene Sypmphony; Hult Center for the Performing Arts, Eugene; www. hultcenter.org or 541-682-5000. Sept. 26-28 Colin Currie, Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www.
orsymphony.org.
THEATER 5 DANCE Through Oct. 31 Oregon Shakespeare Festival:Includes the following productions: "Long Day’ s Journey into Night" (through Oct. 31), "Much Ado about Nothing" (through Nov. 1), "Guys and Dolls" (through Nov. 1), "Pericles" (through Nov. 1), "Secret Lovein Peach Blossom Land"(through Oct. 31), "Antony and Cleopatra" (through Oct. 9), "The Happiest Song Plays Last" (through Nov.1), "Head Over Heels" (through Oct. 10), "The Count of Monte Cristo" (through Oct. 11) and "Sweat" (through Oct. 31); Oregon Shakespeare Festival, Ashland; www. osfashland.org or 800-219-8161. Sept. 11-12, 18-19 "Bus Stop": Presented by Craterian Performances’ Next Stage Repertory Company; Craterian Theater at the Collier Center for the Performing Arts, Medford; www. craterian.org Sept. 11-Oct. 3 "Stupid FO¹" ing Bird":Aaron Posner’s bold and cheeky updateofCheckov's "TheSeagull"'; Oregon Contemporary Theatre, Eugene; www.octheatre.org or (541) 465-1506. Sept. 12-Oct. 4 "The Understudy": A raucously funny existential expose on human motivation that examines the underbelly of the theatre business and the personal drama behind the curtain; Artists Repertory Theatre, Portland; www.artistsrep.org or 503-241-1278. Sept. 18-Oct. 4 "Mary Poppins", The Shedd Institute, Eugene; www. theshedd.org or 541-434-7000. Sept. 18-Oct. 11 "Our Town": Thornton Wilder’s Pulitzer Prize›
GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 23 winning "Our Town" transports the audience to a small New England town at the turn of the twentieth century whose secret desires, family conflicts,
museumofcontemporarycraft.org or 503-223-2654.
familiar today; Presented by Portland Center Stage; The Gerding Theater at the Armory, Portland; www.pcs.org or 503-445-3794. Sept. 22-27 "Pippin":A high› flying, death-defying hit musical from the composer of "Wicked," and winner of four 2013 Tony Awards; L!.S. Bank Broadway in Portland series; Keller Auditorium, Portland; www. portlandopera.org or 503-241-1802. Oct. 3-Nov. 8 "Cuba Libre": This Broadway-scale, contemporary musical tells the story of a man caught between countries, losses and loves, and his search for freedom, and features the three-time Grammy nominated band Tiempo Libre; Artists Repertory Theatre, Portland; www.artistsrep.org or 503-241-1278.
Through Aug. 31 Drive-in at Zidell Yards:A pop-up outdoor film series accessible to cars, bicyclists, riders of mass transit and walkers alike, featuring "An American Werewolf in London"
loves andlosses areresoundingly
EXHIBITS Through Sept. 7 "Ripley's Believe
it or Not,"OregonMuseumof Science and Industry, Portland; www.omsi.edu or 800-955-6674. Through Sept. 20 "Gather," World Forestry Center, Portland; www. worldforestry.org. Through Jan. 3, 2016 Portland Art Museum:The following exhibits are currently on display: "Gods and
Heroes: Masterpiecesfrom theEcole des Beaux-Arts, Paris" (through Sept. 13); "Ai Weiwei: Circle of Animals/ Zodiac Heads: Gold" (through Sept. 13); and "Handand Wheel:Contemporary Japanese Clay" (through Oct. 18); "Fotofolio: Adams, Strand, Weston, Weston, White" (through Jan. 3, 2016); Portland Art Museum, Portland; www.portlandartmuseum.org or 503-226-2811. Through July 31, 2016 Jordan Schnitzer Museum ofArt: The following exhibits are currently on displ ay:"The Word Became Flesh: Images of Christ in Orthodox Devotional Objects" (through Aug.
30); "JapaneseImpressions from
the Vault: The Rare, the Beautiful, and the Bizarre" (through Sept. 6); "Birds & Beasts: Animal Imagery in the Permanent Collection (through Sept. 13); "Brett Weston in Oregon" (through Sept. 20); "Masterworks on Loan" (through October 25); ""True" Korean Landscapes & Virtuous Scholars" (through July 24, 2016); and "Benevolence 8 Loyalty: Filial Piety in Chinese Art" (through July 31, 2016); Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art,
Eugene; jsma.uoregon.edu.
Sept. 3-Jan. 9, 2016 "Alien She":The first exhibition to examine the lasting impact of early1990s pioneering punk feminist movement Riot Grrrl on artists and cultural producers working today; Museum of Contemporary Craft, Portland; www.
MISCELLANY
(Aug. 28), "Jurassic Park" (Aug.29), "North by Northwest" (Aug. 30) and "Pee-Wee’s Big Adventure (Aug. 31); Zidell’s South Waterfront property (between the Ross Island Bridge and Tilikum Crossing), Portland; www. nwfilm.org or 503-221-1156. Through Sep. 6 "The Art of Reinvention: Paul ThomasAnderson & His Influences":the Northwest Film
Center’s screenings ofAnderson’s
seven films, plus 14 other films that have influenced his work; Portland Art Museum, Portland; www.nwfilm.org or 503-221-1156. Through Sept. 7 The Oregon State Fair:Note: Pat Benatar and Neil Giraldo concert canceled; Oregon State Fairgrounds, Salem; www. oregonstatefair.org. ThroughSept.9— Sunsetsinthe Garden:Complimentary tastings from local wineries and breweries, live music, tram tours and the opportunity to enjoy sunset from the beautiful Sensory Garden on Wednesday evenings; The Oregon Garden, Silverton; www. oregongarden.org or 503-874-8100. Sept. 9 National Circus and Acrobats of the People's Republic of China:Direct from Beijing comes the world’s most riveting acrobatic troupe whoseastonishing actshavedazzled audiences the world over; Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www. orsymphony.org. Sept. 10-20 Time-Based Art Festival:Portland Institute of Contemporary Art’s annual TBA Festival draws artists from across the country and around the globe for a convergence
of contemporary performanceand visual art; throughout Portland; www. pica.org/programs/tba-festival or 503-224-7422. Sept. 16-19 Pendleton Round-Up, Pendleton; www.pendletonroundup. corn, 541-276-2553 or 1-800-457-6336. Sept. 17 Suicide Girls: Blackheart Burlesque, McDonaldTheater,Eugene; TW*
Sept. 17-20 Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus,Moda Center, Portland; www.ticketmaster.corn. Sept. 19 Oregon Trail Live 4.0: The only official live-action version
of the classic computer game.Four›
member teams will engage in wacky, Survivor-style antics based on the real› live experiences of Westward-bound settlers in the early 1800s and also enjoy live music and food; Willamette Heritage Center, Salem; www. oregontraillive.corn or 503-585-7012.
COLDW ELLBANKER
This Week' s Open H ou ses
ORRIS EAL STAT E M
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DIRECTIONS: East on Butler Market Road, right on Nolan, home is on the corner of Nolan Street 8 Evelyn Place.
21360 Evelyn Place
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5) fan
GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 25
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, AUGUST 28, 2015
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The Weinatein Company/Submitted photo
Pierce Brosnan, left, and Owen Wilson star in "No Escape," an outlandish, sometimes brutally violent film.
unapologetic insanity of it all. Case in point. Owen Wilson’s Jack, Lake Bell’s Annie and their of the focus and suspense is about two young daughters, Lucy (Ster› those people from Texas and their ling Jerins) and Beeze (Claire desperate attempts to avoid a band Geare), are seemingly trapped on of thugs who track them with the a rooftop where revolutionaries relentless fervor of mask-wearing are systematically gunning down killers in slasher movies. We don’ t civilians locals, Americans, Eu›
ney-accentedHammond in a hotel
even learn the names of most of the Asians who are slaughtered
Disgusting Food and Sing Ka› raoke and Operate Weird Little
• American everymansuddenly develops action-hero skils in ’No Escape’
L
ooks like they picked the wrong week to move to a fourth-world country.
"No Escape" is an outlandish,
sometimes brutally violent, ex› ploitative, fast-paced white-knuck›
ler featuring your classic Ameri› can everyman who suddenly de› velops action-hero skills when his family is placed in danger. When I say "white-knuckler,"
I mean that literally. "No Escape" takes place in an unnamed Asian country that resembles Cambo›
dia (it was filmed in Thailand, but there’s no reference to any one nation). Soon after an American
RICHARD ROEPER
"fie Escape" 103 minutes R, for strong violence throughout, and for language
ropeans,doesn't matter.
Jack says their only hope is to leap to a slightly lower rooftop
throughout the movie while the American family hides and ducks across the street from their build› and runs and plans an escape. ing. Annie should go first, and And yet. There’s no denying di› then he’ ll THROW his kids to her.
bar, he invented a special kind of valve, but his company failed, and now he’s taken a job with a
giant American conglomerate that will supposedly provide clean drinking water to millions of the
localshere in Unnamed Fourth World Country Where People Eat Stores and Recklessly Drive Odd Vehicles.
Brosnan’s a hoot playing a griz› zled ex-patwho wears a tiger's
In slow motion, as it turns out. tooth around his neck, sports a dle’s skill set for creating almost So why has Jack dragged his variety of nasty scars and talks family arrives, a bloody revolution unbearably tense and quite twist› family halfway across the world? of once having had a family of his breaks out, and hundreds of inno› ed suspense pieces in which you’ ll As Jack explains to Pierce Bros› own. cent locals are murdered but all find yourself laughing at the sheer nan’s booze-soaked, crusty, Cock› Continued next page rector/co-writer John Erick Dow›
movies
PAGE 26 e GO! MAGAZINE
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, AUGUST 28, 2015
or ire’. a cameo- e e s s ceo e • Swanberg’s film is equalparts dark comedy, film noir, relationship drama,andmood piece
N
early
every scene in "Dig› ging for Fire" offers up a fresh slice of life, usually embodied in a familiar face or two showing up and moving the sto›
RICHARD
ROEPER
ry in a different direction. It’s the
kind of movie where you elbow the person next to you when, out of nowhere, there’s Anna Kend›
rick showing up for an impromp› tu pool party, or look, it’s Orlando Bloom at the end of the bar! Not that we’ re talking about
glamorizedcameos here.These
"Digging forFire" 83 minutes R, for language, including somesexual references, drug useand brief graphic nudity
Ben Richardson/The Orchard via The Associated Press
This photo provided by The Orchard shows, Mike Birbiglia, from left, as Phil, Jake Johnson as Tim, and Sam Rockwell as Ray, in a scene from the film, "Digging for Fire."
are working actors of v arious
generations and levels of fame,
They have a good, solid marriage.
no doubt attracted to this material because it’s that increasingly rare
Sure,they're in that zone where they jump right into the lifestyle. they’ re not the 20-something, iro› Puttering around the grounds ny-loving hipsters they once were one morning, Tim finds a rusty but they’ re cool. They’ ve got old revolver and something that this. could be a human bone poking Tim and Lee like to think of out from the mud. He’s imme› themselves as bohemian liberals, diately intrigued to the point of but they’ re not above accepting near-obsession. What took place money from Lee’s wealthy par› on this property so many years ents (Judith Light and Sam El› ago? Was it ... MURDER? "Digging For Fire" bears more liott) so Jude can attend private schooL (Like political candidates than a slight resemblance to some campaigning for better public of Woody Allen’s crime-themed education while sending their pictures, such as "Manhattan offspring to private schools, they Murder Mystery" and this sum› rationalize this by convincing mer’s "Irrational Man," w here themselves there’s nothing wrong the possibility of a violent act is
film that’s all about the things peoplesay when they'rein aroom together and the things they do when they’ re left to their own devices. Everyone in this movie talks a
good game. Jake Johnson (who co-wrote the film with director Joe Swan›
berg) gives a terrific, offbeat per› formance as Tim, a public school teacher married to Lee (Rosema› rie DeWitt), a yoga instructor who should be more relaxed about life
in general, given she’s a yoga in› structor. (DeWitt specializes in playing the kind of characters who would say, "I used to be a much nicer person.") They have a hilariously ador› able toddler son named Jude (played by Swanberg’s son Jude).
From previous page It’s as if his James Bond had
much-needed "me time" with her family giving Tim the perfect
in an understated manner that might not make for the most dra›
matic fireworks, but feels right. Director and co-writer Swan› bros over to down beers and join him in digging around the proper› berg also edited the film, and there are some perfectly cut se› ty in search of more clues. Sam Rockwell plays Ray, that quences. (Just as Lee is getting too one guy from your group who close to Ben, Tim is finding him› refused to segue from hedonist self deeply attracted to Max, who to responsible married guy. He shares his keen interest in literally shows up at the house with two digging for more information.) free-spirited lovelies: Max (Brie This is the most ambitious and Larson) and Alicia (Anna Kend› the most mainstream film to date rick), who quickly strip down and from Swanberg, whose previous works include "Happy Christ› jump into the pooL Meanwhile, out of town, Lee’ s mas," "Drinking Buddies" and a honor is defended at a bar by a segment of aVHS." Equal parts guy named Ben(Orlando Bloom), film noir, relationship drama, which results in Ben needing dark comedy and mood piece, stitches, and Lee and Ben getting "Digging for Fire" is a movie made into dangerously flirty territory by someone who clearly loves the on the beach, under the moon. art of movies. Like nearly every other scene in — Richard Roe per is a film critic "Digging for Fire," it plays out for Tribune News Service. opportunity to invite some of his
with wanting the best for your
the vehicle to discoveries of some
own.) Nor are they above jumping at the opportunity to spend a few weeks at a sprawling home in the Hollywood Hills that belongs to
deeply buried truths about certain characters. Lee is only mildly intrigued by Tim’s discovery. She reminds him he’s supposed to be doing their
one of Lee’s yoga clients. In fact,
taxes beforeshe sets out for some
who’s in town for the hookers.
a rock or a handy piece of furni› puts that aside and teams up with called away to a more pressing ture and cave your skull in. him to save their daughters. As matter. And when they DO final› Lake Bell does strong work as a Jack keeps saying, all they have ly find you, they cackle and taunt mother who is fiercely protective to do is stay 10 steps ahead of the you and otherwise drag things out, of her daughters and though men trying to kill them. giving you just enough time to ... you know she wants to kill Jack SPOILER ALERT. Fortunately Well. Just because a movie is herself for putting them in this for this family, these bad guys are called "No Escape" doesn’t mean situation (somehow Jack had NO like the bad guys in nearly every there’s no possibility of an escape. — Richard Roe per is a film critic IDEA half the country considered thriller of this kind. Just when his corporation Enemy No. I), she they’ re about to find you, they get for Tribune News Service.
The perpetually laid-back Wil› been booted from the MI6 in fa› son seems like an odd choice to vor of a guy who looks like Dan› play a husband and father who iel Craig, and now he’s skulking has to get his hands bloody in or› about in the shadows as a gun for der to protect his family, but he ac› hire. It should come as a surprise tually gives one of his best perfor› to no one that when the bleep hits mances. Jack is a loving husband the fan, Hammond turns out to and a tender father, but when be more than just a drunken lech backed into a corner, he will grab
movies
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, AUGUST 28, 2015
GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 27
’Diary of a Teenage Girl’ is rewarding, squirm-inducing of-age experience seen through the eyes of an awkward, unsure teen
It:RISTENTILLOTSON
feeling the heady thrill of an older man’s desire. When he tells her that they should stop, her assumption
isn’t that they’ re being inappropri› ate, but that he must think she’s fat. Minnie goes on to further adven›
"Diary of a TeenageGirl" 102 minutes R, for strong sexual content including dialogue, graphic nudity, drug use, language anddrinking.
tures: dancing on her bed under a poster of Iggy Pop with her BFF Kimmie, watching Patty Hearst
Even for freewheeling 1970s San Francisco, Minnie Goetze isn’ t
your typical 15-year-old. An aspir› ing cartoonist, Minnie (the mag› netic Bel Powley in what is right› ly being lauded as the breakout Bel Powley and Kristen Wiig star in "Diary of a Teenage Girl." performance of the year) roams
Submitted photo
on TV and smoking pot with Mom and her pals in the family’s always hopping living room. She uses her superior boudoir know-how to take charge during a hookup with a classmate and, on a disturbing but later regretted whim, services a couple of guys in a bar bathroom with Kimmie for $5.
It’s easy to forget that the story is Lolita. He is, of course, the one in set more than 40 years ago un› the wrong here as the ostensible til you pause to think about how grown-up, but hand-wringing over much more freedom kids had then the notion that the affair glorifies to make mistakes without their too ugly to ever be loved the next, recting for the screen, what Heller adult/minor sex is m issing the parents or the whole social-me› dia-connected world finding out. Minnie is on a journey that’s spec› has accomplished with the movie point. tacular on the surface but univer› is nothing short of amazing. This isn’t a morality play like What we can hope has also ticular, might not make her Ev› sally relatable underneath. Monroe, s o mewhat l i k a ble so much of what Hollywood turns changed isthat audiences are eryteen. But "The Diary of a Teen› Based on a l argely autobi› despite his icky weakness, is no out concerning wayward girls› made less uneasy by a girl indulg› age Girl" is as rewarding as it is ographical 2002 graphic novel by Humb crt Humb crt-style creep, for which the only acceptable out› ing her libido than they would be if squirm-inducing for its honesty, Phoebe Gloeckner, "Diary" was just as Minnie is no sex-kitten come is punishment. It’s a coming› she were a boy. the city with minimal supervision
from her party-girl mother (Kris› ten Wiig), drinking, doing drugs and failing at school. Oh, and sleeping with her mom’s lollygag› ger boyfriend, Monroe (Alexander Skarsgard). That last circumstance, in par›
audacity and artful portrayal of adolescence from a girl’s point of view. Fearless and foolhardy one minute, desperately afraid she’ s
adapted for the stage in 2010 by playwright-actor Marielle Heller to good reviews. Considering her lack of experience writing and di›
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movies
PAGE 28 e GO! MAGAZINE
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, AUGUST 28, 2015
Submitted photo
Zec Efron plays an aspiring DJ in "We Are Your Friends."
e
e o u r r i en s a
alk about a mediocre mash› other zippy touches into certain up. Much of "We Are Your scenes, i.e., when Cole explains ~i i e Friends" plays like an elec› how his goal as a D J is to get your tronic dance music update of a heart racing at 128 bpm (beats very good John Travolta movie› per minute), at which point you’ ll "Saturday Night Fever" with be under his spell and you’ ll a liberal sprinkling of plot ele› dance until you pass out or some ments from a quite terrible Tom such thing. (On the heels of the Cruise movie called "Cocktail." exhilarating creative passages Zac Efron, who always looks in the Brian Wilson film "Love so shiny and buff on screen (Seth & Mercy" and the N.W.A movie Rogen once said, "I marvel at the "Straight Outta Compton," this is fact we’ re literally the same spe› pretty silly and superficial stuff ) cies"), turns in his usual capable Just as John Travolta’s Tony if not particularly riveting per› Manero in "Fever" hung around formance as our hero, a 23-year› with a scrappy, ragtag bunch of old aspiring DJ named Cole childhood friends, Cole is tight who dreams of making it big in with his crew of scrappy, ragtag Hollywood. childhood friends. (Tony’s group "All you need is a laptop, some i ncluded th e d i m i nutive a n d talent and one track," says Cole troubled Bobby C. Cole’s group an assessment I’m guessing includes the diminutive and trou› wouldn’t sit well with the likes of bled Squirrel.) Skrillex and other superstar DJs Tony and the boys spent their who can fill arenas around the days hustling for money and globe with their talent for mixing chasing girls and dreaming of a music magic. better life. But for one night ev›
RICHARD ROEPER
"We Are YourFriends" 96 minutes R, for languagethroughout, drug use, sexual content and somenudity
SS OI’
Bentley’s James is a veteran DJ and hard-partying man of the world who takes young Cole un› der his wing and teaches him the tricks of the trade. James’ beau› tiful girlfriend (Emily Ratajkow› ski) eventually has a thing for Cole. "We Are Your Friends" earns
its R rating for generous help› ings of casual drug use, female nudity, language and sex but it still feels like a lightweight
to having the chops, but he’s a comfortable presence onscreen.
The same cannot be said of his co-star.
Jon Bernthal (" Fury," "The Walking Dead" ) livens things up as a barracuda who hires the boys to c old-call homeowners who are underwater with their
mortgages and take advantage of their plight. Bentley does fine work playing the needlessly mopey James, who has world› take on the EDM culture. Nearly wide fame, an insanely fabulous chasing girls and dreaming of a all of the successful and/or am› house and a gorgeous girlfriend, better life. But for one night ev› bitious people in this movie are but can barely get out of bed in ery week, Cole is a star on the DJ good-looking white men, while the morning because he’s be› platform and his pals bask in his the women are dancers and par› come a sellout. ty girls and personal assistants The music is what the music is glory. well-suited to the dance floor at Enter the "Cocktail" phase of and sexual predators. The most substantial female 2 a.m., but not particularly mem› the story! In that 1988 minor camp clas› role goes to Emily Ratajkowski, orable as a movie soundtrack (as sic, Bryan Brown’s Coughlin is a who sprang to fame based on opposed to "Saturday Night Fe› veteran bartender and hard-par› that "Blurred Lines" video. Ms. ver" and those iconic cuts from tying man of the world who takes Ratajkowski had a small role in the Bee Gees). The buildup to young Flanagan (Tom Cruise) "Gone Girl," played herself in Cole’s One Big Shot at Stardom is under his wing and teaches him the "Entourage" movie and is simplistic and kinda goofy. "We Are Your Friends" is one Director and co-writer M ax ery week, Tony was a star on the the tricks of the trade. Cough› front and center here as Cole’s Joseph brings a kind of DJ sen› dance floor and his pals basked lin’s beautiful wife (Kelly Lynch) love interest. To date, there is no of the worst titles of the year, and sibility to his approach, having in his glory. eventually has a thing for young substantial evidence of any real the trailer was just awful. The ac› acting talent. Efron isn’t exact› tual product is a step up, squarely fun with the material and inject› Cole and the boys spend their Flanagan. In "We Are Your Friends," Wes ly Ryan Gosling when it comes in the land of below average. ing animation and graphics and days hustling for money and
movies
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, AUGUST 28, 2015
GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 29
SUNNYS l3E SPORTS
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Zade Roeenthal 1 Submitted photo
Paul Rudd as Ant-Man in Marvel’s latest film. •
O N LOCA L S CREEN S Here’s what’s showing onCentral Or› egon movie screens. Forshowtimes, see listings on Page31. Reviews byRichardRoeperorRogerMoore,unless otherwise noted.
HEADS UP "Artists DenPresents Alt-J" An intenseand moody performance bythe U.K. rock group, captured live atLosAngeles’s historic Hollywood American Legion.Featureshits from alt-J’s newest album, "This IsAllYours" andtheir 2012debut "AnAwesome Wave",aswellasexclusiveconcert footage andbandinterviews that will not beshown anywhereelse. Thisfilm screens at7:30 p.m. Wednesdayat RegalOld Mill Stadium16 & IMAX in Bend.Cost is $12.50. 90minutes. NoMPAA rating. — Synopsi sfi vm Fathom Events
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Rating: Threestars. 103minutes. (R) Roeper "WarRoom" — TonyandElizabethJordanhave it all great jobs, abeautiful daughter, andtheir dreamhouse.Butappearancescanbedeceiving. Tony andElizabeth Jordan’s world is actually crumbling underthe strain of afailing marriage. But their livestakean unexpected turn when Elizabethmeetsher newest client, Miss Clara, and is challengedto establish a"war room"anda battle plan ofprayerfor herfamily. No star rating available. 120minutes. (PG) — Synopsis fivm thefilm's website "We AreYourFriends" Inthis lightweight take on electronic dancemusic culture, anaspiring DJ (ZacEfron, capable if notparticularly riveting) dreams ofmaking it big inHollywoodandcatches the eye ofhis mentor’s beautiful girlfriend. The music is unmemorable,andthe hero’s shot at stardom is kindagoofy. Rating: Twostars. 96 minutes. (R) Roeper
STILL SHOWING
"American Ultra" Asoupspoonturns lethal in the unlikely handsof sweetandspacy stoner Mike (JesseEisenberg) inthe violently paranoid action comedy"American Ultra." Mike’s alot like the spoon harmless unlessdeployed inthe right way because he usedto beaparticularly WHAT’S NEW effective "asset" at theCIA. Mikejust wants toget stoned, behappyandhavethegovernmentleave "The Diary of aTeenageGirl" Filmmaker him alone,embracing the’60s ethos of "turn on, Marielle Hellerandactress Bel Powleydeliver a tune in, dropout." Ultimately, thehumanist nature sexual coming-of-agestory frank enoughto be of the film doesn’t allow that tofully happen, but it’ s discomfiting anddisarming in equal measure. a heck of alot of fun watching Mikefigure that out. "The Diary of a TeenageGirl" goes where "Lolita," Rating: Three andahalf stars. 95 minutes. (R) "Smooth Talk," "Thirteen"and"AnEducation" — VaticWa/sh, have gonebefore just to nameafew and claims it asnewterritory. Rating: Fourstars. 102 TnbuneNewsService minutes. (R) "Ant-Man" Thecasting of likable, verbally —Ann Homaday, nimble PaulRuddasScott Lang/Ant-Manseemed The WashingtonPost inspired, butwhat wehaveis alightweight, cliche› riddled origins story thatveersbetweeninside-joke "Digging for Fire" JoeSwanberg (" Happy comedy, ponderousredemptionstory linesand Christmas" di ) rects thestory of a happily married nifty CGIsequencesthat still seemrelatively couple (JakeJohnsonand Rosemarie DeWitt) insignificant. Rating:Twostars.117 minutes (PG› off on separateadventures. Equal parts film noir, 13) — Roe per relationship drama,dark comedyand moodpiece, "Cartel Land" Thecourageous, scary "Cartel this is amovie madebysomeone whoclearly loves the art of movies.Rating:Threeandahalf stars. 83 Land" is ajaw-dropping documentary about two minutes (R) Roeper vigilante groups, onopposite sides of the U.S.› Mexico border,trying tostaveoff Mexican drug "No Escape" As abloody revolution breaks cartels. When the action focusesonthe battle out in anunnamedAsian country, thefocus is on lines in Mexico,the results arenothing short of Owen Wilson’s visiting family fromTexastrying to spectacular.Rating:Threestars. 98 minutes. (R) escape abandof thugs in pursuit. But there’s no — David Lewis, denying director JohnErickDowdle’s skill setfor creating almostunbearably tenseandquite twisted San FrancrscoChronicle suspensepieces inwhichyou’ l find yourself laughing atthe sheerunapologetic insanity of it all. Continued next page
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PAGE 30 e GO! MAGAZINE
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, AUGUST 28, 2015
From previous page
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"Fantastic Four" —A bunch of mostly humorless brainiacs are transformed into mutants with superpowers not nearly as interesting or complex or inherently dramatic as the gifts-slash-curses of aSuperman or a Spidey. This is a lightweight and basically unnecessary attempt to bring some cinematic life to one of the lesser teams in theMarvel Universe. Rating: One and a half stars. 105 minutes. (PG-13) Roeper "The Gift" —Joel Edgerton writes, directs and co-stars in a chilling little gem that feels like a disturbing whisper in the night. Jason Bateman is first-rate as atransplant to California whose life is invaded byan awkward acquaintance from high school (Edgerton). Just when wethink we know where "The Gift" is going, we’ resurprised. Rating: Threeand ahalf stars. 105 minutes. (R) Roeper "Hitman: Agent 47" — Engineered from birth to be aperfect killing machine, Agent 47 (Rupert Friend) goes on a dangerous mission in an action movie with video gameorigins. The action sequencesare nothing special and the big-picture questions havebeentackled elsewhere with far more depth andgrace. Rating: Oneand ahalf stars. 96 minutes. (R) — Roeper "Inside Out" —The world of an11-year-old girl is seen through theemotions in her head Joy, Sadness, Disgust and the like in a bold, gorgeous instant classic from Disney Pixar that deserves anAcademyAward nomination for best picture. Rating: Four stars. 93 minutes. (PG) Roeper "Jurassic World" — Pure, dumb,wall-to› wall fun, "Jurassic World" earns every inch of its PG-13rating for somebone-crunching violence, numerous scenes of dinosaurs munching onhumans and bloodspraying here and there. Strap onthe seat belt and let the silly greatness of it all wash overyou. This film is shown locally in IMAX 3-D. Rating: Three and ahalf stars. 124 minutes. (PG-13) — Roeper "TheMan From U.N.C.L.E."— Reveling in the fashions, weaponsand overall vibe of its 1960s time period, GuyRitchie’s great› looking spy thriller plays like a lower-key, vintage edition of a "Mission: Impossible" movie. It’s slick, stylish and consistently entertaining. Rating: Threestars. 114 minutes. (PG-13) Roeper "Minions" —Notevery co-star is worth a whole movie, andthe minions, as it turns out, weren’ t. Aspin-off of the "Despicable Me" movies, in which the little yellow fellows were the villain’s henchmen, "Minions" is a pointless, frenetic exercise with tired jokes andweak sequencespiledoneontopofthe other, until feature length is finally reached andeverybodycan gohome.Rating:One star. 91 minutes. (PG) — Mick LaSaiie, San Francisco Chronicle "Mission: Impossible —RogueNation"Thisis the rare instance of the later movies in a series easily exceeding the quality of the original. As TomCruise’s Ethan Hunt performs harrowing stunts andengages in clever banter with his adversaries, we essentially get the best JamesBondmovie since "Casino Royale." Rating: Threeanda half stars. 131 minutes. (PG-13) Roeper "Mr. Holmes" —"Mr. Holmes" imagines the old age ofSherlock Holmes. Wesee Holmes (lan McKellen) in two time periods. In1947, he is struggling with a memory loss so severe that hemust reach invain for the names of people in his ownhousehold. Yet in the face of this he is trying to write the record of his last case, the one that made him give up sleuthing and retire to the country. Thiscase,whichtookplacesome30years
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Amy Schumer and Brie Larson star in "Trainwreck.o before, is also depicted. "Mr. Holmes" plays out at onesteady pace, without any alteration in velocity, but it always gives us something, some interplay of characters worth noting, some insight into the great detective’s personality..Rating: Threestars. 104 minutes. (PG) — Mick LaSaiie, San Francisco Chronicle "Ricki andthe Flash" — Meryl Streep doing Bruce Springsteen? I’ ll bedamned if it doesn’t work in director Jonathan Demme’s amiable and predictable rock ’n’ roll fable about a late-middle-age musician rethinking her choices. It’s a sweet, smart and funny confection. Rating: Threestars. 102 minutes. (PG-13) Roeper "Shaun the Sheep" — "Shaun the Sheep" from "Wallace andGromit" and "Chicken Run" filmmakers AardmanAnimations isn’ t like most kid movies. Thedialogue-free film uses ingenious visual storytelling to weave the tale of Shaun, the intrepid little sheep, and his pals, who set out to rescue their bumbling farmer. Engaging, creative fun for the whole family even if you don’t have a child in tow. Rating: Three stars. 85 minutes.
the time-tested notion that it’s the monsters you see the least that are themost horrific. Rating: Oneand a half stars. 97 minutes. (R) — Katie Irjralsb, Tribune News Service "Spy" —A deskbound CIAagent (Melissa McCarthy) is sent on anundercover mission in a foul-mouthed, often hilariously disgusting, slightly padded comedythat soars on the bountiful comedic talents of McCarthy, RoseByrneandJasonStatham. Rating: Three stars. 120 minutes. (PG) — Roe per "Straight OuttaCompton" — Theearly dreams, the big breaksandthe in-fighting are told to great effect in F.Gary Gray’s enthralling, energized tribute to N.W.A. Also something of a docudramaabout Los Angeles in thewakeof the RodneyKing verdict, this is one of the better musical biopics of the last 20 years. Rating: Threeand a half stars. 150 minutes. (R) Roeper "Trainwreck" —The performance of Amy Schumer, in her feature film leaddebut as a NewYorker trying her first grown-up romance, is atour de force of razor-sharp comedic timing. Despite (or maybebecause (PG) of) "Trainwreck’s" sharp edgesandcynical — KatieI4ra/sh, set pieces, it’s a movie youwant to wrap your Tribune NewsService arms around. Rating: Threeand a half stars. 124 minutes. (R) Roeper "Sinister 2" —Horror sequel "Sinister 2" "Vacation" —Grown-up Rusty Griswold is a very strange movie. Youcan’t tell if the filmmakers are deliberately going for a bit of a (Ed Helms) retraces his boyhood vacation goofy, throwback feel, but that’s what comes to Wally World from 1983’s "National across in this spooky tale. Themost sinister Lampoon’s Vacation" in a vile, odious thing in "Sinister 2" is the terrifying domestic disaster populated with unlikable, dopey violence and its ripples throughout the family. characters bumbling through mean-spirited Dad Glint (LeaCoco) is scarier with less set pieces. Rating: Onestar. 99 minutes. (R) — Roe per screen time thananyboogey man, proving
movies
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, AUGUST 28, 2015
MOVI E
T I M E S • For the TJeek foFriday, Aug.28
• There may be anadditional fee for 3-O and IMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change after press time. I
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Bradley Cooper stars in "Aloha," coming to DVD and Biu-Ray.
N EW O N D V D 8 a BLU-RA Y The following movies were re› leased the week ofAug. 25.
"Aloha" Bradley Cooper is terrific as a defensecontractor working in Hawaii, reconnecting with an ex (Rachel McAdams)andcharmed bya fighter pilot (EmmaStone). Cameron Crowe has directed agreat-looking movie with just enough bright spots to get us past the cloudy moments. DVD Extras: Behind thescenes featurette. Additonal Blu-ray Extras: Deleted scenesandalternate ending. Rating: Three stars. 95 minutes. (R) — Moore "Lila and Eve" With the help of another grieving mom(Jennifer Lopez), Lila (Viola Davis) sets out to find the scumwho killed her college› bound son in alurid and ultimately implausible thriller. Davis gives a strong performance, but this dreck is beyond saving. NoDVDor Blu-ray extras listed for this film. Rating: Two stars. 94 minutes. (R) Roeper "Big Game" In the most fantastically ridiculous action movie of 2015, the president of the United States (Samuel L. Jackson) winds up in the unforgiving forests of Finland and teams upwith a bow-and-arrow› wielding boy to fend off a terrorist. "Big Game" never once feels credible, and that’s why it’s so entertaining. No DVD or Blu-ray extras listed for this film. Rating: Threestars. 90 minutes. (PG-1 3) — Roeper
Also available:
"The Pardon," "TwoDays,OneNight," "Skin Trade," and "Citizen Four."
Next Week:
"Mad Max: Fury Road" and"Good Kill."
GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 31
• Acces sibilitydevicesareavailableforsomemoviesatRegalOld Mill Stadium 16 ff /MAX
TOUCHMARK SINCE 1980
I I
Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX,680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend,800-326-3264. • AMERICAN ULTRA (R) Fri-Tue: 3:15, 6:50, 9:30 • ANT-MAN (PG-13) Fri-Tue: 12:15, 3:10, 7:05, 10:10 • ARTISTS DEN PRESENTSALT-J (No MPAA rating) Wed: 7:30 • THE DIA RY OF A TEENAGE GIRL(R) Fri-Tue: 11:45a.m., 2:15, 4:45, 7:15, 9:55 • THE GIFT (R) Fri: 11:55 a.m., 2:35, 5:10, 7:50, 10:35 • HITMAN: AGENT 47 (R) Fri-Tue: 11:50a.m., 2:15, 4:50, 7:20, 9:50 • INSIDE OUT (PG) Fri-Tue: 12:10, 2:40 • JURASSIC WORLD (PG-13) Fri-Tue: 4:25, 7:25, 10:25 • JURASSIC WORLD IMAX3-D (PG-13) Fri-Tue: noon, 3, 6:45, 9:45 • THE MANFROM U.N.C.L.E.(PG-13) Fri-Tue: 11:35 a.m., 2:05, 4:55, 7:40, 10:40 • MINIONS (PG) Fri-Tue: 11:40a.m., 2 • MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE ROGUE NATION (PGI3) Fri-Tue: 12:15, 3:35, 6:55, 10 • NO ESCAPE (R) Fri: 11:45 a.m., 2:20, 4:50, 7:45, 10:25 • RICKI AND THE FLASH (PG-13) Fri-Tue: 12:20, 2:55, 5:15, 8, 10:30 • SHAUN THESHEEP MOVIE(PG) Fri-Tue: 11:35a.m. Submitted photo • SINISTER (R) 2 The biopic "Straight Outta Compton" follows the emergence of NWA. Fri-Tue: 11:50a.m., 2:20, 5, 7:30, 10:05 • STRAIGHT GUTTA COMPTON (R) Fri-Tue: 12:05, 3:30, 7,10:15 Mon-Thu: 2:30, 4:45, 7,9:15 97, Madras, 541-475-3505 • TRAINWRECK (R) • THE MAN FROM U.N.C.L.E.(PG-13) Fri-Tue: 6:40, 9:45 • HITMAN: AGENT 47 (R) Fri-Sun: 11:30a.m., 2, 4:30, 7, 9:30 • WAR ROOM (PG) Fri: 2:40, 5, 7:20, 9:35 Mon-Thu: 2, 4:30, 7,9:30 Fri-Tue: 11:30a.m., 2:30, 7, 9:50 Sat: 12:20, 2:40, 5, 7:20, 9:35 • SHAUN THESHEEP MOVIE(PG) • WE ARE YOUR FRIENDS(R) Sun:12:20, 2:40, 5, 7:20 Fri-Sun: 12:45, 2:45, 4:45 Fri-Tue: 12:25, 3:05, 5:25, 7:55, 10:20 Mon-Thu: 2:40, 5, 7:20 Mon-Thu: 2:45, 4:45 t • MINIONS (PG) I • STRAIGHT OUTTA COMPTON (R) Fri, Mon-Thu: 5 Fri-Sun: 11:45a.m., 3, 6:15, 9:30 McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 Sat-Sun: 12:30, 5 Mon-Thu: 3, 6:15, 9:30 NW Bond St., Bend,541-330-8562 • NO ESCAPE (R) Fri: 2:20, 4:45, 7:15, 9:30 • FANTASTIC FOUR (PG-13) Sat: noon, 2:20, 4:45, 7:15, 9:30 Fri, Wed: 2:30 Sisters Movie House,720 DesperadoCourt, Sat-Sun: 11:30a.m., 2:30 Sun: noon, 2:20, 4:45, 7:15 Sisters, 541-549-8800 Mon-Thu: 2:20, 4:45, 7:15 • SPY (R) • THE MAN FROM U.N.C.L.E.(PG-13) Fri-Thu: 6 • SHAUN THESHEEP MOVIE(PG) Fri: 4:15, 7 • VACATION (R) Fri-Thu: 2:50 Sat: 2:30, 5, 7:30 Fri-Thu: 9 • STRAIGHT OUTTA COMPTON (R) Sun:2,4:30,7 • Younger than 21 may attend all Fri: 3:25, 6:30, 9:25 Mon-Thu: 6:30 screeningsifaccompanied by a legal Sat: 12:15, 3:25, 6:30, 9:25 • MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE ROG U E guardian. Sun: 12:15, 3:25, 6:30 NATION (PG-13) Mon-Thu: 3:25, 6:30 • J s I Fri: 4, 6:45 • VACATION (R) Sat: 2:15, 4:45, 7:15 Tin Pan Theater, 869 NWTin PanAlley, Fri-Sat: 7:05, 8:20 Sun: 1:45, 4:30, 7 Bend, 541-241-2271 Sun-Thu: 7:05 Mon-Thu: 6:15 • WAR ROOM (PG) • CARTEL LAND (R) • MR. HOLMES (PG) Fri-Sat: 1:30, 4:15, 7,9:40 Fri, Sat, Mon-Thu: 3:30 Fri: 4:30 Sun-Thu: 1:30, 4:15, 7 Sun: 2:30 Sat: 4:30, 6:45 • THE DIA RY OF A TEENAGE GIRL(R) Sun: 4, 6:15 Fri, Sat, Mon-Thu: 6 Mon-Thu: 6:30 Pine Theater, 214 N.Main St., Prineville, Sun: 5 • RICKI AND THE FLASH(PG- l3) 541-4 I6-10 I4 • DIGGING FOR FIRE (R) Fri: 4:45, 7:15 Fri, Sat, Mon-Thu: 8:15 • THE MAN FROM U.N.C.L.E.(PG-13) Sat: 2:45, 5, 7:15 Sun: 7:15 Fri:4,7 Sun: 1:45, 4, 6:30 Sat-Sun:1,4,7 Mon-Thu: 6:45 I I I Mon-Thu: 6:15 • SHAUN THESHEEP MOVIE(PG) Redmond Cinemas,1535 SWOdemMedo • MR. HOLMES (Upstairs PG) Fri: 6:45 Road, Redmond, 541-548-8777 Fri: 4:10, 7:15 Sat: 2:30 Sat-Sun: 1:10, 4:10, 7:15 • AMERICAN ULTRA (R) Sun: 2 Fri-Thu: 6:45, 9 Mon-Thu: 6:30 tI • • HITMAN: AGENT 47 (R) • The upstairs screening room has limited Fri-Sun: 12:15, 2:30, 4:45, 7, 9:15 Madras Cinema 5,1101SWU.S. Highway acce ssibility
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THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, AUGUST 28, 2015
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