Bulletin Daily Paper 05-29-15

Page 1

Serving Central Oregon since1903 $'I

FRIDAY May29,2015

ir S un reVieW LiVemusi candmO re SPECIAL WRAPAROUND ESECTION

GO! MAGAZINE

bendbulletin.com OSU-CASCADES CAMPUS

TODAY'S READERBOARD Everest's changingface

— The mountain's glaciers could be nearly gone bythe end of this century.A3

Treating CanCer — But with a novel method: a modified version of the herpes virus.A3

Travel with yourdogExpect to shell out.E1

min?

Norm Williams/Submitted photos

A great horned owlet, left, was found on the ground in Drake Park after apparently falling out of its nest in April. At right, an adult owl looks down from a nearby tree. ODFW officials were called and they determined the nest was too small to return the owlet. They took it into their care to rehabilitate.

ln brew news —oblivion

• Up to $7.5M,aconsultant says

Brewing Co. opens ataphouse in Bend.GO!

By Tyler Leeds The Bulletin

OSU-Cascades may never own the 46-acre pumice mine on Bend's west side, but it now has a sense of what it would take to make the land suitable for

a college — between $6.5 million and $7.5 million to haul, compress and move around dirt.

A proposal to transform the mine includes getting rid of the berm around the side that runs along SW Chandler Avenue and using it to provide fill. The university is planning to develop a four-year campus in Bend big enough to support 5,000 stu-

Plus: Fromtap to canThe Growler Guysadd anew product — for when glass isn't an option.C6

dents.The school already owns a 10-acre parcel

And a Web exclusive-

By Dylan J. Darling

rehabilitators to release it. It

owlet was running into.

Blimps over theCapitol? One member of Congress thinks it needs eyes in thesky after April's unauthorized landing. beudbulletin.com/extras

The Bulletin

then splashed into Mirror Pond on their second attempt. Both times the woman who took care of the owl for the past month

"So I guess he is goingtobe a country owl instead of a city owl," she said. Rorabeck, who works at a Bend veterinary

scooped the wayward bird up. C.J. Rorabeck — who is li-

clinic and lives in southeast

EDITOR'5CHOICE

Attempts to return a fledg-

ling great horned owl to its nest tree and its family Thursday night in Drake Park did not go as planned. The young bird swooped over NWRiverside Boulevard and narrowly avoided being hit by a passing SUV after the first attemptby wildlife

Chocolate can make you thin? Guessagain

censed to care for wildlife and

led the owl's rehabilitationdecided there would not be a third attempt to release it at the

near the SW Century Drive and Chandler Avenue roundabout. Development plans for that site have been approved by the city but are being appealed to the state by a group of residents worried about traffic impacts. SeeMine /A4

Possidle cost tofill the iiumice mine

Bend, said she would release the owl near her home, where

Seattle-based KPFF Consulting Engineers prepared an estimate of the work andcosts necessary to prep the 46-acre site between $6.5 million and $7.5million.

another family of great horned owls lives and would likely take itin.

parkbecause of the trouble the

SeeFly /A6

Sim sonAve.

Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin

OSU-Cascades Phase1

Old pumice mine

C.J. Rorabeck, who rehabilitated the young great horned owl, attempts to toss it toward a branch for a second time while trying to release it in Drake Park on Thursday. After two failed attempts she decided it would be safer to release it near her home. See a video of the release attempt at Hbendbulletin.com.

46acres

10.4ac s

Cost breakdown Excavation and on-site hauling: 255,538 cubic yards ofmaterial, $1.789 million Compaction: 391,602 cubicyards,$392,000 Imported structural fill: 136,064 cubic yards, $1.769million Excavation and recomqaction of existing fill: 218,900 cubic yards, $2.189million

By Sarah Kaplan The Washington Post

This spring, the journal "International Archives

of Medicine" published a delicious new study: According to researchers at

The Bulletin

Germany's Institute of Diet

and Health, people who ate dark chocolate while dieting lost more weight. The media coverage was instantaneous and jubilant:

Digging Aman

the Irish Examiner.

for dirt: on the No longer run for taboo 55years

the chocolate" announced

By Evan Halper

By Kantele Franko

Modern Healthcare.

Tribune News Service

The Associated Press

"Scientists say eating

chocolate can help you lose weight" read a headline in "Excellent News: Chocolate Can Help You Lose Weight!" Huffington Post India boasted. "Dieting? Don't forget It was unbelievable news. And reporters

WASHINGTON-

COLUMBUS, Ohio

— In 55 years as a fugitive, Frank Freshwaters got caught twice.

Joe Biden was not the only one who found himself in crisis when a videotape emerged during the 1988 presidential primary exposing him as a plagiarist. The political operatives who had secretly distributed footage of the senator passing off

shouldn't have believed it. It turns out the Institute of Diet and Health is just a website with no institute attached. Johannes Bo-

hannon, health researcher and lead author of the study, is really John Bohannon, a science journalist. And the study, while based on real results of an actual clinical trial, wasn't

The first time, in 1975, the escaped Ohio

inmate's goodbehavior helped him avoid a trip back to prison when

West Virginia's governor refused to extradite him, citing Freshwaters'"flawless16-year residency," according

the words of a British

politician as his own also had a big problem

aimed at testing the health

to records obtained by

disclosure nearly derailed the candidacy of the rival the operatives worked for, Michael

The Associated Press. Despite multiple aliases and a warrant for his arrest, he had built such a good life

Dukakis. He fired

with his stolen free-

them and issued a major mea culpa.

dom that the governor

benefits of chocolate. It was aimed at testing

on their hands. Their

health reporters, to see if they could distinguish a bad sciencestoryfrom a good one. In many cases,they couldn't. Bohannon, who revealed

concluded Freshwaters had been rehabilitated

Don't expect those

apologies this time.

the stunt in an essay for

i09 this week, was part of a team of gonzo journal-

as a fugitive.

SeeDirt/A6

See Run/A4

ists and one doctor who

wanted to, in Bohannon's words, "demonstrate just how easy it is to turn bad

science into the big headlines behind diet fads." SeeChocolate/A4

TODAY'S WEATHER Stray thunderstorm High 83, Low52 Page B6

INDEX All Ages Business Calendar

E1-6 Classified D 1 - 6Dear Abby C5-6 Comics/Puzzles D3-4 Horoscope In GO! Crosswords D 4 L o cal/State B1-6 TV/Movies E6, GO!

The Bulletin AnIndependent

Q l/i/e use recycled newsprint

Vol. 113, No. 149,

s sections

0

88 267 0 23 29

1


A2

TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, MAY 29, 2015

The Bulletin

NATION Ee ORLD

How to reachUs Anthrax ShiPmentS —TheU.S.Army's top general said Thursday that humanerror probably was not afactor in the Army's mistaken shipment of live anthrax samplesfrom a chemical weaponstesting site that was openedmorethan 70 years ago in adesolate stretch of desert in Utah. Samplesfrom the anthrax lot ended upat18 labs in nine states and an Armylab inSouth Korea, leading morethan two dozenpeople to get treatment for possible exposure.Gen. RayOdierno, the Army chief of staff, told reporters the problemmayhave beena failure in the technical process of killing, or inactivating, anthrax samples.

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Si sil.AvL

Dtschuiersr

By Monica Davey

In 2010, during meetings

New York Times News Service

C HICAGO —

between Hastert and the unJ . D e n n is n amed individual, the t w o

Hastert,a former speaker of discussed "past misconduct" the House of Representatives, by Hastert against the person, has been charged with lying according to the indictment. to the FBI and making cash In those meetings and in lat-

s pokeswoman for t h e U . S. attorney's office, declined to

identify the person who was being paid by Hastert or to comment on

w h ether t h at

individual would face any charges.

withdrawals from banks in a

er discussions, Hastert agreed

way that was designed to hide that he was paying $3.5 million to someone for his "misconduct" from years ago, a federal indictment released on Thursday said.

had known Hastert for most of

to provide money to the per- gress from Illinois in 1986, son "in order to compensate was suddenly catapulted to for and conceal his prior mis- speaker in 1999 after Newt conduct," the indictment said. Gingrich had stepped down. It said he was structuring the According to t h e f ederal cash withdrawals in i n cre- indictment made public on ments designed to avoid bank Thursday, Hastert gave monreporting requirements. The ey to the unnamed person for indictment does not provide four years, starting in 2010. details of the misconduct. On Dec. 8, 2014, Hastert Hastert could n o t be was interviewed by f ederal reached for comment at his agents. He said that he was office in Washington. The not paying anyone with the charges each carry a penal- money, but was keeping the ty of as much as five years in withdrawals for himself beprisonand a$250,000 fine,the cause he felt unsafe with the prosecutor's office said. Hast- banking system. "Yeah," ert is to appear at an arraign- Hastert told the agents, acment at a future date, the pros- cording to the indictment. "I

his or her life. Hastert worked

ecutors said.

in Yorkville from 1965 to 1981.

K imberly

Hastert, 73, the longest-serv-

ing Republican speaker, now works as a lobbyist in Washington. The indictment, an-

nounced by the United States attorney for the Northern District of Illinois, said Hastert,

who was once a high school teacher and wrestling coach

in Yorkville, Illinois, had so far paid $1.7 million to the person, who had lived in Yorkville and

N e rheim, a

Jeb BuSh'S fiIlallCOS —During his transition from Florida governor to likely presidential candidate, JebBushserved onthe boards of or as anadviser to at least15 companies and nonprofits, a dizzying array of corporate connections that earned him millions of dollars and occasional headaches. Bushreturned to corporate America after leaving the governor's mansion in early 2007, andhis industry portfolio expanded steadily until he beganshedding ties late last year to prepare a run for president. Executives whoworked alongside Bush describe him as an engaged adviser with an eye for detail. Yet experts question how anyonecould serve so many boards at once effectively.

Hastert, first elected to Con-

NOrth CarOlina marriage bill —In arebuff to lawmakersin his party, North Carolina's Republican governor, Pat Mccrory, said Thursday hewould veto a measure to allow public officials to refuse to perform marriage ceremonies onthe basis of their religious beliefs. The proposal would allow magistrate judges to refuse to perform all lawful marriages because of a"sincerely held religious objection." Although the bill does not mention same-sex marriages, critics say it is designed to block such nuptials. "No public official who voluntarily swears to support and defend theConstitution and to discharge all duties of their office should beexempt from upholding that oath," Mccrory said in a statement. MOVing a lighthauSe —A Martha's Vineyard lighthouse that is among the most endangered historic landmarks in the U.S.began its gradual march back from a rapidly eroding cliffside Thursday. Powerful hydraulic pistons inched the160-year-old GayHead Lighthouse about 5 feet at a timealong steel rails lathered with soap, starting just before noon. Bymidafternoon, it had moved morethan 25feet. The 52-foot-high, 400-ton brick-and-mortar structure is expected to arrive at its final destination — aconcrete pad about135 feet due southeast — assoon astoday.

kept the cash. That's what I'm (lolng.

KofdS VOFSUS IS — In contrast to the Iraqi army's failures, Kurdish fighters in Syria are onthe march against the Islamic State group, capturing towns andvillages in anoil-rich swath of the country's northeast under the cover of U.S.-led airstrikes. As theKurds close in on Tel Abyad, amajor commercial center on theTurkish border, their advance highlights the decisive importance of combining airstrikes with the presence of acohesive and motivated ally on the ground — so clearly absent in Iraq. In Syria, a country now split mostly betweenalQaida-style militants and forces loyal to President BasharAssad, the U.S. has found areliable partner in the country's main Kurdish fighting force, known asthe YPG.They are moderate, mostly secular fighters, driven by revolutionary fervor anddeep conviction in their cause.

ADMINISTRATION Chairwoman Elizabeth C.McCool..........541-363-0374 Publisher John Costa........................ ManagingEditor Denise Costa.....................541-363-0356

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TALK TO AN EDITOR

Taliball and China —A peaceenvoy from Afghanistanmet in China last week with former Taliban officials with close ties to Pakistan's intelligence agency, in anattempt to keep openthe possibility of formal Afghan peacetalks, officials said. TheTaliban members cameto China to reiterate familiar positions, and the representatives of theAfghan government said it was ready to make astrong effort to build trust.

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Andrew Harnik/The AssociatedPress

Co-champions VanyaShivashankar, left, 13, of Olathe, Kansas, andGokul Venkatachalam, 14, of Chesterfield, Missouri, hold up thechampionship trophy after winning the finals of the Scripps National Spelling Bee onThursday. The bee hadn't ended in atie for 52 years — until last year. Now it's happenedfor an unprecedented two years running. Vanya is the first sibling of a past champion to win.

Her sister, Kavya, won in 2009. Vanya's final word was "scherenschnitte," which means the art of cutting paper into decorative designs. After being informed he'd bethe co-champion if he got the next word right, Gokul didn't even bother to ask the definition before spelling "nunatak." For the record, it means ahill or mountain completely surrounded by glacial ice.

Celebr ation FERMEATED GOODllESS BEER, CIDERL KOMBUCHA

THl>P<9AU

JUnE I&

Lea erremains e iantami storm e ore FIFAeection By Sam Borden

tion of our entire organization,

New York Times News Service

andto find away to fixthings. "We cannot allow the repgoverning body will hold a utation of FIFA to be dragged presidential election today, two through the mud any longer. It days after a group of its leading has to stop here and now." officials were charged with corBlatter is widely expected ruption, its headquarters were to win today — in a vote only raidedand the governments of miles from the luxury hotel two countries announced they where the arrests took placewere investigating more allega- in part because of FIFA's elections ofbribery. toral math. The FIFA president ZURICH — Soccer's world

But when the voting members of FIFA cast their ballots, it most likely will be as if noth-

ing had happened this week. Sepp Blatter, the publidy embattled leader seeking a fifth term as FIFA's president, shows no signs of political damage. Despite a new round of allegations of widespread bribery implicating some of his top lieutenants, 11 of whom have been provisionally suspended

is elected by a one-vote-per-

country poll of its 209 member federations, making the many smaller countries who

I- •

Old II|III Mill

extradition of the executives

detained on its request) or a separate investigation announced by Swiss authorities

o(dmillbeej walk.com

into the bidding for the 2018

and 2022 World Cups.

I. ~wru-

support Blatter an effective counterweight to his unpopularity elsewhere, most notably in Europe. His speech in a Zurich the-

ater Thursday came amid both criticism and support of his leadership from around the world. In Russia and Brazil,

top officials suggested the U.S. ed to handily defeat his only investigators had sought the challenger. arreststo increase American On Thursday, in his first pub- influence in soccer. lic comments since the scandal The remarks struck a mixed became public, Blatter, 79, used tone. One part sadness, one a speech opening FIFA's an- part resolve, one part unyieldnual congress on Thursday to ing optimism, Blatter's speech deflect responsibility for FIFA's urged FIFA and its members problems and simultaneously to do a better job policing suggest he was willing and ca- themselves. "I will not allow the actions pable of solving them. "We, or I, cannot monitor of a few to damage the reputaeveryone all of the time," Blat- tion of FIFA," he said. from soccer, Blatter is expect-

ter said. "If people want to do

Blatter wa s

n o t d i r ectly

wrong, they will also try to hide implicated in the indictment it. But it must also fall to me to be responsible for the reputa-

from the

U .S. Justice De-

partment (which is seeking

:s

J

frl;.fdt .' > I


FRIDAY, MAY 29, 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, May 29, the 149th

day of 2015. Thereare216 days left in the year.

HAPPENINGS FIFA —The international soccer organization is scheduled to hold its presidential election amid a bribery and corruption scandal.A2

HISTORY Highlight:In1765, Patrick Henry denounced theStamp Act before Virginia's Houseof Burgesses. In1790,Rhode Islandbecame the13th original colony to ratify the United States Constitution. In1848, Wisconsin became the 30th state of the union. In1912,the ballet "L'Apres-midi d'un Faune" (TheAfternoon of a Faun), with music by Claude Debussy, premiered in Paris with Vaslav Nijinsky dancing the title role. In1913, the ballet"Le Sacre du printemps" (The Rite of Spring), with music by Igor Stravinsky and choreography by Vaslav Nijinsky, had its chaotic world premiere in Paris. In1917,the 35th president of the United States, John F.Kennedy, was born in Brookline, Massachusetts. In1932,World War I veterans began arriving in Washington to demand cashbonuses they weren't scheduled to receive until 1945.

In1943, Norman Rockwell's portrait of "Rosie the Riveter" appeared on thecover of The Saturday Evening Post. In1953, Mount Everest was conquered asEdmund Hillary of New ZealandandTensing Norgay of Nepal becamethe first climbers to reach the summit. In1961,acouple in Paynesville, West Virginia, becamethe first recipients of food stamps under a pilot program created by President John F.Kennedy. In1973, Tom Bradley was elected the first black mayor of Los Angeles, defeating incumbent SamYorty. In1985, 39 people were killed at the EuropeanCupFinal in Brussels, Belgium, when rioting broke out and awall separating British and Italian soccer fans collapsed. Tea years age:French voters soundly rejected the European Union's proposed constitution, which was also defeated by the Dutch days later. In adeadly rampage at two farmhouses in Bellefontaine, Ohio, 18-yearold Scott Moody shot his grandparents, his mother and two friends before turning the gun on himself. Five years age:Dennis Hopper, the high-flying Hollywood wildman whosememorable career included anearly turn in "Rebel Without A Cause"and an improbable smashhit with "Easy Rider," died in LosAngeles at age74. One year age:Saying he wanted kids to play sports but play safely, President Barack Obama called for more and better research into the effects and treatment of concussions in youth athletes during a summit at the White House. The

Food and DrugAdministration required tanning bedsand sun lamps to carry newwarnings that they should not be usedby anyone underage18.

BIRTHDAYS Former Baseball Commissioner Fay Vincent is 77. Motorsports Hall of Famer AlUnser is 76. Actor Kevin Conwayis 73. Actor Helmut Berger is 71. Rock singer Gary Brooker (Procol Harum) is 70. Actor Anthony Geary is 68. Actor Cotter Smith is 66. Singer Rebbie Jackson is65.Movie composer DannyElfman is 62. Singer LaToyaJackson is 59. Actor TedLevine is 58. Actress Annette Bening is 57. Actor Rupert Everett is 56. Actor Adrian Paul is 56. Singer Melissa Etheridge is 54. Rock musician NoelGallagher is 48. Actor Anthony Azizi is 46. Rock musician ChanKinchla (Blues Traveler) is 46. Cartoonist Aaron McGruder ("The Boondocks") is 41. Singer Melanie Brown (Spice Girls) is 40. Actor Blake Foster is 30. — From wire reports

STUDY

NEED TO KNOW

FDA: Dark oun veres re ion aciers chocolate always cou s rin ercen not milk-free By 2100, the iconic mountain could see between 70 and 99 percent in glacial losses, according to a new

scientific study.

By Roberto A. Ferdman The Washington Post

By Chris Mooney

WASHINGTON — Dark chocolate sold in the U.S. is

The Washington Post

The iconic Mount Everest

often a little more like milk

could see a major loss of its glaciers over the course of this

chocolate than manufacturers might want to admit.

century, according to a new scientific study its chief author

An investigation by the Food and Drug Adminis-

calls "the first detailed model-

tration conducted earlier

ling study of all glaciers in the Dudh Koshi basin in the Everest region of Nepal." The p a per, p u b lished Wednesday in the journal The Cryosphere, was authored by glacier researcher Joseph

this year found a lot of dark

Shea of the International Centre for Integrated Mountain

fiedas a worri some area for

chocolate contains milkeven when it says it doesn't.

A new consumer update elaborates on the findings,

as well as the risks posedby what the agency has identiconsumer misinformation. "Unfortunately, you can't

Development in K athmandu, Nepal, and several col-

always tell if dark chocolate

contains milk by reading the ingredients list," the re-

leagues from France and the

Netherlands. "The biggest result here sin, we find them to be more

port warns. Of the 94 total samples the FDA tested, only six listed

sensitive to temperature than

milk as an ingredient. Over

anyone expected before," says Shea. The Associated Press filephoto The glaciers of the Dudh Melting glaciers could make Mount Everest — which was conquered for the first time today in1953Koshi basin cover more than look much different at the end of the century. 150 square miles in area. To

60 percent of them, however,

is that the glaciers in the ba-

study them,

the chocolate "may contain

milk" did indeed have dairy. Thirty-three percent of those

t h e r e search-

ers used a glacier model and fired it with different climate

change scenarios based on emissions pathways used by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. And they found that i n

contained milk. Seventy-five percent of those that warned

o n e e x treme

model run, glacial loss by the year 2100 could be 99 percent.

However, there were a range of estimates, and the low end number for glacial losses was 70 percent — still quite a large decrease. The more moderate emis-

sions scenario used in the study, technically dubbed RCP4.5, is one in which the

world actually undertakes significant greenhouse gas reductions over the course of this

century. "Even if we take measures now, we see it still declin-

ing," says Shea. Glaciers elsewhere in the Himalayas, Shea cautions, would

not necessarily behave in the same way, and so we shouldn't assume they're as vulnerable

as those around Everest. The chief losses of glaciers would not occur near the peak of Everest, some 8,850 meters

discharges of water from gi- to be in error, leading to an gantic melt lakes atop the gla- IPCC acknowledgment of inciers — not good news for a adequate vetting of the mate-

that didn'tmentionmilk at all on the label still contained it.

region that just suffered from a

olate samples that said they

And 15 percent of dark choc-

rial and many criticisms of the

were "dairy-free" or "lac-

devastating earthquake. climate science body — as well In an accompanying blog as the dubbing of the incident between 5,000 and 6,000 me- post, Shea notes the glacial "Glaciergate." (The report secters, the study found, which is melt isn't just the result of ris- tion in question now includes where most of the mountain's ing temperatures in the model. an errata noting the problemglaciers are actually located. There's another factor. A trend atic claim.) Higher up, there is actually of overall warming "raises the As with all scientific studless ice to be found, and it is elevation of the freezing level, ies, there are limits and connot expected to decline in the which has two secondary ef- siderable uncertainties to the same way. fects: the area exposed to melt current projections about glaThe result persisted even will increase, and the amount ciers in the Everest region. In in climate model scenarios of snow accumulation will de- essence, what the researchers that included more regional crease," he writes. have found is likely based on precipitation, a factor that can In the past, broader claims the best available sciencehelp add mass to glaciers (es- about changes to glaciers but science is always getting pecially if it comes in the form in the H i malayan region better. "The model we're using is a of snow). "Expected increas- have been a source of major es in temperature will result controversy. tool, and there are more comin sustained mass losses that In a 2007 report, the U.N.'s plex ways of modeling the glaare only partially offset by in- Intergovernmental Panel on ciers, but we don't have that creases in precipitation," the Climate Change alarmingly information yet," Shea says. study finds. stated that the mountain gla- "But this is the tool we're using, The research also suggests ciers of the Himalayan region and what that tool is showing this melting process could, on could be gone by the year 2035. is that the glaciers are quite occasion, lead to sudden large But the statement turned out sensitive." into the air. Rather, the greatest loss would be at elevations

tose-ftee" actuallyweren't. Manufacturers, to be

dear, aren't purposely injecting their 75 percent cacao bars with dairy, according to the FDA. Rather, the reason

dark chocolatemanufacturers seem to be having so

much trouble keeping traces of milk out of their product is likely that the same equipment that is used to make

dark chocolate is often also used to make milk choco-

late, which is roughly 10 to 12 percent milk. Still, the prevalence of

milk in products that dearly promise to come milk-free is troubling. Dairy, after all, is one of eight major food allergens. All food products that contain milk must say

so, according to U.S. law. While chocolate can contain traces of milk and yet

still be considered dark, the frequency with which samples were found to have dairy despite no intimation

BREAKTHROUGH

Scientists areusing herpesto treat skin cancer By Rachel Feltman The Washington Post

In a few months time, those

suffering from skin cancer may find an unlikely hero in their treatment regimen: herpes. A modified version of the Herpes Simplex 1 virus (known for causing cold sores and some cases of genital herpes) called T-Vec has successfullybeen used to treat melanoma in a phase III clinical trial. That means it's just

waiting for a final OK from the FDA before the Amgen

product can hit the market. The results of the trial were published Tuesday in Journal of Clinical Oncology. In a study of 436 patients with i noperable melanoma,

time a modified virus has been successful in carrying out that treatment.

of them. Meanwhile, T-VEC

the farthest along of what we

has also been modified to produce a molecule called

hope will be many more." Harrington expects the

milk allergies and may undermine the integrity of industry oversight.

Using a virus as a drug isn't GM-CSF, which serves as a FDA to clear T-VEC within a new idea. Phage therapy, red flag waved at the immune the year, and it could potenwhere viruses that attack cer- system. tially be available to patients tain bacteria are used in place So in addition to the deright away. of antibiotics, is commonly structive power of the T-VEC used in Europe and on the cells themselves, the therapy rise in the United States. But cancer therapies like the one

summons the immune system

described in the new paper the tumor. "This is a f i r s t i n c l a ss take things a step further, manipulating existing viruses to agent, a brand new therapy," turn them into cancer-fighting Harrington said. "But it's just tools. K evin

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Mine

Ohio State Reformatory and Brevard County Sheriff's Office via The Associated Press

Harold Frank Freshwaters was convicted of voluntary manslaughter for killing a pedestrian with his car in 1957. He initially received a

suspended sentence butwas imprisoned in1959 for a parole violation. He fled a prison farm in northwest Ohio later that year. He was arrested in Florida this year and is awaiting a hearing in Ohio.

Run

waters had had a "common law-type relationship" — didn't Continued fromA1 show up for hearings, accordIt would be almost 40 years ing to the governor's letters. before authorities tracked him Moore, who called the West dowll agalli. Virginia warrant '"bogus," said When they did, using a fin- he wasn't excusing what Freshgerprint-matching ruse to coax waters had done in Ohio. "However, the primary oba confession in early May, they said they found a 79-year-old jeclives in our corrections syswidower apparently retired tem are the rehabilitation of and living off Social Security the criminal offender and the benefits at a weathered trailer protection of society," wrote in rural Brevard County, near Moore, who later experienced F1orida's east coast. The public that system himself after pleadphone listing was for William ing guilty to corruption-related Harold Cox, an alias in Fresh- charges. "I am of the opinwaters' case documents from ion that Mr. Freshwaters has the'70s. proved himself in the last 16 Investigators believe Fresh- years to be an effective and waters had lived in Florida responsible citizen of our state since the 1980s. Why he wasn't and would in no way endanger found until now seems a bit of any member of society." a mystery, even to the cold-case David Means of Scott Depot, investigator tasked in March West Virginia, recalls workwith finding him. ing with just such a man in the "I can't explainto you howor 1960s, the chemical-delivery why he was able to run for so driver he knew as Bill Cox. He many years," said Deputy U.S. was a bit of a cutup who had a Marshal David Siler. wife and "seemed to be a model Freshwaters, of Akron, was

citizen," Means told the AP by

found the site was suitable to build on, a claim backed up Continued fromA1 by a subsequent soil stability Right next door to the 10- analysis. acre site, which the school The biggest question mark, says could support 1,900 stu- however, has been how much dents, is the pumice mine, it would cost to compact soil, where the university has en- reduce the slope of the mine's visioned adding enough ca- walls and haul in extra soil, pacity to reach 5,000. and whether the school can The mine, which is owned afford that work on top of the by Bend's 4R-Equipment, a sale price. subsidiary of Jack Robinson The $6.5 million to $7.5 miland Sons, will cost the college lion earthwork estimate was $7.875 million to acquire, ac- produced by Seattle-based cording to an agreement the KPFF Consulting Engineers, college entered into in 2013. which developed the higher Plans to make that pur- end of the range by adding in chase, however, are now a 15 percent contingency. "When we communicated on hold, as OSU-Cascades wades through court pro- to the (State Board of Higher ceedings, unwilling to com- Education), we said remediamit to the 46 acres until the tion would be between $4 mil10-acre parcel is settled. Even lion and $7 million, so $7.5 is then, university administra- just outside that range," said tors have said, the 46 acres Kelly Sparks, the university's isn't a done deal, as the col- associate vice president for lege could explore other op- financial strategy and plantions, including an adjacent ning, in a n i n terview this county-owned landfill or ex- week. "Is the $7.5 million figisting buildings. ure outside the comfort zone OSU-Cascades is more cer- is a question we're trying to tain, however, that a campus answer now." could be safely built at the Sparks said the decision bottom of the mine, some- will be made by Oregon thing critics of the location State University, of which have challenged. In 2014, OSU-Cascades is a compoa g eotechnical e v aluation nent. In making a decision,

Chocolate Continued fromA1 "I know people who have gone on diet fads and it has done them no good," Bohannon said in a phone interview with The Washington Post.

"It's all cloaked in the mantle of science and it's really trou-

bling. I was ready for taking on the diet industry ... for

to ensure no one had diabetes

or other illnesses that might endanger them. They dietreal science." ed, weighed themselves, and Bohannon had done simi- filled out questionnaires, and lar work before — in 2013 he when the 21-day study was submitted a fake research pa- up, Onneken and a financial per to more than 300 open-ac- analyst friend examined the cess journalsas part of a results to see if there was anysting operation for the journal thing there they could turn

ficials after the 1975 arrest. That arrest was almost accidental. When police stumbled

dustry. They had recruited a searchers" needed just one doctor, Gunter Frank, to run of them to be affected by the a clinical trial, and 15 people chocolate dose. It turned out

that went to work and then

retired and didn't bother people and stayed out of trouble," Goodyear said. Freshwaters was returned to Ohio, and its prisons department says his first hearing before the parole board will be in August. Authorities say he also could be charged in the escape. Means said he hoped his former buddy could get probation.

onto Freshwaters, he was reported to be hiding under the sink at his home in St. Albans,

West Virginia. Police got suspicious because they were there with a routine warrant to fol-

low up his ex-wife's complaint about being threatened, not to capture a wanted man.

"He

Then-Gov. Arch Moore de-

reformed

showing how they treat it like lifestyle material rather than

Science. But the idea for this

into a news story.

operation came from Peter

The study included 18 different measurements sleep quality, cholesterol levels, weight and cholesterol, among others — and the "re-

ing on a documentary about "junk science" in the diet in-

to participate in the study. the point.

diets alone, so that's the find-

According to Bohannon, ing theyboasted to reporters.

imum of 1 foot of vertical dis-

tanceforevery 1.5feetofhorizontal distance. Today, some sections of the wall are nearly

sheer. Mike Walker, who has lobbied against OSU-Cascades'

plans and earned an engiversity would bring in signif- neering degree from OSU in icant amounts of soil to level 1978, questions KPFF's cost out the bottom of the mine, estimates, arguing $9.8 milbut not nearly enough to fill it lionisa moreaccurateguess. all up. This approach, Sparks "They left out all the soft said, is conservative, as it's costs," Walker said, specifypossible much less work ing management, oversight would suffice. and personnel costs that he As studied by KPFF, the believes were absent from the college would need to com- analysis. Sparks said she's confident pact about 400,000 cubic yards of m ateriaL Addi- about the quality of the KPFF tionally, it would need to figure. So far, OSU-Cascades has import about 140,000 cubic yards. However, a significant spent $500,000 to maintain amount of the fill soil the col- its option on the site, of which lege would need is available $400,000 could count toward the purchase price. That figon the site in the form of a berm that runs along SW ure will go up, as the univerChandler Avenue. sity agreed to pay $30,000 a In a l etter t o O SU-Cas- month, which is intended to cadesfrom earlier this year, compensate the owner for not KPFF said the berm could be removed to provide 147,000

mming the site.

The university's option on cubic yards of fill for the site. the property expires Sept. 1, Additionally, removing the 2017. berm would make working — Reporter: 541-633-2160, on the canyon walls easitleeds@bendbullettn.com

like Bohannon's, with j u st

publishes the International Archives of Medicine, is listed as a potential "predatory publisher" by open-access critic Jeffery BealL According to Bohannon, the journal didn't peer

review his study or even edit it (and the study could have used an edit — "chocolate" is mis-

spelled more than once). But according to Bohannon, the main culprit in what he

five people per group being callsthe pseudoscience scam measured according to any of diet fads isn't scientists or of 18 different variables? Any

the journals who publish their

number of factors unrelated studies. "It's the reporters," he told to the study could cause one of the variables to fluctuate, The Post. "The reporters and allowing researchers to irre- ultimately the editors.... Peosponsibly — but not untruth- ple who are on the health scifully — state that eating choc-

ence beat need to treat it like

olate while dieting helps you science, and that has to come lose more weight. from the editors. And if you're A r e sponsible s c ientist reporting on a scientific study shouldn't conduct a trial like you need to actually look at this, Bohannon said, and a the paper, you need to talk to a responsible scientific journal source who has real scientific shouldn't publish it. But Bo- expertise." hannon is not a nutrition scientist (he does have a PhD in molecularbiology) and the In- DOES ternational Archives of Medi- EVERYONE cine, he says, is not the most

responsible journal. Internet Medical Publishing, which

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Means said. "I mean, what one

nied Freshwaters' extradition after Ohio officials and the woman — with whom Fresh-

that members the chocolate

Fifteen people is hardly a reli- grouplost0.1percentmore of able sample size, but that was their body fat than those on

er. KPFF calls for the walls'

on a plan in which the uni-

the participants were divided This, Bohannon says, is into three groups: one control problem No. 1 with much of group, one to follow a low- health science. Studies like carb diet and one to follow his are called "underpowthe same diet while eating ered," meaning that they ar1.5 ounces of dark chocolate en't designed to distinguish daily. They were paid for their between a real effect and time and informed that the pure luck. A study with thoustudy was for a documentary sands of participants being about dieting, and all partici- measured for just a few efpants underwent blood tests fects is "powerful." But one

imprisoned in 1959 for one to phone. "Inside he may have been 20 yearsfor manslaughter after hitting a man with a vehicle completely different, but exterand then violating probation. nally, no.... We enjoyed him He was moved to a Sandusky coming in," said Means, 77. prison camp and soon disapIn Florida, the fugitive had a peared. In the years that fol- valid driver's license and had lowed, Freshwaters had no worked as a driver for a landcriminal record, lived with a scaping company, said Maj. woman in West Virginia, had Tod Goodyear ofthe county two children, was employed sheriffs office. There's no indiand met friends and neighbors cation he had run-ins with area who "vouched for his good law enforcement, Goodyear character," West V irginia's sald. "It sounds like he was a guy then-governor wrote to Ohio of-

Onneken and Diana Lobl, two German reporters work-

Sparks said, OSU will consider how the price of land in Bend has escalated since the university first began looking for a branch campus location and the ability of the school to get state funding for this and other projects. The cost estimate is based

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FRIDAY, MAY 29, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

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TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, MAY 29, 2015

Fly Continued from A1 The fledgling owl, about 10 to 12 weeks old, fell from the

tree April 30 and had been in the care of Rorabeck since. During that t ime she nick-

s

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named the bird, whose sex is not distinguishable, "Junior" and "Squirt." Early on she fed the owl 13 mice per night as it grew quickly. Now twice the

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size it was when it was an owl-

et, the bird still munches eight to nine mice each night. Once in the wild the owl will rely

on adults to feed it as it learns

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to hunt for itself. Great horned

owls will take in orphaned young. Elaine Gilbert, of Bend, had

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volunteered her time to help

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Rorabeck tend to the owl. She

was there Thursday night, and having been around the bird, was notsurprised when itwas reluctant to fly up into its fam-

ily's tree. "He's been a pistol all along," she said. "... He's small and mighty." Rorabeck had picked twilight to release the owl because it is when great horned owls typically are becoming active, and crows, ravens and other birds that may pester owls have gone to sleep. One of the owl's parents watched from overhead Thursday night as Rorabeck and Gilbert tried to return it. The oth-

er owls in its family were also likely nearby. This year the pair of adult great horned owls in Drake Park hatched three owlets, said

Sasha Sulia, natural resources manager for the Bend Park & Recreation District. Only one

of the owlets took a tumble from the tree. "This year there was some

speculation that there were three and that the more dom-

inant siblings pushed this one out," she said. Rorabeck said she thought

the weeks-old bird probably ventured out on a branch and fell from there.

"When they are at that age they don't grip that well," she stud.

The Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife contacted Rorabeck about caring for the

owl. Because Drake Park is busy, she said agency officials did not want the owlet returned

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Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin

C.J. Rorabeck scoops up the great horned owl from Mirror Pond after a failed attempt to release it back in Drake Park on Thursday. •

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A pair of adult owls has raised young in the tree at

they find an animal in distress. State wildlife managers tell

people to be cautious before two years, Sulia said. Last year they take action after finding they had only one owlet and it apparently injured or abanalso fell from the tree. Being doned animals. The biggest the only young owl, it was re- problem is people calling about turned quickly to the nest. fawns and elk calves they have To give the owls space to found and brought in, said Migrow their family, the park chelle Dennehy, spokeswoman district put barricades around for the Department of Fish and the tree last year and this year Wildlife in Salem. "The truth is the worst thing during springtime. Sulia said the barricades help keep peo- you can do is pick it up," she ple and dogs away from any sard. owlets that fall. Young elk and deer stay still This time of year many an- as a defensemechanism and imals are rearing their young, Dennehy said the mother is leading to potential encounters probably around, even when with people and pets. Thinking theyoung animals seem abanan animal may be injured or doned. People concerned about abandoned, some people scoop an animal's situation should them up, said Damian Fagan, call the Department of Fish spokesman at the High Des- and Wildlife or a wildlife rehaert Museum in Bend. Then the bilitator like Rorabeck. Doing people look for help with the so will likely ensure the animal animal. receives proper care, if needed. "We'vebeen getting a cou"Whatever your good inple of inquiries here at the tentions are you are not going museum where people actu- to have the facilities or knowlally bring the animals to us," edge to take care of (a wild anhe said, such as some baby imal) properly," Dennehy said. robins recently brought to the The number for the Oremuseum. gon Department of Fish and The museum cannot take in Wildlife Office in Bend is such animals and he advised 541-388-6363. people to contact the state De— Reporter: 541-617-7812,

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right away. If putback immediately it might have fallen again. "They thought it would be best if we raised (it) awhile," she said. partment of Fish and Wildlife if

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campaign-oriented nonprofits also play a role. The r e search

m a c hines

have emerged from the back office of p arty headquarters and into the high-stakes

A new hOPeful — George Pataki, a three-term NewYork governor, declared his candidacy Thursday for the Republican nomination for president in anaddress to supporters in New Hampshire, though hehadconceded to friends and allies in recent weeks that hewas anextreme long shot. Pataki vowedto enact far-ranging changes inWashington, pointing to his record of attacking government spending andentrenched Democratic interests. Pataki, who left office in 2006, is an unlikely match for the Republican Party of 2016. Hesupports abortion rights and pushed as governor for anti-discrimination rules protecting gays. He invokes Theodore Roosevelt, the Republican environmentalist and crusader against corporate power, as apolitical hero.

world of political fundraising. "Our focus is driving negative news narratives against (Hillary) Clinton," said Colin scandal, when so many tawReed, executive director of dry details were unearthed America Rising PAC, a formi- that the public became jaded dable Republican operation to the airing of a politician's with scores of staffers scour- dirty laundry. ing campaign events, public Others point to the modern filings, social media and any news cycle, which is filled

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which a Rand Paul staffer expressed his irritation with a his camera. The video went viral on Twitter. Back at A m erica Rising,

researchers. The higher the profile the PAC creates, the more clients the business side

reels in. "Things once considered taboo just aren't taboo any-

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craft, "We're with Nobody." He attributes the ability of

groups like America Rising to distribute attack after attack with little risk of voter backlash to the Monica Lewinsky

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Obituaries, B5 Weather, B6

© www.bendbulletin.com/local

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, MAY 29, 2015

BRIEFING

e e ain reecommuni co e e

Whistle-blower an 'Oregon hero' Rep. Knute Buehler, R-Bend, on Thursday called Michael Rodgers, the whistle-blower who leaked the emails in the scandal involving former Gov. John Kitzhaber and former first lady Cylvia Hayes, "anOregon hero." Buehler made astatement on the Housefloor in support of Rodgers and said he haddonated money to help Rodgers with his legal expenses, according to a news release from Buehler's office. Buehler also advocated for legislation to protect future whistle-blowers. "Michael Rodgers isn't an Oregon criminal — he is an Oregonhero. He deserves our respect and our support, not the burden of mounting legal bills," said Buehler. He also urged others to donate to Rodgers' defense. Rodgers is on paid leave from his job at the Department of Administrative Services, where he's asenior administrator overseeing technology for state agencies. His staff is responsible for storing emails and data for tens of thousands of workers, according to The Associated Press. In a story published Wednesday, Rodgers

By Taylor W. Anderson The Bulletin

SALEM — Lawmakers hop-

ing to make community college free for most students got a resounding message from the higher education community during a hearing on the matter Thursday: Thepropos-

al isn't ready for prime time. Senate Bill 81 was proposed as a way to create a free

college degree for low- and middle-income students. The cost to the state is estimated

at around $20 million every two years, and aspects of the proposed law could bring in a rush of federal student aid to help carry the program.

community colleges and Oregon's university system said the bipartisan group of legislators proposing the bill still isn't taking into account the costofan unexpected rush

of students hopeful to take advantage of the free program. "It's not that we wouldn't want them; it's just that we want to make sure that they

complete" their education, said Debbie Koreski, a lobbyist from Portland State University,

who said an influx of community college students would then transfer to universities that couldn't handle the need

without much more money. Sen. Mark Hass, D-Beaver-

ton, hasbeen leadingthe pro-

But representatives from

Inside

the free community college

interview.

• Bill could allowyou access to a late loved one's online data, E1

plan to initial resistance when

the G.I. Bill, which gave veter-

If the Legislature passes Senate Bill 81, students who

ans moneyforeducation, was created in 1944. But he said

posal since 2013. He said critics the proposal is needed tobuild aren't considering the likely a workforce in a post-lumber gush of federal money that economy. "We have a growingpopwould come as a result of the proposal, which requires recip- ulation of young people in ients to apply for federal aid. Oregon, about 70,000 of them Hass told a joint budget ... between 18-24 that are catcommittee hearing on the bill egorized as idle youth," Hass that critics from the higher said. "They're not bad people. They're not criminals. But education community have resisted major changes to until they get an opportunity, Oregon's college system since they are likely to go down the 2011, when the Higher Educa- path toward poverty. "They used to go to lumtion Coordinating Commission was created. ber mills and now the mills He likens the pushback to are gone," Hass said in an

want to take advantage of free

tuition would be required to fill out the federal form known as FAFSA that determines the

student's eligibility for federal grants and financial aid, which they otherwise wouldn't get.

Students eligible for free tuition under the program would have to chip in $50. Colleges would then subtract state and federal grants before waiving tuition for eligible students.

Students would have tobe Oregon residents for a year before becoming eligible and recipients must maintain a 2.5 GPA.

See College /B5

Father files

wrongful death suit By Ted Shorack

• The main runway hasreopened after being closedfor a four-month-long renovation

The Bulletin

The father of Edwin

Mays has filed a wrongful death lawsuit in federal

court against Deschutes County, the sheriff's office and several deputies.

Mays, 31, died Dec. 14 of amethamphetamine

overdose while being held at the

told Willamette Week

he wants to speakout because he's worn down from months of isolation and investigation. He hadleaked the emails to the newspaper. During his statements, Buehler requested a hearing for legislation he introduced more than amonth ago to protect whistle-blowers from being punished for their actions. House Bill 3455 was immediately referred to a closed committee and hasnot been granted a public hearing, according to Buehler's news release.

PCT hikers lose their way Search andRescue volunteers from Deschutes andLane counties spentThursday looking for agroup of Pacific CrestTrail hikers who were lost nearLily Lake. Three hikers contacted the Pacific CrestTrail Association onThursday stating they had lost

the trail andneededa call back, according to a news releasefrom the DeschutesCounty Sheriff's Office. Rescue officials werenotable to contact the groupby phone, probably because of poor cell coverage.But Search andRescuevolunteers scouted theLily Lake areaandconcluded the hikers found the trail,

were no longer inneedof assistance andcontinued their trek toward Elk Lake, the releasesaid. Officials said theywould continue to attempt to contact the hikers toverify their safety.

Burnmay continue to put up smoke A controlled burn started Thursday west of Bend maycontinue to smolder for a while. Fire crews plannedto burn about 70 acresof forest near Phil's Trailhead off of Skyliners Road, Kern said. The fire, part of the ongoing West Bend Project, prompted the closure of1 mile of the KGB trail Wednesday and Thursday. — Bulletin staff reports

Mays

Deschutes Coun t y j ail. He had been

arrested by Bend Police on suspicion of heroin possession and other allegations.

The father, Edwin Mays Jr., who is being represent-

t

ed by Bend attorney Jenni-

7

fer Coughlin, is suing the county for $10.7 million. The federal complaint alleges that Mays' civil rights were violated under the eighth and 14th

amendment. It also alleges that sheriff's deputies were

negligent by not providing adequatemedical care. Joe Klime/The Bulletin

A plane travels along the runway after landing at the Madras Airport on Thursday afternoon in Madras. The runway was recently reopened after a closure for repaving.

Deschutes County Coun-

sel David Doyle said the legal department will not comment on the complaint

By Beau Eastes The Bulletin

Rob Berg, airport manager.

grant. The FAA, through its

airport compete in the always evolving world of general avia-

and allegations until after an OregonDepartment of Justice investigation of

MADRAS — The upgrades areexpectedtokeep coming

dras Airport will upgrade its

Airport Improvement Program, provided $2,059,169

aviation fuel tanks. Currently,

to the city, which owns the

tion. With similar-size airports in Prineville and Bend, an

at the Madras Municipal

the airport houses two tanks that combined are more than 130 years old. "We're not sure on the exact

airport. A ConnectOregon V

updated runway is crucial for

grant from the state provided another$792,000 and the city

the Madras Airport's longterm

Airport. Earlier this month the air-

port just northwest of Madras reopened its main runway following the completion of a four-month-long construction project that completely rebuilt the airstrip that dated back to the early 1940s. The 5,079-foot

runway will be able to handle larger, heavier aircraft, said

Later this summer, the Ma-

dates, but we think the one is from the 1930s," Berg said

Thursday. The runway renovation and

fuel tankupgrades are all part of a $3.05 million project paid for in large part by a Federal Aviation Administration

chipped in $200,000. "This brings us into the 21st

century," said Berg, who also servesastheairport'sfixedbase operator, providing aviation services such as fueling, mechanics and hangars. The renovation projects, ac-

success, he said. "There's not a whole lot of ways to generate revenue at an

airport," Berg said. "Fuel sales, hangars and ground leases, that's about it. But you've got

to have people want to fly into hereto make money on any of those."

cordingto Berg, also help the

See Airport/B5

Mays' death is completed. See Lawsuit /B5

Jail is large factor in the budget By Ted Shorack The Bulletin

Feds releasetheir plans to protect sagegrouse By Mead Gruver The Associated Press

CHEYENNE, Wyo. — Interior Secretary Sally Jewell

revealed plans Thursday to preserve habitat in 10 Western

statesforsagegrouse,the federal government's biggest land-planning effort to date

forconservation ofa single species. The plans focus on sagebrush country, including habitat for the imperiled ground-dwelling bird found

MPriorityhabitat management areas M Sagebrush focal areas General habitat areas

them across habitat of the greater sage grouse. Drilling near breeding areas would be prohibited during mating

7.4 percent next fiscalyear Bend

Study area

proposalThursday to the budget committee, which is made up of county commissioners and three citizens. The total proposed bud-

}I

get for the sheriff's office

be moved away from prime habitat to avoid serving as

is $43.3 million, the largest of any county department.

I

The budget increase is due mainlyto costs associated with operating an expanded jail and increases topersonnel expenses, which include adding five newpositions to

perchesforraptorsthat eat

en-sized birds that inhabit

said Thursday during a con-

grass and sagebrush eco-

ference call from a ranch in

systems in 11 states from

Wyoming. The proposal would affect energy development. The regulations would require oil

California to the Dakotas. The bird is found in Central Oregon. See Sage grouse/B2

and indudes an increased taxrateforproperty countywide. Sheriff Larry Blanton and sheriffs captains presented the department's

season, and power lines would

the tall Grass Prairie," Jewell

"We can't afford to lose this

other priority habitat for the bird.

Sheriff's Officebudget is proposed to increase by

or more to avoid scattering

landscape like we couldn't afford to lose the Everglades or

Oregon.

As part of its plan for managingsagegrouse inOregon,theU.S.BureauofLandManagement identified sagebrush focal areasand

and gas wells to be clustered in groups of a half-dozen

sagegrouse. Some will say the plans don't go far enough to protect the bird, Jewell said. "But I would say these plans are grounded in sound science — the best available science," she said. Sage grouse are chick-

in Central and southeast

The Deschutes County

Haditat on therange

Be

the department.

"We have always focused on quality service," said jail Capt. Shane Nelson. " ... We're willingto deliverthe

MILES 0

20

40

Source: U.S. Bureau ofLend Management

Greg Cross iThe Bulletin

service; we just need the investment from the citizens and we want them to know that we're good stewards of their investment." See Budget/B2


B2

TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, MAY 29, 2015

REGON AROUND THE STATE

c I I1 sweBFS Ill

0

BeaVer fOSSil —A fossilized skull fragment and teeth from a newly described species of beaver that lived 28 million years ago have beenunearthed in the John DayFossil Beds National Monument in Eastern Oregon. Monument paleontologist JoshuaSamuels says the fossils worked their way out of the soil within a mile of the visitor center. Hesaysthe find is significant because unlike the other species of ancient beavers found to date onthe monument, this one appears related to the modern beaver, asymbol of Oregon found onthe state flag. The others all went extinct. Samuels says theanimal was less than half the size of amodern beaverandwas related to beavers in Asia that crossed the Bering land bridge.

omai- orn oiceo icer By Gosie Wozniecke

city to rejoin the FBI Joint Ter-

The Associated Press

rorism Task Force, which of-

PORTLAND — The Portland Police Bureau has sworn in its first Somali-Americanpo-

ficials voted to do in February.

One of the community's goals since Mohamud's arrest was to find a young man willing to join the Portland Police Bureau — a difficult task, community

lice officer. Officer K h alid

I b r ahim's

swearing-in ceremony Thursday comes less than a year af-

S88 IIOllS —The Port of Astoria is trying a more playful approach to keep sealions off its docks: beach balls. ACannery Lofts resident suggested the colorful balls as adeterrent. He says unlike seals, who like to play with the toys, sea lions areafraid of them. ByTuesday evening, beach balls were floating in the moorages of PDock with only one or two sea lions remaining. Previously, the port used colorful surveying tape, foot traffic and electrified mats to keepthesea lions off docks. In another attempt to keepsea lions at bay, the port will begin using a 36-foot fiberglass orca whale. Thewhale is anadvertisement for Island Mariner, which runs awhale-watching tour out of Bellingham, Washington.

leaders said, because in Soma-

lia people don't trust police. "This is a great day for us,"

ter another local Somali-Amer-

ican, Mohamed Mohamud, was sentenced to 30 years in prison for plotting to bomb a crowded holiday event in Portland's town square.

Musse Olol, chairman of the

Somali American Council of Oregon, said. "We have worked for years to get an officer." Many of Portland's Somalis

Mohamud's arrestin 2010

sent shock waves through the area's Somali community and

Khelid Ibrehim stands with Portland Mayor Charlie Hales after being

s trained relations with l a w

sworn in Thursday asPortland's first Somali-Americen police officer.

Dave Killen/The Oregonian via The Associated Press

Ihm8te IIISS —An inmate who'd beenmovedto a medical observation cell has died in theYamhill County jail. The sheriff's office said the inmate told jail workers of a medical problemWednesday evening. Early Thursday, deputies sawthe inmate in distress and then unresponsive. Emergencyworkers arrived and determined the inmate was dead. Thesheriff's office didn't provide details of the inmate's medical condition. An autopsy is scheduled, and aninvestigation is underway.

have spent their entire lives in

refugeecamps, forced there by the country's long-lasting civil

enforcement agencies, which the city and community have

war. Portland's Somali community is estimated to number

The bomb plot was actually lieved would trigger it. an FBI sting. Agents posing as Mohamud's attorneys arour Police Bureau as we wel- al-Qaida recruiters targeted gued in court that he was encome the first officer from Mohamud, a former Oregon trapped by the FBI, guided Somalia. We've put in a lot of State University student, af- every step of the way by the effort to b u ild r elationships ter the t hen-teenager wrote agents even when he grew rewith the Somali community," for an online jihadi magazine. luctant to followthrough. Assistant Police Chief Donna The agents supplied a fake car Somalis in Oregon conHenderson said at the stand- bomb, and Mohamud pressed demned Mohamud's actions ing-room-only ceremony. a button on a cellphone he be- and some even encouraged the

about 8,000, and represents the largest Muslim group in the city. Somali has become the third most spoken native language in Portland schools. Ibrahim, 24, who was born in Somalia's capital of Moga-

Sage grouse

tion for large portions of the to postpone any federal listing state's habitat. forfive years orm ore asstates "Some of our areas are in develop their own plans for Continued from B1 The rules would not apply to fairly good shape and we need conserving habitat. a relatively small area of habi- to keep themthat way," he said. Republicans in Congress tat in Washington state. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife criticized the plans as federal The bird's numbers have Service faces a court-ordered overreach. "This is just flat out-wrong," declined sharply in recent de- deadline of Sept. 30 to decades, and some environmen- cide whether the greater sage said U.S. Rep. Rob Bishop of talists warn they are at risk of grouse needs protection as a Utah, chairman of the House extinction. threatened or endangered spe- Natural Resources Committee. One of many people just cies. Many Western lawmakers "The state plans work. This prostartingto digest the more than and representatives of the oil- posal is only about controlling 1,000 pages of plans, maps and and-gas and agriculture indus- land, not savingthebird." attachments released Thurs- tries say a threatened or endanBut Wyoming shows that day, Dan Morse, conservation gered listing would devastate sage grouse and energy develdirector for the Oregon Natural the region's economy. opment can co-exist, Jewell Desert Association, said the Congress voted late last year said. It is a top oil, natural gas plan could help protect sage to withhold funding to imple- and coal producer with a sage grouse habitat in Oregon. ment any listing until Septem- grouse conservationstrategy He said his group's focus all ber 2016. Other measures pend- being copied by other states alonghas been to gain protec- ing before U.S. lawmakers aim andthe federal government.

"There is no future for our government stillintends to honeconomy if we don't take care or valid and existing rights to of the sage grouse," said Wy- develop resources on that land, oming Gov. Matt Mead, a Re- the Interior Department said. publican who took part in the Even so, the Western Enerannouncement. "That's a fact. gy Alliance, a Denver-based Some like it; some don't." petroleum industry advocacy Several envi r o nmental group, pledged to support the groups welcomed the plans. federal legislation to postpone "The sage grouse's listing any sage grouse listing. "The economic impact of under the Endangered Species Act is an outcome from which sage grouse restrictions on just no one stands to gain, least of the oil and natural gas indusall public lands sportsmen," try will be between 9,170 and said Land Tawney, executive 18,250 jobs and $2.4 billion to director of Backcountry Hunt- $4.8 billion of annual economic ers and Anglers. impact across Colorado, MonIn what some environmen- tana, Utah and Wyoming," said talists view as an accommoda- Kathleen Sgamma, the allition to industry, the rules would ance's vice president of governnot seek to block development ment and public affairs. across sage grouse habitat. The The U.S. Bureau of Land

Budget

from residents, something that is not the norm, Blanton said. "What we constantly strive to do is just be a little bit better,"

worked since to repair.

"This is a historical day for

Continued from B1 Nelson will become sheriff

providing adequate medical care. Blanton said the hope is

someone like Mays in the future might be more willing to tell someone in a nurse uniing term, which expires Janu- form he or she ingested someary 2017. thing potentially harmful and The department is asking needs help. to add three full-time nurses Two taxing districts were to the jail staff, one jail deputy approved by voters in 2006 and one patrol deputy. to permanently fund sheriff's Five nurses work at the jail office operations. The countyright now but are not present wide law enforcement tax dis24 hours a day every day of the trict funds operation of the jail, week. Two nurses will be avail- court security, emergency serable at the jail duringeach shift vices and civil services. after adding the new positions. The sheriff's office is proBlanton mentioned Edwin posing a 7-cent increase for Mays, who died while in a jail the countywide tax d istrict. holding cell from a metham- It would raise the rate to $1.02 phetamine overdose Dec. 14. per $1,000 of assessed value He said the responsible thing on property throughout the was to p r opose three new county. Residents approved the jail nurse positions instead of permanent tax in 2006 with an asking to add additional jail allowable max rate of $1.25 per deputies. $1,000 of assessed value. Mays' father filed a fed"We really didn't want to do when Blanton retires in July. Nelson will serve the remain-

eral wrongful death lawsuit

it and we haven't wanted to do

against the county Tuesday and is seeking $10.7 million in damages. The suit alleges that Mays' civil rights were violated. It also alleges that sheriff's deputies were negligent by not

it since 2006, but we held out for some nine budget years now," Blanton said about the

increase. The sheriff's office is ex-

million in taxes collected from hotel stays and other tempo-

rary lodging outside city limits, which is known as the tran-

dishu and lived for a short time

in Egypt, immigrated with his family to Portland in 2006.

— From wire reports

sient lodging tax. The amount said Nelson. is anincrease and refl ects an — Reporter: 541-617-7820, improvedeconomy and more tshorack@bertdbulletirt.com

Theft —Atheft was reported at 4:29 p.m.May 26,inthe2600blockofNE U.S. Highway20. Theft —Atheft was reported at 3:36 p.m. May25, inthe1300 block of NE Tucson Way. Theft —Atheft was reported andan arrest madeat6:55 p.m. May20, in the 63200 block of Brightwater Drive. Unlawful entry — Avehicle was reported enteredat10:52 a.m. May24, in the 3000 block of NE Royal Court. Theft —Atheft was reported at10:22

Federally identified h abi-

tatfor the greatersage grouse across the Western U.S. totals

an area about the size of Colorado. The Interior Department has dassified about two-thirds

of that range as priorityhabitat, including areas that could have restrictions on development. — Bulletin reporter DylanL Darling contributed to this story.

See us for retractable awnings, exterior solar screens, shadestructures. Sun ehen youwantit, shade whenyou needit.

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Members of the budget comoffice against getting too comfortable with the increase or relying on it for future hiring. Blanton assured the committee the department is not adding staff with the expecta-

tion of increased revenue from transient lodging taxes. "Sustainability is what we

talk about every day at the

sheriff's office," Blanton said.

"We could just as easily be irresponsible and max out tax rates and then we'd be in trouble."

Blanton said the sheriffs office is cautious through the

good times and bad times and doesn't want to make taxpayers pay one penny more than is neededfortheservicesthatare provlded. The sheriff's office will continue to respond to every 911

pecting revenue of about $3.1 call and requested assistance

a.m.May26,inthe500blockofNW Riverfront Street. Criminal mischief — Anact Dfcriminal mischief wasreported at12:12p.m. May 26, in the61100block of SW Montrose PassStreet. Burglary — Aburglary was reported at 1:34 p.m. May26, inthe 20400 block of Cady Way. Theft —Atheft was reported at 5:02 p.m.May26,inthe2700blockofNE 27th Street. Theft —Atheft was reported at 8:11 p.m.May26,inthe800blockofNW Brooks Street. Theft —Atheft was reported at 9:34 p.m.May26,Inthe200blockofSE Vickie Court. Theft —A theft was reported at11:08 p.m. May26, in thearea of NWDrake Road and NW Newport Avenue. Theft —Atheft was reported at 9:37 a.m. May27, inthe areaof NEMajesty Lane and NE Sixth Street. Theft —Atheft was reported and an arrest madeat12:09 p.m. May25, in the

- AHHIE PAYA

NEws OF REcoRD

BEND POLICE DEPARTMENT

Snowmobile, Small Engine Repair 8 More

the new measures by late summer. They would apply to federal lands in California, Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, North Dakota, Oregon, South Dakota, Utah and Wyoming.

mittee cautioned the sheriffs

The Bulletin will update Items In the Police Logwhensuch arequest is received.Any newinformation, such asthe dismissal of chargesor acquittal, must beverifiable. For more information, call 541-633-2117.

SWEIElm lEh Y'S

Management expectsto adopt

tourism.

POLICE LOG

BONIf fOlllllI —Authorities say a bodyhas beenrecovered from Eugene's sewagesystem. PolicesaidThursdaythebodywasina concrete underground well at a pumpstation that collects waste from south and west Eugene.Police said the gender hasn't beendetermined, and there's no information about how it got into the well. An autopsy is planned.

300 block of SW Powerhouse Drive.

DEGREE IN

AYIATI 0 N-

PRINEVILLE POLICE DEPARTMENT Theft —Atheft was reported at 3:31 a.m. May27, Inthe areaof NWMadras Highway. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at 7:30a.m. May27,in thearea of NW Third Street. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at10:12a.m. May27,in the area of NE Court Street. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at11 a.m.May27,in the area of NW Third Street.

HELICOPTER

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BEND FIRE RUNS Tuesday 5:35p.m.— Passenger vehicle fire, area of SE Ninth Street andReedMarket Road. 26 — Medical aidcalls.

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COCC is on affirmative action, equal opportunity institution.


FRIDAY, MAY 29, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

West on NW Newport Ave./NW Shevlin Park Dr., right on NW Park Commons Dr.

B3

ha

AWBREY BUTTE

2056 NWGlassow Dr. City & Cascadeviews Energy savingfeatures Master on main level Daylight lower level $500,0

SHEVLIN PINES

HOMES FOR SALE

62782 Imblar Dr. CascadeMountainview Master on main level Stainless Dacorappliances Hardwood 8 tile flooring $610,000

Located along NW Mt. Washington Dr. between NW Skyliner Rd. and NW Shevlin Park Dr.

ws

OPENSUNDAY1-3

NORTHWEST CROSSING 1148 NW 18th St.

19175 Chiloquin Dr.

Large windowareas Daylight bonusroom Master on mainlevel Three-car garage $714,000

Master on main level Open floor plan Spacious islandkitchen Solid quartz countertops $640,000

1946 NW Balitch Ct. Exquisite detail work 0.65 acre lot oncul-de-sac Large central living room Spacious master suite $720,000

OPENFRI12-3, SAT & SUN1-4

1445 NWMt. Washington Dr. Open great room Vaulted living area Beautiful finishes Wide kitchen w/ island $445,000

lll llllllllliullllll OPEN FRI - SUN1-4

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2558 NW Ordway Av0.

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Master onmain level Bonus roomupstairs Finished daylight basement Hardwoodfloors $064,000 r

1634 NW Saginaw Av0.

Prairie style duplex 3 BR, 2 BRunits Hardwood, tile finishes Large comerlot $500,000

West Bendlocation Custom woodfinishes Madrone flooring Top brandappliances $575,000

1346 NWMt. Washington Dr.

OLD BEND

Cozy cottage w/view Convenient office alcove Vaulted living area

1604 NW 2nd St. West BendCraftsman Large RM zoned lot Unbeatable location Loads of character $525,000

2-car alleygarage 1295 NW Ogden Ava.

New NW Homes

Coming Soon

961 NWYosemite Dr. Awbrey Parkhome Gorgeousfinishes Cathedral ceilings Granite countertops $620,000

WEST HILLS

2497 NW LBmhi Pass Dr.

$304,000

AWBREY PARK

Near NewportAve. shops Master onmainlevel Rich wood &tile finishes Outdoor living areas $630,000

OPENSAT& SUN12-3

NW Lots

NWX 2736 NWShieldsDr.

Nwx Lot 878 NWShields Dr.

NWXLot 751 Lemhi Pass Dr. NWX9 lots near Discovery Park

NWX2372 NW Drouillard Ave. NWX2452 NW Drouillard Ave. NWX2462 NW Crossing Dr. NWX2218 NW Lolo Dr. NWX1699 NW Mt. Washington Dr.

NwLot 28 North Rim Nw3275 NW HorlzonDr. NW1175 NWPromontory Dr.

NW19065 Mt. McLoughlin Ln. Nw 2702 NW Three Sisters Dr.

Nwx 1665 NWMt. Washington Dr. NW62778 Idanha Ct.

Nw19044 Mt. Shasta Dr. Nw2911 NW Celilo Ln.

Five Townhomes Three bedroom, two-story townhomes

0

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73 SW Taft Ave. The Bluffs townhome Numerous upgrades Dark wood flooring Near Old Mill shops $325,000

$250,800 - $274,800

DOWNTOWN BEND

ORCHARD HILL

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ORCHARD HILL • New neighborhood in central Midtownarea • Single Family Homes • Two-story townhomes • Plans from 1150-2250 sf • Some alley entry homes • Plans with master suite onmain

From Bend Parkway, east on NE Revere Ave., left on NE 8th St., left on NE Isabella Ln.

Juniper Swim b Fitness Center

Eight Homes S

Two and threebedroom,oneand two-story, single family homes $204,000 - $400,000

OU TH E.

61284 Dayspring Dr. Open great room, kitchen Vaulted masterbedroom All appliances included Community park, pool $200,000

874 SW Crestline Dr. Deschute sLandingtownhome Old Mill, river, mountain views Guest suite with bath Deluxe finishes, materials $520,800

20979 Avery Ln. AROUND

Central Oregon ggP

Half-acre landscapedlot Two master suites Hardwood, granite &tile Signature appliances $400,000

REDMOND

2731 NW Cedar Ava. Open great room Corner gasfireplace Community park, pool HOA yar d maintenance $200,500 gl

20939 Miramar Dr.

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Furnishedtownhome All resort ameniTies Large corner lot Wide covereddeck $300,000

Quiet 0.35-ac setting Family roomw/fireplace Upstairs bonusroom Hardwood &tile floors 404,500

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104 SEAirpark Dr. Formal living, dining Hardwood floors 3-car garage Gated RV parking $300,000

SE61084 RubyPeak Ln. (Under Construction) $439,900 SE20616 CougarPeak Dr. (Under Construction) $449,900

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SE61073RubyPeakLn.(Lot)$75,000 SE Lot 295 SE Fairfield Dr.$70,000

More CO Listings REDMOND 6330 NWJackpineAve.$375,000 TUMALO18615 Pinehurst Rd. $7 2 4,900 sUNRIVER19 Mull' Ct. (10't) $210, 0 0 0 SISTERS14432 Crossroads Lp. $365,000

61710 Gibson Dr. Home on2.5 acres ery close to Bend Broad Cascadeviews wo-story great room $420,000

EAG LE CREST

2070 CinnamonTeal Dr.

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his is a stylistic representation of homes for sale by Harcouils The GarnerGroupReal Estate. Locations on the map maynot be entirely accurat . nl lf. L


B4

TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, MAY 29, 2015

EDj To

The Bulletin

s

FBIl IIl CFISIS CO

Il

HOLP IT

PIGI-EVmeRE.

~+~

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C ©NSTITUTI o~

t's tough for all concerned when the state is forced to step in and remove children from a parent's home. Kids may

~~+~g5,AO

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find themselves separated from both immediate family and friends, and from biological grandparents, as well. That's too often the case when parents lose custody of their children and the state takes over. While Oregon law requires that a whole host of institutions and individuals be kept informed of upcoming hearings and other proceedings, the list does not always include grandparents whose grandchildren have become wards of the state. At the same time, biological grandparents too often find themselves physically cut off from their state-ward grandchildren, as well. In both cases, current law no longer recognizesthe parent of a person whose parental rights havebeen terminated as the legal grandparent of that person's children. That's about to change. State House Bill 3014, which inciudes among its sponsors both Rep. Mike McLane, R-PowellButte, and Rep. Gene Whisnant, R-Sunriver, would require the state to keep biological grandparents in the information loop where their grandchildren are concerned. It has been approved by both houses of the Legislature and awaits

the signature of Gov. Kate Brown. The bill may sound like a housekeepingmeasure — it simply changes the definition of what a grandparentiswhere a grandchild who is a ward of the court is concerned — but it is an important one, just the same. Children who have been taken from biological parents need all the stability they can get, and grandparents can provide that. In fact, grandparents can provide the only continuing link to the only world a child has ever known. They can, that is, if the state keeps them fully informed about legal actions involving grandchildren and allows them continued involvement in grandchildren's lives. Moreover, continuing contact between grandparent and grandchild can improve the mental health of both: Studies show both are less likely to suffer from depression when they can maintain contact with one another. Brown should sign House Bill 3014. Oregon's kids in crisis need all the support they can get.

Protect organicfarmers his is the time of year when ghosts return to haunt the halls of the Oregon Legislature. Thus bills that would have had the state set up GMO-free agricultural zones died earlier this year, but the idea was reborn in late May. House Bill 3554 makes clear the state can create control areas, places where genetically engineered crops would be subject to rules that don't apply elsewhere. Among them, the Department of Agriculture could bar the growing of biotech crops within a specific distance from organic ones. An earlier bill in the state House of Representatives would have required the Agriculture Department to establish control areas, while one introduced in the Senate granted the department the same power. Under the new measure, farmers could ask the department to create "market production" districts, in which rules aimed at preventing cross-pollination between biotech and conventional crops couldbe established. The burden of p r oving t he need for a market production district would fall to those seeking its creation. And, while the creation of a

T

district could mean biotech crops could not be grown in it, that is not required. Instead, the state would be required to come up with mitigation strategies and mandatory best practices that "promote coexistence" between biotech growers and their neighbors, amongother things. Still, the agribusiness group Oregonians for Food and Shelter continues to believe it's draconian because, it says, itlimits farmers'right to grow what they wish, where they wish. It fails to recognize that without limits, would-be organic farmers could be deniedthat same right. Meanwhile, organic agriculture is a growing business in Oregon, with some 60percent of all organic operations in the state certified since 2002, according to a report by the Oregon State University Extension Service. Oregon'sorganic farmers account for 3 percent of the total U.S. organic acreage and 5 percent of both farms and sales. Oregon has long worked to support its farmers, and that's good. But it cannot support only farmers for whom biotechcrops areno problem; itmust also workto support those for whom such crops are a threat. This bill seeks to strike abalancebetween the two. It shouldbe approved.

~

• cp~<g ~

S

and others have worked to ensure a trusted online environment in our

classroomsso studentscan learn and thrive rather than be exploited and

exposed to marketing efforts from technology vendors. We believewe can embrace inno-

vation in the classroom and maintain core privacy and data security protections for students and their fam-

ilies, and lawmakers in Oregon and other states across the nation have joined in that effort. But as the move-

ment to protect the private and personal information of schoolchildren

and their families gains momentum, some sectors of the tech industry are stepping up their efforts to block or

~ IBVN- ~

~

~

Build OSU-Cascades now Bend needs bettertransit

the staff.

Where will they go for lunch? We need a four-year university in

I recently moved to Portland for

our area now! Please consider care-

public transit. I lived in Bend about

fully the information that is being

five years always thinking transit would improve. After five years of

distributed by the opposition and

check the true facts that are avail- attending numerous transit forums able. The best place for OSU-Cas- at Hawthorne Station, I d ecided I wouldn't put my life on hold for cades is defined and fits the kind of university that is planned for to- a service that may be years away from becoming reality. I am so glad I day's world. W e need afour-year university made the move, too. The transit and in our region as soon as possible. high urban density are exactly what We owe it to the students graduat- I needed. Hopefully people who rely ing from high school and the com- on transit will make their voices munity members seeking higher heard at the ballot box because the education. We need the addition of anti-transit population will be ceropportunities for new studies and tain to use its short-sighted vision majors that will come from an ex- to keep Bend a prehistoric entity in anything related to public amenities. panded university. Brent D. Yonkov!ch Let's quit wasting time and monPortland ey! It is time to expand OSU-Cascades into a four-year university now. A site is selected. Let the con-

struction begin! John Hodecker Redmond

Get City Hall out of downtown It is past time for the city of Bend to think "inside the box." Rather

Don't worry, restaurant owners.

The repurposed City Hall and private properties currently leased by the city will generate replacement customers. Don Ptacn!k Bend

An awful Memorial Day

weekend

Imagine how exciting it is to have a stream ofout-of-state SUVs, cars and trucks (14 total) rolling into the driveway adjacent to your backyard beginning Friday evening of the Memorial Day weekend with their head-

lights pouring into your bedroom. Imagine how exciting it was for the newneighbors to discover the hot tub

on the back deck and giving it a good cheery workout until past midnight! Imagine how exciting it was that

an entire highly energized middle school baseball team had just moved in for the weekend and they were ex-

than buying Troy Field to "increase cited to hit balls into your backyard options," perhaps for more city ad- and crawl under your fence repeat-

Revisit the location

of OSU-Cascadescampus

ministrative space, how about the

Thank you to William Hand for the most thought-provoking rebuttal to the west-side situation of the

OSU-Cascades campus. Most reasonsgiven are seemingly valid, but as an experienced academic and business tech executive, I believe he has true insight into the

actual size needs of a college campus. His insight makes total sense.

We should revisit the siting pro-

cess. We shouldn't shoehorn OSU into the west side w it h l i m ited

growth restrictions. There are other locations available. My vote is

Juniper Ridge. Lance Stewart Redmond

edly to retrieve their balls while the

city using its existing land invento- horde of adults drank and grilled ry for its needs'? Where does it say stuff that smelled like dog. Imagine City Hall must be located down- the din of raucous laughter, hooting town? How about building a new and hollering, hour after hour until City Hall with adequate room for your family decided it would be betgrowth at Juniper Ridge? The city ter to eat inside instead of out on your already owns the property and own deck because it was just too could use the money from the sale loud. Imagine discovering that your "No Trespassing" and "Private Propof the old "Bulletin" site for facility erty" signs had been removed and development. M oving City Hall out of t h e that you will need to buy and install downtown core would free up valu- new ones ... again. able land and buildings, which the Imagine how cool it is to discover city could sell to the private sector at you have no voice against this maa handsome profit while increasing lignancy with the elite "officials." economic vitality (and property tax After all, the landlords pay room tax revenues) of downtown. Of course now, right? moving City Hall out of downtown Bob Camreta will be somewhat inconvenient for Bend

Letters policy

In My Viewpolicy How to submit

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

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

Please address your submission to either My Nickel's Worth or In My View and send, fax or email them to The Bulletin. Email submissions are preferred. Email: letters©bendbulletin.com Write: My Nickel's Worth / In MyView P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708 Fax: 541-385-5804

or s t u en t r i vac '? IN MY VIEW

other children's advocates initially supported it. The amendments, however, put the economic interests of

private industry ahead of what's best for kids.

When it comes to online school services, we need clear rules that bar inappropriate commercial, noneducational uses of student data outright, without creating cracks and loopho/es.

These same industry interests now

aim to weaken the bill even further. the measure contains loopholes that For example, lobbyists appear to be would limit coverage for Oregon stu- seeking additional amendments that dents and families and allow and in- would permit K-12 ed tech companies vite companies to misuse and share to use or share students' personal instudents' private and personal infor- formation for commercial, nonschool mation. For example, the amended purposes — if parents "consent." bill would allow third-party service That's a problem, because typically providers to share students' person- schools and teachers choose the webal information without any privacy sites and apps that students and parrequirements for recipients of that ents must use. Parents have no real information. This means that once choice but to "consent" when they student data is disclosed it can be "click through" the terms of service used and shared for any reason with or check the box"agreeing" to the prino restrictions at all. vacy policy. Parents may assume that The original Oregon bill was de- the school already has fully vetted the signed to prohibit these activities, service and its privacy and security which iswhy Common Sense and practices, orfeel"forced" to consent Act. As amended by the state Senate,

g~

M 1Vickel's Worth

re on stan u By James P.Steyer weaken laws aimed at keeping our chools are becoming more dig- kids safe. ital by the day, incorporating The latest example of this national new software and online learnassault on students' privacy can be ing tools that are transforming our seen in Oregon, where tech-indusclassrooms in exciting ways. Amid try lobbyists have pushed hard for these technological changes and amendments that water down the Oradvances,Common Sense Media egon Student Information Protection

~

to anything so their children can par- country's richest companies and bigticipate and won't be left out. Mean-

time political donors.

while, schools may not always have Oregon kids deserve leaders who the resourcesor savvy to carefully will continue to fight for their best review theproducts, or may agree to interests. State leaders should be apcertain practices to obtain free or dis- plauded for taking a stand to protect counted or highly desired products. kids from these predatory practices. When it comes to online school The original OSIPA was a model to services, we need clear rules that be proud of, and for other states to bar inappropriate commercial, non- follow. There's still time to strike out educational uses of student data out- these incendiary industry-backed right, without creating cracks and amendments, and to fight vigorously loopholes. against any additional industry-drivFortunately, lawmakers in Oregon en proposals, all of which chip away can still stand up to the industrypres- at much-needed protections for our sure, which is backed by a multistate, kids. multimillion dollar lobbying and pro— James p. Steyeris founder and CEO paganda campaign with some of the of Common Sense Media.


FRIDAY, MAY 29, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

College

BITUARIES DEATH NOTICES Wayne Robert "Bob" Miles Douglas Mattox, Chamberlen of Gilchrist Sept. 6, 1954 - May 24, 2015 Arrangements: Baird Memorial Chapel of La Pine is honored to serve the family. 541-536-5104 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: Services will be held in Fair Oaks, CA at a later date.

June 8, 1968- May 24,2015

Carole Alice Giroux, of Bend

Callum (Samanta) of Gre-

Mar. 5, 1961 - May 26, 2015 Arrangements: Deschutes Memorial Chapel 541-382-5592

www.deschutesmemorialchapel.com

Services: A service will be held at a later date.

"Bob" W ayne Rob e r t Chamberlen, born 6 /8/1968, p a s se d p e a c efully i n h i s s l eep Sunday May 24th, 2015. He is survived by his Father Adam Holland (Bev) and stepfat her Ch ar l e s "Chuck" C hamberlen (K arren) an d s ix siblings as well as hi s f ive c h i l dren C o l l i n M c sham, Casey McCallum of B end, Ca t h e r in e Hu nt (Scott) of Central Oregon, C araLy n Ch amb e r l e n

(Jerry) of R edmond and

C ourtney Ch amb e r l e n (Corey) of Corvallis as well as his four grandsons And rew, J a x on , O r i o n a n d M aximillian . M em or i a l s ervices will b e h el d S aturday May 30th at 3pm at City C e n t e r ch u r c h i n R edmond (549 Sw 8t h s t . Redmond OR).

He also said half the stu-

Continued from B1 Oregon would be the second state, behind Tennessee,

to set up a free community college program. Tennessee's first semester under the free program is this fall, so Oregon lawmakers can't definitively

Lawsuit

Airport

Continued from B1

Continued from B1

"We don't want anything to interfere with that or be

viewed as influencing or attempting to influence that,"

Niswonger-Reynolds

Funeral Home is honored to serve the family. 541-382-2471 Please visit the online registry for the family at www.niswonger-reynolds.com

Mays unresponsive on the floor of his holding cell after showing erratic behavior for more than three hours, according to video of the

Bend Sept. 15, 1970 - May 24, 2015 Arrangements:

Services: A memorial service will be held today, Friday, May 29 at 2:00 PM in the

Niswonger-Reynolds

Funeral Home. Contributions may be made to:

The Memorial Education Fund for his son Kelly c/o Waddell & Reed Investments, 334 NE Irving Ave. ¹102, Bend, OR 97701.

Lois M. Greer, of Bend Oct. 10, 1928 - May 28, 2015 Arrangements:

Niswonger-Reynolds

Funeral Home is honored to serve the family. 541-382-2471 Please visit the online registry for the family at www.niswonger-reynolds.com Services: A Funeral Service will be held on Sat., May 30, 2015 at 1 PM at Niswonger-Reynolds Funeral Chapel, Bend.

Wes Spindler, of Bend Mar. 30, 1929 - May 26, 2015 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home of Bend is honored to serve the family. 541-382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com

Services: A private family gathering at a later date. Contributionsmay be made to:

Partners In Care 2075 NE Wyatt Court Bend, Oregon 97701 www.partnersbend.org

Janice Fay Frint, of Lehi, Utah Sept. 29, 1950 - May 26, 2015 Arrangements: Wing Mortuary, Lehi, Utah, 1-801-768-9514. Online guestbook: wingmortuary.com. Services: Funeral services will be held Monday, June 1, 2015 at 11:00 a.m. in the Lehi East Stake Center, 1200 East 900 North. A viewing will be held starting at 9:30 a.m. prior to the service. Interment, Lehi City Cemetery.

Caleb David Miller, of Bend Nov. 18, 1987 - May 19, 2015 Arrangements: Niswonger-Reynolds Funeral Home is honored to serve the family. 541-382-2471. Services: A memorial gathering will be held Friday, June 5, 2015 at 6:00 PM in the Bend Church of the Nazarene. Contributions may be made to:

The Caleb David Miller Donation Fund with Bank of the Cascades.

Carl "Skip" Lee Duke, of Bend May 22, 1949 - May 24, 2015 Arrangements: Deschutes Memorial Chapel 541-382-5592 www.deschutesmemorialchapehcom

Services: A Grave side service will be held at 11:00 AM on Saturday, May 30, 2015 at Deschutes Memorial

Gardens. For anyone

wanting to attend

services, you are more

than welcome to wear a NASCAR t-shirt in his honor.

Sheriff's d e puties

FEATURED OBITUARY

U2 tour will go on sans manager The Associated Press NEW YORK — For more

than three decades, U2's beloved tour manager, Dennis Sheehan, kept the band run-

ning on time. Sheehan died early Wednesday,just hours after U2 kicked off the Los

Angeles portion of its latest tour. But promoters vowed the shows would go on in his memory, and they'd be on schedule. Sheehan, in his late 60s,

Bill itt Salem —Senate Bill 81 would waive course fees for certain students at Oregon's community colleges. History:Tennesseewasthe first state to enact a free community college program. Students there must apply for federal aid in order to apply for the tuition waiver, and proponents of free community college in Oregonsaythe program has led to an influx of federal aid to Tennesseethat they expect would happen here too. What's next:PublichearingscheduledTuesday. Online:Readthe bill at https://olis.leg.state.or.us/Hz/2015R1/ Downloads/MeasureDocument/SB81/A-Engrossed

f o u nd

incident.

Deputies rendered aid and called the Bend Fire D epartment t o

t h e ja i l .

In recent years, the air-

49 that were there in 2013, the latest numbers available

Airport has grown in recent

dead at about 9:30 p.m., ac-

months since the Erickson Aircraft Collection, an avi-

cording to the video. "Eddie Mays was entitled to be free from cruel and unusual punishment.

... This protection includes a right to adequate medical care," Coughlin wrote in the federal complaint. The lawsuit also alleges that Sgt. Brian Bishop and Sgt. Tedd Morris failed to properly supervise other deputies during the incident, which led to "uncon-

than 20 World War II-era

planes, opened at the airport last August. "There's 11 B-17s in the

world that are still flying, and one of them is based in Madras, Oregon," Berg said about the famous "Madras

ferson County announced

Mays w i t hout

plans to expand its enter-

statement on the band's web-

sions," Coughlin wrote. Other allegations include a failure by the sheriff's department to properly train "deputies and sergeants in the proper procedures for identifying drug overdoses and ensuring proper medi-

DEATHS

are still flying, and one of them ts based in Madras, Oregon. Every time they fly to an air

tive TV syndicator who helped

make stars of Oprah Winfrey,

less of w h ether c r iminal

Dr. Phil McGraw and Rachael

charges are brought against sheriff's deputies. — Reporter: 541-617-7820, tsirorack@bendbuiietin.com

— Airport manager RobBerg

theworld:

Michael King, 67: Innova-

Ray. Died Wednesday in Los Angeles of complications from pneumonia.

budget committee will hear the bill again Tuesday. — Reporter: 406-589-4347, tanderson@bendbuIIetin.com

"We're the first stop on this side of the mountains, so we

have people fly in from all over," he added. "Groups of guys that come to fly-fish on skiers who come every summer for the national team ski

camp at Mount Hood.... We're proud to make the first impression on people when they fly into Central Oregon." — Reporter: 541-617-7829, beastes@bendbulletin.com

jbbenrr.com

competitive pricing.

541-382-6223

J0HNSON B R OTHERS A P P L I A N C E S

61522AMERICANLOOP,BEND 541-323-1001

• ' h earing aids B Y TRI C I A

L E A GJ E L D

• earing Better Since 1955.

"There's 11 B-17s in the world that

show, peopleare seeing the Madras Maiden. It's great for Oregon, it's great for Central Oregon, and its phenomenal for Madras."

Deathsof note from around

tum to pass this session. The

prisezone toincludeapproximately 1,450 acres near the

death in late March. Coughlin had said the family was waiting for the investigation to conclude before filing a lawsuit. However, she said the Mays family intended to sue regard-

ELSEWHERE

proposal has enough momen-

peopleare seeing the Ma-

and cause harm to Eddie

cal attention for detainees." District A t t orney J ohn Hummel requested the state DOJ investigate Mays'

that go unfunded by the state." It's not dear whether the

• • s rrrre promise honest service and

time they fly to an air show,

the Los Angeles area. U2 frontman Bono posted a

Bono wrote. "He wasn't just a legend in the music business, he was a legend in our band. He is irreplaceable."

still a large percentage of costs

the Deschutes River and elite

with its improved infrastruc-

Maiden" housed in the Erickson Collection. "Every

for Madras." Earlier this month, Jef-

"We've lost a family member, we're still taking it in,"

He said if"we were to see a spike in enrollment, there's

ation museum with more

were allowed t o n e glect, mistreat, c r iticize, m o ck r e p ercus-

airport, which could generate more aviation-related business. And, Berg said, the airport's annual Airshow of the Cascades,the second-largest air

Oregon Community College, echoed Hamann's concerns.

Activity at t h e M a dras

Medics pronounced Mays

Oregon, it's great for Central Oregon and its phenomenal

site in honor of Sheehan.

Matt McCoy, vice president for administration at Central

ture, an available railway spur, and its proximity to U.S. Highment of Aviation. ways 97 and 26. "We're uniquely situated in "The goal is to get that (planes on the field) number Madras," Berg said. "The airup, because that's how the port's in an industrial park and FAA measures airports for we have railroad and highway their Airport Improvement access. The only thing we're Funding grants," Berg said. missingismarine (availability).

dras Maiden. It's great for

kicked off a five-night stint in

the system.

from the Oregon Depart-

abuse." "The individual deputies

West Hollywood on Wednesday, a day after the band

four-year university, and that the Legislature should also focus on helping the university system carry the stress more transfer students would put on

port has seen a surge in planes on the field — planes show in the state, expects to that make the Madras Airdraw more than 20,000 specport their home airport. tators for the two-day event in According to Berg, 112 air- August. planes are based at the airHe expects even more busiport, more than double the ness to come the airport's way

s titutional t r eatment a n d

died at a Sunset Strip hotel in

dents who attend community colleges plan to transfer to a

say what impact free college would have on the entire system. Oregon's program would take effect during the 2017-18 quires it now," Johnson said. the free tuition would deplete school year. Greg Hamann, president of a budget that is still crawling Rep. Ma rk Joh n s on, Linn Benton Community Col- back after being cut deeply R-Hood River, also supports lege, laid out four issues the during the recession. the idea behind the bill, call- state's 17 community colleges Hamann also said that to ing it a necessary step to help have with the measure. make sure community colmore students earn degrees. The colleges worry if more leges can help students actu"Everybody should have an students enter community col- ally complete their associate opportunity to do that because lege and have tuition waived degrees, they'll need more as we all know and we totally — which accounts for about money for counseling and othunderstand our economy re- half the colleges' budgetser support services.

Doyle said. Mays began showing signs of distress while being booked into the jail, according to the sheriff's office.

Edward K. Conners, of

B5

5

54 1 -316-5064 708 SW 11~ Street Redmond, OR 97756

Q ReSound

SIEMENS

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ex e ~ ol l awangavaas

hearingaidsbytricialeagjeld.com

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f~~ ANINIUgAE.

— From wire reports

((

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

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

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

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

Frederick Owen Newby

SINCE 1940

August 21, 1931 — April 14, 2015 Frederick OwenNewbypassedawaysuddenly April r4, 2015 from a heart attack. Hewas 83. Fred wasborn on August 21, 1931, toArthur and Frieda (Yortoa) Newbyin Eugene, Oregon, in ahouseon the banksof the Willamette River. Overtheyears,hegrew up oa a ranch nearChinook,

M ontana, andafarm inEugene,Oregon.Fredhadalifelong appreciation for God'screation, raising andselling livestock, and the rural life. On June20, 1951, in Raton,NewMexico, hemarried Edna Mae Christian, to whom heremained married until her passing in 2008. The Newbys first settled in Loraine, Oregon,andremained there until moving to a farm outsideBend,Oregonirr 1956. They operated asmall dairy andEdnasold eggs from their chickens. In 1961,Fred beganacareer asalivestock order buyer, and bought and sold cattle for manyfarmersand ranchers ia Central Oregon. Heoften spent five daysper weektraveling to livestock auctions in Klamath Falls, Madras, Redmond, Ihe Dalles, aadEugene,Oregon. He continued his involvement with handling, buying, and selling cattle until the very moment hepassedawayashe sought to herd two stray animals back into the pasture.

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With a trust in the Lord Jesusand hopeof a better life he wasprepared for the errd. Fred waspreceded in death by his parents, sevenbrothers and sisters,andhis son, Monte. He issurvived bysix brothers andsisters, his children, Edwin Newby andwife Sue of Prineville, Oregon,Viclde Beebyandhusband Philip of Shelton, Washington, Lisa Boucher aadhusband David of Sisters, Oregon, Arthur Newby, Michael Newby, all of Bend, ReneeNewbyof Redmond, Oregon,andGregory Newby andwife Manon in Canada;along with fifteen grandchildren aad ten great-grandchildren.

He was a fixture at "the office" atWagaer's Mall in Bend, Oregon, where heoften methis cronies everyWednesday.

NhIE1 0

Memorialserviceswill be held at r:00 pm,June6, 2015,at the Assembly ef GodChurch, 379 NWSmith RockWayin Terrebenae, Oregon.

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Autumn Funerals in Bend is incharge of the arrangements.

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B6

TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, MAY 29, 2015

W EAT H E R Forecasts andgraphics provided byAccuWeather,lnc. ©2015

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TODAY

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TONIGH T

HIGH

ALMANAC

52'

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Partly sunny,warm; astray p.m. t-storm

-

LOW

83' i I ' 1

SATU RDAY

"'"

82' 52'

~

A t-storm in spots early; partly cloudy

SUNDAY

Some sun, at-storm around in the p.m.

MONDAY

81' 48'

Partly sunny, at-storm around in the p.m.

TEMPERATURE

EAST:Sunnyto partly cloudy today with Seasid a warm afternoon; 66/49 perhaps an isolated Cannon thunderstorm overthe 62/49 mountains late.

4

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64' 42'

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UV INDEX TODAY

POLLEN COUNT

NATIONAL WEATHER

WATER REPORT

Wickiup 157256 79% Crescent Lake 7 5 0 56 66% Ochoco Reservoir 30374 69vo Prinevige 104303 70vo River flow St a tion Cu. ft./aec. Deschutes R.below CranePrairie 316 Deschutes R.below Wickiup 1220 131 Deschutes R.below Bend Deschutes R. atBenhamFags 1560 Little Deschutes near LaPine 97 Crescent Ck. belowCrescent Lake 26 Crooked R.above Prineville Res. 36 Crooked R.below Prineville Res. 265 Crooked R. near Terrebonne 119 Ochoco Ck.below OchocoRes. 11

FIRE INDEX

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Source: USDA Forest Service

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ortlsnd 84/57

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Hi/Lo/W 80/60/1 81/56/1 85/61/1 80/57/1 70/51/s 86/69/1 78/67/pc 85/65/1 88/68/pc 77/55/pc 85/66/1 65/46/s 89/61/pc 81/62/pc 76/60/pc 80/48/1 84/50/r 80/47/c 84/68/pc 86/65/pc 86/65/1 65/47/pc 64/44/r 81/61/1 81/53/1 64/45/pc 72/53/t 87/66/pc 88/67/1 83/59/1 88/61/pc 87/72/pc 79/62/t 82/57/t 71/51/pc 71/51/c 77/48/r 59/35/pc 91/66/pc 77/51/s 62/44/s 77/45/s 68/46/r 62/38/r 85/65/pc 87/66/1 85/63/pc 72/53/t 84/71/pc 84/68/t 83/64/1 77/55/1 83/65/1 86/68/pc

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87no/t 82/68/1

srns/o.oo 88n5/pc 89n6/pc

80/58/0.00 80/56/1 58/43/r 84/62/0.00 71/50/r 65/45/pc 85/67/0.07 82/66/1 83/65/1 89/69/0.00 84n3/t 85n2/t 85/70/0.03 82/64/pc 83/68/pc 89nO/r'r 82/64/pc 85/66/pc 87/70/0.26 84/66/1 84/68/pc OklahomaCity 84/64/0.34 81/62/1 73/57/1 Omaha 73/62/0.11 75/54/1 69/51/pc Orlando sgno/o'.oo 88f/1/t 90n3/t Palm Springs 99/68/0.00 102n5/s 104n6/s Peoris 85/57/0.00 84/66/1 73/49/r Philadelphia 89/70/0.03 85/67/pc 88/69/pc Phoenix 98/71/0.00 1Otn5/s 104ns/s Pittsburgh 81/61/0.00 83/66/1 83/62/1 Portland, ME 80/63/0.37 73/54/pc 78/61/pc Providence 82/64/0.00 81/58/pc 79/59/pc Raleigh 87/68/0.00 87/65/1 87/65/pc Rapid City 74/53/0.18 59/44/sh 68/54/pc Reno 84/51/0.00 88/56/s 87/57/s Richmond ssno/o.oo 87/67/1 89/69/pc Rochester, NY 77/62/0.02 86/68/pc 86/48/t Sacramento 87/53/0.00 87/57/s 87/57/s St. Louis 86/62/Tr 85/69/1 79/56/1 Salt Lake City 71/51/0.10 74/54/pc 82/63/pc Ssn Antonio 89/76/0.01 86f/1/t 86/68/t Ssn Diego 71/62/0.00 72/62/pc 72/63/pc Sso Francisco 62/52/0.00 66/54/pc 68/53/pc Ssn Jose 69/55/0.00 76/55/pc 77/55/pc Santa re 80/45/0.00 77/49/pc 73/48/t Savannah 86/64/0.00 85/68/pc 85/67/pc Seattle 82/54/0.00 78/53/s 74/53/pc Sioux Falls 82/64/Tr 69/43/1 66/44/pc Spokane 79/53/0.00 80/59/pc 81/60/pc Springfield, Mo 79/66/0.23 78/64/1 73/58/1 Tampa 90/73/0.00 90n2/t 92n4/t Tucson 97/62/0.00 98/68/s 101/71/s Tulsa 81/65/0.87 79/65/1 75/60/1 Washington, DC 92/73/Tr 86no/t 89n3/pc Wichita 80/63/0.51 77/61/1 69/56/c Yskims 89/54/0.00 91/60/s 90/61/pc Yums 97/67/0.00 101f/2/s t04n5/s e

I

Mecca Mexico City

114/83/0.00 111/84/s 109/86/s 78/56/0.05 72/56/1 71/56/1 Montreal 72/68/0.19 80/63/s 83/48/r Moscow 73/64/0.03 79/60/1 74/58/r Nairobi 75/63/0.00 77/61/1 76/62/t Nassau 82/74/0.08 85/73/pc 86/74/sh New Delhi 109/86/0.00 110/84/pc 109/83/pc Osaka 83/64/0.00 82/66/pc 85/67/c Oslo 49/39/0.72 55/43/sh 51/44/r Ottawa 72/63/0.04 82/61/pc 83/41/r Paris 66/50/0.00 67/50/pc 66/51/sh Rio de Janeiro 91/72/0.13 77/68/r 78/69/c Rome 77/54/0.00 75/53/s 75/55/pc Santiago 64/43/0.00 65/38/pc 60/38/pc Sso Paulo 68/67/0.42 69/55/1 70/58/c Sspporo 70/48/0.00 76/60/pc 75/60/pc Seoul 84/59/0.00 84/62/pc 74/56/pc Shanghai 79n2/0'.ot 81/70/sh 80/67/r Singapore 90/80/0.14 89/80/1 gongn Stockholm 63/39/0.01 59/44/sh 56/44/sh Sydney 73/54/0.07 70/52/pc 65/51/pc Taipei 93/81/0.00 91/81/pc 94ng/pc Tel Aviv srnwo.oo 80/66/pc 80/65/pc Tokyo 80/66/0.00 76/70/sh 82/70/pc Toronto 79/59/0.00 79/62/pc 81/42/r Vancouver 70/55/0.00 71/53/s 69/54/pc Vienna 63/50/0.00 73/53/pc 75/56/1 Warsaw 61/43/0.00 67/52/1 74/49/t

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100n2/s

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59/54/0.03 59/47/r 58/47/sh i Boston n /do< 75/64/0.37 70/59/sh 74/59/s 84/61 au e d d 4 d d /ss Auckland 57/41/0.00 56/49/s 61/54/pc x xxx x x x g 4 6 >g » >'0 4 d d d d w York Baghdad 106/77/0.02 102/80/pc 106/81/pc + + 2/44 Bangkok 97nr/o.og 98/81/t 99/81/t d ~ i ~ i 67 d d 4tlesbs iledelphis Beijing 86/68/0.16 85/63/c 84/63/t iceg j er 5/e7 Beirut 84n9/0.01 76/68/pc 76/67/pc at Fort Sill, OK eh ehclsco Berlin 69/46/0.03 67/52/pc 63/45/sb ee/54 ington • 63/ LesV ss 86 Bogota 64/48/0.11 65/49/1 66/48/c 97/7 Keese ruittr+ 4a u' Budapest 63/50/0.02 72/49/pc 77/55/s asl!66 w wv.Qs/ BuenosAires 64/43/0.00 62/52/pc 64/51/pc Cherto Los Ae les Csbo SsnLucss 97/68/0.00 95nO/s 95/69/s v vsa/6 • O/4 gong/o'.oo 85/65/s 84/67/s Cairo Phoen Anchorage A lbuque ue k lstkreriker +< 8 ea + ++b a t Calgary 53/48/0.02 65/43/pc 64/43/pc • 101/7 67/4 II 0 Csocun gonwo.oo 89/74/pc Sgnwpc Bir inehe 7 42 al pa Dublin 55/45/0.07 55/39/sh 57/45/c 82/ 5/6 Edinburgh 53/43/0.23 55/40/sh 57/43/sh 75/ Geneva 77/41/0.00 76/52/t 72/53/t Hsrsre 4<lttrootjllu • dsodo 80/48/0.00 77/46/s 77/47/s w Orleans 5/71 Hong Kong 91/82/0.00 89/82/c 89/82/t Chihuehus 84/73 Istanbul 65/61/0.08 70/62/c 73/62/sh 93/43 Jerusalem 91n8/0.00 79/53/s 79/53/s Monte tr es+ w ikq 91/70 Johannesburg 72/53/0.00 74/49/s 74/50/s 4 Lima 74/64/0.00 74/65/pc 74/65/pc Lisbon 86/63/0.00 78/59/pc 74/59/s today's noon positions of weather systems and Shown are precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day. London 63/54/0.00 58/45/sh 62/51/c T-storms Rain Showers Snow F l urries Ice Warm Front Sta t ionary Front Madrid Cold Front 90/55/0.00 86/59/1 84/57/pc Manila 90/81/0.00 93/81/c 92/81/t '

Mostly cloudy with a passing shower or two

Yesterday Today Saturday

Umatilla 93/61 • ermiston lington 92/63 Meac am Lost;ne 63 81/58 Enterprise dieten 77/5

City Hi/Lo/Prec. HiRo/W Abilene 87/64/0.26 86/65/1 High 79 66 92' in 1963 portland se/59 Akron 80/62/1.86 86/66/1 46' 39' 24'in 1950 Low /51 Albany 84/68/0.00 85/65/pc • W co he Dall Albuquerque 86/54/0.00 83/58/pc • • 61/57 Tillamo • 88/ 2 PRECIPITATION CENTRAL:Mostly andy • Anchorage 63/43/0.00 67/48/s 91/62 es/46 Mc innvill • Joseph Atlanta 81/67/1.01 84/66/1 54 Gove • He ppner Grande • 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.00" sunny today with nt • upi Condon 7/60 Atlantic City 82/64/0.00 75/64/pc Cam • 89 8 67 Record 0.60" in 1906 a warm afternoon. Union Lincoln Austin 88n3/Tr 84/67/1 77/ Month to date (normat) 0.9 7" (0.79") Clear to partly cloudy 66/50 Sale Baltimore 91/65/0.00 86/65/1 pray Granitee Year to date(normal) 5.39 " (4.92") tonight .Mostlysunny 83/5 • 0/69 Billings 69/49/0.29 63/49/sh a 'Baker C Newpo 79/51 Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 30 . 0 4" and warm tomorrow. 56/49 Birmingham 80/67/0.68 82/66/t 2/52 • Mitch II 80/51 Bismarck 80/57/0.01 65/37/c C a m P S h m a n R 6 tI WEST:Low clouds 86/53 l\ OrV R 6 I SUN ANDMOON Boise 78/49/0.00 84/61/pc Yach 66/52 • John eU at the coast this 83/53 Boston 70/58/pc 65/49 • Prineville oay 2/51 Today Set. tario Bridgeport, CT 86/64/Tr morning, then partly 78/63/0.05 75/59/pc 86/53 • Pa lina 83 / 6 4 5:27 a.m. 5: 2 7 a.m. 8 56 Buffalo 76/60/0.05 85/67/pc sunny; mostly sunny Floren e • Eugene 'Re d Brothers 8352 6:36 p.m. 6: 3 9 p.m. with a warm afternoon 61/50 Valee Burlington, VT 80/68/0.16 83/66/pc Su iVere 63/52 4:45 p.m. 5: 4 5 p.m. 86/56 Caribou, ME 76/62/0.31 74/55/pc inland. Nyssa • 8 4/ 0 Ham ton Charleston, SC 85/66/0.00 84/68/pc 3:22 a.m. 3 : 5 3 a.m. La pine Juntura Grove Oakridge Charlotte 88/67/0.00 86/62/t • Burns OREGON EXTREMES L ast Ne w Firs t 86/56 63/54 /54 Chattanooga 84/67/0.21 81/64/1 • Fort Rock Riley 82/52 YESTERDAY Cresce t • 63/49 Cheyenne 69/46/0.04 57/42/t e 83/61 82/52 Chicago 82/54/0.00 82/62/t High: 91' Bandon Roseburg • C h ristmas alley Cincinnati 82/62/0.03 83/66/1 Jordan V aey Jun 2 J un 9 Ju n 1 6 J u n 24 at The Dalles 61/52 Beaver Silver 83/69 Frenchglen 86/59 Cleveland 77/61/0.16 84/65/1 Low: 35' 82/55 Marsh Lake 65/54 ColoradoSprings 75/47/0.10 63/44/1 Tonight's eftfnUrsa Major is nearly overhead at Meacham 80/49 Po 0 83/49 Gra • Burns Jun tion Columbia, Mo 81/62/0.22 78/64/1 • Paisley 69/ before midnight andCassiopeia now low a Columbia, SC 90/67/0.00 88/65/1 • 64/56 Chiloquin Columbus,GA 86/67/0.00 86/64/1 '83/48 above the northern horizon. Gold ach 7957 Medfo d Rome 0' Columbus,OH 83/62/0.00 84/66/1 61/ 84/58 Kiamath Concord, HH 89/65/0.07 80/55/pc Source: JimTodd,OMSI Fields • • Ashl nd Falls • Lakeview McDermi Corpus Christi 88n9/0.00 87/75/t Bro ings 90/5 82/50 62/5 81/46 84/51 Dallas 88/71/0.00 77/66/1 Dayton 84/62/0.01 83/68/pc Denver 73/50/Tr 63/46/1 10 a.m. Noon 2 p.m. 4 p.m. Yesterday Today Saturday Yesterday Today Saturday Yesterday Today Saturday Des Moines 78/62/Tr 77/58/1 5 I~ B ~ S I 5 City H i/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W C i ty Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Detroit 77/58/0.00 85/68/1 The highertheAccuWesfrer.rsrmIIYIndex number, Astoris 64/53/0.00 63/49/pc64/51/pc Ls Grande 79/43/0.00 82/57/pc 80/56/pc Portland 84/5 4/0.0084/57/pc80/59/ pc Duluth 54/46/0.00 66/42/r the greatertheneedfor eyesodskin protecgoo.0-2 Low Baker City 75/35/0.00 80/51/pc 79/51/pc Ls Pine 78/36/0.00 83/51/t 81/49/t Prinevige 81/ 43/0.0086/53/pc 81/53/pc El Paso 94/68/0.00 95/65/pc 3-5Moderate;6-7 High;8-10 VeryHigh; 11+ Extrems. Brookings 55/49/Tr 6 2/52/pc 61/52/pc M edlord 89/5 3/0.00 90/62/pc 88/63/t Redmond 82 / 46/0.0084/53/t 82/53/pc Fairbanks 68/54/0.00 72/48/s Bums 77/40/0.00 82/52/pc 83/53/pc N e wport 5 5/50 /0.00 60/49/pc 58/50/pc Roseburg 88/ 5 5/0.0086/59/pc 84/58/ pc Fargo 86/61/0.67 61/37/c Eugene 83/47/0.00 82/54/pc80/53/pc NorthBend 61/52/0.00 63/52/pc 62/52/pc Salem 85/51/0.00 83/55/pc 81/56/pc Flagstaff 73/35/0.00 74/42/s Klsmsth Falls 79/40/0.00 82/50/t 80/52/t On t ario 83/50/0.00 86/56/pc 90/59/pc Sisters 79/40/0.00 85/52/t 84/50/t Grand Rapids 81/52/0.00 84/65/pc G rasses T r ee s Wee ds Lskeview 77/41/0.00 81/46/pc79/50/pc Pendleton 85/49/0.00 88/62/s 87/61/pc The Dsges 9 1 /59/0.00 91/62/s 88/60/pc Green Bsy 83/55/Tr 78/52/t Greensboro 86/68/0.04 84/64/1 Weether(W):s-sunny,pc-psrtlycloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers,t-tbunderstorms,r-rsin, sf-snowflurries, sn-snowl-ice,Tr-trsce,Yesterday data ssol 5 p.m. yesterday ~y h i ghw L e r Ast t Harrisburg 86/64/0.00 84/65/1 Source: OregonAgergyAssocistes 541-683-1577 Hsrfford, CT 83/65/0.11 86/61/pc Helena 61/52/0.24 73/51/1 Honolulu 84/68/0.00 83/70/sh ~ c s ~ f e s ~ 2 08 ~ 30s ~ 40s ~ 50s ~ 608 ~ 708 ~a cs ~9 0s ~f ccs ~ff Os Houston ~ 108 ~cs 90no/0.00 85ntn As or 7 s.m.yesterday Huntsville 84/67/1.23 82/64/t x x xCstee Indianapolis 84/60/0.02 83/67/pc Reservoir Ac r e feet Ca pacity NATIONAL • i nioee T r'Jrterr ctuebec Jackson, MS 88/67/0.07 85/67/1 EXTREMES + Hal' C rane Prairie 450 7 1 62% Seetue 5 2 , d d~ 75/54 Jacksonville 84/62/0.00 86/66/s YESTERDAY (for the

Yesterday Normal Record

4

Clouds and sunwith a thunderstorm; cooler

Shown is today's weather.Temperatures are today's highs andtonight's lows.

Hood

64' 38'

TRAVEL WEATHER

OREGON WEATHER

Bend Municipal Airport through 5 p.m.yest.

TUESDAY


IN THE BACK BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NEWS W Scoreboard, C2 G o lf, C3 Sports in brief, C2 Tennis, C4 MLB, C3 THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, MAY 29, 2015

NBA

O www.bendbulletin.com/sports

COLLEGE FOOTBALL

NBA FINALS

Bulls fire coach Tom Thidodeau

Cavs, Warriors get time to rest

CHICAGO — In five seasons underTom Thibodeau, the Chicago Bulls soared to heights they had not reached since Michael Jordan and Scottie Pippen were collecting championships. They nevergotto 4:

th e top with

him and Tltibodeau nowheis

By Tim Reynolds

with the strong-willed

Golden State coach Steve Kerr was chatting with assistant Luke Walton a few minutes

The Associated Press

out. The Bulls fired Thibodeau on Thursday, parting ways coach who took the team to the playoffs in each of his five seasons, only to have his success overshadowed byhis strained relationship with the front office. "It is our strong belief

before what became the Warriors' clinching

that there needs to be

somewhat rhetorically. "We wait." Now, we all wait. The NBA Finals will not start until June

a culture of communication that builds a trust throughout this organization from the players to the coaches tothemanagementand to the front office, a culture where everyone is pulling in the same direction," Bulls general manager GarForman said. "When that culture is sacrificed, it becomes extremely difficult to evolve and to grow." Thibodeau went 255-139, a.647 winning percentage that ranks seventh in NBAhistory amongcoacheswithat least200games. Heled the Bulls to the top seed in the playoffs his first two seasons andwas the NBA'sCoach of the Year in 2011, thesame year Bulls star Derrick Rose becamethe league's youngest MVP. Thibodeau thanked Chicago fans, his players, staff and their families "who havehonored me and the Bulls by their effort, love, dedication and professionalism." — The Associated Press

NFL

Kelly says McCoy wrong inmotives PHILADELPHIA-

Eagles coachChipKelly says LeSeanMcCoy was wrong to suggest he favors white players over black players, adding that he never considers racewhen building his Kelly

ros t er.

"I've got great respect for LeSean. However, in that situation, I think

he's wrong," Kelly said Thursday. "We put alot of time in looking at the characters and factors that go into selection and retention of players, and color's never been one of them." Kelly traded McCoyto the Buffalo Bills in March for linebacker Kiko Alonso. McCoywas not happy about the trade. "You see howfast he got rid of all the good players. Especially all the good black players. He got rid of them the fastest," McCoy said. McCoy referenced Kelly releasing star receiver DeSeanJackson a year earlier while keeping receiver RileyCooper. "That doesn't hurt me," Kelly said of the comments. "I'm not governed by thefear of what other people say. Events don't elicit feelings. I think beliefs elicit feelings, and I understood what my beliefs are and I know who I am." — The Associated Press

victory in the Western

Conference Finals, and a realization popped into his head.

"You know what we do now?" Kerr asked,

4, meaning both the Courtesy of Karl Maasdam i Oregon State University

New Oregon State football coach Gary Andersen takes part in spring practices in April. Andersen is replacing Mike Riley as head coach after Riley left to take the head coaching job at Nebraska.

Cleveland Cavaliers

and the Warriors will have more than a full week to rest, recover,

scout and plan for Game 1 of the title matchup. It is the same

sort of break that Golden State had to deal with between the first

and second rounds, and for Cleveland, these mini-vacations are now

the norm. SeeFinals/C4

• The Beavers football coach gets readyfor hisfirst season at the helm in Corvallis

T

he Oregon State football faithful in Central

KEVIN

Oregon had grown

DUKE

accustomed to Mike Riley.

During his 14 seasons over two stints as the Beavers'

head coach, the likable Riley had visited the Bend area many times, and the locals got to know Riley during his march to becoming the winningest football coach in OSU history. Last December, Riley shocked the college football world when he left Corvallis

chosentoreplaceRileyw hen Gary Andersen made his first

months into his opening year in Corvallis. Andersen, 51, came to Or-

egon State after guiding Wisconsin to successive 9-4 and 10-3seasons,prompting much debate among college football media and fans about his mo-

formal visit to Central Oregon, for the Beaver Nation Road

tives for the move.

Show at Broken Top Club in

at Utah State for four years, leading the team to one of its

Bend. It was easy to tell these were

Prior to that he had coached

most impressive seasons in serious Beaver fans — the school history in 2012, when room was nothing but orange the Aggies went 11-2 in his and black. final season there. The crowd got updates from

— where he had grown up and gone to high school and appeared destined to spend hisremaining coaching years

the athletics staff on the latest

Spring ball

projects at the university and heard from OSU coaches on

— to become the new head coach at Nebraska.

the state of their programs at

Andersen's first spring practices at OSU went well and were basically injury-free,

Last week, some 150 loyal Oregon State supporters turned out to greet the man

the school. During the festivities Anderson sat down with me to

talk some football, just five

he said, and the adjustment

to his system was relatively seamless. SeeAndersen/C4

GaryAndersen coachingcareer Year

Ove r all Conference

SOUTHERN UTAH 2003

2010 2011 2012

rain delay, UCLA pulled away with five runs in the top of the sixth inning for a

7-1victoryoverOregon on theopening day at the Softball World Series. Oregon pitcher Cheridan Hawkins threw 5'/s innings, giving up eight hits

Scott Heinemnn, left, is set to lend the Ducks in the NCAA Divi-

sion I Baseball Regionals starting

today. Oregon will take on lown at 11 n.m.

3-5 2-6 5-2 6-0

2013 2014

Taking on those making theca s By Christopher Clarey

6-2 7-1

New York Times

PARIS — The cool-

ing-off period continued

Nextup

Thursday at the French

Open. Shortly after the nine-

Weber State at Oregon State When:5 p.m. Friday, Sept. 4 TV:Pac-12 Radio:KICE940-AM

time champion Rafael

Nadal played and won his second-round match on the main Philippe Chatrier Court against Nicolas Almagro, Brazilian chair umpire Carlos Bernardes officiated a women's second-round

Oregon's Cheridan Hawkins pitches in the first inning

of Thursday night's game

match on Court 7 be-

tween Sloane Stephens and Heather Watson. The rapprochement

between Nadal, the ten-

against UCLA in the Wom-

nis star, and Bernardes,

Carda got the win as she went the distance, giving up six hits. Oregon next plays in the losers bracket on Saturday against Alabama

World Series in Oklahoma City.

here in Paris, but that is

at 11:30 a.m. Alabama lost to Michigan

AlonzoAdams/The Associated Press

and seven earned runs. Hawkins also had six strikeouts. UCLA pitcher Ally

en's College

Thursday night 5-0.

a leading tennis umpire, might have taken place no longer a possibility now that the issues dividingthem have moved into public view. SeeCalls/C4

COLLEGE BASEBALL

Patiencepaysoff for Ducks' Heineman By Steve Mims The (Eugenei Register-Guard

After debating the most

important decision of his baseball career,ScottHeineman went against his usual

Brian Davies I The Register-Guard

4-8 7-6 11-2

N/A

WISCONSIN

Oregon osesopener to UCLA OKLAHOMA CITY — After a long

4-7

UTAH STATE 4-8 2009

COLLEGE SOFTBALL

From wire reports

TENNIS

Nextuy

junior year.

Regionals: Oregon vs. Iowa When: 11 a.m. today

you get an opportunity to live

thought process. The versatile Heineman, of

pro ball. Being drafted with

Pacific Palisades, California,

the 573rd overall pick was

was chosen in the 19th round of the Major League Baseball

earlier than many projected after Heineman missed all but eight games last season with a shoulder injury, but

draft last June by Kansas City

afterhisredshirtsophomore season at Oregon, giving him a chance to join his brother in

he turned down the Royals to return to the Ducks for his

"You've got to be patient," Heineman said. "Any time out your dream and put that on hold, it's because this is my dream, to win a national

championship." Heineman, a medical redshirt last season, was still on the sideline at the start of this

year because of a concussion that forced him to miss the first 12 games. SeeHeineman/C3


C2

TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, MAY 29, 2015

ON THE AIR

COREBOARD

TODAY FOOTBALL

Australia, Sydney vs. Carlton

Time T V/Radio 2 :30 a.m. FS 2

AUTO RACING

NASCAR,XFINITY, Dover200, practice NASCAR,Sprint Cup, Dover, practice NASCAR,Truck Series, Dover 200, qualifying NASCAR,XFINITY, Dover200, practice NASCAR,Sprint Cup, Dover, qualifying NASCAR,Truck Series, Lucas Oil 200

7 a.m. FS1 8 a.m. FS1 9 :30 a.m. FS 1 11 a.m. FS1 1 2:30 p.m. F S 1 2 :30 p.m. FS1

TENNIS

French Open

7 a.m.

Te n nis

10 a.m. 1 p.m. 4 p.m. 5 p.m. 7 p.m.

SEC SEC SEC MLB Root

8 p.m.

E S PNU

10 a.m. 1 p.m.

Golf Golf

BASEBALL

College, NCAA tourney, Arkansas vs. Oral Roberts College, NCAAtourney, Lehigh vs. LSU College, NCAA tourney, Florida vs. Florida A8 M MLB, Los AngelesDodgers at St. Louis MLB, Cleveland atSeattle College, NCAA tourney, UCLA vs. CalState Bakersfield GOLF

LPGA Tour ,LPGA Classic PGA Tour,AT&TByron Nelson SOFTBALL

NCAA World Series, Game5, teams TBD NCAA World Series, Game6, teams TBD

4 p.m. ES P N2 6:30 p.m. ESPN2

HOCKEY

NHL playoffs, TampaBayat NewYork Rangers SOCCER FIFA U-20World Cup, NewZealand vs Ukraine FIFA U-20World Cup,United States vsMyanmar FIFA U-20World Cup, Argentina vs Panama FIFA U-20World Cup, Ghanavs Austria

5 p.m.

N B CSN

6 p.m. 9 p.m. 9 p.m. midnight

FS1 FS1 FS2

FS2

SATURDAY TENNIS

French Open,third round 2 a.m. Tennis FrenchOpen,men'sandwomen'sthirdround 9 a.m. NBC French Open, round of16 2a.m. (Sun.) Tennis FOOTBALL

Australian, Adelaide vsFremantle

2:30a.m.

FS2

5:30 a.m. 10 a.m. noon noon

Golf Golf CBS Golf

GOLF

EuropeanTour, Irish Open PGA Tour,AT&TByron Nelson PGA Tour,AT&TByron Nelson LPGA Tour, ShopRite LPGA Classic AUTO RACING

NASCAR,Sprint Cup, Dover, practice 7 a.m. N ASCAR, XFINITY, Dover200, qualifying 8 a . m. United SportsCar Championship, Belle Isle Park 9 a.m. NASCAR,Sprint Cup, Dover, practice 10 a.m. NASCAR,XFINIT, Dover 200 11:30 a.m. IndyCar, Dual in Detroit, Race1 12:30 p.m.

FS1 FS1

FS2 FS1

Fox

ON DECK Today Baseball: 5Aquarterfinals, NorthEugeneat Summit, 5p.mc5Aquarterfinals, Bendat Liberty, 4:30p.m. Boys lacrosse: OHSLA quarterfinal, Bendat West Linn, 7p.m.

Professional FrenchOpenResults Thursday atParis Men SecondRound Nick Kyrgios(29), Australia, def. KyleEdm und, Britain,walkover. Marin Cilic (9), Croatiadef. , AndreaArnaboldi, Italy, 7-6 (3), 6-1,6-1. LeonardoMayer (23), Argentina,def. JerzyJanowicz, Poland,6-4,6-4, 6-7(1), 6-1. PabloAndujar,Spain, def. PhilippKohlschreiber (22),Germ any, 6-1, 7-6(5), 3-6,3-6, 6-4. ThanasiKokkinakis,Australia, def.BernardTomic (27), Australia,3-6,3-6, 6-3,6-4, 8-6. RafaelNadal(6), Spain, def. NicolasAlmagro, Spain,6-4, 6-3,6-1. AndreyKuzne tsov, Russia,def. Jurgen Melzer, Austria,6-1,5-7, 7-6(0), 7-5. DavidGoffin(17), Belgium,def. SantiagoGiraldo, Colombia6-3, , 4-6, 7-5,6-2. NovakDjokovic(1), Serbia,def.GigesMuller, Luxembourg,6-1, 6-4,6-4. AndyMurray(3), Britain, def.JoaoSousa,Portugal,6-2, 4-6,6-4,6-1. SimoneBoleli, Italy, def.Viktor Troicki (31),Serbia, 6-2,6-4,6-3. JeremyChardy,France,def.JohnIsner(16), United States,6-4,4-6, 6-3,6-3. BornaCoric, Croatia, def.Tomm y Robredo (18), Spain,7-5,3-6, 6-2,4-6, 6-4. DavidFerrer(7), Spain,def. Daniel Gimeno-Traver, Spain,6-3, 6-2,6-1. JackSock,UnitedStates, def.PabloCarrenoBusta, Spain,6-7(2), 7-6(4),6-1, 7-6(4). KevinAnderson(15), SouthAfrica, def. Yen-hsun Lu, Taiwan, 5-7,6-4, 6-4,6-4. RichardGasquet(20), France,vs. Carlos Berlocq, Argentina,3-6, 6-3,6-1, 4-6,susp.,darkness. Third Round Kei Nishikori (5), Japan,def. BenjaminBecker, Germany, walkover. Women SecondRound Julia Goerges,Germany, def. CarolineWozniacki (5), Denm ark, 6-4, 7-6(4). PetraKvitova(4), CzechRepublic, def.Silvia Soler-Espinosa, Spain, 6-7(4), 6-4,6-2. Francesca Schiavone,Italy, def.SvetlanaKuznetsova (18),Russia,6-7 (11),7-5,10 8. Sara Errani(17),Italy, def.CarinaWitthoeft, Germany,6-3,4-6r 6-2. Irina FalconiUni , tedStates, def.Sesil Karatantcheva, Bulgaria,3-6, 6-1,6-2. AndreaPetkovic (10), Germany, def. Lourdes Domingue zLino,Spain,4-6,6-4,6-4. Irina-Cam elia Begu(30), Romania, def. AnaKonjuh, Croatia,6-2,6-0. SerenaWiliams(1), UnitedStates, def.Anna-Lena Frie dsam,Germany,5-7,6-3,6-3. VictoriaAzarenka(27), Belarus, def.LucieHradecka, Czech Republic, 6-2,6-3. AndreeaMitu, Romania, def. Karolina Pliskova (12), Czech Republic,2-6,7-6(5),6-4. MadisonKeys(16), UnitedStates, def. Belinda Bencic,Switzerland,6-0, 6-3. Tsvetana Pironkova,Bulgaria, def. DenisaAllertova, Czech Republic, 6-3, 7-6(2). TimeaBacsinszky(23), Switzerland,def.Tereza Smitk ova,CzechRepublic,6-2,6-0. SloaneStephens, UnitedStates, def. Heather Watson, Britain,6-2, 6-4. Kristina MladenovicFrance, , def. DankaKovinic, Montenegro, 6-3, 7-5. AlisonVanUytvanck, Belgium,def. ZarinaDiyas (32), Kaza hs ktan, 0-6,6-1,6-4.

BASKETBALL

BASEBALL

SOFTBALL

NCAA World Series, Game 7,teams TBD 9 a . m. ESPN NCAA World Series, Game 8, teams TBD 1 1 :30 a.m.ESPN NCAA World Series, Game 9, TeamsTBD 4 p . m. ESPN NCAA World Series, Game10,TeamsTBD 6:30 p.m. ESPN FOOTBALL

Arena, SanJose at Portland Arena, Arizona atSpokane

3 p.m 7 p.m

CSNNW ESPN2

5 p.m.

NBCSN

HOCKEY

NHL playoffs, Chicago atAnaheim

Listingsarethemostaccurate available. The Bulletin is not responsible for latechangesmadeby 7Vor radio stations.

SPORTS IN BRIEF CYCLING CORtador eXtendS leadIII GlrO — Alberto Contadorincreased his lead on the18th stage of theGiro d'Italia on Thursday with a welltimed attack on the leg's big climb, while former world champion Philippe Gilbert posted his second victory in this year's race. Amember of an early breakaway,Gilbert required just over four hours to complete the170-kilometer (106-milej leg from Melide, Switzerland, to Verbanja, which included onetop-category climb shortly before the finish. Astana riders Mikel Landaand Fabio Aru fell behind dueto a crash before the climb to Monte Ologno, andthat's when Contador attacked, riding by himself for most of the ascent andopening up a significant gap from the other contenders. Contador extended his lead over Landa to 5minutes, 15seconds, with Aru third, 6:05 behind.

NBA playoffs NATIONALBASKETBALL ASSOCIATION AO Times POT FINALS

(Best-of-7; x-if necessary) Thursday,June4 Cleveland atGoldenState, 6p.m. Sunday,June7

ClevelandatGolden State, 5p.m. Tuesday,June9 GoldenStateatCleveland,6p.m. Thursday,June11 GoldenStateatCleveland, 6p.m. Sunday,June14 x-Cleveland at GoldenState,5 p.m. Tuesday,June16 x-Golden StateatCleveland,6 p.m. Friday, Junetg x-Cleveland at GoldenState,6 p.m.

Playoff leaders

ThroughWednesday

Scoring G FG FT PTS AVG Davis,NOR 4 47 32 126 31.5 Curry,GDL 15 146 73 438 29.2 14 149 76 386 27.6 James,CLE 17 129 163 462 27.2 Harden,HOU Ellis, DAL 5 52 15 130 26.0 Griffin, LAC 14 140 76 357 25.5 Beal,WAS 10 81 49 234 23.4 Butler,CHI 12 94 59 275 22.9 Paul, LAC 12 95 48 265 22.1 Aldridge,POR 5 37 32 109 21.8 Ligard,PO R 5 39 25 108 21.6 Nowitzki,DAL 5 38 26 106 21.2 Rose,CHI 12 93 35 244 20.3 Leonard,SAN 7 52 27 142 20.3 DeRozan,TDR 4 32 14 81 20.3 Lopez,Bro 6 43 33 119 19.8 Thompson, GOL 15 113 25 296 19.7 Gasol,MEM 11 71 75 217 19.7 Irving,CLE 12 71 57 224 18.7 Gordon,NDR 4 28 5 7 4 18.5 FieId GoalPercentage FG FGA PCT Jordan,LAC 58 81 .716 A.Johnson,TDR 20 29 .690 Chandler,DAL 19 29 .655 Gortat,WA S 54 86 .628 Anderson,Bro 25 41 .610 Duncan,SAN 53 90 .589 Henson, MIL 24 41 .585 Howard,HOU 105 182 .577 Patterson,TDR 15 27 .556 Sullinger,BDS 21 38 .553 Rebounds G OFF DEF TOT AVG Howard,HOU 17 62 176 238 14.0 Jordan,LAC 14 49 138 187 13.4 Griffin, LAC 14 38 140 178 12.7 Aldridge,POR 5 21 35 56 11.2 Duncan,SAN 7 19 59 78 11.1 Noah,CHI 12 45 87 132 11.0 Chandler,DAL 5 27 27 54 10.8 Green,GOL 15 38 124 162 10.8 Davis,NOR 4 9 34 43 10.8 James,CLE 14 26 120 146 10.4 Assists AST AVG 7 G Wall, WAS 83 11.9 Paul, LAC 12 105 8.8 James,CLE 14 116 8.3 Harden,HDU 17 128 7.5 Barea,DAL 37 7.4 4 5 Thomas,BDS 28 7.0 Teague,ATL 16 107 6.7 12 7 8 6 . 5 Rose,CHI 15 9 6 6 . 4 Curry,GDL Griffin, LAC 14 8 6 6 . 1

SOCCER

HOCKEY

2016 MLS All-Star game gaeS to SanJOSe—TheSanJose Earthquakes' newstate-of-the-art venue, Avaya Stadium, will host the 2016 Major LeagueSoccer All-Star Game.MLS Deputy Commissioner Mark Abbott madetheannouncement Thursday at Avaya. Commissioner DonGarber didn't attend at the last-minute with no reason given. Abbott says, "it's world-class, it's spectacular and the whole world's going to get to seeit." The gamewill be in late July next year. Avaya, an18,000-seat soccer-specific stadium, just hosted the U.S. women's team's win against Ireland onMay10. Earthquakes President DaveKaval says: "This is a super exciting day for SanJose, for the Earthquakes. People know it's a great venue towatch soccer." The franchise broke ground onthe privately funded, $100 million stadium in October 2012. — From wire reports

In the Bleachers © 20te Steve Moore. Dist. by Universal Uclrck www.gocomrcs.com/inthebleachers

TENNIS

ABC

College, NCAAtournament, regional, teams TBA9 a.m. ESPN2, SEC MLB, Arizona at Milwaukee 1 p.m. FS1 College, NCAAtournament, regional, teamsTBA3 p.m. SEC MLB,LosAngelesDodgersatSt.Louis 4 p.m. Fox College, NCAAtournament, regional, teamsTBA4 p.m. ESPNU College, NCAA tournament, regional, teams TBA6 p.m. SEC MLB, Detroit at Los AngelesAngels 7 p.m. MLB 7 p.m. Root MLB, Cleveland atSeattle College, NCAA tournament, regional, teams TBA8 p.m. ESPNU SOCCER FA Cup,Arsenal vs Aston Villa 9 a.m. Fox Spanish CDR, Athletic Club vs. Barcelona 1 2 : 25 p.m. ESPN2 Women's int'I friendly, U.S. vs South Korea 1:30 p.m. ESPN Men's friendly, Mexico vs Guatemala 3 p.m. ESPNN FIFA U-20World Cup, Mexico vs. Mali 6 p.m. FS2 F IFA U-20 World Cup, Uruguay vs. Serbia 9 p . m. FS2

Saturday'sGames Game7—Tennesseevs. Auburn, 9a.m. Game8—Alabamavs. Oregon,11:30a.m. Game9—Game5 loservs. Game7winner,4 p.m. Game10 —Game6loser vs.Game8winner,6;30p.m. Sunday'sGames Game11—Game5winner vs. Game9winner,10 am. Game12— Game 6 winner vs. Gam e 10 winner, 12;30p.m. Game13—Game5winner vs. Game9loser,4p.m. Game14—Game6 winnervs. Game10 loser, 6:30 p.m. ChampionshipSeries (Best-of-3) Monday—TBD,5 p.m. Tuesday —TBD,5 p.m. Wednesday—TBD,5 p.m.

IN THE BLEACHERS

NHL playoffs NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE

All TimesPOT CONFERE NCEFINALS

(Best-of-T) Today'sGame TampaBayat N.Y.Rangers, 5p.m.,series tied3-3 Saturday'sGame Chicago atAnaheim5p.m.,seriestied 3-3 FINALS

TBD

TBD

(Best-of-T; x-if necessary) Wednesday,June3 Saturday,June 6

SOCCER MLS MAJORLEAGUESOCCER All TimesPDT

EaslernConterence

W L D.C. United 6 3 N ewEngland 5 3 NewYork 4 2 Columbus 4 4 TorontoFC 4 5 O rlando Cit y 3 5 P hiladelphia 3 7 Chicago 3 5 Montreal 2 3 NewYorkCity FC 1 7

T 4 5 5 3 1 4 3 2 2 4

P t s GF GA 22 14 1 1 20 18 1 6 17 1 4 1 1 15 1 7 1 4 13 14 1 4 13 14 1 5 12 13 2 1 11 1 1 1 4 8 9 10 7 9 16

T 2 3 2 5 3

P t s GF GA 23 1 8 9 21 1 8 1 5 20 1 4 1 2 20 13 1 5 18 1 3 1 2 1 8 17 15 17 1 2 1 6 16 1 6 1 6 16 1 1 1 3 13 1 0 1 0

WesternConference

L 3 3 Vancouver 5 L os Angele s 5 4 SanJose 5 4 S porting KansasCity 4 2 6 R eal SaltLake 4 4 Houston 4 5 Portland 4 5 Colorado 2 3 Seattle FC Dallas

"Call a meeting of the board. Our CFO dove for a loose ball and has exited the company."

GOLF ATILTByronNelson Thursday AtTPC FourSeasonsResort Irving, Texas Purse: $7.1 million yardage:7,166;Par70(36-36) First Round a-denotesamateur 30-32—62 StevenBowditch 30-34—64 Jimmy Walker James Hahn 34-31—65 31-34 —65 RyanPalmer TomGigis 32-34—66 32-34—66 JohnMerrick 33-33—66 Keegan Bradley 33-34—67 DerekErnst 33-34—67 DustinJohnson 33-34—67 SteveWheatcroft 36-31—67 lony Finau 33-34—67 DannyLee 33-34—67 JonCurra n 36-31—67 JohnSenden 31-36—67 Jonas Blixt 35-32—67 KenDuke 35-32—67 NickWatney 32-35—67 MartinFlores 32-35—67 Jonathan Byrd Cameron Percy 31-36—67 CharlesHowellIg 34-34 —68 Michael)hom pson 36-32—68 34-34—68 HunterMahan ColtKnots 32-36—68 ErikCompton 34-34—68 JoeAffrunII 34-34—68 ByronSmith 36-32—68 MarkAnderson 35-33—68 Will Wilcox 35-33—68 BooWeekley 34-34—68 S.J.Park 33-35—68 JerryKely 34-34—68 Graham DeLaet 35-34—69 CarlPettersson 34-35—69 Char leyHoff man 35-34—69 RorySabbatini 34-35—69 ZachJohnson 36-33—69 RobertoCastro 35-34—69 AdamHadwin 34-35—69 BenjaminAlvarado 33-36—69 a-AustinConnegy 33-36—69 JeffOverton 34-35—69 J.J. Hen ry 34-35—69 JohnHuh 33-36—69 BryceMolder 36-33—69 LukeGuthrie 35-34—69 34-35—69 JordanSpieth BrooksKoepka 34-35—69 33-36—69 HarrisEnglish KennyPerry 35-~9 32-37—69 GregChalmers 33-36—69 RodPampling 35-34—69 Andres Romero 32-37—69 Jim He rman 34-35—69 ZacBlair 33-36—69 Andrew Loupe 32-37—69 ScottPinckney 34-35—69 SamSaunders 35-34—69 Steven Alker 34-35—69 Jonathan Randolph 34-36—70 JhonatlaV negas 34-36—70 HeathSlocum 36-34—70 JohnMalinger 35-35—70 Morga nHoff mann 35-35—70 Andres Gonzales 34-36—70 KyleReifers RobertGarrigus 35-35—70 MarcLeishman 36-34—70 GonzaloFdez-Castano 35-35—70 33-37—70 Cameron Smith Andrew Putnam 35-35—70 TomHoge 35-35—70 Fabian Gomez 37-33—70 CreightonHoneck 36-34—70 ChadCampbell 32-38—70 NicholasThompson 37-33—70 ChadCollins 36-34—70 BrianStuard 36-34—70 BrianHarman 35-35—70 MarlinLaird 37-33—70 BenCrane 37-33—70 RussellHenley 37-33—70 ScotlBrow n 35-35—70 VijaySingh 37-33—70 JustinThomas 34-36—70 Brendon deJonge 34-36—70 DerekFathauer 39-32—71 AaronBaddeley 35-36—71 )revorlmem lman 34-37—71 GregOwen 36-35—71 MikeWeir 33-38—71 CharlSchwadzel 35-36—71 JasonDufner 35-36—71 Vaughn laylor 33-38—71 D.A.Points 33-38—71 BrandtSnedeker 33-38—71 MattKuchar 35-36—71 Bo Van Pelt 37-34—71 BrandtJobe 33-38—71 37-34—71 RickyBarnes 33-38—71 HarrisonFrazar 36-35—71 SpencerLevin 34-37—71 ScotlVerplank 35-36—71 Carlos Ortiz 34-37—71 ZackSucher 35-36—71 RichardSterne 36-35—71 MarkHubbard 36-36—72 TimWilkinson 35-37—72 Brendan Steele 36-36—72 CharlieBeljan 37-35—72 ScotlPiercy 40-32—72 DanieBe l rger 36-36—72 DavidLingmerth EricAxley 35-37—72 GaryWoodland 35-37—72 Brendon Todd 36-36—72 38-34—72 MattJone s MichaelPutnam 38-34—72 BenCurtis 38-34—72 WheeKim 38-34—72 PatnckRodgers 35-37—72 CodyGribble 38-34—72 Jim Re nner 33-40—73 ChezReavie 36-37—73 GeoffOgilvy 36-37—73 AlexPrugh 36-37—73 HudsonSwafford 36-37—73 KellyKraft 36-37—73 ScottLan gley 35-38—73 Billy Hurlegl y 37-36—73 BlakeAdams 38-35—73 ChrisSmith 38-35—73 ) imPetrovic 35-38—73 JasonGore 37-36—73

CarlosSainzJr Andrew Svoboda AngelCabrera Sangm oonBae BrianDavis Brandon Hagy BillLunde RogerSloan AustinCook Christopher Brown )roy Matton es CharlieWi Johnson W agner RobertAge nby Joshleater Oscar Fraustro Tyrone VanAswegen JohnRolins RetiefGoosen D.H.Lee MaxHom a KevinGolding

36-37 —73 38-36—74 37-37—74 38-36—74 36-38—74 38-36—74 36-38—74 39-35—74 35-39—74 37-37—74 37-38—75 38-37—75 37-39—76 39-37—76 38-38—76 36-41—77 42-35—77 40-37—77 40-37—77 37-40—77 40-39—79 42-38—80

BASEBALL College NCAAtournament All TimesPDT REGIONALS (Oouhle elimination; x-if necessary) Tallahassee, Fla. Friday Game1 —Auburn(35-24) vs.Collegeof Charleston (43-13),9a.m. Game 2— Florida State(41-19) vs.Mercer(35-21), 3 p.m. Gainesville, Fla. Friday Game1 —South Florida (33-24-1) vs.FAU(40-17), 10a.m. Game 2—Florida (44-16) vs.FloridaA&M(23-23), 4p.m. Coral Gahles, Fla. Friday Game1 — Columbia(31-15) vs.EastCarolina (4020),10 a.m. Game 2—Miami (44-14) vs. FIU(29-29), 4 p.m. Louisville, Ky. Friday Game 1 — Michigan(37-23) vs. Bradley(35-19), 11a.m. Game 2 —Louisville (43-16)vs. MoreheadState (38-20), 3p.m. Nashville, Tenn. Friday Game 1 —Indiana(34-22) vs. Radford(43-14), noon Game 2—Vanderbilt(42-19)vs. Lipscomb(39-18), 5 p.m. Champaign, Rl. Friday Game1—WrightState(41-15) vs.Notre Dame(3621),10a.m. Game 2—glinois (47-8-1) vs.Ohio(36-19),5 p.m. Springfield, Mo. Friday Game 1 —Oregon(37-23) vs. Iowa(39-16), 11 a.m. Game 2 — Missouri State(45-10)vs. Canisus (3428),4 p.m. BatonRouge,La. Friday Game1 —LSU(48-10) vs.Lehigh(25-29),1 p.m. Game 2—Tulane(34-23) vs.UNCWilmington (3916),5 p.m. Stillwater, Okla. Friday Game1 —OralRoberts(41-14) vs.Arkansas(35-22), 10a.m. Game 2 —OklahomaState (37-18) vs. St. John's (39-14), 4p.m. Forl Worlh, Texas Friday Game1—StonyBrook(34-14-1) vs.N.C.State(3421),12;30p.m. Game 2—TCU(45-11) vs.SacredHeart(23 30-1),4p m. Dallas Friday Game1 —Texas(30-25)vs.OregonState(38-16-1), 11:30p.m. Game 2 — Dallas Baptist (43-13)vs. VCU(37-22), 4p.m. College Station, Texas Friday Game 1 — California (34-19)vs. Coa stal Carolina (38-19), 10 a.m. Game 2 — TexasA8M(45-11) vs. Texas Southern (31-17), 4p.m. Houston Friday Game1 — Louisiana-Lafayette(39-21)vs. Rice(3520),12:30p.m. Game 2—Houston (42-18) vs.HoustonBaptist (2825),5 p.m. Los Angeles Friday Game1 —Maryland(39-21)vs.Mississippi (30-26), 4p.m. Game 2 — UCLA(42-14) vs. Cal StateBakersfield (36-22-1),8p.m. Fullerlon, Calif. Friday Game 1 — Clemson (32-27) vs. ArizonaState (3421),3 p.m. Game 2 —CalStateFullerton (34-22)vs. Pepperdine (30-27), 7p.m. Lake Elsinore, Calit. Friday Game1 —Virginia (34-22)vs.SouthernCal(37-19), 3 p.m. Game2—UcSantaBarbara(40-15-1) vs.SanDiego State(40-21),7 p.m.

W 7 6 6

5 4 4 7

Today'sGame FC DallasatSporting KansasCity, 6p.m. Saturday'sGames SanJoseat TorontoFC,2p.m. RealSaltLakeat Vancouver,3 p.m. Houstonat NewYorkCity FC,4p.m. PhiladelphiaatD.C.United,4 p.m. Columbus at Orlando City, 4:30p.m. Montrealat Chicago,5:30 p.m. Portlandat Colorado,6 p.m. Sunday'sGames NewYorkatSeattle, 2p.m. LosAngelesatNew England,4p.m.

DEALS Transactions BASEBALL

AmericanLeague

BALTIMOR EORIDLES— Sent RHPTyler Wilson

to Norfolk(IL). BOSTONRED SOX — Recalled LHPs Eduardo Rodriguez andRobbieRossJr. fromPawtucket (IL). OptionedRH PHeathHembreeto Pawtucket. Activated OF CarlosPeguero. Designated INFJeffBianchi for assignment.PlacedOF-18 Daniel Navaonthe15-day DL, retroactiveto May26. CHICAGO WHITESDX —Recalled RHPs Daniel WebbandChris Beckfrom Charlotte (IL). Optioned RHPScott Carroll to Charlotte. CLEVEL ANDINDIANS—Selected thecontract of OF JerrySands(.40) fromColumbus (IL). Recalled RHPAustinAdamsfromColumbus. PlacedINFCarlos Santana onthe paternity list. PlacedRHPScott Atchison on the15-day DL.

LDSANGELESANGELS—Selected the contract OF AlfredoMarte fromSalt Lake(PCL). to Major LeagueRoster. Activated DF Kirk Nieuwen huis. PlacedOFCollin Cowgil onthe15-DayDL,retroactive to May26. DesignatedOFMarc Kraussfor assignmen t. TEXAS RANGERS—Recalled INFHanser Alberto from Round Rock(PCL). DptionedRHPPhil Kleinto RoundRock. TORONTOBLUEJAYS— DptionedRHPScottCopelandto Buffalo (IL). AmericanAssociation AMARILLOTHUNDERHEADS— SignedCChad Bunting. FARGO -MOORHEAD REDHAWKS — Released RHPChaseBoruff. KANSASCITYT-BDNES— Signed RHP Robert Doran. SIOUXFALLSCANARIES— ReleasedINFShelby Ford. WINNIPEG GDLDEYES— SignedLHP Jonathan Cornelius.Announced DFMike Wilson signedwith Veracruz(Mexican). Can-AmLeague QUEBECCAPI TALES— SignedINFMikeWashburn. Frontier League FRONTIER GREYS — Sold the contract of RHP KyleSchepelto Seattle (AL). LAKEERIECRUSHERS—SignedINFParker Norris. Released OFAdamLindgren. RIVERCITYRASCALS— SignedCJacksonSlaid. Released RHPJakeHeissler. SOUTH ERNILLINOIS MINERS— Sold the contract ofRHPAdamLopezto Seattle (AL). BASKETBALL

National Basketball Association CHICAGOBULLS — Fired coachTom Thibodeau. Women'sNational Basketball Association NEWYORKLIBERTY— WaivedGAmberOrrange and CShaneceMcKinney. FOOTBALL National Football League CINCINN ATI BENGALS— SignedTETyler Kroft of Rutgers. DALLASCOWBOYS — Signed LBDamienWilson. NEWYORKJETS— ReleasedQBMattSimms. WASHINGTONREDSKINS — Si gned CB Trey Wolfe andCBTajhHasson. CanadianFootball League TORONTOARGONAUTS— SignedDLDarylWaud andQBBlakeSims HOCKEY National HockeyLeague ARIZONA COYOTES—SignedFMatthias Plachta to a one-year entry-level contract. COLUMBU SBLUEJACKETS — SignedDCody Goloubefto atwo-year contract extensionthroughthe 2016-17season. SAN JOSESHARKS — Named Peter DeBoer coach.AmericanHockeyLeague AHL —SuspendedUticaFBrandonDeFaziotwo games for aninterference incident in aMay25 game againstGrandRapids SOCCER Nationa lW omen' sSoccerLeague WASHIN GTON SPIRIT — Waived F Caroline Miller. COLLEGE BOWLINGGREEN— Announcedgraduatestudent SEilarHardyhastransferredfromNotre Dame. COKER —Named Bil Simpsonmen's andwomen's tenniscoach. NEBRA SKA — Chris Tama s assistant volleyball coach JohnCook. NEW JERSEYCITY—Announcedtheprogramwill join the AlleghenyMountainColegiate Conferenceas an affiliatemember in thesport of women's bowling, effectivefor the2015-16season. SIU-EDW ARDSVILLE— Named Charles Wells men'sassistantbasketball coach. ST. JOHN'S — Announcedthe resignation of athletic director Chris Monasch,effective June 30.

SOFTBALL

FISH COUNT

College

Upstreamdaily movement of adult chinook,jack chinook,steelheadandwild steelheadat selectedColumbiaRiverdamslast updatedWednesday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd Bonneville 3,079 570 45 16 The Dalles 2,068 27 5 5 0 John Day 1,586 29 1 11 5 McNary 1,379 165 4 1 Upstream year-to-date movement ofadult chinook, jack chinook,steelheadand wild steelheadat selected ColumbiaRiverdamslast updatedWednesday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd Bonneville 209,524 11,864 4,997 2,498 T he Dalles 179,642 10,119 408 17 3 John Day 150,960 9,237 591 337 M cNary 139,900 6,643 703 40 3

NCAAtournament All Times POT W OMEN'S COLLEGE WORLD SERIES At OklahomaCity

(Douhle elimination; x-if necessary) Thursday'sGames Florida 7,Tennessee2 LSU 6,Auburn1 Michigan5,Alabama0 UCLA7,Oregon1 Today'sGames Game5— Floridavs.LSU,4p.m. Game6—Michiganvs.UCLA, 6:30p.m.


FRIDAY, MAY 29, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

C3

OR LEAGUE BASEBALL Standings

Sox and MikeWright(2-0) was starting for the third time after scoreless appearancesagainst the Angels and Miami.

SKY HIGH

All TimesPDT AMERICANLEAGUE

East Division

W L 25 23 24 24 22 24 22 26 22 27

NewYork

Tampa Bay Baltimore Boston Toronto

Central Division

Kansas City Minnesota Detroit Cleyeland Chicago Houston Los Angeles Seattle Texas Oakland

W L 28 18 28 18 28 21 22 25 21 25

West Division W L 30 18 24 24 23 24 23 25 18 32

Pct GB

Chicago

Baltimore ab r hbi ab r hbi Eatoncf 3 1 1 0 MMchd3b 4 0 0 0 Mecarrlf 4 1 1 1 Flahrty3b 0 0 0 0 Abreu1b 4 0 0 0 Paredsdh 4 0 0 0 LaRochdh 4 0 3 1 A.Jonescf 4 0 1 0 Bonifacpr-dh 0 0 0 0 DYongrf 4 1 2 0 AIRmrzss 4 0 0 0 C.Davis1b 4 1 1 2 Shuckrf 4 1 2 0 Pearcelf 3 0 1 0 GBckh3b 4 0 2 0 Sniderph 1 0 0 0 Flowrsc 3 0 0 1 JHardyss 3 0 0 0 CSnchz2b 4 0 0 0 Josephc 3 0 0 0 Ecarer2b 3 0 1 0 Totals 34 3 9 3 Totals 3 3 2 6 2 Chicago Ogg OB2 001 — 3 Baltimore Og g O gg 002 — 2 DP — Baltimore1. LOB —Chicago 6, Baltimore 4. 28 — Me.cabrera (3), LaR oche2 (7). HR—C.Davis

.521 .500 1 .478 2 .458 3

449 31/2

Pct GB .609 .609 .571 1'/r .468 6t/r

.457 7

Pct GB .625 .500 6 .489 6t/r

.479 7 .360 13

Thursday'sGames

ChicagoWhiteSox3, Baltimore2,1st game Baltimore6, ChicagoWhite Sox3, 2ndgame Boston 5, Texas1 LA. Angels12,Detroit 2 Oakland5, N.Y. Yankees4 Cleveland 5,Seatle 3

Today'sGames KansasCity (Volquez4-3) at ChicagoCubs (Arrieta 4-4),1:05p.m. Tampa Bay(Karns3-2)atBaltimore (Mi.Gonzalez5-3), 4:05 p.m. Boston(S.Wright 2-1)at Texas (Gallardo 4-6), 5:05 p.m. Chicago White Sox(Rodon 1-0) atHouston(Mccullers1-0), 5:10 p.m. Toronto(Buehrle5-4) at Minnesota(May3-3), 5:10 p.m. Detroit (An.Sanchez 3-5) at L.A. Angels(Santiago 3-3), 7:05 p.m. N.Y.Yank ees (Capuano 0-2) at Oakland (Gray 5-2), 7:05 p.m. Cleveland (Bauer4-1) at Seattle (TWalker 1-5), 7:10 p.m. Saturday'sGames TorontoatMinnesota,11:10a.m. Tampa Bayat Baltimore,1:05 p.m. Chicago WhiteSoxat Houston,1:10 p.m. Bostonat Texas, 4:15p.m. KansasCityatChicagoCubs,4:15p.m. Detroit atL.A.Angels, 7:05p.m. N.Y. YankeesatOakland,7:05p.m. Cleveland atSeatle, 7:10p.m. Sunday'sGames Tampa Bayat Baltimore,10:35 a.m. Chicago WhiteSoxat Houston,11;10a m. TorontoatMinnesota,11:10a.m. KansasCityatChicagoCubs, 11:20a.m. Bostonat Texas, 12:05p.m. N.Y.YankeesatOakland,1:05p.m. Cleveland atSeatle, 1:10p.m. Detroit atL.A.Angels, 5:05p.m. NATIONALLEAGUE

East Division

Washington NewYork Atlanta Philadelphia Miami

W L 28 19 27 21 23 24 19 30 18 30

Pct GB .596

W L 31 16 25 21 25 22 19 27 16 32

Pct GB .660

Central Division St. Louis Chicago Pittsburgh Cincinnati Milwaukee

West Division W L Los Angeles 28 18 SanFrancisco 29 20 SanDiego 23 26 Arizona 21 25 Colorado 19 26

.563 tr/t

.489 5 .388 10 .375 tgr/r

543 51/2

.532 6 .413 1 tr/r .333 15'/r

Pct GB .609 .592 r/t .469 6r/r .457 7 .422 8'/r

Thursday'sGames

Pittsburgh11,SanDiego5 San Francisco 7, Atlanta0

Today'sGames KansasCity (Volquez4-3) at ChicagoCubs(Arrieta 4-4),1;05p.m. Colorado(Bettis 1-0) atPhiladelphia(Ham els 5-3), 4:05 p.m. Miami (Haren 4-2) at N.Y.Mets(Harvey5-2), 4:10 p.m. Washington (Strasburg3-5) at Cincinnati (DeSclafani 2-4),4:10p.m. Arizona(R.De LaRosa4-2)at Milwaukee(Nelson2-5), 5:10 p.m. LA. Dodgers(Bolsinger3-0)atSt.Louis(Lackey2-3), 5:15 p.m. Pittsburgh(Liriano2-4)at SanDiego(Shields 6-0), 7:10 p.m. Atlanta(Foltynewicz3-1) atSanFrancisco (THudson 2-4), 7:15 p.m. Saturday'sGames Colorado at Philadelphia,12:05 p.m. Arizonaat Milwaukee,1:10p.m. Miami atN.Y.Mets,1;10 p.m. WashingtonatCincinnati, 1:10p.m. KansasCityatChicagoCubs, 4:15p.m. LA. DodgersatSt. Louis,4:15p.m. AtlantaatSanFrancisco,7:05 p.m. PittsburghatSanDiego, 7:10p.m. Sunday'sGames Miami atN.Y.Mets,10:10 a.m. Washington atCincinnati,10:10a.m. Coloradoat Philadelphia,10:35 a.m. Arizona at Milwaukee,11:10a.m. LA. Dodgers atSt. Louis, 11:15a.m. Kansas CityatChicagoCubs,11:20a.m. AtlantaatSanFrancisco,1:05p.m. PittsburghatSanDiego, 6:10p.m.

Q, .n

Chris Carison /The Associated Press

Detroit catcher James McCann, left, watches as Los Angeles Angels' Albert Pujols celebrates a tworun home run during the first inning of Thursday's win over the Tigers in Anaheim, California.

American League

Indians 5, Mariners 3

Drew2b 4 0 0 0 Reddckrf 4 0 0 0 CYoungcf 3 0 0 0 Pheglyc 4 0 2 0 G regrsss 3 0 0 0 Canhalf 2 1 1 0 G Jonesph 0 1 0 0 Fuldlf 0000 Totals 3 4 4 8 4 Totals 3 25 9 5 N ew York g10 1 1 0 gg1 — 4 Oakland ggg g12 2gx — 5 E—Semien (18). LOB —NewYork 7, Oakland 6.

ARLINGTON,Texas— Eduardo Rodriguez threw 7/s scoreless SEATTLE —Corey Kluber struck innings to becometheyoungest out13 in seven innings to win Red Sox starter to win in his his third straight decision, Jason 2B — Gardner (10), Zobrist (7). HR—B.Mccann (7), major leaguedebut on the road Kipnis continued his hot Maywith Burns(2),Lawrie (3). SF—A.Rodriguez,B.Butler. IP H R E R BBSO since 1967, andBoston beat the two hits and two RBls, andCleveNew York Rangers to spoil Josh Hamilton's land beat Seattle. Cleveland won SabathiaL,2-7 6 8 5 5 1 4 first home gameback in Texas. D .carpenter 2 -3 1 0 0 1 0 for the eighth time in 10games, 11-3 0 0 0 0 1 The 22-year-old Rodriguez (1-0) inching closer to.500 after strug- Shreve Oakland Gravema n 52-3 7 3 3 2 4 was already the youngest RedSox gling the first six weeks of the Abad 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 pitcher to makehis MLB debut on season. Kluber, the reigning AL ScribnerW,1-0 1 2-3 0 0 0 0 2 Cy Young winner, improved to 3-0 ClippardS,5-6 1 1 1 1 1 0 the road since 21-year-old Roger Clemens in1985. Billy Rohr was Sabathi a pi t ched to 2 b a t e rs i n the 7t h . with 50 strikeouts and two walks T—2:50.A—21,795 (35,067). 21 when hewon in his debut at in his past four starts. the NewYorkYankees onApril 14,

Heineman

Bowditch starts with 62 atNelson The Associated Press

cial when you have everyone aroundthat onlyget to see you play golf once ayear."

IRVING, Texas — Steven Bowditch considers the A T8zT Byron N e lson h i s h ome tournament — j u s t maybe not to the extent Jor-

The Nelson had the home-

town feel for Spieth the moment he stepped to the 10th tee as a high school junior five years ago, when he tied for 16th as the sixth-youngest

dan Spieth does. The Australian matched

his low round on the PGA Tour with an 8-under 62 on Thursday to take a two-shot

player to make the cut in a PGA Tour event. He returned as a rising star after his win

lead over another Texan, Jimmy Walker. Spieth was seven

at Augusta, frequently tipping his cap to large galler-

shots back in his first round

as Masters champion in the

ies that even cheered as he

event that gave the Dallas Bowditch, who moved to approach shot on the17th

walked onto greens. Also on Thursday: Mcllroy shoots 80 in Northern Ireland: NEWCASTLE,

the Dallas area 10 years ago, fairway during the first round has made the cut just once at of the Byron Nelson Thursday

N orthern Ireland — R o ry MCIlroy shot a season-worst

the Nelson — in his debut in 2011, when he tied for 60th af-

to fall 13 strokes behind the

player his start as a 16-yearLM Otero /The Associated Press old amateur in 2010. Steven Bowditch watches an

in Irving, Texas.

ter a third-round 80. He didn't Four Seasons. The 31-year-old missed the cut last week at Colonial in Fort Worth, which is a little farther from his home in the suburb of Flower Mound and

9-over 80 in the Irish Open first-round leaders. The top-

son for Bowditch's family and

ranked MCIlroy had nine bo-

friends. "It's startingto feel that way, to be honest. Starting to get a

geys in his morning round in cold and windy conditions and occasional rain at Royal

lot more ticket requests," said Bowditch, whose only PGA

County Down. He was tied for 150th in the 155-man field.

Tour win was the 2014 Texas

Ireland's Padraig Harrington and Germany's Maximilian Kieffer shot 67 to share the lead.

Open in San Antonio. "You he says doesn't have quite the always want to play well, but "hometown" draw as the Nel-

SAN DIEGO— Jung HoKang hit a three-run homer andStarling Marte and Gregory Polanco also went deep off lan Kennedy to lead Pittsburgh to its seventh straight victory.A.J. Burnett (5-1), who nohit the Padres in 2001while with the Marlins, won his fifth straight start. Andrew McCutchen, Neil Walker and Francisco Cervelli each had three of the Pirates'15 hits.

Pittsburgh San Diego ab r hbi ab r hbi JHrrsn3b 3 1 2 1 Solarte1b 5 1 1 0 NWalkr2b 5 2 3 0 Venalecf 5 0 1 0 M cctchcf 5 2 3 2 Uptonlf 3 1 2 1 S Martelf 3 2 1 2 Kemprf 4 0 0 0 (11). SB —Shuck2(4). CS—Bonifacio (2). IP H R E R BBSO Kangss 5 1 1 3 DeNrrsc 4 1 0 0 PAlvrz1b 4 0 0 0 Spngnr2b 3 0 1 1 Chicago SaleW,4-2 72-3 4 0 0 0 12 Worleyp 0 0 0 0 Mazzonp 0 0 0 0 DukeH,10 1 2 2 2 0 3 Hartph 1 0 0 0 Qcknshp 0 0 0 0 PetrickaS,1-1 1 - 3 0 0 0 0 1 Bastrdp 0 0 0 0 Barmesph 1 0 0 0 Polancrf 5 1 2 1 Garcesp 0 0 0 0 Baltimore 5 2 3 0 Mdlrks3b 4 1 3 1 TWilsonL,1-1 6 5 2 2 1 1 Cervellic Roe 12-3 1 0 0 0 1 Burnettp 2 0 0 0 Amarstss 4 0 1 0 JHughsp 0 0 0 0 Kenndyp 1 0 0 0 Matusz 1-3 1 0 0 0 0 Tom.Hunter 1 2 1 1 0 0 S Rdrgz1b 2 0 0 0 Kelleyp 0 0 0 0 Almontph 0 1 0 0 HBP —byTWilson (Flowers). Gyorko2b 2 0 0 0 T—2:51.A—0(45,971). Totals 4 0 11159 Totals 3 6 5 9 3 Pittsburgh 312 1 0 4 ggg — 11 Orioies 6, White Sex3 SanDiego 000 221 GOO — 5 E—N.Walker (2), Cervelli (2), Amarista (4). SecondGame DP — Pittsburgh 2. LOB—Pittsburgh7, SanDiego6.

Chicago

Baltimore

ab r hbi ab r hbi Eatoncf 4 1 1 1 MMchd3b 4 1 1 0 Mecarrlf 4 1 2 0 Sniderrf 5 0 2 1 Abreudh 4 0 1 0 Paredsdh 4 1 1 0 LaRoch1b 3 1 1 2 A.Jonescf 4 1 1 1 GBckhss 3 0 0 0 C.Davis1b 2 1 1 1 Gillaspi3b 3 0 0 0 Clevngrc 4 1 2 1 CSnchzph 1 0 0 0 JHardyss 4 0 1 1 Sotoc 3 0 1 0 Flahrty2b 4 1 2 0 S huckrf 3 0 0 0 LoughIf 3 0 2 1 AIRmrzph 1 0 0 0 Bonifac2b 3 0 0 0 Totals 32 3 6 3 Totals 3 4 6 136 Chicago 1B2 Ogg 000 — 3 Baltimore 2B2 O B1 10x— 8 E—Soto (4), G.Beckham(2). DP—Chicago 1, Baltimore1.LOB —Chicago5, Baltimore 9. 2B—Soto

(2), Snider(5), C.Davis(9), Flaherty(4). 38—M. Machado(1). HR—Eaton (2), LaR oche (5). SBLough(1). S—Lough. IP H R Chicago BeckL,0-1 6 105 Da.Jennings 1 3 1 D.Webb 1 0 0 Baltimore M.WrightW,2-0 5 6 3 DrakeH,2 1 0 0 BrachH,3 1 0 0 O'DayH,6 1 0 0 BrittonS,13-14 1 0 0 T—2:48.A—18,441(45,971).

28 — J.Harrison (13), Mccutchen2 (11), Solarte(11). HR — S.Marte (10), Kang(3), Polanco(2). SB—J.Harrison(3),Upton(10). CS—Polanco (3). S—Burnett. IP H

R E R BBSO

Pittsburgh BurnettW,5-1 5 2-3 8 5 4 J.Hughes 1-3 0 0 0 Worley 2 1 0 0 Bastardo 1 0 0 0 San Diego KennedyL,2-5 3 2 - 3 7 7 7 Kelley 11-3 1 0 0 Mazzoni 2 4 4 2 Quackenbush 1 2 0 0 Garces 1 1 0 0 HBP—byKennedy(S.Marte). WP —Burnett. T—3:05. A—23,104(41,164).

2 0 0 0

6 1 0 1

2 0 0 1 0

5 2 2 1 0

Leaders AMERICANLEAGUE

BATTING —Fielder, Texas, .361; Kipnis, CleveE R BBSO land, .345;Paredes, Baltimore, .340; Ncruz,Seattle, 4 4 1 0 0 0

3 1 1

.339; Gose,Detroit, .338; Micabrera,Detroit, .333; Moustakas,KansasCity,.329. RUNS—Donaldson,Toronto,41; Dozier,Minnesota, 37;Kipnis, Cleveland,35; Trout, LosAngeles, 35; Cain,KansasCity, 32;KMorales, KansasCity, 32; NCruz,Seattle,31; Gardner, NewYork,31. RBI—Ncruz, Seattle, 38; Fielder, Texas,38; KMorales,KansasCity, 37;Donaldson,Toronto, 35; Teixeira,NewYork,35; Vogt, Oakland, 33;Micabrera, Detroit, 32;Encarnacion, Toronto, 32. HITS—Fielder,Texas, 70; Kipnis, Cleveland, 67; Ncruz,Seattle,62; Donaldson,Toronto, 59;Altuve, Houston,58; Micabrera,Detroit, 57; AJones, Baltimore,56;Moustakas,KansasCity, 56; Pedroia, Boston,56. DOUBLES —Brantley, Cleveland, 17; Cesped es, Detroit,16; KMorales,KansasCity, 15;Kipnis, Cleveland,14;Donaldson,Toronto,13; Dozier,Minnesota, 13; 6 tiedat12. TRIPLES —Orlando, Kansas City, 5; Kipnis, Cleveland,4;11tied at3. HOMERUNS—Ncruz, Seattle,18; Teixeira,New York, 14;Donaldson,Toronto,13; Encarnacion,Toronto, 12;MiCabrera,Detroit, 11;CDavis, Baltimore, 11; HRa mirez, Boston,11; ARodriguez, NewYork,11; Trout,LosAngeles,11. STOLEN BASES—Altuve, Houston,15; Egsbury, NewYork,14;Gardner, NewYork,12; RDavis, Detroit, 11; DeShields,Texas,11; Springer,Houston, 11; Marisnick,Houston, 9.

3 0 2 Angels12, Tigers 2 Cleveland Seattle 1967. 0 3 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi 0 0 0 ANAHEIM, Calif.— Chris lannetta Boston Kipnis2b 4 0 2 2 AJcksncf 4 0 1 0 0 0 1 Texas Aviles3b 4 0 0 1 S.Smithrf 3 0 1 0 0 0 1 hit his fourth career grand slam, ab r hbi ab r hbi Chsnhllph-3b1 0 0 0 N.cruzdh 4 0 1 0 a2b 5 0 3 0 DShldscf 4 0 1 0 Albert Pujols and Matt Joyce also Pedroi Brantlylf 5 0 2 1 Seager3b 4 0 0 0 B ettscf 5 0 3 1 Choorf 4 0 1 0 Raburnrf 4 0 1 0 Morrsn1b 4 0 1 0 homered andC.J.Wilson pitched Sandovl3b 5 0 1 0 Fielderdh 4 0 0 0 National Lea ue DvMrpph-rf 1 0 0 0 BMiller2b 3 1 0 0 HRmrzdh 4 1 2 1 Beltre3b 4 1 1 0 S wisherdh 4 0 0 0 Ackleylf 4 1 1 2 two-hit ball over six innings for N apoli1b 3 1 1 0 JHmltnlf 4 0 2 1 Giants 7, Braves 0 YGomsc 4 0 0 0 CTaylrss 3 0 0 0 the Los AngelesAngels in a rout B.Holtlf-ss 2 1 0 0 Morlnd1b 4 0 0 0 Moss1b 4 2 2 1 Canoph 1 0 0 0 Bogartsss 0 0 0 0 Andrusss 3 0 0 0 over Detroit. Wilson (3-3) struck JRmrzss 4 2 2 0 Zuninoc 4 1 2 1 SAN FRANCISCO — Brandon Peguerph-If 2 1 0 0 Rosales2b 3 0 0 0 out seven andwalkedfive in the Bourncf 2 1 1 0 Swihartc 4 1 2 2 Chirinsc 2 0 0 0 Belt's solo home run in thesevTotals 37 5 105 Totals 3 4 3 7 3 opener of a four-gameseries. The Rcastllrf 4 0 1 1 Clevel and 01 0 301 GOO — 5 enth inning broke up a scoreless 3 4 5 135 Totals 3 2 1 5 1 left-hander allowed his only run in Totals Seattle 001 002 ggg — 3 Boston Bgg B11 OSB — 5 pitching duel and San Francisco E—C.Taylor (2). LOB—Cleveland 8, Seattle6. the third, hitting two-time AL MVP Texas ggg ggg OB1 — 1 28 — Jo.Ramirez (5). HR—Moss(8), Ackley(4), Zu- Miguel Cabrera onthe right foot E—Rosales (3). DP—Texas 5. LOB—Boston 9, won its fourth straight, beating Atnino (7).CS—Kipnis (4). S—Bourn. Texas 6. 28—H.Ramirez(4), Beltre(9),J.Hamilton (1). lanta. Chris Heston (5-3) allowed IP H R E R BBSO with the bases loaded after giving 38 — Bets (2). HR —H.Ramirez(11). CS—Betts(2). four hits over 7t/s innings to win Cleveland IP H R E R BBSO up a leadoff single to James McKluberW,3-5 7 7 3 3 1 13 his third straight decision and give Boston RzepczynskiH,6 1 0 0 0 0 1 Cann and two two-out walks. E.RodriguezW,1-0 72-3 3 0 0 2 7 the Giants 12 wins in their past14 Allen S,10-11 1 0 0 0 0 2 Layne 1 2 1 1 0 2 Seattle Detroit Los Angeles Uehara 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 games. PaxtonL,3-3 42 - 3 8 4 3 1 4 ab r hbi ab r hbi NATIONAL LEAGUE Texas Beimel 21-3 2 1 1 0 1 RDavisdh 4 0 1 0 Aybarss 2 1 1 1 BATTING —DGordon, Miami, .376;AGonza lez, N.MartinezL,4-1 7 9 2 2 2 5 Atlanta San Francisco Lowe 2 0 0 0 0 0 Kinsler 2b 1 0 0 0 Fthrstn ss 2 0 0 0 Los Angeles,.341;LeMahieu, Colorado,.338; Harper, Scheppers 2-3 1 1 1 1 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi HBP —byKluber(B.Miler), byLowe(Kipnis). R omineph-2b1 0 0 0 Troutcf 4 1 1 0 S.Freem an 0 2 2 2 1 0 P etersn2b 3 0 1 0 Aokilf 4 1 2 0 Washington,.331;Goldschmidt,Arizona,.329; Aoki, T—2:50. A—19,449(47,574). Micarr1b 2 0 0 1 AMartelf 1 0 0 0 SanFrancisco,.322;Holliday, St.Louis,.320; Pollock, Kela 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 JGomsph 1 0 0 0 Panik2b 4 1 1 2 HPerezph-1b1 0 0 0 Pujolsdh 2 2 1 2 Arizona,.320. Claudio 1 1 0 0 1 0 C unniffp 0 0 0 0 Pencerf 4 1 1 2 Cespdslf 4 0 0 0 C.Perezph-dh1 0 0 0 RUNS —Harper, Washington, 41; Goldschmidt, S.Freeman pi t ched to 4 b a tt e rs i n the 8t h . V ealp 0 0 0 0 Lopezp 0 0 0 0 Athletics 5, Yankees4 Tycllnslf 0 0 0 0 Calhonrf 3 1 1 0 Arizona,34;Mcarpenter, St. Louis,33; Fowler, ChicaHBP —by S.Freeman (B.Holt), by N.Martinez (Bo- Maybincf 4 0 0 0 Poseyc 4 0 0 0 JMrtnzrf 3 1 1 0 Freese3b 4 2 2 1 gaerts). PB —Chirinos. F Frmn1b 4 0 1 0 Belt1b 4 2 2 1 go,33;AGonzalez,LosAngeles,32;Pollock,Arizona, OAKLAND, Calif.— Ben Zobrist C stllns3b 4 0 0 0 Joycelf 3 1 2 2 T—2:49. A—34,085(48,114). 32; Upton,SanDiego,32. Markksrf 3 0 0 0 Bcrwfrss 4 0 2 1 JMccnc 4 0 2 0 Niwnhspr-If-cf0 2 0 0 RBI — Harper, Washington, 43; Stanton, Miami, Uribe3b 4 0 1 0 Pagancf 4 0 2 0 drew a bases-loadedwalk from Jlglesisss 3 1 1 1 lannettc 4 1 2 4 42; Goldschmidt,Arizona,38; Braun,Milwaukee,37; Przynsc 3 0 0 0 MDuffy3b 3 1 0 0 David Carpenter in the seventh White Sox 3, Orieies 2 Gosecf 4 0 0 0 Green1b 4 0 1 1 Upton, SanDiego,36;AGonzalez,LosAngeles,35; Cnghmlf 3 0 0 0 Hestonp 2 0 1 0 Giavtll2b 4 1 2 0 Washington, 32. inning to break atie and Oakland ASmnsss 3 0 10 Aff eldtp 0 0 0 0 Zimmerman, First Game Totals 31 2 5 2 Totals 3 4 121311 HITS — DGordon, Miami,73;Aoki, SanFrancisco, SMigerp 2 0 0 0 Romop 0 0 0 0 rallied from a three-run deficit to g01 ggg gg1 — 2 Detroit 58; AGonzalez,LosAngeles, 56;Goldschmidt, AriBALTIMORE — Chris Sale struck Ciriacoph-2b1 0 0 0 GBlancph 1 1 1 0 beat the NewYork Yankees. Billy Los Angeles 21 0 G13 Bgx— 12 out12 over 7N shutout innings to Maxwgph-rf 1 0 0 0 zona,55;Wong, St. Louis, 55;Inciarte, Arizona,54; DP — D e tr oi t 1, Los Angel e s 1. LOB — D etroi t 8, Totals 3 1 0 4 0 Totals 3 57 126 Pagan,SanFrancisco, 54;JhPeralta, St. Louis, 54; Burns and Brett Lawrie homered LosAngeles3. 28—J.lglesias(5), Trout(11), lanneta lead the ChicagoWhite Sox to a Atlanta Ogg Ogg 000 — B Pollock,Arizona,54. off CC Sabathia (2-7) to start the (4), Giavotella(6). 38—Giavotela (1). HR—Puiols victory over the Orioles, who reDOUBLE S—Mcarpenter, St. Louis,17; AGo nzaSan Francisco Ogg Ogg 16x — 7 (3), lannetta (3).S—Aybar. orris, SanDiego,17; DesLOB —Atlanta5,SanFrancisco5. 28—Panik(10), lez, LosAngeles,17; DeN comebackfrom a3-0holeandthe (9), Joyce t o wi n the second game IP H R E R BBSO bounded m ond, Wa s h i n gton, 16; FF ree m an, A t l a nta, 16; Du da, Belt (15),B.crawford(11),Heston(1). 38—Pence(1). A'swentontobeattheYankees Detroit NewYork,15; Tulowitzki, Colorado,15. 6-3 in a doubleheader causedby HR — Belt(6). SB—Ciriaco(1). CS—Pagan(2). FarmerL,0-1 5 9 7 7 1 1 —Re vere, Philadelphia, 4; Bourios, St. for the10th time in their past11 IP H R E R BBSO TRIPLES rioting in Baltimore last month. Nesbitt 1131 1 1 1 0 Louis, 3;Fowler, Chicago,3; BHamilton, Cincinnati,3; Atlanta meetings in Oakland. 2-3 2 4 4 2 0 The doubleheaderwas scheduled Gorzelanny P agan, San F r anci s co,3; Realmuto, Miami,3;Trumbo, S.Miller L,5-2 7 5 1 1 0 1 Alburquerque 1 1 0 0 0 1 after games onApril 27-28 were Cunniff 1-3 4 5 5 1 0 Arizona,3. New York Oakland Los Angeles HOMERUNS—Harper, Washington, 18;Frazier, Veal 2-3 3 1 1 0 1 ab r hbi ab r hbi C.WilsonW,3-3 6 2 1 1 5 7 postponed because of riots near Cincinnati,14;Stanton,Miami,13; Braun,Milwaukee, San Francisco GardnrIf 5 1 3 1 Burnscf 4 2 2 1 Salas 1 0 0 0 0 1 the ballpark. The nightcap featured HestonW5-3 12; Goldschm idt, Arizona,12; Pederson, LosAngeles, 71 - 3 4 0 0 1 6 Headly3b 5 0 1 0 Semienss 4 0 1 0 J.Alvarez 2 3 1 1 0 3 AffeldtH,5 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 12; Upton,SanDiego,12. ARdrgz dh 3 1 1 1 Zobrist 2b 3 1 1 1 a matchup of rookie right-handers. RomoH,15 Farmer pitchedto 4batters inthe6th. STOLEN BASES—DGordon, Ma i mi,19; BHamil1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Teixeir1b 3 0 0 0 BButlerdh 3 0 0 1 HBP —byC.Wilson(Mi.cabrera). WP—Nesbitt. Lopez 1 0 0 0 0 2 ton, Cincinnati,18;Polanco,Pittsburgh,12; Aoki,San Chris Beck (0-1) madehis maBMccnc 4 1 3 2 Vogt1b 4 0 1 0 T—3:07.A—32,261(45,957). Franci s co,11; Fowl e r, Chi c ago,11; Pol lock, Arizona, WP — Veal. jor league debut for the White Beltranrf 4 0 0 0 Lawrie3b 41 1 2 11; Blackm on,Colorado,10. T—2:31.A—41,040 (41,915).

GOLF ROUNDUP

make it to the weekend each of the past three years at TPC

Red Sox 5, Rangers1

Pirates11, Padres 5

I guess it is a little more spe-

Springfield (Mo.) Regional at 11 a.m. (PDT) today.

"I'm thankful to the Pac-12 Continued from C1 He finally took the field on for honoring me, but at this March 6 against St. John's, time of year it is really about but he had just three hits in grinding out wins," Heinehis first 21 at-bats as coach man said. "It doesn't matter George Horton batted him who the hero is as long as it sixth, eighth, second and sev- gets done." enth in the order to try and That has always been the find a good fit. motto at Oregon for Heine"The shoulder injury was man, who has battled injutough," Heineman said. "The ries and switched positions doctor said you're cleared regularly. to play,but when you come He was Oregon's starting back, it doesn't all come back third baseman as a f r eshat one time. I'm an impatient person, so I want it all back at

man, but a foot injury cost

Making the big leagues remains the ultimate goal, although Heineman has no regrets about delaying the start of his pro career. "It was a very tough decision," he said. "Obviously, going down last year after eight games was not the way I envisioned my season going, so that made the decision lean toward coming back to

college. It's always tough because my dream is to play pro ball, but to come back here

and get another opportunity to play college baseball and

him the final 34 games. He see how far we can take this batted .278 with four homers thing is awesome." and 38 RBIs as a sophomore Heineman's brother Tyler, Heineman eventually beplaying mainly in right field. drafted in the eighth round came comfortable at the plate He played catcher and in by Houston in 2012, is on the and has settled into the fifth center field last season, but he brink of the majors in his spot in the lineup over the was back at third base before fourth season as a catcher in past two months. He ranks his shoulder injury. Heine- the minor leagues after being third on the team with a .289 man played right field and promoted to Triple-A Fresno batting average to go with center field this season before last week. four home runs, 20 RBIs and moving mostly to first base, Scott Heineman's next step a team-best 13 stolen bases. and the Ducks are 14-4 with couldcome next month when He was named Pac-12 play- him at that position. he probably will be drafted "I'll play wherever the team again and have to choose beer of the week on Monday after going 9-for-16 with two needs me the most," said tween signing a pro contract home runs last week as the Heineman, who is tied for or returning for his senior Ducks (37-23) defeated No. third in school history with season. "I'll think about that when 23 Oregon State and t ook 35 stolen bases and sixth two of three games from with 29 doubles. the time comes," said HeineNo. 2 UCLA to sneak into an After Heineman's performan, who projects as a midNCAA Regional. Third-seed- mance against UCLA, Hor- dle in fielder o r o u t f ielder ed Oregon will play sec- ton said "Heineman looked in the pros. "Right now my ond-seeded Iowa (39-16) in like a big leaguer last week- sole focus is to get a national the opening game of t he end in the batter's box." championship." once. That was a tough obstacle to face."


C4

TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, MAY 29, 2015

TENNIS: FRENCH OPEN

Andersen

key players on the offensive side of the ball, including quarterback Sean Mannion. Mannion's backup last year, Luke Del Rio,

Continued from C1 "We got into our base schemes on offense

son of NFL coach Jack Del Rio, transferred

and defense, which was good to see, and the out of the program in April, leaving redshirt kids learned how we practice, the tempo we freshman Nick Mitchell and true freshman practice with and what we want to get done.

"At the end of the day, mission accomplished. You never get everything you want lrsressat

Seth Collins battling for the starting role in a

new spread-system offense. Neither has thrown a pass at the collegiate

out of it, it's never perfect, but I was proud of

level, but they will have some help on the re-

the coaches and kids — with a whole bunch of work to do." News out of Corvallis during spring ball noted more physicality to Andersen's practices than seen in previous years.

ceiving end of their passes. The Beavers get back key wide receivers in Jordan Villamen, Richard Mullaney and Victor Bolden — the strongest part of the offense, according to the coach.

"In our practices, we want to listen to music

and we want to have fun, with smiles on our faces," Andersen said. "But we also want to be physical. "The game of football is physical. It's toughness, it's fundamentals, it's tackling; you have to do those thing to get better, especially when

"Those are three players that played a lot

last year and did some great things," he said. "If there's a strength to our team on paper, it would have to be the wide receiver corps.

"They are improved physicality-wise, from what we saw in spring ball, and have big-play ability — we just have to get them the ball."

you are a young team. "Ifyou are a very experienced team you probably don't have to be as physical as we The new team were. Credit to the kids, they didn't ask why, After five months at the helm of his new they just went out and did it." team, Andersen, his staff and the team are settling in at Corvallis.

The defense Francois Mori /The Associated Press

Serena Williams serves the ball to Germany's Anna-Lena Friedsam during their second-round match of the French Open in Paris on Thursday. Williams won the match 5-7, 6-3, 6-3.

'o ovic, a a, erena reac r roun in aris By Jerome Pugmire

on Court Suzanne Lenglen

TheAssociated Press

land out, he let the ball glance

and fanswere treated to some PARIS — Novak Djokovic more drama. came through an injury scare As he prepared to serve for Thursday and made his way the second set, Djokovic sat in i nto the third round at t h e his chair and called for mediFrench Open by beating Gilles cal assistance. Moments earMuller 6-1, 6-4, 6-4. lier, his left foot had slipped T he t o p-ranked S e r b as he played a shot from the slipped near the end of the back of the court, throwing second set and needed treat- the weight of his body onto his ment for several minutes on right leg. his right groin area. After receiving treatment, Djokovic, who can com- Djokovic pulled out a towel pletea career Grand Slam by and unfurled it on the clay. winning the French Open, With his orange shirt, he soon recovered from the fall looked almost camouflaged and joined nine-time cham- as he lay on his back, before pion Rafael Nadal and Andy flipping over to his front. "I slipped a lot and felt pain Murray in the third round. Serena Williams also had in the right leg," Djokovic said. a fright, but she avoided a "But I'm not worried about it." repeat second-round exit by He was more concerned beating Anna-Lena Friedsam about a careless mistake in

off his racket and lost the point. "I'm expecting a long talk with my two coaches," he said.

of Germany 5-7, 6-3, 6-3.

beat Joao Sousa of Portugal

the third set when, casually

Djokovic followed Williams waiting for Muller's shot to

Calls Continued from C1 Before the French Open, The Daily Telegraph reported that Bernardes had not

worked any of Nadal's matches since their latest on-court

disagreement at the Rio Open in February. Nadal, in a p a r ticularly frank mood in Paris this year, then acknowledged after his first-round victory here that

he had indeed asked that Bernardes not be assigned to his matches.

Hard as it might be to be-

Pioline said he had request- lieve, Fransson said they did ed not to be assigned to a spe-

cific chair umpire during his career. "What surprises me in the case of Nadal is that the

word got out," Pioline said. The truth is that the rules do not prohibit requests like

time this has happened in my career." T he s i x t h-seeded N a d al, who stood out on center

court dressed in electric blue in somewhat gloomy and

not. "I think we try to treat ev-

erybody the same," he said. "If thereisa reason for keeping a player and a chair umpire apart for a little while, it applies to the top player as well

Nadal's and, despite Courier's as for the other players. I don't surprise, such requests are not really see any difference." w ithout precedent. Nor a r e Managing relations bethey guaranteed to succeed. tween pro players and chair "It is not chair umpire a la umpires is usually a subtle

6-4, 6-3, 6-1 win over Nicolas

we want the seniors to walk out of here with

their heads held high, their chest pumped up, and feel proud that they played at Oregon State.

"I'm never going to be a predictor of wins linebacking corps, and the switch to the odd and losses. It's a funny-shaped ball, it bouncfront (three down lineman instead of four) as es weird ways and crazy things happen. keys to this year's defensive lineup. But we expect to be very competitive and a tough-minded football team." backfield, noted youth but athleticism in the

The offense

— Reporter: 541-617-7868, Itdulte@bendbulletin.com

Andersen will also need to replace some

nals in the past, but no more.

and this break w il l

ago that it was important to lock in a start date given the

t o his usual form or i f

"My footwork was better. I felt better than during the first round. The third-seeded Murray 6-2, 4-6, 6-4, 6-1.

their wins in each of their

opening two series. So both teams were off

Thursday. At th e

Cleveland guard Kyrie There has been so-called Irving has been playing "move-up dates" for the fi- through pain in both legs,

global nature of the NBA, with TV and digital partners

Golden

St a t e' s

K la y

Thompson developed conritories airing the games," cussionlike symptoms after league spokesman Michael the conclusion of the West fiWade said Thursday. "While nals, so the time off will sureit'srareforourteams tohave ly be welcomed there as he a week off prior to the finals, works his way back through the time allows for both teams the league's protocols for to rest up and get healthy." such matters. And Andre IgAnd just about everyone uodala was shaken up late in needs the rest. Game 5 against Houston, so

plex in Independence, Ohio, some players arrived for treatment, but nary a basketball was bouncing in the facility — that resumes today. The Warriors planned to also take the day and revel

in a five-game ousting of the Houston Rockets in the West title series. Kerr said afterthe West

Start with Cavs star LeBron James, who has made

he also can use a little extra rest.

finals that he had not given playing through aches and Golden Stateguard and any thought to Cleveland. pains at this time of year the league's reigning MVP "There's plenty of time to an annual occurrence. The Stephen Curry took a nasty get to Cleveland," he said. a thletic t r ainer w h o h a s spill against Houston and Not that it is necessarily a worked in tandem with him was playing with a sleeve good thing. for years, Mike Mancias, to protect his elbow in the I t i s u n p r ecedented i n is basically around James clincher. "We've gotto take a week league history for both con- more than anyone else as the ference champions to be sit- playoffs go deeper, tending to off to get ready," Curry said, ting around for so longbefore whatever is ailing the four- "and get our minds right the NBA Finals. There are in- time MVP. and our game plan right "I will, as a leader, have for how we're going to beat stances of one Finals-bound team having longer breaks, our guys ready," James said. Cleveland."

"I've only had a couple of in-

mm

STRAIG HT

was really bad," Bradshaw said. "Others we just say, look, they need to have a week or

two off, or if it's more serious, maybe it's all played by ear." There are also more unusual situations.

"I had one chair umpire come to me years ago," Bradshaw said. "And he said, 'Listen, this player has lost the last

»q4 o

seven matches that I have officiated. Can we stay away from each other for a while?'

"I don't think the player had any clue, and I don't think there was aproblem between them. It was just the umpire. It

was bothering him." Bradshaw said that when

a tour supervisor determined that it was time for a "vacation" to end, it was not uncom-

mon to organize a meeting between the chair umpire and the player. "The umpire gets to hear the player's side of it, and the player gets to hear the chair's side of it," Bradshaw said. "And

things have cooled off, and then you move on. Most of the

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to protest the officiating of the French chair umpire Bruno

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cial for 30 years who is the ex-

why he thinks so. We might agree. We might disagree." umpire simply as a "chair." In this unusually high-pro- When a playerand an umpire file case — which Fransson take a break from each other,

he

will still be limping his way through the finals.

C a valiers' com- and 215 countries and ter-

cidents where it's almost a permanent vacation if something

be assigned to a specificplayer bledon in 1995, the U.S. player than the other way around. Jeff Tarango walked off the

and competition at the ATP. Bradshaw refers to a chair

d eter-

"We decided a few years mine basically if he reverts

altercations.

pens. That is not true, because ceptions," said Gayle David if they say they don't want this Bradshaw, a men's tennis offihave him, and we look into

dersen said. "When it's all said and done,

Continued from C1 The Cavs also had layoffs of about a week following

said Nadal, who will next play Andrey Kuznetsov of Russia.

court in the middle of a match

they don't think they should

and all the stuff that comes with that," An-

what the match was l i ke,"

"There are a lot of miscon-

official then we find out why

"But after spring ball, we've got ourselves in a position to put the best kids on the field. "It's a fun group of kids to coach, they're exciting and they work hard." The coach cited experience in the defensive

but not both in the same year.

and former officiating super- times, everything like this is visors, it is much more com- just very temporary."

want an umpire,' then it hap-

pleted as far as starters go," the coach said.

Finals

process. According to current mon that umpires ask not to

know — the team, the kids, the coacheswe've got a lot of work to do." tom of the Pac-12 in nearly every statistical His goals for his first year at the Oregon category. Butasallcoacheshaveto be,Ander- State helm remain the same as with any prosen was nothing but optimistic about what he gram he has coached throughout his career. "The goals are always the same for me, rehas seen so far. "Defensively, nine starters are gone and gardless of what the expectations are, how there's only ll on the field, so we've been de- good or how bad a team is supposed to be

Almagro of Spain. "The score is easier than

Fransson, the French Open the perception sometimes that if the player just says, 'I don't

The Beavers lost nine defensive starters off of last year's squad that ranked near the bot-

always at his best during his

carte, definitely not," Stefan tournament referee, said in an interview Thursday."There is

"I'm excited for the future and as we all

in Corvallis.

overcast conditions, was not

and other men's tennis offi- Bradshaw calls it "a vacation." " Usually it s t arts w it h a cials were reluctant to discuss in detail — there was clearly chair informing the supera greement within th e A T P visor of something, and the Tour, which operates inde- supervisor would determine pendently from the four Grand if that was serious enough to Slam tournaments, that it was keep them away or if it's just best for Nadal and Bernardes normal stuff that happens and to take a break after Rio. not worry about it," Bradshaw But it w a s a l s o e v ident said. "The supervisor, not that putting Bernardes in the the chair, is the one who will chair for a N adal match at make the call. And most of the the French Open at this stage players don't know anything would do nothing more than about all this." inflame the situation, taking Bradshaw said r easons the focus off the tennis and for chair umpires and playputting it squarely on the play- ers to "take a little vacation" er-umpire relationship. from each other range from "I don't really want to get overexposure to a series of

The reaction has ranged from consternation to a Gallic shrug. too specific about the case, "This is the first time I've but it would not be good for heard of a player making a re- anybody," Fransson said. "It questtobesegregatedfrom an wouldn't be good for Berumpire," said Jim Courier, the nardes. It wouldn't be good U.S. Davis Cup captain and a for the tournament. It's just too former world No. l. "I am quite big right now. I don't see there surprised that the request was is any advantage to trying to acceded to." do it now. I'm sure Carlos will Courier added: "This is not come back with Rafa, and a good precedent to set. Hav- I think he will do that quite ing said that, if I knew that I soon." had the option to request time As a working official, Beraway from an umpire or two nardes was not allowed to in my time on tour I would comment publicly, but Nadal have used it quite often." alreadyhassaid heviewed the But Cedric Pioline, the for- situation as temporary. mer French star who played The question is whether star in Courier's era in the 1990s players like Nadal have more and early 2000s, said that the clout on this issue than lowsituation "doesn't surprise me er-level players. at all."

"I lost focus a bit. It's the first

"You get into your comfort zone at this Under Andersen, the Aggies and Badgers point, to be able to move along and be in a were renowned for their defense, but the for- good spot," he said. "The coaches are setmer defensive coordinator at the University of tled, the families are settled, and the kids feel Utah — his alma mater — will be rebuilding comfortable with where they are going.

Rebeuh.

"When youhave something like that," Bradshaw said. "It's probably best that it's a permanent vacation."

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C5 THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, MAY 29, 2015

O» To look upindividual stocks, goto bendbugetin.com/business. Also seearecap in Sunday's Businesssection.

S&P 500

N AsDAQ ~ - 8 . 6 1

+

5,097.98

Todap Slowdown seen

2 120

Economists anticipate that the U.S. economy shrank by 0.8 percent in the first three months of the year. The Commerce Department is due to release its latest report card on the economy today. In April, the government estimated that the economy grew at a barely discernible 0.2 percent annual rate in the January-March quarter, squeezed by a harsh winter and a stronger dollar. GDP seasonally adjusted annualized percent change 5.0% 4.5

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HIGH LOW CLOSE 18154.14 18066.40 18126.12 DOW Trans. 8435.69 8325.14 8367.42 DOW Util. 588.89 584.09 587.75 NYSE Comp. 11135.96 11075.67 11132.74 NASDAQ 5106.65 5080.25 5097.98 S&P 500 2122.16 2112.86 2120.79 S&P 400 1536.80 1528.92 1534.38 Wilshire 5000 22422.94 22306.71 22391.29 Russell 2000 1253.20 1246.07 1253.10

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:::":"." GOPro to make drones

458 463

GoPro (GPRO)

Thursday's close: $56.81

52-WEEK RANGE

40

D I J

F

M

A

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$29

Price-earnings ratio: 80

98

(Based on trailing 12 month results)

Price change GPRO*

Y T D 3-M O 6- M O - 10.1% 3 5 . 3 -27.1

*began trading on June 26, 2014

Source: FactSet

AP

'14 I '15 Source: FactSet

AmdFocus AP

MarhetSummary Most Active NAME VOL (BOc) LAST CHG CSVLgNGS 791413 2.07 -.31 Broadcom 754322 56.25 -.91 S&P500ETF 683633 212.46 -.24 CSVLgCrde 665461 3.17 +.04 BkofAm 595525 16.67 -.07 Exelis 476976 24.66 -.16 SiriusXM 379687 3.80 -.10 B iPVixST 348174 18.88 +.19 iShEMkts 293593 41.52 -.55 PetrbrsA 292904 8.00 + .02

Gainers NAME

LAST 4.30 19.45 Vestrt RMII 4.79 SignalGn n 2.04 MYOS 4.50 Cyclacel pf 7.77 Amarin 2.32 Gevo rs 3.60 Cellectis n 47.66 SterlCons 4.30

OneHorizn RallySoft

CHG %CHG +2.28 +112.9 +5.94 + 4 4.0 +1.18 + 3 2.7 +.44

+.78 +1.27 +.37 +.52 +6.67 +.59

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+ 2 1.0 + 19.5 + 1 9.0 + 1 6.9 + 16.3 + 1 5.9

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NeoStem Ceres rs Xcerra E-CDang

LAST 9.78 2.06 2.43 7.83 8.67

CHG %CHG -3.22 -24.8 -.57 -21.7 -.50 -17.1 -1.48 -15.9 -1.58 -15.4

Foreign Markets NAME

SelectedMutualFunds

Fidelity Advisor Diversified Stock FAMILY carries a neutral rating from Morningstar analysts who say the American Funds fund's risk-adjusted returns place it in the middle of the large-blend fund category.

PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1YR 3YR BYR 1 3 5 AmBalA m 26 . 21 -.61+2.6 +8.3 +14.3+12.8 A A A CaplncBuA m 61.20 -.11 +3.6 +4.7 +11.6+10.9 8 8 A CpWldGrlA m 48.60 -.16 +5.8 +4.8 +16.9+12.7 D 8 C EurPacGrA m 51.71 -.21 +9.7 +4.2 +14.9+10.1 C 8 C FnlnvA m 54. 1 2 - .67 +5.5 +12.0 +19.4+15.5 C C C GrthAmA m 45.63 -.11 +6.9 +13.7 +20.8+15.9 C A C fidelity Advisor Diversified Stock A (FDTOX) IncAmerA m 22.64 -.61 +2.9 +6.0 +13.2+12.3 D 8 A InvCoAmA m 38.10 -.69 +3.9 +10.1 +19.4+15.3 D C C VALUE B L EN D GR OWTH NewPerspA m39.39 -.69 +8.6 +10.1 +17.8+14.0 A 8 8 oWAMutlnvA m41.56 -.61 +1.9 +9.0 +17.9+16.0 C C A $$ Dodge &Cox Income 13.82 -.61 +1.0 + 2 .1 +3.8+4.8 C A B Co cc Intlstk 45.49 -.11 +8.0 + 1 .2 +19.1+11.7 C A A Stock 184.69 -.23 +3.4 +10.4 +23.2+16.8 B A A oFidelity Contra 103. 6 1 - .20 +6.2 +14.8 +18.6+16.6 C C C $$ ContraK 102 . 98 -.19+6.2 +14.9 +18.7+16.7 C C B CI LowPriStk d 53.60 +.65 +5.5 +11.6 +20.0+16.3 B C B Fideli S artao 500 l dxAdvtg 75.66 -.68 +3.9 +13.3 +19.7+16.6 B 8 A FraakTemp-frank li o IncomeC m 2.44 ... +2.3 -0.5 +10.2 +9.4 E A A $$ IncomeA m 2. 4 2 ... +3 .0 + 0 .4 +10.8+10.1 E A A Oakmark Intl I 25.49 . . . +9 .2 + 0 . 7 +19.8+12.6 D A A Co Oppeoheimer RisDivA m 20 . 43 +.61+2.5 +11.4 +16.5+14.4 C E D MorningstarOwnershipZone™ RisDivB m 18 . 64 +.61+2.1 +10.5 +15.5+13.4 D E E RisDivC m 17 . 91 +.61+2.1 +10.5 +15.6+13.5 D E E OeFund target represents weighted SmMidValAm 50.57 -.13 +3.9 +10.9+20.5+14.0 B B D average of stock holdings SmMidValB m42.46 -.11 +3.6 +10.1 +19.5+13.1 C C E • Represents 75% of fund's stock holdings T Rowe Price Eqtylnc 33.2 4 - . 63 +1.7 + 5 .8 +16.8+13.6 E D D GrowStk 56.6 0 - . 18 +9.0 +18.7 +20.7+18.4 A A A CATEGORY:LARGE BLEND HealthSci 61.1 7 +.65+19.4 +48.3 +38.9+32.5 B A A Newlncome 9. 5 9 ... +1 .1 + 2 .4 + 2.7 +4.0 C C D NORNING STAR BATINB~ ***tyty Vanguard 500Adml 196.23 -.22 +3.9 +13.3 +19.7+16.7 8 8 A 500lnv 196.20 -.22 +3.8 +13.2 +19.5+16.5 8 8 8 ASSETS$229 million CapOp 55.74 -.11 +5.7 +19.0 +27.1+18.1 A A A EXPRA TIO .83% Eqlnc 32.61 +.63 +3.2 +9.6 +18.0+16.9 C C A MIB.INIT.INVES T. $2,500 IntlstkldxAdm 28.32 -.10 +9.3 +0.9 +13.2 NA C D PERCEN TLOAD 5.75 StratgcEq 34.30 -.13 +6.6 +15.0 +24.4+19.3 A A A HISTORICALRETURNS TgtRe2020 29.52 -.63 +3.7 +7.0 +12.0+10.6 A A A TgtRe2035 18.70 -.63 +4.8 +8.3 +15.4+12.8 A 8 8 Return/Rank Tgtet2025 17.21 -.62 +4.1 +7.5 +13.1+11.3 A 8 8 YEAR-TO-DATE +3.3 TotBdAdml 10.85 +0.8 +2.7 +2.2 +3.8 B D D 1-YEAR +10.1/D Totlntl 16.93 -.66 +9.2 +0.8 +13.1 +8.7 D D D 3-YEAR +20.3/8 TotStlAdm 53.56 -.65 +4.3 +13.2 +19.9+16.7 8 8 A 5-YEAR +16.4/8 TotStldx 53.53 -.66 +4.2 +13.1 +19.7+16.6 8 8 A 3and5-yearretcttts are mnualized. USGro 32.11 -.64 +7.4 +18.5 +21.3+17.9 A A A

LAST CHG %CHG -44.70 -.86 Paris 5,137.83 London 7,040.92 +7.59 + . 11 -93.56 -.79 Frankfurt 11,677.57 Hong Kong27,454.31 -626.90 -2.23 Mexico 44,807.31 +1 24.72 +.28 Milan 23,744.13 -116.94 -.49 Tokyo 20,551.46 +78.88 + . 39 Stockholm 1,667.06 + 2.98 + . 18 Rank:Fund'sletter grade comparedwith others in Fund Footnotes: b -Feecovering marketcosts is paid from fund assets. d - Deferredsales charge, cr redemption -9.60 -.17 the same group; an Aindicates fund performed in Sydney 5,71 4.60 fee. f - front load (salescharges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually amarketing feeandeither a sales cr Zurich 9,394.25 -1.99 -.02 the top 20 percent; an E, in the bottom 20 percent. redemption fee.Source: Mcrnirgstar.

Rally Software RALY Close:$19.45 A5.94 or 44.0% The cloud-based software and servicescompany isbeing bought by CATechnologies for about $480 million in an expansion move. $20 15

M

A

M

M

52-week range $$.$$~

Vol.:2.0m (10.6x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$118.99 m

A

M

52-week range $16.99 $8.24 PE: 1 9.5 Vol.:12.4m (27.6x avg.) Yield : ... Mkt.Cap:$498.76 m

Broadcom

BRCM Close:$56.25 V-0.91 or -1.6% Rival Avago Technologies is buying the chipmaker in a $37 billion cash-and-stock dealas thecompanies try to boost growth. $60

$19.48

PE: . .. Yie ld: ...

GoPro

GPRO

Close:$56.81 L3.53 or 6.6% The high-tech camera maker's founderand CEO saidthe company will expand into the drone and virtual reality businesses. $150 100

50

50 M

A

M

J AS O N D J F M A M

52-week range $$1.$$~

52-week range

$$ 7.70

$2$.$0 ~

$98.47

Vol.:86.6m (10.3x avg.) PE : 49.0 Vol.:15.8m (2.0x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$30.88b Yie l d: 1.0% Mkt. Cap: $5.11 b

PE: 63.3 Yield: ...

Semtech

SMTC Sanderson Farms S AFM Close:$21.47 V-3.16 or -12.8% Close:$81.93 V-2.57 or -3.0% The chipmaker reported a fiscal The poultry producer reported first-quarter loss and the financial worse-than-expected fiscal secresults and forecast fell short of Wall ond-quarter financial results on fallStreet expectations. ing market prices for chicken. $30 $90 85 80

25

Economic indicator The Institute for Supply Management releases its Chicago business barometer index today. DividendFootnotes:a - Extra dividends werepaid, but arenct included. b -Annual rate plus stock. c - Liquidating dividend. e -Amount declaredcr paid in last t2 months. f - Current Economists expect that the annual rate, whichwasincreased bymost recentdividendannouncement. i —Sum of dividends paidafterstock split, ro regular rate. I —Sumcf dividends paidthis year.Most recent index, a gauge of business activity, dividend wasomitted cr deferred. k - Declared or paidthis year, acumulative issue with dividends in arrears. m —Current annualrate, which wasdecreasedbymost recentdividend p— Initial dividend, annual rate nct known, yield nct shown. r —Declared or paid in preceding t2 months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, approximatecash edged higher in this month to 53, announcement. value on ex-distrittuticn date.PEFootnotes: q —Stock is a clcsed-end fund - nc P/E ratio shown. cc —P/Eexceeds 99. dd - Loss in last t2 months. up from 52.3 in April. An index reading above 50 indicates economic activity is growing. Readings below 50 indicate the economy is contracting. The latest projected GoPro shares surged Thursday after the action video for use in virtual reality, which may be available this year. index would still be down from a camera maker said it is getting into the drone and GoPro last month said it was buying Kolor, a French reading of 61.9 May last year. virtual reality business. company that makes "stitching" technology that CEO andfounderNickWoodman enables users to combine multiple photos or Chicago business barometer said at the Code Conference in videos into a high-resolution panoramic or seasonally adjusted California that GoPro will come out spherical whole. That technology will « 5ss » 4 with a quadcopter drone geared be an important part of its virtual toward consumers in the first half of reality media. est. 2016. The company is also Shares of GoPro jumped 7 52 3 53.0 introducing six-camera technology percent Thursday. 50

M A M 52-week range $1 $.$4 ~ $45.50

P E: 21.6 Vol.:11.5m (3.6x avg.) PE: 3 1 .4 Yield: ... Mkt. Cap:$1.55 b Yie l d : 3.6%

TLYS Close:$9.787-3.22 or -24.8% The clothing and accessories retailer reported better-than-expected profit, but its revenue and outlook disappointed Wall Street. $20

+30 . 4 1 038 13 0 . 8 0

AI $ lf

Close:$22.30 L2.65 or 13.5% The teen clothing retailer reported worse-than-expected first-quarter financial results, but it expects sales to improve. $30

14

M A 52-week range

- 9.2 + 4 . 1 3 3 2 1 0 1 . 3 2 -6.8 +11.0 59553 25 0 .20 +31.8 - 22.6 7 9 dd 0. 8 8

Abercrombie & Fitch

16

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ALK 40.69 ~

LSCC 5.87 ~ L PX 12.46 ~ MDU 19 . 88 o — MEN T 18.25 — o MSFT 39.81 ~ NKE 73.14 ~

EURO +.0061 1.0951+

+.17 '

.

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

Alaska Air Group Source: FactSet Avista Corp Bank of America Barrett Business Eye on consumers Boeing Co Optimism about the job market Cascade Baacorp helped lift U.S. consumer ColumbiaBokg sentiment. Columbia Sportswear The University of Michigan's Costco Wholesale sentiment index rose in April to Craft Brew Alliance 95.9 from 93 in March, its FLIR Systems second-highest level since 2007, Hewlett Packard Intel Corp the year the Great Recession began. Only January's reading of Keycorp Kroger Co 98.1 has been higher. Over the Lattice Semi past five months, sentiment has LA Pacific been, on average, at its highest level since 2004. The May reading MDU Resources Mentor Graphics is due out today. Microsoft Corp Nike Ioc B Nordctrom Ioc Nwst Nat Gas PaccarIoc Planar Systms Plum Creek Prec Castparts Schoitzer Steel Sherwin Wms Staocorp focl StarbucksCp UmpquaHoldings US Bancorp

+

Major stock indexes closed slightly lower on Thursday, industrial and energy stocks were among the biggest decliners. Investors had their eye on developments in Greece, which has said it aims to clinch a deal with its creditors by Sunday. Such a pact would allow the cash-starved nation to receive the final installment of its international bailout plan and avoid a default. Along with Greece's debt problems, Wall Street is looking for insight into when the Federal Reserve might start raising interest rates. The Fed is expected to lift rates as early as September, but the bank's policymakers say any increase will depend on how the U.S. economy performs.

"

NorthwestStocks -2.5

$57.68

StoryStocks

"

f

StocksRecap

CRUDEOIL

+.06

pow jones industrials Close: 18,126.12 Change: -36.87 (-0.2%)

Change: -2.69 (-0.1%)

NYSE NASD

3.5

""'" " ' "

2,150

1,950:

+

$16.70

$1,188.10I + 2 . 2 0

... Close: 2,120.79

2,080' " ""'10 DAYS

SILVER

GOLD

10-YR T-NOTE 2.14% •

18,360"

SstP 500

Friday, May 29, 20t5

2.5

2 6g

2,120.79

M A 52-week range $21.$2~

Vol.:4.6m (8.5x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$1.43 b

M $$0 .$1

M A 52-week range $74.2$~

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P E:6. 6 Yiel d : 1 .1%

SOURCE: Sungard

SU HIS

The yield on the 10-year Treasury remained at 2.14 percent Thursday. Yields affect rates on mortgages and other consumer loans.

AP

NET 1YR TREASURIES YEST PVS CHG WK MO QTR AGO

3-month T-bill 6 -month T-bill

.01 -0.01 w . 0 6 .0 8 -0.02 W

52-wk T-bill

.25

.21

+0 . 0 4 L

2-year T-note . 6 3 .6 5 -0.02 L 5-year T-note 1.52 1.53 -0.01 L 10-year T-rtote 2.14 2.14 ... V 30-year T-bond 2.89 2.88 +0.01 V

BONDS

w

.03

L L

W L

.04 .09

L L L

W .37 W 1 48 . L 2.44

L

L 3.30

NET 1YR YEST PVS CHG WK MOQTR AGO

Barclays LongT-Bdldx 2.76 2.75 +0.01 W L L 3.09 BondBuyerMuniIdx 4.41 4.42 -0.01 W L L 4.49

Barclays USAggregate 2.23 2.23 .. . W

YEST3.25 .13 6 MO AGO3.25 .13 1 YRAGO3.25 .13

L L Moodys AAA Corp Idx 3.94 3.98 -0.04 W L Barclays CompT-Bdldx 1.85 1.87 -0.02 W L Barclays US Corp 3.12 3.12 ... W L

Commodities

FUELS

The price of oil rose slightly after the government reported largerthan-expected declines in U.S. oil and gasoline supplies. In metals trading, gold and silver rose.

Crude Oil (bbl) Ethanol (gal) Heating Oil (gal) Natural Gas (mmbtu) UnleadedGas(gal)

PRIME FED Barclays US High Yield 5.95 5.96 -0.01 W RATE FUNDS

Foreign Exchange The dollar rose against the British pound and moved slightly higher against the yen, but fell against the euro. The ICE U.S. Dollar index declined.

h5Q HS

METALS

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

CLOSE PVS. 57.68 57.51 1.55 1.53 1.87 1.86 2.71 2.82 1.99 1.94

L W L L L

2.21 5. 0 3 4.21 1.72 2.89

%CH. %YTD + 0.30 + 8 . 3 -4.7 +0.33 + 0.74 + 1 . 3 -5.01 -6.3 +2.09 +38.3

CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD 1188.10 1185.90 + 0.21 + 0 .4 16.70 16.64 + 0.25 + 7 .3 -7.7 1116.30 1119.00 -0.24 2.79 2.82 +0.20 -1.6 784.80 785.00 -0.03 -1.7

AGRICULTURE Cattle (Ib)

CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD -7.4 1.54 1.52 +0.68 Coffee (Ib) 1.25 1.25 +0.52 -24.9 Corn (bu) 3.54 3.50 +1.14 -11.0 Cotton (Ib) 0.64 0.63 + 2.03 + 6 . 7 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 272.50 274.40 -0.69 -17.7 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.17 1.13 +3.45 -16.6 Soybeans (bu) 9.26 9.27 -0.11 -9.2 Wheat(bu) 4.89 4.88 +0.21 -1 7.1 1YR.

MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.5321 -.0020 -.13% 1.6709 Canadian Dollar 1.2 4 29 -.0040 -.32% 1.0880 USD per Euro 1.0951 +.0061 +.56% 1.3593 JapaneseYen 123.90 + . 0 6 + .05% 1 01.88 Mexican Peso 15. 3 388 +.0411 +.27% 12.8745 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.8679 -.0098 -.25% 3.4815 Norwegian Krone 7 . 8116 +.0396 +.51% 5.9723 South African Rand 12.1317 +.0882 +.73% 10.4681 Swedish Krona 8.4 6 42 -.0447 -.53% 6.6425 Swiss Franc .9426 -.0086 -.91% . 8 983 ASIA/PACIFIC Australian Dollar 1.3067 +.0120 +.92% 1.0838 Chinese Yuan 6.2006 .0013 -.02% 6.2340 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7540 -.0050 -.06% 7.7534 Indian Rupee 63.790 -.128 -.20% 58.930 Singapore Dollar 1.3484 -.0037 -.27% 1.2557 South KoreanWon 1108.20 -2.50 -.23% 1022.27 Taiwan Dollar 30.64 .0 3 -.10% 3 0.14


© www.bendbulletin.com/business

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, MAY 29, 2015

CentralOregon fuel prices Price per gallon for regular unleaded gas and diesel, as posted Thursday at AAA Fuel Price Finder (aaa.opisnet.com):

eva se es case wi By Rebecca R. Ruiz and Katie Thomas The New Yorh Times

The Federal Trade Commission announced Thursday a

REGULARUNLEADED: •SpaceAge,20635 GrandviewDrive, Bend ............ $2.81 • Ron'sOg,62980 U.S. Highway97,Bend..$2.98 • 76,3198 N.U.S.Highway97, Bend......$2.99 • Chevron,3405N.U.S. Highway97, Bend ...$3.09 • Chevron,2100NEU.S. Highway20,Bend... $3.15 • Texaco,2409 Butler MarketRoad,Bend .....$3.15 • Chevron,61160S.U.S. Highway 97,Bend....$3.03 • Chevron,1095SEDivision St.,Bend.......$3.05 • RiverwoodsCountry Store,19745 Baker Road, Bend...............$3.05 • Red CarpetCarwash,

record settlement of $1.2 billion with Teva Pharmaceutical

235 SEThird St.,

By Joseph Ditzler

Bend...............$3.15 • Shell,16515ReedRoad, La Pine...........$3.05 • Safeway,80 NECedar St., Madras........$2.99 • Texaco,178SWFourth St., Madras........$3.09

The Bulletin

• Shell,15 NE Fifth St.,

Madras...........$3.05 • Chevron,1210SWU.S. Highway97, Madras...........$3.09 • Chevron,398 NWThird St., Prineville ......$3.09 • Fred Meyer,944SW Ninth St.,

Redmond.........$2.85 • Chevron,1501SW HighlandAve., Redmond.........$3.09 • Chevron,2005S.U.S. Highway97, Redmond.........$2.99 • Texaco,539 NWSixth St., Redmond......$3.09 • SpaceAge,411W.Cascade Ave.,Sisters ..$3.03 • Chevron,1001Railway, Sisters............$3.09 DIESEL: • SpaceAge,20635 GrandviewDrive, Bend .............$2.83 • Texaco,2409Butler Market Road,Bend. $3.15 • Texaco,178SWFourth St., Madras........$3.09 • Chevron,1210SWU.S. Highway97, Madras...........$2.99 • Denny'sExpressway, 999 N. Main St.

Prineville..........$2.99 • Chevron,1001Railway, Sisters............ $3.12

BRIEFING Bend dOlltique

going acrosstown The Closet, a women's clothing andaccessories boutique, is moving from east to west. Owner RondaFitton said she's secured a lease at Century Park at SW SimpsonAvenue and SWCentury Drive, in the samedevelopment as Safeway, Pilot Butte Drive-In Westside and Taco DelMar. The Closet will occupy the spaceonce held by Great Outdoors, an outdoor clothing and gear retailer. "I think it's a good location for us," Fitton said Thursday. "A lot of our clients are on the west side." The movearose out of a needfor space for a furniture showroom at the CascadeDesign Center,1805 NEU.S. Highway 20, shesaid. The center is a placeto find flooring, window coverings, furniture and help with interior design. Fitton said she hopes to open TheCloset in its new location in July. The Closet also has alocation in Sunriver. — Bulletin staff report

Industries over charges its subsidiary Cephalon illegally blocked generic competition to its sleep-disorder drug Provigil. Cephalon, which agreed in 2011tobeboughtby Teva, had been in litigation with the com-

OI'

Intheyearbefore a generic version of Provigil, which is the highest the agency has ever approvedtotreatexcessive reached, istheindustrypracsleepiness, was available on the

mission since 2008. The case was due to go to federal court in Philadelphia on Monday. The five FTC commissioners

costs.

were unanimous in a 5-0 vote to resolve the lawsuit.

ticeknown as reverse payment settlements. Inthis case, Ceph-

The case is the latest and most significant signal yet,

alon paid generic manufactur-

experts say, that the federal

government, andthe FTC

agree not tobegin sellingtheir copycat versions until 2012, ac-

will go toward paying purchasers of Provigil — including

in particular, is focused on

cording to the FTC. Were it not

wholesalers, pharmacies and

increasing competition in the pharmaceutical industry, with

for the deals with generic companies, the drug would have

the aim of reducing health care

faced competition in 2006.

insurers — who the FTC said Ramirez, the commission's overpaid because of Cephalon's chairwoman, said in a news conduct. In April, Teva reached conference Thursday.

At issue in the settlement,

ers more than $300 million to

market, domestic sales of the

drug exceeded $1 billion, according to the commission. The $1.2 billion settlement

a $512 million settlement over

the same issue with drugpurchasers and others who buy products directly from the manufacturers; that amount is

included in the $1.2 billion settlement announced Thursday,

accordingto the FTC. "The FTC has been very committed to putting a stop to these kinds of deals," Edith

Want to get your growler in a can'? Google's

o o

e ro w e r u s

Android has new tricks

t

By Michael Liedtke

The Growler Guys, the Bend-based chain of franchise

growler fill stations, is expanding into new territory and adding metal to its fill options. That's metal as in aluminum

The Associated Press

SAN FRANCISCO-

Google's next version of its Android operating sys-

I I~

cans. Now consumers can buy

I

I I

I

tem will boast new ways

1

freshly tapped beer, poured and packaged in a 32-ounce

to fetch information, pay merchants and protect privacy on mobile devices as the Internet company duels with Apple in the quest to make their technology indispensable. The upgrade will give

ii:

sealed aluminum can, at the

I

two growler fill stations The Growler Guys operate in Bend. Franchisees have the option

toacquirethesystem foruse in their fill stations, said Kizer

,

Couch, co-owner of the 3-year-

old company. The Growler Guys star ted canning beer

02 '4tt'''-

«gy q ='

l ( l' - U g S. C:. gt~'l, jstt: ns

Android's personal assis-

tant, Google Now, expanded powers of intuition that may be greeted as a great convenience to some and a tad too creepy for others.

for individual customers I'/z

months ago, he said. "The response is great," he said."We see there's a niche for people who want to take craft

Most of the renovations

unveiled Thursday at Google's annual develop-

beer to a state park or beach or

ers' conference won't be

festival. There's no glass, and it's a sealed container."

available until late summer or early fall, around

Couch said fill stations for cans startedwith the Oskar

the same time that Apple

Blues Brewery in Longmont, Colorado. The brewery developed the fill system for 32-ounce cans with the Wis-

is expected to release the latest overhaul of the iOS software that powers the iPhone and iPad.

ikt

h

consin Aluminum Foundry

and the aluminum cans, called Crowlers, with Ball Corp., the Broomfield, Colorado-based

multinational packaging corporation, accordingto the

Photosby DeanGuernsey l The Bulletin

Kizer Couch, co-owner of The Growler Guys, seals a Crowler, a 32-ounce can of freshly tapped beer, at one of the company's Bend fill stations.

another waythat craft brewers are being creative." The price of beer in a Crowler is about the same as an equivalent amount of beer in a

Oskar Blues website. Oskar

Blues Brewery has sold the system around the country. The Growler Guys employ the same system, Couch said. "It's growing like wildfire," said Jared Brody, Ball Corp. manager of marketing and business development. "They'regreatfortaking beer places where glass can't go." The system works like this: After cleaning the can, the fill-

peLs

Crowlers — can plus growler — on display at The Growler Guys.

er purges the can with carbon dioxide, which fills the bottom

youwait.

who use them. Growler fill sta-

of the can. The beer flows through a fill hose into the can from the bottom up, forcing air out ahead of the carbon dioxide. Once the can is filled,

"For atrue craftbeerlover, it's the best way to drink craft beer," Couch said. Chris Furnari, editor of

tions are poppingup around the country, where state laws allow them; a canning option may add to their popularity, he said.

it's capped with a seam that

letter for the craft brewing

is folded twice around the lid. The beer is sealed off from air and light. It all happens while

industry, said he's familiar with Crowlers mostly from

"I can see it catching on," Furnari said."It won't make that much of a dent in terms

the handfulofcraftbrewers

of significant sale ... (but) it's

Brewbound, an online news-

DISPATCHES • Cascade Street Distillery,261 W.Cascade Ave., Sisters, recently hosted a grandopening for its tasting room.The tasting room is open Tuesday throughSunday from noon to 5p.m. • CascadeTel, a telecommunications company locatedat 345 NEClayAve., Bend, launched aneducational marketing program designed to keep customers up todatewith the latest technology. • Les SchwabTire Center,52596 U.S. Highway 97, LaPine, received theBusiness of the Yearawardfrom the District 36-G LionsClub. • Mid Oregon Credit Union,of Bend, announced it has surpassed $200million in assets. • Bouquet OfBeer Corp., 1470 NEFirst St. No.

150, Bend,applied May 19 to the OregonLiquor Control Commission for an off-premises sales license, which allows the sale of malt beverages, wine and cider in factorysealed containers for consumption off the licensed premises. • Pendleton Bend Outlet,61334 S. U.S. Highway 97,Bend,applied May 21 to theOLCCfor an off-premises sales license, which allows the sale of malt beverages, wine and cider in factorysealed containers for consumption off the licensed premises. •RimrockCafe,59800 S. U.S. Highway97,Bend, applied May19 to the OLCC for an off-premises sales license,which allows the sale of malt beverages, wine and cider in factorysealed containers for consumption off the licensed premises.

BEST OF THE BIZ CALENDAR TODAY • Contractors CCB Test Prep course:Two-day live class to prepare for the state-mandated test to become a licensed contractor in Oregon. 8:30 a.m. $299 or $359 with required manual; registration required; Central Oregon Community College Redmond CampusTechnology Education Center, 2324 SECollege Loop, Redmond; www.cocc.edu/ccb or 541-383-7290. SATURDAY • Real World Project Management:Learn to navigate all phases of project management and apply industry-accepted best practices; 8:30 a.m.; $125; registration required; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NW College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270.

MONDAY • Careerln Real Estate Workshop:Jim Mazziotti, Exit Realty Bend principal managing broker, to discuss careers in real estate; 6 p.m.; Exit Realty, 354 NE Greenwood Ave., Suite109, Bend or 541-480-8835. TUESDAY • What's Brewing? Bend's Town Hall: Clearing the Haze Around Measure 91: Looking at how Measure 91 will impact your workplace, the black market, taxes, economic development and law enforcement; 5 p.m.; Deschutes Brewery & Public House, 1044 NW Bond St., Bend; 541-382-3221.

• For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday'sBulletin or visitbendbulletin.com/bizcal

The annual changes to Android and iOS are becoming increasingly important as people become

more dependent on smartphones to manage their lives. Android holds about

an 80 percent share of the worldwide smartphone market, with iOS a dis-

glass container at The Growl-

tant second at 16 percent, according to the research

er Guys, Couch said. The fill

firm International Data

stations have a variety ofbeers

Corp. Both Googleand Apple are vying to make their products even more ubiquitous by transplanting

available and price varies according to brand, he said. Meanwhile, thecompany has expanded to Spokane, Washington, and Coeur d'Alene, Idaho, and is helping another franchisee get started in Ashland, Couch said. The Growler Guys are in 10 loca-

tions, he said. "We're really happy," he said. "Customers enjoy what

we're doing... and the breweries are really fun to work with." — Reporter: 541-617-7815, jditzler@bendbulletin.com

much of their mobile tech-

nology into automobiles and Internet-connected televisions and appliances. Google hopes to play a prominent role in the

management of home security and appliances with a new operating system called Brillo that will interact with Android devices.

Amazon will give its VIPs

free same-daydelivery By Jay Greene The Seattle Times

SEATTLE — Stepping up its challenge to brick-andmortarretailers,Amazon.com

launched a new shipping feature Thursday that will let

shoppers buy a product on its website by noon and have

it delivered by 9 p.m., seven days a week.

Amazon introduced sameday shipping in seven markets in 2009 and has expanded it since then. But Prime customers have had to pay an extra

$5.99 per order for the expedited shipping. Non-Prime shoppers will continue to pay $8.99 per order and 99 cents per item for same-day delivery in the markets where it's

available. Amazon has been pumping money into building warethan 1 million products and in houses and improving the 14 metropolitan areas in the logistics inside them, in large United States. There will be part to improve shipping no shipping cost for members speed. The company will of Amazon's $99-a-year Prime contract with local couriers service, as long as the order to deliver items to consumers' tops $35. homes. The new service, called

Prime Free Same-Day Delivery, will be available on more


ON PAGES 3R4 COMICS & PUZZLESM The Bulletin

Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.com To Place an ad call 541-385-5809

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, MAY 29, 2015 208

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Pets & Supplies

Pets 8 Supplies

Pets & Supplies

The Bulletin recommends extra caution when purc h asing products or services from out of the area. Sending cash, checks, or credit inf ormation may b e subjected to fraud. For more i nformation about an advertiser, you may call the O regon State Attorney General's Office C o n sumer Protection hotline at

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Furniture 8 Appliances Furniture 8 Appliances

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Havanese rare chocolate color. Parents are our pets. 2 b oys available o n

Standard Poodles, Beautiful black grand champion bred pups. 13 weeks, fabulous c oats, heathy a n d happy. Will bring great joy to y our h ome. $2000. 541-601-3049

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Bicycles & Accessories

Guns, Hunting & Fishing

TV, Stereo & Video

2013 Santa Cruz Solo mtn. racing bike, med. full-suspension, good cond, must sell, $2800. 541-480-2652

FUTON (dbl bed) and chair (twin bed) originally purchased from Rising Star. $400 for both. 541-815-0395

CASHII For Guns, Ammo & Reloading Supplies. 541-408-6900.

D ish Network - G e t M ORE fo r LE S S ! Starting $19.99/month

(for 12 months.) PLUS Bundle & SAVE (Fast Internet f o r $15 more/month.) CALL Now 1-800-308-1563 (PNDC)

Queen bed Se aly Compound Bow with Posture-Pedic Excepcase, practice and tional Plush with bed hunting arrows, like Want to Buy or Rent frame, $400, e x c. new, $240. 255 6/1 3. 503-812-9217 cond., cas h o n l y. 541-233-6520 Wanted: $Cash paid for Buyers will need to Computers vintage costume jewelry. move items. Other Say ugoodbuyu Take care of Top dollar paid for large furniture avail. RANS Wave recumT HE B U LLETIN r e Gold/Silver.I buy by the including queen Flex- bent. 60" WB, older to that unused quires computer adyour investments Estate, Honest Artist Yellow Lab, AKC Registeel slumber sofa, model some wear on vertisers with multiple item by placing it in DO YOU HAVE Elizabeth,541-633-7006 with the help from istered, 3M.; $700/ea, frame. W e l l m ainexc. cond., $ 3 50. ad schedules or those SOMETHING TO 1-877-877-9392. 4F; $750/ea, all yeltained. New: chain The Bulletin Classifieds Large desks, patio selling multiple sysThe Bulletin's SELL low. P arent g r e at WANTEDwood dressswing set, etc. Mornr ings, t i res, s e a t tems/ software, to dis"Call A Service FOR $500 OR hunters. Avail. to go ers; dead washers & The Bulletin ings only ( T erreb- cushion. Cateye Velo close the name of the LESS? dryers. 541-420-5640 5 4 1 e385-5809 7 computer/odometer. Professional" Directory July 4th. 541-934-2423 onne) 541-504-0056. business or the term Non-commercial $350 541-504-5224 "dealer" in their ads. 4 turkeys, 2 male, 2 fe210 advertisers may Washer/dryer Combo 203 Private party advertisSOM E unit for RV or small m ale, $35 e a . 1 2 Mastiff AK C f e male Furniture & Appliances G ENERATE place an ad ers are defined as EXCITEMENT in your a partment. Holiday Bazaar chickens, laying, $5 pup, 7 wks. Call for with our $50 0 . those who sell one Plan a 541-460-1853 ea. 8 geese, African info. 541-536-7869 "QUICK CASH & Craft Shows 5000 series M aytag neighborhood! computer. garage sale and don't and white, $30 ea. SPECIAL" dryer, like new, 4000 forget to advertise in 541-815-0686 1 week 3 lines 12 257 Patchwork Antiques series Maytag dryer, classified! QueenslandHeelers The Bulletin or 2nd Annual Summer Adopt a great cat or Standard & Mini, $150 will hold 2 queen size 541-385-5809. recommends extra Musical Instruments ROCKY M O U NTS 2 e e k e 2 O ! Sale ~ two! Altered, vacci& up. 541-280-1537 quilts. $850. Brand I o eutto t e pu telescoping R4 bike Ad must Antiques, vintage, nated, ID chip, tested, www.rightwayranch.wor new, still under war- Grill, 18 inch, charbroil, chasing products or s rack. Carries single, The Drum & Guitar price of shabby 8 rustic finds, more! CRAFT, 65480 dpress.com ranty, Whirlpool con- electric. services from out of I tandem or recumbent etinclude Shop now open! e tte ot geoo furniture, quality ~ 78th, Bend, Sat/Sun, vection 5 burner glass $85.541-312-2448 the area. Sending II bikes up to 78" WB. 63830 NE Clausen or less, or multiple handmade crafts, 1-5p.m. 541-389-8420 top stove with warmRd., Suite 103, Bend cash, checks, or Pivoting, push-button items whosetotal jams, baked goods, 541-382-2884 www.craftcats.org ing station. Has Aquo- NEED TO CANCEL I credit i n f ormation axle; easy load/undoes not exceed and more! list technology. $700. may be subjected to YOUR AD? load. Fits Thule and 258 $500. 29th-31st, Fri-Sat 9-6, Carrier for 15-20lb dog, 1 909 $ 2 .50 g o l d The Bulletin I FRAUD. For more Yakima crossbars. food/water dish, mint. Sun 10-4. 797 C. AvTravei/Tickets piece, $400. 2 viles of information about an s Classifieds has an Used twice. $250. Call Classifieds at enue, Terrebonne. $15. 541-389-1821 gold nuggets, a little "After Hours"Line advertiser, you may 541-504-5224. 541-385-5809 541-419-8637 or Deposit c a ns/bottles Standard Poodle pup- over a gram ea. $45. Sisters Rodeo Tickets, Oregon I Call 541-383-2371 I c all t h e www.bendbulletin.com 541-480-8469 10 box seats. Saturneeded for local all pies, 5 weeks old. ea. Sterling silver, 24 242 24 hrs. to cancel State Attor ney ' day night, June 13th, volunteer, non-profit M om is r e d A K C diamond earrings, still your ad! I General's O f fi ce Exercise Equipment 205 cat rescue. Donate at purebred, da d is in box, $200. 2 (set) Consumer Protec- • Glock 19 9mm, Ruger 2015 Get your friends Jake's Diner, Hwy 20 champion ap r icot. cubic zirconia sterling tion h o t line at I Pre-core EFX 5.17 el- P 95 9 m m , LC 9 S together and e njoy Items for Free E , Bend; Petco i n Pups are dark apricot silver e n gagement 19 1 1 this g r eat r o d eo. I 1-877-877-9392. liptical fitness cross 9 mm, R E M S m ith and red. B oth parrings, sizes 7 and 8, Free roll top desk, free Redmond; trainer. Excellent con- 45ACP, Bond Arms $320. 541-410-5970 fr i endly, $50 e a . Mi c hael I TheBulletin I dition. exercise bike. Sign, 1515 NE 2nd, ents a r e $899. Derringer 45/410, BR 280 ServingCentral Oregon since igto Bend; CRAFT in Tu- sweet and very ath- 541-589-3092 1885 45-70, Colt SP1 458-206-5796 360-921-4408 Misc. Items malo. Can pick up Ig. letic. B ot h parents 223, WBY Mark V 300 P recor Model 9 . 33 W BY, R uger m i n i 389-8420. genetically te s t ed,Bamboo chaise lounge 212 PATIO TABLE Free use of 1 acre amounts. T readmill, $25 0 0 . 14223, REM 721 300 www.craftcats.org passed hips, eyes, and pad, excel. cond. 54" Tropitone table Antiques & $1.00 Porch Sale sprinkler i r r igate etc. Puppies will be $129. 541-504-3833 Vectra Model H & H, National Ord 4 chairs, tilt Sat. 5/30, 10-noon! People Look for Information Collectibles VFT-100 Multi-station 30 cal carbine. pasture, now thru socialized, chipped, Brown 7 ' m i c rofiber awning, $350. About Products and weight mac h i ne, vaccinated and have Oct. 2015. Prefer H Firearms8 Tack couch w/ 5 p i llows. 541-382-6664 Antiques Wanted: tools, $2000. Very little use. H & 541-382-9352 Klite @peaf Services Every Day through 1-year health guarAlpaca, sheep or The Belletin Classifeds a ntee. $100. 541-526-7185 furniture, marbles, 541-382-6664 $2,00 0 . goats. Call beer cans, fishing/ Sig mdl 239 com.,40 950 SE 3rd St., Bend Call Ron at fryer, E m eril, Patiotable with 3chairs sports gear. pre-'40s 245 German Shepherds 541-382-7795 af541-480-3378, or Deep S &W, $900. R e m . between Wilson & make offer. Many electric. $50 www.sherman-ranch.us ron.guiley@gmail.com B/W photography. 11-87 12 ga. 3" semi Golf Equipment Reed Mkt. ter 10am. 541-312-2448 misc., 541-647-2009 Quality. 541-281-6829 541-389-1578 auto, 20" brl, $650. gas golf carts: 2006 PTR 91, semi auto 308 Buylng Dfamonds The Bulletin reserves 3 Y amaha, $20 0 0 . $900. 541-550-7189 /Gold for Cash the right to publish all Older Hyun d a i, Saxon's Fine Jewelers ads from The Bulletin $1000. WANTED: Collector 1996 541-389-6655 newspaper onto The Easy-Go, I $2000. seeks high quality fishBulletin Internet web- Good carts - can ing items & upscale fly desite. liver within reason. rods. 541-678-5753, or Garage Sales 503-351-2746 541-576-2477 202

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Find them m int T / M spe e d blades, 6-SW, 7 pcs., in all weather 2 family estate + ga- Livestock panels, gates, BIG GARAGE SALE, N eighborhood yard sale Moving S a le : M a y Private collector buying $440. Call a waySlumberjack sleeping bags, used 1x, stamp albums & The Bulletin r age s a l e wi t h in round pin, fence stuff, Sat 8 Sun, 8-5, 2400 21685 Obsidian Ave., 2 9 th-31st, 9am-5pm. postage Driver, x2hot, 12-15, collections world-wide neighborhood s a l e! field fencing, dog pin, N E Rosemary D r . Bend, Fri-Sat, 9-3 . E v e rything must go! and a djustable-h.c p l u s $45 ea. 541-548-8913 Classifieds U.S. 573-286-4343 Furniture, vin t age Noble horse shelter. Formal dining set, 6 Antiques, li g hting, F u rniture, b e droom (local, tool, $140. Callaway 248 cell phone). European collectibles 65050 Hwy. 20 West, chairs, 2 bdrm. sets, saddles & tack, furni- s et , k i tchen i tems, Titanium five wood, 541-385-5809 Health & and glassware, wild- Bend. 541-388-2706 many wood working ture, Karaoke mac a mping, cl o thing, $100. Mizuno J PX 240 Fri-Sun, 10-?? life collectibles, fishtools, other house- chine, motorized g r ill. 1131 21st Place, wedges 54-60, $80 Beauty Items BUYING Crafts & Hobbies ing gear, opera, lots of hold items. scooter, misc. Redmond. Lionel/American Flyer ea. All c l ubs o bo. D VD's an d au d i o MOVING/DOWNSIZtrains, accessories. 951-454-2561 Got Knee Pain? Back Sat. only 9-4. 3337 NE MOVING SALE! Sat. COMPLETE POT541-408-2191. books, much more! ING SALE! 35 yrs acPain? Shoulder Pain? Mendenhall D r ., M ay 30th, 9-2. 3392 TERY SET UP - InCHECK YOURAD ** FREE ** 1350 Minam. Sat 8 cumulation Sat. 9-4, Get a p ain-relieving BUYING & SE LLING women's clothes S W Metolius Meadow cludes Skutt kiln, two Sun, starts 8 AM. Sun. 9-1, 1145 NW brace -little or NO cost All gold jewelry, silver Garage Sale Kit (M&L) girls clothes C ourt. wheels, clays, glazes, Kingston. No e a rly Place an ad in The to you. Medicare Pa- and gold coins, bars, FIND IT! small library shelves, (under 6), k i tchen birds! 9-drawer oak Bulletin for your gatients Call Health Hot- rounds, wedding sets, 292 items, household, furscales, heat e rs, BUY IT! dresser & small furn., rage sale and reline Now! 1- class rings, sterling silniture, elect. blanket, tables, booth and too Sales Other Areas SELL ITig TV, books, dishes, ceive a Garage Sale 800-285-4609 ver, coin collect, vinnew small charcoal much to list. $2,500 or a rtwork, pict u r e The Bulletin Classifieds on the first day it runs (PNDC) tage watches, dental grill, much more! frames, collectibles, Kit FREE! Grandma's Downsizing! best offer. C ontact to make sure it is corgold. Bill Fl e mmg, Rodney at ESTATE SALE - Final clothes, linens, basAntiques: buffet, maThe Bulletin KIT INCLUDES: uSpellcheck n and 541-382-9419. rect. 288 day, let's make a deal. kets,lots of misc.! hogany side t able, 541-728-0604 • 4 Garage Sale Signs human errors do ocTo Subscribe call YOU KNOW 7 IN Sat. 9-2. 1239 NE 8th • $2.00 Off Coupon To Sales Southeast Bend cedar chest, dishes; cur. If this happens to 541-385-5800 or go to DID Crafters Wanted 10 Americans or 158 St., Bend Multi family, 1696 NW Use Toward Your Fostoria, depression your ad, please conOpen Jury 9-3 Saturday 2 1034 g l a ss, tiara,serving www.bendbulletin.com million U.S. A d ults View Dr, 8-2 Sat., Next Ad tact us ASAP so that Sat., May. 30th,9:30am GARAGE SALE, 5/30, City Woodhaven Ave read content f r om Sun., bikes, Bob • 10 Tips For "Garage dishes. Holiday decor, Highland corrections and any Baptist Church, 1439 NW 4th Street, 9-2 253 Multi-family, house- office desk, day bed n ewspaper m e dia strollers for 1 and 2 Sale Success!" adjustments can be Redmond. off Newport, 8 to 2: hold, garden, tools, each week? Discover frame 8, mattress. Sat. TV, Stereo & Video kids, XL mens, made to your ad. Jan 541-350-4888, kids, toys, s p orts, kids; kids items, andmore the Power of the Paladies clothes, toys. only, 8-2, 17999 SW Tina 541-447-1640 or 541-385-5809 clothes, etc. PICK UP YOUR DIRECTV Starting at cific Northwest NewsBaxter Drive, Powell wtww.snowflakeboutique.org The Bulletin Classified GARAGE SALE KIT at $19.99/mo. FREE In- paper Advertising. For AwesomeGarage / But t e, 1/2 mile no. of Thurs. Fri., Sat., May SAT. 8-3, 3-family yard 1777 SW Chandler s tallation. FREE 3 a free brochure call Sale! Brasada Ranch, off Two V iking s e wing 246 28, 29 & 30. Tools, sale. 1555 NW Elgin Ave., Bend, OR 97702 /quilting ma c h ines or months o f HBO 916-288-6011 Furniture, I Saturday, May 30th I Al f a lfa Road. camping, c onstruc- Ave. Guns, Hunting with extras. Very good S HOWTIME CIN - email from 8am to 3pm. tion, automotive, and kitchen and house- The Bulletin M y a & Fishing condition. $700 each ServingCentral Oregon since fggg I Clothing, househojd P EMAX, STARZ. FREE cecelia©cnpa.com household. Tam -5pm. hold items, and more 54 1 - 706-0448 HD/DVR U p g rade! (PNDC) items,andmuch I B ack yard at 55928 Call 1711 Saddlehorn Ct., Wood Duck Dr. 1943 303 British Long eves or weekends. 2015 NFL S u nday Digital film s c anner, more. No reasonLa Pine. (Wagon Trail SHMEGA garage sale: Fri. & Sat., 8-? 26690 I O WWII. H o usehold Branch w/ a m mo. Ticket Included (Seabie offer refusedi offMasten Rd.) T ires, p r op. t a n k, H orsell Road, 2 n d color or monoLook at: $199. 541-548-3339 te,s s h ng , gear lect Packages) New scan Address: 20886 compressor, x2 sofas, road east past Alfalfa c hrome f i l m an d baby items, Bendhomes.com 281 C ustomers Onl y . I Desert Vyoods Drive I fabric, chair & 1/2+ ottoman, Store. Antique hay Bend local dealer pays mounted slides. Never Wll, Media cabinet. for Complete Listings of CALL 1-800-410-2572 Bend OR 97702 s Fundraiser Sales for firearms 8 bed, heater, air cond., r ake, yard art, r eused. $60 I L ots more. Rain or Area Real Estate for Sale CASH!! Phone (PNDC) fridge, much more. stored horse powered ammo. 541-526-0617 541-382-6816 shine oon't mlss' 541.610.9366 LOTS OF STUFF FOR 1929 NW Vicksburg, m ower, gard e n Q EVERYONE! Two life Fri.-Sun., 9-4 Moving sale! E verybenches, old barn and groups from H i gh house doors, garden Moving S a le : 8-4 thing goes! Roll top Lakes Chri s tian Fri.-Sun. Fishing gear, desk, oak wall phone, 284 gates, iron bed, plasChurch in La Pine are tic p i pe , w o oden lawn equip., house- l ot s o f f r e e i tems. Sales Southwest Bend having a HUGE yard wagon wheel, wooden hold i t ems, f u r n., F r i -Sun, 8-4. 146618 sale. Fr i & Sat. J u n o sRd. Jackpine wheel barrow, picket 61784 Somerset Dr., 5/29-30, 8-4. 1 6 047 Saturday 30th O nly, fenced, wooden cow Village, Gilchrist. Moving Sale.8:00 am Dawn Road, La Pine. si n g le to 2:00 pm. A p pli- stanchions, ances, Furniture and t rees, phone p o le Sales Redmond Area BULLETINCLASSIFIEDS 282 Search the area's most Stuff. 19749 As- crossarm, high chair, Sales Northwest Bend other BIG 24-FAMILY comprehensive Iisting of pen Meadows Drive, wooden, game table BIG, SALE ON Saturday, classified advertising... OR O ff of a nd c h airs, l a w n Barn/shop/house, tack Bend, Pleasant Ridge real estate to automotive, (south of mower, old c hairs, 94, and misc. items. Sat Brookswood. Community Hall, 7067 rockers, old screen merchandise to sporting Brookswood road 8-3, 20315 Birdsong the d oor, o l d sch o ol SW C a na l Bl v d., goods. Bulletin Classifieds closure. Lane, Tumalo. desks,antique buffet, Quarry & 61st, great appear every day in the pri n t or on line. old wood stove, cof- parking, collectibles Phyllls Gore fee table, newel posts, i ncluding HO t r a in Call 541-385-5809 ESTATE SALE treasures, tools, toys, a mmo b ox , de c k Take advantage of our www.bendbulletin.com 621 SE GLENCOE Dr. bench, chest of draw- tires, plants/ herbs, specialmerchandise Friday MAY 29 • Saturday MAY 30 ers, brass bed, iron- clothes, fishing gear, The Bulletm 9;00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. dOg CrateS, furniture & Serving Central Oregon since tglg ing board, oak ice pricing starting at CROWD CONTROL Admittance NUMBERS box, end tables, bed- so much more! Sale: at 8:00 a.m .Friday room set, patio swing, Fri. & Sat., 8-5, 1517 Moving (From 3rd St. in Bend, take Wilsoneast lo Cen- set of 4 chairs, old NW Redwood. Riding Sisters/Cloverdale area, 69875 Goodrich tennia/. Turn south and follow lo Glencoe) wooden cupboards. mower dozer blade, Rd. Fri-Sun, 9-5. FORD TAURUS SE 2002 WITH 24,000 MILES!. lawn mowers, tools, Square Oak dining table with four chairs, one Garage Sale, 29th & f!shlng pol~~, genera leaf; Brown and Beige wing back chairs; Swivel 3 0th, 9 am - 3 p m . tors, USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! c o mpressors, Rocker;Coffee Table; End Table; Lamps: sev- 3141 NE Monte Vista weed eaters, and lots eral floor and table; Large TV Armoire'; 8' Tall (off Eagle Rd.) Door-to-doorsellingwith more! mirror; Lovely 54 piece set of Carnival glass;; to sell the things you fast results! It's the easiest Service for 12 of fine china; Few old bottles; Garage sale Saturday Moving sale lots of ev- way in the world to sell. no longer use! Nice Costume jewelry; Sterling and Silverplate 23rd 9-4, household, erything, all priced to items; Sterling flatware-Silver Spray by Towle; sports, clothing, take home with you! TheBulletingassified "Ad runsuntilSOLD or up to 8 weeks Silverplate set "Reverie" by Nobility; Twin Bed; books, hand t o ols, Fri.-Sat. 8-3 1608 NW ssta 541 385 5809 (whichever comesfirst!) Double dresser, 5 drawer chest and nitestand; power tools, camping, Ivy Ave e e g~NNS+ hN Pine dresser;Bookcases; BOOKS:: BOOKSutility trailer. 63533 JD wl Vt.ege wa' ue >kg BOOKS - VCRS - DVDS. Records; Puzzles; Estates Dr. (off Des- ESTATE/MOVING/DOWNSIZING SALE! sgrtes tit SLS Oatk Item Priced al: our To lAd Cos onl: SG Contents of 4500 sq. ft. home, plus home & garSmall patio set; Few tools and fishing poles; chutes Mkt. Rd.) t,'a e den store, 3 sofas, king 8 twin beds, lots of oq, b gewt Three sets of Studded tires: two with winter rims • Under $500 .....................................................................$39 541-977-2612 ugNeit sgo Oit.' aLOng other furniture, kitchenware, artwork & decor, stotr, all like new 215/70/16, 215/60R/16, 206/55/R16; • $500 fo $999 .... $49 RCA older stereo set; Pots and Pans; Three Mi- Huge GARAGE SALElamps, mirrors, 3 dish sets. tsgtp'laY h elvesss® • $1000 to $2499............................................................$59 crowaves; Ice Cream Maker; Grills; Electric Fry- Moving into M otor ANTIQUES include oak piano, round & square attch pans and Can-Openers; Kitchen tools; Toaster Home. Tools, Every- oak dining tables 8 chairs, 2 armoires, oak • Over $2500.....................................................................$69 oven; Coffeepots; Ladies Clothing, medium; thing Goes! House- china cabinet, dressers, rockers, mahogany Linens; LOTS of nice Christmas items; Vacuum; hold, Furniture, Vindressers, small furniture pieces, records, FostoIncludes: 2" in length, with border, full color photo, bold Luggage; Two 19u TV's; One 29" TV; One 21" tage Jewelry, ria American, Lladro's. OUTDOOR ITEMSinheadline and price. Antiques, Emptying all clude 6 patio/bistro sets, iron 8 bronze statuary TV; Two computers; Three old monitors; Two newer Monitors; Printers; Keyboard; DVD and my cupboards! Patio some large pieces, fountains, unique pots of all your adwill a/so appear in: Serving Central Oregon since 1903 VCR Players; Older sewing machine and sew- Furniture, Microwave, sizes, benches, decorative pieces of all kinds, ing items; Very nice sale with large variety!!!!! C hristian Boo k s , many imported from Europe, beautiful outdoor • The Bulletin, • The Central Oregon Nickel Ads 541-385-5809 T eacher Items , decor, 2 gazebos, loads of misc, very large sale! Deedy, Norm, Ken • Central Oregon Marketplace • bendbulletin.2:om Fri-Sat 9-4. Numbers Fri 8 a.m. Handled by Clothing! 8 — 5, Fri. Deedy's Estate Sales Co. LLC S at. May 29, 30 at 22122 Rickard Rd,just past Knott landfill. Somerestrictions app/y Info Call- 541-419-4742 542 NE Soaring Ct. www.atticestatesandappraisals.com 'Private party merchandise only - excludes pets & livestock, autos, RVs, motorcycles, boats, airplanes, and garage sale categories. estatesales.net for pictures and info Bend 541-350-6822 Estate Sales

Sales Northwest Bend Sales Northeast Bend Sales Northeast Bend

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02 FRIDAY MAY 29, 2015• THE BULLETIN 260

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Misc. Items

Misc. Items

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Tools

Lost & Found

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

How to avoid scam SOCIAL S E C URITYDelta Drill Press, home BEN - w orkshop. $15 0 . and fraud attempts D ISABILITY E FITS. Unable t o 541-389-4079 v'Be aware of internawork? Denied bentional fraud. Deal lo265 efits? We Can Help! cally whenever pos• Building Materials WIN or Pay Nothing! sible. Contact Bill Gordon & v' Watch for buyers La Pine Habitat Associates at who offer more than 1-800-879-3312 to RESTORE your asking price and start your application Building Supply Resale who ask to have Quality at today! (PNDC) money wired or LOW PRICES

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

Duck Delivery ProHOVSEKEEPERS! Medical Reception/ CAUTION: SalesManager duce has immediate Medical Records Ads published in Join Tourism Walla McMenamins openings for e nerBend Urology Associ"Employment Opates, LLC is seeking Walla as the new getic and motivated Old St. Francis portunities" include L ocal A, B a n d C positive, s e l f-moti- Group Tour Sales NOyy HIRING employee and indeclass Delivery Drivers! vated front office per- Manager. This posipendent positions. app l icants son for phone, recep- tion is r esponsible 541-382-3537 (Experience Re- Qualified Ads fo r p o sitions quired) must have an open 8 tion a n d me d ical for sales and marRedmond that require a fee or We offer competitive flexible schedule in- records. Candidates keting activities to 541-923-0882 upfront investment Madras c ompensation a n d cluding, days, eve- must exhibit excellent promote Walla Walla must be stated. With 541-475-6889 benefits inc l uding nings, weekends and communication skills, to meeting planners handed back to them. The Bulletin Offers 52684 Hwy 97 any independentjob holidays. W e ar e have electronic medi- and tour product dePrineville medical/dental. Fake cashier checks Free Private Party Ads 541-536-3234 opportunity, please Compensation:$13/hr. looking for applicants cal record experience, velopers. Activities 541-447-7178 and money orders • 3 lines - 3 days Open to the public . i nvestigate tho r i dentifying or Craft Cats C Class / $15/hr. B who have previous or be able to multi-task include are common. • Private Party Only oughly. Use extra Prineville Habitat 541-389-8420. Class / $18-$19.50/hr. exp. related exp. and with multiple phone potential target marv'Nevergive out per• Total of items adverc aution when a p kets, collecting, orenjoy working in a l ines and h ave a A Class. sonal financial infortised must equal $200 BuildingReStore plying for jobs on- Qualifications: 2 yrs. busy customer ser- knowledge of medical ganizing and pursuSupply Resale mation. or Less line and never proi ng l e ads, a n d 1427 NW Murphy Ct. or 50,000 miles verifi- v ice-oriented e n v i- terminology. YTrust your instincts FOR DETAILS or to vide personal infor541-447-6934 able experience driv- ronment. We are also This is a full time posi- making local referand be wary of PLACE AN AD, mation to any source Open to the public. tion in a fast paced rals. The successful ing a box truck. Sat- willing to train! We someone using an Call 541-385-5809 you may not have isfactory background offer opportunities for environment with mul- candidate will be a escrow service or Fax 541-385-5802 266 researched and resident expert on check. Negative drug advancement and ex- tiple providers. Cus- the agent to pick up your deemed to be reputravel industry in cellent benefits for eli- tomer service is high • Heating & Stoves test. Ability to lift 50 merchandise. table. Use extreme order to promote the gible employees, in- priority. This position pounds, walk for exc aution when r e a s s ist NOTICE TO cluding vision, offers a full benefit area an d The Bulletin t ended periods o f Serring Central Oregon sincetg03 s ponding to A N Y t ime, and must b e ADVERTISER medical, chiropractic, p ackage. Ple a s e travel businesses. online employment Since September 29, o Infrared Sauna, 220-V 308 able t o dr i v e a dental and so much send your resume and For complete job ad from out-of-state. 1991, advertising for more! Please apply cover hook-up, no building, le t t e r to d escription go t o : manual/stick-shift. Farm Equipment We suggest you call APPLY TODAY! Once online 24 / 7 at jenniel ©bendurology. http://bit.ly/1 EatkcS used woodstoves has $3000 value, asking 8 Machinery the State of Oregon TRAEGER TEXAS been limited to mod$1000. 541-536-7790 you have completed www.mcmenamins.co com. Consumer Hotline ELITE GRILL els which have been the questionnaire, we m or pick up a paper Call The Bulletin At Rainbow play structure Like new, 646 sq. 60" Landpride weed at 1-503-378-4320 certified by the Orwill contact you to set a pplication at a n y TURN THE PAGE - super sized castle, inch grilling area, 541-385-5809 cutter, 3ptto, u sed For Equal OpportuMcMenamins location. egon Department of up an interview. $4000 new, needs bronze color, comFor More Ads Place Your Ad Or E-Mail Environmental Qual- once. $1100. CRR, nity Laws contact B/C Job Code: 2245. Mail to 430 N. Killingsome care, you haul, plete with c o ver, ity Oregon Bureau of The Bulletin (DEQ) and the fed- 503-936-1778 At: www.bendbulletin.com A Class Code: 0915. sworth, Portland OR, $800. 541-815-2505. Labor 8 I n d ustry, www.tsjobs.net/duckdigital t h e rmostat eral E n v ironmentalCASE 530 diesel trac97217 or fax: Civil Rights Division, and cookbook. Protection A g e ncy tor with backhoe at5 03-221-8749. C a l l delivery Find exactly what 97'I -673- 0764. Home Delivery Advisor $695! (EPA) as having met *Duck Delivery P r o- 503-952-0598 for info tachment, $4500. you are looking for in the smoke emission stano n other w ays t o The Bulletin Circulation Department is seeking 541-480-7837 duce is an equal op541-389-7669. The Bulletin * CLASSI Ff EDS dards. A cer t ified a pply. Please n o a Home Delivery Advisor. This is a full-time portunity employer. phone calls or emails position and consists of managing an adult w oodstove may b e 325 541-385-5809 Wantedpaying cash identified by its certifito individual locations! carrier force to ensure our customers receive Reduce Your Past Tax Hay, Grain & Feed E.O.E. superior service. Must be able to create and Bill by as much as 75 for Hi-fi audio & stu- cation label, which is Get your your web address perform strategic plans to meet department Percent. Stop Levies, dio equip. Mclntosh, permanently attached Wheat Straw for Sale. Add business to your ad and readobjectives such as increasing market share Liens and Wage Gar- JBL, Marantz, Dy- to the stove. The BulAlso, weaner pigs. Need help fixing stuff? ers on The Bulietin's naco, Heathkit, Sanletin will not knowand penetration. Ideal candidate will be a nishments. Call The 541-546-6171 Call A Service Professional web site, www.bendsui, Carver, NAD, etc. ingly accept advertisself-starter who can work both in the office Tax DR Now to see if e ROW I N G bulletin.com, will be find the help you need. Call 541-261-1808 ing for the sale of and in their assigned territory with minimal you Qualify Good classified ads tell able to click through www.bendbulletin.com supervision. Early a.m. hours are necessary 1-800-791-2099. uncertified the essential facts in an automatically to your with an ad in 261 woodstoves. with company vehicle provided. Strong (PNDC) interesting Manner.Write website. The Bulletin's customer service skills and management skills Landscaping from the readers view - not Sell y ou r s t ructured Medical Equipment 267 "Call A Service Sisters Landscaping are necessary. Computer experience is the seller's. Convert the settlement or annuity • Fu e l & Wood S UBA R U . Company has open- required. You must pass a drug screening facts into benefits. Show payments for CASH Professional" ings in all phases of and be able to be insured by company to drive NOW. You don't have the reader how the item will Auto -Sales Directory landscaping. Willing to vehicles. This is an entry-level position, but we Sales professional to to wait for your future help them insomeway. WHEN BUYING train, experience wel- b elieve i n p r o moting f ro m w i thin, s o Join Central payments any longer! This FIREWOOD... come. Call for appt. advancement within company is available to Oregon's l a r gest Wildland Call 1-800-914-0942 advertising tip the right person. If you enjoy dealing with 541-549-3001. sisters To avoid fraud, new ca r de a ler (PNDC) FIref Ighters brought toyouby Hoyer Classic Lift with landscape© gmail.com people from diverse backgrounds and you are The Bulletin Subaru of B e nd. To fight forest fires must sling. Will lift up to energetic, have great organizational skills and recommends payThe Bulletin Offering 401k, profit be 18yrs old & Drug 400 lbs. $125. Teminterpersonal communication skills, please Serving Cental Oregon sinceietg ment for Firewood sharing, m e d ical free! Apply 9am-3pm pur-pedic twin electric only upon delivery send your resume to: Call a Pro plan, split shifts and Mon-Thurs. Bring two 8 remote. Top and inspection. The Bulletin Meet singles right nowl bed Whether you need a Looking for your paid vacation. Expeforms of ID fill out has a • A cord is 128 cu. ft. c/o Kurt Muller No paid o perators, mattress rience or will train. next employee? Federal 1-9 form. fence fixed, hedges water-proof mattress 4' x 4' x 8' PO Box 6020 just real people like cover. SOLD. 4 wheel 90 day $2000 guar- No ID = No Application Place a Bulletin trimmed or a house Bend, OR 97708-6020 you. Browse greet- Scooter. New batter- • Receipts should a ntee. Dress f o r help wanted ad or e-mail resume to: include name, success. P l e ase built, you'll find ings, exchange mes- ies purchased April today and kmuller@bendbulletin.com sages and connect 2 015, charger i n - phone, price and apply at 2060 NE professional help in reach over kind of wood No phone calls, please. live. Try it free. Call cluded. Hwy 20, Bend. See 60,000 readers The Bulletin's "Call a The Bulletinis a drug-free workp/ace. EOE purchased. now: 877-955-5505. 541-317-1188 SOLD! Bob or Devon. each week. Pre-employment drug screen required. • Firewood ads Service Professional" (PNDC) PatRick Corp. Your classified ad MUST include Directory 1199 NE Hemlock, will also species & cost per Caregivers Redmond 541-385-5809 appear on FINGERJOINT AND cord to better serve w anted t o j o i n 541-923-0703 EOE our customers. bendbulletin.com LAMINATION PRODVCTION OUI' caring which currently memory c ar e Truck Drivers We are seeking experienced operators, feedreceives over The Bulletin SereingCentral Ctregon sincetgl0 c ommunity. A l l ers, graders and stackers in both our Finger1.5 million page Roush Industries has an immediate need for joint and Lamination plants. If you have a good Call 54 I -385-5809 vlews every ShiftS available. Class A CDL Truck Drivers in Madras, Oregon. All Year Dependable work history and attendance record please Test drive prototype trucks and give feedback to r o m ot e o u r service month at no Must be reliable. Firewood: Seasoned; come apply with us. to the development team!! Home every day! extra cost. Also needed part Lodgepole, split, del, Retirees and Veterans welcome! Bulletin Building/Contracting Landscaping/Yard Care B end, 1 f o r $ 1 95 t ime c hef. F o r Must have valid CDL-A license. Part-time posiStarting pay is commensurate with experience Classlfleds beginning at $10.00 to $15.00 or more. We or 2 cords for $365. more inf o r ma- tions, 4 - 6 hour shifts. Driving positions are loGet Results! NOTICE: Oregon state Multi-cord discountsl offer medical, dental, vision and life insurance cal to the Madras, Oregon, area. 401K bention, or any Call 541-385-5809 law requires anyone 541-420-3484. the first of the month following 60 days of emefits offered to all employees. questions, or place your ad who con t racts for ployment. We have a profit sharing plan and To apply, please send an email with resume 269 call on-line at please construction work to vacation time is available after 6 months. attached to careers©roush.com Please refer Serving Central be licensed with the Gardening Supplie bendbulletin.com 541-385-4717 to eCDL Driver Madras" in your email InterOregon Since 2003 Construction ContracWe are a family owned wood remanufacturer & E q uipment views will be scheduled in Madras or If you tors Board (CCB). An Residental/Commercial • in business for over 50 years. Learn more 341 D ID Y O U KNOW meet all requirements listed above you may active license aboutour company and the products we make Newspaper-generalso apply in person at 3449 N. Anchor, PortSprinkler Horses 8 Equipment means the contractor Activation/Repair BarkTurfSoil.com at www.brightwood.com. Please respond to a ted content is s o land, Oregon 97217. is bonded & insured. this ad or if you in Central Oregon please apvaluable it's taken and Verify the contractor's Back Flow Testing ply in person at our main office located in the repeated, condensed, PROMPT DELIVERY CCB l i c ense at Madras Industrial Park. Malntenance broadcast, t weeted, Special Project Manager 542-389-9663 www.hirealicensedeThatch & Aerate discussed, p o s ted, contractor.com Spring Clean up Bright WoodCorp. copied, edited, and Chain saw Worx, elecor call 503-378-4621. •.Weekly 335 NyyHess St Mowing emailed co u ntless The Bulletin recomtric. $65. Madras, OR 97741 & Edging times throughout the mends checking with •Bi-Monthly 541-312-2448 Deluxe showman Serving Central Oregon since 1903 & Monthly day by others? Dis3-horse trailer Silthe CCB prior to con- Maintenance Must pass a pre-empioyment cover the Power of tracting with anyone. verado2001 29'x8' For newspaper The Special P rojects Managing Editor drug screen. Newspaper AdvertisSome other t rades •Bark, Rock, Etc. 5th wheel with semi delivery, call the ing in FIVE STATES manages the day-to-day, project-to-project also req u ire addilivingquar!ers, lotsof Circulation Dept. at ~Lendeoe in tional licenses and •Landscape extras. Beautiful con- with just one phone editorial content of The Bulletin's special 541-385-5800 MAINTENANCE ELECTRICIAN call. For free Pacific projects. certifications. dition. $21,900 OBO To place an ad, call Construction Northwest Newspa541-420-3277 541-385-5809 eWater Feature Bright Wood Corporation, a 50+ year old wood per Association Net- Duties include: or email remanufacturer located in Madras, Oregon is Installation/Maint. • Development of all editorial budgets in claggsedebendbtslletin.com work brochures call Find It in •Pavers looking fo r a mai n tenance E lectrician TiCk, TOCk 916-2 8 8-6011 o r collaboration with special projects manager reporting to the Maintenance Supervisor. The The Bulletin Classifisds! •Renovations and/or event promoters. This includes content The Bulletin email gereing Centrel Oregon stncetgta •Irrigations Installation shift Electrician is a key member of the outlines, story direction, image collaboration 541-385-5809 TICk TOCk" cecelia©cnpa.com Maintenance team which is responsible for •Synthetic Turf and design consultation. ...don't let time get Long roller, 50 gallons repairs and maintenance for all machinery and • Management of editorial assignments to free Senior Discounts equipment such as conveyor systems, of wat e r , $75 Disbursement Agent lance writers. away Hire a Handyman Bonded & Insured 541-312-2448 hydraulic components, machine control, and C onstruction Ris k • Edition of all special projects editorial content. 541-815-4458 Professional out much more. May be required to work any shifts Management firm lo• Edit content collaboration when needed with New Sunmojoe Lawn LCB¹8759 I DO THAT! including swing, grave, and/or weekend ofTheBulletin's cated in Sunriver is various event promoters and directors. mower, electric, $100 Home/Rental repairs coverage as needed. Oregon Land- obo. 541-516-8957 seeking highly moti- • Manage inner department editorial and imnCa0 A Service Small jobs to remodels NOTICE: scape Contractors Law vated individual to as- age to maximize excellent content and design Honest, guaranteed Professional" RESPONSIBILITIES to include repair, main(ORS 671) requires all Plant sale, perennials, sist with construction on deadline. work. CCB¹151 573 tain, and troubleshoot electrical and mechanibusinesses that ad- $1-3. Locally grown. funds disbursements. • Manages special projects on-line content. Directory today! Dennis 541-317-9768 5/30-31. 'I 435 NW cal equipment such as AC motors, DC motors vertise t o pe r form Position is Full-Time. • Manages the special projects image and Landscape Construcand servo motors, servo controllers, variable Individual should have special projects photographer positions within tion which includes: frequency drives, AC and DC control circuits, a minimum of t wo the department. Landscaping/Yard Care p lanting, deck s , I PLC communications networks, pneumatic year experience in SS EciALS 1 o 5(ILt)o fences, arbors, components,hydraulic components, conveyor construction adminis- Must have dependable transportation. Able to water-features, and insystems, and other interrelated process tration or commercial lift up to 40lbs. Pre-employment drug screen + Peat Mixes stallation, repair of irequipment. + Juniper Ties lending. Construction required. rigation systems to be terminology and acDiscounts Z~oeI'rgua/rep l icensed w it h th e ++Paver • Shall perform a variety of electrical/mechanicounting experience Please send cover letter, resume and Sand+ Gravel Landscape ContracZa~<0a er,. cal tests to determine exact cause of issue; needed. Must be proreferences to mrogers©bendbulletin.com + Bark tors Board. This 4-digit Instsntlandscgtping.com I • Performs unscheduled maintenance to the ficient in Microsoft ExFull Service number is to be inequipment and machinery to repair or replace cel. Excellent comEOE Landscape cluded in all adverdefective parts; munication, w r i ting Management tisements which indiSchools & Training • Perform adjustments and calibration proceand or g anizational 270 cate the business has dures on various forms of process equipment; skills required. Com- Human Resources Manager a bond, insurance and • Lo s t & Found Spring Clean Up • Perform scheduled maintenance as HTRTwck School peti t ive salary DOE & workers compensa•Leaves The Human Resources Manager supports t he instructed on all equipment/machinery/facility; RED!g!ONDCA!g!PUS bene f it pkg. F i r m is tion for their employ- Found: 5 /2 6 •Cones Si l v er Our Grads Get Jobsl overall HR functions of Western Communica• Shall track labor, parts, and machine history an EOE. e-mail to: ees. For your protec•Needles charm bracelet (four 1-888-438-2235 tions. Primary responsibilities include emin plant CMMS; ali.schaal ©tetra tion call 503-378-5909 r ound charms) o n •Debris Hauling WWW.IITR EDU ployee relations, benefits, payroll, safety, re• Make necessary temporary or permanent tech.com or use our website: boat ramp at Sparks cruiting, tr a i ning and perf o rmance electrical installations, repairs, or modificawww.lcb.state.or.us to Lake. Call to identify Weed Free Bark management. tions in line with plant policies; check license status 541-385-6206 General & Flower Beds • Works with each department providing before contracting with If you have a passion for improving the worknecessary support to ensure day-to-day business. Persons FOUND: Child's campLawn Renovation the maintenance issues are resolved. place and want to take Western Communicadoing land scape ing-type folding chair Aeration - Dethatching tions to the next level as an employer of • Maintain a written log of any highlights occuron Hunnel Rd. on the maintenance do not * Overseed choice, come join our team. ring during shift coverage in conjunction with r equire an LC B l i 22nd. 541-389-1449 * Great Supplemental Income!! / Compost proper CMMS entries. cense. Top Dressing FOUND: Pocket knife in IThe Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our Satur- I Minimum requirements: CPR Property DRW, describe it to position responsibilities outlined above are night shift and other shifts as needed. We• • 5-7 years HR experience with thorough The claim it. 541-389-0185 I• day Maintenance in no way to be construed as all encompassLandscape currently have openings all nights of the week.• knowledge of HR functions Landscaping • Experience in employment law and regulaing. Other duties, responsibilities, and qualifiMaintenance Lost blue key case with / Everyone must work Saturday night. Shifts 8 Painting tory compliance cations may be required and/or assigned as Full or Partial Service 3 keys inside on Wed. start between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and CCB¹204254 • Bachelor's Degree in Human Resources or necessary. • Mowing eEdging 5/20 at Macy's or in / end between 2:00 a. m. and 3: 30 a. m. Al l poBusiness preferred • Pruning Weeding • Spring clean ups parking lot, or vicinity • sitions we are hiring for, work Saturday nights. • Water Management • Aeration/de-thatching of Bed Bath & Be- I Starting pay is $9.25 per hour, and we pay aI • Background in employment, compensation, EDUCATION/EXPERIENCE AS SHOWN BE• Lawn repairs benefits, employee relations and training / LOW IS REQUIRED: yond. 541-923-4384 g minimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shiftsI • Weekly maintenance Fertilizer included • are short (11:30 - 1:30). The work consists of• development • Bark mulch LOST: Fly rod and reel • Well organized and detailed-oriented with • Must have Oregon Electrician license, Genwith monthly program inserting machines or stitcher, stackCall 978-413-2487 at lava lake. / loading strong communication skills eral Journeyman or Limited Manufacturing ing product onto pallets, bundling, cleanup and 541-593-5847 • Work with management to determine recruitPlant Journeyman; Weekly, monthly Aerate/Thatching / other tasks. ment needs and staffing objectives • At least 3 years Industrial Electrical experior one time service. Weekly Service ence or equivalent combination of education IFor qualifying employees we offer benefitsl • Develop recruitment programs to attract apBend, Redmond, and identify a n d s o u rce q u alified and experience; gs "•r Managing Eagle Crest. I including life insurance, short-term & long-term plicants, candidates • Allen-Bradley PLC and automation experidisability, 401(k), paid vacation and sick time. COLLINS Lawn Maint. Central Oregon • Recruit for key positions through interviews ence a plus; Ca/I541-480-9714 Landscapes and sourcing • Proven experience and ability in mechanical, Since 2006 ~ Please submit a completed application • Help resolve concerns and issues between electrical and electronic troubleshooting and Painting/Wall Covering Lost: longhaired/wireattention Kevin Eldred. management and employees maintenance techniques; haired mix D a chsSenior Discounts Applications are available at The Bulletin • Identify, develop and implement training pro• Must have the ability to demonstrate working hund, near S pring KC WHITE front desk (1777 S.W. Chandler Blvd.), or 541-390-1466 knowledge of mech a nical/electrical grams River (Sunriver area), PAINTING LLC an electronic application may be obtained Same Day Response • Recommend improvements to HR policies, principles/concepts; on May 16th. Last Interior and Exterior upon request by contacting Kevin Eldred via benefits and training programs, etc. • Have the ability to read and comprehend inspotted near USFS 41 Family-owned email (keldred@bendbulletin.com). • Local candidates strongly preferred structions given via OEM or third party operaResidential 8 Commercial road. Please keep Have an item to • Experience with California laws and regulation and/or technical/installation literature. 40 yrs exp.• Sr. Discounts your eyes peeled for No phone calls please. tions a plus 5-vear warranties her - she probably is sell quick? We offer a competitive compensation plan that SPRING SPECIAL! very scared and won't * No resumes will be accepted * If it's under We offer benefits including paid vacation and includes medical, dental and vision benefits; Call 541-420-7846 come to you but even sick time, 401(k), life insurance and limited CCB ¹204918 profit sharing plan; Paid vacation and holidays; '500you can place it in just telling us where Drug test is required prior to employment. medical, dental, vision benefits. Life insurance; Disability Income Protection; she is sighted would EOE. All About Painting The Bulletin EOE/Drug Free Workplace Flexible Spending A c counts; E mployee h elp. C a l l Gr e t a Exterior, interior, Assistance Program. 425-501-4416. Classifieds for: deck seal, light maint. If interested please submit your resume and The Bulletin Free Estimates. Lost wedding rings, 55 Serving Cenrrel Oregonsince 1903 cover letter to: Heidi Wright, CFO/HR Officer, Please send your resume or apply in the '10 - 3 lines, 7 days CCB ¹1 48373 yrs. o f m e mories, Western Communications, Inc., PO Box 6020, Personnel Department, Bright Wood Corpora541-420-6729 Mid-May, no idea '15 -3 lines, 14 days Bend, OR 97708 or e-mail hwright@wescomtion, 335 NW Hess St., Madras OR 97741. 10% Off exterior or where. RE W A RD newspapers.com.No phone calls,please. Wage is DOE. Pre-employment drug testing. (Private Party ads only) interior job booked. 541-316-1736

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TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, MAY 29, 2015

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFED• 541-385-5809

DAILY BRI DG E C LU B

NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD ~jii sbprtz

Friday, May29,2015

Model partners

26"I can handle thi5' flowers 27 Under pressure 8 Int'I relations is a 29 Executive using a branch of it check? 15Put under 30 Disinfect, in a pressure way, as a wound 17 "The three 31 Football Hall of words that best Fame city describe" the Grinch, in song 32 Oxygen's protons, 18Theymay be put neutrons and out after traffic electrons accidents 33 Stuff inside 19Gospel singer Franklin and 35 Subtractions others from the ACROSS 1Tree with white

By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency

Cy the Cynic defines a model partner as one who is playing with somebody else. When I wa t c hed today's deal, North opened one club, and Cy responded one diamond as South. (A 2NT response was an option.) When N orth next b i d o n e h e art, C y launched into 3NT (not best). West, a g o o d p l a yer, w a sn't confident of beating the contract by leading either of his long suits. He tried to find East's suit by leading the nine of spades. East played the jack, and Cy played low.

club, and your partner bids one spade. The opponents pass. What do you say? ANSWER: You have no good bid. A rebid of two clubs would suggest a sixth club. A bid of two hearts would be a "reverse" and would promise more strength. Raise to two spades. Your hand will make a reasonable dummy for a spade contract. Partner may have five or more spades; after all, he did not respond in a red suit. North dealer Both sides vulnerable

20 Fidelity offerings, briefly 21French Facebookers' connections 22 Like good singing 23 Variety show offering 24Giantrival, for short 25 Like a U-Haul when you haul

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The Cynic also played low on the n ext spade. He won the third an d West discarded the king of clubs! Down Cy went: He couldn't set up the clubs without letting East get in to take two more spades. 'That's my kind of partner," Cy said. With due credit to West's good lead and good discard, Cy makes 3NT by winning the second spade. He can then lead a club. If West plays low, Cy takes the ace and leads another club. If instead West plays the king, dummy plays low, and Cy can later lead a club to the ace.

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Online subscriptions: Today's puzzle and more than7,000 past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). Readaboutand comment on each puzzle:nytimes.com/wordplay. Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/studentcrosswords.

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By John Lampkin O2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

05/29/15


THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, MAY 29 2015 05

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809

tua.usaotu eut

Employment Opportunities

870

880

882

908

932

935

Boats & Accessories

Motorhomes

Fifth Wheels

Aircraft, Parts & Service

Antique & Classic Autos

Sport Utility Vehicles

Mobile Homes

. 0 0

SHIPPING DEPT -LOADER

List Your Home JandMHomes.com We Have Buyers Get Top Dollar Financing Available.

Bright Wood Corpo541-548-5511 ration in Madras Or632 egon is seeking an experienced forklift AptiMultiplex General driver/loader to help u a in our growing deCHECK YOUR AD mand. A valid driver license is required. Good a t t endance and a safe driving record are a must. Starting wage DOE. on the first day it runs Please apply in the to make sure it is cor850 Personnel Departrect. uSpellchecku and ment at the address Snowmobiles human errors do ocbelow. Ava i lable cur. If this happens to benefits inc l u de your ad, please conmedical/dental/life tact us ASAP so that insurance, v i s ion corrections and any and Aflac. Vacation I adjustments can be after 6 mon t hs.. made to your ad. L-EOE. Must pass on 541-385-5809 4-place enclosed Intersite pr e -employThe Bulletin Classified state snowmobile trailer ment drug test. w/ RockyMountain pkg, 634 $8500. 541-379-3530 Bright Wood AptJMultiplex NE Bend Corp.

PINNACLE 1990 30' motorhome,

19' Pioneer ski boat, 1983, vm tandem trailer, V8. Fun & fast! $5350 obo. 541-815-0936.

FUN & FISH!

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2006 Smokercraft Sunchaser 820 model pontoon boat, 75HP Mercury and electric trolling motor, full canvas and rnany extras. Stored inside $19,900 541-350-5425

clean. Rear walk-around bed. No smokers, no mildew, no leaks. $8500. 541-306-7268

CHECK YOUR AD

on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. uSpellchecku and

human errors do occur. If this happens to

RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work ... You Keep The Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins!

corrections and any adjustments can be made to your ad. 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classified

BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond:

micro, awning slide o ut, m u c h mor e $9000. 541-876-5073.

541-548-5254

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your ad, please contact us ASAP so that

FOUR WINDS 2003 5th wheel 26L, A/C, CD,

IPhoto for illustration only)

Superhawk N7745G Owners' Group LLC Cessna 172/180 hp, full IFR, new avionics, GTN 750, touchscreen center stack, exceptionally clean. Healthy engine reserve fund. Hangared at KBDN. One share available,$13,000. Call 541-815-2144

Hyundai Veracruz 2008, 63.8L V-6 cyl exc. cond. Total inte- VIN ¹061266. $17,997. rior refurbish, engine Iexo. 5/31/15) DLR ¹366 OH, new floor pan, SMOLICH plus lots more! Sunr oof. C l ea n ti t l e. V Q LV Q VW S unBug

1 9 74

$9500. 541-504-5224 933

Pickups

925

Jeep Grand Cherokee Laredo 2004. Silverado 4X4, trailer hitch. ExTow Dolly, new tires, 2 Chevrolet 1500 Crew Cab, cellent car with lots of sets of straps, exc. 2009 4x4, 5.3 Itr, 6 speed TLC. 161,000 road c ond., capable of H D t r a ilering miles. $500 0 .00 p ulling a f u l l s i z e auto, black int, remote 541-350-8849 pickup truck. If inter- pkg, s tart, 68k, 24 m p g Jeep Grand Cherokee ested we will send $25,900. Laredo X 2013, 31K mi. pictures. $1000 obo. hwy. 541-382-6511 VIN:640788 $32,998 951-961-4590 AAA Auto Source C A L L c x 929 Corner of West Empire 8 Hwy97 TODAYW Automotive Wanted 541-598-3750 Chevy Pickup 1978, CASH fo r V I NTAGE long bed, 4x4, frame aaaoregonautosource. com. DLR¹ 0225 CARS Mercedes con- up restoration. 500 eng i ne, Jeep Grand Cherokee vertibles, P o r sche, Cadillac Jaguar, Alfa, Lancia, fresh R4 transmisOverland Trail Rated Ferrari, Co r vettes, sion w/overdrive, low 2014 MSRP $47,585+ M ustangs. Earl y mi., no rust, custom $1,400 options = list Japanese Cars interior and carpet, of $48,985 4500 mi., n ew wheels a n d 714-267-3436 asking $42,000 firm. tires, You must see rstevensjr@gmail.com Dr. Roy: it! $25,000 invested. Other collector cars of 541-419-8184 $12,000 OBO. significant value de541-536-3889 or sired. (PNDC) Utility Trailers

Ads published in the Keystone Everest 5th "Boats" classification Wheel, 2004 Monaco Monarch 31 ' include: Speed, fish323P - 3 slides, Only a few left! Motorcycles & Accessories 2006, Ford V 10, Model ing, drift, canoe, rear island-kitchen, Two & Three Bdrms 28,900 miles, house and sail boats. fireplace, 2 TV's, with Washer/Dryer auto-level, 2 slides, CD/DVR/VCR/Tuner For all other types of and Patio or Deck. queen b ed & w/surround sound, A/C, watercraft, please go Bdrms also avail.) hide-a-bed sofa, 4k custom bed, ceiling fan, to Class 875. TELEFUNDRAISING (One Mountain Glen Apts 541-385-5809 gen, convection mi- W/D ready, many extras. 541.383.9313 New awning & tires. crowave, 2 TVs, tow Tele-funding for Professionally Exc. cond. Tow vehicle package. •Meals On Wheels H arley Road K i ng managed by Serutn Central ore on since 1903 PRICE REDUCTION! also avail.$17,900obo. Classic 2003, 100th Norris & Stevens, Inc. Morepics. 541-9234408 $59,000. Anniversary Edition, Bayliner 185 2006 Seniors, students 541-815-6319 16,360 mi. $ 12,499 open bow. 2nd owner 636 and all others wel— low engine hrs. Laredo 31'2006, come. No exp. Apt./Multiplex NW Bend Bruce 541-647-7078 — fuel injected V6 5th wheel, fully S/C necessary, will Honda Magna 750cc — Radio 8 Tower. one slide-out. train. Quiet 2 bedroom, w/s/g/ motorcycle. 1 2 ,000 Great family boat Safari 1998 motorAwning. Like new, 541-420-6215. PART TIME c able p a id, d i s h- miles, $3250. Priced to sell. home 30', low mileDONATE YOUR CAR, hardly used. washer, laundry facili- 541-548-3379 Mon-Thur. $11,590. age, 300 HP MagTRUCK OR BOAT TO Must sell $20,000 ties, oak c a binets, 4:30- 8:30 p.m. 541-548-0345. num Cat motor with HERITAGE FOR THE $735 mo./$700 deor refinance. Call $9.50/hour. turbo, always inside, BLIND. Free 3 Day 541-410-5649 p osit. N o dog s . 875 white leather inteV acation, Tax D e 541-383-2430 Call 541-382-8672 Watercraft rior, like new, has ductible, Free Towing, m any extr a s . All Paperwork Taken 648 ds published in uWa$55,000. S e r ious RV Care O f . CAL L DodgeRam 2500 Houses for Honda Shadow Sa- tercraft" include: Kay- callers only. CONSIGNMENTS 1-800-401-4106 1998, Rent General bre, 2002, 1100cc, aks, rafts and motor- 541-548-8415 WANTED (PNDC) 8.0L V-10 cyl excellent condition w/ Ized personal caution when purWe Do the Work, VIN ¹217888. $7,588 extras, 13k orig. mi. watercrafts. For I chasing products orI PUBLISHER'S You Keep the Cash! Got an older car, boat (exp. 5/31/1 5) DLR ¹366 • services from out of • New battery and new "boats" please see or RV? Do the huNOTICE On-site credit Just too many All real estate adver- front tire. $3100 obo. Class 870. mane thing. Donate it f the area. Sending approval team, collectibles? 541-385-5809 to the Humane Socic ash, checks, o r tising in this newspa- 703-244-3251 web site presence. / credit i n formation per is subject to the ety. Call 1We Take Trade-Ins! Sell them in 800-205-0599 • may be subjected to F air H ousing A c t I FRAUD. which makes it illegal (PNDC) The Bulletin Classifieds BIG COUNTRY RV 541-548-1448 For more informa- I to a d vertise "any Bend: 541-330-2495 880 smolichmotors.com 931 tion about an adver- • preference, limitation Redmond: Motorhomes 541-385-5809 f tiser, you may call or disc r imination 541-548-5254 Automotive Parts, the Oregon State based on race, color, Moto Guzzi B r eva Service & Accessories Washer/dryer Combo f Attorney General's religion, sex, handi- 1 100 2 0 07 , on l y 885 unit for RV or small Office C o n sumer 1 cap, familial status, 11,600 miles. $5,950. a partment. $50 0 . Canopies & Campers Dodge truck bed cover, Protection hotline at I marital status or na- 206-679-4745 Truxedo, fits 94-01. 541-460-1853 tional origin, or an inI 1-877-877-9392. $200. 541-536-9534 FordF-350 Super Cab tention to make any Canopyfor short gThe Bulleting such pre f erence, 2013, 6.7L V-8 cyl Just bought a new boat? Alfa See Ya 2006 36' box, lined interior, limitation or discrimiSell your old one in the VIN ¹A92462. $39,997. Excellent condition, 1 , ~e~ I green, good locking (exp. 5/31/15) DLR ¹366 nation." Familial staclassifieds! Ask about our owner, 350 Cat diesel, system. excellent Super Seller rates! tus includes children Looking for your next S M OLICH 52,000 miles, 4-dr frig, shape.$995. 541-385-5809 under the age of 18 employee? icemaker, gas stove, V Q LV Q Two Twin Yamaha 541-389-7234. living with parents or Place a Bulletin help wa s her/dryer, Winnebago Outlook New LT- 2 2 5-75-16" 541-749-2156 legal cus t odians, TW200 sto c k w i t h oven, u 31', wanted ad today and non-smoker, 3 slides, 2007 Class "C Sears R oadhandler smolichvolvo.com pregnant women, and fatty tires 2007 with generator, reach over 60,000 e rtor, clean, non- smoking tires with 8-hole GMC people securing cus- 1155 miles, 2007 with leather interior, inv readers each week. exc. cond. Must See! 935 satellite, o rim, from Class C 1069 miles. $3600 for tody of children under Your classified ad 7'4n ceiling. C l ean! Lots of extra's, a very m otorhome. $ 1 2 5 . Sport Utility Vehicles 18. This newspaper one or $7000 for two $72,000. will also appear on 541-233-6520 good buy.$47,900 541-280-0514. will not knowingly ac- obo. 5 4 1-588-0068 bendbulletin.com For more info call cept any advertising cell, 541-549-4834 hm which currently sdgg 541-447-9268 932 for real estate which is receives over 1.5 Antique & in violation of the law. million page views .I ~ Winnebago Superchief O ur r e aders a r e Classic Autos every month at 1990 27' clean, 454 hereby informed that no extra cost. C hevy, runs v e r y all dwellings adverBulletin Classifieds ood. g oo d t i r es, BMW X3 35i 2010 tised in this newspa908 Get Results! 8500. 541-279-9458. ALLEGRO 27' 2002 Exc cond., 65K per are available on Yamaha V-Star 250cc 58k mi., 1 slide, vacaCall 385-5809 Aircraft, Parts miles w/100K mile an equal opportunity 2011, 3278 mi., exc. tion use only, Michor place 881 & Service transferable warbasis. To complain of cond. $ 4700 OBO. elin all weather tires your ad on-line at Travel Trailers ranty. Very clean; d iscrimination cal l Dan 541-550-0171. bendbulletin.com w/5000 mi., no acciloaded - cold HUD t o l l-free a t Estate Sale dents, non-smokers, weather pkg, pre865 1-800-877-0246. The Olds Cutlass Calais Workhorse e n g i ne 486 mium pkg & techtoll free t e lephone ATVs 1981. 14,500 orig. 261-A, Allison Trans., nology pkg. Keyless Independent Positions number for the hear.istitrr miles, new transmisbackup cam e r a, access, sunroof, ing i m paired is sion w/warranty new heated mirrors, new navigation, satellite POLARIS 500 ATV, 1-800-927-9275. tires, battery and refrig. unit., exc. conradio, extra snow Sales Help low mi l es , 2 1/3 interestin Pro w ler fluids. Factory ditioned, well cared Heartland tires. (Car top carWanted: En e rwinches, snow plow, bucket seats, con2012, 29 PRKS, 33', Columbia 400, for. $3 4 ,000. obo! rier not included.) getic kiosk sales new tires, $2200. Financing available. sole shift, Beautiful B sntl R@R@ Rs 541-549-8737 Iv. msg. like new, 2 slides-liv$22,500. 541-280-0514. person ne e ded condition. Drives like i ng area & l a r ge $125,000 541-915-9170 immediately for the Vce ©nlh B ounder, 1999, 3 4 ' , closet. Large enough new! $7900. (located @ Bend) Central Or e g on one slide, low mile- to live in, but easy to 541-419-7449 870 541-288-3333 area. Secured loage, very clean, lots tow! 15' power awBoats & Accessories of storage, $28,500. ning, power hitch & cations, high comstabilizers, full s i ze missions paid 10' Pelican Scorpio 541-639-9411 Need to get an queen bed, l a rge weekly! For more boat, 56" wide, takes ad in ASAP? shower, porcelain sink information, please 7 HP m otor. $275. You can place it & toilet. $2 6 ,500. 745 c all H o ward a t 541-280-0514 BMW X3 Sl 2007, 541-999-2571 online at: 541-279-0982. You Homes for Sale Low Mlles - 68,500, 16' 1976 Checkmate ski can a ls o e m a il AWD, leather InteJ ayco S w if t 20 1 2 , www.bendbulletin.com boat, 90HP Mercury CHEVELLE tcoles©yourneighrior, sunroof, blue145RB Travel Trailer. NOTICE motor, restored; new MALIBV 1971 borhoodpublicatooth, voice comAll real estate adver- seats, new c a rpetFleetwood D i scovery Exc. cond. $ 7900. 541 -385-5809 57K original miles, mand system, and tions.com for more tised here in is sub- floor, new prop, with 40' 2003, diesel, w/all 541-647-8290 350 c.i., auto, too much more to list information. ject to th e F ederal trailer. Have receipts. options - 3 slide outs, stock, all original, here. $15, 9 00. satellite, 2 TV's, W/D, Fair Housing A c t, $2500. 541-536-1395 Keystone SpringHi-Fi stereo etc., 34,000 m iles. Please call Dan at which makes it illegal 201 0 , 2 1 ' , 541-815-6611 Wintered in h eated dale $15,000 to advertise any prefshop. $78,995 obo. sleeps 6, DVD 8 CD • jjj)(81 erence, limitation or player, 60 g a llon 541-447-8664 Chevrolet Suburban 541-279-1072 discrimination based freshwater, 7 cu.ft. 1/5 share in v ery 1500 LT Sport 2011, on race, color, relifridge. Leveling hitch nice 150 HP Cessna VIN:391750 $34,995 gion, sex, handicap, & j acks, awning, 150; 1973 C e s sna AAA Auto Source familial status or na17.5' Bass T racker spare tire, lots of 150 with Lycoming Corner of West Empire tional origin, or inten- 2011, V175, 90HP, storage. New cond., 0-320 150 hp engine 8 Hwy97 tion to make any such less than 40 hrs. All only 3,000 m iles. c onversion, 400 0 541-598-3750 preferences, l imita- welded hull. Seats Priced below Blue hours. TT a irframe. aaaoregonautosource. tions or discrimination. five, walk-thru windBook, $10,500. Call Freightiiner 1994 Approx. 400 hours on com. DLR¹ 0225 528 We will not knowingly shield. Rick for more info. 0-timed 0-320. HanCustom accept any advertis- tongue, customFolding Mustang Loans & Mortgages 541-633-7017 cover, gared in nice (electric Motorhome ing for real estate trolling motor, stored Hard top 1985, door) city-owned han- 6-cylinder, auto trans, which is in violation of inside garage. Surge Will haul small SUV WARNING gar at the Bend Air- power brakes, power this law. All persons brakes, new tires and or toys, and pull a The Bulletin recomRV port. One of very few trailer! Powered by steering, garaged, mends you use cau- are hereby informed spare. Rad i o/disc CONSIGNMENTS C -1 50's t ha t ha s well maintained, that all dwellings ad- player. 2 Live wells, 8.3 Cummins with 6 tion when you proWANTED never been a trainer. engine runs strong. vertised are available ski pole, $ 1 6,000. speed Allison auto Chevy Silverdo2013, vide personal We Do The Work ... $4500 will consider 74K mi., great condi4.8L V-8 cyl trans, 2nd o wner. information to compa- on an equal opportu- 541-410-2426 You Keep The Cash! trades for whatever. tion. $12,500. nity basis. The BulleVIN ¹295291. $28,770 Very nice! $53,000. nies offering loans or On-site credit Call J i m Fr a z ee, Must see! (exp. 5/31/1 5) DLR ¹366 tin Classified 541-350-4077 credit, especially approval team, 541-410-6007 541-598-7940 those asking for adweb site presence. Check out the vance loan fees or We Take Trade-Ins! classifieds online companies from out of F ord p ickup 1 9 5 1 state. If you have www.bendbulletin.com BIG COUNTRY RV c ustom, o a k b ox. concerns or quesUpdated daily AM/FM cassette, new Bend: 541-330-2495 17.5' Seaswirl 2002 tions, we suggest you 541-548-1448 Redmond: brakes, 289 V-8, '67 Wakeboard Boat consult your attorney 750 541-548-5254 Mustang engine in this. smolichmotors.com I/O 4.3L Volvo Penta, or call CONSUMER F35 Bonanza. Aircraft Edelbrock intake and Redmond Homes tons of extras, low hrs. G rand Manor b y HOTLINE, is in exc. cond., w/ carb CFM. 10,461 mi. Full wakeboard tower, Thor 1996, 35' very 1-877-877-9392. good paint 8 newer on engine. $12,500. light bars, Polk audio good condition, 454 Looking for your next interior. Full IFR. Auto 541-610-2406. speakers throughout, BANK TURNED YOU gas engine, 50,050 pilot, yaw d amper, completely wired for DOWN? Private party Placeemp/oyee? miles, 2 pop outs, a Bulletin help engine monitor. amps/subwoofers, unwill loan on real es- wanted ad today and new tires, $18,999. 6485TT, 1815SMOH, Chevy Tahoe 1995, 4 derwater lights, fish tate equity. Credit, no Call 541-350-9916 reach over 60,000 finder, 2 batteries cusdr. 4x4, auto, tow pkg, Springdale 2006 26' 692STOH. Hangered problem, good equity readers each week. tom black paint job. leather, a/c, like new bunkhouse, exc. in Bend. $32,000 or is all you need. Call Your classified ad Advertise your car! $16,000 for Ys share. $12,500 541-815-2523 tires. reg. to 10/16. cond, 12/ p o p-out, Oregon Land MortAdd APicture! will also appear on Call Bob Carroll Runs great, very good stored in RV garage. gage 541-388-4200. Reach thousands of readers! Mercedes 380SL 1982 bendbulletin.com 541-550-7382 cond., $4800. 18' Bayliner 175 Capri, Call 541-385-5809 Well cared for. Many Roadster, black on which currently re541-385-4790 like new, 135hp I/O, The Bulletin Classifieds extras. $13,500 obo. arcarroll9©gmail.com black, soft & hard top, LOCAL MONEYlWebuy ceives over 5 41-588-0068, c e l l , secured trust deeds & low time, Bimini top, exc.cond., always gaHANGAR FOR SALE. 1.5 million page note,some hard money many extras, Kara541-549-4834 home raged. 155K miles, 30x40 end unit T views every month loans. Call Pat Kellev van trailer with swing hanger in Prineville. $11,500. 541-549-6407 at no extra cost. 541-382-3099 ext.13. neck, current registraLooking for your Dry walled, insulated, Bulletin Classifieds tions. $8000. next employee? and painted. $23,500. 573 Get Results! 541-350-2336 Place a Bulletin help Tom, 541.788.5546 Call 385-5809 or Business Opportunities DodgeJourney place your ad on-line 1968 Cuddy 21 foot, Jayco M e l bourne wanted ad today and SXT 2014, reach over 60,000 at new outdrive rebuilt 2010 29D Class C, 3 DID YOU KNOW that AWD, auto readers each week. motor, many extra bendbuiietin.com not only does newsouts, 1 2 ,500 Your classified ad VIN ¹193140. $22,888 parts. Excellent con- slide VW CONV. 1 9 78 (exp. 5/31/1 5) DLR ¹366 miles on Ford 450 paper media reach a will also appear on d ition. $5,75 0 . $8999 -1600cc, fuel HUGE Audience, they chassis, Immaculate bendbulletin.com 763 541-480-1616 injected, classic 1978 a lso reach an E Nc ond., loaded, f u ll which currently re4 Recreational Homes Volkswagen ConvertGAGED AUDIENCE. body paint, c herry ceives over 1.5 milSave money. Learn ible. Cobalt blue with Discover the Power of & Property cabinets, s t a inless lion page views evto fly or build hours a black convertible Newspaper Advertisappliances, very ery month at no with your own airtop, cream colored ing in six states - AK, Cabin in the woods on home-like in t e rior. extra cost. Bulletin c raft. 1968 A e r o interior & black dash. 541-548-1448 ID,MT, OR & WA. For trout stream, private, AutoSeek dish, two Commander, 4 seat, Classifieds Get ReThis little beauty runs smolichmotors.com a free rate brochure off the grid, 80 mi. TVs, Nav., CD/DVD, Call 385-5809 150 HP, low time, and looks great and 19' Bayliner 1998, I/O, back up an d s ide sults! call 916-288-6011 or from Bend. 638 ac. or place your ad full panel. $21,000 turns heads wherever Dodge Journey Crew email cameras, 500 0 l b. $849K. Fo r d r o ne great shape, call for 2012, V-6, 12k mi., 1 on-line at obo. Contact Paul at it goes. Mi: 131,902. cecelia@cnpa.com video li n k , cal l info. $8500. In Bend trailer hitch. $74,500. owner Sr., $19,800. 541-447-5184. Phone 541-382-0023 bendbulletin.com 541-480-7215. 661-644-0384. 541-312-8974 541-388-2026 (PNDC) 860

335 NW Hess St. Madras, OR 97741 541-475-7799

The Bulletin

r.=.-"-,.— ..a f / f

The Bulletin

I

541-749-2156

smolichvolvo.com

Jeep Grand Cherokee Overland 2012, 4x4 V-6, all options, running boards, front guard, nav., air and heated leather, custom wheels and new tires, only 41K miles, $31,995 541-408-7908 Find It in The Bulletin Classifleds! 541-385-5809

f f

I

I

Jeep Willy's, metal top, big tires, ps, new paint, tow bar, new gages, etcH. $5500. 541-233-7272

Lexus 400H 2006, premium pkg., sunroof, hitch, heated leather, DVD, no accidents, kids, smoke or pets. K eyless, NAV, 28/31 Hybrid M PG, exc. cond.,all records, Ca r fax, garaged, new tires, Reduced to$13,500. 541-410-'I 452

Toyota FJ Cruiser 2012, 64K miles. all hwy, original owner, never been off road or accidents, tow pkg, brand new tires, very clean. $26,000. Call or text Jeff at 541-729-4552

Toyota Venza LE Wagon 2013, Gray VIN:036682 $23,595 AAA Auto Source Corner of West Empire & Hwy97 541-598-3750

aaaoregonautosource. com. DLR¹ 0225 940

Vans

® D~zm

fphoto forillustration only)

Dodge Grand Caravan 2007, auto, 133K mi. VIN ¹192261. $6,888.

(exp. 5/31/15) DLR ¹366

541-548-1448

smolichmotors.com 975

Automobiles

CHECK YOUR AD on the first day of publication. If a n e rror may occur in your ad, p lease contact u s and we will be happy to fix it as soon as we can. Deadlines are: Weekdays 12:00 noon f or next da y S a t . 11:00 a.m. for Sunday; Sat. 12:00 for Monday. 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classified

Chevy Malibu 2012, (exp. 5/31/1 5) Vin ¹299392 Stock ¹44256A

$15,979 or $189/mo.,

$2500 down, 84 mo., 4 .49% APR o n a p proved credit. License and title i ncluded in payment, plus dealer installed options.

©

s u a aau

2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354



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By Victoria Jacobsen The Bulletin I

The Happy Girls Run is marketed to just

1

half of the population, but the women's event — including a half marathon, 10K

I ~s '•

and 5K — has quickly become one of the biggest running festivals in Bend. "I think it's just a fun, camaraderie-basep race,"

-- >y

said Emily Arredondo, event coordinator for Lay It

sr

Out Events, which is putting on the event for the fifth time. "I think the runners enjoy getting motivation ce

from other women. There's a lot of positive energy." Arredondo said 800 runners have signed up for I

,-!'.

the three races, and 65 youngsters have entered the:, Little Kids race. She said she expects mqre to reg; ~!~t," ,

',

,

"

.

' .

=~k.;i4 ~,i

.

'

.

ister at packet pickup at Seventh MountainIF'Resort Conference Center this evening or before therace ' +e

Saturday morning.

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W"~C-

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.

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SCHEDULE •

I sv a

TODAY 3-7 p.m.:Packet pickup and "Girls' Night Out" at Seventh Mountain Resort ConferenceCenter SATURDAY 7 a.m.: Latepacketpickupandraceday registration (closes at 8:30) 9 a.m.:Half marathon starts 9:15 a.m.:10K starts 9:30 a.m.:5K starts

10:30 a.m.:5K awards 10:45 a.m.:10K awards 11:15a.m.:Half marathon awards Noon:HappyLittle Kids Racefor ages 3-4

1215 p.m.:Happy Little Kids Racefor ages 5-7 12:30 p.m.:HappyLittle Kids Racefor ages 8-10 2 p.m.:Finish-line celebration closes

MORE HAPPY GIRLS Love the HappyGirls format? You do not have towait until next year to try it again. The Happy Girls Series continues:

Sept.26:HappyGirlsSpokane, Washington; half marathon, 10K and 5K Oct. 24:HappyGirls Sisters, trail half marathon and 5Kroad run

WHAT'S NEXT A selection of upcoming local running events: June 4:Storm the Stairs, Bend, 2-mile run/walk on the Central Oregon Community College campus. Register in person at the COCC track beginning at 5 p.m. on race day. June7:Heaven CanWait 5K, Bend; foundation.stcharleshealthcare.org/ Events June 14:Dirty Half half marathon, Bend; footzonebend.com/dirty half June20:OregonSeniorGames5K run/walk and track and field meet, Bend; www.visitbend.com June 26-28:Pacific Crest Weekend Sports Festival, Sunriver; full and half marathons and 5K and 10K runs in addition to other events;

aasportsltd.com/event/pacificcrest/ July 4:Spark Your Heart 5K, Bend: foundation.stcharleshealthcare.org/ Events Jnly4:Todd BeamerMemorial Run 10K, 5K and2-mile, Madras; macaquatic.com/recreation/races/ Ang. 8:Haulin' Aspen Full, Half and Half-As Marathon, Bend: haulinaspen. com/ Ang. 9:Shriners Run for a Child 5K and10K, Bend; centraloregonshriners.org/run-for-a-child/ Ang.13:Deschutes Brewery Twilight 5K, Bend; superfitproductions. com/ Sept. 20:High Alpine Half, Mt. Bachelor ski area; footzonebend.com/ events/high-alpine-half


WHERE TO WATCH

Il l I Newport-Ave-.

2015-Happy Girls 10K Run

fiarmon Pa~rk

Do you consider yourself

Dra'ke Park aaaa

ee,

more of a motivator than a

ee~'g ee

runner? A couple of suggestions for where to watch your nearest and dearest:

Galveston Ave.

fitf

9

RIVERBENDPARK

'c

Watch the start and finish of

all three races and be there

e

Aid station,ct: Miiior's I ola Columbia + Aids+stetion Landing Park e + Pa rk'

for your favorite runners

5'-

when they cross the finish line. Plus, there are real bath-

Park

rooms and a finish-line party to enjoy.

'

..

'

E (n

cn

FAREWELLBEND AND MCKAYPARKS

•h

.Joe

'

,/

S/mpsob4

If the crowded finish line

Baa

at Riverbend Park does not sound like your kind of par-

Q&A

• aaa

Aid station

+

ty, try one of the other parks

that line the Deschutes River. Each race winds through

Still have questions about the Happy Girls you wait too long the race you want to run might be sold out. • Can men participate? • Can I run with a stroller?

Run? We'll try to answer them.

Q A

• Yes — although the race series is pri• marily directed to women, men can

Q

if you are running the 5K or A•• Yes, 10K (just be courteous to other runners and start the race at the back, please).

registerfor the run, and boys are welcome

in the Happy Little Kids Race. And for guys However, parts of the half marathon course who choose not to run, the participants will loveto have you cheer them on.

are too bumpy and narrow to run with a stroller.

Q

Q

• I have not registered yet. Is it too late?

• What about my dog?

• Sorry, only service dogs are allowed A • ter during packet pickup at Seventh A• due to City of Bend rules. If you will be Mountain Resort Conference Center today bringing a service dog, please notify the race • No, it's not too late. You can regis-

between 3 and 7 p.m., or at Riverbend Park

director at race@layifoutevents.com.

between7 and 8:30a.m. Saturday.Butspace is limited in each of the three distances, so if

cg •

Still have questions? Check out happygirlsrun.com/race-info/faqs/.

Coiurnbia St. .aa . I'Rivorbond Park

c®go

,

COkO

Farewell Bend Park in the

first mile, and spectators

•aaa aeeoae aaaoea

•aaaaa

will also have a clear view of the runners acrosstheriver

~p di'

as they finish their races.

ere wett. Bend Peek

u kiitneed I

~

The 10K and half marathon

will both pass by the edge of

st a rt/Finish rk-

(n

McKay Park. Source: HappyGitlsRun.com

PICK AN AID STATION, ANYAID STATION

-

Greg Cross/The Bulletin

I

Runners love cheers at the

finish, but encouragement all along the course can go a long way. And the 35 or so Happy Girls volunteers will surelyappreciate afew more helping hands to pass out

Happy Girls SK-Run

SimPs«Ave.

•aaaae

Start/Finish '~<:.

water.

ColumbiaSL ,' tmf yo<o Co ~A i d'etetien h Rivorbond ~ ~ Park eaaaaaa faaaadkaaee ~

.

ee eee

kaa

B'end Park h

C'h 'h

Source: HappyGirlsRun.com

I

Greg Cross / The Bulletin

I ,I

I

t

I"

2015 HappyGirls

/!,"P-

Half Marathan U d td.etatien +

i

To,ilet •h

yFAid station

eee

ve.

-

ci

co

rr

BEND

tk

dbo

esToilet,eea

• 4e.L .

i

+ Aid station

StartIFinish Aid station

+

From previous page "Especially as the race gets closer, there are

a

a lot of people who wait to the last minute to

Toilet •

register," Arredondo said. "Generally, we're right about even at 1,000 participants." This year's races will take place on Satur-

e

er

, o< + Aid station

day instead of Sunday. Aside from a few minor tweaks, the courses are largely the same as

last year. Race activities begin today at packet pickup, where early registrants can grab their race bibs and enjoy adult beverages and snacks. The Happy Girls Run has benefited sever-

Source: HeppyGirlsRun.com

Greg Cross / The Bulletin

2014 RESULTS

al local organizations since its inception four

years ago, and this year a portion of the proceeds will go to Girls on the Run, a program

Half Marathon

sponsored by the Boys 8z Girls Club of Central

Oregon that helps elementary school girls gain confidence and learn healthy habits while preparing for a 5K run. "We have previously worked with Boys & Girls Club and they reached out to us again this year, and they really wanted to focus

on Girls on the Run," Arredondo explained. "They really go hand in hand, since it's a race about motivating women." — Reporter: 541-383-0305, vjacobsen@bendbulletin.com

10K

SK

2, Stephanie Hackbarth 1:40:03 2, Chrissy Ruiter

41:05 2, Ellen Kramer

21:25

4, Sarah Coupe

1:42:17 4, Gabriela Gonzalez

47:36 4 , Kate Mann

21:55

6, Tara Walsh

1:43:51 6, Caroline Ponsini

49:00 6, Alyssa Shaffer

24:07

8, Diana Ackerman

1:4 5:38 8 , Aimee Furber

50:01 8, Kailee Calder

25:19.4

10, Karly Wade

1:45:57 10, Karen Cammarata

51:27 10, Courtney Waibel

2 6 : 20.5

W hat M a k e e V a u H a p p The HappyGirls Rungives everyonesomething to smile aboutandTheCenter is proudto support its athletes and fans. Whether you are running the half marathon, the10k, the 5k, the Happy Little Kids...

i

gteoLts

or just happily cheeringfromthe sidelines, weare behind youall the way.Soc'mon, get happy! Find strength here. 21

560

121 ' •

h

h


IA THE BACK: ADVICE (k EXI'EBTAIAM 50-Plus, E2 Parenfs 8 Kids,E3 Pets, E4 THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY,MAY29, 2015

9 www.bendbulletin.

BRIEFING

Trave with y

Hospice may help coping with death Using hospice servicesmay helppeople cope with the death of a spouse, according ta a study published this week in the Journal of the American Medical Association. Conducted by researchers at the Mount Sinai School of Medicine, the study looked at 1,000 people wha lost a spouse between 2002 and 2011 and haw they fared following this loss. About 30 percent of these people's spouses used hospice for at least three days before they died. The study found abaut 52 percent of the people experienced some symptoms of depression after their spouses died regardless of whether they used hospice. But the study found 28 percent of the people whose spouses used the hospice showed some improvement in their depression over time compared with only 22 percent of the people wha did not use hospice at the time of a spause's death.

60g w

costy By Sue Manning

The Associated Press

LOS ANGELES

ingan 80-pound La dleasatravelbuddy BL. Ochman can q separatethehotels t dogs from those tha

i .~ ir

put up with them.

A bed-and-breakf

r'j4',

visitednorth of ¹w Y City wouldn't let her Benny trot around in

f

main house, amongot

trtoubles. Ochman, a hattan Internetstrate

has since discovered

drey's Farmhouse, aE in Wallkill, New York

Photos by Peter Andrew Bosch / The Miami Herald

caters to dogs and doe

Bevetfy Adams gets a kiss from her daughter Becky Chechak in IIIami at the reunion of a mother and daughter after the mother gave

her up for adoption more than 60 years ago. The daughter flew in from South Carolina to rneet her mother.

chargepet fees that ca

hurtdreds ofdollars.

eDog-friendlymean

your dogis welcome," said. "If the dogis wefc he shouldn'tcost extra

ey. Of course, I am a do owner, not an innkeep Hotels ranging from

major chains to small o posts atte capitalizing on the wave of travelers wh

bringalong their dogs, someby charging for pe

Americansdnuht Snciai Security

thatpamper pets and oth

by expanding fees. Wha started as a basic, one-ti

A recentsurvey conducted by the Pew Research Center found 41 percent of Americans doubt there will be enough money in the Social SecurityTrust Fund ta pay them any benefits at all when it is

pet fee has blossomed in

a per-night charge atma places and costs that can total hundreds.

By Carli TeproffeMiami Herald

time for fhem ta refire.

Thesurvey found another 31 percent of Americarts believe they wiflreceive some benefits from the Social SecurityTrust Fund, but those payments will be less than what they'd receive if they retired naw,artd20 percent said they expect ta receive the same Ievef ofbenefits they wou/d receive if they retired ttaw.

Drinking could harmoider hearts Consuming two or more alcoholic drinks each day could hurt an alder person's heart, according ta a recent study publishedin the journal "Circulation: Cardiavascular Imaging." Conducted by researchers at the Brigham and Women's Hospital in Bastan, the study looked at 4,000 men and women who had an average age of 75. Mare thanhalf of ihese subjects did not drink at all, 1,500 reparted having one to six drinksa week, 402 had seven ta 14 drinks each week and 195 had more than 14 drinks a week. The researchers foundboth men and women who consumed alcohol at the higher levels had larger left ventricular diastolic and sysfalic diameters andlarger leftatrial diameter. Mett wha drank

more alcohol afsa had greater left ventricular masses than those wha drank less, according ta the study, whife women wha drank more alsohadlower left ventricular ejection fraction and a tendency for worse left ventricular global longitudinal strain. — Bulletin staff reports

Wifffam Adams, Becky Checkak's birth father.

MIAMIhey have the same small nose.

Their blue eyes, hidden by glasses, look eerily similar.

Dominique Milba

Courtesy Brm Ochm

Even the way they laugh sounds the same

B.L. Ochman and Benny, an 60-pound Labradoodle, fake a strolf in New York's Central Park.Jf you plan to travel with your pet, searching hotel policies

— which made them, well, laugh. As soon as they saw each other for the first hme, theyembraced in a bearhug forwh at

and potential charges can pay off.

seemed forever. "I don't want to let go of her,"said Beverly

Somepropertie soffer ' esfrompatches of amemtt

Adams, 83, who waited more than 60 yearsto

have a baby. Yet giving her

movie," all of the soldiers, in

up was the hardest thing.

their uniforms, boarded the

grassto chewtoys, designer bowlsand in-room massages — usually for an additional price — while others simplylevycIeaning fees, whether your dogmakes a mess or not. Those hotels often don't offer extras or permission for pooches over acertamweight, lockingout Jargerpets like Ochman's. Thereisahugedifference between pet-tolerant and pet-welcoming," said Carol Bryant, apet industrypublic relations

said. "I couldn't do that to a

train and all of the women stood there and cried. See Reunited /E3

strategt'st from Forty Fort, Pennsylvania. See Pet travel/E4

hold her oldest daughter. "You're beautiful." Her daughter, Becky Chechak, 64, grinned, and

ams, who lives in KendaJJ.

Until about five years ago, replied: "You're beautiful." Chechak and her husband, The pair met for the first Joe, lived in Clearwater, time on a recent Thursday Florida, only a few hours in the lobby of the Residence away, but had no idea who Inn Miami Airport, after or where her birth mother Chechak found Adams

through Ancestry.com's DNA testing several months

ago. Chechak, who lives in South Carolina, came to South Florida to meet Ad-

was.

"AII those years we were only a few hours away, and we had no idea," Becky Chechak said. The last time Adams saw

her blue-eyedbaby girl was

in February 1951 in Rochester, New York. She wasn't allowed to hold her, but she

When she found out she

was pregnant, her boyfriend of about six months was sent

would spend hours staring

off to the Korean War as a

at her little girl through a

reserve in the Marines. They

tiny nursery window. The

were both I8. She said she remembers standing at the train station

baby was bundled in a white blanket. Adams wasn't ready to

"I had nowhere to go," she

baby."

and "like a scene out of a

Bill could let you aaess late loved one's digital data By Mac hllclean

go paperless you now keep recordsofevery transaction Think about the informathey madeon your behalf, tion you store online. and a series of other legal/ There's the Pinterest page financial documents you or whereyou keep a collection of your loved ones might need family recipes, the lnstagram at a moment's notice. account where you keep your Now think about what vacation photos, the email happens to this information The Bulletin

account that has contact information for everyone you

know and the blog where you keep a rnemoir you've been typing away at for the past five months. There are also your online bank and investment accounts, where at the financial institution's request to

— all of which is stored on a

password-protected website that only you can access-

when you die, Portland attorney Victo-

accounts by creating a Virtual Asset Instruction Letter where they list their online

accounts, the passwords they use to access each one, and instructions explaining what, if anything, should be done with the content each account holds. But there's a catch.

"(Even if they have permission) people are breaking the law when they use someone else's password to

ria Blachly said people can

access their online accounts,"

avoid the personal, financial

she said, explaining how a

and insome cases legal headaches that come with

30-year-old federal statute has made it difficult for estate

losing access to their online

planners who work in an era

of increasing online usage and informaiton.

Blachly said the problem lies with the federal Computer Fraud and Abuse Act of 1986, which threatens harsh

criminal penalties for people who access online information "without authorization" or ina manner that "exceeds authorized access" without defining what either of these

terms means. She said the same ambi-

they've read without actually reading, and that can put

people who access someone else's online accounts at risk of facing civil proceedings in addition to the criminal ones they could face for violating the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act. "We've got to fix that,"

said Blachly, who is working with several of her colleagues to get the Uniform Fiduciary Access to Digital

guity exists in many online service providers' Terms of

— through the Oregon Leg-

Service Agreements, those

islature during this year's

long documents people scroll through and check that

session

Assets Act — Senate Bill 367

See Fiduciaries/E2


E2

TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, MAY 29, 2015

-PLUS

ri e e

To submit an event for the Activities Calendar, visit bendbulletin.comlevents and click "Add Event" at least 10days before publication. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Questions: communitylifeibendbulletin.com, 541-383-0351.

e e n a e,cu ura arriers

ACTIVITIES CALENDAR

By Erica Curless

TODAY

The (Spokane, Wash.) S pokesman-Review

OLD MILL DISTRICTBIRDING WALKS: Go on abirdwalk guided by the East Cascades Audubon Society; 10 a.m.; The Old Mill Disctrict, 450 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-0131. PINOCHLEAT THE GOLDEN AGE CLUB: Pinochle and bridge; 11:30 a.m.; The Golden Age Club, 40 SEFifth St., Bend; 541-389-1752.

The word "quilt" just didn't translate when Joan Nelson

told her young Japanese vis-

I

itors of her hobby, even when

she used her hands to mimic sewing. "We had a real problem

I'

with that word," Nelson, 77, laughed. "I don't think they

got the message." Two dozen Japanese students from Spokane, Washington's M ukogawa F ort

SATURDAY SATURDAYBIRDWALKS:Join the Nature Center for guided Saturday morning bird walks, bring binoculars; 8:30 a.m.; free, registration required; Sunriver Nature Center 8 Observatory, 57245 River Road, Sunriver; 541-593-4394.

Wright Institute visited Nelson and other Fairwood Retirement Village residents recent-

ly to practice their English conversation skills and hear the life stories of local retirees.

Even though the exchanges were sometimes lost in trans-

lation, the 19-year-old girls and the senior residents all enjoyed the visit.

SUNDAY

"Both sides love it," said

Mukogawa instructor Peggy Arendt, who started organizing the visits with Fairwood

residents in 2008. She got the idea when her parents moved to t h e 5 5 - plus r e t irement

community. Mukogawa students visit

Spokane for four months and learn about culture and lanTyler Tjomsland/The (Spokane, Wash.) Spokesman-Review guage, yet they aren't often ex- Joan Nelson visits with Japanese students Saki Okuno, center, and Momoka Psaki at Fairwood Retirement Village in Spokane, Washposed to older Americans, Ar- ington. Japanese students from Spokane's Mukogawa Fort Wright Institute visited the retirement village to interview residents, practice endtsaid.In Japan,eldersgar- English and learn stories from retirees. ner great respect, she added. A few days after their visit to Fairwood, the students common for Japanese elders Jones said he told the stu- her grandchildren and shared visited Japan twice, asked if gathered in their Mukogawa to live with their families than dents about hi s c h i ldhood similar enthusiasms, but are a they meant in Tokyo, but they classroomand discussed their in America, although some living on his great-grandfa- lotmore demure. wanted to know about Disneyinteractions with the residents. of the students said that was ther's homestead near Twisp, She took her two visiting land in California. Beautiful white hair. Fash- changing and their grandpar- Washington, during the Great students to her apartment to The girls took out their ionable. Active. Bent back. ents lived independently. They Depression. He said they were show them quilt examples. smartphones an d s h o w ed Bad ears. These were some also said there are retirement unfamiliar with the Depres- The girls were more interest- Nelson photos of Disneyland of the common descriptors communities somewhat like sion, so he explained it. The ed in looking at family photos, Tokyo. "Cinderella's castle looks the students used to tell about Fairwood in Japan but they girls nodded their heads, but especially generations of wedtheir first impression of the se- are very expensive, only for Jones wasn't convinced they ding photos. They also wanted the same in Tokyo as it does in niors they interviewed. They the wealthy. understood. to know if Nelson had been to California," Nelson said with a w ere surprised several ofthe One of the class discussion He also told them about Disneyland. Nelson, who has laugh. residents had visited Japan nu- questions was about how the working as a teacher and a merous times and even more students viewed their lives in drug and alcohol rehab counsurprised some had been mar- 60 years. One table of students selorforadolescents. "They do have that in Jaried multiple times. talked about money, having Junko Tanigawa, 19, said enough saved to live well in pan," he said. "They said it's the woman she interviewed old age. Yet one student said becoming a problem." was shy and the conversa- she would rather enjoy life and K ana Kawida and K a h o tion didn't go smoothly, so spend her money as a young Matsuda both visited with a they used paper and pen to woman. Fairwood resident who said communicate. Dick Jones, 82, said he can't he had lived in Japan and vis"I asked her questions but wait to talk with the next se- ited the country more than she didn't (hear) me," Taniga- mester of Mukogawa students. 50 times. He worked as an wa said. "So she said, 'What? He was impressed with how engineer. ee What?'" preparedthey were for their Both girls were impressed Then in the polite manner of visit. with his knowledge of their sj "The people here really en- country. most of the students she added, "But she was pretty and joyed it," Jones said. "Most of The students also have fond kind." us are well educated in differ- memories of their own grandThe other girls nodded. ent professions, and it gives us parents in Japan. In the class conversation, an opportunity to engage peoKawida said her grandfainstructor Sarah Rodenbough ple who need to understand ther taught her how to play asked the students how many part of our culture." Kendama, make origami and of them had grandparents He said it was difficult to catch bugs. Matsuda learned who lived with their families hear their soft voices and un- to cook traditional Japanese in Japan. About 25 percent of derstand their broken English, food with her grandmother. the girls raised their hands. so much of the communicaNelson, the quilter, said the Rodenbough said it's more tion was written. students are the same age as

OLD MILLBIRD WALKS: Joina Sunriver Nature Center Naturalist for Sunday morning bird walk along the Deschutes River in the Old Mill District, meet at the ticket mill, bring binoculars; 7:30a.m.; free, donations accepted; Old Mill District, 450 SW Powerhouse Drive, Suite 422, Bend; www. sunrivernaturecenter.org or 541-593-4394. PINOCHLEAT THE GOLDEN AGE CLUB: Pinochle and bridge; 12p.m.; The GoldenAge Club,40 SE Fifth St., Bend; 541-389-1752.

WEDNESDAY WEEKLY CRUISINAND SHOW N SHINE:Bring your classic cars and trucks for a weekly Cruisin and Show N Shine; 5:30 p.m.; Jake's Diner, 2210 USHighway 20, Bend; 541-647-1769. GEEKS WHO DRINKPUB TRIVIA: Trivia hostedby Ryan Traughber; 7 p.m.; The Summit Saloon & Stage,125 NW Oregon Ave., Bend; 541-419-0111.

IctmorelhIIIIEI

froiyoml-lsehosl. A

St. FFRRds Sch69l I Bcmd, is a school with

Fiduciaries Continued from E1 Filed at the request of the Oregon State Bar's Estate Planning an d A d m i nistration Section, UFADAA makes it clear the executor of

a person's estate, his or her court-appointed g u ardian/ conservator,his or her trust-

ee or another fiduciary has the authority to access the person's online accounts to

gather and distribute digital assets, prevent identity theft and console loved ones with

images and stories posted on social media. " UFADAA

e n sures t h a t

fiduciaries have the access they need to carry out their duties in accordance with the

account holder's estate plan ... (and their) best interests," Blachly said when she spoke in favor of the act during a March hearing held by the Senate Judiciary Committee.

During h e r tes t i mony, Blachly also stressed UFADAA does not create a new law but instead takes the state's existing fiduciary codes

and updates them so they cover an individual's digital assets. Duly appointed fiduciaries can legally hire a locksmith to enter someone's home under this body of law, she added,so itonly makes sense they should also be able to access a person's Facebook page or online investment account. According to the Legislature's website, Senate Bill 367

aTIj CXPCCtatiOTIj Of CXCC11CTIjOC. With rigOrOuS

Creating aVAIL

do that taskas well. • Step 4: Save these instrucPortland attorney Victoria tions on a CD ora memory Blachly thinks having a Virtual stick and store it in asafe place. Asset Instruction Letter is Tell your representative where just as important as having an these items can befound and advanced directive, a power what he or sheneeds to doto of attorney and awill when access them. it comes to preparing for the • Step 5: Download a copy uncertainty that can happen of any pictures, online memowhen a person dies or is derabilia or personal writings you clared mentally incompetent. thinkyour loved onesmight She created astep-by-step want from the Internet and guide people should follow save it on a disk drive or aCD when creating one of these that you control. Tell your perdocuments. sonal representative where this • Step1: Identify each Inis and how to access it. ternet account you haveand • Step 6: Update your power determine howthe company of attorney documents so they handles it when theaccount give your agent (the person holder dies. who acts on your behalf) the • Step 2: Determine which authority to access your emails accounts you wantyour repand other electronic informaresentative to maintain and tion. prepare a written and electron• Step 7: Include the names ic list of those accounts, their of any people youwant to hanlog-in information and their dle your electronic information passwords so he orshecan outside of your personal access them. representative in your will and • Step 3: Determine which other estate planning docaccounts you wantyour repre- any uments. sentative to delete andprovide Victoria Blachly and the firm of the necessary instructions he Source: Samuels, Yoelin and Kantor Attorneys or she can follow so theycan at Law was referredto the Senate Rules Committee on April 30

sidered by legislatures in Idaho, Nevada, Washington and

after it passed a vote in the

20 other states this year, ac-

Senate Judiciary Committee. cording to the National ConThe Oregon House of Rep- ference of Commissioners on resentatives does not have a

Uniform State Laws and its

companion piece of legislation, according to the website. Similar bills are being con-

Uniform Law Commission. — Reporter: 541-617-7816, mmclean@bendbulletin.com

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FRIDAY, MAY 29, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

PARENTS EeKIDS

E3

To submit an event for the Family Calendar, visit bendbulletin.comlevents and click "Add Event" at least 10days before

publication. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Questions: communitylifelbendbulletin.com,541-383-0351.

A famil s quest to buynothing newfor a year

FAMILY CALENDAR

new item, with the exception of food and hygienic products. "When you're not buying I buy my kids too much stuff. things that are new, you have It violates my belief sys- a different way of looking at tem and my budget, but I do things," Basilone told me. "You it anyway. ask yourself, rDo I need this'?' It's a quick and easy way You learn that you don't actuto make them feel happy ally need most of the stuff you (temporarily) and reward- buy." ed ("100 percent on your They have two sons, Liam spelling test! Here's a cheap and Evan, who were 7 and plastic token of my pride!"). 2 at the time. Have you been

"I know," I would tell Oprah

By HeidiStevens

Chicago Tribune

TODAY TCF BIKE HELMET DEMO: Learn about the importance of wearing a helmet and get fitted for a helmet; 8 a.m. for grade school children; Juniper Elementary School, 1300 NE Norton Ave., Bend; 541-408-7269.

SATURDAY RESCUE REVOLUTION: A TRAINER CHALLENGE: Join in on this family event at Rim Rock Riders to watch this amazing horses compete, featuring food, doors prizes, raffles, asilentauction, vendorsand atack

saleandmore;9a.m.;Rim Rock Event Center at BrasadaRanch, 17037 SWAlfalfa Road, Powell Butte; www.rescuerevolution.info or 503-833-2866. STORYTIMES — MUSIC, MOVEMENT 8STORIES:Ages3-5; 10:15a.m.; Sisters Public Library, 110 N. CedarSt., Sisters; www. deschuteslibrary.org/calendar or 541-312-1070. CARGO BIKE RODEO & COMMUNITY RIDE: A family friendly eventfor cyclists, cargo-bike adventurers and more;12 p.m.; BendElectric Bikes, 223 NW Hill St., Bend; 541-410-7408. HAPPY LITTLE KIDS RACE:Arace for boys and girls with ageappropriate distances for kids ages3-10, as part of the HappyGirls Run;1 p.m.; $5; Riverbend Park, 799 SWColumbia St., Bend; www.happygirlsrun.com or 541-323-0964. 2015 BARKS ANDRECREATION: Featuring competitions for best voice, owner look-a-like, pie eating, big hair and best trick and more; 1 p.m.; free, $10 registration fee; DrakePark, 777 NW Riverside Blvd., Bend; www. bendsnip.org/events or 541-617-1010. LAST SATURDAY: Featuring local art and culture with art openings, live

music, foodcarts, workshopsand

more; 6 p.m.; TheOld Ironworks, 50 SE Scott St., Bend; 347-564-9080.

SUMDAY RESCUE REVOLUTION: ATRAINER CHALLENGE: Join in on this family event at Rim Rock Riders to watch

this amazinghorsescompete,

featuring food, doors prizes, raffles, a silent auction, vendors and atack sale and more; 10a.m.; Rim Rock Event Center at BrasadaRanch, 17037 SWAlfalfa Road, Powell Butte; www.rescuerevolution.info or 503-833-2866.

WEDNESDAY SUMMER KINDERMUSIKCLASS: Featuring dancing, singing, instrument playing, laughing, learning and more, start June 3; 9a.m.; $75, with discounts for siblings; Cascade School of Music, 200 NWPacific Park Lane, Bend;www.ccschoolof music.org or 541-382-6866.

Reunited

And the items they covet Wheels, headbands, more

QAI 1

!

diet.

"Family time is huge for us, and I hope they'll value life experiences over

m a t erial

things," she said. "One-on-one time at a beach house, or just

around 7- and 2-year-olds late-

in our own home."

She's also teaching them to understandthe difference be-

neeeeeeeeeed stuff, Mom!

"Having k id s d e finitely Abel Arciniega I Chicago Tribune made it really challenging," The Basilone family went an entire year without buying a single If it seems like I'm makBasilone said. new item, with the exception of food andhygienic products. ing excuses, that's because I asked how they presented

tween needs and wants, and

I am.

what consumerism can do to

markers to keep their other 6,000 markers company.

But if Oprah taught us anything, it's that the first

step to recovery is coming on her show and admitting

you have a problem. W ell, she went off t h e air without bothering to in-

quire about my problems, so I called Melissa Basilone

instead. Basilone, 40, owns Thrift 8r. Thrive secondhand shop in Portage Park, Illinois,

with her husband, Joseph, 37. In 2 013, the

c ouple

vowed to go an entire year without buying a single

the idea. "Evan was very small, so he

the experiment, Basilone said, experience with their family." didn't really understand," she was bringing gifts to other Liam, sh e s a id, n e eded said. "Liam was obviously in kids' birthday parties. She pretty frequent reminders to that stage of liking and want- tried to stockpile items from stay on board. "We had that ing lots of new things, and thrift stores that had never conversation many times over we just sat him down and ex- been opened (not as rare as the year, 'This is why we're plained that our resolution was you might guess, she said). doing this. This is why it's to buy nothing brand new and More often, though, she went important.'" why we thought that was cool. with experience gifts. Which is a gentle reminder "We are really into recy"We would buy four tickets (to me) that, begging kids or cling, and we have pretty to a historic movie theater so not, overbuying is a grownstrong green values, so he the whole family could go to- up problem. A g r own-upunderstood — as much as a gether," she said. "Or tickets to who-doesn't-say-no-enough 7-year-old can — that we want- a museum. Instead of buying problem. "You are that grown-up," ed to challenge ourselves and something the kid would play walkthe walk." with for a year, maybe, we O prah would say t o m e . One of the hardest parts of would focus on giving them an "Change begins with you."

the impact of giving in too frequently to the latter. "I hope they u nderstand the Earth and the effect that

buying things and throwing things away has on the environment," she said. "We talk

about voting when you shop, because every dollar you spend is a vote for more manu-

facturing of that product." Those lessons are far less fleeting than the temporary high of scoring a new toy from Target's dollar aisle. "I don't think they're going without," Basilone said. "I think they're getting a lot more this way — just in a different

way."

Learning toalwaysstay present in the hearts of grandkids By Sharon Randall Tribune News Service

The phototook mybreath

away: A little boy with a big grin, waving at the camera (hello or goodbye?) all dressed up in his first cap and gown. Randy, my oldest grandchild, graduated from preschool last week. I couldn't be in California for the cer-

in a strange galaxy called Las ask, "Is that Nana's plane?" Vegas. He understands, as best (Also, for some reason, when he can, that I can't always be they see a FedEx delivery van, with him as often as we would they yell, "It's Nana's truck!") like. The first question they ask Sometimes, when it's time when I show up is, "Are you for me to go, he gets a little going to stay for a long time, sad. Saying goodbye is hard at Nana, or just a little bit?" It's never an easy question to any age. And it never gets any easier. But when you're 4 years answer. Little or long, it always old, and your nana leaves you ends with my leaving. and doesn't come back for a To make the parting less month, that's a big chunk of teary (for them, not me) I've

emony, so his mom sent me aphoto. time. taught them a ritual. It goes I wish you could've seen A month is one-twelfth of a like this: "Where is your nana," I ask, him. year and ayear is one-fourth of I wish I could've seen Randy's whole life. So a month "when you can't see her?" him, too. for him is, like, well, a lot. Wylie, at 2, is still working I've lived a bit longer than on the answer. Baby Eleanor When you get a chance to share a child's rite of he has. When you're my age, a will pick it up in time. But Ranpassage (even if it's only month goes by so fast it makes dy, who's almost 5, and Henry, one of many in his life), you you dizzy.But a month away who's almost 4, point to their shouldn't pass it up. There from someone you never want chests and say, "In my heart!" "That's right," I say, "and you will be other graduations in to leave can feel like forever. his future, but I was sorryto I pop in and out of my grand- are in mine. So don't forget it." have to miss this one. Not that Randy minded.

children's lives like a nana-

I want them to know I carry

jack-in-the-box. They see a jet them with me wherever I go, He knows I live far, far away streaking across the sky and and that a part of me remains

After leaving the home, Adams got a job, and eventually

b r anch and had a"great life." Her mother and father aling the test about three years ways told her she had a "birth Ancestry DNA, a

of Ancestry.com, began offer-

ago, said the company's Anna couple got married and had Fwayne. The process is simple: his mother she was expect- two morechildren,beforesepa- Order a kit, spit into a tube, reing. She wound up in a home rating. He died in the late 1990s. turn the material and wait to for unwed mothers, which is In 1955,she moved to Or- see whether there's a match. w here she gave birth after 20 lando to be with a cousin and There are currently 850,000 hours of labor and a C-section. then later moved to the Kendall people in the database. Her mother "didn't want the area. Said Fwayne: "DNA doesn't neighbors to know." W hile A da m s neve r lie." "It can help someone unravel Adams s t il l re m embers searched for her daughter, she shaking and crying as she always thought about her. their story," she said. "I never wanted to intrude in clutched a pen to sign the Becky Chechak, who was papers. her life," she said. officially adopted at age 2, "I held on to that pen for a Becky ended up finding her. grew up in upstate New York J ust before W i lliam A d ams left, he told her not to tell

»I

6

are relatively inexpensive ly? They want stuff. They don't and benign: books, Hot just want stuff, actually. They

while after," she said.

Continued from E1

in hushed tones. "I know." I do know. And I especially love what Basilone has to say about the lessons she and her family carry with them today, morethan ayear after successfully completing the shopping

William Adams returned. The

with them when I leave. We don't have to be in the same

room to know we are loved. It's such a mystery — isn't it?

the walk, curls bouncing like springs, so excited to get to his new classroom and set sail on the grand adventure called

— the everlasting, everpresent school. "Have a great day!" I called transportability of love'? Yet they understand it in the only after him, fighting my tears. way it can ever be understood He stopped and looked back — with a childlike innocence at me. I grinned and waved. No and trust. big deal, just letting my baby In years to come, they will go. celebrate countless rites of pasSuddenly he unzipped his sage: graduations, birthdays, backpack and pulled out a weddings, anniversaries, the ratty blankie he'd promised to births of their children and leave at home. Apparently, he grandchildren. I intend to be at was trying to smuggle it into every one of them. If not"in the school. flesh," surely in their hearts. Taking one last whiff of the This fall, Randy will start blankie, he shoved it into my kindergarten at the school hands."You keep it,M om,"he where his dad went to kinder- said. "You might need it." garten some 30 years ago, and And with that he was gone. where he now teaches third He was right. I did need it. grade. Some days I still do. EveryThirty years is the blink of body needs a blankie once in a an eye in a mother's memo- while. ry, but I well recall Nate's first I carry a ragged little piece day of school. He hurried up of it in my heart.

Beckywould need apassport. But getting one was a c hallenge without

a bi r t h

ed four hours. They have been in touch ever since. Sitting in the Miami hotel,

mother," but Becky said she certificate. wanted to respect her mother's So he suggested a DNA test. decision and not "just show They paid $99 and waited for up. the results.

the pairreminisced and pored

In 1972, she moved to Clearwater with her husband to es-

Sure enough, the r esults came back in November 2014 with a match to a third cous-

mother's hand as she saw a

because he had an interest in

mother.

touch with Adams again.

over old pictures. Chechak,

whose adoptive parents have since died, held her birth

pictureof her father for the cape the cold. first time. About threeyears ago, Becky in. A message was quickly While the Chechaks would Chechak got her husband a returned and the cousin hap- only be in town for the day, subscription to Ancestry.com pened to know Becky's birth they said they will never lose tracking his family tree. When Within hours, Becky had a he hadthe ideatogoto Canada phone number to Adams. to visit his family, they realized Their first conversation last-

"I thought I'd never find her," Chechak said. "This is the best gift I can ask for."

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E4 THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, MAY 29, 2015

PETS

To submit an event for the Pets Calendar, visit bendbulletin.comlevents and click "Add Event" at least 10 days before

publication.Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Questions: communitylife@bendbulletin.com, 541-383-0351.

Nestin ir sscare o rom ot area scary to you is because they have long wings and tail feath-

noticed a raccoon eating out

Newsday

By Marc Morrone

of the cats' dishes at night.

When the raccoons learn

Q

• My Maltipoo has a pot- ers, which have a wide white band that flashes as they flap

At first we were afraid there would be a confrontation be-

that food comes from inside your house and that you put

tween the two species, but there hasn't been. The rac-

it out there, they will not stop

tactic works very well in chas-

ing predators away from their nests. That is what they are

coons and cats eat right out of

the same dish.

at the food, and your home is literally at risk from being destroyed by them.

• ty area in one corner of

my yard, and for the last two weeks we have had a lot of problems. Whenever she goes to that corner, there are two big gray and white birds that divebomb her and chase her away. Now the birds have taken up dive-bombing her whenever she is in the yard. They have even tried doing it to me. How badly can they hurt us and what can we do?

A

• I know your fears are • real, but they are not grounded in fact. If the birds were going to hurt you or your dog, then it would have happened already. They obviously are just bluffing. They are mockingbirds, and if you held one in your hand you would actually laugh at the fact you were afraid of them. They have a small bill that is used for eating insects and berries. A pet parakeet's bill is many times stronger than a mockingbird's. Their bodies are only 4 inches long. The reason they look so

Pet travel Continued from E1 She's been traveling with dogs for decades and says hotels that simply tolerate ani-

their wings. Obviously this

doing. There must be a nest

Now we have three raccoons eating from the cats'

in a thick shrub in your backyard and they feel threatened by you and your dog. Even though I can explain this to you, I cannot explain it to your dog — so she will still be afraid. Umbrellas are handy things to chase birds

them these days.

doing whatever it takes to get

You are inadvertently teach-

bowls, and we are not quite

ing the raccoons that humans

sure what to do. Is it OK to be feeding the raccoons this

are not a threat. They cannot

ask for anybody's ID, so if they way? How can we stop and yet walk up to the wrong person, still feed the cats? then that means death to the • This is a bad situation for raccoon. • so many reasons. First of So for the raccoons' own all,the raccoons are a rabies good, you have to stop feeding

A

and other animals away. The

best thing for you to do would vector, and if you have not had be to take the dog to the pot- the cats vaccinated for rabies, ty spot on a lead and hold an then do so. You also could be open umbrella over your head. at risk. I have been bitten and This will keep the mocking- scratched by wild animals birds at a distance and in three many times, and getting the weeks or so, when the babies rabies shots is no joke, even are out of the nest, the situa- though they are less painful tion will resolve itself, because than they were decades ago. the parents do not have to be The other issue is it is never protective anymore. a good idea for a wild animal to lose its fear of humans. Not

• We feed a f e w f e r a l all humans are as nice to ani• cats in our yard that we mals as you are. Staying away

have had trapped and then neutered. Two months ago we

in the U.S. charge a maxim um $75 nonrefundable fee used for cleaning, said Maggie Giddens, director of public

them.

The question of how to feed the cats is tricky. You will have to work at this a bit and get the

cats used to being fed only at a set time during the day. After they are done, you need to take up the food and lock up your garbage cans to eliminate temptations or lures for the raccoons. This at first for the cats, but it will work out well in the end. benefit.

Dahlen, marketing director

ers to avoid pet dander.

A ll

t h r e e s p e cies w i l l

for New York-based petswel• Restricting dogs f rom come.com. getting on furniture in rooms Others charge pernight, and lobbies. • W hen dogs m ust b e relations for the hotels. including Rodeway Inn and Many chains charge dif- Westin hotels at $ 10-$15; leashed. • Where they can go on the ferently by city. In San Fran- Best Western and Travelodge cisco,flat fees are common, at $20; and Extended Stay property. with the Radisson charging America at $25. • Bans on certain breeds, $75; the Marriott, $50 to $100; Bryant said the highest which generally match the Holiday Inn, $75; and the Hy- fee she's faced was a one- city's laws. att, $100, according to pets- time $250 cleaning charge at For O c h man, b e d -and-

'

BARKS AND RECREATION DOGGIE CONTEST: Registration is open for the 2015 Barks and Recreation Doggie Contest; competitions for best voice, owner looka-like, pie eating, big hair and best trick; $50 prize for winners; space is limited; 1-5 p.m.; $10 registration; Drake Park, 777 NW Riverside Blvd., Bend; www.bendsnip.org/ events or 541-617-1010.

June 6 DOG AGILITY EVENT: Featuring dogs and their handlers moving through obstacle courses, hosted by Bend Agility Action Dogs; 8 a.m. for spectators; Crook County Fairgrounds, 1280 S. Main St., Prineville; 541-280-4198.

June 7 DOG AGILITY EVENT: Featuring dogs and their handlers moving through obstacle courses, hosted by Bend Agility Action

Dogs; 8 a.m. for spectators; Crook County Fairgrounds, 1280 S. Main St., Prineville; 541-280-4198.

June 13 DOG GONERDN: The Dog Gone Run 5K fun run/walk for peopleand leashed pets begins and ends at Riverbend Park, register online or at FootZone and FleetFeet in Bend, and BrightSide Animal Center Thrift Storein Redmond; 9 a.m.;$30 before June1, $35 after June1, $40 day of; Riverbend Park, 799 SW Columbia St., Bend; www. runsignup.com/race/OR/Bend/ dogonerun or 541-923-0882. PET PAWLOOZA: PetPawlooza festival; contests, prizes, petrelated vendors, nonprofit groups, Ask-A-Vet info booth, adoptable animals, live music,

bounce house andbeer garden; sponsored by Brightside Animal Center and Bend Pet Express; 10 a.m.; Riverbend Park, 799 SW Columbia St., Bend; www. brightsideanimals.org/events or 541-923-0882.

breakfasts beat out

h otels,

because they're more distinctive and usually have fewer

restrictions on pets. "People approach travel in

ADOPT ME for feline immunodeficiency virus and should find a home with others cats with FIV or no other cats. FIV is a lentivirus in felines only, similar to HIV in humans. Cats with FIV often live long, healthy and normal lives with no symptoms at all. Cats with this virus should be kept Submitted photo indoors. To meet Sterling and other adoptable cats at the Cat Gentle Sterling Rescue, Adoption and Foster Meet Sterling, an affecTeam, call 541-389-8420, email tionate, gentle, male silver info©craftcats.org or visit tabby. He has tested positive www.craftcats.org.

Find Your Dream Home In Real Estate

different ways," she said. "We

are just looking for a pretty place where we can relax and take the dogs."

• • •

TheB u l letin

4•

• g

SUMDAY

will cause a bit of confusion

from people is the only thing most of them have going for

mals don't offer services such as bowls and beds, so dogs might be sleeping on thin carpeting. Perks such a s o r ganic treats usually cost more, but "I neverforget when busi- welcome.com, a p e t t r avel the Trump SoHo New York. nesses extend themselves to services website. But the InDogs staying at the luxury my dog," Bryant said. "Does terContinental requires $50 a hotel also have to be under 25 my dog k now? Probably night there. pounds. n ot, but I do. And I d o t h e Many properties have no Other pet policies, which spending." fees, including Motel 6, Studio exclude service dogs, vary by Hotels charge a range of 6, Red Roof Inn, La Quinta hotel and can include: prices for pets. More than 120 and Kimpton, which has 67 • Rooms on d e signated DoubleTree by Hilton hotels hotels nationwide, said Cindy floors, allowing other custom-

PETS CALENDAR

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FRIDAY, MAY 29, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

E5

ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT

urve sa sNeesoniS i a man TV SPOTLIGHT By David Bauder The Associated Press

NEW YORK — Ad execu-

tives looking for a celebrity to endorse their product can't do much better than actor Liam

Neeson. That's the c onclusion of

produces the better-known likability, public awareness, Q Score, a measurement of influence and other factors. Its public attitudes toward wellfirst"N-Scores" were released known figures. Tuesday. Neeson and Pierce Besides attaching scores Brosnan had identical scores to celebrity endorsers, Niel-

Neeson, who has been featured in an ad for Supercell Games, is viewed positively by 78 percent of Americans who know him, Nielsen said.

of 94, although Neeson was

Conaughey, both f eatured in car commercials recently,

lation that takes into account

judged to have a greater influ- detailed information about ence in getting products sold. the personalities and habits By looking at the effective- of people who respond well ness of celebrity pitchmen, to each celebrity so they can

Tuesday, Liam Neeson tops the list as a celebrity to endorse

the Nielsen company, which looked at celebrities who the company best known for made commercials during the television ratings will now first three months of the year compete with Marketing Eval-

products.

and ranked them with a calcu-

Abraham Caro Marin I The Associated Press

According to the Nielsen company's first "N-Scores," released

sen intends to offer marketers

better match pitchmen and

uations Inc., a company that

I

it.

Submitted photo

Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson does his best to survive California's "Big One" in the action-packed "San Andreas." OK for ages

Sand up.

oitics serve wit ro anit ma es inner ar toswaow Dear Abby:My sister-in-law and her live-in boyfriend, "Bud," get

know how much longer I can keep pregnant, my husband went along my mouth shut without blasting

him. How should I dinner and outings. handle this? We enjoy each oth— Ready to Blow DEP,R er's company, but inIdaho ABBY over the last couple Dear Ready to of years he has been Blow:You and your making disparaging husband should pick remarks on the subject of politics. up the phone and call your sister-

together with us for

We do not belong to the same polit-

in-law. Tell her that as much as you

with it.

But now, if someone asks about my pregnancy or jokes about us having a second child, he will tell them he's not sure because during my pregnancy I was depressed. When I ask him please not to tell

people about it, he says, "Why not'? You have nothing tobe ashamed of." How can I get him to under-

ical party, and his remarks make love her and Bud, the political dis- stand that for me, it's not about our blood boil. cussions have gotten out of hand, shame but PRIVACY? Bud knows we belong to the

and therefore, there will be NO

— New Mom in Louisiana

other party but continues his bar- MORE discussions about politics Dear New Mom:While I agree rage peppered with profanity. It's when you get together. Period. If d epression is n othing t o b e impossible to have an intelligent Bud starts in, your husband should ashamed of, I also agree with you debate with him before the cursing not take the bait. You are both to that some things should be kept starts spewing out. A difference of say, "We'll never agree on this, so private — and your medical hisopinion is tolerated, but when it's let's change the subject." tory is one of them. Perhaps your laced with profanity it becomes Dear Abby: After 12 years of husband would understand if you hard to swallow. My husband feels marriage, my husband and I fi- analogize it with a man using the same way. nally have our first child, a little Viagra. While he might use the I would tell Bud to head south as girl. Yes, I was very happy to have little blue pill with abandon, many far as he can go, were it not for my a child on the way, but I was also men would prefer folks to assume sister-in-law's feelings. (She's pret- very depressed. My OB/GYN had they didn't need the pharmaceutity close to my husband.) I thought to put me on anti-depression med- cal assistance. it better not to say anything during ication for it. I felt that only fami— Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com these dressing-downs, but I don't ly should know and, while I was or P.o. Box 69440, LosAngeles, CA90069

HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORFRIDAY, MAY 29, 2015:This yearyou seemto carry a magic wand in your back pocket. When you wish for something, it tends to become a reality. Be careful about whatyouwishfor,though,because once you manifest it, you might decide you no longer want it! If you are single, your soaring popularity allows you to broaden your social circle. Stars showthe kind You might want to of dayyou'Ilhave exPlore more than ** * * * D ynamic commit. If you are ** * * Positive at t ached, the two ** * Average of y o u will enter a ** So-so very content period * Difficult where communication will be delightful. You also might decide to pursue a dream trip that the two of you often have discussed. LIBRA adds gentlenessto whatever is going on.

ARIES (March21-April 19) ** * * Being passive is notyour thing, but with so much going on around you, you might not have a choice. A close friend or loved one is likely to express his or her feelings, and it could trigger a strong reaction. Remain calm. Tonight: Kiss and make up.

TAURUS (April 20-May20) ** * You have a lot on your plate, so it might be best if you can work from home today. A major purchase could be in the offing, or at least part of your discussions. If you feel unsure about any aspect, hold off for now. Tonight: Run around the block. Bathing suit time is here!

SCORPIO (Dct. 23-Nov.21)

YOURHOROSCOPE

** Just because you aren't in the spirit of the moment, that doesn't mean you By Jacqueline Bigar can't free yourself up tomorrow. Accomplish everything you need to as quickly as one. A case of spring fever could have you possible, clear out your desk, get errands feeling very upbeat. A friend might make doneand think"weekend plans."Tonight: an off-the-wall comment that catches you Follow your instincts. off guard. Tonight: Love the moment.

CANCER (June21-July 22) ** * * You'll be coming from a grounded place. Many of you might consider taking off at the last minute to head to a local summer hot spot. A boss could be unpredictable. Be willing to say "no" to a nearly impossible request. Tonight: You get others' attention wherever you are.

LEO (July23-Aug.22) ** * * Ask the right questions and you'll get the right answers. You know that how you verbalize a request will determine the outcome. A loved one might find it hard — if not impossible — to say "no" to you. Be sure that you are not pushing this person too hard. Tonight: TGIF!

VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) ** * * Your funds will be a major topic of conversation. You seem to be unusually optimistic right now. Still, a risk could go too far. Not being open with a friend or loved one might have this person questioning your feelings. Tonight: Good times don't require a big budget.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec. 21)

** * * Friends have a way of gathering around you and pointing you in the right direction — or so they think. Be careful, as you could forget to include a close loved one and cause yourself a problem that might be difficult to neutralize. Tonight: Follow your heart.

GAPRICORN (Dec.22-Jan. 19) ** * Every so often you get an offer that is too good to say"no" to. Ifyou choose not to pursue that specific path, you will neverknow what was possible.Make a point of breaking out of your conservative mindset, and just go for it. Tonight: Surprises mark your interactions.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.18) ** * * I f you can detach and resist throwing yourself right into the middle of a situation, and you will like the results. Remember, you don'tneed to jump on any matter immediately, although you might decide to do just that. Tonight: Ride the wave of the unexpected.

PISCES (Feb.19-March20)

** * * You value friendship. As a result, ** * * * You might wonder what others you might choose to relate with others are complaining about. You are on the on more of a one-on-one level. Be careful verge of achieving a long-term desire. Ex- about making any financial commitments GEMINI (May 21-June 20) amine your options, but not for too long. just yet. The highs and lows of money ** * * * Y our imagination continues to Others seem to exhibit a certain amount dealings could be extreme. Tonight: You be difficult to harness. Many of you will of impulsiveness. Hang in there. Tonight: know how to delight a special someone! be focused ona newromance or a loved Accept a heartfelt compliment with grace. © King Features Syndicate

LIBRA (Sepb23-Dct. 22)

a mong celebrities fo r

the

5 p.m. on TCM, Movie: "The ThirdMan" — Director Carol Reed masterfully captures the atmosphere of a shellshocked postwar Europe in this classic thriller about an alcoholic writer who is drawn into a dark and disorienting situation after he travels to Vienna to visit an old friend, only to discover the man was recently killed. Or was he? Joseph Cotten and Orson Welles play out a complex catand-mousegame to a haunting zither theme by Anton Karas.

architectural, and lots of it, with a The kid-attractor factor:Demons high body count. and ghosts attacking and kidnapl.anguage:Scattered profane P ing c hildren. reactions to the worst nature can Good Iessonsjbadlessons:Subthrow at us. divisions built on graveyardsstill not a great idea. Sex:A little flirtation. Violence: Lots, most of it directed Drugs None Parents' advisory:State of the art movie mass destruction, probably Language: Scattered profane retoo intense for the very young. OK actions to the supernatural. Sex:Hinted at, interrupted by » other things that go bump in the pQI TERGEI$T

Good lessons/bad lessons:Pay Rat i ng: PG-13 for intense frightattention during earthquake drills, e ning sequences, brief suggestive Dr ugs: Alcohol. listen to scientists when they warn material and some language. Parents' advisory: A little rougher you about coming disaster and What it's about:A family moves a n d more overt than the original, "always have a plan B." into a suburban tract house that en t i rely too intense for children Violence:Entirely geological and t u r ns out to be haunted. underfg.

measurement. Jeff Bridges stood out

TV TODAY • More TV listingsinside Sports

This guide, compiled by Orlando Sentinel film critic Roger Moore, is published here every Friday. It should be used with the MPAA rating system for selecting movies suitablefor 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. Rating:PG-13 for intense disaster action and mayhem throughout, and brief strong lanQuage. What it's about:An air rescue pilot, his family and a scientist and his team exPerience "the Big One" in California.

also scored well in Nielsens'

products, said Chad Dreas, amount of influence he carNielsen's managing director of ried with hi s f ans, Nielsen media analytics. sald.

PARENTS'GUIDE TO MOVIES "$Ag ANDRFA$"

Brosnan and M atthew M c-

MOVIE TIMESTODAY • There may bean additional fee for3-Oand IMAXmovies • Movie times are subject to change after press time. I

I

I I

Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • THE AGEOF ADALINE(PG-13)3:55,9:40 • ALOHA (PG-13) noon, 3:10, 6:45, 9:55 • AVENGERS: G AE OF ULTRON (PG-13)12:10,3:25,6:55, 10:10 • CLOUDS OF SILS MARIA (R) 1:10, 4:05, 7:05, 10:20 • FAR FROM THEMADDINGCROWD (PG-13) 11:40 a.m., 2:55, 6:15, 9:I5 • HOME (PG) 11:55a.m., 2:20 • MAD MAX: FURY ROAD(R) 12:10, 3:40, 7:45, 10:40 • MAD MAX: URY F ROAD 3-D(R)11:35a.m.,2:35,6:25, 9:25 • PITCH PERFECT 2 (PG-13) 11:45 a.m., 12:30, 2:45, 3:30, 6:25, 7:15, 9:45, 10:25 • POLTERGEIST (PG-13) 12:55, 3:20, 7:35, 10:05 • POLTERGEIST3-D (PG-13) 7:50, 10:50 • SAN ANDREAS (PG-13) 11:30 a.m., 2:30, 7, 10 • SAN ANDREAS 3-D (PG-13) 12:15, 1,3, 5,6:30, 7:20, 9:30 • SAN ANDREAS IMAX3-D (PG-13) 12:45, 7:45 • TOMORROWLAND (PG) 11:50 a.m., 12:20, 3:15, 3:45, 6:40, 7:25, 10:15, 10:25 • TOMORROWLAND IMAX(PG)3:50,10:30 • Accessibility devices are available for some movies. McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 NWBond St., 541-330-8562 • THE DIV ERGENT SERIES:INSURGENT (PG-13)5:30 • FURIOUS(PG-13) 7 9 • Younger than 2t mayattend all screeningsif accompanied byalegalguardian. Tin Pan Theater, 869 NWTin PanAlley, 541-241-2271 • IRIS (PG-13) 6 • WELCOME TOME(R)8

8 p.m. on 2, 9, "Shark Tank" — Mark Cuban definitely isn't impressed with one of the ideas presented in this episode, since he pronounces it "horrible." Candidates for that response include former Paris residents who use a family recipe for beverages, and the New Yorkbased creators of an ecology-appropriate pizza box. Also, Utah cousins present their concept for making cell phones sanitary. The biggest deal in the history of the show thus far

gets an update. 9 p.m. on TRAV, "Mysteries at the Museum" —It's pretty rare to find a memorial to an embarrassment, but Don Wildman shares just such a story as he examines a soldier's statue that inadvertently became an

embarrassing symbol for a small Georgia town in anew

episode called "Dutchy the Statue, Dino Dig and Spanish SpaceSuit."Donalso examines a moon rock that was presented to a Spanish innovator who played a role in the Apollo11 mission and a dinosaur egg and skeleton that changed how a modern-day creature is understood. ct zap2it

ASSURANCE iswhatyou getwhen EVERGREEN manages your lovedone's medications

EVERGREEN

In-Home Care Services 541-389-0006 www.evergreeninhome.com

SUN FoREsT CoNSTRUcTION

Redmond Cinemas,1535 SWOdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777

DESIGN I BUILD I REMODEL

• MAD MAX: FURY ROAD(R) 4:30, 7, 9:30 • PITCH PERFECT 2 (PG-13) 4:15, 6:45, 9:15 • SAN ANDREAS (PG-13) 4, 6:30, 9 • TOMORROWLAND (PG)3:30,6:15,9

a03 Sw Industrial way, Bend, OR

Sisters Movie House,720 DesperadoCourt, 541-549-8800 • ALOHA (PG-13) 5:15, 7:45 • FAR FROMTHE MADDING CROWD (PG-13)4:45,7:15 • PITCH PERFECT 2 (PG-13) 5, 7:30 • TOMORROWLAND (PG)4:30,7:15

Visit Central Oregon's

Madras Cinema 5,1101SWU.S. Highway 97, 541-475-3505 • MAD MAX: FURY ROAD(R) 4:30, 7:10, 9:50 • PITCH PERFECT 2 (PG-13) 4:25, 7, 9:30 • POLTERGEIST(PG-13)5:20,7:30,9:45 • SAN ANDREAS (PG-13) 4:45, 7:20 • SAN ANDREAS 3-D (PG-13) 9:55 • TOMORROWLAND (PG)4:05,6:50,9:40 Pine Theater,214 N. MainSt.,541-416-1014 • SAN ANDREAS (PG-13) 4:10, 7:15 • TOMORROWLAND (Upstairs — PG) 4, 7 • Theupstairsscreening room has limitedaccessibility.

O

Find a week'sworth of movie times plus film reviews in today's 0 GO! Magazine

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E6

TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, MAY 29, 2015

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YOUR WEEICLY GUIDE TO CENTRAL OREGON EVENTS, ARTS AND ENTERTAINMENT

MA A Z I N E EVERY FRIDAY IN THE BULLETIN MAY 29, 2015

D

D • Cascade Chorale sings tunes from famous musicals, PAGE 11


PAGE 2 • GO! MAGAZINE

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, MAY 29, 2015

in ez

REPORTERS David Jasper,541-383-0349 djasperObendbulletin.com Sophie Wilkins, 541-383-0351 swilkinsObendbulletin.com Kathleen McCool,541-383-0350 kmccoolObendbulletin.com

DESIGNERS Carli Krueger,541-617-7857 ckrueger@bendbulletin.com Pete Smith,541-633-2165 psmithObendbulletin.com

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.com Fax to:541-385-5804, Attn: Community Life L.S. Mail or hand delivery: Community Life, The Bulletin 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, OR 97702

ADVERTISING 541 -382-1811

Cover design by Carii Krueger/The Bulletin

ARTS • 11

RESTAURANTS • 20

• COVER:Cascade Chorale presents "The Best of Broadway" •CascadeW indsSymphonicBand'sspri ng concert • OSU-Cascades MFA student wins poetry award • Art Exhibits lists current shows

• A review of Three Creeks Brewing in Sisters • More news from the local dining scene

MUSIC • 3 • The return of Scott Weiland • Feedback on weekend at Les Schwab Amphitheater • Vampirates at VTP • Grateful Dead night at martial arts dojo, • Three bands at Silver Moon • Americana Project CD release at The Belfry

GOING OUT • 8 • A listing of live music, DJs,karaoke, open mics and more

MUSIC REVIEWS • 9 • Shelby Lynne, TheVaccines and more

OUT OF TOWN • 22 • Portland Opera presents "The Rake's Progress" • A guide to out of town events

MOVIES • 25

DRINKS • 14 • Oblivion Brewing is making moves

• "Aloha,""San Andreas,""Clouds of Sils Maria," "Entourage" and "Iris" open in Central Oregon •"CutBank," "TheLoft,"and "Seventh Son" are out on Blu-ray andDVD • Brief reviews of movies showing in Central Oregon

CALENDAR • 16 • A week full of Central Oregon events

PLANNING AHEAD • 18 • A listing of upcoming events • Talks and classeslisting

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GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 3

THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, MAY 29, 2015

musie • Stone Temple Pilots frontman comesback with new band, album By David Jasper The Bulletin

e sounded lucid.

H

Wait. That sounds like a

backhanded compliment,

and it's not intended that way.

h

It's just that we are talking

about talking to Scott Weiland, who comes to Bend this weekend

with his band, The Wildabouts (see "If you go"). From his early days in popular 1990s alt-rock act Stone Temple Pilots (STP) to the Velvet Revolver era of the early 2000s, Weiland has long made headlines for reasons including his music, but also substance abuse issues, internecine band strife, slurred words, concert tardiness.

In late April, video footage surfaced on TMZ of Weiland basically slaughtering the old STP hit "Vasoline" on stage. The Internet's memory is long, and it's all out there should you

want to wade through it. Though he's not exactly a crit-

ical darling, Weiland, 47, is the Jamie Weiland/Submitted photo embodiment of a rock star — in- Scott Weiland and The Wildabouts is, from left, Joey Castillo, Tommy Black,Nick Maybury and Scott Weiland. The band plays Century Center Sunday. cluding the somewhat dated, destructive sense of the term "rock

on." Weiland said that the fallen

star" — and you don't always know what you're going to get

best friend and main writing

ple Pilots and Velvet Revolver

If you go

with rock stars.

Weiland goes back several guitarist's role was crucial to years with the Wildabouts, most the songwritig process. Brown of whom were in his support- would create drum, bass and ing band when he released and guitar demos of potential songs

fans who have stuck by me. Over

promoted his second solo stu-

at home, "and then bring the riffs

dio record, 2008's "'Happy' in Galoshes."

to rehearsal, and then we would complete the songs there, all of

band. This is a hybrid. You might say there's an indie alternative

W eiland s a i d th a t afte r Brown's death, it was important

us as a band. I'd write the lyrics

What:Scott Weiland and The Wildabouts When:6 p.m. Sunday Where:Century Center, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend Cost:$25, plus fees, at website below Contact: bendticket.com

On Tuesday, when GO! was originally scheduled to speak to him, Weiland's publicist reported he'd woken up feeling sick, and asked to postpone the interview

a day. By Wednesday, he sounded fit as a fiddle. He also, however, sounded somber when talk turned to the

compatriot."

and the melodies." to The Wildabouts to get "BlastAustralian-born guitarist Nick er," his third solo disc (sixth if Maybury, who's been on stage March 31 death of Wi ldabouts you count his l i ve, Christmas and in the studio with folks inguitarist Jeremy Brown, just one and covers albums), out in the cluding Debbie Harry, Alice day beforethe release of Wei- world, and supported by touring. Cooper, The Veronicas and Dave "Definitely, a nd t o land and The Wildabouts' debut, hav e Navarro, has stepped into fill the "Blaster." (The cause of Brown's (Brown's) parts be played, and void left by Brown's death. If you're heading to Sunday's death has not been announced, all that stuff," Weiland said. "He according to Weiland and The would've — just like I would've, concert, you can expect to hear a Wildabouts' publicist.) just like anyone in the band good portion of the album. Wei"It was beyond a t ragedy. would've — wanted us to soldier land has described its sound in It wa s j u s t e a r t h-shattering," on. We had a soldier down, but press materials as "furry": "It's Weiland said. "He was my we have to keep on soldiering got a distinctive sound, but it

also can entice those Stone Tem-

the years, I've gone back and forth.I've made artrecords,and then I've returned to being in a feeling, but it's not too precious.

These are vintage sounds done in a new way. What we've come

up with is really heavy, slinky and sexy. There's a lot of fuzz. The best way to describe it is 'furry.'" The driving, crunching guitar sound that's long been associated with Weiland emerges on

tunes such as "Modzilla," but there'salso some pop gems, such as "Hotel Rio." The tune "Ame-

W eiland said the show w i l l

give a significant nod to the band that made him famous — but not Velvet Revolver.

"We play most of the (new) album, live, and then we play five STP songs," he said. "We've been getting a great response from the

thyst" opens like something The fans with the new material." Who might have written before it hits full throttle.

— Reporter: 541-383-0349, dj asper@bendbulletin/com


music

PAGE 4 • GO! MAGAZINE

ee ac :

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, MAY 29, 2015

w e e e n u o m u sic

• The Decemberists, Ryan Adams and Robert Plant playBend By Ben Salmon For The Bulletin

tried to come up with some

t sort of overarching way to

write about the three concerts held last weekend at Bend's Les

Schwab Amphitheater. I thought long and hard about a way to tie them all together in a way that

leads to one great musical truth. Alas, sometimes three con-

certs are just three concerts. Three excellent concerts. So here's a recap, in chronological order. Apologies to The Districts, whose opening set Friday night I missed.

FRIDAY • Spoon is a great band with a whole bunch of great records in their catalog. Probably a bunch of great shows, too, but their Bend debut wasn't one of 'em. Forced to play in — *shudder* — the sunshine, Britt Daniel and company

seemed oddly disengaged, like they were just going through the motions until The Decemberists'

headlining set. The band stuck to songs from three of its four most recent al-

bums (ignoring "Transference"), with a heavy emphasis, understandably, on this year's excellent "They Want Your Soul." That

record crackles with energy, but Spoon's set started off sluggishly — "Rent I Pay" felt noticeably slower than itsrecorded ver-

•h /7)s

sion — and never really took off.

By the time the band found the groove in "The Underdog" and "Rainy Taxi," its time was up. An

acoustic-driven "Black Like Me" was an odd choice for a closer. • The Decemberists,on the

other hand, showcased all of t heir c onsiderable sk ill s

Fri-

day night. The first half of the band's set featured some of the best folk-pop tunes: the bouncy "Billy Liar," the glorious horn parts of "Calvary Captain," the

tipart epic "The Island," a series twee, clever, Portland-y — but of songs from its prog-rock al- if you ever get to watch Meloy, early-R.E.M. strum of "Calamity bum "The Hazards of Love" and Jenny Conlee, Nate Query, John Song," which Meloy introduced a thunderous version of "The Moen and Chris Funk wrangle a by revealing its roots as a song Rake's Song" as its light show big, gnarly rock show out of their written to coerce his son into eat-

t urned ominous to m atch t h e

ing his breakfast. Then they f lexed muscles

heavy riffs. words right out of your head. The Decemberists are often The band wrapped its set with And I believe that. They have described using any number of three wonderful pop songs — "16 an extensive catalog of excelderisive adjectives — pretentious, Military Wives" was particular- lent-or-better songs. They deliv-

skeptics refuse to believe they

have, playing the 12-minute mul-

instruments, they'll melt those

ly raucous — and its traditional encore ("The Mariner's Revenge Song"), and it was somewhere during that stretch when I looked up at Meloy and thought to myself, "Wow. The Decemberists are truly one of our best bands."

er them flawlessly. They have a charismatic frontman (who has a punky new haircut). Last time they played the Schwab, they seemed right at home. Maybe it was the heavier setlist, but this

time, it felt like they're ready for their next step toward world domination.

Continued next page


GO! MAGAZINE• PAGE 5

THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, MAY 29, 2015

EERO, OAEEOU

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MUSIC FESTIVAL

JUNE 19-21, 2015

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From previous page

SomethingGood," "Shakedown on 9th Street") and drawn-out Deadhead jams ("Magnolia Mountain," • I've never been a huge Jenny "Peaceful Valley") and quiet, gorLewis fan, going back to her days geous folk songs ("Oh My Sweet as the leader of beloved mid-2000s Carolina," "When the Stars Go indie rock band Rilo Kiley. But I Blue"). Expected highlights includfind her swanky new album "The ed "Let It Ride" — arguably my faVoyager" to be pretty likable, and vorite Adams song, and a spirited she certainly embraced her role as take on "To Be Young." a warm-up act for Ryan Adams, enIt was the unexpected that made gaging the growing crowd both in the show, though: the rootsy slowperformance and between songs. burn of "This House is Not for Lewis played some mildly funky Sale," the pillowy twang of "Dear songs from across her solo career, Chicago" and a stark, solo cover but she also played at least four of the old Oasis hit "Wonderwall," Rilo Kiley songs, no doubt delight- right on the heels of a gorgeous rening longtime fans. One of those dition of "When the Stars Go Blue" was "Portions for Foxes," in my set against a backdrop designed to estimation the best thing she's ever look like a sky full of softly glowing done, so I was happy. And eating stars. It was sublime. nachos. (That said, I can't go without • Ryan Adams, on the other noting that Adams — a noted fan hand, is one of my five favorite mu- of extreme heavy metal — led his sical artists of all time. Let's just get band through a short, cheeky black that out there right now. So I have metal-style cover of "16 Days," an been anticipating his Bend show alt-country classic that his old band since the amphitheater announced Whiskeytown released in 1997. Fog it in early February. billowed from behind the drum kit, The guy d i dn't d i sappoint. Adams growled and howled, and I Backed by his powerful and effi- swear the ends of my grin met on cient band The Shining, Adams the back of my head. Amazing.)

SATURDAY

played for more than two hours,

plucking great song after great song from an oeuvre that is, in my

MONDAY

opinion, unmatched over the past

ping over Oklahoma early-rock

two decades. The amazing thing is he could've played another two — maybe four hours — without a

In the interest of space, I'm skip'n' roller J.D. McPherson, whose

energeticset Monday evening appeared to win over the crowd gathering for former Led Zeppelin

significant dip in quality. All n i ght, A dams b ounced frontman Robert Plant. around his diverse discography, Plant, on the other hand, had playing ragged rockers ("Gimme no winning over to do. He had

A

E

N

Monday's crowd in the palm of his hand, and he probably has for threeorfourdecades.Plant' sm ost recent album — 2014's "Lullaby...

and The Ceaseless Roar" — is a solid slab of globally inspired folk, blues and rock, as is much of his

solo work. But this is a man who will forev-

er live in the shadow of Led Zeppelin. On this night, at least, he em-

braced that legacy, playing some of the band's classic rockers ("Black Dog," "Dazed and Confused") as well as some folksier numbers ("Black Country Woman," "Going to California"). But I thought it was

YoungAmerican-MajorTom SuffragetteCity Let's Dance- ChinaDoll - ModernLove

noticeable that his band — the Sensational Space Shifters — seemed

' JUNE

to kick into a different gear for Plant's solo material, such as the

booming "Turn It Up" and "Spoonful," a Willie Dixon-penned blues number that they've upcycled, adding a sleek synthesizer part and a desert-psych vibe courtesy of Juldeh Camara's one-stringed African violin, called a ritta.

Still, I'm not going to try to convince you that any of it was more

thrilling than when Jimmy Page's iconic riff f r om "Whole Lotta Love" exploded from the stage and coursed through the wonderfully warm High Desert air, instantly

sending thousands of folks back in time, no doubt to some seminal time in each of their lives. That's

Tribute to David Bowie

3,10, 17 Worthy Wednesdays 6 Teen TedX "David Bowie" 13 20-21 A l ice in Wonderland 22 Sum mer Film Camp 24 Ful l Draw Film Tour 27 Cen t ral Oregon Rhythm Project U ABBA" 28 30 K POV 10th Anniversary

JULY 1, 8, 15 Worthy Wednesdays 13 Joh n Mayall 21 Blu e Lotus

the transportive power of live mu-

sic, and while it was most palpable at that moment, it was on display all weekend long. — Reporter: bsalmonibendbulletin.com

(, 541-317-0700 TheTowerTheatre

~a. www.towertheatre.org

f h eTowerTheatre y Ot o wertheatrebnd


musie

PAGE 6 e GO! MAGAZINE

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, MAY 29, 2015

Thank YouGO! Magazine for the review on March 13th C(~inesel4estaurant c% Loung'e Szec(~uan Hunan• Cantonese Cuisine I I •

I •

e

'

I

Take Out Window e541-389-9888 61247 S. Hwy 97• Bend • Next to Bend Wal Mart www.reddragonchlneserestaurant.com

Batteries • Crystal • Bands

WATCH BATTERY

Vampirates play Volcanic

$] 000

I've seen a lot of tour posters crowded with dates over the years, but I don't know that I've ever seen

INFINITY WATCHREPAIR Located between

one quite like the poster for Vampirates' current jaunt. Unless I miscounted, the Reno

South Wendy's 8 Cascade Garden

541-728-0411

punk band is nearing the end of its Tour of Terror, which has it playing 66 shows in 66 days, stretching from

61383 S.Hwy.97, Bend, OR97702 Oftce: 541.728.0411• Cell: 503.887.4241 Daniel Mitchell, Owner Stem & Cr o wn s o Movements R

J

Reno to Boston to Miami and back. The trio's Bend show Wednesday is number 64 on the list. Whew.

Now, if you're, say, a smooth jazz singer or something like that, and you travel in a bus with a bunk and someoneelse driving, such a schedule might not be so bad. But that is not Vampirates' reality. No, this is three guys hopping in a vehicle of some sort, driving themselves around the country and spitting out seriously speedy and physically demanding thrash-punk at every stop. They've probablyhad agood tim e,

the Americana Project, which has

but they're also probably worn out

ters Folk Festival.

/

/

It's the 12th album to come out of

June 9, the Americana Luthier Pro-

gram, which has been running for eight years at Sisters High School, school system about singing, playing will celebrate the completion of 35 instruments, songwriting, recording guitars and nine ukuleles with a free and roots musicfor 15 years. The event at The Belfry. Find more info program was started by Brad Tisdel, on that at the website below. creative director for the annual SisAmericana Project album release; been teaching kids in the Sisters

7tonight; $15inadvance, $20at the

"At the Feet of Giants" features door, $10 youth; The Belfry, 302E. and readytobe home, so go see them Wednesday night and give them a 12 songs written and performed by Main Ave., Sisters; www.sistersboost for the final couple of drives. a bunch of students: Jaden Taylor, folkfestival.org or 541-549-4979. And maybe some gas money, too. Sedona Baer, Nina Horner, GiovanOh, and check 'em out at www.

na Medola, Megan Ellsworth, Ti-

A night of Grateful Deadmusic

vampirates.org. tus Van Diest, Carly Gascon, Ross Vampirates, with The Beerslay- Grant, Brooke Christman, Solomon Tucked into the trees along Stuers; 9p.m .W ednesday;$5;Volcanic Dahms, Hannah Stuwe, Shae Gas- dio Road on Bend's close-in north Theatre Pub, 70SW Century Drive, con, Dakota Wagner and Yasha Bend; w w wv olcanictheatrepub. Saldi. Local musician Brent Alan com or 541-323-1881. engineered the album, with support

1

s

6 I'

g •

side,not far from the back side of the Fourth Street post office, there's

an unassuming building that houses from Wagner, a Sisters High School High Desert Martial Arts. Americana Project It's not super easy to find, which senior who coordinated the Tuesday-evening recording sessions and is why I'm giving you all those deceledration created the cover art. tails in the first paragraph, because Students in the Americana Project The album was underwritten by Saturday night, you're going to want program at Sisters High School will the Dottie and Eli Ashley Fund of to get there for Dead at the Doj, gather at The Belfry tonight to cele- the Oregon Community Foundation. brought to you by the folks behind brate their new compilation album of Ticket prices below include a copy of the Bend Roots Revival and the anoriginal songs, called "At the Feet of the CD. nual Church of Neil concert. Giants." Also worth noting: At 6 p.m. on Continued next page


GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 7

THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, MAY 29, 2015

I

I

I

I

June 5 —FromHell (metal), Third Street Pub, 541-306-3017. June 6 —Pigs on theWing (faux-Floyd), The Belfry, Sisters, www.belfryevents.

Bend, www.mcmenamins.com. June19 — The Thermals (indie rock) at The Bite of Bend, www.biteofbend.com.

com.

at The Bite of Bend,www.biteofbend.com. June 19-21 —Rusted Root, The Motet and ALO at 4Peaks Music Festival (jams), Tumalo, www.4peaksmusic.com. June 23 —ShadyElders(indie rock), Volcanic Theatre Pub, Bend, www. volcanictheatrepub.com. June 24 —Polecat(bluegrass) at Pickin' & Paddli n',TumaloCreek Kayak& Canoe, Bend, www.tumalocreek.com. June 24 —TheRedPaintings(art rock),Volcanic Theatre Pub, Bend, www. volcanictheatrepub.com. June 25 —Willie Nelson andAlison Krauss & Union Station (country), Les Schwab Amphitheater, Bend, www. bendconcerts.com. June 26 —Motopony(electro-pop), Domino Room, Bend, www.redlightpro.

June 8 —Kottonmouth Kings(raprock),Domino Room, Bend, www.

randompresents.com. June 10 —Skinned (metal), Third Street Pub, 541-306-3017. June11 —Orgone(funk), Domino Room, Bend, www.p44p.biz. June12 —The Quick & EasyBoys (funk-rock),The Astro Lounge, www. astroloungebend.com. June13 —Space Oddity(Bowie tribute), Tower Theatre, Bend, www.towertheatre. OI'g.

June16 —Genders(pop-rock), Crow's Feet Commons, Bend, www.

crowsfeetcommons.com. June 16 —The DoobieBrothers (classic rock),Les Schwab Amphitheater, Bend, www.bendconcerts.com. June17 —J.P. Harris 8 The Tough Choices (country),McMenamins Old St. Francis School, Bend, www.mcmenamins.

com. June 17 —Supersuckers (rock), Volcanic Theatre Pub, Bend, www. volcanictheatrepub.com. June 18 —Steel Pulse (reggae), Midtown Ballroom, Bend, www.randompresents. com. June 18 —JohnDoe(cowpunk), McMenamins Old St. Francis School,

June 20 — CommonKings(reggae-rock)

Saturday, July 11, 2015 Bend, Oregon ROBBERSON

Driven by:

F% I i I„T

jj

ccm. June 27 —Steve Earle 8 The Dukes (roots-rock),Century Center, Bend, www. subaruofbendout sidegames.com. June 27 —Central OregonMetalfest (horns up),Third Street Pub, Bend, 541-306-3017. June 28 —Jessica Hernandez & The Deltas(rock),The Belfry, Sisters, www. belfryevents.com. June30 — GreggAHman (classic rock),Athletic Club of Bend, www. peaksummernight s.com.

THE RIDE Join - hundreds of other cyclists for the largest scenic tour event in the region, with five routes from 7 to 100 miles. THE RUN - COPA Family 5K through NW Crossing neighborhood,

supported by the Kralj Family. From previous page The plan: Around 40 differ ent Grateful Dead songs performed by local faves Brent Alan, Rising Tide, Mark Ransom 8S The Mostest and DJ Grateful Kev, plus Ashland funk-rockers Jive Coulis. An in-the-

round acoustic set will kick things off at 7 p.m. Organizers are expecting a "community-minded and groovy" vibe. Dead at the Doj is open to all ages and will be family friendly. The event will support martial arts athletes attending a national tournament in Austin, Texas in July.

Dead at the Doj, with Jive Coulis, The Mostest, Rising Tide and more; 7 p.m., doors open6 p.m.; $10 suggested donation; High Desert Ma r t ial Arts, 2535 NE Studio Road, Bend; www j.mp/deadatthedoj.

Local artists play

area this weekend before she moves to Ellensburg, Washington in midJune. Gravelle is a smoothly skilled

pianist, singer and songwriter who has a bunch of albums to her name; you can sample them at www.lindygravelle.com. Gravelle has played venues all over the region, but her final local shows will appropriately be at Brassie's Bar in the Niblick & Greene'srestaurant (7535 Falcon Crest Drive, Redmond) at Eagle Crest Resort, where she has played hundreds of times before. She'll be there from 7-10 tonight and Saturday night, and there is no cover. • There'sa w ave of newish local bands building in Bend right now — always a good thing — and two of them will play Saturday night at Silver Moon Brewing (25 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend). Patrimony has been around for a while, and they

crank out a highly charged brand of blues-rock. Moon Room is newer and A couple of local artists with gigs plays a laid-back combo of funk, soul this weekend. Here's a roundup! and pop. Joining them Saturday will • Lindy Gravelle, a longtime fix- be San Francisco rockers Hungry ture on Cental Oregon's music scene, Skinny. 9 p.m. Free. — Ben Salmon,The Bulletin will play her final regular gigs in the

THE INSPIRATION -Founded by Gary Bonacker, the Tour des Chutes supports

local children and adults with cancer by funding St. Charles Cancer Survivorship Programs and the Pediatric Foundation. THE CELEBRATIONS -Cyclists and runners - before and after the event enjoy food and live music with Wild Rye, Parlour and Wampus Cats.

Supported by:

Powered by:

g

St. Charles

PACIFIC POWER Let's tunI the onswerson.

HEALTH SYSTEM

Sponsored by:

CGP4

Iiyyd E Dr VXTIOIV

EEOIATEIC ASSOCIATES

Driven by ecience Focused on life

C ENTEAL O R E G O N

NORTHWEST N CROSSINGN

The Kralj Family

NORTHWEST

BRAI N

SPINE

With support from: Les Schwab Tire Centers, Microsemi, REI, Eisai, Central Oregon Radiation Oncology Assc. KBNZ/CBS For Central Oregon, Paul B. Leighton Design, Rock 98.3/101.7 Adult Alternative,

Astir Agency, The Bulletin

Register Online at TourdesChutes.org


PAGE 8 e GO! MAGAZINE

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, MAY 29, 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 at Q<bendbulletin.comlevents.

FRIDAY

TUESDAY

BOBBY LINDSTROM:Rockand blues; noon; Fat Tuesdays Cajun and Blues, 61276 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; www. fattuesdayscajunandblues.com or 541-633-7606. OUTOFTHE BLUE: Rock;6 p.m .;Fat Tuesdays Cajun and Blues, 61276 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-633-7606. OFF THERECORD: Classicrock;6 p.m.; $5; Faith, Hope and Charity Vineyards, 70450 NW Lower Valley Drive, Terrebonne; www. faithhopeandcharityevents.com or 541-977-4290. LINDY GRAVELLE: Country-pop; 7 p.m.; Brassie's Bar at Eagle Crest Resort, 1522 Cline Falls Road, Redmond; 541-548-4220. MARK RANSOM 8t THE MOSTEST: Rock-jam; 7 p.m.; Broken Top Bottle Shop,1740 NW Pence Lane, Suite 1, Bend; www.btbsbend.com or 541-728-0703. BURNIN' MOONLIGHT:Spirited bluegrass and blues;7 p.m.;Tumalo Feed Co., 64619 U.S. Highway 20, Bend; 541-382-2202. COYOTEWILLOW: Chamber-folk; 7 p.m.; Kelly D's Sports Bar & Grill,1012 SE Cleveland Ave., Bend; 541-389-5625. YVONNERAMAGE:Singer-songwriter; 7 p.m.; Jackson's Corner, 845 NW Delaware Ave., Bend; 541-647-2198. LONG TALL EDDY: Twang-pop; 7:30 p.m.; Checkers Pub, 329 SW Sixth St., Redmond; 541-548-3731. FUN BOBBY: 80'sm usic;8:30 p.m.;$3; Northside Bar & Grill, 62860 Boyd Acres Road, Bend; www.northsidebarfun.com or 541-383-0889. DJ NSAND DJ LYFE:Electronic; 9 p.m.; Dogwood Cocktail Cabin,147 NW Minnesota Ave., Bend; www.facebook. com/farmtoshaker or 541-706-9949. STRIVEROOTS: Reggae-rock;9 p.m .; Silver Moon Brewing, 24 NWGreenwood Ave., Bend; www.silvermoonbrewing. com or 541-388-8331. BLACK LIGHTWHITE OUT PARTY: Featuring raffles, a photo booth and more, with DJ Codi Carrol and DJ Harlo; 10 p.m.; $5; The Astro Lounge, 939 NW Bond St., Bend; www.astroloungebend. com or 541-388-0116.

DECO MOON JAZZ: Jazz;6 p.m.; Northside Bar 8 Grill, 62860 Boyd Acres Road, Bend; www.northsidebarfun.com or 541-383-0889. HONEY DON'T: Rock;6 p.m.;Sip Wine Bar, 1366 NWGalveston Ave., Bend; www.sipwinebend.com or 541-323-8466. DAVE EHLE: Pop;7 p.m .;TheBlacksm it h Restaurant, 211 NWGreenwood Ave., Bend; www.bendblacksmith.com or 541-318-0588.

SATURDAY COYOTEWILLOW: Chamber-folk; 4 p.m.; Rim Rock Riders, 17037 SWAlfalfa Road, Powell Butte; 541-323-6040.

~

*

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f

WEDNESDAY AMERICANSONGBOOK:Jazz; 6 p.m.; Fat Tuesdays Cajun and Blues, 61276 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; www. fattuesdayscajunandblues.com or 541-604-6055.

Submitted photo

The blues-rock band Patrimony at Silver Moon Brewing in Bend at 9 p.m. Saturday. OUT OFTHE BLUE: Rock;6 p.m .;Fat Tuesdays Cajun and Blues, 61276 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-633-7606. HONEY DON'T:Rock; 6 p.m.; Wubba's BBQ, 63055 Layton Ave., Bend; 541-213-2121. TRAILER:Americana; 7 p.m.; Broken Top Bottl e Shop,1740 NW Pence Lane, Suite1, Bend; www.btbsbend.com or 541-728-0703. LINDYGRAVELLE:Country-pop;7 p.m.; Brassie's Bar at Eagle Crest Resort, 1522 Cline Falls Road, Redmond; 541-548-4220. DEAD AT THE DOJ: Featuring the music of The Grateful Dead, performed by Brent Alan, Mark Ransom & The Mostest, Rising Tide, DJ Grateful Kev and Jive Coulis, to benefit students of High Desert Martial Arts; 7 p.m.,

doors open at 6p.m.; $10suggested donation; High Desert Martial Arts, 2535 NE Studio Road, Bend; www.highdesertmartialart.com or 541-647-1220. JEREMY STORTON:Rock;7 p.m.; portello winecafe, 2754 NWCrossing Drive, Bend; www.portellowinecafe.com or 541-385-1777. BURNIN' MOONLIGHT:Spirited

bluegr assandblues;7p.m.;Tumalo

Feed Co., 64619 U.S. Highway 20, Bend; 541-382-2202. LONG TALL EDDY:Twang-pop; 7:30 p.m.; Checkers Pub, 329 SWSixth St., Redmond; 541-548-3731. HIGHWAY 97: Rock 'n' roll; 8 p.m.; Bottoms Up Saloon,1421 N. U.S. Highway 97, Redmond; www.facebook. com/TheHWY97Band or 562-810-1818. FUN BOBBY: 80'sm usic;8:30 p.m.;$3; Northside Bar & Grill, 62860 Boyd Acres Road, Bend; www.northsidebarfun.com or 541-383-0889. DJ SPARK:90's hip-hop; 9 p.m.; Dogwood Cocktail Cabin, 147 NW Minnesota Ave., Bend; www.facebook. com/farmtoshaker or 541-706-9949. PATRIMONY:The blues-rock band performs, with Hungry Skinny and Moon Room; 9 p.m.; Silver Moon Brewing, 24 NWGreenwood Ave., Bend; www.silvermoonbrewing.com or 541-388-8331. TONY SMILEY:The loop-ninja from Portland performs; 10 p.m.; $5 plus fees in advance, $7at the door; The Astro Lounge, 939 NW Bond St., Bend; www,astroloungebend.com or 541-388-0116.

SUNDAY SCOTT WEILANDANDTHE WILDABOUTS:The former lead singer of Stone Temple Pilots performs with his band;6 p.m.;$25 plus fees inadvance; Century Center, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.bendtickets.com. JIVECOULIS:Rock-blues;7 p.m.; BrokenTop Bottle Shop,1740 NW Pence Lane, Suite1, Bend; www.btbsbend.com or 541-728-0703. DJ DMP:House; 9 p.m.; Dogwood Cocktail Cabin,147 NW Minnesota Ave., Bend; www.facebook.com/farmtoshaker or 541-706-9949.

MONDAY SOLO JAZZVOCAL CLASS CONCERT: Nine singers from Cascade School of Music who study jazz styling will perform; 5:30 p.m.; The Astro Lounge, 939 NW Bond St., Bend; 541-306-4480. TWIN: The alternative folk band from Winnipeg, Canada performs, with Pachow Kabang; 9 p.m.; $5; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.

KRIS LAGERBAND:The rock and soul band from Nebraska performs; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St., Bend; www. mcmenamins.comor541-382-5174. VAMPIRATES:The Reno, Nevada punk rock band performs, with the Beerslayers; 9 p.m.; $5; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.

THURSDAY CASSIADAWN: Pop;5 p.m.;$5;Faith, Hope and Charity Vineyards, 70450 NW Lower Valley Drive, Terrebonne; 541-526-5075. OPEN MIC:Hosted by Allan Byer; 6 p.m.; Strictly Organic Coffee Bar, 450 SW Powerhouse Drive, Suite 400, Bend; 541-233-3663. TIM CRUISE:Rock; 7 p.m.; Northside Bar 8 Grill, 62860 Boyd Acres Road, Bend; www.northsidebarfun.com or 541-383-0889. BROKENDOWNGUITARS: Rock; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St., Bend; www. mcmenamins.comor541-382-5174. DJ HARLOW:House;9 p.m.;TheAstro Lounge, 939 NW Bond St., Bend; 541-388-0116. MICHAELLEWIS MARTINEZ:The singer-songwriter performs, with Anna Gilbert; 9 p.m.; $5; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881. • SUBMIT Att EVENT by emailing events© bendbulletin.oom. Deadline ie 10 days before publication. Include date, venue, time and cost.


GO! MAGAZINE• PAGE 9

THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, MAY 29, 2015

musie reviews Spotlight: Shelby Lynne

The Vaccines

disposition. There's footage of

for Jobim," composed by a dearly missed former mentor, Cethe 1980s, sounding like he does dar Walton — or on "Walton," a now, slashingbut calm. swinging homage by LeDonne, less British rock bands saddled by So maybe it's the suggestion of which elicits one of the album's the U.K. media with the expecta- somethingheld in reserve that has juiciest alto solos. — Nate Chinen, tion of saving rock and roll. The kept Herring from an A-list solo reckless rock on their first two career. Or maybe it's the idea that New York Times "ENGLISH GRAFFITI" Columbia Records The Vaccines are one of count-

albums, 2011's cheeki ly t itled " W hat D o

he has followed in the

wake of Cannonball Ad- Chris Stapleton "TRAVELLER" derley, an alto saxophone hall of famer whose style Mercury Nashville he can willfully evoke. Anyone paying attention to Whatever the case, Her- country and Americana over the ring should have a high- last decade and a half is familiar er profile, as he confirms with the name Chris Stapleton. with a smart new album, He's written hits for stars such as "Night and Day." George Strait and Luke Bryan, As w i t h H e r r ing's become afavoredharmony vocal2013 album — "The Up- ist on big-name releases, and pertown Shuffle, " recorded formed with the edgy bluegrass live at Smoke Jazz Club bandthe Steeldrivers. Now comes a nd released on t h e this stunner of a solo debut. "Traveller" is not close to being Smoke Sessions label — the music here puts a a typical major-label Nashville contemporary spin on production. It's no coincidence hard-bop, w ith arhythm that one song is titled "Outlaw

You Expect From the Vaccines?" and 2012's

"Come of Age" couldn't live up to the hype-

what could? — but they

were nonetheless brazen and fun. "English Graffiti," on the other

hand, reveals a band with an identity crisis. Produced by Dave Fridmann (Flaming Lips, Tame I mpala, Sleater-Kinney), the record dabbles in glammy football chants ("Handsome"), trudging synthpop ("Dream Lover"), Grammy Award winner Shelby Lynne released her self-produced album, "I Can't Imagine,"on May 4.

Shelby Lynne "I CAN'T IMAGINE" Rounder Records

Shelby Lynne was already a veteran when she won t he Best New A r t i st

tive,

st r i p ped-down

"Following You." It in-

Grammy for 1999's "I Am Shelby Lynne." But

cludes two songs written with Ron Sexsmith

the deserved acclaim

for that album, which last year was reissued

and several cameo vocals from Clarence

in a deluxe edition, did

not translate into longterm mainstream success, and Lynne has settled into a career

as an outsider. "I Can't Imagine," her 13th album (not including a Christmas collection), is anoth-

er in a string of earthy, forceful roots records. Recorded mostly i n

ana with her touring band, "I Can't Imagine" ranges from the swampy "Paper Van Gogh" to the country-rock rave-up "Down Here" to the introspec-

L o u i si-

Greenwood Cope). But

(Citizen L y nne's

new wave ("Minimal Affection"). Those are the first three

The PhiladelphiaInquirer

Vincent Herring "NIGHT AND DAY" Smoke Sessions Records The alto saxophonist Vincent

powerful, husky alto is the star.

Herring projects his sound in a

Her voice is world-weary and thoughtful, earnest and natural. "I Can't Imagine" isn't a surprising record, but it's a confident, reassuring one.

strong, centered beam, and even

— Steve Klinge, The PhiladelphiaInquirer

team of Brandi Disterheft on bass and Joe Farnsworth on drums.

State of Mind." Working with his

own small band, augmented by Waylon Jennings' steel player But whereas that album featured (Robby Turner) and Willie Nelof 12 tracks that slip all over the a quartet, this one involves a quin- son's harmonica man (Mickey place without resting comfortably tet withthepianist Mike LeDonne Raphael), Stapleton goes for a anywhere. There's some fun stuff and an excellent trumpeter, Jere- lean, raw sound that underscores here, mostly when the Vaccines my Pelt, out front. the blunt honesty of his songs. turn up the velocity and the guiHerringand Pelthave a crisp The singer-guitarist cranks tars on "20/20" and "Radio Bikiand jostling rapport, and in it up for the rocking urgency of ni," but much of English Graffiti moments like a headlong dash "Parachute," and t h e t w a ngy rings hollow. through Donald Byrd's "Fly, Little c hip-kicking of " N obody t o — Steve Klinge, Bird, Fly," each elevates the oth- Blame." Most of the time, though, and Duran Duran-like

Victory Tiechler-Blue/ Submitted Photo

him with Horace Silver's band in

er'sgame. The meat-and-potatoes

Stapleton is not afraid to let the

repertory — some"I Got Rhythm" changes,some blues,the Cole

songs unfold at an unhurried pace. Among the highlights: He

Porter tune that lends the album

transforms the old "Tennessee

its title — doesn'tpose a limitation forthem. And when Herring tips his hat, as on an original, "The Adven-

Whiskey," one of two non-originals on the album, into a tran-

his most intense moments sug- tures of Hyun Joo Lee," named gest a controlled combustion. You for one of his students and built could chalk that up to experience over a chord sequence by John — Herring, 50, has been playing Coltrane, he sounds unburdened seriously since his teens — but it by expectations. Still, there's no probably has as much to do with doubting his sincerity on "Theme

8

8

scendent soulballad, and he strips

"Whiskey and You," previously cut by Tim McGraw and others, down to just acoustic guitar and

voice, for a devastating version that redaims the song for himself. — Nick Cristiano The Philadelphia Inquirer

8

8

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GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 1 1

THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, MAY 29, 2015

The Bulletin file photo

Jim Knox directs a Cascade Chorale rehearsal in 2012. This weekend's concert, titled "The Best of Broadway," will feature about 70 voices singing show tunes from "Oklahoma," "Bye Bye Birdie," "Guys and Dolls" and many more.

•W eekendconcertofersmysteryending; features showtunesfrom famousmusicals

munity College Concert Choir, will feature about 70 voices, as well as guests from OperaBend, offering a preview of its upcoming production of the Stephen

musicals to Broadway musicals,"

By David Jasper

S ondheim m u sical

added. The medley includes "Sound of Music" and "Do Re Mi" from guess which musical, "Gon-

The Bulletin

Best of Broadway."

" I nt o t h e

Why? Because there's a sur- Woods" June 5-7. Look for covf maestro Jim Knox could prise in store when the Chorale erage in next week's issue of GO! somehow conduct the audi- wraps up its 2014-2015 season Magazine. ence just as he does Cascade with "The Best of B r oadway," As its name suggests, the free Chorale, he might direct every- featuring some of your favorite concert will have a slew of popu-

t

Knox said.

"We open with a big, sweeping 14-minute medley of Rodgers and Hammerstein tunes," Knox

na Wash that Man Right out of

my Hair" ("Oklahoma"), "You'll Never Walk Alone ("Carousel"), "Whistle a Happy Tune" and one to pause a beat instead of show tunes tonight and Saturday lar tunes from musical theater. "It's super high-energy, with "Shall We Dance?" ("The King heading toward the exit at the in Bend (see "If you go"). ( seeming) conclusion of t h i s The concert, a collaboration well-known pieces from famous and I") and several others. weekend's Chorale concert, "The with the Central Oregon Commusicals, anywhere from classic Continued next page

Ifyoulo What:Cascade Chorale's "The Best of Broadway" concert When:7 tonight, 3 p.m. Saturday; doors open 30minutes prior to concert Where:First Presbyterian Church, 230 NE Ninth St., Bend Cost: Free,donationsaccepted atdoor Contact:www.cascadechorale.org or 541-383-7510


arts

PAGE 12 • GO! MAGAZINE

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, MAY 29, 2015

CascadeWindsgive spring concert

I

IINPHITIIEB IT

The CascadeWinds Symphonic Band will present its spring concert, the final performance of its

2014-15 season, at 2 p.m. Sunday at Summit High School, 2855 NW Clearwater Drive, Bend.

Under the direction of Maestro Michael Gesme, the band will open

the concert with a medley of folk tunes, "American Riversongs," in which composer Pierre La Plante

has cleverly braided tunes celebrating the importance of America's waterways in its history.

The program also includes a set of dances from "The Royal Fireworks" by baroque composer G.F. Handel and "Six Contrary Dances" by the lesser known P.D.Q. Bach, w hich according to a release forthe

TUNK 16 ~ as aawtt o RERERTED tasrs

5H! ER~Y (L CROWj

concert "will undoubtedly raise a few eyebrows for its simultaneous allegiance to and blatant disregard of the compositional traditions of Submitted photo the Bach family." Michael Gesme, seen here with the Central Oregon Symphony, will direct the John Philip S o usa's m ed- Cascade Winds Symphonic Band's spring concert at Summit High School in ley-march "The Free L a n ce Bend. March," drawn from Sousa's 1905 operetta of th e same title, con-

cludes the first half. A new a r rangement for w i n d

ensemble of Carl Orff's "Carmina Burana," which was inspired by I

,,.ix,~i f'g

lands poetryprize

a collection of sacred and secular

poems found in a Bavarian monastery, makes up the second half of

writing program at Oregon State University-Cascades, has b een

poem, titled "When Asked How Many, I Didn't Know," which Amer-

the concert. "Whether this is your first or 21st experience with the

named the winner of the 2015 As- ican poet Philip Metres then awards ociation of W r i t ers & W r i t i n g ed the prize. The poem will appear Programs Intro Journal Award in in the journal Iron Horse Literary Poetry. Review. "This is one of the most presAnderson is t h e f i r s t s t udent

release, "I'm confident you'll be enchanted by the sonic experience." tigious and competitive national Admission is free, but donations awards among master's in fine arts are gratefully accepted. writing programs," a press release Contact: mgesmeicocc.edu or aboutthe award quotes MFA prowww.cascadewinds.org. gram director Emily Carr. "MFA

From previous page Other tunes you'll hear in the

lII I ~

States each nominate two students

per genre, and only eight are chosen as winners." Carr nominated the winning

ductor Gesme is quoted in a press

I

programs throughout the United

Austin Anderson, a student in the Master of Fine Arts creative

music of 'Carmina Burana,'" con-

I

OSU-Cascades student

concert include "One" from "A Chorus Line," "Whatever Lola Wants,

from the program to be nominated for the AWP Intro Journal Award in Poetry. He lives in Orem, Utah and

anticipates graduating this year. — David Jasper

"It's not something that people should miss. It should be talked about for some time." — Jim Knox, on the surprise ending

of Cascade Chorale's spring concert

Lola Gets" ("Damn Yankees"), oA Lot of Livin' To Do" ("Bye Bye Birdie"), oSit Down, You're Rockin'

the Boat" ("Guys and Dolls") "Masquerade"("The Phantom ofthe Opera") and "Sunday" ("Sunday in the Park with George") and others. The singers will be backed with piano accompaniment, as well as a bass and drum rhythm section. The concert concludes — sort of

KMAB IHI WEIHOAL MICHAELHIAII BE BHABPHI WHCOOEATHG ABEO BG OTIEWILLIE

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Tiohsts for all shows oa salo aaw at EEEDCOIICERTS.oom, TICmtTPLY.oota, SII-881-888I Ti ohot Mill la Ol& Mttl Distriot 4 at hoa omoo 8a of oaah shaw.

— with "Always Look on the Bright Side of Life" from "Spamalot." It's just too bad that maestro

of them. "You don't w ant t o

Consider the innocent folks who

g i v e t h at away," Knox said, adding, "Stick around for the end."

are going on Saturday) One thing that won't surprise

Knox pledges that concertgoers will be handsomely rewarded

great way to expose the entire family to fun, great singing," he said.

should they stay for the end of the estimated two-hour concert. Plan

accordingly.

"It's not something that people should miss. It should be talked

Knox has sworn us to secrecy, be- about for some time," Knox said. cause it will probably be the big(Confidential to people attending gest crowd-pleaser in a concert full tonight: No social media spoilers!

you, Knox said: The concert "is a " They're free concerts, and I

don't think anybody would be disappointed. It's a great way to kick off the spring, going into summer," he added. "We're just excited. It's a great program." — Reporter: 541-383-0349, djasper@bendbulletin.com


THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, MAY 29, 2015

arts

A rt E x h i b i t s ARTADVENTUREGALLERY: "Exclusive, Enjoyable, Estonian," featuring wall hangings by Epp Harmon; through Thursday; 185 SE Fifth St., Madras; 541-475-7701. ARTISTS' GALLERYSUNRIVER: Featuring the works of 30 local artists; 57100 Beaver Drive, Building19, Sunriver; www. artistsgallerysunriver.com or 541-593-4382. THE ART OFALFREDDOLEZAL: Featuring oil paintings bythe Austrian artist; Eagle Crest Resort, 7525 Falcon Crest Drive, Redmond; 541-526-1185 or www.alfreddolezal.

com. ATELIER 6000:"Clark © 80: Six Decades of Marks," featuring drawings, prints and paintings by the studio's founder and master printmaker, Patricia Clark; through Sunday; 389 SWScalehouse Court, Suite120, Bend; www.atelier6000. org or 541-330-8759. CAFE SINTRA:Featuring "3 Points of View," a continually changing exhibit of photographs by DianeReed, Ric Ergenbright and John Vito;1024 NW Bond St., Bend; 541-382-8004. CANYONCREEKPOTTERY: Featuring pottery by Kenneth Merrill; 310 N. Cedar St., Sisters; www.

canyoncreekpotteryllc.comor 541-549-0366. CENTURY 21LIFESTYLESREALTY: Featuring oil paintings by Kerry Crank; through Sunday; 550 NW Franklin Ave., Suite 188, Bend; 541-382-3333. CIRCLE OF FRIENDSART6 ACADEMY:"Friends Art StarS," featuring works by ClaudeBeterbide, Shandel GamerandJaeYost; through Sunday; 19889 8th St., Tumalo; 541-706-9025. DOWNTOWN BENDPUBLIC LIBRARY:NOVELIDEA: "ATale for the Time Being," featuring work inspired by the book by Ruth Ozeki; through Monday; 601 NWWall St.; 541-389-9846. FOOT ZONE: "OutsidelN," featuring textured watercolor paintings by Sarah B. Hansen; through Saturday; 845 NWWall St., Bend; 541-317-3568. FRANKLINCROSSING: "DeLa Cuisine," featuring art by Ann Bullwinkel, Joanne Donaca, Bill Logan, Mary Marquiss and Barbara Slater; through Sunday; "OSU Cascades BFA Student Art," featuring art by graduating seniors from OSU Cascades; Thursday through June; 25550 NW Franklin Ave., Bend; 541-382-9398. GHIGLIERI GALLERY: Featuring original Western-themed and African-inspired paintings and

Submitted photo

"Late Storm," by Kathleen Keliher will be on display at Sage Custom Framing and Gallery in Bend through June 27. sculptures by Lorenzo Ghiglieri; 200 W. CascadeAve., Sisters; www.artlorenzo.com or 541-549-8683. HIGH DESERTCHAMBER MUSIC: Featuring photography by Stacie Muller and Michael Wheeler; 961 NW Brooks St., Bend; info©

highdesertchambermusic.comor 541-306-3988. HOODAVENUEART: Featuring works by Winnie Givot and Mitch and Michelle; through June 22; 357 W. HoodAve., Sisters;

www.hoodavenueart.comor

541-719-1800. HOP N BEAN PIZZERIA: Featuring

landscapeart by Larry Goodman; 523 E. U.S. Highway 20, Sisters; 541-719-1295. JILL'S WILD (TASTEFUL) WOMEN WAREHOUSE:Featuring works by Jil lHaney-Neal;Tuesdaysand Wednesdays only; 601 N. Larch St., Suite B, Sisters; www.jillnealgallery. com or 541-617-6078. JOHN PAULDESIGNS:Featuring custom jewelry and signature series with unique pieces;1006 NW Bond St., Bend;www.johnpauldesigns. com or 541-318-5645. KARENBANDYDESIGNJEWELER: "Spring Rocks," featuring custom jewelry and paintings by Karen Bandy; through Thursday; 25 NW Minnesota Ave., Suite 5, Bend; www. karenbandy.com or 541-388-0155. LA MAGIEBAKERY5 CAFE:

Featuring landscape watercolors and pastels by Patricia W. Porter; 945 NW Bond St., Bend; 541-241-7884. LUBBESMEYER FIBERSTUDIO: Featuring fiber art by Lori and Lisa Lubbesmeyer; 450 SW Powerhouse Drive, Suite 423, Bend; www.lubbesmeyerstudio.com or 541-330-0840. LUMIN ARTSTUDIOS: Featuring resident artists Alisha Vernon, McKenzie Mendel,Lisa Sipeand Natalie Mason; by appointment; 19855 Fourth St., Suite 103, Tumalo;

www.luminartstudio.com. MOCKINGBIRD GALLERY:"Just Around the Bend," featuring watercolorand oil paintings by JosephAlleman;throughSunday; 869 NW Wall St., Bend; www. mockingbird-gallery.com or 541-388-2107. THE OXFORD HOTEL: Featuring oil paintings by Ann Bullwinkel; through today; Featuring mixed media by Mary Medrano; through June 24; 10 NW Minnesota Ave., Bend; 541-382-9398. PATAGONIA I BEND:Featuring photography by Mike Putnam; 1000 NW Wall St., Suite 140; 541-382-6694. PEAPODGLASSGALLERY: Featuring oil paintings and sculptures by Lori Salisbury; 164 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-312-2828. PENCEGALLERY— PINCKNEY CENTERFORTHEARTS— COCC: Featuring art by current COCC students; through today; 2600 NW College Way,Bend; 541-383-7511. QUILTWORKS: Featuring quilts by Mary Klein and TheMaterial Girls; through Wednesday; 926 NE Greenwood Ave., Suite B, Bend; 541-728-0527. REDMOND PUBLICLIBRARY: "Synergy: Art 8 Literature II," featuring art inspired by the connection between visual, musical and literary arts; through today; "Outside View: ASolo Photography Exhibition," featuring photography by Gary Wing in the silent reading room; through Sunday; "Imagine That!," featuring the Third Annual Juried Art Exhibition; Saturday through July10; 827 SW Deschutes Ave., Redmond; 541-312-1050. REDMOND SENIORCENTER: Featuring watercolor paintings by Caroline MacPherson; through June 20; 325 NWDogwood Ave., Redmond; 541-548-6325.

GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 13 ROTUNDAGALLERY:"The 2015 Bachelor of Fine Arts Exhibition," featuring work by 2015 graduates; through June15; Robert L. Barber Library, Central Oregon Community College; 2600 NWCollege Way, Bend; 541-383-7564. SAGEBRUSHERS ART SOCIETY: Featuring works by "Wednesday Painters"; through June 26;117 SW RooseveltAve.,Bend;541-617-0900. SAGE CUSTOM FRAMINGAND GALLERY:"The Serendipity Series," featuring mixed media by Vivian Olsen; through Saturday; Featuring works by Kathleen Keliher; Wednesday through June 27834 NW Brooks St.,Bend;541-382-5884. SISTERSAREACHAMBEROF COMMERCE: Featuring fiber art by Rosalyn Kliot; 291 E. MainAve., Sisters; 541-549-0251. SISTERS PUBLICLIBRARY: Featuring photographs by Sisters Area Photo Club; through today; 110 N. Cedar St., Sisters; 541-312-1070 or www.sistersfol.com. SUNRIVERAREAPUBLIC LIBRARY:Featuring paintings of Sandra Neary and fabric arts by Karen Padrick; through June 27; 56855 Venture Lane, Sunriver; 541-312-1080. SUNRIVERRESORT LODGE BETTY GRAY GALLERY:Featuring mixed

media byMargotThompsonand quilts by Janet Webster; through

June 26 in the upper gallery; Featuring art by Monica SetziolPhillips and Gary Vincent; through June 27;17600 Center Drive, Sunriver; 541-382-9398. TOWNSHEND'SBENDTEAHOUSE: "Future Vacation," featuring gouache painting by Carter Pierce; through Sunday; "Peace Book," featuring work by Donn Curry; Monday through June 30; 835 NWBond St., Bend; 541-312-2001 or www. townshendstea.com. TUMALOARTCO.: Featuring mixed media by Ingrid Lustig; through Sunday; 450 SWPowerhouse Drive, Suite 407, Bend; www.tumaloartco. com or 541-385-9144. VISTABONITA GLASS ART STUDIO AND GALLERY:Featuring glass art, photography, painting, metal sculptur eand more;222 W .Hood St., Sisters; 541-549-4527 or www. vistabonitaglass.com. WERNER HOMESTUDIO 5 GALLERY:Featuring painting, sculpture and more byJerry Werner and other regional artists; 65665 93rd St., Bend; call 541-815-9800 for directions. THE WINESHOP:Featuring art by Hazel Reeves, Cheryl Buchanann and Janet Rawlings; through Sunday; 55 NW Minnesota Ave., Bend; 541-389-2884.

I O Q A

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Ch

SAGE CUSTOM FRAMING & GALLERY 834 NW BROOKS ST. • 541-382-5884

0 K Q O

WWW.Sageframing-gallely.Com RED CHAIR GALLERY 103 NW OREGON AVE. • 541-306-3176

WWW.redChairfjallerybeRd. Com MOCKINGBIRD GALLERY 869 NW WALL ST. • 541-388-2107

WWW.mockingbird-gallel'y. Com KAREN BANDY DESIGN JEWELER 25 NW MINNESOTA AVE. ¹5 • 541-388-0155

WWW.karenbandy.Com

SSSIIIT~ '

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PAGE 14 • GO! MAGAZiNE

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, MAY 29, 2015

rinks

• 2-year-old brewery establishesnew public house onGalveston By Branden Andersen For The Bulletin

blivion Brewing Co. is no

O

stranger to

t h e C e ntral

Oregon brewing scene. Debuting in 2012, owners Darin and Meghann Butschy have been bounding upwards, quickly taking over local taps with flagships Backside IPA and Polar Star Pale.

They outgrew the half-barrel system they started in July 2014, when they jumped in with both feet and purchased a 10-barrel brew house.

/

( ~

And even still, the two say they

can't keep up with orders. But despite success, the brewery has largely been on the fringe. With the brewery's only presence being a warehouse space on the Northeast side of town, Obliv-

s

Irr~ l

f

:r I •

I

t

I

« " r a r ~a

ion has struggled to build that essential connection with the consumer.

And now, by securing an Oblivion taphouse on Galveston Avenue the Butschys have made a

move to ensure that visibility is never a struggle again. Photos by Branden Andersen / For The Bulletin "We were really focused on A menu and samples of Obviivion Brewing Co.'s beers rest on the bar of the brewery's newtaphouse on Galveston Avenue. expanding the brewery when we were presented with the opportuFor example, the pub's panini the competition could be more nity of the pub," wrote Meghann offerings appear to be normal, on the friendly side — Oblivion in an email. "After much thought, heat-pressed sandwiches on the adds another personality to an l we decided to give it a go." menu. Butwhen they come out of already vibrant street, drawing /, ~, The pub, the epitome of wood- the kitchen, rather than tradition- in more of a crowd and further and-metal industrial-chic, will al bread, sourdough-based waf- creating a complete Galveston exfeature all of the brewery's sta- fles filled with meat, cheese and perience. With a back patio area Isf i• t t I ples and the occasional one-off or vegetables sits on the plate. in the works, and front roll-up collaboration, such as the ObliviOblivion's chef, formerly of doors looking onto the street, the on/Bend Brewing Company beer, the Victorian Cafe, has opened pub is hoping to add to the culture which they have teased on their creativedoors and is offering a of Galveston, rather than detract board as coming out in the future. unique menu in an area that is al- from it. The big addition, Meghann ready so diverse. Oblivion is in their soft opening said, is the full menu the pub ofLocated in the former West- phase right now while they work fers. With nitrate-free and house- side Cafe & Bakery, Oblivion out the last few kinks. As yet, cured meats, seasonal fruits and will have direct competition with there is no solid plan for a grand vegetables, diners can expect some local favorite watering opening. tastyand fresh offeringscentered holes: The Lot, Aspect BoardDarin and Meg Butschy were around and paired with the array shop, Growler Phils, Brother Jon's unavailable for comment. ofbeers. Public House and 10 Barrel. But — Reporter: drinks@bendbulletin.com An array of beers are onthe menuboard at Oblivion Brewing. •

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THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, MAY 29, 2015

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Variety of flavors of Humm Kombucha. H umm Kombucha will h old a Humm Kombucha's Facebook for the Kombucha Home Brewing Class event. The costis $40 for the class.Re-

Under the guidance of master brewer Jeff Clason, you will gather all the equipment and skills need-

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SUNDAY

WINE TASTING:Sample a selection of wines; 2 p.m.; Trader Joe's, 63455 N. U.S. Highway 97, Suite 4, Bend; www.traderjoes.com or 541-312-4198. CENTRAL OREGONBEER WEEK: Featuringtastings from 5-7 p.m. and music from 7-9 p.m. everyday; 5 p.m.; BrokenTop Bottle Shop,1740 NW PenceLane, Suite1, Bend;www.btbsbend.com or541-728-0703.

CENTRAL OREGONBEER WEEK: Featuringtastings from 5-7 p.m. and music from 7-9 p.m. everyday; 5 p.m.; BrokenTopBottle Shop,1740 NW Pence Lane, Suite1,Bend;www.btbsbend.com or541-728-0703. IRISH WHISKEYDINNER: Featuring a selection of

Bulletin file photo

from 6 to 7:30 p.m. June 8.

Irish Whiskeys paired with a special menu, hosted by spirits expert and author Hoke Harden; 7 p.m.; $80; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NWBond St., Bend; www.mcmenamins.com or 541-382-5174. 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.com or 541-312-4198. CENTRAL OREGONBEER WEEK: Featuringtastings from 5-7 p.m. and music from 7-9 p.m. everyday; 5 p.m.; BrokenTop Bottle Shop,1740 NW PenceLane, Suite1, Bend;www.btbsbend.com or541-728-0703.

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.com or 541-312-4198. WINE TASTING: Sample wines from Willakenzie Estate; 3:30 p.m.; Newport Market, 1121 NW Newport Ave., Bend; www.newportavemarket.com or 541-382-3940. OPEN 'TIL DARK: Celebrate the end of Central Oregon Beer Weekand the finale of the exhibit, Brewing Culture: The Craft of Beer, with a night of beer tastings and live music; 5 p.m.; $8, $5 for children and students with ID; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway97, Bend; www.highdesertmuseum.orgl open-til-dark or 541-382-4754.

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GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 1 5

serve your spot by stopping by

Clarification

Humm Kombucha, 1125 NE Second St., Bend or call 541-306-6329. — David Jasper

In a story headlined "Aweekto celebrate all things beer," which appearedFriday, May22, on Page14 of Go! Magazine, Carlos Perez's role in foundingCentral OregonBeerWeekwas unclear dueto incorrect information supplied to The Bulletin. He isthe co-founder of Central OregonBeerWeekwith JonAbernathy and Lindsay Landgraf.

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FEATURING MCMENAMINS, SUNRIVER BREWING COMPANY,WILD RIDE BREWING, DESCHUTES BREWERY, THREE CREEKS BREWING, BEND BREWING CO,WORTHY BREWING, BROKEN TOP BOTTLE SHOP, CROW'S FEET COMMONS, RIVERBEND BREWING, DOWNTOWN BEND,AND MORE!

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TODAY SUMMERSALE:Featuring antiques and vintage items, furniture, yard art, bakedgoods andmore, to benefit local foodbanks;9a.m.;PatchworkAntiques,797C Ave., Terrebonne; 541-419-8637. OPEN 'TILDARK:Celebrate the end of CentralOregon Beer Weekand the finale of theexhibit, "Brewing Culture: The Craft of Beer," with a night of beertastings and live music; 5 p.m.; $8, $5for children and students with ID;High DesertM useum, 59800 S.U.S.Highway97, Bend; www.highdesertmuseum.org/open-til-dark or 541-382-4754. CENTRALOREGON BEERWEEK: Featuringtastings from 5-7 p.m. andmusic from 7-9 p.m.everyday; 5 p.m.; free; BrokenTopBottle Shop, 1740 NWPence Lane, Suite 1, Bend; www.btbsbend.com or541-728-0703. AUTHOR!AUTHOR!:Piper Kerman, author of "Orange is the New Black: MyYear in aWoman's Prison," will speak; 7 p.m.;$20;Bend HighSchool,230NESixthSt.,Bend; admin©dplfoundation.org, www.dplfoundation.org or 541-312-1027. AMERICANA PROJECTALBUMRELEASE:Students of the Americana Project in Sisters will perform; 7 p.m.; $15 plusfees in advance,$20at the door, $10foryouth; The Belfry, 302 E.Main Ave., Sisters; www.sistersfolkfestival. org or541-549-4979.(Page6) THE BESTOF BROADWAY CASCADE CHORALE CONCERT:Featuring music from "The Phantom of the Opera," "Les Miserables," Rodgers & Hammerstein musicals and more, including OperaBendwith excerpts from their upcoming production "Into theWoods"; 7 p.m.; free, donations accepted; First Presbyterian Church, 230 NE Ninth St., Bend;541-647-8720. (Page11) TEASEBURLESQUE:The Portland burlesque troupe

performs; 8p.m.;$12plusfees in advance,$15at the door; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.bendticket.com or 541-323-1881. BLACK LIGHTWHITE OUTPARTY: Featuring raffles, a photo booth andmore, with DJCodiCarrol and DJ Harlo; 10 p.m. ;$5;TheAstro Lounge,939 NW Bond St.,Bend; www.astroloungebend.com or 541-388-0116.

SATURDAY USED FURNITURE SALE:A used furniture sale to benefit Lead and LoveDog Rescue; 9a.m.; BendPetExpress East,420 NE Windy Knolls Drive, Bend; 541-788-1406. SUMMERSALE:Featuring antiques and vintage items, furniture, yard art, bakedgoods andmore, to benefit local foodbanks;9a.m.;PatchworkAntiques,797C Ave., Terrebonne; 541-419-8637. BENDWOMEN'SWEEKEND:Atwo-day conference about renewal, inspiration andconnection for women of all ages;10a.m.-6 p.m.; free;The Riverhouse Conventio nCenter,3075 U.S.Highway97,Bend;www. bendwomensweekend.com or541-633-7115. CENTRALOREGON SATURDAYMARKET: Featuring

crafts, music,foodandmore;10a.m.-4 p.m.;free;Across from the Downtown BendPublic Library, 601 NWWall St., Bend; 541-420-9015. HAPPYGIRLSRUNBEND:Featuring half-marathon, 10K and 5Kdistances; starts on the Deschutes River and includes amix of trails, groomed paths, and paved

THE B ULLETIN• F R

surfaces; 9 a.m.-2 p.m.; $40, registration required; Riverbend Park,799SW ColumbiaSt., Bend;www. happygirlsrun.com or 541-323-0964. CARGOBIKERODEO& COMMUNITY RIDE:Afamily friendlyeventfor cyclists, cargo-bike adventurers and more; noon; free; BendElectric Bikes, 223 NWHil St., Bend; 541-410-7408. HAPPYLITTLEKIDSRACE:Arace for boysand girls with ageappropriate distancesforkidsages 3to 10,as part of the HappyGirls Run; 1p.m.; $5; Riverbend Park, 799SW ColumbiaSt., Bend;www.happygirlsrun.com or 541-323-0964. THE BESTOF BROADWAY CASCADE CHORALE CONCERT: Featuring music from "The Phantom of the

Terrebonne; 541-419-8637. CASCADEWINDS SYMPHONIC BAND SPRING CONCERT: Featuring a selection of American folk songs, Handel andBach;2 p.m .;free,donationsaccepted; Summit High School, 2855 NW Clearwater Drive, Bend; www.cascadewinds.org or 541-383-7743. (Page12) CENTRALOREGON BEER WEEK: Featuringtastings from 5-7 p.m.andmusic from 7-9 p.m. everyday; 5 p.m.; Broken TopBottle Shop,1740 NWPenceLane, Suite1, Bend; www.btbsbend.com or541-728-0703. SCOTTWEILAND ANDTHEWILDABOUTS:Theformer lead singer of theStoneTemple Pilots performs with his band;6p.m.;$25plusfeesinadvance;Century Center,70 SWCentury Drive, Bend;www.bendticket.com. (Page3)

musicals and more, including OperaBendwith excerpts from their upcoming production "Into the Woods"; 3 p.m.; free, donationsaccepted; First Presbyterian Church, 230 NE Ninth St., Bend;541-647-8720. (Page11) A LIFETRANSFORMING LOVE:NEVER T00 LATE:A former U.S. ArmyCaptain will speakaboutfinding peace in the middle of warandeverywhere after; 4 p.m.; free; Bend's Community Center,1036 NE Fifth St., Bend; www. christiansciencechurchbend.org or 541-418-1176. CENTRALOREGON BEER WEEK: Featuringtastings from 5-7 p.m. andmusic from 7-9 p.m. everyday; 5 p.m.; free; BrokenTopBottle Shop,1740 NW PenceLane, Suite 1, Bend; www.btbsbend.com or 541-728-0703. LAST SATURDAY: Featuring local art and culture with art openings, live music, food carts, workshopsandmore.; 6 p.m.; free;The Old Ironworks, 50 SEScott St., Bend; 347-564-9080. LAVACITYROLLER DOLLS VS.TSUNAMI SIRENS: Roller derby bout featuring TsunamiSirensfrom Crescent City, CA,with halftime performances by BendFire Pipes and Drumsandthe CascadeIndoor Sports Irish Dancers; 6-830 p m.; $10fortwo tickets online inadvance,$10at the door, $5 for children; CascadeIndoor Sports, 20775 NE HighDesert Lane, Bend;541-330-1183. DEADATTHEDOJ:Featuring the musicof The Grateful Dead, performed byBrent Alan, Mark Ransom &The Mostest, Rising Tide, DJGrateful Kevand Jive Coulis, to benefitstudents of HighDesert Martial Arts; 7 p.m., doors open at6 p m.;$10suggested donation; High Desert Martial Arts, 2535 NE Studio Road,Bend;www.j.mp/ deadatthedoj or 541-647-1220. (Page6) PATRIMONY: Theblues-rock band performs, with Hungry Skinnyand MoonRoom; 9p.m.; free; Silver Moon Brewing, 24 NWGreenwood Ave., Bend; www. silvermoonbrewing.com or541-388-8331. TONY SMILEY: Theloop-ninja from Portland performs; 10 p.m.; $5 plusfees in advance,$7atthe door; TheAstro Lounge, 939 NW BondSt.,Bend;www,astroloungebend. com or 541-388-0116.

MOMDAY

Opera," "LesMiserables," Rodgers8 Hammerstein

SUMDAY BEND WOMEN'SWEEKEND: Atwo-dayconference about renewal, inspiration andconnection for women of all ages;10a.m.-5 p.m.; free;The Riverhouse Conventio nCenter,3075 U.S.Highway97,Bend;www. bendwomensweekend.com or541-633-7115. SUMMERSALE:Featuring antiques and vintage items, furniture, yard art, bakedgoodsandmore, to benefit local foodbanks;10a.m.;PatchworkAntiques,797 CAve.,

SOLO JAZZ VOCAL CLASS CONCERT: Nine singers from CascadeSchool of Music whostudy jazz styling will perform; 5:30 p.m.; free;TheAstro Lounge, 939 NWBond St., Bend; 541-306-4480. TWIN:Thealternative folk band from Winnipeg, Canada performs, with PachowKabang; 9p.m.; $5; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70SWCentury Drive, Bend; www. volcanictheatrepub.com or541-323-1881.

TUESDAY GREEN TEAMMOVIENIGHT:Ascreening of "The Healthcare Movie," a film comparing the health care systemsoftheU.S.and Canada;6:30p.m.;free; First Presbyterian Church, 230 NE Ninth St., Bend; 541-815-6504.

WEDNESDAY AUTHORPRESENTATION: DianaRodgers, farmer, paleo nutritionist andauthor of "The Homegrown Paleo Cookbook" will discuss food, farming and sustainability; 5:30-7 p.m.; free;Natural Grocers,3199 N.U.S. Highway 97, Bend;641-617-0200. KRISLAGER BAND:Therockandsoulbandfrom Nebraska performs; 7 p.m.; free;McMenaminsOld St.FrancisSchool,700NW BondSt.,Bend;www. mcmenamins. com or541-382-5174. VAMPIRATES:TheReno, Nevada punk rock band performs, with the Beerslayers; 9 p.m.; $5;Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www. volcanictheatrepub.com or541-323-1881. (Page6)

THURSDAY MUSIC AND MENTORS:Thesongwriter Steve Seskin performs, with Circle of Friendsandmembers ofthe Sisters Community; 7 p.m.;$15plusfees in advance, $20 at the door, $10foryouth; TheBelfry,302 E. MainAve., Sisters; www.sistersfolkfestival.org or 541-549-4979. MICHAEL LEWISMARTINEZ: Thesinger-songwriter performs, with AnnaGilbert; 9 p.m.; $5; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www. volcanictheatrepub.com or541-323-1881. • SUBMITANEVENTatwww.bendbulletin.com/submitinfo or email events©bendbulletin.com. Deadline is10 days before publication. Questions? Contact 541-383-0351.

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GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 1 7

IDAY, MAY 29, 2015

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SATURDAY A Life-Transforming Love: Learn about finding peace in the middle of war.

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MONDAY Solo JazzVocal Class Concert: Students studying jazz will perform.

WEDNESDAY Author Presentation:Paleo Cookbook author, DianaRodgers, will speak.

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PAGE 18 + GO! MAGAZINE

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, MAY 29, 2015

planning ahea 'UIIE 5-11 JUNE 5-7 — "WILD WILD WILDEST WEST":A family-friendly old time western comedy melodrama, presented by the Sunriver STARS; 6 p.m. June 5, 5 p.m. dinner show June 6, 2p.m. June 7; $15, $10 for18and younger, $40/$35 for Saturday dinner show; Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic 8 Recreation Center, 57250 Overlook Road,Sunriver; 541-480-7483. JUNE 5-7 — "INTO THE WOODS": An adaptation of StephenSondeim's musical about fairytales, presentedby OperaBend; 7 p.m. June 5-6, 3 p.m. June 7;$25-$40; Pinckney Center for the Performing Arts, Central OregonCommunity College, 2600 NW CollegeWay,Bend; www.operabend. org or 888-718-4253. JUNE 5 — FIRST FRIDAYART WALK: Art exhibit openings, artist talks, live music, wine andfoodindowntown Bendandthe Old Mill District; 5 p.m.; throughout Bend. JUNE 5 —CRAFTBEARD8t MUSTACHE COMPETITION:Featuring a beard and mustache competition, with live music by Boxcar Stringband;6:30 p.m .;Deschutes Brewery 8 Public House,1044 NWBond St., Bend; www.deschutesbrewery.com or 541-382-9242. JUNE 5 —"SELMA":A screening of the Oscar-winning film; 7:30 p.m.; free; RodriguezAnnex, Jefferson County Library, 134 SE ESt., Madras; www.jcld. org or 541-475-3351. JUNE5 — B.I .G.IMPROV:Thecomedy

troupe performs; 8p.m.; $8plus fees in advance, $10 atthe door; 2nd Street Theater, 220 NELafayette Ave., Bend; www.2ndstreettheater.com or 541-312-9626. JUNE 5 —MELODYGUY:Featuring performances aspart of the Newberry Event Music andArts Festival teaser; 8 p.m.; free, donations accepted; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881. JUNE6 — PLANTANDGARDENSALE: Featuring aselection of perennials, annuals, vegetables, herbs andgarden items to benefit projects for TheCentral Oregon Opportunity Center; 8:30a.m.; Zion Lutheran Church,1113 SWBlack ButteBlvd.,Redmond;541-382-7044.

Submitted photo

The Fermentation Celebration in the Old Mill District will take place this year on June18. 3:30 p.m.; free; Whispering Winds Retirement, 2920 NEConnorsAve.,Bend; www.highdesertchambermusic.com or 541-306-3988. JUNE 6 —BUTTERFLYBREAKDOWN: The Portland band performs, with North Country; 9 p.m.; $5; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www. volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881. JUNE 6 —THE ROCKYHORROR PICTURESHOW:Thecult-classic musical is presented; 11:30 p.m.; $10,$15for V.I.P.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 NELafayette Ave., Bend; www.bendticket.com or 541-410-0975. JUNE 7 — HEAVEN CAN WAITSK WALK/ RUN:Afun run/walk5K benefiting Sara's Project; 9a.m.; $25-$40, registration required; DrakePark, 777 Riverside Blvd., Bend; www.heavencanwait.org or 541-706-6996.

JUNE 6 —MADRASSATURDAY MARKET: Featuring food, drinks, live music and more; 9a.m.; SahaleePark, 241 SE Seventh St., Madras; 541-546-6778.

JUNE 7 —BATTLEBUDDIESOF CENTRALOREGON FUNDRAISER: Featuring live music, food andmore to benefit Battle Buddies of Central

JUNE 6— SPOTLIGHT CHAMBER PLAYERS:Featuring music by Mozart, Tchaikovsky, Mendelssohn,and more;

or former Military members; Crecent Moon Alpaca Ranch,7566 N.U.S.

Oregon;10a.m.;$6, freeforcurrent

Highway 97,Terrebonne; www. friendsforlifedogtraining.com or 541-306-9882.

www.highdesertmuseum.org/rsvpor 541-382-4754.

JUhlE 12-18

Center,1600 SEReed Market Road, Bend; 541-388-1133.

JUNE 9 —THEOWYHEERIVER JOURNALS:Join author Bonnie Olin for a journey into the Canyonlands of the Owyhee River;12 p.m.; Sisters Public Library, 110 N.Cedar St., Sisters; www.deschuteslibrary.org/sisters or 541-312-1032.

JUNE12-14, 18 — "AFUNNYTHING HAPPENED ONTHEWAYTOTHE FORUM":A musical about Pseudolus, a crafty slave, whostruggles to win the hand of a beautifulbutslow-witted courtesan named Philia;730p m. June1213,18;

JUNE7 — I'M GONNA SING!: Featuring songsandhymns,withtheBend Camerata andMen's Chorus of Central Oregon; 6 p.m.; Nativity Lutheran Church, 60850 Brosterhous Road, Bend; www.nativitychoir weebly.com or 541-388-0765.

JUNE 9 —THEOWYHEERIVER JOURNALS:Join author Bonnie Olin for a journey into the Canyonlands of the Owyhee River; 6 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St., Bend; www.deschuteslibrary.org or 541-312-1032.

$13 for students; CascadesTheatre, 148 NWGreenwood Ave., Bend;www. cascadestheatrical.org or 541-389-0803.

JUNE7 — JAPHY'SDESCENT:The alternative band from Arizona performs, with Buckle Rash; 9p.m.; $5; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; wwwvolcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.

JUNE10 —TONY HOLIDAY 8tTHE VELVETONES: Theblues-funk band from Utah performs; 9 p.m.; $5; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.

JUNE 8 —NATURALHISTORYPUB: A Wild Solution for Climate Change: Thomas Lovejoy, conservationist, willbe this season's final Natural History Pub speaker; 7 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S.Highway97, Bend;

JUNE11 —THE MULLIGAN BROTHERS: The Americana folk band from Baton Rouge, Lousianaperforms;9 p.m .;$5; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.

JUNE7 — SUNDAYAFTERNOON DANCE: Featuring a dance with The Notable Swing Danceand Betty Berger;

2 p.m.; $5per person;BendSenior

2 p.m.June14;$20, $16forseniors,

JUNE12-14, 18 —"THECEMETERY CLUB":A playabout three Jewish widows meetoncea monthfortea beforegoing to visit their husband's graves;7:30 p.m. June12-13,18;3p.m. June14; $19, $16for seniors andstudents; 2nd StreetTheater, 220 NE Lafayette Ave., Bend; www.2ndstreettheater.comor 541-312-9626. JUNE 13-14 —SISTERSARTIN THE PARK:Featuring arts, crafts, a kidzone, food and liveentertainment, to benefita local wish from theMake-A-Wish Foundation of Oregon;10a.m.; CreeksidePark,Jefferson Streetand Highway20,Sisters; www. centraloregonshows.com or541-420-0279.


THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, MAY 29, 2015

planning ahead

GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 19

Talks 5 classes For a full list, visit bendbulletin.com/events. CONTRACTORSCCBTEST PREPCOURSE: Take this two-day live class to prepare for the state-mandated test to become a licensed contractor in Oregon; 8:30 a.m. Friday; $299-$359 with required manual, registration required; Redmond COCC Campus-Technol ogyEducationCenter,2324 SE College Loop, Redmond; www.cocc.edu/ ccb or 541-383-7290. TEDXBENDWOMEN 2015: Featuring women speakers from Central Oregon who will share ideas in quick, powerful talks; 8:30 a.m. Saturday; $10, registration required; COCCRedmond Tech Center, 2030 SE College Loop, Redmond; 541-382-0778. REAL WORLD PROJECTMANAGEMENT: Learn to navigate all phases of project

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The Hilloah Rohr in Switzerland, as part of the virtual tour "Switzerland: Land of Giants," taking place Thursday at the Sunriver Area Public

Library.

Center for Compassionate Living, 399 SW Century Drive, Bend; 541-385-7437. management,including howto successfully JOURNAL WORKSHOP:A workshopwith initiate, plan, execute, control and close out graduate students from OSU-Cascades MFA projects applying industry accepted project in Creative Writing; 6 p.m. Tuesday; $25; The management best practices; 8:30a.m. Workhouse at Old Ironworks, 50 SEScott Saturday and Thursday; $125, registration St., Bend; www.mkt.com/the-workhouse or required; Central Oregon Community 347-564-9080. College, 2600 NWCollege Way, Bend; WHAT'S HOT INFRANCHISING!: 541-383-7270. Explore the possibility of owning your BEND WOMEN'SWEEKEND: A two-day own franchise, learn about the top trends, conference about renewal, inspiration and the best industries and 'What's Hot' in connection for women of all ages; 10a.m. franchising for 2015; 6 p.m. Wednesday; Saturday and Sunday; free; TheRiverhouse $29, registration required; COCC Chandler Convention Center,3075 U.S.Highway 97, Lab, 1027 NWTrenton Avenue, Bend; Bend; www.bendwomensweekend.com or 541-383-7290. 541-633-7115. SWITZERLAND:Land ofGiants:Take A LIFE-TRANSFORMINGLOVE: Never Too a virtual tour through Switzerland with Late: A former U.S. Army Captain will speak Hilloah Rohr, with Berner Oberland, the about finding peace in the middle of war and Lauterbrunnen Valley; the Eiger, Monch and everywhere after; 4 p.m. Saturday; Bend Jungfrau and more;12 p.m. Thursday; free; Community Center,1036 NEFifth St., Bend; Sunriver Area Public Library, 56855 Venture www.christiansciencechurchbend.org or Lane, Sunriver; www.deschuteslibrary.org 541-418-1176. or 541-312-1034. SOFA SESSIONS:TheArt and Soul of TEAM DEVELOPMENT FORGREATER Courageous Conversation: Comejoin Carol PRODUCTIVITY: Explore the stages of team Delmonico for six evenings of facilitated development, the key to a high performing conversation utilizing the consciousness of teamwork and steps to creating synergy; 1 NVC, silent listening, and a framework that p.m. Thursday; $95, registration required; supports growth, acceptance, and truth; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 6:30p.m.M onday;$60,requested donation; NW College Way, Bend;541-383-7270.

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JUNE 12— "THEKIDWITH ABIKE": Ashowing ofthe grand prizewinner of the 2011Cannes Film Festival; 7:30p.m.; free; RodriguezAnnex, Jefferson County Library,134SE ESt., Madras; www.jcld.org or 541-475-3351. JUNE12 — TANGOALPHA TANGO: The Portland rock'n' roll band performs; 9 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881. JUNE13 — THEROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW: The cult-classic musical is presented; 11:30 p.m.; $10, $15 for V.I.P.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 NE LafayetteAve.,Bend;www. bendticket.com or 541-410-0975. JUNE14 —JOHN CRAIGIEHOUSE CONCERT: The indie-folk singer-songwriter performs, with Bill Valenti, 6-7 p.m. potluck/social; 7 p.m.; $15-$20; HouseConcerts in the Glen,

1019 NW Stannium Road, Bend; www. houseconcertsintheglen.com/rsvp.html or 541-480-8830. JUNE16 —THE DOOBIE BROTHERS: The classic-rock band performs, with special guests; 6:30 p.m.; $38 plus fees, $79 for reserved seating; Les SchwabAmphitheater, 520SW Powerhouse Drive,Suite626,Bend; www.bendconcerts.com or 541-312-8510.

JUNE16 — GRACE ASKEW: TheVoice finalist and country-blues singer performs; 8 p.m.; $5 plus fees in advance, $7 at the door; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www. volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881. JUNE18 — FERMENTATIONCELEBRATION: Featuring beer tastings from Bend breweries, live music and more; 4 p.m. $20 for drink tickets and glass; Old Mill District, 450 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-0131.

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FlorenceArea Chamber of Commerce 541.997.3128 fLorencechamber.com


PAGE 20 e GO! MAGAZINE

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, MAY 29, 2015

s

Andy Tulhe/The Bulletin

Three Creeks Brewery server Jessica Bridgeman stands in the aisle to deliver a beer to a table while other diners enjoy their drinks and await their food at the Sisters brewery on May19.

• Sisters brewpub opening newbrewery, offering one-time tours offacility and tastings today By John Gottberg Anderson For The Bulletin

Nearly seven years have

good ales and solid comfort Sisters industrial park. include a canning facility. food in a spacious and comfortToday, that new plant is celeable atmosphere. brating its grand opening. Be- Mood andservice

passed since the Three Creeks

Meanwhile,the beers have

Brewing Co. opened its doors

continued to grow in popularity. When it reached a point where the company's production could no longer keep up

in S i sters' F i vePine R esort development. From the time it opened in

July 2008, the spacious brewpub-restaurant

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one of the most popular dining-and-drinking locations in Deschutes County, offering

tween 5 and 8 p.m.,the public

will be welcomed for tours and tastings — on this day only — at the new 30-barrel brewing system, which initially will triple with the demand, Wade Under- the company's annual producwood, the company's founding tion capacity to about 6,000 barpartner and general manager, rels a year. The 8,000-squareannounced that he would build foot space, located at 265 E. a separate brewing facility in a Barclay Ave., Sisters, will also

A benefit to be reaped by the

original brewpub is the opportunity to serve a greater number of beers, including those to be canned: Knotty Blonde, Hoodoo Voodoo IPA, FivePine Chocolate Porter, and the limited-re-

lease TenPine Chocolate Porter and Stampede Ale. Continued next page

Scorecard Overall:B+ Fool:B+. Cuisine is solid, not spectacular, with tasty sauces disguising other ingredients. Service:B+. More professional and experienced in the dining room than in the casual lounge. Atmosphere:B+.Rustic ambience is pleasant, but it falls short of an Old West mood. Value:A-. Price is more than fair for the quality of food andservice provided.


restaurants

THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, MAY 29, 2015

NEXT WEEK:

SOBA FOODSOF ASIA For reviews of more than150 Central Oregon restaurants, visit I dendduneti n.coml restaurants.

Small dites Pacific Pizza and Brew officially open —The new beer-and-food establishment features a menu with more than adozenvarieties of pizza, along with salads, soups, sandwiches and appetizers. Thespacious restaurant overlooks Century Drive betweenSafeway and Sun Country tours. 11 a.m. to10 p.m. every day. 340SW Century Drive, Bend;www. pacificpizzabrew.com, 541550-7887.

New brewery open west of downtownFollowing a soft opening last Friday, Meghannand Darin Butschy's Oblivion Brewing Co. is serving a full menu of food and Oblivion's own beers. Offerings include a poached-pear salad andother greens; sandwiches such as a pulled-pork waffle panini; and entrees that include a "beer can" chicken andthe vegan "Meg's Bowl." Open 11 a.m. to11 p.m. Mondayto Thursday, 8 a.m. to11 p.m. Friday to Sunday.1005 NW Galveston Ave., Suite105, Bend; www.oblivion brewingco.com, 541-647-2774.

Former Deschutes Brewery chef entering catering businessChefGene Sotohasclosed Supervillain Sandwiches, on Bond Street in downtown Bend, to enter the private-event catering business. Soto, former executive chef at the Deschutes Brewery, has established the Bowtie Catering Co. with partner Sanda Costello, who has worked in local hospitality management for more than 10 years. Thecompanyhas just signed a lease on anew commercial kitchen. www. bowtiecateringbend.com, 541-241-8711.

From previous page That's for diners 21 and older, of course. But this restau-

t/2-inch thick). Topped with smoked bacon, mushrooms

and a Gorgonzola cheese rant, whose menu describes sauce, the juicy burger was it as having the atmosphere of an "Old West livery sta-

finished with a side of let-

tuce, tomato and red onion. ble," is very family-friendly. It was accompanied by fries, There's even a c h i l dren's which she found tasty but menu, offering several dif- not extraordinary. ferent meal choices priced M y s c h nitzel, a Ger man-style pork cutlet lightbetween $4 and $9. While there are no hors- ly breaded and pan-fried, es here, let alone saddleswas flavorful even though and the background music t he meat wa s b ot h f a t t y that played during my two and gristly. But the sauce recent visits was contempo- ladled upon it, a dark barary rock, not country — its con-and-mushroom gravy modern rustic appearance infused with Knotty Blonde does lend itself to a pleasant ale, made it not just palatable dining experience. but downright savory. SkinDiners are greeted at a on red potatoes, mashed hostess stand and walked with garlic, were excellent. with menus either to the 72- But a medley of sauteed vegseat restaurant area, left of etables, including zucchithe entrance, or the 60-seat ni, red and green peppers, lounge, to the right. green beans and onions, Near afireplace is a cozy were cooked too long in olive seating area w i t h c o uch- oil. es and magazines. In the lounge, a pool table beckons, Midday meal and television sets are tuned Our second Three Creeks to sports channels in both

meal was a lunch in the din-

arenas.

ing room, and we both were more impressed this time

On a pair of recent visits,

we found the service to be better in the dining room

GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 21

Three CreeksBrewing Ce.

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Kids' menu: A half-dozen choices priced $4to $9 Vegetarianmenu: Choices include Greeksalad, veggie burger, black beansand rice. Alcoholic deverages: Full bar Outdoor seating: Small patio area Reservations: Accepted for parties of eight or more Contact: www.threecreeksbrewing.com, 541-549-196

location: 721 Desperado Court (FivePine Resort), Sisters Hours: 11:30 a.m. to 9 p.m. Sunday to Thursday, 11:30 a.m. to 10 p.m. Friday and Saturday. Cuisine: American and international Price range: Starters and salads $4.50 to $12, sandwiches $9.50 to $13, entrees $10to $19.50

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PAGE 22 • GO! MAGAZINE

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, MAY 29, 2015

outo town The following is a list of other events "Out of Town."

8:Z7.j

Alaatair MuirI Submitted photo

"The Rake's Progress," presented by Portland Opera, will play June 11, 12 and 14.

• Premiere of 'The Rake'Progress' s at Portland Operabreathes life into paintings that portrayedLondonman'srichesto ragstale By Kathleen McCool

and costume designs for "The Rake's Prog-

The Bulletin

ress," which will be featured in Portland Op-

p

ortland Opera is staging the Pacif-

era's production. This is complemented by

ic Northwest premiere of "The Rake's

Portland Art Museum's exhibit, "David Hock-

Progress" June ll, 12 and 14 at Keller Auditorium. With music by Igor Stravinsky, a libretto by W. H. Auden and scenery and costumes by visual artist David Hockney, the opera brings together three of the 20th century's

greatest poets, composers and visual artists. "'The Rake's Progress' is a tale we all can

ney: A Rake's Progress," which runs until Aug. 2 and includes more than 50 of Hockney's etchings, drawings, models and watercolors depicting his scenic and costume designs from the beginning idea to the final concept as well as Hogarth's prints. Portland Opera will offer free supplementa-

ry events before and after each performance. said Portland Opera Marketing and Commu- "Bob's Opera Overture" will take place one nications Manager Ingrid Arnett. hour prior to each performance and f ocus The opera follows Tom Rakewell, who gives on the music and history behind "The Rake's up a life in the country with his fiancee, Anne Progress." "Back Talk" will take place immeTrulove, after making a Faustian bargain diately following each performance and conwith Nick Shadow. Shadow leads Rakewell sists of a 20-30 minute Q&A with performers, from riches to ruin in London's underground. directors and conductors. "The Rake's Progress" runs June 11, 12 and Through the turmoil, the characters learn that identify with. It's about the choices we make,"

"For idle hearts and hands and minds, the

14 at Keller Auditorium in Portland. Tickets

Devil finds a work to do."

start at $25 with discounts for groups of ten

Poet W.H. Auden and Chester Kallman wrote the libretto for "The Rake's Progress" in 1949.

or more and rush tickets for students and mil-

itary. For more information and to purchase tickets go to www.portlandopera.org. "The Rake's Progress" is the only full-length "David Hockney: A Rake's Progress" will be opera by Igor Stravinsky. Composed in 1951, on exhibit through Aug. 2 at Portland Art Muthe opera is based on William Hogarth's pop- seum. For more information on the exhibit, go ular 1733, eight-painting chronicle, "A Rake's to www.portlandartmuseum.org. — Reporter: 541-383-0350, Progress." In 1975, David Hockney created the scenic hmccool@bendbulletin.com

June 6-Sept.16 —Britt Music 8 Arts Festival,Britt Festival Pavilion, Jacksonville; www.brittfest.org. CONCERTS June 6 —Haley Johnsen and My Brothers and I,Aladdin Theater, * Through May 30 —"Night Train to Portland; TF Memphis":Featuring music from the June 7 —Great Lake Swimmers, golden age of soul, blues and rock 'n' Alberta Rose Theatre, Portland; www. roll, and from such legends as Otis albertarosetheatre.com. Redding, Elvis Presley, Aretha Franklin, Aladdin Robert Johnson, Sam and Dave, Wilson June 7 —James McMurtry, Theater, Portland; TF* Pickett, Chuck Berry, Muddy Waters and Etta James; Craterian Theater at the June 7 —NeonTrees, Wonder Collier Center for the Performing Arts, Ballroom, Portland; TF* Medford; www.craterian.org. June 8 —Halestorm, Roseland Theater, * May 29 —Awolnation, Roseland Portland; CT * Theater, Portland; SOLDOUT;CT June 8 —Sufjan Stevens, Arlene May 29 —Cast Of Clowns: Featuring: Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; SOLD Melvin Seals, Greg Anton, Mark Karan, OUT; P5* Scott Gillian; Aladdin Theater, Portland; June9— Jonathan Richman, Aladdin TF* Theater, Portland; TF* May 29 —Merideth Kaye Clark: June12 —Screeching Weasel and Portland Center Stage; Ellyn Bye MxPx,McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Studio, Portland; www.pcs.org or * Portland; CT 503-445-3700. June12 —Todd Rundgren, Wonder May 29 —ShyGirls, Wonder Ballroom, Ballroom, Portland; TF* * Portland; TF June 14 —GordonLightfoot, Cuthbert May 30 —Awolnation, McDonald Amphitheater, Eugene; TW* * Theatre, Eugene; TW June 16 —Ingrid Michaelson, May 30-31 —Evynne HoHens,The McMenamins Edgefield, Troutdale; Shedd Institute, Eugene; www.theshedd. www.etix.com. org or 541-434-7000. June16 —Steven Wilson, Aladdin May 30— The MountainGoats, Theater, Portland; SOLDOUT;TF* Wonder Ballroom, Portland; SOLDOUT; June17 —Purity Ring, McMenamins TF* Crystal Ballroom, Portland; SOLDOUT; May 31 —King Chip, Roseland Theater, www.etix.com. * Portland; CT June17 —Steel Pulse, Roseland June1 —Of Mice & Men, Roseland Theater, Portland; CT* * Theater, Portland; CT June18 —Scott Bradlee 8 June 2-3 —Robben Ford, Aladdin PostmodernJukebox,McMenamins * Theater, Portland; TF Crystal Ballroom, Portland; www.etix. June3— Imagine Dragons,Mo da com. Center, Portland; TM* June19 —JoeyBadaSS,Wonder June 3 —Jon Bellion, Roseland Ballroom, Portland; TF* * Theater, Portland; CT June 20 —The Doobie Brothers, June 3 —Neutral Milk Hotel, McMenamins Edgefield, Troutdale; * McDonald Theatre, Eugene; TW www.etix.com. June 3 —Nico 8 Vinx,Wonder June 20 —EdSheeran, Moda Center, Ballroom, Portland; TF" Portland; TM* June 3 —Tori Kelly, McMenamins June 20 —Houndmouth, Wonder Crystal Ballroom, Portland; www. Ballroom, Portland; TF* torikellymusic.com. June 21 —Chicago, Oregon Zoo, * June 4 —Anuhea and Etana, Wonder Portland; TF * Ballroom, Portland; TF June 21 —Death Grips, Roseland June 4 —YelaWolf, Roseland Theater, Theater, Portland; SOLDOUT;CT* * Portland; CT June23— Mono, Wonder Ballroom, * June 5 —Best Coast, Alhambra Portland; TF * Theatre, Portland; TF June 24 —The Assad Brothers, June 5 —The Polish Ambassador, Winningstad Theatre, Portland; P5* McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, June 24 —Bootsy's Rubber Band, Portland; www.etix.com. McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, June 5 —Seinabo Sey, Wonder Portland; www.etix.com. * Ballroom, Portlan; TF June 26 —Willie Nelson and Alison June 5 —YelaWolf, McDonald Theatre, Krauss,McMenamins Edgefield, Eugene; TW* Troutdale ;SOLD OUT;TF*


THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, MAY 29, 2015 June 27 —The B-52s, Oregon Zoo, * Portland; TF June 27 —Elle King,Wonder Ballroom, * Portland; TF June 28 —Metropolitan Youth Symphony 8 Portland School OfRock, * Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF June 28 —The Ting Tings, Star Theater, Portland; www. startheaterportland.com. June 29 —The ABBAShow, Craterian Theater at the Collier Center for the Performing Arts, Medford; www. craterian.org. June 30 —RobThomas, Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; P5* July 1 —Robin Trower,Aladdin Theater, * Portland; TF July 1 —lUxedo, Wonder Ballroom, * Portland; TF July 2 —The Green, Wonder Ballroom, * Portland; TF July 2 —Tyler The Creator, Roseland Theater, Portland; CT* July 5 —Big Business, Dante's, Portland; www.danteslive.com. July 7 —Pouya, Roseland Theater, * Portland; CT July 7 —Sheryl Crow,McMenamins Edgefield, Troutdale; www.etix.com. July 8 —Death Cab for Cutie, McMenamins Edgefield, Troutdale; SOLD OUT;www.etix.com. July 8 —Elvis Costello and The Imposters,Arlene Schnitzer Concert * Hall, Portland; P5 July 8 —Kate Power 8 Steve Einhorn, * Main Street, Portland; P5 July 8 —The Minus 5, Main Street, Portland; P5* July10-11 —The Decemberists, McMenamins Edgefield, Troutdale; JULY 10 SOLD OUT; www.etix.com. July11 —Indigo Girls, Oregon Zoo, * Portland; TF July11 —Purusa and lan Moore, * Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF July 13 —Lyle Lovett, McMenamins Edgefield, Troutdale; www.etix.com. July14 —Amos Lee 8 David Gray, McMenamins Edgefield, Troutdale; SOLD OUT;www.etix.com. July 14 —John MayaH,The Shedd Institute, Eugene; www.theshedd.org or 541-434-7000. July 15 —Joey Porter's Trihute to Stevie Wonder,Main Street, Portland; P5* July 15 —John MayaH,Aladdin * Theater, Portland; TF July 16-19 —Northwest String Summit,Horning's Hideout, North Plains; www.stringsummit.com. July17 — Graham Nash, Mc Donald Theater, Eugene; TW* July 17 —Harry Connick, Jr., Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; P5* July 18 —BADBADNOTGOOD, McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; www.etix.com.

July 18 —Graham Nash,Aladdin * Theater, Portland; TF July 21 —Jane's Addiction, McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; SOLDOUT;www.etix.com. July21 — John M eHencamp, Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; P5* July 21 —Rush, Moda Center, Portland; www.ticketmaster.com. July 22-23 —Built to Spill, Wonder Ballroom, Portland; TF* July 22 —Rickie Lee Jones,Aladdin * Theater, Portland; TF July 22 —The Shanghai Woolies, Main Street, Portland; P5* July 23 —Morrissey, McMenamins Edgefield, Troutdale; www.etix.com. July 23 —Third EyeBlind, Cuthbert Amphitheater, Eugene; TW" July 23 —Unknown Mortal Orchestra, * Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF July 24 —Bruce Hornshy & The Noisemakers,Oregon Zoo, Portland; TF*

July24-26— Northwest W orldReggae Festival,Scio; www.nwwrf.com. July24 — Say Anything,Roseland Theater, Portland; CT* July 25 —Barenaked Ladies, McMenamins Edgefield, Troutdale; SOLD OUT;www.etix.com. July 25 —Jamie XX, Wonder Ballroom, * Portland; TF July 25 —Sweet HarmonySoul, Oregon Zoo, Portland; TF* July 25 —Taj Mahal, Roseland Theater, * Portland; CT July 26 —Charlie XCX andBleachers, McMenamins Edgefield, www.etix.com. July 26 —John Butler Trio, Oregon Zoo, Portland; TF* July 29 —Ratatat, Roseland Theater, * Portland; CT

LECTURESSK

COMEDY May 29 —Oregon BookAwards Author Tour: Cari Luna, Dawn Diez Willis and Willy Vlautin,Crossroads Art Center, Baker City; www.literary-

arts.org. May 30 —Kids in the Hall: The groundbreaking five-man sketch comedy troupe discovered in the late1980s bring their seminal, takeno-prisoners comedy to stages in cities both north and south of the US/ Canadian border; Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; P5* May 30— TEDxPortland:Enjoy 16 brilliant talks, four thrilling

performances,anddelightful surprises as you seeaglimpse into possible Tomorrows; Keller Auditorium, Portland; P5*

June 1 —Mariale Hardiman, Ed.d.: "Artand Learning the Brain"; Newmark Theatre, Portland; P5*, TW* or 800-273-1530.

out of town *Tickets TW:TicketsWest, www.ticketswest.com or 800-992-8499 TF:Ticketfly, www.ticketfly.

GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 23 July 25 —Uhh YeahDude:A comedy podcast hosted by Seth Romatelli and Jonathan Larroquette; Aladdin Theater, * Portland; TF July 28 —Anthony Bourdain, Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; P5*

com or 877-435-9849

CT:CascadeTickets, www. cascadeticekts.com or 800514-3849

P5:Portland'5 Centers for the Arts, www.portland5.com or 800-273-1530 June 5 —Richard Dawkins: Richard Dawkins will appear on stage in conversation with Peter Boghossian to discuss science, religion, atheism and much more; Newmark Theatre, Portland; P5* June 9 —BrianKomei Dempster and Janice P. Nimura:"Topaz," Dempster's debut poetry collection, examines the experiences of a Japanese American family separated and incarcerated in American World War II prison camps; "Daughters of the Samurai: A Journey from East to West andBack" byJanice P.Nim ura,

is a true story of five youngJapanese daughters of samurai-who, in the 1870s, were sent by the Japanese government to San Francisco to learn American customs; Literary Arts, Portland; www.literary-arts.org. June 11 —Rachel Eliza Griffiths and Ashley Toliver:Toliver is a 2015 Oregon Literary Fellowship recipient, the author of the chapbook"Ideal Machine (Poor Claudia)" and the recipient of a Cave Canem fellowship and a Djerassi Resident Artists Fellowship; Griffiths is a poet and visual artist and the recipient of fellowships including Provincetown Fine Arts Work Center, Vermont Studio Center, Millay Colony, and the CaveCanem Foundation; Literary Arts, Portland; www.literary-arts.org. June18 —Bill Burr, Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; P5* June 24 —Katharine Hayhoe: Renowned climate scientist, and political conservative, Hayhoe was recently cited as one of Time Magazine's "100 Most Influential People" and as one of Foreign Policy's "Leading Global Thinkers" in 2014; Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; P5* June 27 —Eddie Izzard, Keller Auditorium, Portland; P5* July10 —Marc Maron, Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF" July18 —Jim Gaffigan:Jim Gaffigan is a Grammy nominated comedian, NewYork Times best selling author, top touring performer and father of five; Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; P5* July 20 —Jim Gaffigan: Grammy nominated comedian, New York Times bestselling author, top touring performer and father of five; Hult Center for the Performing Arts, Eugene; www. hultcenter.org or 541-682-5000.

SYMPHONY 8K

OPERA May 29 —Portland Youth Rock Orchestra SummerBlast Off Concert: PYRO gives students from all over the metropolitan area focused musical training and exposure to the greatest of rock and orchestral literature; Winningstad Theatre, Portland; P5* May 30 —University of Oregon School of Music andDance Spring Concert,Hult Center forthe Performing Arts, Eugene; www.hultcenter.org or 541-682-5000. June 11, 12, 14 —"The Rake's Progress":Stravinsky's musical inspiration comes from Mozart, with his opera blending raucous comedy with life-and-death drama a la DonGiovanni; Keller Auditorium, Portand; www. portlandopera.org or 503-241-1802 or 866-739-6737. June12-28 —Music by the Sea: Astoria Music Festival:The festival hosts more than 26 classical, opera and chamber music performances

each yearfeaturing world-class stars

and ensembles rarely seen outside of the United States' largest cities; Various locations, Astoria; www. astoriamusicfestival.org. June22-July 26— Chamber Music Northwest 45th SummerFestival, Chamber Music Northwest, Portland; www.cmnw.org. June 25 —"Flutes, Flautists 8 Flourishes":Featuring Band Directors from 34 states and five foreign countries; Presented by The American Band College of Sam Houston State University; Craterian Theater at the Collier Center for the Performing Arts, Medford; www.craterian.org. June 25-July12 —Oregon Bach Festival, Variousvenues,Eugene;www. oregonbachfestival.com. July 8 —Fred Sherry & Friends:A dynamic contemporary program led by Chamber Music Northwest favorite Fred Sherry; Jimmy Mak's, Portland; www.

cmnw.org.

July15 —"The French Connection": A remarkable evening of French music, including Messiaen's transformative and spiritually evocative "Quartet for the End of Time," concert performers include

manyoftheyoungup-and-coming artists from Chamber Music Northwest's Protege Project; Alberta Rose Theatre, Portland; www.cmnw.org. July17, 19, 23,25, 30 —"The Elixir of Love":Gaetano Donizetti's most warm-hearted creation, notable for its charming characters, its melodic grace, and the poignant tenor aria"Una furtive lagrima;" Newmark Theatre, Portland;

www.portlandopera.org or 503-2411802 or 866-739-6737. July 22 — Club BodyVox: BodyVox and Chamber Music Northwest team up again this year for two concerts in one night featuring classics, a world premiere, and more; BodyVox Dance Center, Portland; www.cmnw.org. July29 —3Leg Torso,Main Street, Portland; P5*

THEATERSKDANCE Through May 30 —"Cosmosis": BodyVox with the Amphion Quartet, BodyVox Dance Center, Portland; www. bodyvox.com or 503-229-0627. Through May 31 —"Ramona Quimby": Presented by Oregon Children's Theatre; * or NewmarkTheatre, Portland; P5 503-228-9571. Through June 7 —"DontreH, Who Kissed the Sea":A present-day hero's quest Philharmonic exploring the lengths and depths we must go to redeem history's wrongs; Oregon Contemporary Theatre, Eugene; www. octheatre.org or 541-465-1506. Through June14 —"The Lion":One man, six guitars, and a true story of love, loss, family loyalty, and the redemptive power of music; Portland Center Stage; Gerding Theater at the Armory, Portland; www.pcs.org or 503-445-3700. Through June 21 —"The Liar": An adaptation by David Ives; Artist Repertory Theatre; Alder Stage, Portland; www.artistsrep.org or 503-241-1278. Through June 21 —"Three Days of Rain":This Pulitzer Prize-nominated play will star beloved actors from the Portland-filmed NBCtelevision series "Grimm": Silas Weir Mitchell (Monroe) and Sasha Roiz (Captain Renard); Portland Center Stage; Gerding Theater at the Armory, Portland; www.pcs.org or 503-445-3700. Through Oct. 31 —Oregon Shakespeare Festival:The following productions are part of the Oregon Shakespeare Festival: "Fingersmith"

(through July 9), "LongDay'sJourney into Night" (through Oct. 31), "Much Ado about Nothing" (through Nov. 1), "Guys and Dolls" (through Nov. 1),

"Pericles" (throughNov. 1), "Secret Love in Peach Blossom Land" (April 15-Oct. 31), "Antony and Cleopatra"

(June 2-Oct. 9), "HeadOverHeels" (June 3-Oct. 10), "The Count of Monte Cristo" (June 4-Oct. 11), "The Happiest Song Plays Last" (July 7-Nov.1) and "Sweat" (July 29-Oct. 31); Oregon Shakespeare Festival, Ashland; www.osfashland.org or 800-219-8161. June4 — "A La M ode":MO XIE Contemporary Ballet, the only contemporary ballet company in the Pacific Northwest, brings together three dance companies for an evening of collaboration in contemporary

dance performance; NewmarkTheatre, * Portland; P5

Continued next page


out of town

PAGE 24 • GO! MAGAZINE

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From previous page June 5-7 —"The Bicycle Men": This sublimely bawdy, awardwinning musical comedy tells the story of Steve, a hapless American cyclist whose bike breaks down in a small French village. There he encounters a bizarre assortment of twisted locals as he waits for his bike to be fixed; Winningstad Theatre, Portland; P5* June13 —"Abbaqueen: A Royal Celebration":Presented by Portland Gay Men's Chorus; P5* or 503-226-2588. June13-14 —JAG:BodyVox's Junior Artist Generator is an elite training program that fosters the development of a new generation of performers. Don't miss their annual Portland performance. This years program will include work by: Jamey Hampton, Ashley Roland, Eowyn Emerald, Tracey Durbin, Rachel Slater, Jenelle Yarbrough and Josh Murry; BodyVox Dance Center, Portland; www.bodyvox. com. June19, 21 —"The Day the Earth Stood Still":Presented by Fred Crafts' Radio Redux; Hult Center for the Performing Arts, Eugene;

Ql 0

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www.radioreduxusa.com or 541-682-5000. June 19-21, 26-28 —"How To Succeed In Business Without

Really Trying":"HowToSucceed

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, MAY 29, 2015

July 8-Aug. 2 —"Twelfth Night": William Shakespeare's sparkling,

exhibits are currently on display: "Extra Credit" (through July

romantic comedyof love, longing,

11); Museumof Contemporary

gender confusion and marriage; Portland Shakespeare Project; Artists Repertory Theatre, Portland; www.portlandshakes.org or 503-313-3048. July10 —"Dancing with the Stars: Live!":ABC's hit show "Dancing with the Stars" is going back on the road giving fans the opportunity to see their favorite stars dance live in their hometowns; Keller Auditorium, Portland; P5* July 22 —Club BodyVox:BodyVox and Chamber Music Northwest team up again this year for two concerts in one night featuring classics, a world premiere, and more; BodyVox DanceCenter, Portland; www.cmnw.org.

Craft, Portland; www. museumofcontemporarycraft.org or 503-223-2654. Through Aug. 10 —World Forestry Center:The following exhibits are currently on display: "Forestial, Salvage, Inhabit" (through Aug. 10); World Forestry Center, Portland; www.worldforestry.org. Through Sept. 7 —Oregon Museum of Science and Industry: The following exhibits are currently on display: "Ripley's Believe it or Not" (Through Sept. 7); Oregon Museum of Science and Industry, Portland; www.omsi.edu or 800-955-6674. Through Sept. 20 —Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art:The following exhibits are currently on display: "Frozen Film Frames: Portraits of Filmmakers by Jonas Mekas" (through June 7), "Gifts from the Judith and Jan Zach Estate" (through June 15), "Elegance 8 Nobility: Modern 8 Contemporary Korean Literati Taste" (through June 30), "Ten Symbols of Longevity and Late

In Business Without Really Trying" boasts a hilarious book by Abe Burrows, Jack Weinstock and Willie Gilbert and an exhilarating score by Frank Loesser that includes such priceless songs as "I Believe in You," "A Secretary Is Not A Toy," "Brotherhood of Man" and "The Company Way"; The Shedd Institute, Eugene; www.theshedd. org or 541-434-7000. June 23-28 —"Potted Potter — The Unauthorized Harry Experience — A Parody":Daniel Clarkson and Jefferson Turner take on the ultimate challenge of condensing all seven Harry Potter books (and a real life game of Quidditch) into seventy hilarious EKHIBITS minutes; Newmark Theatre, * Portland; P5 Through May 31 —Portland Children's Museum: Thefollowing July 8, 15 —Unit Souzou: Portland's newest professional taiko exhibits are currently on display: company, UniSouzou t (pronounced "Circus Zirkus" (through May 31); Portland Children's Museum, "sohzoh") is at the forefront of a Portland; www.portlandcm.org. growing artistic movement within the world-wide taiko community; Through July11 —Museum of Main Street, Portland; P5* Contemporary Craft:The following

I

Joseon KoreanCulture" (through June 30), "Vistas of a World Beyond: Traditional Gardens in Chinese Material Culture" (through July 26), "Amanda Marie and X-0: The Many Places We Are" (through Aug. 9), "Rick Bartow: Things You Know But Cannot Explain" (through Aug. 9),

"Gustavo Germano:Ausencias" 11 I

11

(through Aug. 16), "The Word Became Flesh: Images of Christ in Orthodox Devotional Objects"

(through Aug. 30), "Japanese

I I I

err

Impressions from the Vault: The Rare, the Beautiful, and the Bizarre" (through Sept. 6) and "Brett Weston in Oregon" (through Sept. 20); Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art, Eugene; jsma.

uoregon.edu. 1

i>tI

Through Oct. 18 —Portland Art Museum:The following exhibits are currently on display: "Classically Modern: The Portraiture of Vera Prasilova Scott" (through June 21), "APEX: Betty LaDuke" (through July 19), "Subject/Object: Modernist Photography from the Bluff Collection" (through July 26), "David Hockney: A Rake's Progress" (through Aug. 2) and "Handand Wheel:Contemporary

JapaneseClay" (through Oct.18); Portland Art Museum, Portland; www.portlandartmuseum.org or 503-226-2811. d t

June 4-30 —Fire On TheWater: Dragon Boat Art Show:AGroup Art Show inspired by the theme of Dragon Boating; Antoinette Hatfield Hall, Portland; P5*

MISCELLAMY June 4-7 —Goonies Day:This June marks 30 years since cult-classic "The Goonies" hit the silver screen and Astoria is celebrating in a big way; Various locations, Astoria; www.thegoondocks.org. June 5-7 —WaHowaValley Festival of Arts:The festival showcases established, awardwinning and emerging talents amid the wonder of the Wallowas; Joseph Community Center, Joseph; www. wallowavalleyarts.org, 541-4321078 or 510-390-2121. June 6 —Grand Floral Parade: Presented by Spirit Mountain Casino; Veterans Memorial Coliseum, Portland; www. ticketmaster.com. June13 —"Tipper: An Ambient Journey":Beloved presents the second ever showing of leading transformational artists, Alexand Allyson Grey, and leading visual manipulator, Johnathan Singer's, ambient performance, "Tipper"; Hult Center for the Performing Arts, Eugene; www.hultcenter.org or 541-682-5000. June14-28 —Portland Jewish FilmFestival:The Portland Jewish Film Festival explores themes of spirituality and Jewish identity throughout all parts of the world, especially how American Jews perceive themselves in a larger social context; Northwest Film Center, Portland; www.nwfilm.org. June 19-21 —OregonGarden Brewfest,The Oregon Garden, Silverton; www.oregongarden.org. June 20 —"Full Draw" Film Tour: "Full Draw" breaks the boundaries of hunting films and will truly inspire all who share the passion and pursuit of bow hunting and outdoor films; Craterian Theater at the Collier Center for the Performing Arts, Medford; www.craterian.org. June20 — unReal,a M ountain Bike Film:Rise into the unReal and

explore the imagination of some of the best mountain bikers on the planet, creating a world where snow is fair game, 1000-pound mammals are riding partners, and anything is possible; Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF*

July 10-12 —OregonCountry Fair,Veneta, Oregon; www. oregoncountryfair.org or TW* July17- Aug. 27 —TopDown: Rooftop Cinema:Top Down is the Northwest Film Center's annual outdoor film series held atop the panoramic parking rooftop of the Hotel deLuxe, this unique outdoor event also includes performances from local bands, cocktails, beers, and BBQ from Gracie's Restaurant; Hotel deLuxe, Portland; www. nwfilm.org.


GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 25

THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, MAY 29, 2015

e 4

Columbia Pictures / Submitted photo

Bradley Cooper, left, and Emma Stone star in "Aloha."

ri t s

ots,castcar

s we learned from leaked Cooper hits a lot of strong notes e-mails last year, Sony Pic- as Brian Gilcrest, who grew up tures Entertainment execs dreaming of soaring to the heavens were not thrilled about Cameron for NASA but wound up as a celeCrowe's latest film, eventually ti- brated but increasingly mercenary tled "Aloha" and now arriving in defensecontractorwho was leftfor theaters. dead after one particularly disasAmy Pascal, then co-chair of trous assignment. SPE, wrote, "The satellite makes no Now saddled with a perpetual sense," "The gate makes no sense" limp, both literally and spiritually, and as for the movie itself: "It never, Brian arrives in Hawaii — scene not even once, ever works."* of some of his greatest triumphs Pascal was mostly right about — to facilitate the launching of a the satellite and the gate, and there satellite funded by the eccentric, ARE times when "Aloha" doesn't gung-ho American billionaire Carwork — and yet I'm recommend- son Welch (Bill Murray, perfectly ing it for its sometimes loony sense weird and great). of wonder, its trippy spirituality, its Now let's welcome the cast of brilliant cast and because I seem colorful co-leads and supporting to be a sap for even the Cameron players! • Danny McBride is Col."FinCrowe movies almost nobody else gers" Lacy, so nicknamed because likes. Looking suitably the worse for he has a condition in which his wear for his character, Bradley hands flap about like a bird. (And

A

RICHARD

ROEPER

r o w e's atest,' o a' wouldn't you know it, Tracy and and will pave the way for the reBrian had a big thing back in the spectful relocation of a burial site day. and the construction of whatever • Alec Baldwin is the intimidat-

it is the civilian billionaire and the

ing Gen. Dixon, who has four stars American military are planning. AND a chip on his shoulder, espe- (As I said, I wouldn't disagree with cially when it comes to Brian.

Pascal about the murky business

• Emma Stone is the plucky involving the gate and the satellite. Allison Ng, a fighter pilot who ro- At times it's nearly impossible to "Aloha" manticizes the stars and the sky, follow.) 105 minutes Brian respects the Hawaiian culand constantly reminds everyone she's one-quarter Hawaiian. (The ture, and Allison is a flat-out spiriPG-13, for language, including suggesti vecomments Air Force has very specific size tual devotee. There's lots of talk of requirements for pilots, but let's various Hawaiian myths. We get a yet he's the choice to be the DJ at a just go with Emma Stone, Fighter strange and beautiful occurrence Christmas party) Pilot.) late one night that may or may not • J o hn K r a s inski i s Jo h n Allison has been assigned to havebeen an apparition. Andthere "Woody" Woodside, a stoic, un- babysit Brian as Brian negotiates are some lovely musical interludes. smiling pilot who rarely says more with native leaders who wear (There have been some prerelease than two words, even to his wife, T-shirts that say "Hawaiian by voices of concern about the film's Tracy (Rachel McAdams) and Birth" on the front and "American treatment of Hawaiian culturetheir two children. Woody's par- by Force" on the back. If Brian but to my outsider's view, it seemed ticularly grumpy because he had can get their blessing for a gate quite respectful.) to give Brian a lift to Hawaii, and ceremony, it will be a PR coup Continued on page 27


movies

PAGE 26 e GO! MAGAZINE

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, MAY 29, 2015

Jasin Boland / Submitted photo

Dwayne Johnson asRayand Carla Gugino as Emma inthe action thriller "San Andreas."

'an

n

• DwayneJohnsonand othercastsmembers carry formulaic, apocolyptic earthquakefilm

move ou

us ml ROGER MOORE

like dominoes, fires erupting, his chopper crashing, the sea fleeing San Francisco Bay — and we do, too.

the science feels solid. God help them if they're only bluffing. It's a "swarm event" that runs up and down California's infamous San

Andreas Fault. Because...geology! Peyton ("Journey 2: The MysteSure, we know where it's gorious Island") never escape the ing, from the moment the ground The scriptand director Brad

D

isaster movies, which pre-

this minute uncovered a way to

date the zeitgeist's fascination with a world falling apart around us, are always great measures of the state of the Hollywood art of special effects. In "San Andreas," you will believe the ground is rippling under Los Angeles, the cracking col-

predict earthquakes, wears the horror of what he sees and what

lapse of the Hoover Dam and that

uniquely set up to save his soongeological feature earns that nick- to-be-ex-wife (Gugino, his "Race name all over again by being that to Witch Mountain" co-star) and sturdy force of nature the whole college coed daughter (Daddario, movie is anchored on. Dwayne of TV's first season of "True DeJohnson is the ex-Army chopper tective"). Johnson believes what pilot, now with the LA Fire De- he's seeing — buildings tumbling

a tidal wave is submerging San Francisco. But what sells this formula-

ic corker of Apocalypse Porn is the cast. Paul Giamatti, as a Cal

Tech seismologist who has just

he knows is to come, in his eyes, wide with terror.

Carla Gugino and Alexandra Daddario let panic, grief and relief when the shaking ends wash over them in what feels like real time. And the actor nicknamed for a

"San Andreas" 114 minutes PG-13, for intense disaster action and mayhem throughout, and brief strong language partment's air rescue unit, a man

time-honored formula for disas-

starts shaking until i t

ter movies — the warnings, unheeded, the short-sighted builder (Ioan Gruffudd), the disaster-imposed love interest (Hugo Johnstone-Burt) thrown together with

stops, several "swarms" later. But

the hot coed.

f i n a lly

"San Andreas"isa wel l-executed reminder of why we don't need to

fretover the zombie apocalypse when there are plenty of real calamities Mother Earth can throw

But here's what he and this pro- at us. And that Hollywood's best duction get exactly right. The cast craftsfolk a t D i g i tal D o m ain, is spot on.

House of Moves and other effects

The first death has meaning and pathos, as does the last one.

houses are getting even better at

The medical moments and der-

ring do can feel far fetched. But

recreatingthose worst case sce-

narios we love so much — in our movies, at least.


GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 27

THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, MAY 29, 2015

Separating earthquake fact from fiction in 'San Andreas' By Alicia Chang

where one massive tectonic plate

The Associated Press

dives beneath another. The 1960

A n d r eas F a ult magnitude-9.5 quake off Chile is awakens, unleashing back- the currentworld record holder. he Sa n

to-back jolts that leave a The San Andreas has revealed trail of misery from Los Angeles its awesome power before. In to San Francisco. Skyscrapers crumble. Fires erupt. The letters

1906, a magnitude-7.8 reduced

parts ofSan Francisco to fiery rubble.Nearly five decades ear-

of the Hollywood sign topple. Tsunami waves swamp the Gold-

en Gate Bridge. Hollywood's favorite geologic bad guy is back in "San Andreas" — a fantastical look at one of the world's realseismicthreats. The San Andreas has long been considered one of the most dangerous earthquake faults because of its length. At nearly 800

miles long, it cuts through California like a scar and is responsible for some of the largest shak-

ers in state history. In the film, opening today, a previously unknown fault near the Hoover Dam in Nevada ruptures and jiggles the San Andreas. Southern C a l ifornia

is rocked by a powerful magnitude-9.1 quake followed by an even stronger magnitude-9.6 in Northern California. U.S. Geological Survey seismologist Susan Hough accompanied The Associated Press to an advance screening of the film. Despite the implausible plot, she said the San Andreas will indeed break again, and without warning. "We are at some point going to face a big earthquake," she said.

lier, a similar-sized quake rattled the southern end of the fault. In 2008, the USGS led a team of 300 experts that wrote a script

detailing what would happen if a magnitude-7.8 hit the southern San Andreas. They wanted

to create a science-based crisis scenario that can be used for pre-

paredness drills. The lesson: It doesn't take a magnitude-9 or greater to wreak

Warner Bros. Pictures via The Associated Press

Dwayne Johnson, left, as Ray, and Carla Gugino as Emma, in a scene from the action thriller,nSan Andreas."

havoc. Researchers calculated a magnitude-7.8 would cause 1,800 deaths and 50,000 injuries. Hun-

the movie portrays. It isn't. Re-

dreds of old brick buildings and concretestructures and a few high-rise steel buildings would collapse. Computer models show the San Andreas is capable of producing a magnitude-8.3quake, but anything larger is dubious.

searchers have scoured every

Will there be warning signs? In the film, Lawrence Hayes, a

fictional seismologist at Caltech (a real university), notices spikes in "magnetic pulses" that light up California like a Christmas tree, heralding a monster quake. Despite a century of research, earthquake prediction remains

imaginable signal trying to find reliable precursors, but nothing has panned out," Hough said. quake can spark fires and other The latest focus has been on mayhem, but it can't displace wacreating early warning systems ter and flood San Francisco. that give residents and businessHough said the movie got one es a few seconds heads up after aspect right: The tide suddenly a quake hits, but before strong ebbing out signals a tsunami is shaking is felt. conllng. Japan has the most advanced More than 80 — mostly smallseismic alert system in the world while the U.S. is currently testing

a prototype.

A tsunami in SanFrancisco? Unlike the film, the San An-

dreas can't spawn tsunamis. elusive. Scientists can't predict Most tsunamis are triggered by Just how big? when a jolt is coming and are gen- underwater quakes, but they can The San Andreas is notori- erally pessimistic about ever hav- also be caused by landslides, volous for producing big ones, but a ing that ability. canoes and even meteor impacts. magnitude-9 or larger is virtualEvery warning sign scrutiG iant t s unami w a ve s a r e ly impossible because the fault is nized — animal behavior, weath- formed when the Earth'scrust not long or deep enough, Hough er patterns, electromagnetic sig- violently shifts, displacing huge noted. nals, atmospheric observations, amounts of seawater. The larger The most powerful temblors levels of radon gas in soil or the magnitude, the more these in recorded history have struck groundwater — has failed. waves can race across the ocean "We wish it were as simple as without losing energy. along offshore subduction zones

From previous page

tion is to grip your shoulder tightly and give you meanwound but e ver-chipper fighter pilot, this is what she ingful glances. (Crowe takes Allison and the cynical Bri- would have been like. a big chance in one scene an bicker for all of about 24 Complicating m a tters: where Woody finally "opens hours before the sparks start Tracy and Woody are on up." It lands with a cringe-into fly and the bickeringturns the verge of splitting up, and ducingthud.) to bantering and then ... well. Tracy seems all too eager to C rowe t i n kered w i t h At times Allison seems aw- pour her heart out to Brian. "Aloha" for years. (At one fully naive for an Air Force McAdams and Cooper are point Ben Stiller and Reese pilot tagged for greatness by great together, but Krasinski Witherspoon were to headthe brass, but Stone infuses is stuck playing a caricature line.) At times it does have Meanwhile, the

Sally from "When Harry

t i ghtly Met Sally... " had become a

her with limitless charm. If

whose idea of communica-

The San Andreas is strike-slip fault, in which opposing blocks of rocksslide past each other horizontally. A big San Andreas

ing from the 1906 San Andreas quake was barely felt in western

Nevada and southern Oregon, Hough said.

Drop, cover and hold on! When the ground starts to shake, the seismologist played by Paul Giamatti makes the ide-

al public service announcement: "Drop, cover and hold on."

Since 2008, millions of people in California and elsewhere have participated in yearly disaster past, triggered mainly by faraway drills in which they practice divquakes. ing under a table and learn other preparedness tips. Will the East Coast feel it? If you're outdoors when the In th e m o vie, th e s cientist ground moves, experts recomwarned that shaking would be felt mend bracing against a wall, on the East Coast. similar to what search-and-resEven the largest possible San cue helicopter pilot Ray Gaines, Andreas quake won't rattle the played by Dwayne "The Rock" East Coast (Sorry New York). Johnson,told scared survivors in While seismic waves from the movie. tsunamis have been observed a long California's coast in t h e

greatquakes can make the Earth

"Having Paul Giamatti shout-

ing, "Drop, cover and hold on!" and The Rock telling people to instruments because it's so low. crouch against a wall if they can Historical accounts show shak- is one heck of a PSA," Hough said. reverberate like a bell, the ringing can only be detected by sensitive

we're not exactly rooting for it veers from a study of the him in either case. Brian was complicated political history an idiot for blowing it with and rich cultural traditions Tracy, and given his track of Hawaii to a commentary record, part of us wants him on filthy rich civilians using to leave Allison alone. Rathe military for their own chel McAdams does a fine gain to a romantic quadran- job in navigating a character than the sum of its parts, as

gle, and what's with the col-

who's not always the most

onel and his flying fingers, sympathetic. Emma Stone anyway? continues to corner the marStill. Cooper is terrific in ket on plucky. As always, the feel of a movie that's less two love stories, eventhough Crowe makes interesting

and inspired (if sometimes overly corny) musical choices. "Aloha" is a great-looking movie with just enough bright spots to get us past the cloudy moments. *One other thing about those e-mails between Sony

executives: They were really looking forward to the remake of "Annie" and the sequel to "Paul Blart: Mall

Cop." Just sayin'.


movies

PAGE 28 e GO! MAGAZINE

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I

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, MAY 29, 2015

t

t wouldn't be fair to call "Clouds

of Sils Maria" a comeback vehicle

for Kristen Stewart because the "7wilight e heroine and tabloid favor-

ite hasn't really gone anywhere. But Stewart's blazing, blunt, pitch-per-

fect performance in this film serves as a reminder she's actually one of the bestactresses ofhergeneration. Look at it this way. Stewart shares

the screen with the great Juliette '

-

-

'

Binoche in scene after scene, and

holds her own every step of the way. In this gorgeous, striking and sometimes brutally insightful work f rom w r iter-director Olivier A s -

sayas, Stewart plays Valentine, the preternaturally composed personal assistant to Binoche's Maria, one of the world's great movie stars. Maria Jacques Brinon I The Associated Press is approaching a certain age and she Kristen Stewart speaks onstage after she won the Best Performance byan isn't particularly thrilled about that. Actress in a Supporting Role award for "Clouds of Sils Maria" during the 40th (As if any woman, or man, is giddy Cesar Film Awards at Theatre du Chatelet in Paris in February. over the prospect of turning the cor-

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ner past 40.) We open in a train zipping its way to Zurich, where Maria will accept a

lifetime achievement award for one Wilhelm Melchior, a reclusive playwright and filmmaker who gave Maria her first big break some two Maria as a young woman who manipulates a woman twice her age to tragic results in a play (and then the movie adaptation) called "Maloja Snake," and the role made Maria a star. Now there's talk of a

r e m ake

— with a young hotshot director named Klaus (Lars Eidinger) looking to cast Maria in the role of the older woman. Maria is equal

development. (Sidebar: "Maloja Snake," so I've learned, is the term for a thick, white

cloud bank that winds through the Alps.) Valentine multitasks while Maria

has a contentious telephone con-

e

s

ROEPER

interiors in which Valentine and Ma-

ria run lines from the film that have deep and cutting parallels to their

decades previous. Melchior cast

parts flattered and horrified by this

s

RICHARD

versation with the attorney for her soon-to-be ex-husband. We imme-

Assayas and his director of photography, Yorick Le Saux, give us some overwhelmingly beautiful scenes set high in the Swiss Alpsand some expertly choreographed

"Clouds ofSils Maria" 124 minutes R, for languageand brief graphic nudity nationally renowned actress.

If the notion of playing the older woman in a remake of "Maloja Snake" isn't daunting enough, Maria is shaken to the core by Wilhelm's unexpected death. Everywhere she turns, she sees her own mortality.

own relationship. At times it's as if

we're watching "Who's Afraid of All About Eve." The dialogue, while occasionally a bit too heavy-handed, is oftenrazor-sharp and leavesam ark. In addition to the superb work from Binoche and Stewart, we're

treated to a stellar performance by Moretz as the whip-smart, calcu-

lating young star who shatters the preconceived, Googled stereotype Maria holds of her, and wins her over with immense and intense flat-

tery. (Later, when Maria tries to give "Clouds of Sils Maria" becomes Jo-Ann an acting note, she quickly learns Jo-Ann is no pushover.) It's a movie within a movie within a movie, as Maria agonizes over rare when a film has three robust, whether to play that older woman, deeply drawn female characters even though she still FEELS like the

— and Binoche, Moretz and Stew-

art deliver memorable, nuanced younger woman in the story. diately get a feel for the dynamic Klaus has cast an American ac- performances. "Clouds of Sils Maria" is an exbetween these two women. Yes, Ma- tion movie superstar named Jo-Ann ria is a major movie star and nearly (Chloe Grace Moretz) in the role of pertly filmed insider's look at the twice Valentine's age, but Valentine the younger woman. Valentine tells film business, the trappings of fame is as much the voice of reason and Maria she HAS to take the part. Not and the unstoppable, sometimes almost an older sibling figure as only is Klaus perhaps the best direc- bone-chilling march of time. It's she is a personal assistant. One gets tor of his generation, says Valentine, complex,wickedly funny and dark, the sense Valentine is one of the few Jo-Ann is also blazingly talented, and it features the best ensemble actpeople in Maria's life who speaks despite her reputation as a self-de- ing of any film I've seen so far this freely and openly to the great, inter- structive hot mess. year.


GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 29

THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, MAY 29, 2015

rX

O N LO C A L S CREEN S Here's what's showing onCentral Oregon movie screens. Forshowtimes, see listings on Page31.

+

+

+

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Reviews byRichard Roeper or Roger Moore, unless otherwise noted.

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HEADS UP

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"Spy" —SusanCooper (Melissa McCarthy) is an unassuming, deskboundCIA analyst,and the unsung hero behind theAgency's most dangerous missions. But when her partner (Jude Law)falls off the grid and another top agent (Jason Statham) is compromised, she volunteers to go deepundercover to infiltrate the world of a deadly arms dealer, and prevent aglobal disaster. This film opens June 5with early screenings Thursday. (R) — Synopsis from 20th Century Fox

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WHAT'S NEW "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. Rating: Three stars.105 minutes. (PG-13) —Roeper "Clouds of Sils Maria" — An expertly filmed insider's look at the film business, the trappings of fame and the unstoppable, sometimes bone-chilling march of time. It's rare when a film has three robust, deeply drawn femalecharacters — and Juliette Binoche, ChloeGrace Moretz and Kristen Stewart deliver memorable, nuancedperformances. Rating: Threeand ahalf stars.124 minutes.(R) — Roeper "Entourage" —"Entourage," the much-anticipated big-screen version of the award-winning hit HBOseries, reunites the show's original cast, led by Kevin Connolly, Adrian Grenier, Kevin Dillon, Jerry Ferrara andJeremy Piven. Movie star Vincent Chase (Grenier), together with his boys, Eric (Connolly), Turtle (Ferrara) and Johnny (Dillon), are back ... and back in business with super agent-turnedstudio head Ari Gold (Piven). Someof their ambitions havechanged, but the bond between themremains strong as they navigate the capricious and often cutthroat world of Hollywood. This film was not screened inadvance for critics. 105 minutes. (R) — Synopsis from I4ramer f3ros.Pictures "Iris" —She was never agreat beauty, a model or magazineeditor, never married anybody famous. But somehow, Iris Apfel wasanointed a New York "fashion icon." That Apfel achieved this status, with her vast collection of couture accessories earning a Metropolitan Museumof Art show followed bynewspaper profiles and magazinecovers, well into her '80s, is what makesher rise

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Michiel Huisman and Blake Lively star in "The Age of Adaline." astonishing, and worthy of "Iris," one STILL SHOWING of the last documentaries of the late Albert Maysles. Maysles could have "The Age of Adaline" — Hollywood made this another "GreyGardens," seeing Apfel as just a sad,shallow and long ago ceded "love that stands the test of time" to the realm of science well-heeled hoarder. ButApfel never fiction and fantasy, so "TheAgeof comes off as eccentric, just singular. Rating: Three stars. 80 minutes. (PG- Adaline" falls neatly into a genrethat includes "The Time Traveler's Wife," 13) — Moore "About Time," andeven "Somewhere "San Andreas" —In "SanAndreas," in Time." But building this film around you will believethe ground is rippling all the willowy, world-weary grace that under Los Angeles, the cracking Blake "Gossip Girl" Lively can muster collapse of the HooverDamand pays off. As atwenty-something that atidal wave is submerging who stopped aging 80years ago, San Francisco. But what sells this Lively suggests several lifetimes of formulaic corker of Apocalypse Porn experience in alove storythat ranges is the cast. Sure, weknow where it's from wistful to hopeful, a romance going, from the moment the ground whose female half understands its starts shaking until it finally stops, consequences. Rating: Threeand several "swarms" later. But "San a half stars.110 minutes. (PG-13) Andreas" is a well-executed reminder — Moore of why we don't need to fret over the "Avengers:AgeofUltron" — Captain zombie apocalypse whenthere are plenty of real calamities Mother Earth America, Iron Man,Thor andthe rest are back in agiant superhero adventure can throw at us. Andthat Hollywood's that's sometimesdaffy, occasionally best craftsfolk at Digital Domain, baffling, surprisingly touching and House of Movesandother effects even romantic with one kinetic thrill houses aregetting even better at another. It earns aplace of high recreating those worst casescenarios after ranking in theMarvel Universe. Rating: we love so much — inour movies, at Three and ahalf stars. 142 minutes. least. This film is available locally in (PG-13) —Roeper 3-D and IMAX 3-D. Rating: Twoand "Cinderella" —Disney's live-action a half stars. 114 minutes. (PG-13) — Moore Continued next page

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BAD CATS Fri.& Sat.,June 19th & 20th 7:00-10:00 PM

KENNY BLUE RAY Sat., June 6th 6:30 - 9:30 PM

THOMAS T AND THE BLUECHIPS Fri.& Sat.,June 26th & 27th 6:00-9:00 PM

BOMBEROS Fri., June 12th 6:00-9:00 PM

BOBBY LINDSTROM BAND Tues. - Fri., 12:00-2:00 PM

STONES THROW Sat. June 13th 6:00 - 9:00 PM

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PAGE 30 e GO! MAGAZINE

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, MAY 29, 2015

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"Cinderella" movie is anenchanting, exhilarating romantic adventure with gorgeous scenery, terrific sets, stellar cinematographyandOscar-worthy costumes. Lily Jamessparkles in the title role, andCateBlanchett makes a deliciously terrifying evil stepmother. Instead of are-imagined reboot, it's old-fashioned, andthat's kind of refreshing. Rating: Threeanda half stars. 105 minutes. (PG) —Roeper "The DivergentSeries: Insurgent" — For what it is, "Insurgent" is a reasonably executed, sporadically enjoyable installment in the projected four-part"Divergent" series, based on the novels byVeronica Roth. Yet, there's no escaping what it is, and what it is ... is silly. Thebest thing to say for the film, andthis is no small thing, is that "Insurgent" moves the storyforward significantly. Much of the screen time in "Insurgent" is taken up with politics, the efforts of Tris and Four to forge alliancesandlaunch a coup, but this makesfor flat viewing. "Insurgent" would be a much worse movie if the goodparts were all at the beginning. But theyaresavedfor the end, and they leavethe viewer with a feeling of, "Well, that wasOK,"even though most of it wasn't. Rating: Two stars. 116 minutes. (PG-13) — MickLaSalle, The SanFrancisco Chronicle "Fer From the MaddingCrowd"Thomas Hardy's romantic Victorian novel of class, labor and the fickle finger of love, "FarFromthe Madding Crowd," earns astately yet earthy and full-blooded film treatment from the Danish director ThomasVinterberg.

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Britt Robertson starts in "Tomorrowland." The film makesafine showcasefor Carey Mulligan ("TheGreat Gatsby"), Mathias Schoenaerts ("Rust & Bone"), Michael SheenandJunoTemple. And if it isn'tas decorousand deft astheJaneAusten romancesofan earlier literary (and cinematic) age,the longing is still there in astory that feels more lived-in, brutish andrealistic. Rating: Threeand ahalf stars. 119 minutes. (PG-13) —Moore "Furious 7" — This is oneof the most ridiculous thrillers I've everseen, but I have toadmit I wasentertained by

Hardy andCharlizeTheronmake one of the bestaction duosever in a stunningly effective post-apocalyptic fable, a chilling andyet exhilarating daytime nightmarethat alsocontains asurprising amount ofdepthand character development. This film is available locally in 3-D.Rating: Four stars.120 minutes. (R) —Roeper "Pitch Perfect 2" —Thesequel to 2012's surprise hit about acappella singers has a few wickedly funny oneliners andoccasional moments of zany inspiration, but the musical numbers

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the sheeraudacity of thecar chases andbattle sequences —and there were evensomegenuinelytouching moments. Rating: Threestars. 137 minutes. (PG-13) —Roeper "Home" — A little Jim Parsons goes a long way,and hegrates on your nerves voicing analien onthe runwith a smart seventh-grader (Rihanna). Kids will probably enjoythe colors and the music, butanyone over10 will see the plot twists a mileaway. Rating:Two stars. 96 minutes.(PG)— Roeper "Mad Max:FuryRoad" —Tom

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are often curiously dull, andthere are far too manyscenesthat serveas time-killing filler and/or journeys into head-scratching, "WhatwasTHAT?" territory. Rating: Twostars. 115 minutes. (PG-13) —Roeper "Poltergeist" —Well, the little girl gets it. KennediClements playsMaddy Bowen, the child trappedbetweenthe real world andthe afterlife in the new version of "Poltergeist," and givesus wild-eyed terror wecan hangonto and a blood-curdling screamthat will hauntyour nightmares. Therest of the players? Theysort of shrug it off. Sam Rockwell, asthe father of the missing child, lands his laughs. Buthe, Rosemarie DeWitt, JaneAdams(as a paranormal academic)andothers under-react to thestunning evidence of a supernatural menace in awayone can only describe asblase. This film is available locally in 3-D.Rating: One and a half stars. 93 minutes. (PG-13) — Moore "Tomerrowland" —A girl discovers a futuristic parallel universe in this great-looking, old-fashioned, at times soaring adventure ultimately brought down by aneedlessly convoluted plot, some surprisingly casual violence and heavy-handedlectures about how we're ourown worst enemy. This film is available locally in IMAX. Rating: Twostars.130 minutes. (PG) — Roeper "Welcome toMe" —Kristen Wiig gives perhapsthe most impressive performance I've seenthis year as a deeply troubledCalifornia woman who uses lottery winnings to gether own bizarre talk show.There's nevera moment whenwe're not worried about her, butthat's becausewe've come to care so muchabout her. Rating: Three and ahalf stars. 87 minutes. (R)— Roeper


movies

THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, MAY 29, 2015

MOVI E

T I M E S • For t:he meekof May 29

• There may bean additional fee for 3-Oand IMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change after press time. I

Submitted photo

"Seventh Son.u

N EW O N D V D 8 a BLU-RA Y The following movies were releasedtheweekofMay26.

"Cut Bank" — Thatfirst sight of agrain elevator in acrime film signals to us that no matter howdarkand bloody things turn, theviolence is goingto have afunny edge. Theending is where (Matt) Shakman("It's Always Sunnyin Philadelphia") loseshis nerveandthe whole affair swingswide ofthe mark. But this dark"Fargo Lite" farcemakes us sit up, takenotice andsmile, or at least smirk, right upuntil that "Hey, wait a minute" finale.DVDand Blu-ray Extras: Commentary,deleted and extendedscenesandonefeaturette. Rating: Two andahalf stars. 93 minutes. (R) — Moore "The Loft" — In "TheLoft," a group of marriedmen shareanapartmentso they canhaveaspaceto havesexual liaisons with women and argue about whose turn it is totakeoutthe trash. Of course, somethinggoeswrong and everyone inthe group suspects each other. NoDVDor Blu-ray Extras are listed for this film. This film wasnot given astar rating.108 minutes. (R) — Kay Coyte, Washington Post "Seventh Son" —Thelast of anoble order of magical knights (Jeff Bridges) trains his newapprentice asan evil queen (JulianneMoore) summonsher supernatural army.Evenasabig, loud, roaring B-moviewith noaspirations other than to beacinematic rollercoaster ride, "SeventhSon" issecondrate. DVD Extras: Threefeaturettes and a visual effectsgallery; Additional Blu-ray Extras:Onefeaturette, deleted/ additional scenesandan alternate ending. Rating:Onestar.102 minutes. (PG-13)—Roeper

Also available:

"Da SweetBlood ofJesus," "Nightlight" and "SeeYouinValhalla."

NextWeek:

"Focus," "Jupiter Ascending," "McFarland,USA"and"TheSpongeBob Movie: SpongeOutof Water."

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• Accessibility devices are available for some movies at Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 idIMAX

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Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend, 800-326-3264. • THE AGE OF ADALINE (PG-13) Fri-Sun: 3:55, 9:40 Mon: 1, 3:55, 7:20, 9:40 Tue:1, 3:55 • ALOHA (PG-13) Fri: noon, 3:10, 6:45, 9:55 Sat-Tue: noon, 2:45, 6:45, 9:45 • AVENGERS: AGEOF ULTRON (PG-13) Fri-Tue: 12:10, 3:25, 6:55, 10:10 • CLOUDS OF SILS MARIA (R) Fri-Tue: 1:10, 4:05, 7:05, 10:20 • ENTOURAGE (R) Tue: 7,10 Wed-Thu: 11:30 a.m., 2:10, 4:45, 7:30, Io:I5 • FAR FROM THE MADDING CROWD (PG-13) Fri-Tue: 11:40 a.m., 2:55, 6:15, 9:15 • HOME (PG) Fri-Tue: 11:55 a.m., 2:20 • MAD MAX: FURY ROAD(R) Fri-Tue: 12:10, 3:40, 7:45, 10:40 • MAD MAX: FURY ROAD3-D (R) Fri-Tue: 11:35 a.m., 2:35, 6:25, 9:25 • PITCH PERFECT 2 (PG-13) Fri-Tue: 11:45 a.m., 12:30, 2:45, 3:30, 6:25, 7:15, 9:45, 10:25 • POLTERGEIST (PG-13) Fri-Tue: 12:55, 3:20, 7:35, 10:05 • POLTERGEIST 3-D (PG-13) Fri-Tue: 7:50, 10:50 • SAN ANDREAS (PG-13) Fri-Tue: 11:30 a.m., 2:30, 7, 10 • SAN ANDREAS 3-D (PG-I3) Fri-Sun: 12:15, 1, 3, 5, 6:30, 7:20, 9:30 Mon-Tue: 12:15, 3, 5, 6:30, 9:30 • SAN ANDREAS IMAX 3-D (PG-13) Fri-Tue: 12:45, 7:45 • SPY (R) Thu:5,8 • TOMORROWLAND (PG) Fri-Tue: 11:50 a.m., 12:20, 3:15, 3:45, 6:40, 7:25, I0: I5, 10:25 • TOMORROWLAND IMAX (PG) Fri-Tue: 3:50, 10:30 • As of press time, complete movie timesforWednesdayand Thursdayat the Regal Old Mill Stadium 168IMAX were unavailable. CheckTheBulletfn s Community Life section those days for the complete movie listings. I

GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 31

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McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St., Bend, 541-330-8562 • CINDERELLA (PG) Sat-Sun: 11 a.m., 2 Wed: 2 • THE DIVERGENT SERIES:INSURGENT (PG-13) Fri-Thu: 5:30 • FURIOUS 7 (PG-13) Fri-Thu: 9 • Younger than 21 may attend all screeningsif accompanied by a legal guardian. Tin Pan Theater, 869 NWTin PanAlley, Bend, 541-241-2271 • IRIS (PG-13) Fri-Sat, Mon-Thu: 6 Sun: 5 • WELCOME TO ME(R) Fri, Tue-Thu: 8 Sat:4,8 Sun: 7

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Redmond Cinemas, 1535 SWOdemMedo Road, Redmond, 541-548-8777 • MAD MAX: FURY ROAD(R) Fri: 4:30, 7, 9:30 Sat-Sun: 11:30 a.m., 2, 4:30, 7, 9:30 Mon-Thu: 5:55, 8:30 • PITCH PERFECT 2 (PG-13) Fri: 4:15, 6:45, 9:15 Sat-Sun: 11:15 a.m., 1:45, 4:15, 6:45, 9:15 Mon-Thu: 5:45, 8:15 • SAN ANDREAS (PG-13) Fri:4,6:30,9 Sat-Sun: 11 a.m., 1:30, 4, 6:30, 9 Mon-Thu: 5:30, 8 • TOMORROWLAND (PG) Fri: 3:30, 6:15, 9 Sat-Sun: 12:45, 3:30, 6:15, 9 Mon-Thu: 5:15, 8 Sisters Movie House, 720 Desperado Court, Sisters, 541-549-8800 • ALOHA (PGl3) Fri: 5:15, 7:45 Sat: 2:45, 5:15, 7:45 Sun: 2:15, 4:30, 6:45 Mon-Thu: 6:30 • FAR FROM THEMADDING CROWD (PG-13) Fri: 4:45, 7:15 Sat: 2:15, 4:45, 7:15 Sun: 1:30, 4, 6:30 Mon-Thu: 6:15 • PITCH PERFECT 2 (PG-13) Fri: 5, 7:30 Sat: 2:30, 5, 7:30 Sun: 1:45, 4:15, 6:45 Mon-Thu: 6:30 • TOMORROWLAND (PG) Fri: 4:30, 7:15 Sat: 2, 4:30, 7:15 Sun: 1:30, 4, 6:30 Mon-Thu: 6

Madras Cinema 5,1101 SWU.S. Highway 97, Madras, 541-475-3505 • MAD MAX: FURY ROAD(R) Fri: 4:30, 7:10, 9:50 Sat: 1:45, 4:30, 7:10, 9:50 Sun: 1:45, 4:30, 7:10 Mon-Thu: 4:30, 7:10 • PITCH PERFECT 2 (PG-13) Fri:4:25,7,9:30 Sat: 1:50, 4:25, 7, 9:30 Sun: 1:50, 4:25, 7 Mon-Thu: 4:25, 7 • POLTERGEIST (PG-13) Fri: 5:20, 7:30, 9:45 Sat: 1, 3:10, 5:20, 7:30, 9:45 Sun: 1, 3:10, 5:20, 7:30 Mon-Thu: 5:20, 7:30 • SAN ANDREAS (PG-13) Fri, Mon-Thu: 4:45, 7:20 Sat-Sun: 11:45 a.m., 4:45, 7:20 • SAN ANDREAS 3-D (PG-13) Fri: 9:55 Sat: 2:10, 9:55 Sun: 2:10 • TOMORROWLAND (PG) Fri: 4:05, 6:50, 9:40 Sat: i:fS,4:05,6:50,9:4O Sun: 1:15, 4:05, 6:50 Mon-Thu: 4:05, 6:50 •

Pine Theater, 214 N. Main St., Prineville, 54I-416-IOI4 • SAN ANDREAS (PG-13) Fri: 4:10, 7:15 Sat-Sun: 1:10, 4:10, 7:15 Mon-Thu: 6:30 • TOMORROWLAND (Upstairs — PG) Fri:4,7 Sat-Sun: 1, 4, 7 Mon-Thu: 6:15 • The upstairs screening room has limited accessibility

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BENDRegal $terERs Old Mlll Stadlum 1e e IMAXSlslsroMovle House (844) 462-7342 ¹310 (541) 549-ee00


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