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bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD Happy GirlsRun—The perks of a run for womenonly A woman gets to win.D1

• IN SALEM: Lawmakers backontransport after impasse

• IN BEND: Foesgearing up to fight a local gastax

By Taylor W. Anderson

By Tyler Leeds

throughout the state to create jobs and maintain roads and bridges.

The Bulletin

SALEM — F o r B e n d r e sidents, After three weeks of meetings bethe only thing more important than tween legislative leaders and Gov. Kate

Plus Millionto one'When a doctor says you're unlikely to ever walk again, what doyou do? Run.D1

Odituary —BeauBiden, son of the vice president, was also a public servant.B4

Tiny sumo wrestlers-

They're the future of Japan's national sport — assuming it has a future.A7

maintaining roads and sidewalks are drinking water and police and fire protection. That's according to a survey the city released early this year, when 67 percent of respondents said they support their taxes going for road and sidewalk repair. The city's ability to meet those expectations lies with the Legislature, where lawmakers are again meeting to find a waythrough an impasse that's blocking a bill that would send money

Brown's office to rush to put together a major transportation package while avoiding higher costs down the line, the talks now include a wider group of lawmakers, The Bulletin has learned.

But evenifa dealcan be made, refining the wish lists put together by businesses and communities throughout Oregon is meticulous and typically takes months to accomplish. Time is

also an issue; the Legislature must adjourn no later than July 12. See Lawmakers/A5

a revenue stream, city staff has suggested, could be used to support a Even though theBend City Coun- bond to fund a large chunk of work cil hasn't formally endorsed a gas upfront and stave off the deterioratax, locals in the fuel industry have tion of local roads. The Bulletin

an attorney and are ready to squelch the idea.

Those in the fuel industry, how-

ever, think a gas tax will hurt their The city of Bend has about $80 businesses. Eight companies, inmillion in deferred street maintecluding Mid Columbia Producers nance, a figure that is projected and American Energy, have hired to rise faster and faster the longer Jeff Eager, a local attorney and forwork is put off. mer mayor, to lobby on their behalf. To address the issue, the City Combined, Eager says, those busiCouncil has discussed proposing a 5 nesses employ over 150 people and cents per gallon gas tax, which ear- operate 17 commercial establishly forecasts indicate could generate ments in the city. around $2.5 million annually. Such SeeTax /A5

National focus turns to rape kit

ALL THAT RECENT PHONE ACTIVITY • • •

BiZarre Weather —Heavy flooding, heat waves: Maywas a weird weather month.A3

Plus: Flooding —cities try to prepare — at great cost.A6

And a Wed exclusiveA biracial beauty queenchallenges Japan's self-image. benribunetln.com/extras

backlog

EDITOR'SCHOICE

By Sharon Cohen I

An Afghan ally's tale ofbetrayal, redemption

I i I

An electronic Amber Alert system launched inTexasin 1996 to inform the public of missing children. By2005, a national network was in place. Amber andother emergencyalerts — for weatherand criminal dangers — are sent viaTV, radio andemail, though theyare mostcommonly seen onelectronic highway signs. In 2005, sending alerts to wireless users wasalready in the works.

By Shashank Bengan Los Angeles Times

GHAZNI, Afghanistan — Temour Ebrahim had

little reason to be nervous when U.S. soldiers summoned him to their base in

this edgy highway town 80 miles south of Kabul, the

Afghan capital. For the better part of a decade, he had been

The Associated Press

The evidence piled up for years, abandoned in police property rooms, warehouses and crime labs. Now, tens of I •

A dramatic shift and prosecutors

'I

I

I

I

I I

I ' I I

I I

Ii

a dusty maze of Hesco

Tall and thickset, with

an English accent from living two decades in London, Temour was wellknown to the Americans as aformer police com-

is taking hold across the country as police

coming to the garrison in Ghazni, weaving through barriers for meetings with U.S. military and civilian personneL

By Dylan J. Darlinge The Bulletin

Emergency alerts have come to pockets

and purses near you. OVer the PaSt COuPle Of WeekS War11

soarces:www,readygov,U.s.officeofJusticeprograms,Ap Photosfrom The Associated Press, left, and FEMA

Hazara militias and source who helped locate Taliban

Oregon, alerting their owners to potential flash floods and abductions in the Northwest.

2011, an Army Special Forces team arrested him.

more women while evidence of their crimes languished in storage. Lawmakers, meanwhile, are proposing reforms to ensure this doesn't happen again. "There's definitely momentum," says Sarah Haacke Byrd, managing director of the Joyful Heart Foundation, an

advocacygroup working on the issue. "In the last year, we really are seeing the tide turn where federal and state governments are

shoved him into a cold car-

A week later he was

of whom attacked

ple to emergency information. They represent ever evolving national alert systems developing with

technology.

transferred by helicopter to the U.S. prison at Bagram airfield. He would

predators, many

The alerts are examples of how local, state and federal agencies are trying to quickly connect peo-

They accused him of working with the Taliban and spying for Iranian intelligence, bound his wrists with plastic handcuffs and go container in a restricted area of the base. This is a joke, Temour recalled thinking. He denied the allegations.

DNA matches to track down sexual

David Wray/rhe Bulletin

ings rattled cellphones around Central

But when he arrived that afternoon in December

scramble to process these kits and use

These new "wireless emergency alerts" that buzzyour phone may resembletext messages, but they look, sound and vibrate differently — they're designed to get your attention. There arethree kindsof wireless emergencyalerts: Amber, imminent threat and presidential, which are sent variously by state and local public safety officials, the National Weather Service, the National Center for Missing andExploited Children and the president of the United States. Amber Alertsstarted being automatically sent to millions of cellphones at the beginning of 2013. If you get anAmber Alert via phone, thecallbacknumber is800-THE-LOST (800-843-5678). If you have WEA-enabled a phone, youare automatically enrolled for the three kinds of alerts. (You canturn them off using instructions from your wireless provider.)

mander, liaison to ethnic weapons.

thousands of sexual assault kits are giving up their secrets — and rapists who've long remained free may finally face justice.

"The goal is to reach as many people as possible,"

cellphones are set up to receive them.

said Savannah Brehmer,

Officials recommended

phones also put out a sound when they receive an alert.

spokeswoman at the regional Federal Emergency Management Agency office in Bothell, Washington. M ost major phone carriers

people contact their carrier if their phone appears to not

tention," said Michael Ryan,

emergency manager for Crook County.

notifications about missing children; imminent threat,

messages but do not become

While the alerts show up

have the ability to send out

bogged down in the stream of notes from friends and family on many people's phones. Instead they flash to

on all sorts of phones, they should not lead to any additional costs appearing on

"wireless emergency alerts," as they are referred to by federal agencies. And newer

receive alerts.

The alerts look like text

"There is no cost to receive

the front of the phone. Some "They want to get your at-

bills.

offering critically needed leadership and critically needed resourcesto fixthe problem."

the alerts," Brehmer said. The three main kinds of

countyprosecutor's

In Cleveland, the

alerts that may pop up on

office has indicted

a cellphone are: Amber, or

more than 300 rape suspects since 2013, based on newly test-

ed DNA evidence from old kits. Au-

such as earthquakes, floods

or deadly weather; and presidential, warnings from the

thorities expect to

eventually charge

nation's top office. SeeAlerts /A6

1,000.

See Backlog /A4

spend the next 2/2 years in detention — a dramatic

reversal for a man who once was the closest thing

TODAY'S WEATHER

the United States had to a

friend in this shadowy corner of Afghanistan. SeeAfghan/A6

b

A p.m. t'storm High 80, Low51 Pa g e B6

The Bulletin

INDEX Books Business Calendar

F4-6 Classified G f - 6 L ocal/State Bf -6 Puzzles Ef -6 Community Life Cf -8 Obituaries B4-5 Sports Ff-3 TV/Movies B2 Crosswords C6, G2 Opinion

AnIndependent

Df 6 C7

Q I/I/e userecyclednewsprint

Vol. 113, No. 151,

7 sections 0

88 267 0 23 3 0

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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MAY 31, 2015

The Bulletin

NATION Ee ORLD

How to reachUs TruCk emiSSienS —This week, the Environmental Protection Agency is expected to propose regulations to cut greenhousegas emissions from heavy-duty trucks, a major newenvironmental mandate by theObamaadministration that could dramatically transform America's trucking industry. A tractor-trailer now averages 5 and 6 miles to agallon of diesel. The newregulations would seekto raise that average to asmuch as 9mpg, requiring that fuel economy increase up to 40percent by 2027 compared with levels in 2010, according to people briefed on the proposal. Trucks account for a quarter of all greenhousegasemissions from vehicles in the U.S.

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New York Times News Service

WASHINGTON The Senate's showdown this weekend over the future of the gov-

ernment's dragnet of American phone records is not the

NEW S R O O M FA X

result of a partisan fracas. It is an ideological battle within the Republican Party, pitting the Senate majority leader against the speaker of the

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Ir8ll lluCI88r de8I —Secretary of State John Kerry began amajor push Saturday to conclude anuclear agreement with Iran aheadof the June 30deadline. Kerry and MohammadJavad Zarif, the Iranian foreign minister, met in GenevaonSaturday for six hours of talks, the first high-level negotiating round since the two sides settled on the outline of anagreement on April 2. A senior U.S. official said afterward that the discussions hadbeen"intense at times, but very focused andvery comprehensive." It is unclear when Kerry will meet again with the Iranians, but negotiators plan to convene on Thursday.

Last month, the House overThat has been strongly opwhelmingly passed a bill that posed bySen.Mitch McConwould overhaul the Patriot Act nell, R-Ky., the majority leader, and curtail the metadata sur- and more than two dozen othveillance exposed by Edward er senators who fear ending Snowden. But in the Senate, the program would endanger that measure failed on a pro- national security. cedural vote this month, and efforts to pass a short-term ex-

Rep. Devin Nunes, R-Calif.,

chairman of the House Intelli-

tension collapsed under objec- gence Committee, said House tions by three senators. Under the bipartisan bill, known as the USA Freedom

comers againstlong-serving members, and defense hawks Act, changes would be made against a rising tide of young- to the Patriot Act to prohibit er, more libertarian-minded bulk collection of telephone "metadata." The data would members. Senate leaders are expected insteadbe storedby thephone to try to assemble a compro- companies and could be remise surveillance bill today trieved by intelligence agenthat can get the required votes cies only after approval of the to proceed before the authoriz- Foreign Intelligence Surveiling law expires at midnight. lance Act court.

Egypt freeS AmeriCell —Mohamed Soltan, an American citizen who spent nearly two years in anEgyptian prison on charges that he supported an Islamist protest, has beenreleased bythe Egyptian authorities and flew back to theUnited States onSaturday. Soltan, 27, who hadspent much of his detention on ahunger strike, was sentenced to life in prison in April. TheObamaadministration had appealed for his release onhumanitarian grounds. Soltan had joined demonstrators protesting President MohammedMorsi's removal that was violently dispersed bysecurity forces on Aug. 14, 2013 and was arrested11 days later.

and Senate negotiators had

laid out a series of options to revise the USA Freedom Act. M cConnell most likely w i l l not know what combination

ofthosechanges might garner the necessary votes until senators have gathered today, but he was optimistic a deal could

be reached. "I believe that on Sunday night, they're going to

IIgerie 8tt8CkS —A suicide bomb blast outside a mosqueand rocket-propelled grenadesthat exploded into homes aspeople slept killed at least 30 people in the Nigerian city Maiduguri on Saturday, residents and officials said. Theexplosion killed people who were prostrating themselves for afternoon prayers outside the mosque, including traders from the nearby crowdedmarketplace in the largest city in Nigeria's troubled northeast, survivors said. Trader Ali Bakomi said the bomberwas pushing awheelbarrow and pretending to be an itinerant trader when he joined them. Borno state Gov. Kashim Shettima toured the scenewhere onewall was reduced to rubble and another was splattered with blood. Officials told him the bomber killed himself and16 other people.

come up with a path forward," McConnell said.

Si sil.AvL

ANOTHER CONTENDER FOR 2016

Dtsouies rrr

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

FranCe'S COnSerVatiVeS —This weekend, France's main conservative party, under the leadership of former President Nicolas Sarkozy, voted to renameitself the Republicans, dropping its identity as the Union for a Popular Movement. In adopting a name that plays much more directly to French nationalism, the party was also offering the latest evidence of theways inwhich the far-right National Front is reshaping politics in France. Sarkozy's strategy, analysts said, is to try to co-opt some of theappeal of the National Front and its charismatic leader in part through policy shifts to the right on issues like immigration and social issues.

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Banned frOmRuSSia —Russia hasbarred dozensof European officials from entering its territory in whatappears to beretaliation for the EuropeanUnion's barring of Russian politicians, officials and businessmen whoEuropesays havesupported the annexation of Crimea or the pro-Russian forces fighting in eastern Ukraine.TheEuropean Union confirmed theexistence of alist of barred travelers Saturday, saying it had 89 namesonit. The list's existence emergedafter a member of Germany's Parliament wasunexpectedly restricted from entering Russia last weekend.Karl-GeorgWellmann, adeputy in Chancellor Angela Merkel's center-right bloc, spent the night at theMoscowairport.

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CORRECTIONS The Bulletin's primaryconcern isthat all stories areaccurate. If you knowof an error in a story, call us at541-363-0356.

Pakistan attackS —Tensions were running high Saturday in southwestern Pakistan after dozens ofheavily armedgunmen,wearing the uniforms of security forces, stoppedtwo buses, singled out ethnic Pashtuns andfatally shot at least 22 of them on Friday night. Hundreds of protesters held asit-in outside theGovernor's House in Quetta, the provincial capital of restive Baluchistan province, demanding punishment for the killers. Nogroup hasclaimed responsibility for the attack.

Evan Vucci /The Associated Press

Former Maryland Gov.Martin O'Malley speaks during an event to announcethat he is entering the Democratic presidential race, onSaturday in Baltimore, as his wife, Katie, right, looks on. O'Malley entered the Democratic presidential race on Saturday in a long-shot challenge to Hillary Rodham Clinton for the 2016nomination, casting

himself as a newgeneration leader who would rebuild the economy andreform Wall Street. "I'm running for you," hetold a crowd of about1,000 people in apopulist message in Baltimore, wherehe served asmayor before two terms asgovernor. O'Malley said hewas drawn into the campaign "to rebuild the truth of the American dream for all Americans."

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All Bulletin payments areaccepted at the drop box atCity Hall. Checkpayments may beconvertedto anelectronic fundstransfer.TheBulletin, USPS P552-520, ispublisheddaily byWestem Communications Inc.,1777SWChandler Ave., Bend,OR97702.Periodicals poslagepaidat Bend,OR.Postmaster: Send address changesto TheBulletin circulationdepartment, Po. Box6020, Bend, OR 97706. TheBulletin retains ownershipandcopyright protection of all sraff-prepared newscopy,advertising copy andnewsorad ilustrations. They may not bereproducedwithout explicit prior approval.

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More heavyrain bLjt nonewseriousflooding in Houston area By Michael Graczyk

as a childhood friend of one of the missing. "I've got a young ROSENBERG, Texas alligator poked its snout above family," he said Friday while The seemingly ceaseless rain water as he talked, followed by leading a group of volunteers swept across areas of Texas a black water moccasin slither- in a search. "I'd like to think again Saturday, bringing fears ing along the muddied water. someone wouldcome out and "I'm concerned about it of renewed flooding but no do the same for us." new serious problems. enough, but I'm a lo t m ore A mong the m issing i s At least 31 people have concerned because we have a 6-year-old William Charba, been killed in storms that be- lot of older people living down the son of R a ndy Charba, gan inTexas and Oklahoma here," he said. over Memorial Day weekend. Former NFL running back Twenty-seven of th e deaths Earnest Jackson, who played have been in Texas alone, and for San Diego, Pittsburgh and ll people were still missing Philadelphia after his time at Saturday. Texas A&M, has lived in the Asmuchas3/ainches of rain neighborhood for 45 years. His ' fell Saturday afternoon and take: "I ain't afraid of it." p af a > ~ & u~ k evening in Houston. Officials About 60 miles southwest said bayous were responding of Houston in W harton, an well and no new evacuations evacuation order for about were ordered or recommended 30 homes in a low-lying area in low-lying and riverfront ar- along the west bank of t h e eas of Southeast Texas outside Colorado River was lifted Satthe nation's fourth largest city. urday evening after the river The Associated Press

The Brazos River southwest of Houston was the main

area of concern as floodwaters moved from Northand Central Texas downstream toward the Gulf of Mexico. Floyd Pres-

ton's home in the Houston sub-

measured it on Friday night and Saturday morning. An

his family had joined the CharMichelle's body was found bas and the Careys for the holWednesday. Michelle's moth- iday weekend, all coming from 42, and MichelleCharba, 43. er, Sue Carey, 71, is still miss-

Corpus Christi.

ing, but officials said late Friday they had identified the

wife, Laura, 33, and 4-year-old daughter, Leighton, are still

remains ofher father, retired

unaccounted for. The body of

dentist Ralph Carey, 73. JonathanMcComb, the lone

their 6-year-old son, Andrew,

survivor from the house, and

was found Wednesday in the river.

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crested about 3r/z feet above

flood stage. Earlier in the week, the

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Colorado River in W h arton and the San Jacinto River near Houston were threatening homes, but the National

Weather Service said both are yards from the flooded river expectedto recede below flood and three houses from a police stage by today. barricade marking the evacuaIn Central Texas, about urb of Rosenberg is about 100

tion zone.

"I'm going to stay for the

2,000 volunteers and 100 mem-

bersofan elitesearch and rest ime being. This is not t h e cue team looked for a group of first time for a flood. One way people whose vacation house or another, when your time was swept away in a massive comes, it could be on dry land flood on the Blanco River. or water," the 66-year-old said The bodies of two women as he was trimming his lawn, were found Saturday along the adding that the closest flood- river. Autopsies will be needed waters had gotten in the past to identify them. Hays County was about 50 yards away. officials said they weren't sure A creek that empties into the if they are among six people Brazos River — which reached still listed as missing in the 49 feet and is expected to rise county from the flood. until Monday morning and Toby Baker, a commissioner crest at 50 feet — went up 4 with the Texas Commission on feet between the time Ricky Environmental Quality, had McCullough, 47, and a friend come in an unofficial capacity,

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Enjoy a continental breakfast while you learn about our design/build remodeling services and get inspired to start on your project!

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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MAY 31, 2015

Backlog

quently perceived as concocting bogus narratives to avoid getting in trouble if, for example, they missed a curfew.

Continued from A1 In Houston, authorities re-

cently cleared a backlog of nearly 6,700 kits that included

"Law enforcement, general-

•0

cases dating back to the 1980s.

The project, which cost about $6 million, turned up 850

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DNA Ilb Sff'Of'S —TheFBI has notified crime labs across the country that it has discoverederrors in data used byforensic scientists in thousands ofcases to calculate the chancesthat DNA found at a crimescene matches aparticular person, several people familiar with the issuesaid. The bureauhas said it believesthe errors, which extend to1999, are unlikely to result in dramatic changes that would affect cases. It has submitted the research findings to support that conclusion for publication in theJuly issue of theJournal of Forensic Sciences, the officials said. But crime labsandattorneys said they want to know moreabout the problem before conceding it would not makemuch difference in any given case. "The public puts so muchfaith in DNAtesting that it makes it especially important to make those the best estimates possible," said Wright State University professor of statistics Daniel Krane,an expert whosework hasbeencited by defense attorneys. "There is no excusefor asystematic error to many thousands of calculations in such acontext." Krane, who identified errors 10years ago inthe DNAprofiles the FBI analyzed togeneratethe population statistics data, called the consequences ofthedisclosure appalling, saying the data have been used intens of thousands or hundreds of thousands of cases worldwide in thepast15 years. Hesaid when heflagged theproblems a decadeago, the FBIdownplayed his findings. The issue centers aroundthe FBI's"Pop stats," which are built into the software programs used by 9in10 U.S. labs andmany overseas, Kranesaid. While juries might well reachthesamedecision if errors mean that an individual has a1 in abillion chance of matching a crime scene sampleinstead of1 in10 billion, for example, that may not be so if errors were tohalve, say, assertions that person had a1 in 180 chance ofmatching, as Kranesaid came upin acase that he testified in last week. Such low ratios are increasingly common as state and local labs analyze smaller andsmaller traces of DNAfound onobjects such as gunsorcountertops— known as"low-copy"and"touch DNA"and often aresifting through DNAmixtures, or profiles contributed by multiple people. Stephen Mercer, chief of the forensic division of Maryland's Office of the Public Defender,said his office last weeknotified its attorneys about the issueandsuggested they consider asking prosecutors about such problems incasesinvolving DNAevidence. "The prediction that the errors are likely to have anominal impact has to beassessed bythe defense in the individual circumstances of each particular case," Mercer said. In a bulletin sent to crime labs, theFBIsaid the problem stemmed from "clerical mistakes in transcriptions of thegenotypes andto limitations of the oldtechnology andsoftware."

3ak y)

qr ~~

matches in a national DNA

database.

ly, they just do not believe victims," Campbell says. "They believe that they're lying, that they're making a story up to cover up for bad behavior." Illinois A t t orney

G e ner-

al Lisa Madigan also notes

In Detroit, the Wayne County prosecutor'soffice is seek-

Pat Sullivan/The Associated Press

ing donations to help analyze, Vials of evidence in a sexual assault case are labeled snd sorted in investigate a n d

pr o s ecute t h e biology lab at the Houston Fo rensic Science Center. The city cases from the results of more recently cleared a backlog of nearly 6,700 kits — a project which than 11,000 kits that had been c o st about $6 million.

that women whose kits aren't

tested promptly may be less inclined to help police and prosecutors. "They may begin to question why they consent-

untested. Hamstrung by city

ed to an intrusive medical fo-

and county money troubles,

rensic examination that took hours," she said in recent con-

theprosecutorhasformedan w it h the Michigan Women's

congressional testimony.) The unusualpartnershipwith tw o F o u ndation and th eD etroit group is getting help from two nonprofits to raise $10 mil- C r ime Commission to raise law firms, working without lion. So far, contributions have money to complete the testing charge, who are using public poured in from corporations a n d i nvestigation of kits and record requests to gauge the and residents from all 50 states b r ing suspects to trial.

extent of the backlog in about

"These results are coming 25 police and eight foreign countries. departments around There's anewurgency, too, very fast and furious," she the country. in statehouses from Alaska to a d d s."Because we don't have Dallas; Salt Lake City; PortMaryland, where legislators the staff of investigators and land; and Kansas City, Mis-

gressional testimony. "They may wonder why they bothered to report the incident in

the first place." But some say progress is being made in Detroit and other

cities with new police training and rules for handling kits, improved understanding of in more than 20 states are con- p r osecutors ... in essence we're souri, have reported untested trauma and legal reforms that sidering — and in some cases, developing another backlog." kits. The Las Vegas metro po- will prevent new backlogs. "Policehave come a long passing — laws that include Li s a Bloom, a lawyer, au- lice department has one of the auditing all kits and deadlines thor and TV legal analyst, said larger backlogs — more than way," says Sgt. Amy Mills, for submitting and processing while fundraising is a worthy 5,600 kits — and plans to test head of the Dallas police sex DNA evidence. Recent counts pursuit, it reveals something all of them. assault unit. "I cannot believe in L ouisiana found n early a b o ut the priorities of a justice San Francisco police anthe reports I read that were 1,100 unprocessed kits. Dis- system where money is always nounced last w i nter t hey'd made five years ago, comturbingly, nearly 100 addition- f o und to prosecute prostitutes sent out 753 rape kits for anal- pared to the way they are now. al kits from two New Orleans a n d d r u g c rimes. "Women's ysis and are consulting with It's just 180 degrees." children's hospitals also have lives are not worth a grand, other departments on the best When l a w en f o rcement been discovered. apparently," she wrote in an way to handle those beyond deals with rape survivors now, The high-profile campaign online commentary. "Want to the statute of limitations. Mills said, "We always start also is getting a big financial lock up rapists? Hey, have a The question remains: How with, 'We believe you,' not boost: At least $76 million — bakesale!" did this happen in the first 'Convince us.'" more than half from the feds S o m e major financial com-place? — will be available for test- mitments, though, will ease "There is no smoking gun Waiting for justice ing, prosecution and that burden. that you can point to in any For the r ape survivors reforms. P resident Bar a c k city in America to say this is themselves, the delays in test-No one knows how Obama's 2015 budget the one reason why we have ing rape kits have been inmuch it will all cost in ,g set aside $41 million to this accumulation of kits that furiating, frustrating — and t he end. And it won't be < help test kits and pros- have been untested," says Mc- inexplicable. easy to make up for lost ecute pe r p etrators.Gowen, the coordinator of Natasha Alexenko was a "Because T his spring, Biden an- the Memphis task force, who college student in New York time. In some cases, it's we d o n't nou nc e d the 2016 fiscal notes that DNA wasn't wide- in 1993 when she was raped simply too late for jus- have the yea r budget includes a ly used until the late 1990s. and robbed at gunpoint while tice because statutes st aff ofin- prop o sal for another $41 "It's very hard to quantify the returning home from her job. of limitations have ex- ve stigators mil l i on to chip away at actions of people when the Alexenko says police told pired. In others, inves- and pros- th ebacklog, along with science was new ... or when her a few y ears later that tigators may have to ec utors ... $ 2 0 million to develop the science wasn't available. they'd pursued all leads and wadethroughold,often inessence re forms that will pre- We're looking at it through to- the case was closed. day's lens." "I just assumed they knew incomplete, police files, we're ventarecurrence. search fo r w i t n esses de veloping Manha t t an D i s t r ict Before DNA, rape kits could what they're doing," she says. and suspects, confront another Attor n ey Cyrus Vance be tested for blood group typ- "Surely, they tested the kit. fading memories and backlog." als o has pledged up to ing, but that was nowhere as Surely, they followed up on persuade survivors to — Kym $35 million — money definitive and th e evidence everything.... Why wouldn't reopen painful chapters Wo r t hy, his office received from could broadly exclude or in- someone want to apprehend of their lives. It will be a Wayn e as set forfeiture cases- clude a suspect — if one had a clearly violent criminal? ... I lot slower-going than it Cou n ty, th a t h e e stimates will been identified. was very young and naive." is on those prime-time Mi c h igan, b e enough to test 70,000 DNA proved to be a turning Nearly a decade had passed police procedurals. pros e cutor kits. point, but Houston Assistant when the prosecutor's office "It's great entertain"We felt this was an Police Chief Mary Lentschke called to notify Alexenko her ment on television that essential i n vestment," notes that police still faced rape kit would be tested. "I in one hour's time, we have a Vance said. "Rapists are sex of- two big obstacles: a shortage waited nine and half years for crime, we take the sample, we f e nders who are moving from of both money and crime lab someone to tell me I mattered get a 'hit,' we arrest the sus- one location to another. There staff. It has cost $500 to $1,500 and they were still thinking pect and then he's prosecuted will be crimes that are going to test and analyze each kit. about me," she says. and off to jail," says Doug Mc- t o be solved in other states that

— The Washington Post

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And as DNA became more

In 2007, Victor Rondon was Gowen, coordinator of Mem- are linked to New York." common in c r ime-solving, found through a match to a phis' Sexual Assault Kit Task Th a t 's already happened.labs were overwhelmed with DNA profile after he'd been Force."That'sjustnotthecase, D N A e v i dence from n ewly requests for testing, for homi- arrested on a minor charge

clearly." tested Detroit-area rape kits cides as well. "When you don't have the In Memphis, about half of h as been linked to crimes in 31 more than 12,300 kits have s t ates — New York inciuded- funding and you don't have been tested or are waiting to andtheDistrictof Columbia. the staffing, you make decibe analyzed. It will take at Van ce's office says labs, po- sions on a case-by-case basis," least 40 hours to follow up on lice and prosecutors from 30 she says. each case and all will be in- s tates have expressed interest Some police departments vestigated even if there is no DNA match, McGowen says.

i n t he funds, which will be dis- haven't tested kits if the womt r i buted in late summer or ear- an knew the assailant, she

He estimates the police work l y f all.

didn't want to pursue charges

and trials could continue until 2019.

or theattacker confessed.

It to o k f our years for New York City to eliminate its own

Butonceallthekitsarepro- backlog of 17,000 cases. In cessed, the potential is enor-

As Vice President Joe Biden t i f y suspects by their genetic t h e statuteoflimitations.

m ore crimes will be prevented, and more women will be

given back their lives."

In

la t e A p r il , o n e o f

"I felt that was the moment I took back the power from

him," Alexenko said of her testimony.

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women over nearly a decade Giardala was added to CODIS as evidence went unprocessed. because of an unrelated case He pleaded guilty last fall and in Florida. It matched the one was sentenced to up to 135 f r omtheNewYorkassault. years in prison. Giardala, 44, who was arIn Wayne County, home to restedin Los Angeles, returned Detroit, authorities say 288 po- to New York to face chargestential serial rapists have been more than 20 years later.

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"You shouldn't have a kit sit-

from testing so far are serial It r e mained there 14 years.ma and sexual assault, says rape suspects. One of them, Then, this spring, a break. skepticism and, at times, hosRobert Green, assaulted seven A

541-389-8714 62968 OB Riley Rd,, Ste E2 ~ ProActiveHealthBend.com

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to write it off as sloppiness. It's alarming pattern: Many rap- e v i dence kit was taken at a apathy." ists are repeat offenders. hospital. In 2001, it was entered Rebecca Campbell, a MichiIn CuyahogaCounty,home into the Combined DNA Index gan State University professor to Cleveland, about 30 percent System, or CODIS, a national who has consulted and trained of cases that have developed D N A d atabase.

P ROACT IV E H E A L T H

years.

Critics claim these policies reflect a more general attitude

t h o se "John Does" shed his sheriffs to report untested kits. "I think the message it sends to anonymity.

That case dated back to JanUnCOVeringSerial raPe uary 1995, whena 25-year-old In resurrect ing old crimes, woman was raped and robbed investigators have detected an at knifepoint. A sexual assault

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him in a New York court, and he was sentenced to up to 107

recently declared: "If we are code and prevent them from ting on a shelf somewhere for able to test these rape kits, avoiding prosecution by using 20 years," says Louisiana State more crimes will be solved,

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in Las Vegas. The next year, Alexenko testified against

M a n hattan, that led to 49 in- of law enforcement not plac-

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behaviors: crying and visible signs of distress. If a victim is very calm and quiet, they found among the kits tested. think there's no possible way Among the cases to surface is What tOOkSO lOng? she could have been raped." Reginald Holland, who raped T h e new attention to sexual Campbell wa s t h e c h i ef a woman in 2005. His identi- a s sault kits stems from a com- author of a multi-year study b i n ation of factors: the per- that included interviews, data analysis and reviews of 1,595 entered in a national database s uch as the Joyful Heart Foun- untested sexual assault kits

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on an unrelated case. By the dation, investigative media re- in Detroit. She concluded that time his first victim's sexual ports, the willingness of rape understaffed crime labs and assault kit was tested in 2012, s u r vivors to speak out and po- high turnover in police leadhe'd assaulted four more wom- litical support from statehous- ership contributed to the deen. In 2014, he was sentenced to es up to the White House. cades-old backlog. life in prison. But the full scope of the But evidence also clearly "Yes, it is an embarrass- problem is something of a showed "police treating vicment," county prosecutor Kym mystery. tims in dehumanizing ways," Worthy says of these cases. "It N o f e deral agency tracks according to the study funded shows that we, as this country, untested sexual assault kits, by the National Institute of do not respect rape victims to b u t Joyful Heart estimates it's Justice, released in April. the extent that we respect other i n the hundreds of thousands. Women were often assumed vlctuns. (Texas alone has more than to be prostitutes, the study Her officeis now working 20,000, according to recent found, and adolescents fre-

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TheBulletin serving central oregon since1903


SUNDAY, MAY 31, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

Lawmakers

tation package, a $1 billion is expected to increase the spending agreement in 2009, cost of gasoline by as much Continued fromA1 Bend received about $1.8 mil- as 19 cents per gallon, acA proposal would likely lion annually for road main- cording to the state. raise money through a gas tenance, King said. House Republicans still tax and bonding for road Another injection would m aintain t h ey'll s ettle f o r m aintenance, s eismic u p - help the city with its goal of nothing short of a repeal of grades, improvements that keeping its entire road sys- the new law, Senate Bill 324, allow heavy trucks to travel tem at or better than current which they branded a "hidon more bridges throughout levels, which it figures would den gas tax." the state and other projects. cost about $3.7 million anBut lawmakers from both While the list of needs and nually, an additional $2.5 parties are now back at the wants is vast, stakeholders million over what it received table along with Gov. Kate are hopeful that lawmakers from the last transportation Brown to try to broker a commeeting means an agreement deal. promise on the low-carbon is possible. The city isn't expecting to fuel standard that would lead "It's good to see that that's raise or receive $80 million to to a transportation deal. "My understanding is that happening and they've got pay for all its maintenance at the right people in the room, once. It instead sets priorities there are ongoing transportabut we're running out of time. to do upkeep on major arteri- tion talks and that everything At least for now," said Craig al roads or residential streets. is on the table," Knopp said. Campbell, who is a lobbyist Lately, King said, Bend's res- "There's two members from for AAA and was president idential streets have suffered each caucus." of the Oregon Transportation as the city uses its money on The Legislature had creatForum that gathered infor- major roads. ed a bipartisan work group "We do have this residen- early this year that origimation for a potential transnally included 10 lawmakportation package. tial problem," King said. "Could they do something The city has two tiers of ers, five from the House and later on? They could (in the projects, some that have been five from the Senate. Four of 2016) short session, special more thoroughly developed the five House memberssession, they could wait until and are nearly shovel-ready, House Speaker Tina Kotek, 2017. The longer you wait of and others that are still be- and Reps. John Davis, R-Wilcourse the higher the cost is- ing worked out. If this Legis- sonville, Caddy McKeown, sue," Campbell said. D-Coos Bay, and Cliff Bentz, lature passes transportation The transportation forum funding, Bend has a better R-Ontario — w ere m issing was made up of a wide array chance atseeing a ma jorren- for numerous votes during of interest groups and late ovation or rebuild earmarked an extended floor session last year released a broad list if the project is ready to go, Thursday. T heir absences on t h e of projects businesses and lo- King said. That's what happened in cal governments would like floor were excused because funded. That largely included 2009, when the state paid $25 they were conducting House maintaining state and local million toward an upgrade business. "There is a group of legisroads, bridge repair and seis- of the U.S. Highway 97 and mic preparation for vulnera- Murphy Road interchange lators that are meeting. They ble areas. that sought to decrease traffic have met every day this week. For Bend,money from the and congestion, increase con- They're operating under a Legislature for transporta- nectivity between the east code of silence," said Bob tion would lighten the burden and west and improve safety, Russell, a lobbyist for the Oron taxpayers to maintain lo- according to the state. egon Trucking Association. cal roads. The fact that large-scale The Bulletin first reported Bend has an $80 million p reventive s pending o n in early May that lawmakers backlog of maintenance for transportation actually pre- were reviving talks about a its more than 800 miles of vents bigger spending later transportation package, and roads. It costs 12 times more oftenencourages agreement that major changes to the to rebuild a road compared from both sides of the aisle in l ow-carbon s t andard w a s w ith m a intaining i t w h e n the Legislature. part of the discussion. needed, the city says. Also At least at this point both At the time, only the head on Bend's wish list are bike sides are talking, said Sen. members of t h e c a u cuses and pedestrian projects that Tim Knopp, R-Bend, and oth- were meeting. would cost $10 million to $30 ers familiar with the latest efNone of the revived work million that otherwise have forts to revive the package for group members would comment for the story, nor would no funding. this session. City Manager Eric King Republicans had stopped the offices of Kotek or Brown. said the city knows it like- talking w i th Dem o c r ats A s p okesman f o r S e n ate ly won'tget enough money about transportation early President P eter C o u r tney, from the state to maintain the this session after Democrats D-Salem, didn't respond to a current condition of streets passed a bill that will imple- request for comment. without raising revenue on ment a low-carbon fuel stan— Reporter: 406-589-4347, its own. In the last transpor- dard in Oregon. The proposal tanderson@bendbulletin.com

Is your high-techsmaltwatch a highway hazardonyour wrist? By Heyley Tsukayame

the road is a concern, because "visual-manual distractions

The Washington Post

Smartwatches such as

have been consistently shown

... to increase risk and decreasedriving performance." The agency's plans to address distracted driving in the future include looking at the

the Apple Watch are de-

signed to keep us from being glued to our smartphone screens all day. But even with t heir b ite-size

messages, are these new gadgets still too distracting for use behind the wheel'? Some other countries' police officers certainly seem to think so. A Canadian man was fined $120 for using his Apple Watch while driving earlier this w eek, M o n treal's

CTV

News reported. According to the report, the man was using his Apple Watch to change the song he was playing on h i s i Phone

effects that other electronics

such as GPS navigation systems, tablets and voice-control software have on distracted

driving. According t o NH T SA, 660,000 U.S. drivers are using phones or otherelectronics at any given "daylight mo-

New York Times News Service file photo

Police and safety advocates

ment" — a number that's held

fear the Apple Watch will be yet another safety hazard behind the wheel. "There's en almost

steady since 2010. And, the agency says, the average text

biological urge toanswer" atext

five seconds, which at highway speeds will take you the length of a football field. Macek said she already

takes your eyes off the road for

said Kara Mecek with the Gover-

nors HighwaySafety Associetion. "It's bad enoughwhen you have your phone inyour purse; just for t h e s m artwatch imagine when it's onyour erm use. — just feeling that buzz." Two police departments through his c ar's stereo

system. A police officer behind him pulled him over

i n A u stralia

resultinfines.

Columbia unless the telephone

or device is equipped with a hands-free accessory."

the smartwatch. While driv-

ers can reasonably glance at a traditional watch, she said, she smartwatch qualify it as a de- thinks it takes way more physvice with a hands-free acces- ical, mental and visual energy sory? (One could also argue to read even a short text mesthat a smartwatch itself is an sage — energy that should be accessory. A really expensive spent focused on where you're one.) District of Columbia po- driving. "There's an almost biologlice didn't respond to a request for comment. ical urge to answer it," she But safety — not the fear said. "It's bad enough when of a ticket — should be the you have your phone in your main concern for tech-loving purse; imagine when it's on drivers,road safety advocates your arm — just feeling that said. buzz." "The technology is advancDo the voice capabilities of a

That raises a lot of questions about ho w s m artwatches - and f uture

wearable devices — fit into a growing number of state "distracted driving" laws that aim t o ba n t exting, some phone calls and other

electronic device use while drlvmg.

From a legal standpoint, it's hard to say whether au t o mat-

ically get you in trouble. The

driving to keep them from being tempted by buzzes and beeps. She would recommend doing something similar with

h av e a l s o

made public pronouncements that using the gadgets while driving could

smartwatches

recommends that m otorists stow their smartphones while

C a n adian s t a t ute ing faster than the laws can

FLYMV

prohibits use of a "hand- keep up, in many cases," said held" device, which raises Kara Macek, director of comquestions about whether munications for the Governors smartwatches fall into the Highway Safety Association. "Technology in and of itself category. You aren't, after all, holding a smartwatch is fantastic. But when you're when you use it. It's on your driving, you need to focus on wrist.

A quick read of state

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the task at hand." In a statement, the National

Highway Traffic Safety Aded driving — plus those for ministration said anything Washington, Puerto Rico, that draws a driver' s eyes off laws that prohibit distractGuam and the U.S. Vir-

Tax Continued fromA1 The crux of Eager's argument against a tax is that the city has money available to fix the streets. In the pro-

posed 2015-17 city budget, the amount of money dedicated to

street maintenance is down over the previous biennium, dropping from about $14.4 million to $13.8 million. The city's entire general fund, however, isprojected to grow from around $85 million to $95 million. That growth is reflected in the budgets of many city d epartments, including Bend Police, which will have about $2 million more to work with during the next biennium.

"I think what's going on is the city is reallocating funding

ly affect his business. "Any tax infringes on comfund stabilization fund (which is essentially the city's 'rainy merce, and it infringes more day' fund), we are comfortable when it is specific to a certain with using $2 million of gen- locationordemographic,"Vereralfund reserves for street non said. "What it tends to do maintenance or other council is to make some people less directed projects, as that will competitive and some people allow us to still maintain our more competitive." reservetarget of 20 percent in Vernon also q uestioned the general fund." w hether t h e ci t y wou l d Wojda noted there are a make good use of additional couple of things driving down revenue. "In my experience, if you funding for street maintenance. One is the cost of im- give the government a dollar, plementing a new citywide they will target 20 cents to organizational software, a what is in need and the rest cost being shared by every will be taken to increase their department. The city is also pension plans and wages," he constructing a new fuel sta- said. "How many times have tion, as the current setup is you seen a utility crew in Bend 30 years old, an expense that with four people standing is draining funds away from around watching as one guy tional reserves in the general

streets.

Eager also argues that as away from street preservation cars become more efficient, to other things in anticipation a gas tax is likely to be unof morerevenue from a gas sustainable, because revenue tax or something else," Eager probably would decrease over said. "To the degree it's going time. His clients, however, are on now, voters might be con- mostly concerned about losing cerned that would occur in business. the future. If the city gets the

new revenue source directed at street preservation, do

more of those existing dollars get directed away from street preservation?"

nance director, wrote in an

email. "Since we have addi-

change, he noted, could great-

BrightSide Animal Center

other gadgets. For example, the District of Columbia's law reads as follows:

"No person shall use a mobile telephone or oth-

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operating a moving motor vehicle in the District of

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its infinite wisdom decided to payers build roundabouts bea business, the city would be broke."

TOUCHMARK SINCE 1980

As an alternative to a gas

tax, the city has also considwould significantly harm local ered imposing a $5 per month fuel suppliers, they are pre- fee on utility bills, something pared to organize and invest voters would not have to in a vigorous campaign to de- approve. "We would prefer a utility feat a gas tax ballot measure," Eager wrote in a letter to the fee as opposed to the tax, beCity Council and Budget Com- cause the tax will impact our

habits to avoid Bend. That

@ Sponsored by g

specificity when it comes

build roundabout art. Do tax-

"Because a Bend gas tax

City C o uncilor V i c tor Chudowsky doesn't completely disagree with Eager and mittee on May 12. "If the balargues that more money is lot measure were to fail, Bend available. would be back at square one in "The thing that bothers me addressing the problems with about the proposed budget ... our streets. My clients hope is that it does not seem to me to to avoid a contentious cambe that difficult to shave a few paign and a failed fix to the percentage points (I percent to street problem, which is why 4 percent), along with some re- they haveasked me to comserves and contingency funds, municate with you now, while off some existing budget re- you are deciding how the city quests in order to set aside should proceed." $2.5 million extra to streets, Eager said he does not have thus making the gas tax pos- specific examples of businesssibly unnecessary," Chudows- es closing after a fuel tax is imky wrote in an email. "There plemented, though his clients would be no cuts or reductions have anecdotal evidence. In from the previous budget cycle Oregon, about 20 cities have for any department." gas taxes, including Sisters, At the urging of Chudowsky which charges 3 cents per and other councilors, the city gallon. is looking at how much money Greg Vernon, the general it can draw from reservesto manager of American Enerboost street funding. gy, said the majority of driv"Twenty percent is the tar- ers won't change their beget levelof reserves for the havior because of 5 cents, but general fund that i s e stab- about25 percent ofpeoplerelished in our fiscal policies," ally look for the cheapest fuel, Sharon Wojda, the city's fi- and they could change their

gin Islands — shows that language in these statutes vary. While many specifically prohibit handheld mobile phones, there's less

works. This is the city that in

cause we want to drive around and look at art? If they were

Join the Touchmark team to help us enrich the lives of others in a caring and friendly community.

businesses," Vernon said. "Ev-

erybody benefits from better roads, even bikers." In the past, City Council

members have noted one upside of a gas tax is that the

Positions we are seeking to fill include: • Caregivers

burden can be shared with

• C OOkS

visitors to Bend. "A gas tax will mean that

• Di sh washers

• Personal care assistants • Ho usekeepers • Ma intenance

the people who come and visit our town will share in the cost," city Councilor Sal-

ly Russell said in April. "The tourists should help shoulder

Touchmark offers flexible schedules, competitive wages, and comprehensive benefits.

the cost, as they're contribut-

ing to the expense." According t o re s earch commissioned by Visit Bend, about 2.2 million tourists visit

the city annually. While th e

C i t y C o u ncil

hasn't yet backed the idea of a gas tax, councilors have approved doing a survey that will gauge community support for different ways to fund

To apply to any open positions, please follow our online process:

www.touchmark.com/careers

541-647-2956 ® TouchmarkBend.com

street maintenance. The city

plans to complete that survey within the next three weeks. — Reporter: 541-633-2160, tleedslbendbulletin.com

A5

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A6

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MAY 31, 2015

Nashville debateshowto prepare

Afghan Continued fromA1 Despite working together, wary of Temour — and he

before next devastating flood

learned the hard way that he could not trust them.

By Richard Fausset

the Americans had remained

New York Times News Service

His is a murky tale of alli-

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — As

ance, betrayal and, ultimately,

redemption that traces the arc of the United States' longest

e

war.

Aiding the U.S. The Americans who invaded Afghanistan in 2001 found

an insular society hardened by Soviet o ccupation, civ-

ShashankBengali/LosAngeles Times

Temour Ebrahim, a former ally of U.S. forces in Afghanistan, was

il war and Taliban rule. Into jailed by the Americans and later released over a lack of evidence. this land of gaunt, inscrutable faces came Temour, with his

round belly, Bob Marley tunes on the car stereo and fluent, lilting English that to U.S. forces must have sounded like its own kind of music. His family, members of the Hazara minority, had moved

dozen or so members rotated

to London when he was 9 after his father, who was active

team declined to pursue a lead

in opposition politics, learned he was being targeted by Afghanistan's communist government. Temour returned to Afghanistan in 2001 at the

every few months, and in mid2011, Temour got into a dispute

U.S. contact. "One man, what he did to me, it does not mean I should

with a new team leader, saying blame everyone in the United he hadn't been paid for two

weapons busts. That September, the ODA Temour had, about a cache of Taliban munitions in the hilly

States Army or military," he wrote.

The contact suggested a meeting at Bagram, but Temour demurred, fearing another setup. The American did not

badlands of Deh Yak. He took write back. the information to a n other Then in February, Moham-

U.S. unit, which recovered about tw o

mad Mohaqiq, deputy to the

d o zen r o adside chief executive in Afghani-

Instead, Mayor Karl Dean's the city is to the vicissitudes ambitious plan to build a $100 of the Cumberland and its million flood wall and pump- tributaries. ing system meant to protect But Dean's record of de-

Texasreelsfrom catastrophic flooding, this booming city the heart of downtown, inon the Cumberland River is cluding a $623 million concontemplating what to do to vention hall that opened protect itself in the wake of its three years after the deluge, own disaster from five years is facing significant opposiago, the May 2010 flood that tion here. Politicians running killed 10 people and dam- for his job and others say the aged or destroyed 11,000 plan would not do enough to properties. protect less high-powered But, at a time when scientists say climate change

parts of the city.

Dean is likely to be rememis producing more extreme bered for presiding over good weather and forcing cities economic times, building a around the world to consider number of big-ticket downhow best to safeguard flood- town attractions and guiding prone areas, Nashville is Nashville through the 2010 finding the sense of unity it flood.The flood forced many had during the disaster is not residents to realize, for the as easy to summon up again. first time, how v u lnerable

Alerts

has such a high number of visitors," Garibay said.

urging of his uncle, a militia bombs, according to emails stan's unity government and leader who helped U.S.-led reviewed by the Los Angeles the country's most prominent

Continued fromA1

forces oust the Taliban. Te-

from federalagencies, said flash flooding on May 21 Sgt. Nathan Garibay, emer- from the National Weather gency services manager for Service. The weather service the Deschutes County Sher- will issue an alert if there is iff's Office. He said there are a danger to life or property, strict parameters to what insaid Dennis Hull, a meteoformation can be put into the rologist with the agency in

Times.

mour quickly became an asset Temour now believed he to American troops working was owed well over $15,000. on reconstruction and coun- Military personnel told him t erterrorism programs i n that there was a funding shortGhazni. When U .S. c o mmanders wanted to construct a school or well in a Hazara area, they called Temour. As the U.S.

fall and that the money would be available within weeks, ac-

began to assemble a national army andpoliceforce,Temour helped get scores of his uncle's fighters to hand in their weapons.

he wasn't authorized to discuss it publicly.

"The Americans back then

were serious about building a new Afghanistan," Temour said, "and a lot of us were on board with that." With a n e x t ensive n etwork of contacts — including

cording to a U.S. official with

Hazara politician, hired Te-

mour as an adviseron security affairs. In one of his first official duties, Temour arranged a

meetingbetween Mohaqiq and Maj. Gen. Scott Berrier, deputy chief of staff in charge of intelligence for the U.S.-led military

knowledge of the matter, who

coalition. was not to be named because Since then, Temour has met Around the same time, the

often with U.S. military and civilian personnel in Kabul to discuss security issues. At

ODA team began telling other U.S. personnel of "solid evi-

first, none mentioned his time in prison. Perhaps they were dence" that Temour was work- embarrassed about what haping with Iranian intelligence, pened to him, he thought. said a U.S. official who re-

But eventually h e

was

quested anonymity to discuss asked to take another polyprivate communications. Te- graph. More than ever, he felt mour's American contacts cut he had nothing to hide. When off communications with him. he passed, he got what he had Afghan soldiers and police, On Dec. 26, he got a call been waiting to hear for years: Hazara militiamen, Taliban from an unfamiliar voice tell- an apology. "They're all shocked that I informants and village elders ing him to come to the base who opposed the insurgents the next day to "settle ac- w ouldcome back and help the — Temour also began sup- counts." There, he was arrest- U.S. after what they did to me. plying information about Tal- ed. Among the items taken And I said, 'What am I going iban weapons hidden in the from him were his cellphone to do, go and sit with the Talimountains.

and a notebook containing the

in rewards for tips that led to

In two hearings in 2013 at the Justice Center in Parwan,

ban'?' I'm a Hazara. I'm a Shiite

"He was amazingly helpful numbers of all his American Muslim," Temour said. "What in tracking down munitions," contacts. theyaccused me ofnevermade said Brig. Gen. Blake Ortner, a sense." Virginia National Guardsman Lockedup who led U.S. forces in Ghazni He would spend nearly 18 from 2004 to2005. "He did a months at Bagram, the prison lot of great things for us." often described as a "second Over the years, Temour Guantanamo," beforebeing collected thousands of dollars transferred to Afghan custody. weapons busts or arrests of Taliban suspects, according to officials who worked with

S uch alerts ma y

A recent alert in Central c o m e Oregon was for potential

alerts, which are limited to 90 characters — 50 less than a tweet. "We are taking critical

Pendleton. The office fore-

velopment success has not

yet translated to the flood project. Nashville's situation is not

unique. In New York, billions are being spent in anticipation of more threatening storms after 2012's Hurricane Sandy. The rainstorms

that caused major flooding in Houston last week, sparked a broader conversation about

emergency p r eparedness there, including renewed calls to build a coastal barri-

er system to protect Galveston Bay, an idea that by one estimate could cost up to $6 billion.

fire evacuation updates, that might not be spread using the federal wireless alert system. While the counties have

the ability to call landlines with such information, they are looking at ways to bet-

ter connect, said Ryan, the Crook County emergency manager. "In Central Oregon we

casts for Central Oregon. "We issue (them) as often as we need to," he said. emergency information," he Alerts on cellphones exsaid. "It is kind of the now or pand on the familiar federal never type information," such broadcast warning system, as about a wildfire bearing which sends out alerts over down on homes. television and radio. Those A long wi th bein g messages may last up to two eye-catching, the alerts go minutes, containing more to any phone in a particular information than those sent area, rather than to a list of to cellphones, said Terry people who have registered Cowan, general manager for notices for a particular for a Christian music station agency. For example, people in Bend. But they might not from Central Oregon visiting reach as many people as the the Midwest would see an cellphone alerts. alert on their phone if they Given the limited length of were in an area where the cellphone alerts, emergency

don't have a great mass-mes-

National Weather Service is-

lot of information out to the

managers in Deschutes and

sage system," he said. He and Garibay, his counterpart in Deschutes County,

are looking at potential systems the counties could contract for yearly, including one that uses 26 points of contact

for people who have registered — from texts to email to Ins-

tagram. Such systems range in cost depending on population, Ryan said, with Crook

County likely facing a cost of up to $10,000 per year and Deschutes up to $35,000.

They get the word out, though. "They allow you to get a

sued a tornado warning. Cell Crook counties are look- people you want to get it out towers relay the alert to all ing at ways to improve how to — and it does it very fast," nearby phones. they can then follow up such he said. "That is a big issue for us messages or pass out more — Reporter: 541-617-7812, because we are an area that information, such as wildddarling@bendbulletirLcom

an Afghan court for national security cases that was cre-

him. A large cache of 107 mm ated with heavy U.S. support, rockets — a favorite among in- Afghan prosecutors argued surgents — could net as much that Temour was "a spy and as $2,500. agent of the Iranian governMany Afghan warlords be- ment" and had supplied inforcame rich off American cash, mation to the Taliban. They but Temour said he gave most offeredas proof statements by of the money to sources who coalition forces and Afghan otherwise would have sold intelligence officials, accordtheir information to drug syn- ing to court records. dicates, the insurgency or othThe Pentagon adminiser groups opposing U.S. inter- tered two polygraph exams to ests. He could afford a Toyota Temour at Bagram. If either truck and some jewelry for his yielded anything to incrimiwife, but they remained with nate him, it did not surface at their three children in a mod- trial. "The prosecutor has not est pink house along a dirt road in Ghazni. been able to connect Temour "In Afghanistan, we've got with any terrorist organizato pay people to get things tion," the Legal Aid Organizadone," he said. "I was paying tion of Afghanistan, a nongovpeople out of my pocket for ernmental group that helped the information I gave to the in his defense, wrote in a letter Americans." to The Times this year. H is i n terests w er e n o t The judges agreed, saying only financiaL Many Tali- the terrorism and espionage ban regard the Hazaras, who allegations were unsubstantiare Shiite Muslims, as infi-

ated, but sentenced him to 18

dels, and had slaughtered months for possessing illegal thousands. weapons. Three months lat-

Relationship sours In 2006, Temour briefly led a contingent of 70 Afghan police officers in the south-

er, with little explanation, an

appellate panel extended his term to five years.

Released

ern province of Zabol. Mark

As the United States sought

Wenell, an Air Force technical

to wind down the war, it gradu-

sergeant from Arizona who was training the Afghans,

ally handed control of Bagram prison and its thousands of said Temour's m en "were detainees to the Afghan govsome of the only people I could ernment. Afghanistan has recount on to save these villages leased the vast majority of priswhen they came underattack oners, citing a lack of evidence. by the Taliban." Last July, Temour was set Afghan Hazaras have of- free after a review board ap-

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ten been described as sympathetic to S h i ite-led Iran. But Wenell, who retired from the military after 22 years,

pointed by then-President Hamid Karzai determined there

"He was not armed when credited Temour with helping U.S. forces recover 39 Irani- detained, there's no evidence an-made anti-personnel mines to show he was spying for in Zabol in early 2007 — one foreigners, he wasn't dealing of the first significant caches drugs — anything," said Abdul

Get more from your energy.

of Iranian munitions found in

Shakoor Dadras, the head of

Afghanistan.

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Back in Ghazni, Temour established contact with an

Temour, now 45, returned to Ghazni and spent several un-

Serving customers of Portland General Electric,

Army SpecialForces team

happy months without a job.

Pacific Power, NW Natural and Cascade Natural Gas.

was noevidence to supporthis

pound on the base. The team's

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continued detention.

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SUNDAY, MAY 31, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

TODAY'S READ: JAPAN'S NATIONAL SPORT

Malaysiansseekpulp fiction escape as their government'sgrip tightens By Chen May Yee

said Wani Ardy, 31, the proprifledging political opposition by etor of a pop-up book market. Britain in 1957, has reacted to a

New York Times News Service

KUALA LUMPUR, Ma-

tightening restrictions on ev-

laysia — When Anis Suhaila wants a cheap thrill, latest Malaysian paperback releases. But she does not

buy them in ordinary bookstores here, some of which do not carry the titles she is most interested in.

Instead, she

' ,t

More than 10 M alay-lan-

guage publishers have burst

erythingfrom academic freedom to personal liberties. Young people are told how to behave not only by their teachers and parents but also, increasingly, by the government and religious authorities. Recent decrees have included prohibitions on yoga, the celebration of Halloween and smoking shisha, or water pipes. Newspapers and televisionshows are routinely censored. In Malaysia, writers and

she turns to Instagram and Twitter to learn about the

's

A7

u sually

heads to one of the "pop

up" book markets that appear occasionally, almost

onto the scene in the past four

years. Most of them produce pulp fiction and estimate that they have sold more than a

million books through popup stalls, online vendors and some traditional bookstores.

"Newspapers are subject to censorship and things like libel law, whereas with fiction,

you can then create scenarios people kind of recognize," said Amir Muhammad, 42, who

started one of the country's in Kuala Lumpur to find dom, but on print, in a book, biggest independent publishwhat she is looking for: ris- they can basically go naked," ing companies, Buku Fixi. randomly, on the streets

Photosby KoSasaki/For The Washington Post

que tales of crime, horror

Boys take part in sumo wrestling practice at a dojo in Tokyo. Japan's national sport is in decline as

and gritty young love that

younger audiences flock to baseball and soccer.

are written in Malay and

ans inn i sreca ture ecounr 'ssumo o? By Anna Fifielde The Washington Post

TOKYO — Chikara Yamanobe is about as far from a sumo wrestler as it's possible to be. He's so skinny that his ribs stick out, and his eyes well up when he gets manhandled in the ring. He's also 5 years old. Still, Chikara, whose name means "power," wants to be a professional sumo wrestler when he grows up. "I want to be l ike Endo,"

yj

aimed at young Muslim Malaysians. T he writing can b e patchy, but it is fresh and edgy, said Anis, 24, a

~r •

manager at an education

vant" to Malaysia's political scene. She devours four

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boy who can see ghosts. This new-style pulp fiction, much of it by first-time

authors who got their start blogging, is the product of an independent, irreverent publishing industry that has sprung up over the past four years and has tapped into a desirefor escapism among younger Malaysians as their country has become more socially In recentyears, Malaysia's laid-back style of Islam

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has taken on more Arab

CAUNNIH 541-213-5651 ~

overtones. And the government, controlled by the same coalition since the

nation's independence from

Japan's national sport, with

"I lost 31 pounds!"

books a month, she said, the most recent a tale of a

conservative.

Increase yourFAT-BURNING Metabolismup to70%I

mi

on "something that is rele-

most three hours at a dojo in the Japanese sumo star and heartthrob. Chances are Chikara won't make it.

e

company, adding that the stories sometimes touch

he said after training for alnorthern Tokyo one recent Sunday morning, referring to

readers "don't have much free-

nra casouc RESEARCH CENTER

g

'on Metsbdic Mow', moal chenlscen expect s loee 1s Ihs per week.Reeults verypenonh penon.

WE IG H T LOSSSPECIALISTS

its traditions and Shinto ritu-

als and requirement for physical heft, is in decline as boys in this baseball-mad country

A MAGAZINE DEDICATED TO DEFINING THE FUTURE OF CENTRAL OREGON

lose interest in a sport that is

seldom shown on prime-time TV and offers little in the way

Shotaro Abe, 6, wipes away tears after being thrown to the ground

of branded goods. at sumo wrestling practice. In recent years, sumo has become dominated by foreignsumo, so our aim is to provide Shotaro asked to start sumo a sumo tournament wrapped up an occasion," Nakazawa said. year ago after seeing it at one this month, the winners were "We'll be happy if anyone, of the i n troductory tournaall from somewhere else. Ter- even one child, gets interested ments, so now they travel an unofuji Haruo — a Mongolian and starts to play." hour by train to the dojo every born Gantulga Ganerdene The Japan Sumo Federa- Saturday and Sunday. "I'm a little envious that he is — emerged victorious from tion, the group for amateur a competition that featured wrestlers, also is trying to get having so much fun," Abe said. two of his compatriots and a children interested through He confessed to wanting Bulgarian in the top rankings. tournaments for junior high Japanese wrestlers to work Hawaiians and other Pacific school students. harder when M o ngolians Islanders, along with an EgypNoboru Yoshimura, admin- came to dominate the sport. tian and a couple of Georgians, istrative chief of the federation, "But then I thought about how also have featured prominent- said he was worried about Ichiro has done so well and sumo's declining popularity. how this is just accepted," he ly this year. This is partly the result of a Even though martial arts be- said, referring to Ichiro Sugeneral trend away from rigid came part of the junior high zuki, the Japanese baseball traditions — the numbers of school curriculum in 2012, player who is a member of the heavily made-up geisha also kids are choosing kendo and Miami Marlins. are plummeting — and the life judo over other options. Some parents, h owever, of a professional sumo wresYoshimura said the feder- balk at a crucial part of getting tler is particularly tough. As- ation now provides a three- ahead in sumo: being heavy. "Some high school clubs pirants must give up school at day sumo training course 15 and live in a communal"sta- for teachers to boost interest. make you eat until you throw ble" where everything from "Sumo doesn't require much, up, but some clubs just leave it their hairstyle to their diet is there'sno equipment neces- to you to bulk up," said Akiteregimented. sary, and it's easier to start, so ru Kiyomiya as he watched It also stems in part from a we are promoting sumo that his sons, 13-year-old Itto and lack of access. The main sumo way in order to expand the 10-year-old Kenshi, train. "If matches happen in the after- player base," he said. this is the path they want to noon — they are shown on the Numbers are hard to come take, then yes, I'll support public broadcasting network by, but participation in the them." while most kids are at cram Wanpaku sumo tournament, But the boys' mother, Yumi school — and sumo arenas are an event for c h ildren, has Kiyomiya, was not so sure. "I filled largely with pensioners droppedfrom 70,000 kids in actually don't want them to get and tourists. 1994 to 33,000 in 2014. Starting big," she said. "I just feed them "They're losing their de- last year, a qualifying round balanced meals." After the four-hour training mographic," said Mike Wese- was held in Mongolia, and one mann, an American who runs will be held in Hawaii for the session, Shinju Taira, a former the SumoTalk blog. Plus, it's first time this year. professional wrestler who now difficult for sumo to compete But at the dojo in Asakusa, coaches at the dojo, said he with other sports. a Tokyo neighborhood famous worried about the decline of "It's not like fathers say for its Buddhist temple, boys sumo both as a sport and as a to their sons in t h e w eek- of various ages were spending part of a culture. "It's not that everybody will end, 'Let'sgo practice sumo,' hours doing exercises, wresbut they will go kick a ball tling with coaches and fetch- get into the professional levels, a round," W esemann s a i d . ing Band-Aids for grazes. In but we're trying to raise future "And in baseball and soc- a sign of the sport's hierarchi- leaders, people who can be cer, there are jerseys and cal traditions, older boys took leaders in our society," he said. hats that kids can wear, but turns holding sweat towels for Hisao Yoshiyoka, who had they're hardly going to wander theircoaches. two sons on the mat at the around in a loincloth to show But the older boys also tend- dojo, said she was happy about their love of sumo. There's just ed to the younger ones, fixing her boys' experience. "They're learning how to nothing cool about it." their mawashi, or loincloths, Sumo officials are all too when they came loose and survive in society, in this hiaware of this. patiently taking them through erarchicalworld, and they're "Sumo is not a familiar their drills. learning about Japanese traBoys — and they are almost ditions," she said. "When the sport compared to others like soccer and b aseball," said always boys, as girls and wom- young ones come for the first Kento Nakazawa of the Ja- en have not traditionally been time, they are a little bit scared pan Sumo Association, who allowed in the ring — gener- to go into the ring. But as they organizesa children's sumo ally practice sumo as a sport learn how it's done, they beclass every year. The associ- until high school. Then, if they come more confident." Her youngest son, Ryudai, ation conducts the class at as want to continue, things bemany as six locations, but on come alotmore serious. 7, has already chosen his proaverage,only 50 to 60children Toshiyo Abe sat on the tat- fessional sumo wrestler name. showup. ami mats watching his son Watch out in 2030 for a yo"There aren't many oppor- Shotaro, a 6-year-old missing a kozuna, or grand champion, tunities for kids to get to play front tooth, wrestle older boys. called Dairyu. ers. When the summer grand

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Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B4 Weather, B6

© www.bendbulletin.com/local

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MAY 31, 2015

Detourahead A detour will direct motorists around the Franklin Avenue

underpass today so workers can repair the

railroad bridge above.

Churcb toholdvigil for Burundi's Batwa

togay

A dirt bike nder was

By Jasmine Rockow The Bulletin

After raising money to help indigenous people in Burundi

Presbyterian Church is preparing a show of friendship and solidarity. Political turmoil has

Pete Smith / The Bulletin

Road repaving A length of road onNE 27th Street between Rosemary Drive and Butler Market Road will be repaved June1-5. Thecity will keep two-way traffic on 27th except whenthe workis adjacentto Mountain View High School.

qlls es Rd.

Mountain View High School

Ifyouoo: What:Prayer vigil for Burundi Where:First Presbyterian

o

Church, 230 NE Ninth St.,

Bend When:6:30 p.m. today Contact:www.bendfp.org

erupted in the small, pover-

I

ty-stricken southeast African country since three Bend

Source: City of Bend

women traveled there in

February. The trip forged a friendship between Bend's congregation and the Batwa, an indigenous minority group that has been forced out of ancestral lands and pushed

into extreme poverty by the forces of modernization and the devastating Hutu-Tutsi

conflict.

friends during this difficult time at 6:30 tonight. Church

leaders plan to pray, read Burundian poetry and talk about the political situation

and what people can do to support people in Burundi while applying political pressure on U.S. leaders. "For us, there's a real sense of friendship and really wanting to stand with our friends," said Pastor Jenny Warner. "We want to let them know

First Presbyterian Church

we're here and that we're committed to staying in the

members will hold a vigil in support of their Batwa

Evariste Ndikumana/ Submitted photo

Bstws people taking pictures for their identity cards. The First Presbyterian Church raised money to help the Batwa people obtain the cards so they can vote in Burundi.

relationship even when it's

you. I think that friendship

hard ... now that they are

piece is important and a vigil is one thing we can do even when we're so far away."

having conflict, we can say we're here, we're thinking about you and praying for

See Batwa /B2

oun u n ers earnro es

7Ro e Carli Krueger /The Bulletin

STATE NEWS • Fossil:Sen. Wyden calling for radar update,B3 • Rnsehurg: Reinstatement of neighborhood watch helps clean up southeast area,B3 • Cnrvngis:Public commentsoughtas industrial site cleanup enters final phase,B3

PUBUC OFFICIALS

The Bulletin Call nreporter

Deschutes.............541-617-7820 Crook.....................541-617-7831 Jefferson...............541-617-7831 Salem .................. 406-589-4347 Business............... 541-617-7815 Education..............541-617-7831 Health ...................541-383-0304 Public lands..........541-617-7812 Public safety.........541-383-0376

Photos by Tess Freeman/The Bulletin

A.J. Clough, 11, controls the head of n mechanical replica of a deer while G. Rick Collins, of Bend, watches during the Oregon Hunters Association Youth and Family Day. Oregon State Police demonstrated at the event how they use the mechanical animals to catch people

hunting illegally.

• Sisters' hunting eventaimsat bringing a new generation to theage-old sport By Scott Hammers The Bulletin

SISTERS — Local kids got a taste of the outdoor life

Submissions • Lettersand opinions:

and family coordinator for the Bend chapter ofthe Oregon Edward Flores, 14, of Bend, practices shooting a bowand arrow.

• Schoolnews andnotes:

as shooting and fishing.

Details onthe Obituaries page inside. Contact: 541-617-7825, obits@bendbulletin.com

• Community events: Visit bendbuiietin.com/events and click "AddEvent" at ieast10 days beforepublication. Details on the calendarpageinside Local andGO!Magazine. Contact: 541-383-0351, communityiife@bendbuiieiin.com

• Engagements,weddings, anniversaries, birthdays: The Milestonespagepublishes Sunday inCommunity Life. Forms areavailable online at bendbuiietin.com/miiesfones. Contact: 541-633-2117, miiestones@bendbuiietin.com

will likely decline further if people don't start when they're young. An estimated 80 families, some hunters and some

Saturday's event and the youth

541-383-0367

• Obituaries, DeathNotices:

in recent years, Borst said, and

annual Oregon Hunters AssoSisters. Kevin Borst, organizer of

ee'

The event st Alder Creek Ranch near Sisters featured more than10 stations where children and adults practiced outdoor skills such

Email newsitemsand notices ofgeneralinterest to news@bendbuiietin.com. Email announcements ofteens' academic achievements toyouth@bendbuiietin.com. Email collegenotes, military graduationsandreunion info fo bulletin@bendbuiietin.com. Contact: 541-633-2117

shotguns and more at the ciation Youth and Family Day at the Alder Creek Ranch near

• Civic Calendarnotices:

and phone number. Contact:

See additional photos on The Bulletin's website: hnndhnnetin.cnm

O

Saturday, shooting bows and

Email: ietters@bendbuiietin.com Maiii My Nickei's Worth or In MyView P.O. Box6020 Bend, OR97708 Details onthe Editorials page inside. Contact: 541-633-2117 Email eventinformation to news@bendbulletin.com,with "Civic Calendar" inthesubject, andincludeacontact name

injured andhadto be rescued on private forestland Saturdayafternoon west of Bend. Pat Rupar,44, was flown by AirLink to St. Charles Bendwith nonlife-threatening injuries, according to anews release from Sgt. Ronny Dozier, Searchand Rescue operations manager with the Deschutes County Sheriff's Office. Rupar, JamieChiapetta,48, and Brian Price, all from Bend,were riding on a nonmaintained road whenRuparstruck a small boulder in the road about 3:45 p.m.and was thrown off his bike into a stump. His bike landed ontop of him, according to Dozier. They were riding on trails near Bull Springs Road andForest Service Road 4606west of Bend. Chiapetta called 911 and was able toprovide an accurate location using coordinates from a handheld GPS. Search andRescue units from the sheriff's offic erespondedalong with the U.S.Forest Service and OregonState Police. Theterrain was too rough for fire and ambulance to respond, Dozier said. AirLink landed about ahalf-mile away. Rupar wasstabilized, transported to AirLink by a Searchand Rescue unit and then flown to the hospital. — Bulletin staff report

Have a story idea or submission? Contact us!

Bend ......................541-633-2160 Redmond...............541-617-7831 Sisters....................541-617-7831 La Pine ...................541-617-7831 Sunriver .................541-617-7831

Diit dike rider

in crash, rescued

obtain identification cards that are imperative to their enfranchisement, Bend's First

Rsag CIBSeg

BRIEFING

not, turned out Saturday. Borst said hunting has a bit

of an image problem, in no small part because hunters'

support for conservation efall about gettingkids outside. forts isn't as widely known as Participation in hunting and it could be. fishing has been on the decline SeeHunting/B5 Hunters Association, said it's

U.S. SENATE • Sen. JeffMerkiey, D-Ore. 107 Russell Senate Office Building Washington, D.C.20510 Phone: 202-224-3753 Web: http://merkiey. senate.gov Bend office: 131 NWHawthorne Ave., Suite 208 Bend, OR97701 Phone: 541-318-1298 • Sen. RonWyden, D-Ore. 223 Dirksen Senate Office Building Washington, D.C.20510 Phone: 202-224-5244 Web: http://wyden. senate.gov Bend office: 131 NWHawthorne Ave., Suite107 Bend, OR97701 Phone: 541-330-9142 U.S. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES • Rep. GregWalden, R-HoodRiver 2182 Rayburn House Office Building Washington, D.C.20515 Phone: 202-225-6730 Web: http://walden. house.gov Bendoffice: 1051 NWBondSt., Suite 400 Bend, OR97701 Phone: 541-389-4408 Fax: 541-389-4452 STATE OF OREGON

• Gov. KateBrown, D 160 State Capitol, 900 Court St. Salem, OR 97301 Phone:503-378-4582 Fax:503-378-6872 Web: http://governor. oregon.gov

YESTERYEAR

Yacht club plans to sail on ElkLakeasseason opens in 1940 Compiled byDonHoinesstrom rrchivedcopiesofTheBulletin atDes Chutes County Historical Society.

top of an eminence whence is

seen a pleasant outlook. But let us not in the elation

of winning this first hilltop, deceive ourselves into thinking that we have gained the summit of the hill of our mu-

For theweekending M81 30, 1915

nicipal ambitions. Let us not, for one self-satisfied moment,

Keep at it(editoyial)

be content with what we have attained.

Bend has arrived at a milestone in its career. A bad bit of

the grade lies behind us. We are well on the way up the hill. We have, in fact, reached the

Rather, let us realize fully and with unanimous determi-

nation, that the bigger hills, the summits really worth gaining, still lie before us. Our

ambitions should in no way abatebecause we atlastseem somewhat above the level. It is rather for us to strive more

required to make such a town as we desire Bend to be. Fortunately, in addition to

To be aprosperous lumber manufacturing town is well enough.We aredelightedtobe that, and wonderfullypleased

persistently for the higher

our timber, which is our great immediate economic asset, na- that at last milling has come.

positions which we now see

ture has given us other notable

It means immediate and sub-

with ever increasing clearness ahead of us cheered in our

resources. While doing all we can toassistthosewho areun-

stantial expansion, the firm

resolve to reach them by the

dertaking the development of

success thus far achieved.

the timber opportunities upon a scale that alone will make of Bend a goodly city, let us

population andbusiness center and metropolis of Central

In other words, Bend has not "arrived." It takes more than

one swallow to make a summer as the saying goes, and more than one lumber mill, or

even several lumber mills are

establishment of Bend as the Oregon. But we are not satisfied to stop there. Bend must

remember that it is now more

and inevitably will be, a truly

than ever a community duty to encourage the up-building of our other resources.

important city. It is for us so to make it.

SeeYesteryear/B5


B2

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MAY 31, 2015

E VENT

ENDA R

TODAY

THURSDAY

BEND WOMEN'SWEEKEND: A two-day conference about renewal, inspiration and connection for women of all ages;10a.m.-5 p.m.; free; The Riverhouse Convention Center, 3075 U.S. Highway 97,Bend; www.bendwomensweekend.com or 541-633-7115. SUMMER SALE: Featuring antiques and vintage items, furniture, yard art, baked goods and more, to benefit local food banks; 10 a.m.; Patchwork Antiques, 797 CAve., Terrebonne; 541-419-8637. GEAR SALE: Featuring women's used and newoutdoor gear for all seasons; noon; Rebound Physical Therapy and Biomechanics LabWest Clinic,1160 SWSimpson Ave., Suite 200, Bend; 541-280-1000. CASCADE WINDSSYMPHONIC BAND SPRING CONCERT:Featuring aselection of American folksongs, Handel and Bach; 2 p.m.; free, donations accepted; Summit High School, 2855 NWClearwater Drive, Bend; www.cascadewinds.org or 541-383-7743. CENTRALOREGON BEERWEEK: Featuring tastings from 5-7 p.m. and music from 7-9 p.m. every day; 5 p.m.; Broken TopBottle Shop, 1740 NW Pence Lane,Suite1, Bend; www. btbsbend.com or 541-728-0703. SCOTT WEILAND ANDTHE WILDABOUTS: The former lead singer of the StoneTemple Pilots performs with his band; 6 p.m.; $25 plus fees in advance; Century Center, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www. bendticket.com.

MUSIC ANDMENTORS: The songwriter Steve Seskin performs, with Circle of Friends andmembers of the Sisters Community; 7 p.m.; $15 plus fees in advance, $20 atthe door, $10foryouth; The Belfry, 302 E. MainAve., Sisters; www.sistersfolkfestival.org or 541-549-4979. 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.

Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Questions: communitylife@bendbulletin.com,541-383-0351.

Ash and Elm, Sisters; 541-719-8030. SCRATCHDOG STRINGBAND:The Portlandbluegrassand folktrio performs; 6 p.m.; $5; Faith, Hopeand Charity Vineyards, 70450 NWLower Valley Drive, Terrebonne; www. faithhopeandcharityevents.com or 541-526-5075. AUTHORPRESENTATION:Jonathan Stewart will speak on his book "Walking Away from the Land: Change at the Crest of a Continent"; 6:30 p.m.; $5; Paulina Springs june10 Books, 422 SW Sixth St.,Redmond; BEND FARMERSMARKET: 541-526-1491. Featuring food, drinks and more; 3 AUTHORPRESENTATION:Jennifer p.m.; Brooks Alley, NWBrooks St., Hillman-Magnuson will be reading Bend; www.bendfarmersmarket.com excerpts from her travel memoir or 541-408-4998. "Peanut Butter and Naan:Stories of TONY HOLIDAY8tTHE an American Mom in the FarEast"; VELVETONES: The blues-funk 6:30 p.m.; Barnes and Noble, Forum band from Utah performs; 9 Shopping Center, 2690 U.S. Highway p.m.; $5; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 20, Bend; 541-318-7242. 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; "A FUNNYTHINGHAPPENED www volcanictheatrepub.com or ON THEWAYTOTHE FORUM": A 541-323-1881. musical about Pseudolus, a crafty slave, who struggles to win the June11 hand of a beautiful but slow-witted BIG BANDJAZZ ENSEMBLE courtesan named Philia; 7:30 CONCERT: Theensemble performs p.m.; $20,$16for seniors, $13 traditional and contemporary charts; for students; CascadesTheatre, 7:30 p.m.; $10, $5 for seniors 148 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; and students with ID; Wille Hall, www.cascadestheatrical.org or Central Oregon Community College, 541-389-0803. 2600 NWCollegeWay ,Bend; "THE KIDWITH ABIKE":A showing 541-383-7510. of the grand prize winner of the 2011 THE MULLIGANBROTHERS: Cannes Film Festival; 7:30 p.m.; The Americana folk band from Rodriguez Annex, Jefferson County Baton Rouge, L.A. performs; 9 Library, 134 SE E St., Madras; www. p.m.; $5; Volcanic Theatre Pub, jcld.org or 541-475-3351. 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; "THE CEMETERY CLUB":A play www.volcanictheatrepub.com or about three Jewish widows meet 541-323-1881. once a month for tea before going to visit their husband's graves; June12 7:30 p.m.; $19, $16 for seniors SISTERSFARMERSMARKET: and students; 2nd StreetTheater, Featuring fresh vegetables, fruits, 220 NE Lafayette Ave., Bend; locall y madegoods and more;2 p.m.; www.2ndstreettheater.com or Barclay Park, Hood Street, between 541-312-9626. REDMOND FARMERS MARKET: Featuring food, drinks and more; 3 p.m.; Centennial Park, corner of SW Seventh Street and Evergreen Avenue, Redmond;541-550-0066. THE OWYHEERIVER JOURNALS: Join author Bonnie Olin for a journey into the Canyonlands of the Owyhee River; 6 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NWWall St., Bend; www.deschuteslibrary.org or 541-312-1032.

FRIDAY

SISTERSFARMERSMARKET: Featuring fresh vegetables, fruits, locall ymadegoodsand more;2 p.m .; Barclay Park, Hood Street, between Ash and Elm, Sisters; 541-719-8030. FIRST FRIDAY ARTWALK: Art exhibit openings, artist talks, live music, wine and food in downtown Bend and the Old Mill District; 5 p.m.; throughout Bend. "WILD WILD WILDEST WEST": A family-friendly old time Western comedymelodrama,presented by the Sunriver STARS; 6p.m.; $15, $10 for18 and younger, $40i$35 for Saturday dinner show; Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic & Recreation Center, 57250 Overlook Road, Sunriver; 541-480-7483. CRAFT BEARD& MUSTACHE COMPETITION:Featuring a beard and mustache competition, with live music by Boxcar Stringband; 6:30 p.m.; Deschutes Brewery & Public House,1044 NW BondSt., Bend; MOMDAY www.deschutesbrewery.com or 541-382-9242. SOLO JAZZVOCALCLASS "INTOTHE WOODS": An adaptation CONCERT: Nine singers from CascadeSchoolofM usicwhostudy of Stephen Sondeim's musical about fairytales, presented by OperaBend; jazz styling will perform; 5:30 p.m.; free; The Astro Lounge, 939 NW 7 p.m.; $25-$40; Pinckney Center for the Performing Arts, Central Oregon Bond St., Bend; 541-306-4480. TWIN:The alternative folk band from Community College, 2600 NW College Way, Bend; www.operabend. Winnipeg, Canada, performs, with Pachow Kabang; 9 p.m.; $5; Volcanic org or 888-718-4253. "SELMA":A screening of the OscarTheatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com winning film; 7:30 p.m.; Rodriguez Annex, Jefferson County Library,134 or 541-323-1881. SE E St., Madras; www.jcld.org or 541-475-3351. TUESDAY THE RISE OFENDURO:Afilm about GREEN TEAM MOVIENIGHT:A the history of enduro mountain screening of "The Healthcare Movie," biking, featuring raffles and more, a film comparing the health care to benefit COTA;7:30 p.m.; $10 plus systems of the U.S.and Canada; fees in advance, $14at the door; 6:30 p.m.; free; First Presbyterian Tower Theatre, 835 NWWall St., Church, 230 NENinth St., Bend; Bend; www.towertheatre.org or 541-815-6504. 541-317-0700. B.I.G. IM PROV:Thecomedytroupe WEDNESDAY performs; 8 p.m.; $8 plus fees in advance, $10 at the door; 2nd Street BEND FARMERSMARKET: Theater, 220 NELafayette Ave., Featuring food, drinks and more; 3 Bend; www.2ndstreettheater.com or p.m.; Brooks Alley, NWBrooks St., 541-312-9626. Bend; www.bendfarmersmarket.com MELODY GUY:Featuring or 541-408-4998. performances as part of the AUTHOR PRESENTATION: Diana Newberry Event Music and Arts Rodgers, farmer, paleo nutritionist Festival teaser; 8 p.m.; free, and author of "The Homegrown donationsaccepted; Volcanic Theatre Paleo Cookbook" will discuss Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; food, farming and sustainability; www volcanictheatrepub.com or 5:30-7 p.m.; free; Natural Grocers, 541-323-1881. 3199 N. U.S. Highway 97,Bend; 641-617-0200. SATURDAY KRIS LAGER BAND:The rock and soul band from Nebraska performs; PLANT ANDGARDENSALE: 7 p.m.; free; McMenamins Old St. Featuring aselection of perennials, Francis School,700 NW Bond St., annuals, vegetables, herbs and Bend; www.mcmenamins.com or garden items to benefit projects for 541-382-5174. The Central Oregon Opportunity Center; 8:30a.m.; Zion Lutheran VAMPIRATES:TheReno, Nevada, Church,1113SWBlackButte Blvd., punk rock band performs, with the Redmond; 541-382-7044. Beerslayers; 9p.m.; $5;Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, MADRASSATURDAYMARKET: Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com Featuring food, drinks, live music and or 541-323-1881. more;9a.m.; Sahalee Park,241 SE

Jamie Weiland / Submitted photo

Scott Weiland and The Wlldabouts featuring, from left, Joey Castillo, Tommy Black, Nick Maybury and Scott Weiland, plays at 6 tonight at Century Center. Seventh St., Madras; 541-546-6778. OSU EXTENSIONMASTER GARDENERSPLANTSALE: Find plants that thrive in Central Oregon, grown by Master Gardeners; 9 a.m.; OSU Extension Office-Deschutes Fairgrounds, 3800 SWAirport Way,

Redmond;www.gocomga.comor 541-548-6088. CENTRALOREGONSATURDAY MARKET:Featuring crafts, music, food and more; 10 a.m.; Across from the Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NWWall St., Bend; 541-420-9015. SPOTLIGHTCHAMBER PLAYERS: Featuring music by Mozart, Tchaikovsky, Mendelssohn, and more; 3:30 p.m.; Whispering Winds Retirement, 2920 NE Connors Ave., Bend; www. highdesertchambermusic.comi or 541-306-3988. "WILD WILD WILDESTWEST": A family-friendly old-time Western comedymelodrama, presented by the Sunriver STARS; 5p.m.; $15, $10for18andyounger, $40l$35 for Saturday dinner show; Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic & Recreation Center, 57250 Overlook Road, Sunriver; 541-480-7483. BEND SUMMERLATIN DANCESHOWCASE:Featuring

performances,food, drinks, dancing and more; 6:30 p.m.; $10 plus fees; Armature, 50 SEScott St, Bend; 541-325-6676. "INTOTHE WOODS": Anadaptation of Stephen Sondeim's musical about fairytales, presented by OperaBend; 7 p.m.; $25-$40; Pinckney Center for the Performing Arts, Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NW College Way,Bend; www.operabend. org or 888-718-4253. BUTTERFLYBREAKDOWN:The Portland band performs, with North Country; 9 p.m.; $5; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881. "THE ROCKYHORROR PICTURE SHOW":The cult-classic musical is presented;11:30 p.m.; $10, $15 for V.I.P.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 NE Lafayette Ave., Bend; www. bendticket.com or 541-410-0975.

June 7

Oregon; 10 a.m.; free; Crescent Moon Alpaca Ranch, 7566 N. U.S. Highway 97,Terrebonne; www. friendsforlifedogtraining.com or 541-306-9882. "WILD WILD WILDEST WEST": A family-friendly old time western comedymelodrama,presented by the Sunriver STARS; 2p.m.; $15,

$10 for18 andyounger, $40/$35 for Saturday dinner show; Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic & Recreation Center, 57250 Overlook Road, Sunriver; 541-480-7483. SUNDAYAFTERNOONDANCE: Featuring a dancewith The Notable Swing Dance andBetty Berger; 2

p.m.; $5 perperson; BendSenior Center, 1600 SEReedMarket Road, Bend; 541-388-1133. "INTO THE WOODS": An adaptation of Stephen Sondeim's musical about fairytales, presented by OperaBend; 3 p.m.; $25-$40; Pinckney Center for the Performing Arts, Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NW College Way,Bend; www.operabend. org or 888-718-4253. I'M GONNASING!: Featuring songs and hymns, with the BendCamerata and Men's Chorus of Central Oregon; 6 p.m.; Nativity Lutheran Church, 60850 Brosterhous Road, Bend; www.nativitychoir weebly.com or 541-388-0765. JAPHY'S DESCENT: The alternative band from Arizona performs, with Buckle Rash;9 p.m.;$5;Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.

June 8 NATURALHISTORYPUB:AWild Solution for Climate Change:Thomas Lovejoy, conservationist, will be this season's final Natural History Pub speaker; 7 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; www.highdesertmuseum.orgi rsvp or 541-382-4754.

COUNTRY SIDE LIVING ANice Place To Call Home Opening Country Side Living in Redmond Fall of zoig TAKING RESERVATIONS: CALL FOR MORE INFO Call: 541-548-3049 j www.countrysideliving.com

June 9

THELMA'S PLACE

THE OWYHEERIVER JOURNALS: Join author Bonnie Olin for a journey into the Canyonlands of the Owyhee River; noon; Sisters Library,110 N CedarSt., Sisters; www.deschuteslibrary.org/Sisters; 541-312-1032.

Adult Day Respite for those living with memory loss Donate your Vehicle to Thelma's Place & Make a Difference in Memory Care! FREE PICK-UP j TAX DEDUCTION j IT'S EASY! Call: 54z-548-3049 j www.thelmasplace.org

HEAVEN CANWAIT 5K WALK/RUN: A fun run/walk 5K benefiting Sara's Project; 9 a.m.; $25-$40, registration required; Drake Park, 777 Riverside Blvd., Bend; www.heavencanwait.org or 541-706-6996. BATTLEBUDDIESOFCENTRAL OREGON FUNDRAISER: Featuring live music, food and more to benefit Battle Buddies of Central

The congregation raised$17,000, and nearly 700 Batwa people have obtained their

Sat a Contlnued from B1 W arner t r aveled t o

To submit an event, visit bendbulletin.comlevents and click 'Add Event" at least 10 days before publication.

Bu-

rundi in February with local author Jane Kirkpatrick, vol-

unteer and church member Maggie Hanson, Kelly Bean of Portland-based nonprofit African Road, and Batwa activist Evariste N dikumana. The three Bend women

identity cards, which they have to buy, and

registered to vote since receiving the money in March.The $17,000 also helped pay for378 Batwa children to receive birth certificates in April, and earlier this week Batwa couples bought wedding clothes and started marriage ceremonies,using some ofthe money.

returned determined to raise enough money to buy three Batwa villages everything be there for their lifetime." they would need to purchase In the midst of all of this, identity cards, which are re- the country has since been con f l i ct t h a t

in the capital of Bujumbura, has fled the country. Last

month he co-authored anoped piece for The New York

quired to vote.

struck w i t h

The congregation raised $17,000, and nearly 700 Batwa people have obtained their identity cards, which they have to buy, and regis-

threatens to boil over. Presi- Times that warns the current dent Pierre Nkurunziza anconflict could "soon become nounced in April his plan to another violent chapter in his

tered to vote since receiving

cerned to write letters to U.S.

run for a third term, which

sparked protests from opponents who say the move is

the money in March. The unconstitutional and in viola$17,000 also helped pay for tion of a peace deal that end378 Batwa children to receive ed the country's 12-year civil birth certificates inApril, and war in 2006. earlier this week Batwa couDespite a failed coup, ciples bought wedding clothes vilian deaths and the flight and started marriagecere- of more than 105,000 people monies, using some of the from the country, the rural money. Batwa villages communicat"That's really exciting, ing with First Presbyterian

country's fratricidal history."

Warner urges those conRep. Greg Walden, R-Hood River, Sens. Ron Wyden and Jeff Merkley, both D-Ore., or the White House.

"The more people say 'Hey, Burundi is on our radar and even though it's a tiny coun-

As a Rotaractor you can • Volunteer locallyand internationally

• Build career contacts • Develop leadership skills • Network with service-minded people worldwide

• Make new friends and have fun! Contact usto learn how you can join.

II

I

5

E I

Follow us on social media and check our page for the next meeting!

making intervention on their

www.rotary.ors/rotaract

behalf will go a long way I

have remained safe, Warner

despite everything," Warner said. "Their ID and registra-

said. But Jean Claude Nkund- think," Warner said. wa, a peace activist Warner, Hanson and Kirkpatrick met

Be a part of Bend Rotaract.

try, we're concerned,' the better. Some level of peace-

that the project is continuing tion with the government will

Join a movement of exceptional individuals who are using their skills talents, and energy to help others.

— Reporter: 541-383-0354, jrockow@bendbulletin.com


SUNDAY, MAY 31, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

B3

REGON AROUND THE STATE

as wee in e e isaure: con ro, a a n o By Jonathan J. Cooper

prescription. The advocates

The Associated Press

of each measure say they'd make it easier for women to

SALEM — Here's a look at

OffiCer-inVOIVed ShOOting —The Oregon State Police said aman is dead after hewasshot by troopers responding to a domestic disturbance call in rural JosephineCounty. Thepatrol said Robert Box,55, died shortly after hewastaken to Three Rivers Medical Center inGrants Pass. Twotroopers responded to acall just before10:30 p.m. Friday near Wilderville, which isabout10 miles southwest of Grants Pass. The patrol said thetroopers madecontact with Box andshortly after reported that shots werefired and Boxwasdown. Noother details were immediately available.Theshooting is being investigated by ateamof law enforcementagencies.

after he took photographs up men and women. a teenager's skirt. The House

Marijuana

also voted to outlaw so-called

highlights of the past week in access contraception and rethe Oregon Legislature: duce the number of unintended pregnancies. Neither had

ArreSt in infant death —AnOregonmanhasbeenarrested after

"revenge porn," making it a

The Senate voted nearly

crime to share intimate im-

unanimously to impose stricter regulations on Oregon's medical marijuana program, advancing a bill that's viewed much more skeptically in the

ages of someone without that

his10-month-old daughterwasfound unresponsive in acar in Pendleton and later died inthe hospital. Travis Martin, 21,wasarrested Fridaynight at his Irrigon homeoninvestigation of manslaughter, assault andcriminal mistreatment. MorrowCounty District AttorneyJustin Nelsonsaid the investigation beganafter the child wasfoundThursday in avehicle. Thegirl was taken to alocal hospital and later flown to ProvidenceSacred Heart Medical CenterandChildren's Hospital in Spokane,Washington. Nelson said shediedthereThursday afternoon. Nelsonsaid the child suffered injuries in Irrigon buthercondition worsened in Pendleton.

Birth control

opposition in the committees.

person's consent.

Two bills expanding access to birth control are headed for

Sex crimes

Talking about pay

The Senate Judiciary Committee voted unanimously to

The Oregon Senate endorsed a bill that would allow

House. Key r epresentatives

double the amount of time

people to sue an employer if

o f the committee that w i l l

that police and prosecutors

t hey're sanctioned for

consider it — oppose a provision allowing cities and counties to ban marijuana stores

votes in the House and Sen-

ate after advancing through committees last week. The Senate will take up a bill that

— including the co-chairman

d i s-

would require private insur- have to bring charges against ers to cover up to 12 months people accused of rape or

cussing their pay with other peopleor forseeking a raise. o f birth control at a t i m e , sexual assault. The proposed The bill is backed by Demomuch more thanthe 30- or 12-year statute of limitations crats who say it would help 90-day supplies that wom- is still less than the 20 years women who make less than

JuVenile Offender eSCapeS — Authorities aresearching for a Eugenemanwho escaped supervision at anOregonYouth Authority job site. A warrant hasbeenissued for the arrest of Joshua Ward, 18,who was sentenced asajuvenile for attempted sexual abuseandattempted robbery. TheOregonState Policesaid Fridaythat hewalked awayfrom a supervised job site inFlorence onWednesday. OregonYouthAuthority's Ann SnydersaidSaturdayafternoon that Ward hadnot beenfound but had reportedly beenspotted in the area. Shesays she's not surewhyhe chose to walkaway.CampFlorence is atransitional facility. State police say Wardmayposea danger to himself or others.

in their boundaries. The bill

is part of the Legislature's effort to rein in the medical en can currently get. In the that some sexual assault vic- their male co-workers fight marijuana program, which House, the Rules Committee tims are seeking. Meanwhile, for f a irness. Republicans is widely believed to create advanced another bill that the Senate backed a bi ll were staunchly opposed, say- excess pot that ends up on would allow pharmacists to aimed at closing a loophole in ing it would expose business- the black market, before recprescribe and dispense birth state privacy laws that recent- es to lawsuits and wouldn't reational marijuana becomes control without a doctor's ly let a man go unpunished fix the wage gap between legal.

— From wire reports

Wyden requestsradar updatefor wind energy Contamination deanup The Associated Press PENDLETON — U.S. Sen.

Ron Wyden is asking officials to update Air Force ra-

dar in Fossilbecause thecurrent system is outdated and preventing the generation of nearly 4,000 megawatts of wind energy across eastern Oregon and Washington. Wyden, an Oregon Democrat, sent a May 21 letter to Pentagon and Federal Avi-

ation officials asking them to replace the system with

aged by the Department of Defense and Homeland Security and is also used for air traffic control.

herds Flat Wind Farm in Gil-

liam and Morrow counties.

But Wyden says the admino v er- istration should replace the come interference created entire Fossil radar to allow by turbines, reports the East further projects.

"I appreciate the significance of your agencies' re-

to enter the final phase

future. "It's hard for me to believe,

A l l e n at the end of the day, there isn't a reasonable solution to continue wind development

F AA s p okesman

Kenitzer said they have reThe FAA has flagged sev- ceived Wyden's letter and eral wind turbines as a powill respond in a t i mely tential hazard because they manner. The Defense Deobstruct the radar's ability to partment did no t r e spond monitor airspace. to a request for comment on In 2010, the system was up- Thursday. graded to allow construction A farmer in the process of of the 845-megawatt Shep- permitting a 500-megawatt

technology that ca n

Oregonian. Developers consistently run into problems with the radar in Fossil, preventing the local wind energy development that has become a leading source of revenue for many communities. The long-range surveillance radar is jointly man-

velopment of wind energy resources."

The Associated Press

in the region," he said. "If not, then I guess we made a good

deanup efforts, bumps up others and adds bioremediation, a process by which the harmful tal Quality is asking for public chemical is broken down by comment on the final phase of bacteria.People can provide

bet and lost."

the trichloroethylene contam-

Although the cost of replacing the Fossil radar is

ination cleanup efforts that

CORVALLIS — The Oregon Department of Environmen-

started in 1990 at a western Oregon industrial site.

Qualityuntil Mondaymorning.

Judge Gary Thompson believes it is nothing in comparison to the billions of dollars

Trichloroethylene is a widely used, powerful industrial

Hollingsworth & Vose bought

in potential investment from

ingested. It spilled at the for- diation efforts and bills assomer Evanite Fiber plant some- ciated with the contamination, time between 1975 and 1985, induding paying m onthly when the contamination was city water fees for nearby discovered, the Corvallis Ga- families whose wells were

unknown, Sherman County

wind farm in M o rrow and Umatilla counties said more than 70 percent of his 292

sponsibilities in Eastern Or-

Wheatridge Wind Energy

egon, and I strongly support your efforts to ensure nation-

LLC, said he met with leaders in Washington, D.C., but

M assach u s e t t s - b a s e d the industrial site in 1996. The company inherited the reme-

solvent that's harmful when

turbine sites have been iden- wind companies searching tified by the FAA as potential for rural locations. hazards. In Oregon's second smallFarmer Jerry R i etmann, w ho i s a l s o t h e C E O o f

input on the plan to the Oregon Department of Environmental

est county of just 1,765 peo-

ple, Thompson says there are more than 1,000 mega-

zette-Times reports.

contaminated.

Oregon Department of Environmental Quality project manager Seth Sadofsky said this newest proposal could cost $6 million and may lead to the

watts of wind generation that

bring in more $8 million in they were unable to come up revenue. "It's our biggest induswith a solution to the wind "I do not, however, be- turbine problem. try, currently," he said. "In lieve that t h ese m i ssions Rietmann said he's still county revenue, it surpasses should preclude further de- p ositive about h i s f a r m 's farming substantially." al defense and safe skies," he wrote.

completion of the project in as

little as five years. The plan continues some

Free pipe installation estirttates

R)od, Home & Garden In

AT HOME

NeighbOrhOOd WatCh Cleaning uP SOutheaSt ROSebLIrg By Troy Brynelson The (Roseburg) News-Review

Neighborhood-watch membersin southeastRoseburg met with Douglas County District

Attorney Rick Wesenberg and Douglas County Sheriff John Hanlin on Thursday to dis-

cuss how to monitor the sometimes-problematic areabetter. Nearly 30 members from the

area were on hand at the Roseburg Senior Center to share stories and to ask questions

painted with foul language or door, an online bulletin board theirdoorssmeared with feces. within a p erson's respective "We make it perfectly clear neighborhood. "It's a never-ending struggle. that we're not going to accept them doing business, so we That group is really unique," takepictures and write down li- Wesenberg said. "It's a very censeplatenumbers and make diverse group of people, and it quite aware of what we're do- they're quite cohesive. That ing, so they don't come back," really speaks strongly for said Ruth Smith, a member of their neighborhood watch the watch. "They know they're organization." being observed and watched." Hanlin reminded the neighIn addition t o q u estions borhood watch members that about making a citizen's ar-

about cleaning up the area, rest, attendants of the meeting which stretches from Main asked about holding landlords Street to the South Umpqua accountable. Southeast RoseRiver and south of Oak Ave- burg has a relatively high rentnue to the Southgate Market & al rate, with about 60 percent Deli. of homes being rented. About That area, the watch said, 32 percent of Douglas County has often struggled to main- residents are renters. Members tain security. Though crimes of the watch said the landlords today are a far cry from when of the homes in the area feel rethe area was dubbed "Felony moved from their responsibilFlats," neighbors are still frus- ities, though D.A. Wesenberg trated with pervasive drug said at the moment there isn't a use and negligence. The area lot to be done other than filing cydesfrom safeto dangerous complaints when laws and city and back again frequently, ordinances are broken. members said. Still, the gathering provided "There's only two problems: positive reinforcement for the One is drugs. Selling drugs neighborhood watch, which isn't considered a real high pri- reactivated earlier this year to ority crime. (Sellers) get a slap quell problems in the neighon the wrist and come back. borhoods. Andrea Zielinski, That's a constant problem," community outreach coordisaid Kerry Atherton, the watch

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• •

• •

• •

• •

• •

• •

• •

• •

• •

• •

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• • Th eBulletin

taking matters into their own hands can go too far. With the

%ILSONSo fRedmond

exception of extreme crimes, citizen's arrests should take a

541-54$-2066

backseat to keen observation

and proper note-taking to help law enforcement. Vigilantism, he said, is not the goal. "Be smart about it," the sheriff said. "Being a dialed-in, top-

$INCS

lR ' TREss

notch witness is often better

than taking matters into your

O~O

HWY 20E & Dean swift Rd. (1 block West of Costco)

G allery-Be n d

own hands."

541-330-5084 •

541-323-3011• starks.com •

DISC OVERTHEVERYBESTCENTRALOREGONjjASTOOFFER,: :

i

Available at Central Oregon resorts, Chambers of Commerce, hotels and other key points of interests, including tourist kiosks across the state. It is also offeredto Deschutes County Expo Center visitors all year-round and at The Bulletin.

t

I

ll,"

, •

•1

nator for the sheriffs office,

captain. "The second problem told the crowd that statistics is the homeless problem, but from county law enforcement that is much, much better (than at least indicate that the area is it used tobe)." improving, as calls for service The members of the neigh- remain high but overall arrests borhood watch, decked out are down. "I love what you have done in yellow T-shirts, have once again taken to patrolling the with this neighborhood," Zielstreets. Since the beginning inski told the citizens. "You're of the year, they have called changing the perception of police with thorough reports what this area is." about potential criminal acThe neighborhood watch tivity. At the meeting, some is closely tied with others in speakers recalled times they town, such as NeighborWorks have brazenlytaken pictures, Umpqua and the South East close up and in broad daylight, Roseburg Voices in Communiof drug deals in progress. 0th- ty Enhancement (SERVICE). ers talked about times they've The members also c oordibeen retaliated against for their nate their efforts over a social efforts, getting their cars spray media website called Next-

112 WAYS TO,DISCOVERCENTRAL OREGON '; -;-"j: ., '"-~<+ ~ , IS 'ACOMPREHENSIVE GUIDE:. 4' to places, e v ents a n d a c t ivities t a king .", place throughout Central Oregon d uring the year =,

! I,

The Bulletin www.denddulletin.com •


B4

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MAY 31, 2015

BITUARIES DEATH NOTICES Joanne M. Walker, of Brothers Dec. 7, 1936 - May 25, 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 graveside service will be held Monday, June 1, 2015 at 11:00 AM in Pilot Butte Cemetery, Bend.

Richard H. (Dick) Mccolly, formerly of Sisters and Redmond Nov. 21, 1927 - May 21, 2015 Arrangements: Crown Memorial Center, Salem, OR Services: A Celebration of Life at Silverton, OR. Elks Lodge 2210, on Sat., June 6, from 12:00 - 2:00 p.m. Contributionsmay be made to:

Willamette Valley Hospice, 1015 3rd St., NW, Salem, OR 97304

David MacLean Ghormley, of Bend Sept. 29, 1923 - May 25, 2015 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Bend 541-318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.net Services: A private gathering to be held later this summer. Contributions may be made to:

Partners In Care, 2075 NE Wyatt Ct., Bend, OR.

Jacqueline Jean Smith, of Bend Mar. 13, 1935 - May 15, 2015 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Bend 541-318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.net Services: A Celebration of Life will be held at the Gardner Family Home, 22055 Rickard Road, Bend, Oregon 97702, Saturday, June 13, 2015 from 1:00 P.M. -4:00 P.M.

Caleb David Miller Nuv.18,1987- May19,2015 C aleb David M i l le r w a s born to D a vi d an d B e cky Miller in Bend, Oregon, on November 18, 1987. H is y ou n g e r sist e r , J azmin, w a s b o r n fo u r y ears later . C a leb l oved Legos and d i n osaurs and from ages 8-12 had a pass ion for roller hockey. H e l oved m u si c a n d b e g a n playing t h e p i a n o a t a

oung age and also played

ass and a c oustic g u i t ar and the low whistle. C aleb m ad e fr i en d s wherever he t r avelled, inc luding New Or l ea n s , Portland, and Indianapolis. His q u ic k l a u gh , g e n t leness, and thoughtful manner all drew people to him. He was a gifted musician, creative filmmaker, and int elligent student. H e w i l l b e dearly m i s sed b y h i s large and loving extended f amily, h i s d e v o ted p a r e nts, and hi s c a r ing l i t t l e sister. A m e m o r ia l g a t h e r i ng will be held Friday, June 5, 2 015, at 6:00 p.m., in t h e Bend Church of the Nazarene. Memorial co n t r i b utions may be made to the Caleb D avid Mi l l e r Don a t i o n Fund w i t h B a n k o f t he Cascades. P lease v i si t t h e o n l i n e r egistry fo r t h e f a m il y a t www.niswonger-reynolds. com

Colonel Clifford W. Steele February 24, 1942- May 27, 2015 Colonel Cl i f f o r d W. S teele passed away M a y 27th. H is f ami l y an d friends honor and remember him a s a l i f e l ong p a triot, a ma n o f d eep c onviction and integrity, and a e nerous and l o v in g s o n , r other, h u s band, f a t h er and grandfather. Memor ial con t r i b u t i on s in Clifford's name ar e b eing a ccepted a t P a r t n er s I n Care/Hospice House, 2075 NE Wyatt Court, Bend, OR 97701.

Sam L. Basque July 9, 1933- May 24, 2015

Ghormley

Sam Basque passed away o n May 2 4 i n B e n d , O r egon. He was born July 9, 1933 t o M a x an d A n n Basque in T r i n i dad, Colorado. He moved with his f amily t o C a l i f o r ni a d u r i ng W W I I . T he fam i l y settled i n P i t t sburg, C ahf ornia w h er e h e m e t h i s wife, N a n cy. H i g h -school s weethearts, t h e cou p l e w ere married on M a y 2 3 , 1953 in St. Peter's Martyr Church in Pittsburg. Sam began his career at D uPont i n A n t i o ch , C a l i f ornia, a n d af t e r s e v e n y ears j o i n e d th e D ow Chemical Company. Duri ng his y e ars a t D o w h e held many positions in Research and Technical Service and D evelopment. In 1973, he was transferred to the L o s A n g e le s O p er ations wh ere h e r e m a ined u ntil h i s r et i r e m en t i n 1983. He served his count ry in t h e U S A r m y f r o m 1952 to 1959. Upon r et i r e m en t th e couple moved to Corvallis, O regon. T h e y bo t h en ' oyed the s l ower p ace o f Ifi fe and tr ips in t h eir R V . T hey traveled i n t h e U S , Canada and Mexico where he continued to pursue his love of f i s h in g i n o c e an, r ivers an d s t r e ams. S am also e n j o ye d g a r d e ning and did e x tensive remodeling and i m p r oving t h eir m any h o m es. H i s w o o d working skills extended to t he making o f s o m e f i n e i eces o f fu r n i t u r e th e amily continues to enjoy. Beloved husband, father, grandfather and a friend to m any, h e w i l l b e s o r e l y missed. He will be remembered for his charm, sense of humor a n d g e n erosity b y his family and all w h o knew him. He was preceded in death b y h is pa r e n t s , si s t e r M axine B r ax t o n an d brother Max Gerald. He is survived by his wife o f 62 y e a rs, s on s D a v i d

Sept. 29,1923- May25,2015

Constantine P.

Gungura

July 21, 1925- May 27, 2015 Born in P h iladelphia the f irst generation o f G r e en immigrants. H e s erved in t he a rm y a s a r if l e m a n during W WI I a n d p a r t i cip ated i n t he No r m a n d y and Northern France camp aigns a f te r t r a i n in g a t Camp Hale. He was also a M ilitary P o l i c eman a f t e r

recuperating from shrap-

nel wounds received duri ng co m b a t . He w a s awarded the Combat Inf antry b a dg e a n d P u r p l e Heart. He was a l o n gtime resid ent of B e nd , h a v in g r e tired in 1968, to raise and b reed Per u v i a n Paso h orses on his l and i n T u m alo w it h h i s w i f e w h o preceded him indeath. H e i s s u r v i ve d b y hi s b rother, A n t h o n y Gu n g ura, P e n nsylvania; t w o d aughters, L o r r a in e N e l son, Bend, Oregon, JoAnn del So l a r , Gai n e s ville, Texas; two gr andchildren, and three great-grandchildren. A private f a mily m e m orial will be held at a l ater date. D eschutes M em or i a l C hapel a n d Ga r d en s i s l eased t o ser ve th e a mily. V i s i t o u r onl i n e g uestbook a t w w w . d e s chutesmemorialchapel.co m

Find It All Online bendbulletin.com

Where Buyers And Sellers Meet ClaSSifIedS

Son of Vice President Biden, Beau Biden dies ofcancer

David M a cLean G h ormley, 91, of Bend, OR, died May 25, 2015. He was the s on of A l f r e d a n d E l i z a beth Ghormley and loving husband of B ar - By Mlichael D. Shear New York Times News Service bara W ASHINGTON — B e a u (Birdie) GhormBiden, the former attorney

ley.

He is survived

by

his

w ife a n d three David Ghormleychildren, Bill Ghormley, of G r eenwood, IN, Cathy Taylor, of Pasadena, CA , an d Ji m Ghormley, of St . C h arles, MO; his sister, Mary A l i ce T udor o f C A . H e i s a l s o survived by six g r andchildren and six g r eat-grandchildren. Ghormley spent his youth o n the Carnation Farm i n W A, an d t h e n m o v e d t o S outhern C a l i f o r nia . H e e arned a deg r e e fr o m Stanford University and an M BA f r o m H a r v a rd . H e s erved in the U S N av y i n WWII and was an elder in the Presbyterian C h u r ch. He was a consultant in the food industry an d s e rved on various boards until his r etirement a n d m o v e t o Bend, OR, in 1986. He then s erved the c o m munity i n several o f f i ce s i n b oth Sunriver and Bend, OR. David loved golf, tennis, b ridge an d t r a v eling. H e w as known f o r h i s w i t t y observations o f l if e , as

many enjoyed in his "Se-

n ior M o m e n ts " c o l u m n , published in t h e S u n r iver Scene. He w i l l b e g reatly m issed by hi s f a m ily a n d friends. Services will be held at a private service in Sunriver, OR in July.

generalof Delaware and the eldest son of Vice President Joe Biden, has died of brain cancer, his father announced

Saturday. The younger Biden was 46. Biden had spent more than

a week receiving treatment at the Walter Reed National Military Medical Center i n

Washington. In a

Jacquelyn Martin/The Associated Press file photo

s t atement Saturday Delaware Attorney General Beau Biden pauses while speaking at a

night, the vice president said,

news conference at the Justice Department in Washington in 2013

"It is with broken hearts that

On Saturday, Vice President Joe Biden announced the death of hie

Hallie, Hunter, Ashley, Jill son Beau from brain cancer. and I announce the passing of our husband, brother and son, Beau, after he battled brain appeared to be a natural to

at my bedside." Many in Delaware expected Biden to run for his father's

cancer with the same integ-

follow his father's path toward

rity, courage and strength he demonstrated every day of his

national political success.

life."

tion, but the younger Biden, A lawyer by training, Biden who was elected attorney genjoined the Delaware National eral in 2006, declined, saying Guard in 2003, serving as a he was still needed in his state major in the Judge Advocate as he pressed ahead on a maGeneral Corps. His unit was jor child molestation case his deployed to Iraq in 2008, while agency was pursuing against a his father was running for vice pediatrician. "I have a duty to fulfill as atpresident. In a short, emotional speech torney general, and the immeintroducing his father at the diate need to focus on a case of

"In the words of the Biden family: Beau Biden was, quite simply, the finest man any of us have ever known." In 2010, Biden had suffered

what officials described as a mild stroke. Three years later, he was admitted to the University of Texas M.D. Anderson

Cancer Center in Houston after what White House officials

described at the time as "an episode of disorientation and weakness." Officials said in2013 that the

Joseph R. Biden III, known as Beau, was born Feb. 3, 1969.

Senate seat after the 2008 elec-

2008 Democratic N a tional great consequence. And that is Convention in Denver, Biden what I must do." recalled the tragedy that had Instead,he ran for re-electouched his family, describing tion in 2010, serving a second the moments after the crash. term beforedeciding to seek

"One of my earliest mem- higher office. Biden is survived by his Biden's death marks a secwife, Hallie, and two children. ond tragic loss for the vice We, not the Senate, were all he President Barack Obama doctors in Texas had removed a small lesion from his brain.

ories was being in that hospital, Dad always at our side.

president, whose first w i f e,

cared about," Biden said. "He

said in a statement that he was

Neilia, an d 1 3 -month-olddecided not to take the oath grieving for the vice president daughter, Naomi, were killed of office. He said, 'Delaware and his family. in a car accident in 1972 when

"For all t hat Beau Biden

can get another senator, but

the station wagon they were my boys can't get another fadriving in to go Christmas ther.' However, great men like shopping was hit by a trac- Ted Kennedy, Mike Mansfield, tor-trailer. Beau Biden and Hubert Humphrey — men who his brother, Hunter, were also had been tested themselves-

achieved in his life, nothing made him prouder, nothing made him happier, nothing claimed a fuller focus of his

Deaths of note from around the world:

injured in the crash, but both survived.

family," Obama said. "Just like his dad."

L . Tom Perry, 92 : A top-ranking Mormon lead-

itician in his home state who

er. He was second-most se-

was known to be very close

nior member of the quorum, having been chosen for the

to his father, Biden served two

DEATHS

(Linda), Robert (Victoria)

and daughter, Susan Pedersen an d s i x g r a n d children. The f a m i l y w i s h e s to t hank th e staff a t T o u c hm ark a t M t . B ac h e l o r , Partners In Care, and Visiting Angels for their care and compassion. A private f a mily m e m o rial service will be held at a later date. Niswonger-Reynolds is in charge of arrangements.

FEATURED OBITUARY

David MacLean

ELSEWHERE

council in 1974 and he was

the oldest of the church's top 15 leaders. Died Saturday at

announcing last year that he would not run for a third term

his home in Salt Lake City of

so he could make a bid for gov-

cancer that had spread to his lungs. Doris Hart, 89: Tennis great who won each Grand Slam tournament at least once,

ernor in 2016. "What started as a thought

— a very persistent thought — has now become a course

and once won three Wim-

of actionthat I wish to pursue," Biden wrote in an open letter

bledon titles in a single day. Died Friday at her home in

to his constituents in A p ril 2014.

Florida.

As recently as late February, some Delaware politicians close to Biden told news organizations that they still

— the first board with a core

was sworn in, in the hospital,

love and devotion than hi s

A popular Democratic pol-

terms as Delaware's top law enforcement official before

Dave Sweet, 86: Surfer whose obsessive tinkering 60 years ago in search of a better way to ride a wave resulted in a surfboard revolution

convinced him to serve. So he

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 besubmitted by phone, mail, email or fax. The Bulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information on any of these services or about the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825.

Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and by4:30 p.m. Friday for Sundaypublication. Obituaries must be received by 5 p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the second dayafter submission, by1 p.m. Fridayfor Sunday publication, and by 9 a.m. MondayforTuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; pleasecall for details.

Phone: 541-617-7825

Mail:Obituaries

believed Biden planned to run

for governor in 2016. But Biden's health had ap-

of polyurethane foam, still the leading choice of surfers

parently declined in

from Oahu to the Maldives.

Walter Reed on May 20.

r e cent

weeks, and he was taken to

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

P.O. Box 6020

Bend, OR97708

Died on May 18 in Los AngeA handsome, energetic poliles of kidney failure. tician whose broad smile mir— From wire reports

rored that of his father, Biden

Gerald Steve Sissel Nancy Ann (Reiter

MA R C H I5~ Z948

OC T O B E R 3~ 2OI4

Nave Brassel September 25, 1937- May 13, 2015 Nancy Ann (Reiter) Nave Brassel of Bend, Oregon passed away on May 13, 2015 at home surrounded by her loving family, A private celebration of life will be held at a later date. Nancy was born September 25, 1937, in Fort Wayne, Indiana to Wayne Sr. and Martha Reiter. She grew up in Fort Wayne and Columbia City, Indiana before moving to Glendale, California, where she graduated from high school. In 1956, she married Glen Nave in San Francisco, where they had three children before returning to Indiana to raise their family, In 1980, Nancy moved to Oregon and married William Brassel in 1983 in Salem. Nancy was first and foremost a mother, grandmother, and wife, but she also worked a full career as a bookkeeper in various industries and was a past member of the Lutheran Church. She enjoyed cooking and baking for her family and friends, and compiled a cookbook of favorite family recipes. She also enjoyed camping, fishing, reading, sewing, quilting, painting, basket weaving, knitting, and crocheting. Nancy is survived by one daughter, Debby (husband Jack,) Adams of Albany, Oregon; two sons, Doug (wife, Charlotte) Nave of Sunriver, Oregon, and Steve (wife Ann) Nave; 9 grandchildren; 8 great-grandchildren; and one sister, Jacque (husband, Bill) Bittle of Albany, oregon. She was preceded in death by her parents, husband Bill, one brother, Wayne "Butch" Reiter, Jr. and one sister, Ellen Ray Reiter. Memorial contributions can be made in Nancy's name to St. Charles Hospice, 2275 Doctors Dr., Ste. 3, Bend, Oregon 97701, 541-706-7600, www.stcharleshealthcare.org. ~

Baird Funeral Home of Bend, is honored to serve Ms, B r a ssel's family, 541-382-0903.

Gerald (Steve) Sissel,66, of Alfalfa, Oregon, passed away suddenly in his home on Friday, October 3,2014. Steve was born in Pawnee, OK to FT and Mary (Montell) Sissel on March 15, 1948. As a child, Steve saw adventure and promise in a simple life and was very athletic. During his teens, Steve's family moved to Portland, OR and on December 12, 1966 he met the love of his life, Terry Lee McCallister. Steve graduated from Roosevelt High School in 1967 and on January 10, 1969, Steve and Terry were married. Steve's career knowledge was broad, though the commonality was working with metal. After receiving numerous certifications in welding, he owned an auto body repair shop for many years in Portland, OR. He then moved to Bend, OR and started a metal fabrication and sales business until finally settling into custom irrigation systems for the remainder of his career. In his free time, he focused on where his heart was — his family and friends. He loved sharing the river bank, bowling alley lanes, pool cue stick and his warm smile with them as often as possible. Steve is survived by Terry, his wife of 45 years; their three children, Jason, of Calera, AL, William (Wink), of Bend, OR, and Kimberly Pazaski of Seattle, WA; their three grandchildren, Katie,Justin and Josephine; his five siblings, Barbara, Jerrie, David, Dorothy and Paula; and his father-in-law, Robert Beckett. Steve ispreceded in death by his parents,FT and Mary; stepfather, Bill Weston; and mother-in-law, Eva Mae Beckett. A celebration of Steve's life will be held on Saturday,June 6,2015 at the Sissel residence in Alfalfa. For directions and updates, please visit: www.sisselandpazaskifamjlywordpress.com. In lieu of Rowers, charitable contributions to The Shepherd's House would be appreciated. Special thanks to Bend Fire Station ¹304 responders and to Kellie, from Deschutes Memorial Chapel, for their professionalism and kindness.


SUNDAY, MAY 31, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

Hunting "We as hunters, we don't want to go out and kill every-

in the headlights" look and said he's hunted chukar with a interchangeable antlers, are thrown tomahawk — worked unconvincing up close, even dosely with Kim McAbee and when Love makes them move her daughters, Kay and Grace, using the controller from a re- all visiting from Georgia.

thing and wipe it all out, we

mote-control car. But, he said,

want it to regenerate for the

poachers who go out at night are often intoo much of ahurry

Continued from B1

next generation," he said. Oregon State Police Senior to notice. "Somebody not intending Trooper Greg Love brought a pairof robotic deer decoys to to break the law, they'd take show kids at Saturday's event, a minute and figure it out," crucial tools used by law en- Love said. "But someone who's forcement officers trying to planning to break the law, they crack down on poaching. Re- want to be in and out." cent surveys of deer fitted with

Volunteers staffed a variety

electronic tags indicate poach- of booths Saturday, teaching ers kill just as many deer as kids how tie flies, cast a fly rod, legitimate, licensed hunters, he navigate with a compass and said. fling a tomahawk into the end The taxidermied deer, fit- of a large log.

strations were their favorite

part of the day. "Last year was pretty fun, it was a good experience, so we wanted to come back and do it

again," Anthony said. and Kay, 13, lobbed the tomaSpencer Tabor, a shooting hawk over and under the target, instructor with the gun safeor dangedtheheadofftheedge ty and competitive shooting of the log and sent it spinning group Deshoots Youth Sports, In dozens of tries, McAbee

off into the bushes. Only Grace, 8, was able to successfully lob

'{

manned the shotgun booth,

giving kids a chance to fire at flying clay targets. and stick it into the log. Tabor said teachingkids who Grace said she couldn't ex- have never fired a shotgun beplain her success. fore is always a lot of fun. Most the tomahawk end over end

"Just throw," she said. Anthony Sanchez, 13, and

first-timers express some con-

cerns about recoil, he said, but friend Edward Flores, 14, both once they've hit their first day of Bend, said this was the sec-

Tess Freeman/The Bulletin

William Moore,7, of Bend, examines a red fox pelt at the pelt station, which was one of the animal demonstrations at the event.

target, any worries about a

ond year in a row they've at- bruised shoulder vanish. "They're focused. The target ted with patches of reflective V olunteer t omahawk i n - tended the event. Both said the tape in their eyes for the "deer structor Rod Adams — who archery and shotgun demon- blows up when you hit it, you

Yesteryear

B5

get that instant feedback — I

did the right thing," he said.

— Reporter: 541-383-0387, shammers@bendbullett'n.com

Lutz will assume the post green lumber and processed hands. a long a stretch of th e D e equaled, and in the revised vacated earlier this year when at Brooks-Scanlon. Too many people seem de- schutes River, in a mistaken handicaps of the Columbia H.A. "Hoot Moore" resigned. termined to tame the local belief they would better the River association for 1939, the Moore will take a post with wildlife — like developers view of the river from their 25 YEARSAGO Bend boat heads the list. the University of Oregon's have tamed much of the forest rooms. City officials ordered Races are to be sailed at Job Corps Training Center in For the week ending and sagebrush lands. When them to plant new trees on the Elk Lake every Sunday this Tongue Point. May 30, 1990 a mink or river otter snatch- riverbank. season, with all boats particLutz, with the Bend district es a duckling or cygnet off But a resident population ipating. Plans for dual compe- for the past 11 years, has been Takingthe 'w ild'out of the surface of the Deschutes, of beavers — which was quite tition with the Klamath Lake first assistant o n M o o r e's wildlife in Central Oregon outraged witnesses call the happy with the willows and yachting fleet are being con- staff since 1957. He has also (By Rick Adig, outdoors Oregon Department of Fish other brush that had been sidered. The club consists of been an assistant football editor) and Wildlife to report the kill- in place — kept gnawing on 16 yachts, skippers and crews. coach and freshman basketing and suggest trapping the and killing the saplings. The In addition to these owners, ball coach during that time. Not long ago a well-mean- predators. answer to a problem the deMerle Blann, George Wallace, D irectors n a me d P e t er ing — if naive — motorist Sometimes they also tele- veloperscreated themselves Chester Sohm and Red Mea- Smith, physical education in- stopped to comfort a b adly phone the newspaper and, came to this: Trap and remove gher are building yachts for structor at Kenwood School, injured coyote struck down because they are transferred the beavers. 1940 competition on the high to fill Lutz' assistant post on on a Central Oregon highway. to the outdoor editor, they end Increasingly, various spelake that mirrors the reflec- the coaching staff. Charles The coyote summoned the up talking to me. Once a tear- cies of wildlife are viewed tions of the South Sister and Hudson, with the system four strength to bite her just before ful teenager called to say she as pests in Central Oregon. Bachelor Butte. he died. had watched a mink pluck M any h o m eowners wh o years, is the other assistant. Lutz is a s o c ial s cience That bite may help slow a two ducklings off the river. bought land outside of urban Sweden rejects demand "It just took them under teacher at the Bend Junior pernicious trend in Central areas now spend a lot of time of Nazis High. He has taught there for Oregon, a slow but steady and killed them," she said. and energy trying to get rid of Sweden has rejected Ger10 years following one year at loss of understanding about "We tried to stop them, but the same deer that made their man demands for permission Kenwood. the region's wildlife. Perhaps you could see the blood in the properties so attractive. to ship materials and men He earned his bachelor's it has something to do with water. It was so gross. They The deer that once ate bitacrossSweden forthe reliefof degree inelementary educa- the cute and cuddly birds and should get all the minks out of ter-brush on A w brey Butte the besieged and weakening tion at Southern Oregon Col- animals of the T-shirts, coffee there." now feed on shrubs and flowGerman garrison at Narvik, lege in Ashland. Since that mugs and other tourist trinThere was a time in Central ers. Dozens of homeowners Norway. time he has earned a master's kets and the real estate billOregon when it was consider- on Bend's west side call the Negotiations c o ntinued. degree in school counseling boards showing bigger-than- ably more "normal" for swans Department of Fish and WildBut the present situation, in- at the University of Oregon life deer grazing in this or that to drive people away from life every year to complain formants said, was that the during summer sessions. subdivision. their nests and for minks to about deer. Most simply want demands had been made and Lutz was a four-sport letToo many people are begin- eat ducklings than it was for ideas on how to keep deer rejectedand that Sweden had t erman i n h i g h s c hool a t ning to think of Central Ore- large numbers of people to be from eating prized flowers; said she would fight against Grants Pass. He coached ju- gon as one big petting zooshocked byeither of those be- a few, however, ask for "kill any violation her neutrality nior high level track in Burns the sort of place to take a loaf haviors. But those days seem permits." from whatever direction. before coming to Bend. of white bread and enjoy the to be gone. With c o ntinued p o pulaAdolf H itler w a s r eportHe and his wife, Barbara, sights. Fewer and fewer people in tion growth and the steady ed to be determined that the and their two children, Linda The region is losing its col- Central Oregon understand march of urbanization, these Narvik garrison should not and Don, live in Bend. lectivefear and respect for the ways of wildlife and how conflicts are only going to get be captured or wiped out, and wildlife. A swan fiercely pro- human activities affect their more common. The challenge that it should not weaken Ger- Virgin Fall River timber tecting its mate's nest is con- behaviors. That fact is a seri- is educating people about the man prestige by retreating stand yields qiant sidered a strange bird, and a ous threat to wildlife — and needs of wildlife. The first across the Norwegian frontier ponderosa pine problem only if it interferes by extension, to the nebulous step may be helping them intoSweden. The commander Ross Defoe, forest service with the annual Pole, Pedal, thing we refer to as our qual- understand just what being "wild" means. of the German garrison, one log scaler,measures a log Paddle on Mirror Pond. ity of life. General Deitl, was said here containing 7,000 board feet, A series of well-publicized When developers built a That coyote on the highway to be a close friend of Hitler. enough for a small home. The swan attacks, including one motel in Bend they wiped out used his last breath to do just It was said that a German 400 year-old tree, from which that ended when a canoeist the willows and other trees that. force had been concentrated the log came, contains about broke a bird's neck and then for landing on the Swedish 18,000 board feet. Taper on paddled safely to shore, have gulf of B othnia coast, and this 32 foot section is small; made people wary of the was ready move at Hitler's one end is 5-feet, 11-inches; swans. But others still play order. the other end has a 5-foot, chicken with the birds, seeing Two reasons were given 7-inch diameter. just how close to the nests they why the order, believed in Log was cut in virgin tim- can come without triggering some quarters to be immi- ber near Fall River Guard an attack. November 22, 1925 - May 24, 2015 nent, has been withheld: 1. Station. Lelco forester Vern And many tourists are still Hitler's preoccupation with Everett said this was the big- blissfully unaware, showing tt Dorothy Eliza beth (Anthony) the Nazi blitzkrieg on the gest pine he had ever taken up at Drake Park with their Robberson was born to Al exander and western front; 2. The thought from the Deschutes forest. bread crumbs and seeing if Tillie Anthony on November 22, 1925 that an open attack on Swe- The Lelco log will be cut in the swans, like the ducks and in Portland, Oregon. Shortly after her birth her family den might bring Finland and half, quartered, made into geese, will eat out o f t h eir on that occasion has not been

Continued from B1

First epgs are now

hatching (editorial) The Bend state fish hatch-

ery is now in operation. The hatchery is completed except for a few finishing touches and the first eggs were placed in the troughs yesterday morning. In about four weeks the young trout will be hatched and ready to be moved to the pools in which

their next stage of development will take place. The hatchery is situated at

theupper end ofthe Sisemore place at a point where the old irrigation ditch is best avail-

able to supply water for the troughs in which the eggs are hatched. The ditch has been

cleaned out for the purpose and a wing dam thrown out at its upper end to turn more water in.

The hatchery itself is a long building open on all sides with a roof to provide shelter for the egg troughs beneath. The trout eggs are held in trays in these troughs and freshwater keptrunning over them from a flume from the

ditch across one side of the building. Lloyd Wilson, an expert from the state hatchery at Bonneville, arrived Saturday

night to have charge of the egg hatching, and will remain until the fish are ready for re-

lease in the river.

75 YEARSAGO For the week ending May 30, 1940

ElkLake Yacht Club to plan for coming season Final plans for t h e

1940

sailing season will be outlined at a meeting of the Elk Lake Yacht Club. This will be

the club's last meeting prior to the opening of the season on mile-high Elk Lake. Now only two years old, the club has grown so rapidly that it now boasts as large a

fleet of fine sailing yachts as any club in the state exclusive Russia to her aid. of the Portland organization.

The club was founded by S.R. Peoples, who has served as

50 YEARSAGO

commodore for the past two

For the week ending

years. The Elk Lake club brought

May 30, 1965

state-wide recognition of the

Bend country as a yachting center when the "Hi Hope,"

John Grlffeth (Deke) Houston May 15, 1936 - May 2, 201S

Jack Lutz is appointed new track coach at BHS

John Griffeth (Deke)Houston of La Quinta, California and Bend, Oregon died May 2, 2015 inEisenhower Hospital, Rancho Mirage, California of complicationsfrom pulmonary rtbrosis.He was born May 15, 1936 to Jack and EstherHouston in Portland, Oregon. He married Renee Houston in 1988. John was a graduate of theclass of 1959 (the first class) of the Unites States AirForceAcademy at Colorado Springs, Colorado. Following graduation, he attendedpilot training and served with distinctionas an officer and pilot in the US Air Force, receiving two Air Force Crossesand a Silver Star for heroism in combat. Because of his bravery in combat, he became known as "Tiger John". After gaining an advanced degree in aeronautical engineering he became a test pilot at Tyndall Air ForceBase, Florida, where he tested new systemsfor fighter aircraft.

Jack R. Lutz was named

owned by Ernest Bembry and Bend High School head track Myron Symons, was sailed and field coach for the upin the Astoria regatta in 1937 coming school year by the by Peoples and Symons. The school board. The action was last time set by the "Hi Hope" unanimous.

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Following his distinguished career in the US AirForce, John joined the family business of Houston's,lnc., a master distributor of , bar andrestaurant supplies. He was the driving force behind the phenomenalgrowth of that company increasing the businessfrom a small 2-personoffice to a nationwide distributorship with over 50 trucks.

Following that verysuccessful career, John retired to golf and build homes for pleasure andprofit. He was a member of the Air Force Association,TheQuiet Birdman, The Red River RatsAssociation, The US Air ForceAcademy Association of Graduates and with his wife, Renee,a supporter of anumber of philanthropies, including the Boys and Girls Aid Society. John was an avid golfer, avoracious reader, and a talented home designer and builder. He was, by any measure, an extraordinary man and he will be greatly missed. He served in the US AirForce from 195Sto 1972 and departed theservice with the rank of Major. He is survived byRenee Houston, his wife of 27 years. A tributeand remembrance will be held Saturday, June 13th at 2:00 p.m. at Waverly Golf Club, 1100 SE Waverly Drive, OP T , Portland,Oregon97222. Q The family suggests donations to I", The American Lung Association in .r lieuofflowers.

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moved to Seattle, Washington where she was raised. After graduating from Lincoln High School she worked for the War Department during World War II where she met many lifelong friends. After the war she married her high school sweetheart, Gordon Robberson on July 27, 1946. lhey lived in Seattle until they movedto Bend, Oregon to purchase the Ford Dealership in 1957. She remained in Bend until 1984 when she moved back to the Seattle area to be near her family and friends, settling Ln a beautiful home on La ke Sammamish in Bellevue, Washington. In 2010 she moved back to Bend to be near her children and grandchildren and became part of the Touchmark community. She was a 50-yearmember of PEO. She was an active member of Chapter DE i n B end and Chapter HE L n Issaquah, Washinyon. She was also a longtime member of Bend Study Club. She was a volunteer for the Hospital Guild at St. Charles Hospital in Bend and at Overlake Hospital in Bellevue. She was a loving and caring caregiver for her mother, aunt and sister in Seattle, all who preceded her Ln death. She was, above all else,a terrific woman who loved her role as mother and grandmother. She nurtured everyone's activities, even helping children practice their sports. She encouraged ail to do their best, supported ali her family by listening, welcoming friends, and above all, always thinking about what she could do for others.

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Anthony, her mother Tillie Anthony, her stepmother Qiga~ Anthony, her brother Bob, sister Jean and granddaughter Cory Lovliett. She is survived by her brother, Alexander Anthony, her daughter, Chris and husband Bob Lovlien, her son, Jeff and wife Margi Robberson, grandchildren, Mark and wife Maya Lovlien, Lindsay (Lovlien) Hunsicker and husband Brian, and Miro and wife Lizzy Garaj and three great grandchildren. Ihe family will gather for a private memorial celebration of her life honoring her wish to have her ashes scattered along with her sister'sashes over a river that will carry them both to the ocean. We will send her oII'with love. lhe family wishes to thank Dr. Jeffrey Boggess,Dr. Jon Lutz, and Dr. Gavin Noble for the care of our mother. Remembrancesmay be made in her name to PE.O., Chapter DE, C/0 Eileen McLellan, 2831 N.W. 'Ihree Sisters Dr. to provide scholarshipsfor women for college degrees.


B6

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MAY 31, 2015

W EAT H E R Forecasts and graphics provided by ACCH Weather, lnc. ©2015

i

I

i

'

I

TODAY

iI

TONIGHT

HIGH 80'

ALMANAC TEMPERATURE Yesterday Normal Record 81 55'

Low

88 39'

93' in 1903 20'in 1908

more sunshinethan clouds. Perhapsan isolated showerover the mountains late.

60/53

Cannon

Year to date(normal) 5.42 " (4.99") Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 29 . 9 2"

60/53

/

Tigamo

Jun 2 Jun 9 J u n1e J un 24 Tonight'6 slty:Saturn near waxing gibbous moon.

I

5

3-5Moderate;6-7 High;8-10 VeryHigh; 11+ Exlrems.

POLLEN COUNT Wee ds ~

L

As ur 7 a.m.yesterday

/54

285 82 9

FIRE INDEX

Bed/v Rd

'e

~

L

IV M d

~

L

~

L

~ ~

L L

Sisters piu e ille Ls Pi ISI h ie

Source: USDA Forest Service

• Pa lina

• Fort Rock Cresce t • 81/49

82/52

•, sf/51 •

Joseph Grande • 83 55 union 50 •

Grande

'Baker C

80/46

83/51

• John eu Day 5/49 85 / 5 3

tario 9 62

Valee 93/61

Roseburg

• Ch ristmas alley Silver 81/4g Lake 77/49 80/49 • Paisley Chiloquin 82/45 •

Beaver Marsh

57/

'

M edfo d

I /B o Klamath

,88/58

• Asmnd 82/5

Jordan V gey

Frenchglen

86/55

81/48

• Burns Jun tion • 90/57

Rome 91/58

• Lakeview

79/49

Yesterday Today Monday

untura • Burns JBS/55

Nyssa 91/ 6 1

Riley 84/47 85/44

77/50

83/57

Gra ra 7/ Gold ach • 0

McDermi

80/45

87/55

Yesterday Today Monday

Yesterday Today Monday

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 64/52/0.00 66/53/c 61/53/sh La Grande 77/57/0.03 83/55/pc76/50/c Portland 77/5 2/0.0081/57/pc 65/55/sh 75/55/0.0583/51/pc 76/48/c La Pine 77/49/0.00 79/50/t 61/43/t Prinevige 86/ 55/0.0084/51/pc 61/44/pc Brookings 58/51/0.00 60/51/c 58/51/sh Medford 8 8 /64/0.00 88/58/t 69/55/shRedmond 83 / 56/Tr 83/52/t 67/45/t Bums 80/54/Tr 84/47/pc 74/46/pc Newport 5 5 /50/0.00 59/53/c 56/51/shRoseburg 83/ 5 7/0.0083/57/pc 66/55/ sh Eugene 76/54/0.00 80/54/pc63/52/sh NorthBend 61/54/0.00 61/54/pc 59/53/sh Salem 80/50/0.00 82/56/pc 65/55/sh Klamath Fags 83/52/0.01 79/49/t 66/43/c On tario 84/65/0.00 92/62/pc 87/56/c Sisters 81/55/0.00 85/52/t 68/45/t Lakeview 81/43/0.00 80/45/pc68/43/pc Pendleton 86/60/Tr 88/60/pc 78/53/pc The Dages 8 8 /63/0.00 90/64/pc 75/59/t

Weather(W):s-sunny,pc-partlycloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers,t-tbunderstorms,r-rain, sf-snowflurries, sn-snowl-ice,Tr-trsce,Yesterday data asof 5 p.m. yesterday

NATIONAL WEATHER ~ fgs ~ o s

~ os

Ac r e feet Ca pacity NATIONAL 448 1 5 81% EXTREMES (for the Wickiup 155043 78% YESTERDAY Crescent Lake 7 5 0 58 88% 48 contiguousstates) Ochoco Reservoir 30227 Bsvo National high: 115 Prineville 103395 70vo at Death Valley,CA River flow St a tion Cu. ft./aec. National low:2e Deschutes R.below CranePrairie 318 at Leadville, CO Deschutes R.below Wickiup 1440 Precipitation: 2.82" Deschutes R.below Bend 109 at Baton Rouge,LA Deschutes R. atBenhamFalls 1830 Little Deschutes near LaPine 90 Crescent Ck. belowCrescent Lake 28 Crooked R.above Prineville Res. 27 Crooked R. near Terrebonne Ochoco Ck.below OchocoRes.

7/4

79/54

~ f os ~ 2 0 8

~ sgs ~dgs ~ags ~ecs ~yes ~ags ~ggs ~TOOs ~ffcs Catea 76/45

6 74/55

81/57

Billings 77/57

Increasing clouds

utr ee Ttrauder Bay

Que c

ea/

dd 5

City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Abilene 73/62/0.43 82/62/pc Akron 83/69/0.01 74/52/t Albany 87/66/0.31 70/51/r Albuquerque 82/59/0.00 86/62/t Anchorage 70/48/0.00 71/51/s Atlanta 85/67/0.00 85/68/t Atlantic City 79/65/0.00 69/67/pc Austin 87/68/0.11 83/59/pc Baltimore 88/69/0.00 88/67/pc Billings 76/47/Tr 77/57/1 Birmingham 85/66/0.04 84/65/1 Bismarck 59/32/0.00 61/48/pc Boise 81/65/0.00 92/65/pc Boston 88/58/0.00 71/48/sh Bridgeport, CT 81/61/0.00 77/57/1 Buffalo 82n2/Tr 51/46/r Burlington, VT 88/67/0.35 58/49/r Caribou, ME 83/57/0.03 62/43/c Charleston, SC 86/67/0.00 87/68/pc Charlotte 87/65/0.00 87/66/1 Chattanooga 86/67/0.00 84/65/t Cheyenne 66/40/Tr 76/52/pc Chicago 71/47/0.35 54/44/pc Cincinnati 85/67/Tr 70/53/c Cleveland 83/71/0.82 62/49/r ColoradoSprings 66/46/0.06 77/53/c Columbia, Mo 75/66/0.96 64/50/pc Columbia, SC 90/65/0.00 89/68/1 Columbus,GA 89/66/0.00 88/66/t Columbus,OH 85no/0.25 76/54/1 Concord, NH 89/57/0.00 71/46/r Corpus Christi 88n4/0.01 87/69/1 Dallas 76/64/0.89 80/58/pc Dayton 87/69/0.02 71/52/c Denver 72/40/0.00 81/55/pc Des Moines 64/56/0.20 68/50/pc Detroit 83/60/0.91 53/47/r Duluth 55/42/0.00 55/36/s El Paso 90/68/0.00 92/70/t Fairbanks 72/47/0.00 70/42/pc Fargo 59/35/0.00 63/48/pc Flagstaff 77/39/0.00 78/45/s Grand Rapids 70/68/0.48 57/42/pc Green Bay 56/52/0.68 59/40/pc Greensboro 86/65/0.00 85/66/pc Harrisburg 87/67/0.03 86/68/t Harffurd, CT 87/60/0.00 79/52/r Helena 70/50/0.16 78/55/1 Honolulu 83/69/0.06 82/71/sh Houston 91n2/0.38 83/65/1 Huntsville 86/68/0.04 82/63/t Indianapolis 84/68/0.87 62/50/c Jackson, MS 87/71/0.39 80/63/t Jacksonville 81/65/0.94 86/67/1

Hi/Lo/W 87/65/pc 62/49/r 65/50/r 87/58/c 67/50/pc 84/67/1 78/65/1 85/64/pc 84/65/t 82/55/pc 80/64/1 79/59/pc 86/55/c 56/48/r 68/58/r 55/48/r 57/49/r 62/40/c 87/69/1 85/65/1 81/64/t 77/51/1 60/44/pc 70/54/c 58/50/r 78/52/t 68/53/pc 87/67/1 85/66/t 67/51/c 54/45/r 87/70/s 81/62/pc 67/52/c 83/55/1 70/53/pc 66/48/pc 61/42/s 96/71/s 60/38/s 71/56/pc 75/45/s 67/44/pc 65/39/pc 82/65/t 81/63/r 66/52/r 74/51/1 84/72/pc 86/66/pc 79/63/1 68/52/pc 81/62/t 87/67/1

Amsterdam Athens

60/52/pc 78/64/s 63/55/sh 108/85/c

ne

, xx

v

a

d<v

Yesterday Today Monday

City

Juneau Kansas City Lansing Las Vegas Lexington Lincoln Litue Rock Lus Angeles Louisville Madison, Wl Memphis Miami

Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W 76/46/0.02 69/49/s 66/48/pc 65/54/0.07 68/51/pc 70/56/pc 74/68/0.37 53/42/pc 65/42/pc 102/74/0.00 102n4/s 97/69/s 85/68/0.00 77/58/1 75/57/c 71/51/Tr 70/52/pc 72/57/s 84/68/1.65 77/59/0.00 85/70/0.19 58/57/0.18

77/62/1 78/61/pc

88ns/rr

87n5/t

76/61/pc 76/61/pc 73/59/c 73/60/c 63/38/pc 67/41/pc

ssnuo'.08 75/61/1 78/61/pc

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

51/49/0.50 54/42/pc 64/47/Tr 65/47/s 85/68/0.32 79/63/1 86/74/0.25 84/69/1 85/66/0.00 83/63/1 86/65/0.00 84/63/t 85/68/0.00 85/69/pc OklahomaCity 73/59/0.00 76/57/pc Omaha 71/50/Tr 70/53/pc Orlando 92/71/Tr 90//1/t Palm Springs 102/77/0.00 104n2/s Peoria 74/67/0.58 63/48/pc Philadelphia 87/68/0.00 87/68/c Phoenix 105/74/0.00 106ns/s Pittsburgh 82/67/0.07 82/58/1 Portland, ME 84/54/0.00 67/47/r Providence 85/56/0.00 78/50/1 Raleigh 88/66/0.00 88/67/pc Rapid City 66/34/0.00 73/53/pc Reno 93/56/0.00 89/56/pc Richmond 88/68/0.00 89/69/pc Rochester, NY 87/72/0.11 52/46/r Sacramento 89/54/0.00 82/55/pc St. Louis 75/69/0.60 65/54/pc Salt Lake City 85/56/0.00 88/65/pc San Antonio 88/73/0.76 85/66/t San Diego 71/62/0.00 71/62/pc San Francisco 64/52/0.00 65/56/pc San Jose 73/53/0.00 74/56/pc Santa re 77/50/0.00 81/54/1 Savannah 83/67/0.06 86/67/pc Seattle 73/50/0.00 74/55/pc Sioux Fags 62/42/Tr 66/50/pc Spokane 82/59/Tr 81/60/pc Springfield, Mo 73/65/0.41 68/51/pc

Tampa sgn2/0.00 88n4/t Tucson 102/68/0.00 104/71/s Tulsa 67/61/0.00 73/53/pc Washington, DC gon2/0.00 91n3/pc Wichita

Yskima Yuma i

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57/48/0.12 61/48/r /45 77/55/0.00 77/62/pc sv. Maw v.'ek Auckland 54/46/0.05 61/54/sh 54/42 D etvort Baghdad 102/78/0.00 105/84/s '' v in Che n Bangkok 97/82/0.00 99/80/pc ss/es es/50 '~aw 74/S . lladelphla Beijing 86/62/0.04 95/69/1 4i C icsg did d ssliL ke Ity 7/es Beirut 77/69/0.15 78/68/s im sncl~o 0 h 5 44 " ss/es d d Berlin 64/49/0.06 70/59/sh 45/54 St. L uis ington LavV ss 45/54 91 Bogota 68/46/0.20 67/49/1 g v 102 Kansas Ctty Budapest 75/50/0.12 76/55/pc vfd ea/51 BuenosAires 63/45/0.14 66/53/s tosan les Albu uerque Cabo San Lucas 97/69/0.00 96n2/pc P a umsoay tue Ruck e/41 S e/4 • Cairo 82/68/0.00 85/65/s 74/5 \ 7 /62v Anchorage • Calgary 63/43/0.02 76/45/s ~a~ 'as/es 71/61 4 Phoeni Cancun 88n9/0.00 90n5/pc pagaao Dublin 54/39/0.28 54/41/sh so/ss Edinburgh 57/40/0.02 53/42/r 49/49 8$0 Geneva 72/57/0.00 75/55/c 92/70 pO • ilshde Harare 76/44/0.00 78/48/s vlesh5 9 Hong Kong 91/82/0.30 89/83/t ci o ~ . t Istanbul 70/57/0.00 73/62/pc SZ/71 ",,~ m , 91/41 'e'ehhh++y' Miami Jerusalem 71/56/0.00 81/57/s Mo 'e 'e 'e 'e X X X 9 ' 87/TII- 'x . Johannesburg 74/52/0.00 73/49/s sen• w vvv'+'+v e Lima 75/62/0.00 75/66/pc Lisbon 75/57/0.00 74/59/s Shown are today's noonpositions of weather systemsand precipitation. Temperature bandsare highs for the day. London 64/46/0.12 61/46/sh T-storms Rain S h owers S now F l urries Ice Warm Front Sta t ionary Front Madrid Cold Front 82/54/0.00 86/58/pc Manila 90/82/0.29 93/81/t eut$ • 92/65

Partly sunny

i

City Asturis Baker City

Reservoir C rane Prairie

Crooked R.below Prineville Res.

84/51

' Re d B rothers Su iVere 80/51 • s f / 0 • l.a pine Ham ton C e Grove Oakridge

Source: OregonAgergyAssociates 541-683-1577

WATER REPORT

/58 • Mitch ll 85/54

• Prineville

• Eugene

60/51

The highertheAccuWealher.rxrm IIYIndex number, the greatertheneedfor eyeandskin protscgun.0-2 Low

G rasses T r ee s ~ yh i g h v d t

BTO inge

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CENTRAL:Sunshine 66/53 24 hours through 5 p.m.yesterday 0.01 " and clouds today Record 0.57" in 1948 with a mild afternoon Lincoln Month to date (normal) 1.0 0" (0.86") Mostly cloudy tonight 62/53

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WEST NEWS

Snake Riverjuvenile salmon transport numberslow sofar By Josh Babcock Moscow-Pullman Daily News (ldaho)

MOSCOW, Idaho — Lower Granite Lock aftd Dam has

collected a little more than 2 million fish and transported 904,000 below Bonneville Dam

so farthisyear— afarcryfrom

i

4

The goal of the juvenile According to the U.S. Army transportation program is to Corps of Engineers, the first reduce the mortality rate of juremovable spillway weir was veniles navigating the dam's the dam.

installed at Lower Granite in 2001 and it has a survival rate that exceeds 95 percent. Holdren said w h ile m ost

I'

turbines.

To achieve that goal, during collection seasonjuvenile salmon are loaded on barges and

salmon like to swim near the trucks aftd released below Bonmore than 4 million transport- water'ssurface,the dam's con- neville Dam, the last dam juveed in 2014. figurations cause some fish to nile salmon have to pass before Elizabeth Holdren, super- dive 50 to 60 feet to find their reachingthe ocean. visor and fisheries biologist at passage routes. For those fish To load the juveniles into Lower Granite, described this that swim away from the fore- the barge's holds from the year as unot typical," but said bay and surface spillway and raceways, fish are funneled there iS Still time this Summer at lower depths to navigate the through a large white pipe into for those numbers to jump. dam, Holdren said, multiple the holds of the barge. She said low flow and an early 45-degree angle fish screens There are a number of difspringrtm are two contributors are used to help guide the fish ferent barges used for juvenile to the low numbers of fish col- into a bypass channel where transport, the largest of which lected and transported at Low- juveniles are attracted to 12- can hold 150,000 gallons of waer Granite. inch orifices by bright LED ter and 75,000 pounds of fish. Although there u sually lights. The largest barges have would have been a peak by John Bailey, fisheries biolo- eight massive holding containnow, she said, in April hun- gist for the Corps, said 14-inch ers that reSt under the deCk. All dreds of fiSh W ereSeen jumPing oriftces are being constructed have an aerator to pass oxygen iTTthe Lower Granite forebay to replace the 12-inch orifices through the water and a filter and it's likely many of those to attract more juvenile fish to that offers the fishthe smell and fish were spilled over the dam the collection channel, which is feel of their natural habitat on and thereby not collected or part of the Corps' $50 million their 36-hour barge ride. Holtransported. juvenile bypass upgrade. dren said when the fish are reIn 2014, Holdren said, there Once juveniles reach the leased below Bonneville Dam a were 26days at Lower Granite collection channel they make large plunger is removed from that flows exceeded 100kilo cu- their way outside of the dam all the holds simultaneously bebic feet per second, all of which into a 1,800-foot pipeline that cause releasing just one canput Came befOre mid-June. This routes them underground to pressure on thebargein particyear there have been zero days the Juvenile Fish Facility. Some ular places and create strange that exceeded 100 KCFS. Hol- fish are rerouted right back nOiSeS that Can Startle the fish dren said the highest flow day into the Snake River and the and the crew. this year has been 74 KCFS. others continue their trek and Bailey said the majority of the 6.68 million collected and

According to the Columbia Basin Bulletin, Lower Granite,

wind up at the JFF. Once juveniles arrive at the

which is the first dam juveniles JFF they reach a slotted-grate, enCOunter as they SWim tO the where only juveniles are small ocean, handles the most fish enough to fall through. out of all eight dams in the CoHoldren said from there lumbia and Snake Riverdam those fish will reach the racesystem. w ays, an area o f t h e J F F To improve the survivabil- that has multiple rectanguity of juvenile salmon, Lower lar-shaped tanks that are about Granite offers a number of 15 to 20 feet long and a few feet routes fish can take. deep. The first and most popular The only other route of pasOPtiOn fOr fish iS SurfaCe SPill. sage for salmon is through the To spill those fish near the powerhouse where the dam's surface over the dam, Lower turbines are located. Bailey Granite uses a removable spill- said only about 5 percent of fish way. One of the dam's spillway travel through the turbines and gates is lifted attd a spillway

of those fish about 96 percent

weir is used to allow some wa- survive. "The juveniles really go ter through, creating a waterslide for fish to glide through through a gauntlet," he said.

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the fish transported from Low-

er Granit earem oved onbarges between May 1 and Aug. 15. For those transported after Aug. 15, their travel time is

shaved by 30 hours because they travel by truck and it only takes six hours to drive to Bonneville Dam. Trucks are only used at the end of the SeaSOn

when fish numbers have significantly dropped. A truck can hold about 3,500 gallons of water and about 1,750 pounds of fish. About 21,000 fish were

transportedbytrucklastyear. Although about 96 percent of juvenile fish survive passing throughthe dam's powerhouse, "It all adds up," Bailey said. "The CumulatiVe1OSSis Signifi-

cant when you get to the end."

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IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Travel, C2-6 Puzzles, C6

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MAY 31, 2015

O www.bendbulletin.com/community

SPOTLIGHT

Foundation hits $1B milestone The OregonCommunity Foundation recently reached amilestone, awarding atotal of $1 billion in grants andscholarships to nonprofits and communities around Oregon sincetheOCF's founding in 1974. Helping OCF reach the billion-dollar markarethe 36 Central Oregonagencies that received atotal of $380,000 inawards last week. A few examples: In Bend, Campfire USA, Central OregonCouncil, received afirst-time grant of $20,000 to expandits Teens inAction program, designed to improvestudent success. In Crook County, Redemption House received a$21,000 grant to expandemergency and transition shelter services for homeless women andchildren. St. Vincent DePaul of Crook County received an$11,000 grant for replacement of a refrigerated truck for transportation of food for emergency programs. For more information about the history of OCF, as well ascurrent and future initiatives, visit www.oregoncf.org.

Continuing ed grants offered The RedmondChapter FX of the Philanthropic Educational Organization is accepting applications for the Programfor Continuing Education. This program provides grants to womenwho have hadtheir education interrupted, andare seeking to complete a degree orcertification that will improve their skills for employment to support themselvesand their families. Applicants must have spent at least 24 months asanonstudent and must bewithin 24 months of completing her education program. To be consideredfor the fall semester,applications mustbymadeby June 8. To learn more,email Margaret McKeownat mckeown614©bendbroadband.com.

Nutrition volunteers sought The OregonState University/DeschutesCounty Extension Office is seeking Nutrition Education Volunteer applicants. Participants will take a six-hour class from 9 am. to 3 pm. June17 at the OSU/Deschutes County Extension office in Redmond.Applications will beaccepted through June15. Volunteers will demonstrate cooking healthy recipes atlocal food pantries or lead small groups with fun, interactive nutrition activities. Oncetrained and certified, participants will commit to demonstrating healthy recipessix times over six months. Email applications to Katie Ahern,Family & Community Health instructor, at katherine. ahern©oregonstate. edu or mail them toOSU Extension, 1900NE Division St., Suite107, Bend, OR 97701. The

class will be held atthe OSU/Deschute sCounty Extension Office at3893 SW Airport Way inRedmond. For more information about the program orto obtain the application form, go to www.extension.oregonstate.edu/ deschutes/nutrition-education, or call 541-3066067. — Bulletin staff reports

Barb Gonzalez / For The Bulletin

Resting on the rim of a giant volcanic caldera, the Crater Lake Lodge provides a stunning view of its namesake lake. It is the main building of the historic Rim Village district, which also includes additional structures from the 1920s and early 1930s.

By John Gottberg Anderson«For The Bulletin

CRATER LAKE-

Crater lake NationalPark To Hwy.97,/ Bend

CleetwoodTrail to tour boat landing

Ro"' R Cteetwoo•

ne hundred years have passed since a rustic lodge was built atop a stark cliff

The Crater Lake Lodge has a century's worth

— Wizard Island

"When it was built," said

Lodge and the East Glacier

Mark, "there was no foundation, no basement, nothing to keep the lodge from collapsing in heavy snow years. In fact, when the lodge opened

Lodge in Montana. Coming a year ahead of the centennial of the National Park Service, the 100th birth-

day party of the Crater Lake in 1915, it was nowhere near Lodge will be an occasion to finished. So it had to be cabled remember.Scheduled inthe through the winter." building's Great Hall on Aug. That hasn't been necessary

since the lodge was reconstructed from 1989 to 1995.

The Crater Lake Lodge is considered one of the great national park lodges of the Western United States, along

with such other icons of early-20th-century architecture as Yellowstone's Old Faithful

Lodge, Yosemite's Ahwahnee

25 — nearly two months after

the anniversary of the actual opening date (June 28, 1915) — the reception will, indeed, include a birthday cake. The only other date set

asideon the summer-season calendar is a June 12 appearance on KPTV's "Good

Morning Oregon" television program."I'm working on

Aaron Copland and Leonard

The Bulletin

Bernstein as well as world premieres of pieces by Heather Schmidt and C.F. Kip Winger. The concert schedule is as follows:

Sunriver Music Festival will return for its 38th season in

August, with Maestro George Hanson leading the Festival Orchestra in seven concerts in

Bend and Sunriver Aug. 7-19. Tickets to the classical music festival's four Classical

Concerts, Pops Concert, Solo Piano Concert and Family Concert will go on sale to the

public Monday. Along with tunes from wellknown classical composers

such as Franz Schumann, Ludwigvan Beethoven,Gioachino Rossini, Joseph Haydn and Felix Mendelssohn, concertgoers will hear contemporary compositions from

Aug. 7:"America the Beautiful," Pops Concert, featuring

Central Oregon Mastersingers; Summit High School, 2855 NW Clearwater Drive, Bend.

Aug. 9:"The Love of Country," Classical Concert I, featuring the Festival Orchestra

Aug. 10:Family Concert; Sunriver Resort Great Hall. Aug. 12:"Red, White & Heavenly," Classical Concert

Chemult

BeaverMarsh I

X GarfielN'eak

Crater Lake lodge

Crfter

s

ea quarters

Ap e e Peak

ake, rate / tlenai 'Lake

Rim Drive (closed inWinter) Maz Village To Hwy.62, KlamathFalls

Fort Klamath

The Pinnacles

Kla th Falls

Greg Cross / The Bulletin

"All the great lodges of the

scheduling a couple more events," said generalmanager Mike Keller.

national parks are unique,"

Natural splendor

the natural wonders that surround them give visitors the

he said. "Their proximity to

NORTHWESTTRAVEL

ability to appreciate the splena couple of years ago with dors each national park proXanterra Parks & Resorts, the vides. The Crater Lake Lodge companythatoperatesthecon- sits atop the rim, above one of cession at this national park the largest volcanic calderas and several others, including in the world." Yellowstone and Glacier. SeeCrater Lake /C4 Keller came to Crater Lake

Next week: BBQ, Blues and Brews in Coos Bay

~ E 8 CVb FARP~

/ tgAou more fAledlr/rWW~P

If yougo What:2015 Sunriver Music Festival When: Aug. 7-19 Where:Bend andSunriver Cost:$35 to $70; $10 for Family Concert. Public ticketsalesbeginMonday. Contact:www.sunriver music.org or 541-593-9310

performing works by Rossini, Beethoven and more; Sunriver Resort Great Hall, 17600 Center Drive.

Qh Falls

Diamondake I

unriver usic es iva ma es summer re urn By David Jasper

«ettae.W

Clo cap

l3lscovery Point Rim Village Visitor Center

of stories to tell. Yet, according to park historian Stephen Mark, it's lucky it has lasted this long.

De eyil IIrek

Crater Lake

that overlooks the deepest lake in the United States.

Rim Drive (closedin Winter)

cove

II, with guest cellist Amit

Peled performing Haydn's Cello Concerto in C major and worldpremiereby composer Heather Schmidt; Sunriver Resort Great Hall.

SeeSunriver/C6

-~>tcoolsculpting. Cool Night Out Thursday, June 4, 2015 Seatings at 6 and 7pm Chance to WinTwoFree Coolsculpting Packages Q&A CoolsculptingPresentation• RefreshmentsServed• Special EventPricing!

ESTHETIX MD s p &ui c t

»5 SW Allen Road l 54L330.5551 Bend, Oregon97702 I EsthetixMD.com


C2

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MAY 31, 2015

ruise aine'scoas or ame o s er ro s By SteVe DolinSkye Chicago Tribune

EASTPORT, Mainelobster claw the size of an iPhone 5 sits perched atop my lunch, completely obliterating any chance I have to see the quarter-pound of chopped lobster meat, lightly dressed with mayo and tucked into a split-top hot

5 -" - .

dog bun that's been ever-so-gently griddled with butter on either side. The lobster roll at Quoddy Bay Lobster, an industrial-looking blue aluminum shack on the eastern lip of the United States, isn't my first — you can find them now in seafood restaurants all over the country — but it's certainly the freshest, most delicious version I've ever had. "We feed people the way we feed our fishermen at home," said Sara Griffin, who runs the fishing co-op and restaurant with her family. That means no celery, drawn butter or lettuce but rather a bit of mayo tohold the roughly chopped claw, knuckle and tail meat together, topped with a fully intact,

sre t

steamed claw. Quoddy Bay began as a Thursday-

only chowder joint eight seasons ago. Today the staff goes through about 100 pounds of live lobster

i

every day in summer, about half that amount in the fall, all still dispensed through a carryout window.

Photos by Steve Dolinsky/ Chicago Tribune

The lobster roll was born in 1929 at Perry's restaurant in Milford, Connecticut, accord-

ing to "The Encyclopedia of American Food and Drink."

Like manyof the nation's great sandwiches, it was born of necessity: How else to use up this

prodigious native species'? Not everyone feels like tackling a It/~- to 2-pound lobster, plastic

bib intact, metal shell cracker in one hand, tiny fork in the other. The lobster roll offers

industry in New Brunswick,

yet the Lilliputian rolls at St. Andrews-by-the-Sea's Clam

Digger, a roadside joint where the fryers get a real workout, were dressed simply with lettuce and a few lemon wedges. OK, but nothing like the ones at Quoddy Bay. Sitting on wooden picnic tables as blue as the water just a few yards from where we were sitting, the vibe at Quoddy Bay is serene, with an occasional flurry of activity each time a boat is unloaded. In the

the pleasures of this naturally sweet crustacean without getting your hands dirty. While warehouse nextto the restausome fishing towns in New rant, a burly fisherman, sportEngland have added melted ing a beard and a Harley hat, butter, celery and lettuce along lifted two enormous oranges p e cithe way, Maine's fishermen and-black-speckled seem to adhere to a less-is- mens from a crate gobsters more ethos; mayo is fine, but turn red once they're cooked), even that' s considered sacri- their claws flailing helplessly, lege in some quarters of the already rubber-banded to prePine Tree State.

ventsomeone'sfinger from be-

My family and I drove south ing pinched. along Maine's coast the week The state is on a roll, boastbefore Labor Day, the height ing historic catches the last of lobsterseason on the East threeyears,according to the Coast, starting in New Bruns- state Department of Marine wick, Canada, and ending Resources. More than 120 milup in Portland, Maine, for a lion pounds were landed each lobster roll lover's Magical year,supplying 85 percent of Mystery Tour. I talked to col- the country's fishmongers. leagues; I consulted friends That lobster roll you had last who grew up in Saco, Maine, week in Chicago or Dallas or and others who attended col- San Francisco? Chances are it lege at Bowdoin in Bruns- came from Maine. wick, Maine. I asked "Bizarre If the road to Quoddy Bay is F oods" host A n drew Z i m - a winding, twisting odyssey, mern, whose parents retired the journey down U.S. Highin Maine and who visits every way 1 is a meandering sosummer. I ate so much lob- journ past antique shops and ster that my doctor put odds seafood shacks. We stopped on my gout returning with a in Ellsworth at the Union Rivvengeance. er Lobster Pot (not open for The town of St. Andrews- lunch), and passed on the faby-the-Sea in New Brunswick mous Red's Eats in Wiscasset is as bucolic as they get in the — too long of a line. A good maritime provinces of Cana- friend recommended Dolphin da. Known for whale-watch- Marina in Harpswell, half an ing excursions and sea kay- hour from where we were, but aking, s everal r e staurants we were hungry after an hour offer lobster rolls, and I was or two of shopping at the L.L. expecting the behemoths I Bean world headquarters in had seen farther up the Bay Freeport, so we drove 10 minof Fundy, near Nova Scotia, utes toward the water. stacked sideways into hoagie Brendon A l terio s p orted rolls. Lobster is part of a $1 a toothy grin and his daily billion dollar fish and seafood uniform of a golf visor and r.

In Naine

ABOVE: The Spring Point Ledge Light juts into the Atlantic at South Portland, smack dab in the heart of lobster

• Harraseeket Lunch and Lobster, 36 Main St., South Freeport, 207-865-3535,

www.harraseeketlunchand lobster.com, (open May2 to Columbus Day) • The Lobster Shack atTwo Lights, 225 TwoLights Road, CapeElizabeth,

country. LEFT: The lobster roll at Eventide Oys-

ter Co. is doused

207-799-1677, www.lobster

shacktwolights.com, (open March 29to Oct. 26) • Quoddy BayLobster, 7 Sea St., Eastport, 207-8536640, (open mid-May to mid-October) • Eventide Oyster Co., 86 Middle St., Portland, 207-774-8538, www

.eventideoysterco.com

in a bit of brown butter and served

in a puffy, split-top Asian bun.

beat the Lobster Shack at Two Lights, about 10 minutes south

of Portland, in Cape Eliza-

In Canada

beth. This is the ideal East

• Clam Digger, 4468 Route 127, St. Andrews-by-theSea, NewBrunswick, 506-529-8084

Coast shack experience I had been dreaming of: located

er a

almost directly on the water,

Ilrqaritc [ l't

next to a Coast Guard house that blasts a fog horn every

J

few minutes, it's a cozy little

SHririrr AGE rll

ItO SUR GEIY ' HO FACBJFT

T-shirt sporting the H a rraseeket Lunch an d L o bster on whole lobsters, fried clams thick arms and a permanent

tan from watching his eight lobster boats come in each

Enjoy theSunthls Summerwlth caution. Just rememberwhatyou donow will age youlater.

and lobster rolls (don't forget the chowda). Opened by James Leadbetter in 1969, back when lobster rolls werejust$9— asopposed

day from Casco Bay. The busi- to the $15 version now — the ness is in its 46th year, and rulehas always been a 3-ounce the lines forming beneath the sandwich consisting of tail, pinstriped awning each day claw and knuckle. We sat on reflect a loyalty that extends one of the dozen or so red pic-

Formwla 10 tt59.98

ptusfreetmwelsize i, '%P„ Anti-Aging tinted SuperSerumwith SPF20

beyond state lines. The rolls

nic tables out front, just as the

Call for aFREEProducf Consultation withSherry

begin with lobster that's first boiled; professional "pick-

sun was setting, devouring our rolls — barely dressed,topped with a dollop of mayo on one

SHER-RAY.COM 541-389-2228

ers" come in to separate the meat from the shells. A bit of

Buy online or by phone Also at:

end, a pickle on the other, the

mayo, some salt and pepper are all the seasoning they get. Three-and-a-half ounces of barely dressed meat is stuffed

entire top layer lightly dusted with paprika — and just stared endlessly into the dark blue abyss of the Atlantic, inhaling into the buttered-and-griddled the salty sea air, thinking how Sunbeam buns that have a were we ever going to polish thin layer of green leaf lettuce off that giant whoopee pie still at the bottom for added color

sitting on the table.

•OREGON BODY & BATH (Downtown) •AUTRY'S 4 SEASONS FLORIST,Greenwood Ave.,Bend • ATHLETIC CLUBOFBEND;THECLUBSALON(541) 322-ee02 • MARACUPUNTURE INC. Mara Kevn (415) 531-4eee

• Susan Hart N.P. PRO AcnvE HEALTH (541) 3es-e7t4

Visit ourretail shoppeat I98838lt St. IOpenM-W-FIO-4pm• Sat. byappointment (RedbuildingatTumaloMal, offHtNy20,turneast at Cook) Next to Tumalo Garden Market, TUMALOMALL

and crunch. "We keep it basic, so you get the true flavor of the meat," Al-

terio said, echoing sentiments of his fellow fishermen. That

philosophy, as simple as it is, results in about 500 lobster rolls a day during the summer. Sitting beneath an

The Bulletin MI LESTONES

GUIDELINE

e n or-

mous picture of a Kumamoto

r oe

oyster at a wooden table in Portland's hip I n di a S t reet

Q/

neighborhood, I

co u l dn't

help but notice the enormous

bar housing a granite slab jammed with ice and nine types of r egional oysters. Eventide Oyster Co. is much more than an oysterbar.Ithas that rare menu, forcing im-

possible-to-decide dilemmas between creative, raw crudos,

If you would like to receive forms to announce your engagement, wedding, or anniversary, plus helpful information to plan the perfect Central Oregon wedding, pick up your Book of Love at The Bulletin (1777 SW Chandler Avco Bend) or from any of these valued advertisers: AAA Travel Awbrey Glen Golf Club Bad Boys Barbecue Bend Park 6t. Recreation District Bend Wedding tst. Formal

full-on lobster bakes and unc-*:

tuous seafood stews. The signature lobster roll, doused in a bit of brown butter and served

in a puffy, split-top Asian bun, is certainly not traditional, but A good look at a lobster before it hits the pot at the Quoddy Bay Lobster restaurant.

rs

Sunscreen The Natural Way! "„"„;,„;„;,"„„„;"

home with 1960s wood paneling and a brief menu, heavy

logos. Alterio is built like a former football player with

BEND, OREGON

it's also not to be missed.

For pure tradition, you can't

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SUNDAY, MAY 31, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

no so in,nos in an

C3

a es earein s an

By Karen O'Souza San Jose (Calif) Mercury News

In 1887, when the last Gold-

.s"

en Spike was pounded into

e ll

the tracks in A shland, and

f

the iron horse officially encir-

cled the nation, the Railroad District was the bustling hub

I, I'

of the Rogue Valley. The area was bristling with railroad

'fr." es s' '

"

'

,

qsr e I•

r I

~X;'

workers, Chinese immigrants,

gamblers and hustlers of all stripes, looking to make their fortune in the Wild West.

Nowadays, the star of the town is the Oregon Shake-

S nll'

speare Festival, which is cel-

ebrating its 80th anniversary by staging 11 plays on three A glassblowing demonstration at Gathering Glass studio.

stages for nine months. But

old-timers are quick to point out that

t h e r a m bunctious

spirit of the railroad's golden age has not vanished. Indeed, there's one feisty ghost, in par-

The Railroad District This historic district in Ash-

ticular, who is said to roam the

land offers plenty to savor. Here's just a sampling of possibilities: Coquina: Farm-to-fork fare at 542 A St.; www.coquinarestaurant.com Deux Chats: Bakery at 222 A St.; www.deuxchats.com Gallerie Karon: 500 ASt.,

halls of the historic Peerless on 4th, a stylish 1894 hotel that seduces its guests with

Photos by Karen D'Souza / Bay Area News Group

It's hard to find a better cup of coffee than at Nobel Coffee in Ashland's Railroad district.

the romance of the past, from claw-foot tubs to hand-paint-

ed, trompe I'oeil murals and stained-glass lamps.

Ashland Co-op offer a win-

In all honesty, the food is so delectable at Coquina that the

or seven hours a day in a the-

glass.com Jega Gallery & Sculpture Gardens: 625 A St.

Noble Coffeehouse: 281 Fourth St.; www.noblecoffeeroasting.com The Peerless on 4th: Hotel, restaurant and bar at 243 Fourth St.; www.peerlesshotel. com Playwright Public House: 258 A St.; www.playwrightpublichouse.com

ater seat — and walking as mellow, eco-friendly Ashland fare at the Playwright, a near- much as possible the rest of only heightened by the hotel's lifestyle. by gastropub, pales by com- the time. So keep on trucking It's a l i ttle l ik e Berkeley, parison, despite its very cozy down the street toward Gathsupernatural guest, a genteel Suite1 lady named Amelia with red California, only without the atmosphere and well-poured eringGlassforan eye-popping Gathering Glass Studio: 3322 Studio A.B: 621 A St.; www. hair piled high atop her head. crime, traffic and stratospher- pints. demonstration of glass-blowN. Pioneer St.; www.gathering- studioa-b.com To be clear, I never caught ic price tags. The other must-munch on ing alchemy. The crafters a glimpse of Amelia (thank Just across the street from my list is at Ashland's Lunch here are steeped in the centugoodness!), but the lights in the Peerless, you'll find Revive, Show, a convivial purveyor of ries-old tradition as it's done my swanky suite flickered on a picturesque shop that spe- locally sourced lunches that on the Venetian island of Mu- pily, it's a quick walk from you can take some of sting out and off every once in a while, cializes in revamped antique dishes up a toasty roast beef, rano, but they also tap into a t he Railroad District to t he of your departure with a pit so I suspect she might have furniture, housed in the town's cheddar and caramelized on- vibrant Pacific Northwestern Oregon Shakespeare Festival stop at Deux Chats, a bakery been paying me a visit. There old firehouse. It's a place ion sandwich with a horserad- vibe that makes their glass theaters, where Mary Zim- that has locals lining up for its was also one goose-bump- where you can be fashionable ish cream so yummy it's hard sculptures pulsate with whim- merman's masterful revival sinfully gooey cinnamon rolls filled evening when I returned as well as green, which is the to stifle the moans. Home- sy. The delicate glass grape- of "Guys and Dolls" is guar- and decadentchocolate chip to the hotel in the wee hours, sweet spot in Ashland. For the made potato chips are a nice vines and flowers popped with anteed to put a song in your cookies. Rolling out of town is having walked back from the record, this is also a terrific bonus. fiery colors so mesmerizing heart. a little bit easier with a piece If you're like me, a theater that I stared too long and altheater through an eerie pea- town for thrifting. Vintage adAs always, parting Ashland of Ashland melting in your soup fog, visions of the Dick- dicts can rummage through vacation means spending six most missed my curtain. Hap- is such sweet sorrow — but mouth. ensian romp "Fingersmith" designer castoffs at Deja Vu, still dancing in my head. As just up the road. I passed through the empty Saunter through the Rail• Fremed Alt hotel lobby, I thought I heard road District, and you'll also er CanVaS Alt DEcoR~aFINlsHEDDEcoRATIYE the unmistakable creak of the encounter the cheeky Push WOOD ACCESSORIES • Coffese Frames Cetegories Usted antique hobby horse bouncing art gallery, the fanciful GalOA UNRNISHED CRAFT WOOD • Nen's Nefef DOES NOT INCLUDE SF ASONAL DEP A rtrrrtENT all by itself. lerie Karon (where the propri• Cendfeholders 8 Wood Decor No power on Earth could etor will regale you with local WALL a TABLE WALL a TABLE have compelled me to t u rn haunting lore), the eclectic • Nefel Decor Sale • Decorative Memo CHOOSE FROM METAL WALL back and check. Jega Gallery & Sculpture GarDECOR AND FUNCTIONAL Soerds, Chefkboerds a DECOIIAllyl METAL My idea ofmaking a con- dens and the pastel and chara Corlrboerds ACCESSORIES nection to the past has a whole coal wonders of Studio A.B. rrsrrls rrtfcso$24.99a up INCLUDES METAL CONTAINERS • Tiays, Coasters a Place Nafs IN OUR FLORALa CRAFT lot more charm in the bright But the tastiest way to samDEPARTMENTS • Knobs, Drawer pulls 8 Handles OOES Nor INCLUDE FURNITURE light of day. If you have a han- ple local culture in these parts lanterns. Sfrdceges Decor Sale kering for history, there's no is at Coquina, a farm-to-table • All Wicker, Decorative • Glass INCLUDES GLASSDEPARTMENT, FLORAL Soxes a Storage better place to stay in Ashland treasure where organic, sea• Decoretive Wem etebfeOOESNor Irrcuros utRGETRUMKS dow into the pleasures of the

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crowds of Main Street, but it feelsa universe away.Here, locals lounge over ridiculously good java and chocolate croissants from Noble Coffeehouse, while they listen to street

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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MAY 31, 2015

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Photos by Barb Gonzalez/For The Bulletin

On a sunny day, there are few panoramas more remarkable than that of Crater Lake. Six miles across, it is the deepest (1,943 feet) and possibly the purest lake in the United States: It is possible to look straight down into the lake to a depth of more than 400 feet. A meal of elk chops, topped with a huckleberry-walnut

glaze and served

Weekly Arts Sr

Entertainment In

with mashed

potatoes andfresh vegetables, is one of the most popular

dinner entrees in the lodge dining > ff l

~

room. Entree prices range from$24 to

Ble

$43, and this plate is at the top of the

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TheBulletin

price scale. I

IGLGAZINE

r

S aturday, July ll , 2 0 1 5 Bend, Oregon The Crater Lake Lodge opened in1915, closed in1989 and reopened in 1995 after a head-to-toe restoration. Although the original building had no foundation or basement, reinforced concrete and

ROBBERSON

Driven by:

structural steel were added to protect it from collapse under heavy winter snows.

Crater Lake

in 1853. They were more inter- design," Mark told me, as ested in mineral wealth, but we sat amid stacks of books Continued from C1 their stories about a "deep blue and papers in the library of That caldera was the lega- lake" intrigued others who the p a r k' s a d m i nistration cy of Mount Mazama, which followed. Scientists mounted building. geologists say once stood r esearch expeditions in t h e Mark said William Steel, more than 12,000 feet above 1870s and 1880s, and in 1902 a t i r eless c o n servationist the surrounding landscape. Crater Lake was established whose efforts led to the creAbout 7,700 years ago, it as the fifth national park in ation of Crater Lake National erupted in one of the greatest the U.S. Park in May 1902, believed a volcanic eruptions known to Today, Crater Lake is rec- lake-view lodge would attract man. Smoke, ash and molten ognized as the deepest lake in more visitors to this location rock were thrust into the at-

the United States — 1,943 feet

mosphere with such force that at its maximum — as well as a toxic cloud extended all the the purest: It is possible to look way across Canada to Green- straight down into the lake to land. Then the great peak col- a depth of more than 400 feet. lapsed into itself. No streams flow in, so there is At first, this steaming calno accumulation of silt in the dera, 6 miles across, was a waters. Natural evaporation barren wasteland of lava and and minor seepage through pumice rock, with cliffs rising cliff walls keep the lake level 3,900 feet above its deepest consistent. point. As centuries passed, the crater filled with w ater

from rain and snowmelt. For thousands of years before the arrival of white Eu-

ropeans, the native Klamath people revered the mountain

and its lake. Their legends told of its creation in an epic battle between heaven and hell. They never lived on the moun-

tain but visited for private religious ceremonies and prayers to their gods. The first white men to see the lake were gold prospectors who looked over its rim

Construction story

— which, at the start of the

20th century, was far more inaccessible than it is today,

requiring a journey of many miles over crude, unpaved roads. But the promise of eight

months of winter didn't help him find a builder. The average annual snowfall on the crater's rim, 7,100 feet above sea level, is more than 540

inches (over 45 feet). No deMark has been the park veloper wanted to commit to historian since 1988. He was the work, especially given the already at Crater Lake when limited seasonal window for the lodge was closed in the construction work and the spring of 1989. He watched reality that l aborers would the rehabilitation work begin be lured from summer agriin the fall of that year; he saw cultural work only with the it completed five years later, promise of substantial pay. beforethe lodge's reopening Finally, said Mark, "Will in May 1995. Steel recruited hi s P ortAnd he knows the full story land real estate pal, Alfred of the construction of Crater Parkhurst, who adapted a Lake Lodge. house design as an automo"The original lodge was a bile lodge." He began building big Portland suburban house on a site that was a mere field of pumice, with only a scattering of forest. He oriented

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the building with "open arms to the elements," Mark said,

practically inviting snowdrifts to gather upon the building.

cut corners in interior design.

Let'sturn the answers on.

HEALTH SYSTEM

Sponsored by:

Because the cost of con-

struction r a pidly m u s hroomed, Parkhurst had to

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W hen thelodge opened, the only electricity was provided by a small generator for a few hours each morning and evening. Tar paper and cardboard covered the walls, and An old-fashioned claw-foot bathtub dominates the private bathroom of a fourth-floor guest room in the Crater Lake Lodge. "No

Les Schwab Tire Centers, Microsemi, REI, Eisai, Central Oregon Radiation Oncology Assc.

1923 and 1924, there were no

KBNZ/CBS For Central Oregon, Paul B. Leighton Design, Rock98.3/101.7 Adult Alternative,

two guest rooms are alike," said general manager Mike Keller,

private bathrooms. But even those guest rooms were not

who added, "Each is unique in its size, orientation and views it

completed until the 1930s.

provides."

With support from:

until new annex wings doubled the number of rooms in

Continued next page

Astir Agency, The Bulletin

Register Online at TourdesChutes.org


SUNDAY, MAY 31, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

C5

''iy .

t;

i

5L

Photos by Barb Gonzalez/ For The Bulletin

Park visitors enjoy an afternoon presentation by ranger DaveGrimes in the Great Room ofthe Crater Lake Lodge. Decorative slabs of pine bark and stone masonry were among the rare materials preserved from early construction when the lodge was reconstructed 20

years ago.

Crater Lake National Park historian Stephen Mark, the park historian since1988, is charged with surveying archaeological and cultural sites in addition to performing research and writing.

A couple relax with a "happy hour" glass of wine beside the fire in the Great Room of the Crater Lake No matter the weather, Crater Lake nearly always gives visitors a beautiful view. The lake was formed about 7,700 years ago by the eruption of 12,000-foot Mount Mazama, which collapsed into itself after sending a cloud of smoke, ash and molten rock into the atmosphere.

Lodge. Traditionally a gathering place for guests, the hotel's largest roomopens onto aterrace where visitors can sit and enjoy the view of the lake during fine weather.

Room rates begin at $169.99 temporary form, knowing that for a ground-floor room and I have certain modern ameniclimb to $294.99 for a loft unit. ties along with modern safety The restaurant beckons with There are no TVs or phones, provisions. fine dining, three meals a day. and cell-phone service is spot— John Gottberg Anderson As in the Great Room, the de- ty, but the lodge does offer Wican be reached atjanderson@ cor is highlighted by slabs of Fi connections. If you require bendbulletin.com. pine bark that cover the walls, a shower, request one when perhaps lending a sense of you make your reservation, camping in the great outdoors. as many rooms have only See us for retractable But the food is anything but bathtubs. awnings, exterior solar campfire fare. From hearty The Crater Lake Lodge is screens, shadestructures. pancakes-and-eggs breakfasts indeed a historical treasure. Sun whenyou wantit, to dinners of Alaskan halibut But I think Iprefer it in its conshade whenyou needit. and elk chops with a huckleberry-walnut glaze, the food is www.AgateBeaehMotel.oom a visual and culinary treatPrivate,vintage,oceanfront~getaway. though not an inexpensive one. half-mile of that to get a pho-

Expenses fortwo Gas:Bend to Crater Lake (round-trip), 215 miles at $3/gallon: $25.80 Lodging:(two nights), Crater Lake Lodge: $419.98 All meals:Crater Lake Lodge $312.85 TOTAL: $758.63

Ifyou go Information:Crater Lake National Park. P.O.Box 7, Crater

From previous page

Lake, OR97604; www.nps.gov /cria, 541-594-3000.

Lodginganddining Crater Lake Lodge. Rim Village, Crater LakeNational Park; mailing address, 1211 Avenue C,White City; www.craterlakelodges.com, 541-594-2255. Rates from

$169.99. Dining room serves three meals every day (expensive). Closes for the season Oct. 12.

bilitation of the old lodge was to begin. "But that was 'DOA'

T he D e p ression e r a in '92," he said. "The Park Serbrought landscaping and tree vice was forced into rehabbing planting to Rim Village (as the lodge earlier than the plan the lodge district is known), called for." courtesy of the Civilian ConFor two years, planning and servation Corps. But during designfocused on re-creating World War II, the park and the appearanceof the lodge's lodge closed. 1920s exterior a n d p u b l ic rooms. By 1991, contractors

Falling down

had determined that most of

a few days afterthe lodge tographic perspective on the opened for the 2015 season, we lodge's setting. drove through a short circu-

lar entry drive where we were greeted by a bellman, who helped us unload our luggage and led us to the front desk. We found that the comfortable registration area, flanked

by one of several fireplaces in the building, was a good place to get oriented.

To our right was the Great Room — a traditional gathering place for lodge guestsand, beyond that, the Dining Room. During a cold, drizzly two-day stay, we spent substantial time in these two areas. The Great Room, with its

To the left of the registration

area are offices, a small museum nook of lodge history and

rustic furnishings and roaring fireplace,was ideal for reading, talking with other guests, enjoying a pre-dinner glass of wine and listening to after-

two elevators that carry guests

noon lectures by resident park

room is unique in its size, orientation and views it provides."

rangers. Double doors opened to a concrete terrace where Adirondack chairs invited us to

relax and enjoy the view of

to the 73 guest rooms.

N wport, O iR 1 0' ' 755-- 7 4

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;,at eSeac motel

V CI

O >N DEMA N D

541-389-9983 www.shadeondemand.com

"No two guest rooms inside

the lodge are alike," said Keller, the general manager. "Each Our queen room, in a corner of the fourth floor, had

windows facing to both the north and west and a sitting

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W hen th e C r a ter L a k e the building would have to be the spectacular lake, its stark area with a bay window that Lodge reopened to increased gutted. "Only about 10 per- walls still fringed with snow extended above the lake with business in the late 1940s, the cent of the original materials despite this having been the a fine view toward Wizard ravages of time and neglect were reincorporated into the driestwinter on record here. Island. Our b athroom panwere showing their effects. way the building looks today," A 1.7-mile trail to the summit orama was no less stunning, Start your tailored TruGreen plan today. "The fourth floor had never Mark said, "and most of that of nearby Garfield Peak be- as we could soak in a solitary 541-610-3063 been finished, because of the was stonework and decorative gan just off the terrace; during claw-foot tub while embracing TruGreen.com winter cable placement and wood elements." a break in the precipitation, the sight of the deep-blue lake ©2015Truereen LimitedPartnership. All rights reserved. the fear of someone falling," R einforced concrete a n d we marched about the first below. Mark said. "And not only did structural steel elements were the kitchen wing have no ex- added "to keep the building its; you would have had to be where it is," Mark said. New an acrobat to use any of the safety systems and utilities fire exits." brought the property up to Floors and ceilings were modern s t andards. R ooms sagging, and the walls were were reconfigured, and an An About stretched by cables that tried to employee dining room was keep them from bowing under added in the new basement. the weight of snow. Cracks in The lodge was completed in the stone masonry were wid- fall 1994 at an expense of more ening. What Mark now calls"a than $15 million and reopened Band-Aid approach" failed to to the public in May 1995. bring the building up to safety But Mark is hesitant to refer Arlene H Clarence Bales are retiring after 12 eeonderful years in BefMt. standards. to the Crater Lake Lodge as a When the N ational Park building that's celebrating its Service took ownership of 100th birthday this year. • Pool Tables and Pool Table • Pub Tables and Bar Stools "What you see is actually the lodge in 1967, it realized it didn't have the resources to a new building, made to look Accessories • Foosball Tables give it a proper restoration. old," he said. Public o pinion, h owever, • Pool Cues and Cases • Wall and Floor Art quashed a proposal to demol- The lodgetoday ish the National Register of Those who visit Crater Lake • All Pool Cues Accessories • Juke Boxes, Record Players, Historic Places building, so today approach the lodge by

LlQUiDATlON g ~ L I , ss

EVERY1'I N O e o mgss

a team of engineers were retained to monitor the structur-

a half-mile "driveway" that extends off West Rim Drive.

al integrity of the lodge. Before the 1989 lodging season, the engineers determined the lodge could no longer safe-

The road passes the 1921 Kiser Studio (now a visitor center), a cafeteria and gift shop (built in

ly remain open — that a col-

morial Overlook (1931), a com-

lapse was impending. The original development project, Mark said, called for the construction of a hotel (with underground parking)

munity house and a comfort

to be completed before reha-

On our v isit t hi s m onth,

1928), a trail to the Sinnott Me-

station. There's parking beside a broad meadow that invites

snowshoe expeditions during the winter season.

)

• All Darts, Flights and Dart Accessories and Cases

Phones and Small Games • plus Much, Much Morej

12,93 NE 3rd St. • Bend, Oregon 97701 Ph. (541) 382, 9700 • Fax ( 5 41) 389 38 12,

HUGg pp ~p S

OlSCOP~g % Qgge


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looked better nor been more p edestrian-friendly. Tha t vast parking lot in the midst

of the park's central plaza has disappeared. Now, colorful umbrellas and chairs dot the Plaza de Panama in a riot

Jackie Butrell / San Jose Mercury News

of turquoise, cherry red and San Diego's Balboa Park is celebrating its centennial this year golden yellow. Visitors pedal with a few special things, including the reopening of the tower at fringe-topped surreys down the Museum of Man, new exhibits and colorful seating on a central the esplanade. Fountains plaza previously occupied by parked cars. burble merrily, and buskers entertain. A fundraising effort is on target to help the the 1915 Panama-California 100-year-old Spreckels Or- Exposition, an expo that unTower tours: Tickets are gan Pavilion reclaim its title expectedly turned out to be a $16-$22.50 and include as the world's largest outdoor grand success. On the eve of admission to the Museum pipe organ. And the ornate the opening of the Panama of Man, whose halls include tile tower that tops the Muse- Canal, the then-tiny coastexhibits on ancient Egypt, um of Man is open for tours al city had hoped to host a anthropology, folklore and forthe firsttime in 80 years. world's fair. San Diego was, uBeerology.n Museum adWe booked our tower tour after all, the first U.S. port tickets ahead of time — with that ships would encounter mission is $6-$12.50 withspace for just 12 people per as they steamed west through out the tour.1350 El Prado, 40-minute tour, these tickets the new canal. Balboa Park, SanDiego; are a hot commodity — laced San Francisco quashed www.museumofman.org. up our sneakers and Uber- those dreams by winning the Spreckels Organ Pavilion: ed our way over to the park rights to host the official PanThe pavilion is a favorite ama-Pacific International Exon a recent Saturday mornphoto op for bridal parties ing, eager to use this histor- position. Instead of folding, and quinceanerasevery ic stairclimb to work off a San Diego leaders decided to day, but you'll want to visit tasty brunch at the Patio on host their own party, anyway. at 2 p.m. on aSunday, when Goldfinch. They built these grand edificthe pavilion hosts free orGetting a ride is key. Park- es, landscaped the gardens ing at Balboa Park has al- and planted a showstopping gan concerts. 1549 ElPraways been a challenge; it's agricultural farm, then set do; spreckelsorgan.org. even more difficult now that those electriquettes b u zzSan Diego History Center: the plaza-spoiling parking lot ing down the park's wide This small museum inhas disappeared. Sneakers or boulevard. cludes some historical exsimilarly comfy shoes also are S an F r a n cisco's e x p o hibits, a1915 display and a imperative. You'll be climbing closed after nine months. San Dr. Seuss gallery. Whether Diego's lasted a full two years 125 steep stairs, capped by a the few minutes you spend final tight spiral staircase, to and actuall y became grander here is worth the $6-$10 reach the museum tower. It's the second year, when eight admission is open to denot quite the topmost level, countries — including Brazil, bate. 1649 El Prado; www. but at 375 feet above sea level, France, Germany and Russia sandiegohistory.org. the rounded balconies of this — opened pavilions within platform offer a breathtak- Balboa Park's borders. Park ing perch from which to take guides still beam with gratifiin the park, the Cuyamaca cation as they tell the tale. fountains. And when you deMountains and the sea. Now Balboa Park is launch- scend from the historical tow-

Ifyou go

With its rococo flourishes, tiled domes and sculptures

of historic notables, this Spanish Baroque building made an imposing entry for

ing its next chapter with a

er tour, what awaits is a hunt-

er-gatherer-to-hipster exhibit on Beerology. way to foot traffic. Reclaimed Cheers. Oh, and happy water splashes in the grand birthday. savviness that is distinctly

21st century: Cars have given

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and others; Tower Theater, 835 NW Wall St., Bend.

Aug. 17: Solo Piano Concert, Competition Crystal Medalist

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Aug. 15: "United We Stand," Classical Concert III, featur-

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wicker carts that

Cy plays as before. If East has five diamonds, Cy can s till d i scard t h ree h earts f r o m dummy, ruff his last diamond, and next lead a heart to West's ace. Cy can then ruff his last heart in dummy. "I have 25 more deals to play with her," Cy growled to me. "I can't wait." South dealer Both sides vulnerable

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— reproductions of the 1915

Tribune Content Agency

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trendy cafes and, of course,

It wasn't supposed to be a

By FRANK STEWART

The relationship, if you can call it t hat, between Cy t h e C y n ic, a shameless chauvinist, and Wendy, my club's feminist, appeared to have softened a bit. "We're playing t ogether i n a duplicate game this afternoon," Cy had told me. I s a t d o w n to wat c h th e partnership, and t h e y p r o mptly reached a slam in today's deal. Cy was South,and after Wendy cue-bid her ace of clubs, Cy's leap to six spades was reasonable. Cy took the ace of clubs, led a trump to his jack, led a diamond to dmnmy's jack and returned a second trump to his queen. West discarded, so the Cynic drew East's king of trumps and started the diamonds. They broke 4-3, so Cy discarded all four of dummy's hearts. He ruffed a heart with dummy's last trump and lost one heart at the end, making six. "Well bid, partner," Cy said. "You m isplayed i t , " We n d y sniffed. "That's just like her," Cy grumbled to me. "I've often heard her say that behind every successful man stands a woman telling him he's mong." Wendy proceeded to tell Cy that he would have gone down ifEast had h eld five d i amonds. After C y ' s second trump finesse wins, he should test the diamonds without cashing the ace of trumps. When they break 4-3,

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IV, featuring guest pianist Sean Chen and world preSubmitted photo miere of new Winger work, Van Cliburn International Piano Competition winner Sean Chen along with compositions by performs alongside conductor George Hanson at the 2014 SunMendelssohn, S c humann; river Music Festival. Both will be on hand for the festival's 38th Sunriver Resort Great HalL season this August. All concerts begin at 7:30 p.m., except for the Aug. 10 Family Concert, which takes tor of festival. of reference, personal essays, place at 4 p.m. At 7 p.m. June 14, the festi- school transcripts and a reperThough the concerts won't val will hold its popular Young toire representing three classihappen until August, things Artists Scholarship Concert, cal periods. get swinging June 7, with showcasing 2014 competition The free concert will be held the Swings fore Strings Golf winners, in a program featur- at Holy Trinity Church, 18143 Tournament at the Woodlands ing vocalists, violin, piano and Cottonwood Road. A donation Course in Sunriver. flute. of $10 is requested. In its seventh year, the fundraiser supports the festival as

To compete, music students

For more information, visit

well as music education, said

from Deschutes, Jefferson, www.sunrivermusic.org. Crook and Harney counties — Reporter: 541-383-0349,

Pam Beezley, executive direc-

submit an application, letters

djasper@bendbulletirbcom


SUNDAY, MAY 31, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

C7

ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT

uc ovn ison ecasein' u arius' TV SPOTLIGHT "Aquarius" 9 p.m. Thursdays,NBC By Greg Braxton Los Angeles Times

NBC's "Aquarius" transports hippies, flower power, free love and a budding psychopath named Charles Manson to prime time. More significant for

n e t-

work TV watchers, "Aquarius" marks the dawning of the new age of David Duchovny. The drama is a return to

broadcast for the actor who

vivian zink/Nec

David Duchovny stars as Sam Hodiak, a decorated Vietnam War veteran and homocide detective, in "Aquarius."

first shot to stardom on Fox

with the iconic sci-fi series "The X-Files" and then leaped to cable, spending seven seasons on Showtime's racy "Californication" as a troubled, alcoholic writer grappling with life and family difficulties.

looking for something to do," Black Panthers. Duchovny says about why he During his investigation, he took on "Aquarius" before div- crosses paths with a moody ing back into "The X-Files." but confident young man "But I wa s not t hinking in named Charles Manson, who terms of network. I liked the has not yet launched his infa"Aquarius" co m e s as experience I had on Show- mous murderous crime ramDuchovny prepares for the time, the freedom that really page but demonstrates a hyplong-awaited reboot of "The helped the storytelling. When notic and dangerous power X-Files" for Fox alongside his I first began talking with the over women. original co-star Gillian An- producers about 'Aquarius,' Executive producers John derson and the show's creator, I never thought it was a net- McNamara and Marty AdelChris Carter. work show." stein say they wanted to devel"Aquarius" also arrives as The series revolves around op a series that could not only another key component in Sam Hodiak, a decorated Viet- work as a procedural but as a Duchovny's directive to plant nam War vetworking as a ho- piece of historical fiction comhis creative flag all along the micide detective in Los Ange- bining real-life characters and pop culture spectrum: Sur- les in 1967. When the 16-year- events with fictional characprising those who see him old daughter of a friend goes ters such as Hodiak. as just a handsome actor, he missing, Hodiak is forced to The 1960s provided poreleased his first album this step out of his comfort zone tent territory for the massive month ("Hell or Highwater") and deal with a younger gen- changes going on in America. "We were all searching for and recently published his eration that engages with loosfirst novel ("Holy Cow: A Mod- er morals, open drug use, war things in the '60s, and every ern-Day Dairy Tale"). protests and anti-establish- single aspect of American life "I like to work so I'm always ment movements such as the was changing at light speed,"

says McNamara, whose pro- concept. "I thought telling ducing credits include "In the story of the '60s through Plain Sight" and "Jericho." Manson was clever and good. "We wanted to write about As for my character, here's a people who have to deal with guy born in the '20s or '30s. sudden change. What would He is completely out of place. it be like to be a 40-something He's not of the '60s. He doesn't white cop in Los Angeles, like the hair, he doesn't like where there's Vietnam pro- the music, he doesn't like the tests, the sexual revolution, the clothes. I thought that was Black Panthers." interesting." Manson's influence was a Having to do only 13 epicritical part of the era, says sodesinstead of a fullseason fellow executive producer orderofmorethan20wa salso Marty Adelstein: "Overnight, aplus. "If they had wanted me we went from not locking our doors, to locking our doors. As to do 21 or 22, I would have kids, we thought that Manson balked. There's no part of me was gong to come and get us." that wants to do that schedule W hen D u chovny f i r st again." started talking to McNamara and Adelstein about coming

For themoment, Duchovny

appears to be taking the flur-

aboard, he was certain that, ry of activity with his new algiven the subject matter and bum, book and series in stride, the dark themes, "Aquarius" though he seems to be particuwould never be considered larly invigorated by his music for a network, and would land and writing endeavors since on cable. "But when we heard they fall outside the box of that NBC was interested, we what people expect of him. When he returns to the "The thought, 'Well, actually, that makes sense.' Networks have X-Files" this summer, the run been talking about how they will be a six-episode special want to compete with cable.

event.

So we still were able to make The sci-fi series premiered the show we wanted to make in September 1993and ran for — it's not very different from nineseasons before ending in what would have been on

2002.

"We'll be going back to Vancable." NBC is already handling couver, where it all started," "Aquarius" differently from Duchovny says. "I'm very hapconventional broadcast series, py that Gillian will be there allowing viewers to stream all with me. I look at her and say, 13 episodes at once following 'Can you believe we're doing the broadcast launch. this 25 years later'?' It will be Duchovny adds he was nostalgic, but we're also telling particularly intrigued by the new stories. I can't wait."

S ace nee e rommot er-in-aw

MOVIE TIMESTODAY • There may be an additional fee for 3-D andIMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change after press time. t

Dear Abby: I have been mar- him more than a couple of times ried to my husband a little over a a week if you don't want to. If he year. He's a wonderful man, but I feels he needs to give her an explafeel he's a little too attached to his nation for your absence, he should mother. She lives about 20 minutes tell her you are busy with things

it me? What can I say to her next

away, and he wants to go visit her

stay in there until we know she's

you need to do. It's polite, it's log-

year? I thought about buying her a bathrobe and giving it to her. I have also considered that my boyfriend and I could get a private room and

almost every day. His mother is a very negative perDFP,R son. She isn't mean and we get along well, but her negativity is overwhelming. She finds joy in practically nothing and I always leave feeling agitated. I have talked with my husband

ical — and I'm sure dressed. Really, she needs the priyou will find errands vate room, and I t hought about or tasks with which paying for it, or should something to fill the time. just politely be said? — No Proper Wrap Dear Abby: My boyfriend has been Dear N.P.W.: Before doing anymeeting a group of thing, stop and analyze why you diving friends in Mexico for more are so bothered by what Connie is than 15 years. We are now a cou- doing. Do you think she is coming ple and this was my first year on to your boyfriend? Remember, meeting everyone. There were these are all diving friends who about this before and his response two other couples and one female, have gotten together for a very is, "That's how some old people "Connie," sharing the condo. The long time before you were in the are." I could put up with it a few other couples had private bath- picture.

pggy

times a week, but this everyday

thing is wearing on me. How can I get my husband to understand how I'm feeling without hurting

rooms, and we shared the main bathroom with Connie. I found it odd that Connie would leave the bathroom after show-

If he w a s i n terested in h e r, which I doubt, he wouldn't be with

you. I do not think paying for another room for Connie would be

his mother's feelings?

ering with only a towel wrapped appropriate. I do think you should around her. My boyfriend would get to know her better and, if you Dear No Joy: You and your hus- stay in the room or go out to the still feel threatened (which you band are married, not joined at the deck and read, yet she didn't hes- may not), talk to your boyfriend hip. If he wants to see his moth- itate to walk out to the patio and about your feelings. — No Joy in Texas

er every day, that's fine. But you

should not be obligated to go with

HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORSUNDAY, MAY 31, 2015: This year you often will want to get centered before

youmakeanybigdecisions.Youcommunicate well, though at times you can be sarcastic. Curb the sarcasm, unless you really want to dent someone's ego. You will develop an odd entourage of friends who can be somewhat unpredictable. If you are single, you might be tempted to date a very unusual person, but you'll be pleasStarsshowthe ging antly surprised by how well the two of dsyyooIhs„e ** * * * D ynamic of you connect. If ** * * p ositive yo u are attached, ** * Average you r significant ** So-so other will enjoy the ups and downs * Difficult

ofyour expanding

converse with him.

Is this socially acceptable or is

— Write toDearAbby at dearabby.com or P.O. Box 69440, LosAngeles, CA90069

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)

YOUR HOROSCOPE others. Reach out to an older friend or relative, and offer to pitch in on a project. Tonight: Don't push yourself so hard.

** * * * Y ou might not like the flak you seem to be getting from a loved one or dear friend. Avoid trying to control this person. This person is who he or she is, and you can't change that. Get some exercise instead of letting stress build. Tonight: You know how to draw someone in.

CANCER (June 21-July 22)

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)

By Jacqueline Bigar

** * * * Y ou can't seem to stop yourself from expressing your feelings. You see the big picture, butyou still often worry about the future. For now, worry less and enjoy the moment by relishing thosearound you.Tonight:Recognize that you are creating memories not just for you.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)

social network. Let him or her know how ** * * I nvite others over and expemuch you care. SCORPIO knows how to rience a fun happening together. You intimidate you. might discover that you have pushed toohardand need to slow down. Some ARIES (March 21-April 19) news heads your way that could sur** * * Your intuition might tell you prise you at first, but ultimately will put something different from what you are hearing. You understand that someone's a smile on your face. Tonight: Let others pitch in. anger is not directed at you. Be careful to respond in a kind and nurturing way. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) A loved one could pull you into his or her *** * A loved one's impulsiveness plans. Tonight: Act like a free spirit. could shake you up, even if you feel as if you are used to his or her unpredictabilTAURUS (April 20-May 20) ity. Your life is more exciting because of ** * * You might be surrounded by this person. You might be holding back highly energized people. Others could some special news or not openly sharhave difficulty understanding each ing your feelings. Tonight: Hang out. other. Hang out close to home in order to avoid the chaos. Excitement envelops LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) those who venture out to join a friend or ** * * * Y ou know when to defer and two. Tonight: Say "yes" to an offer. when to pull back. You might not want to get into a situation that involves your GEMINI (May 21-June 20) ** * * You could be more forceful finances. Opt to take a break from your friends and obligations. Curb a need than you realize. You not only say what you think and feel, but you also express to overspend at the moment. Tonight: Don't feel obligated to join others. a drive that might be overwhelming to

** * You might want to stay away from the crowds for now. You could find yourself scowling at others' lack of authenticity. Make plans to meet up with a friend or loved one. You could be surprised by this person's unpredictability at the moment. Tonight: Hang in there.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) ** * * You will want to be where your friends are. You could find yourself reacting and feeling a need to control

I

I

TV TODAY • More TV listingsinside Sports 7:30 a.m. on 6, "Face the Nation" — It's no overstatement

to say aneraends herefor the Sunday-morning staple, since CBS News veteran Bob Schieffer — who has been the

program's anchor, in every sense of that word, for 24 years — leaves that chair with this broadcast. Expect some parting words from him, infused with his political insight and his typical good humor, as he turns the reins over to successor John Dickerson (son of Schieffer's late friend and colleague Nancy

Dickerson). 5 p.m. on A8 E, "The Critics' Choice Television Awards" — From the Beverly Hilton in Beverly Hills, California, Cat Deeley ("So You Think You Can Dance") hosts the fifth annual ceremony honoring outstanding work in television. The FX drama "Justified," which recently ended its run, and the two-part HBO drama"Olive Kittredge" lead the pack of nominees with five

apiece. Amongbroadcast network shows, "The Good Wife" follows closely with four nods. Walton Goggins is an acting nominee both for his supporting role on "Justified" and his guest gig on "Sons of Anarchy." 6 p.m.on NGC, "Wicked Tuna" — The final weeks of the bluefin fishing season in the North Atlantic finds Capt. Dave Marciano struggling to maintain his slender lead, but sharks and his competitors make that increasingly difficult in the two-hour season finale, "It All Comes Down to This." While most of the fleet opts to fish inshore, Capt. Tyler McLaughlin of the Pinwheel decides to go big or go home, choosing instead to fish further offshore. Capt. Dave Carraro of the FV-Tuna.com needs more fish to repeat last year's triumph.

7 p.m. on10, "Bob's Burgers"

I

Regal Old Mill Stadium16 8 IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264

• THE AGEOF ADALINE(PG-13)3:55,9:40 • ALOHA (PG-13) noon, 2:45, 6:45, 9:45 • AVENGERS:AGE OFULTRON (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, 9:15 • HOME (PG) 11:55a.m., 2:20 • MAD MAX: URY F ROAD (R)l2:10,3:40,7:45,l0:40 • 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-l3) 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-l3) l2:45, 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 forsome movies.

— Louise (voice of Kristen Schaal) has a head-turning experience at a concert in "Boyz 4 Now" — not only the title of the episode, butalso the name of the group that inspires her change of heart. She develops an immediate fondness for one of the singers, and her emotions take her by surprise. Gene (voice of Eugene Mirman) gets politically incorrect while competing in a table-setting contest. H. Jon Benjamin is the voice of Bob. Another episode follows. © Zap2it

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someoneclosetoyou.Thisperson will not respond well. Understand that everyone is on his or her own path. Tonight: The more, the merrier.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) ** * Take charge of a situation, but know your limits. You could decide to take an odd risk where you might try a new activity for the first time. Your reaction will be humorous, but you'll succeed more than you first thought possible. Tonight: Tillthe wee hours.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) ** * * You will want to reach out to someone at a distance. A friend or loved one could feel insecure and might express these feelings through copping an attitude or by trying to control you. Smileand know where you areheading. Tonight: Make sure you are around lots of music. © King Features Syndicate

Madras Cinema 5,1101SWU.S. Highway 97, 541-475-3505 • MAD MAX: FURY ROAD(R) 1:45, 4:30, 7:10 • PITCH PERFECT2 (PG-13) 1:50, 4:25, 7 • POLTERGEIST (PG-l3) 1, 3:10, 5:20, 7:30 • SAN ANDREAS (PG-13) 11:45 a.m., 4:45, 7:20 • SAN ANDREAS 3-D (PG-13) 2:10 • TOMORROWLAND (PG)1:15,4:05,6:50 •

•3

Pine Theater, 214 N.MainSt., 541-416-1014 • SAN ANDREAS (PG-13) 1:10, 4:10, 7:15 • TOMORROWLAND (Upstairs — PG) 1, 4, 7 • Theupstairsscreening room has limitedaccessibility.

O

Find a week'sworth of movie times plus film reviews in Friday's 0 GO! Magazine

C om p l e m e n t s

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541.322.7337 w ww . c o m p l e m e n t s h o m e . c o m


CS TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MAY 31, 2015

QUEsTIoN:I'm 43 years old and have had 2 children. I'm back to my normal weight but now I have a lot of loose skin on my stomach above and below my belly button that sags when I bend over. I feel embarrassed when I am at the gym. Would a tummy tuck help with lose skin?

M.D.

pi",,'„.,s '„,,"„A

Ns w E R: G e n erally, i f

yo u h ave

loose skin above and below the belly button, a full "tummy tuck" (abdominoplasty) is the best solution as it addresses your loose skin as well as any of your muscles that may be separated due to your p r egnancy. You sound l ik e an i d eal c andidate! A " m i n i t u m m y t u ck " c o ul d a lso b e an option i f y o u o n l y h ave loose skin below the belly button. I t i s a lways a good idea, to have a consultation with a board certified plastic surgeon, to determine the best procedure BEND for you. P LASTI C SURGERY

QUESTioN: The older I get the smaller my mouth seems to be (although my husband would disagree!) I um considering have

fillersinjected to enhance my lips. I understand it is not a long term solution. Is permanent makeup a good alternative? A NswER: Permanent m akeup i s a n cevn~g~ap+ImvtI+III excellent alternate to enhance your lips and also make them look fuller. Lip liner or full lip color can reshape your lips. Lip line alone, coupled with your lipstick or gloss will keep your color from bleeding into the surrounding skin. It can even diminish the appearance of age lines around your lips. Full lip color eliminates the chore of always applying lipstick especially after eating or kissing! Just like cosmetic stores, multiple colors are available from subtle to dramatic. The results will far outweigh fillers.

Call today for a FREE consultation... You will wonder why you waited so long!

QttxsrioNi What areas can be treated with

CoolScnlpting? Answer:CoolSculpting is FDA approved in the United States to treat the abdomen, hips and love handles, muffin top region, and thighs. Upper arms are also treated. DualSculpting, treating two areas simultaneously with CoolSculpting is now available at The Leffel Center. Dr. Leffel is successfully using DnalSculpting to freeze twice Dr. Linda J. t h e fat in half the time. Please join us at our next Leffel CoolN i g ht out for complimentary consultations with Board Certified Plastic Surgeon DI. Linda Leffel. DualSculpting successfully treats twice the fat, in half the time. The procedure is FDA cleared, safe and effective with permanent results. CoolSculpting uses controlled cooling and freezing to permanently destroy unwanted fat cells without surgery or downtime. Over 1 million CoolSculpting treatments have been safely performed worldwide. If you are considering CoolSculpting, please be evaluated by a Board Certified Plastic Surgeon or surgeon who has completed a residency in cosmetic surgery and body contouring. Before any office procedure you should have a consultation and exam by the treating physician, to thoroughly assess your general health and if you are a candidate for the procedure. CoolSculpting is a medical treatment and should be performed in a doctor's office. Don't settle for anyone but a plastic surgeon for CoolSculpting for the best results. For more information or questions please call our office 541-388-3006 or visit www.LeffelCenter.com.

CoolNight Out June 4, 2015 at 5:00 pm

A dam P. A n g e l e s , M . D . S end P l a s t i c 8

P erma n e n t M a k e u p B y Susan , C P C P 1265NW Wall Street • Bend

C EN T E R

541-383-3387 www.permanentmakeupbysusan.com

G O S M E T I G , B R EA S T A N D L A S E R SU R G E R Y

M edica l D i r e c t o r , R e c o n s t r uct ive Su rge ry

431 NE Revere¹200 • Bend, OR 97701 541-749-2282 www.bendprs.com • infoobendprs.com

QL|EsiioN:I've tried EVERYTHING! What can I do toget rid of my acne?

QUESTioNi I found a lump in my breast?

ANswER: Acneappearswhen apore in onr skin clogs; the clog begins with deadskin cells. Normally, the body sheds dead skincells easily bnt sometimesthe bodymakesexcessive amounts of sebum(oil), causing the deadskin cells to stick

together like glue,blocking or cloggingtheopening of a pore. Drying ont your skin with harsh products will ultimately make your body product MOREoil to combat the dryness, so t not to nse toomanYacne P Iodncts andmakesure Y on wear proper piotection from wind and UV rays. Sometimes bacteria that live ontheskin canget into that clogged pore and since theenvironment is perfect to grow in, the bacteria thrive causing inflammation (Ied and swollen pores). It's really important not to squeezetheselittle volcanoes, as they can "pop" backward and spread the bacteria under the skin, causing MORE pimples. Also,harshscrubsandbrushescanscratch theskin andmovebacteria around which can leave yon open to more bieakonts or infection. With gentle exfoliation (no robust scrubbing oi harsh chemicals), a twice daily homeskin-care routine and some other tips to keepyonr skin clean, yoncanfind balanceand clear np yoni skin. Microdeimabiasion is a greatoption for acne(not cystic) as well as organic enzyme peels (canbeusedon all acne)becausethey deeply cleanont thepores. Also, LEDLight Therapy hasbeenproven to helpkill the bacteria that causesacne,so amonthly facial or microdeimabiasion with LED Light afterward is aneffective way to getacneunder control. A homerontine with gentle,balancing productsthat won't over dry your skin is crucial. Yonshouldseeimprovement within a fewweeks. Tlps:

- Avoid harsh, abrasive,overdrying products - Changeyoni pillowcasedaily (nnti! yonr skin is better) - Regularly washcoats, scarvesandclothesthat touchyoni face - Try not to touchyonr face,ever(nnlessyou're washingit) - Shower immediatelyafter sweating - Wear sunscreen.UV causesmore inflammation. - NO PICKING! = morepimplesandscarring - Cleanse,toneandmoisturize AM andPM - Don'tnseoilsonyoniskin

Revive Skin Services, Ilc 2100 NENeff Rd ¹B • Bend 541-410-2697 www.reviveskinservices.com

e

QUESTION: I have hypothyroidism and have been on Synthroid for years. I'm told that my lab results lookIine, bnt I still continue to struggk with weight, energylevels, and depression. Isthere anything else I

can dot ANSWER: There are two Inain issues with iow thyroid function that typically require more attention. First, "normal lab tests" can mean a lot of things, and I commonly find that patients have not had a "T3" ph tt value or thyroid antibodies run on their laboratory NahIIppathIz workup. These tests can be very helpful and in some physician cases are guiding for a more effective treatment plan. Synthroid is the "T4" type of thyroid hormone which relies on the body's capacity to convert T4 toT3 lthe more bio-active horrnone). Many people are not good natural "converteis" and would do better on a thyroid hormone product that is a blend of T4 and T3. ti-.„

The second issue is that over 90'/0 of hypothyroidism is an auto-immune Inediated condition known as "Hashimoto's". Simply pnt, the body

produces antibodies that damage the thyroid gland, rendering it unable to produce enough hormone. Taking thyroid hormone alone as treatment for hypothyroidism ignores this important underlying cause, and allows for continued damage to the thyroid gland over time. This usnaIIy means the need io continually increase the dose of Synthroid. A naturopathiclholistic medical approach otTers many tools to not only correct hormone levels, but also to address this underlying auto-immune process.

In most cases, addressing thyroid hormone conversion issues as well as the underlying auto-immune process means that not only will lab results look good, but you will feel better as well.

HAWTHORN J oshua P h i l l i ps, N D Hawthorn Healing Arts Center

39 NWLouisiana Ave, Bend, OR SBAIINGARTS CENHnI

541-330-0334 www. HawthornCenter.com

Jana M.D., FACS

What do I do? ANswER:If you find a lump in your breast contact your primary care physician or OB/GYN, who will order tests such as a mammogram, an ultrasound or a biopsy. When the results are received the course of treatment is discussed and you may be referred to a surgeon.

You should choose a physician specializing in breast care, who can educate you on the many options and treatments available to you. If you have breast cancer you have a choice in the specialists you see. The treatment of breast cancer is advancing and changing continuously so choose physicians who are well educated, interested in breast cancer and compassionate to your individual situation. Ideally your surgeon will develop a treatment plan in conjunction with the St. Charles Breast Cancer Center and you. You should thoroughly understand your options before proceeding with definitive treatment. YOUR HEALTH • YOUR CHOICE • OUR EXPERTISE Jana M VanAmburg MD, FACS Member oftheAmerican Society ofBreastSurgeons

LE F

F E L

s urger y c a r e cr

ANSWER: In the last 20 years gluten has been accused of causing: gas, bloating, IBS, allergies, unable to focus, stomach ache, headaches, tiredness, etc. Gluten is a protein thathas been eaten for10,000 yearsallaround Sally Champa the world. W h is t h ere an eP idemic of gluten allergies in our culture? In Ayurveda, the main reason for this is our weak digestive fire cannot cook the gluten and digest it properly. 80% of the body's immune response is located in the gut. When the gut gets beaten up by undigested gluten, a whole host of symptoms and diseases begin to arise. Secondly, gluten and wheat were never meant to be eaten 3 times per day, every day of the year. Wheat is a winter food. It is a heavy, warm, wet protein rich grain that is a perfect antidote for the coldness and dryness of winter. It is not necessary to have gluten in our diet. However, if this is happening this is a flag that the digestive fire is impaired and needs to be strengthened. Eventually there will be other foods that the body will have a reaction to because of poor digestion. If a weak digestion is allowed to continue in the body, it will create toxins which will eventually create a disease. Please see www.ayurvedainbend.com for the full article and ideas to strengthen the digestive fire.

Sally Champa 155 SW Century Drive, Suite144 Bend, OR 97702

V anAm b ur g S u r g e r y C a r e

2275 NE DoctorsDr., Bend, OR97701 541-323-2790 Offices lnBend 8 Redmond www.vanamburgsurgery.com

541-388-3008 www.leffelcenter.com

QUESTION:I have an intolerance to Gluten, what can I do?

J ana M . V a n A m b u r g , M D , F A C S •

Dr. Linda J. Leffel, MD 171SSW Chandler Ave. ¹100 Bend, OR 97702

Hyul iretJI'C Lt'lrt'pty Sneclallnna in Holistic Henithcnre

541-318-8201 www.ayurvedainbend.com

Ask one of our Health

Professionals

on the following

categories

Dentistry • Urology • Eye Care Plastic Surgery • General and Specialty Surgery • Dermatology, Holistic Medicine Physical Therapy • Pain Management Chiropractics • Health k, Beauty Send your questions to Ask A Health Professional The Bulletin By fax: 541-385-5802 Email: kclark@bendbulletin.com Mail:P.O. Box 6020, Bend, Oregon 97708 My question is:


Scoreboard, D2 Sports in brief, D2

NBA , D4 NHL, D4 M o tor sports, D4 College baseball, D4 Golf, D4 Tennis, D5

MLB, D3

© www.bendbulletin.com/sports

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MAY 31, 2015

RUNNING

BASEBALL

NFL

Bend Elksseek host families The Bend Elkssummer collegiate baseball season starts June 5, and the WestCoast Leagueteam isseeking host families for incoming players. Families that host one or more players over the summer, providing a few meals aday, receive free barbecuemeals at all SundayElksgames at Vince GennaStadium. Host families also will receive teamshirts and season preferred tickets, and children could be chosen to serve asan Elks batboy or batgirl. Those interested in becoming ahost family should contact Kelsie Marick atkelsie@ bendelks.com or541312-9259. Theseasonis scheduled to beginJune 5. For moreinformation, visit www.bendelks.com.

Niners struggling with ACL injuries By Cam Inman San Jose (Calif) Mercury News

SANTA CLARA, Calif. — Dr. James An-

drews is not astonished that the San Francisco

49ers have nine players — two shy of a full huddle — who are battling back from torn ACLs.

'aa

4l

As

arguably the most renowned doctor in

American sports, he

• U.S. women tie South Korea in final tuneup for World Cup,D6 • Jewsbury scores in stoppage time to lift Timbers,D6

Jonathan Toewsscores two goals in the opening minutes, Corey Crawford makes 35saves and Chicago roars into the Stanley Cupfinals with a 5-3 victory over the Anaheim Ducks in Game 7 of theWestern Conference,04

tients, a common thread exists. "Everyone wants to

be ready for next season and get back in the line of fire," Andrews said in a recentphone interview.

f esut ,"atir

l , J!'th (llejy,~

With organized team

activities (OTAs) and minicamps starting

'e; t

,i A. ti

last week, quick bursts, 8'' >':: c~

-.

sudden stops and turnon-a-dime cuts will test those surgically repaired

.

'

r..

knees.

See49ers/D6

L

Photos by Joe Kline i The Bulletin

Runners in the HappyGirls10K make their way around a curve in the course along the Deschutes River.

• At Happy Girls Run, womenget to enjoy the spoils of winning the whole race

RUNNING

time I've actually led the entire race," said 40-year-old Bend runner Kramer, who won the 5K on Saturday

Running again to prove that you can

with a time of 21 minutes, 4 seconds. "There's a lot of races, especially coed races, where I might be the

By John Rogers

By Victoria Jacobsen •The Bulletin

A

s Ellen Kramer discovered at the Happy Girls Run in Bend on Saturday, races designed just for women come with a few perks.

For one thing, a woman gets to be the first one to cross the finish line. "This is the first race I've ever won outright. I've won my age group in a lot of events, but this is the first

The Associated Press

second female, but there are still 25 people ahead of me."

LOSANGELES-

The worst day of Aaron Baker's life was not when the then-20-year-old pro-

Happy Girls

According to Lay It Out Events coordinator Emily

runners from Girls on the

Arredondo, nearly 1,000 women and girls (and a few men) competed in Saturday's

Run warm up before

half marathon, 10K and 5K races, which started and finished in Riverbend Park

the start of o.

and wound up and down the Deschutes River and the west

side of Bend. Like Kramer, who improved on her second-place finish in

their races Saturday in Riverbend Park in Bend.

fessional motocross racer crashed his bike one spring day in 1999, flew over the handlebars and hit the ground headfirst, paralyzing him from the neck down. No, the worst day came ayear later when

Baker's physical therapy ended. That was when

photos on The Bulletin's website: hendbulletin. com/sperts

the 5K in 2014, half marathon winner Karyn Woods, 32, said

she was enjoying her spot atop the podium for the first time after finishing in 1 hour,

his therapists, marveling that he could actually stand on his own again and move his arms some,

cautioned him not to ex-

32 minutes and 49 seconds.

pect much more. The chances of walk-

not ever won anything, so this was fun," said Woods, a Bend

were one in a million. He eventuallyusedthat as a

resident who said she picked up running after college. "I just had my third baby, and this is my first race back, so I

mantra — whenpeople

"It's pretty amazing. I have

ing again, he was told,

they train with the same

and for me it's the perfect time

performance running group,

of year, not too hot yet, but it's

didn't know where I stood. It

which meets every Tuesday to

warm enough to be out here

was a fun surprise." Woods and Kramer said

focus on speed work. "(Happy Girls) is a fun race,

and have fun," said Kramer. "And they give really great

prizes for the winners, so that's always nice." The prizes were apparently good enough to share. SeeHappy/D5

say odds are a million to one, ignore the million

and focus on the oneand has learned to walk

again. SeeQuadriplegic/D5

COLLEGE SOFTBALL

Ducks eliminated from WCWSby Bama

NHL PLAYOFFS

Blackhawks join lightning in final

D6

wrth 13ACLtears No matter the number of pa-

.n

is

Blatter questions ij.S. motives

Inside

wants a new deal,

all, even a team coping

SOCCER

— New Yoifr Times News Service

Bennett

has seen it

— Bulletin staffreport

The embattled Sepp Blatter struck a familiarly defiant tone ashe began his fifth term as president of FIFA, blaming others for the widespread corruption scandal that has engulfed international soccer. Blatter told reporters late Friday andSaturday that the U.S.authorities choselastweekto make a raid in Zurich as anattempt to stop him from being re-elected ashead of FIFA, soccer's world governing body. Blatter also said the arrests of14 soccer and marketing officials had stemmed from resentment by Englandand the United States, which failed in bids to host the 2018 and 2022World Cups. He also suggested that U.S. authorities acted because of U.S. political support for Jordan, the country of Blatter's rival in Friday's FIFA election, Prince Ali bin al-Hussein. Blatter told a Swiss broadcaster that hewas shocked by comments from U.S. Attorney General Loretta Lynch that unscrupulous officials had corrupted worldwide soccer for personal enrichment. "As a president, I would never makea statement about another organization without knowing," Blatter told a Swiss broadcaster, RTS. The timing of the raid was not a coincidence, Blattertold RTS, saying, "The Americans, if they have a financial crime that regards American citizens, then they must arrest these people there and not in Zurich when we have acongress."

INSide • Seattle DE

By Cliff Brunt

inning and struck out the

land," Oregon pitcher Cher-

The Associated Press

final two in the seventh to clinch the win. The Crimson

idan Hawkins said. "And it was unlucky, but I thinkI just

bama freshman Alexis Osorio threw a complete game, gave

Tide (48-15) were eliminated Saturday night after a 5-3 loss

up three hits and struck out

to LSU.

Chandler Dare's single in the second inning scored two for Alabama's only runs.

bases during the Women's College World Series

nine to help Alabama beat Oregon 2-1 on Saturday in a Women's College World Series elimination game. Osorio (22-9) struck out

realized if I really wanted to give my team and our offense a chance to win, I had to keep it at two runs. So I definitely

in Oklahoma City on Saturday.

all three batters in the sixth

that ball just happened to

v~

)

' .

ttp'

SteveSisney ITheOklahoman

Oregon pitcher Cheridan Hawkins, left, tags Alabama'sChandler Dare as she is caught between

OKLAHOMA CITY — Ala-

"I think I made a mistake,

and I missed my spot, and

just tried to limit the number

of people on base and do the best I could to give our offense an opportunity." SeeDucks /D4

Inside • Ducks baseball flies past Canisius in NCAA

tournament, while the Beavers are rained out. Roundup,D4


D2

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MAY 31, 2015

ON THE AIR

CORKBOARD

TODAY GOLF

EuropeanTour, Irish Open, final round PGA Tour,AT&TByron Nelson, final round PGA Tour,AT&TByron Nelson, final round LPGATour, ShopRite LPGA Classic, final round

Time TV/Radio 5 a.m. Golf 10 a.m. Golf noon CBS noon Golf

TENNIS

FrenchOpen,men'sandwomen'sfourthround 9 a.m. NBC French Open,Round of16 2a.m. (Mon.) ESPN2 BASEBALL

NCAA tournament, teamsTBD NCAAtournament,Coastal Carolinavs. TexasA&M MLB, L.A. Dodgers at St. Louis MLB, Cleveland atSeattle NCAA tournament, teamsTBD NCAA tournament, OregonSt. vs. VCU NCAA tournament, teamsTBD MLB, Detroit at L.A. Angels NCAA tournament, teamsTBD

10a.m. ESPN2 10a.m. SEC 11 a.m. MLB 1 p.m. Root 1 p.m. SEC 2 p.m KICE940-AM 4 p.m. SEC 5 p.m. ESPN2 8:30 p.m. ESPNU

MOTOR SPORTS

NASCAR,Sprint Cup, Dover IndyCar, Dual in Detroit, Race 2

10a.m. 12:30 p.m.

FS1 ABC

SOFTBALL

College World Series, Florida vs. Auburn College World Series, Michigan vs. LSU College World Series, Florida vs. Auburn College World Series, Michigan vs. LSU SOCCER MLS, NewYork at Seattle MLS,LosAngelesatNew England U-20 World Cup,Nigeria vs. Brazil U-20WorldCup,Uzbekistanvs.Honduras U-20 World Cup,North Koreavs. Hungary

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ESP N Roo t E S PNU

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MONDAY TENNIS

French Open, round of16 GOLF

Men's college,NCAA championship, individual stroke play BASEBALL

MLB, Milwaukee atSt. Louis MLB, N.Y. Yankees at Seattle

College, NCAAtournament, teams TBA SOFTBALL

College World Series, championship, Game1 SOCCER U-20 World Cup,Myanmarvs. Ukraine U-20 World Cup,Austria vs. Panama U-20 World Cup,NewZealand vs. United States U-20 World Cup,Argentina vs. Ghana

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Listingsarethemostaccurate available. TheBulletin is not responsible for latechangesmadeby TVor radio stations.

SPORTS IN BRIEF BASKETBALL POIICanS to taP WarriOrSaSSiStant Gentry aS COaChThe NewOrleans Pelicans havedecided that 60-year-old NBAcoaching veteran Alvin Gentry is the best candidate to mold ayoung roster featuring 22-year-old budding superstar Anthony Davis. Gentry, who is currently a top GoldenState Warriors assistant, has beenhired as New Orleans' newheadcoach, according to a person familiar with the situation. Gentry is expected to remain with GoldenState until the Warriors complete the NBA Finals against Cleveland, the person said. Gentry has served as a head coach four times, compiling a career record of 335-370. His most successful tenure came inPhoenix, where he went158-144 in five seasons. Hetook the Suns to the 2010 Western Conference finals, where they lost to the eventual NBA champion Los Angeles Lakers.

BOXING BrOOk retainS the Other welterweight delt —KellBrook won his second defense of the IBF welterweight belt to stay undefeated. Brook extended his record to 35 wins by outclassing Frankie Gavin in a one-sided, all-British fight stopped late in the sixth round. Floyd Mayweather holds the other belts in the high-profile welterweight division. In other world title fights at London's 02 Arena, Jorge Linares of Venezuelaretained the WBClightweight belt by stopping Kevin Mitchell in the 10th round andLeeSelby of Britain took the IBFfeatherweight belt off Russia's Evgeny Gradovich after an eighth-round technical decision.

CYCLING Contador SufferS dut remainS On COurSe far Win — Alberto Contador had his overall lead sliced in half on the penultimate day of the Giro d'Italia on Saturday, although the Spaniard remained on course for the title after the 20th stage. Contador was droppedon the grueling climb up adirt road on Colle delle Finestre as rivals Fabio AruandMikelLandaspedclear.Aru,who movedbackintosecond place overall with victory in Friday's19th stage, soloed to asecond successive win to close thegap to 2 minutes, 2 seconds. Ryder Hesjedal was18 seconds slower than Aru at theend of the199-kilometer 124-mile leg from Saint-Vincent to Sestriere, with Rigoberto Uran 0:24 behind the Italian.

SOCCER ArSenal defendS FA CBPtitle — TheoWalcott endedafrustrating season byscoring the first goal as Arsenalwon arecord12th FA Cup title Saturdaywith adominant 4-0 victory over AstonVilla in thefinal at London's WembleyStadium. Walcott, who missed most of 2014with a knee injury sustained in an FACupgame, volleyed homea shot in the 40th minute to putdefending championArsenal ahead.After a nine-year trophy drought, Arsenalhasnowwon the Cuptwo years in arow, overtaking Manchester United's record of11 titles. Southamptonqualified for the EuropaLeaguewith theGunners' victory.

TRACK AND FIELD Kirani JameS winS400 at Pre ClaSSiC —Kirani Jameswon the 400 meters Saturday in the Prefontaine Classic, pulling awayfrom a strong field at Hayward Field in Eugene.James, the 2012 Olympic champion from Grenada,andAmerican rival LeShawn Merritt ran side by side onthe final curve before James turned it on, finishing in a world-best 43.95 seconds, two-hundredths of a secondfaster than the time heand Merritt ran at the meet this year. American Justin Gatlin, 32, won the 200 in 19.68, matching his lifetime best to break the Hayward Field record. It was the fastest time in theworld this year. Tyson Gaywonthe 100 in 9.88. — From wire reports

ON DECK

TENNIS

Tuesday Baseball: 5A semifinals, Summitat Liberty,4:30p.m.

Professional

RUNNING Local HappyGirls Run

RiverbendPark, Bend Top10 finishers Half Marathon 1, KarynWoods,1;32:49. 2, AmandaFerrari, 1:37:15. 3,DebraCrowther, 1:38:57. 4, CarrieMeng, 1:39:03. 5,KarlaNash,1:41:03. 6,KeeMoon,1:41:36, 7, Haley Younger,1:42:10. 8. Scott Rauch,1:42:58. 9, MalloryCocco,1:44:02.10,GaritLawson,1:4429. 10K 1,StephanieHackbarth,44:55.2,MakennaTeague, 45:41. 3,Averi Harlford,45:44. 4, KelseySwenson, 45:44. 5,CarolinePonzini,47:18. 6, MaryJoMorgan, 47:25. 7, AnnBaxter, 47:25. 8, AnnePendeygraft, 48:24. 9,MaureenDurrant, 48:57.10,AndreaBessman,49:03. BK 1, EllenKramer,21:04.2, SaraKuhn, 22:20.3,Sara Miller, 23:11. 4, ErikaLuckel, 23:23. 5, Josephine Traceweff,24:46. 6, CindyAlt, 25:04.7, SayoMils, 25:25. 8,LucyCockrum,25:29. 9, Rebecca Figueroa, 25:34.10,KaciRyan,25:34.

FrenchOpen Saturday atParis Men Third Round AndyMurray(3), Britain, def.NickKyrgios(29),

Australia,6-4, 6-2,6-3.

MarinCilic(9), Croatia,def. LeonardoMayer (23), Argentina,6-3,6-2,6-4. NovakDjokovic (1), Serbia,def. ThanasiKokkinakis,Australia,6-4, 6-4,6-4. Jeremy Chardy,France,def.David Goffin (17), Belgium,6-3, 6-4,6-2. RafaelNadal(6), Spain,def. AndreyKuznetsov, Russia,6-1,6-3, 6-2. JackSock,UnitedStates, def. BornaCoric, Croatia, 6-2,6-1, 6-4.

RichardGasquet(20), France,def. KevinAnderson (15), South Africa, 4-6,7-6(4), 7-5,6-4. DavidFerrer(7), Spain,def. SimoneBoleli, Italy, 6-3, 1-6,5-7, 6-0,6-1. Women Third Round PetraKvitova(4), CzechRepublic, def.Irina-Camelia Begu (30), Romania, 6-3, 6-2. SaraErrani(17), Italy, def.AndreaPetkovic (10), Germany, 6-3, 6-3. Andreea Mitu, Romania, def. FrancescaSchiavone, Italy, 7-5,6-4. AlisonVanUytvanck, Belgium, def.KristinaMladenovic, France, 6-4, 6-1. TimeaBacsinszky(23), Switzerland,def. Madison Keys(16),UnitedStates,6-4,6-2. Julia Goerges,Germany, def. Irina Falconi, United States,6-4, 6-1. SloaneStephens, UnitedStates, def. TsvetanaPironkova,Bulgaria,6-4,6-1. SerenaWiliams(1), UnitedStates,def. Victoria Azarenka(27),Belarus,3-6,6-4,6-2.

BASKETBALL

MO TOR SPORTS

NBA playoffs

IndyCar

NATIONALBASKETBALL ASSOCIATION All TimesPDT

Chevrolet IndyOual in Detroit Race 1results Saturday atTheRacewayat Belle Isle Park, Detroit Lap length: 2.35miles

FINALS (Best-of-7;x-if necessary) GoldenStatevs.Cleveland Thursday:atGoldenState, 6p.m. Sunday ,June7;atGoldenState,5p.m. Tuesd ay ,June9:atCleveland,6p.m. Thursday, June11: atCleveland,6p.m. x-Sunday,June14:at GoldenState,5 p.m. x-Tue sday,June16:atCleveland,6p.m. x-Friday,June19: atGolden State, 6p.m.

GOLF PGA

Byron Nelson Saturday atTPCFour SeasonsResort Irving, Texas ThursdayYardage:7,166; Par70 Friday-SaturdayYardage:6,864; Par69 Third Round 62-68-65 —195 Steven Bowditch DustinJohnson 67-68-62 —197 Scott Pinckney 69-64-64—197 Jonathan Randolph 69-63-65—197 67-63-67—197 Jon Curran 64-66-67—197 JimmyWalker PREPS CharleyHoffman 69-65-64—198 Joe Affrunti 68-63-67—198 Baseball RyanPalmer 65-66-67—198 70-66-63—199 Class BA Brendon deJonge 68-65-66—199 State playoifs Colt Knost Semifinals Zac Blair 69-64-66—199 C ameron P e r cy 67-64-68—199 Tuesday'sGames Today's Matches TonyFinau 67-64-68—199 No.4SheldonatNo.1Clackamas,3p.m. Court PhilippeChatrier 67-69-64—200 No. 7McMinnville atNo.6West Linn, 5p.m. Martin Flores Elina Svi t ol i n a(19), Ukrai n e, vs. Al i z e C o rnet (29), 71-65-64—200 Championship JasonDufner France FridayatVolcanoesStadiuminKeizer Jerry Kelly 68-64-68—200 Jo-Wilfried Tsonga(14), France, vs. Tomas S.J. Park 68-68-65—201 Berdych (4), CzechRepublic Class BA BryceMolder 69-67-65—201 Gael Monfils (13), France, vs. Ro ger F ed erer(2), 69-68-64—201 State playoifs KennyPerry Switzerl a nd 69-68-64—201 Semifinals BrooksKoepka F lavia Penn e tta (28), Italy, vs. Garbi n e Mu guru z a Tuesday'sGames MattJones 72-63-66—201 (21),Spain No. 4Summit at No.1Liberty, 4:30 p.m. B randt Sne d ek er 71-66-64—201 CourlSuzanne Lenglen No.14PendletonatNo.7HoodRiver Valley,4:30p.m. Daniel Berger 72-65-64—201 Ana Ivanovi c (7), Serbi a , vs. Ekat e ri n a Mak a ro va Championship 67-67-67—201 DerekErnst (9), Russi a FridayatVolcanoesStadiuminKeizer 69-65-67—201 LukeGuthrie Kei Nishikori(5),Japan,vs. TeymurazGabashvili, ZachJohnson 69-64-68—201 Russia Class 4A Jordan Spi e th 69-64-68—201 StanWawrinka(8), Switzerland,vs. GiffesSimon Danny State playoifs Le e 67-69-66—202 (12), France Semifinals 68-67-67—202 Erik Compton Lucie Safarova (13), Czech R epubl i c , vs. Mari a Tuesday'sGames 68-67-67—202 Will Wilcox Sharapova(2),Russia No.4HiddenValleyatNo.1Henley,4:30p.m. GrahamDeLaet 69-66-67—202 No.10ScappooseatNo.3Gladstone,5p.m. HarrisEnglish 69-66-67—202 Championship HOCKEY JohnSenden 67-67-68—202 FridayatVolcanoesStadiuminKeizer 69-64-69—202 RorySabbatini 66-67-69—202 JohnMerrick NHL playoffs Class 3A HunterMahan 68-64-70—202 NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE State playoifs N ick Wa t n e y 67-65-70—202 All TimesPDT Semifinals Matt Kuchar 71-67-64—202 Tuesday'sGames 66-70-67—203 Keegan Bradley CONFERE NCEFINALS No. 4GlideatNo.1 CascadeChristian, 5p.m. 67-69-67—203 JonasBlixt (Besl-of-7) No. 3ClatskanieatNo.2SantiamChristian,4:30 p.m. NicholasThompson 70-67-66—203 Saturday'sGame Championship Vijay Si n gh 70-67-66—203 Chicago5,Anaheim3, Chicagowins series4-3 Thursday, June5at VolcanoesStadiuminKeizer AndrewLoupe 69-65-69—203 68-66-69—203 MichaelThom pson STANLEY CUPFINALS Class2AftA 71-67-65—203 Spencer Levin (Besl-of-7; x-if necessary) State playoifs MarkAnderson 68-68-68—204 TampaBayvs. Chicago Semifinals Chad Col l i n s 70-67-67—204 Wednes day;atTampaBay,5p.m. Tuesday'sGames Rod Pam pl i n g 69-66-69—204 S atur d a y , J u n e 6 : a t T a mp a B a y , 4 : 1 5 p . m. No. 4Burnsat No.1 Monroe/Alsea,TBD 71-66-67—204 MarkHubbard Monday, June8:atChicago,5p.m. No. 3RegisatNo.2Knappa,4:30 p.m. 70-65-69—204 RusselHenl l ey Wednesday,June10: atChicago,5p.m. Championship BrianHarman 70-68-66—204 x-Sat urday,June13:atTampaBay,5p.m. Thursday at VolcanoesStadiumin Keizer Jeff Dverton 69-65-70—204 x-Monday ,June15:atChicago,5p.m. AdamHadwin 69-67-69—205 x-Wedne sday,June17:atTampaBay,5p.m. 65-70-70—205 James Hahn Softball 70-67-68—205 JustinThomas Class 6A SOCCER BenCurtis 72-63-70—205 Semifinals SamSaunders 69-68-68—205 Tuesday'sGames KenDuke 67-68-70—205 MLS No.12Barlowat No.1 Westview, 5pm. 70-67-68—205 Cameron Smith MAJORLEAGUESOCCE No. 3GrantsPassat No.2Tualatin, 5p.m. JohnHuh 69-69-67—205 All Times PDT Championship KyleReifers 70-68-67—205 FridayatDSUSoftball Com plex G onzal o Fd e z -Ca s t a no 70-68-67—205 EasternConference 73-65-67—205 H udson S wa fford W L T Pts GF GA Class BA 70-66-70—206 ScottBrown D.C.United 7 3 4 25 16 12 State playoffs RichardSterne 71-65-70—206 NewEngland 5 3 5 20 18 16 Semifinals GaryWoodland 72-63-71—206 NewYork 4 2 5 17 14 11 Tuesday'sGames G reg Ch a l m er s 69-69-68—206 TorontoFC 5 5 1 16 17 15 No. 4Maristat No.1Putnam,TBD 67-71-68 —206 Columbus 4 4 4 16 19 16 Jonathan B yr d No. 6SilvertonatNo.2 Pendleton, 4:30p.m. 71-67-68 —206 Chicago 4 5 2 14 14 14 GregOwen Championship OrlandoCit y 3 5 5 14 16 17 Carl Pettersson 69-69-68 —206 FridayatDSUSoftball Complex Philadelphia 3 8 3 12 14 23 Jhonattan Vegas 70-68-68—206 Montreal 2 4 2 8 9 13 Class 4A NewYorkCity FC 1 7 5 8 10 17 State playoifs LPGA WesternConference Semifinals W L T Pts GF GA hopRite Classic S Tuesday'sGames Seattle 7 3 2 23 18 9 Saturday atStockton SeaviewHotel andGolf No.12MazamaatNo.1Banks,4p.m. Vancouver 7 5 2 23 16 13 Club, BayCourse, GallowayTownship, N.J. No. 3Yamhil-Carlton atNo.2 McLoughlin, 4p.m. Fc Dallas 6 4 3 21 18 19 Yardage:6,177; Par71 Championship Sporting KansasCity 5 2 6 21 21 15 SecondRound FridayatOS USoftball Complex Los Angele s 5 4 5 20 13 15 66-69—135 MorganPressel Portland 5 5 4 19 13 14 67-69—136 AnnaNordqvist Class 3A SanJose 5 5 3 18 14 15 Kelly WShon 70-68—138 State playoffs Houston 4 5 5 17 17 17 Christel Boel j o n 68-70—138 Semifinals RealSaltLake 4 5 5 17 13 18 Gerina Pi l e r 68-70—138 2 4 7 13 11 12 Tuesday'sGames Colorado Pernilla Lindberg 68-70—138 No. 5PleasantHil atNo.1Dayton, 5p.m. 68-70—138 CatrionaMathew Saturday'sGames No. 3ScioatNo.2 Rainier,4:30p.m. SunYoungYoo 69-70—139 TorontoFC3,SanJose1 Championship K im Kauf m a n 69-70—139 Vancouyer 2, Real Salt Lake1 Thursdayat OSUSoflball Complex MarissaLSteen 69-70—139 D.C.United2, Philadelphia1 73-67—140 NewYorkCity FC1,Houston1, tie JayeMarieGreen Class2A/tA 72-68—140 OrlandoCity2, Columbus2,tie PaulaCreamer State playoifs Chicago3,Montreal 0 AyakoUehara 72-68—140 Semifinals Portland 2, Co l o rado1 JiYoung Dh 71-69—140 Tuesday'sGames Today' s Games S hanshan F eng 70-70—140 No.5Weston-McEwenatNo.1Union/Cove,430pm. YorkatSeatle, 2p.m. Mirim Lee 70-70—140 No. 3 Pilot Rock/Nixyaawii atNo. 2 Central Linn, New L os An g e l e s a t N e w E n g l a n d , 4 p . m. 70-70—140 Felicity Johnson 4:30p.m. W ednesdayrs Ga m es MoriyaJutanugarn 69-71—140 Championship Columbus at P hi l a del p hi a 4 p m Mika Mi y aza t o 69-71—140 Thursdayat DSUSoftball Complex ChicagoatD.c. United,4 p.m. Ryann DToole 67-73—140 Vancouver at Montreal, 5p.m. I.K. Kim 73-68 —141 Friday's Game 71-70 — 141 InbeePark NewYorkat Houston, 6p.m. BASEBALL Ai Miyazato 71-70 — 141 Saturday, June6 Mariajo Uri b e 70-71 —141 NewYorkCity Fcat Philadelphia, 4 p.m. MinLee 67-74—141 College TorontoFCatD.C.United, 4p.m. 74-68—142 Azahara Munoz NCAAtournament Montrealat Columbus,4:30p.m. 73-69—142 KathleenEkey All TimesPDT Seattleat Sporting KansasCity,5:30p.m. Wei-Ling Hsu 72-70—142 OrlandoCityat Chicago,5:30 p.m. Alison Lee 72-70—142 Vancouver at LosAngeles,7:30p.m. REGIONALS Suzann P ett e rsen 72-70—142 NewEnglandat Portland, 7:30p.m. (Double elimination; x-ii necessary) 72-70—142 MinjeeLee Springfield, Mo.Regional 70-72—142 Ashleigh Simon Saturday'sGames Women's World Cup Jodi EwartShadoff 69-73—142 MissouriSt.14,Canisius1 H ee Young P ar k 68-74—142 All Times PDT Oregon12,Canisius6, Canisiuseliminated B eatriz Re c a ri 73-70—143 MissouriSt.5, lowa3 73-70—143 Ha NaJang Today'sGames GROUP STAGE 72-71—143 JacquiConcolino Saturday, June6 Game 5:Oregon(38-24) vs.Iowa(40-17), noon BeckyMorgan 72-71—143 vs. China, 3p.m. Game6: Missouri St.(47-10)vs. Game5winner,5 p.m. Canada M i Hyang Le e 72-71—143 NewZealandvs.Netherlands,6p.m. Monday'sGame S andra G al 71-72—143 Sunday,June 7 x-Game 7: Missouri St.vs.Game5winner, 11a.m. 71-72—143 Norwayvs. Thailand,10 a.m. JanePark 71-72—143 AmyAnderson Germany vs. IvoryCoast,1 p.m. Dallas Regional PerrineDelacour 71-72—143 Monday,June8 Saturday'sGames Hyo Joo Ki m 71-72—143 Sweden vs. Nigeria,1p.m. Texasvs.Dalas Baptist, ppd.,rain N a Yeon C h oi 71-72—143 C ameroon vs. E c ua dor, 4 p.m . Oregon St.vs.VCU,ppd., rain 70-73—143 UnitedStatesvs. Australia, 4:30p.m. KarrieWebb Today'sGames 70-73—143 vs.Switzerland, 7p.m. SooBin Kim Game3: Texas(3026) vs.DallasBaptist(4314),10a m. Japan Tuesday,June9 Kris Tam ulis 70-73—143 Game4: OregonSt. (39-16-1) vs.VCU(38 22), 2p m. France vs. En gl a nd,10 a. m . Maria McBri d e 70-73—143 Game5:Game3winnervs.Game4loser,6p.m. Colombi a vs. M e xi c o,1 p.m. Mina Hari g ae 69-74—143 Monday'sGames Spainvs.CostaRica,1p.m. 68-75—143 JennyShin Game6:Game4winnervs. Game5winner,8 a.m. Brazilvs.SouthKorea,7p.m. Alena Sharp 67-76—143 x-Game 7: Game4winner vs. Game5winner, 5p.m. Thursday,June11 CarlotaCiganda 74-70—144 Germany vs. Norway,1p.m. CristieKerr 74-70—144 Chinavs.Netherlands,3 p.m. 73-71—144 LizetteSalas IvoryCoastvs. Thailand, 4p.m. SOFTBALL 72-72—144 Angela Stanford Canada vs. NewZealand,6 p.m. JulietaGranada 72-72—144 Friday, June 12 SarahKemp 72-72—144 College Australiavs.Nigeria,2p.m. Jing Yan 72-72—144 NCAAtournament Switzerlandvs. Ecuador,4 p.m. 72-72—144 Laetitia Beck All TimesPDT UnitedStatesvs. Sweden,5 p.m. ChristinaKim 71-73—144 Japan vs.Cameroon, 7p.m. LisaFerrero 71-73—144 WOMEN'SCOLLEGE WORLO SERIES Saturday, June13 KarlinBeck 71-73—144 At Oklahoma City France vs.Colombia,10a.m. Mo Marti n 69-75—144 (Double elimination; x-if necessary) Englan dvs.Mexico,1p.m. 68-76—144 Sydnee Mi c hae l s Saturday'sGames Brazil vs.Spain,1p.m. Juli Inkster 74-71—145 Auburn 4,Tennessee2,Tennesseeeliminated South Koreavs.CostaRica,4p.m. YueerCindyFeng 74-71—145 Alabama 2, Oregon1, Oregoneliminated Monday,June15 MeenaLee 73-72—145 Auburn11,UCL A10,10 innings,UCLAeliminated Thailand vs.Germany,1 p.m. 73-72—145 KendalDye l Game10; LSU5,Alabama3,Alabamaeliminated IvoryCoastvs. Norway,1 p.m. 72-73—145 Katie Burnett Today'sGames Netherlandsvs. Canada, 4:30p.m. Xi YuLin 72-73—145 Game11: Floridavs.Auburn,10a.m. Chinavs.NewZealand,4:30p.m. AustinErnst 72-73—145 Game12: Michiganvs.LSU,12:30p.m. Tuesday,June16 StacyLewis 72-73—145 x-Game13:Floridavs. Auburn, 4p.m. Ecuadorvs.Japan, 2p.m. 72-73—145 x-Game14: Michiganvs.LSU,6:30p.m. Sei Young Kim Switzerlandvs. Cameroon,2p.m. 72-73—145 f hee Lee NOTE:If onlyonegameis necessary, it wil beplayed Nigeriavs.UnitedStates,5p.m. Pornanong Phatlum 71-74—145 at 4p.m. Australiavs.Sweden,5 p.m. Tiffany Joh 71-74—145 ChampionshipSeries Wednesday,June17 YaniTseng 70-75—145 (Best-of-3) Mexicovs.France,1 p.m. 70-75—145 Monday:TBD,5p.m. England vs. Colombia,1 p.m. LauraDiaz 69-76—145 Tuesday:TBD,5p.m. CostaRicavs. Brazil, 4 p.m. HeeKyungSeo x-Wednesday: TBD,5 p.m. SouthKoreavs. Spain, 4p.m. BrookeM.Henderson 68-77—145

(Starling position inparentheses)

1.(20) CarlosMunoz, Honda,47. 2. (9) MarcoAndretti, Honda,47. 3.(5) Simon Pagenaud, Chevrolet,47. 4.(1) Will Power, Chevrolet,47. 5.(7) ScottDixon,Chevrolet, 47. 6.(2) HelioCastroneves,Chevrolet, 47. 7.(14)JackHawksworth, Honda,47. 8.(18)JosefNewgarden, Chevrolet, 47. 9.(19) Luca Filippi, Chevrolet, 47,Contact. 10.(3)JuanPabloMontoya,Chevrolet, 46. 11. (4)TakumaSato, Honda,46. 12. (10)JamesJakes, Honda, 46. 13. (16)RyanHunter-Reay, Honda, 46. 14. (6)Sebastien Bourdais, Chevrolet, 46. 15. (8)StefanoColeti, Chevrolet,46. 16.(12)SageKaram,Chevrolet, 46. 17. (11)TristanVautier, Honda,46. 18.(23)GabbyChaves,Honda,46. 19. (21)ConorDaly, Honda,46. 20. (15)TonyKanaan, Chevrolet, 34. 21. (22)RodolfoGonzalez, Honda,25, mechanical. 22. (17)CharlieKimball, Chevrolet,13,contact. 23. (13)GrahamRahal, Honda, 5,contact. Race Statistics Winner's averagespeed:75.510mph. Time ot Race:1:27;45.7906. Margin of Victory:Undercaution. Cautions: 6for18laps. Lead Changes:5 among4drivers Lap Leaders:Power1-2,Sato3-14,Andretti1533,Power34-35,Andretti36-39,Munoz40-47. Points: Montoya292, Power281, Dixon241, Castroneves 234, Rahal211, Newgarden197, Andretti 194, Pagen aud177, Bourdais177, Munoz173.

NAiuCAR Sprint Cup After Fridayqualifying; racetoday at Dover International Speedway,Dover, Del. Lap length: 1miles (Car number in parentheses) 1. (11)DennyHamhn,Toyota,160.121. 2. (78)MartinTruexJr., Chevrolet,159.723. 3. (42)KyleLarson,Chevrolet,159.681. 4. (20)Matt Kenseth, Toyota,159.674. 5. (22)JoeyLogano,Ford,159.596. 6. (4) KevinHarvick, Chevrolet,159.497. 7. (16)GregBiffle, Ford,159.483. 8. (19)CarlEdwards,Toyota,159.229. 9. (17)RickyStenhouseJr., Ford,159.046. 10. (18)KyleBusch,Toyota,158.975. 11. (1)JamieMcMurray, Chevrolet,158.709. 12. (3)AustinDilon, Chevrolet,158.29. 13. (41)KurtBusch,Chevrolet,158.891. 14. (48)JimmieJohnson,Chevrolet,158.814. 15. (55)David Ragan,Toyota,158.66. 16. (88)DaleEarnhardt Jr., Chevrolet,158.479. 17. (31)RyanNewman,Chevrolet,158.263. 18. (27)PaulMenard, Chevrolet,158.172. 19. (2)BradKeselowski, Ford,158.165. 20. (15)Clint Bowyer,Toyota,158.144. 21. (13)CaseyMears, Chevrolet,158.096. 22. (24)JeffGordon,Chevrolet,158.082. 23. (43)AricAlmirola, Ford,158.082. 24. (51)JustinAllgaier, Chevrolet,157.687. 25. (5)KaseyKahne,Chevrolet,158.27. 26. (14)TonyStewart, Chevrolet,158.082. 27. (33)BrianScott, Chevrolet, 158.04. 28. (9)SamHornishJr., Ford,157.673. 29. (47)AJAllmendinger, Chevrolet, 157.66. 30 (7) AlexBowman Chevrolet 157301 31. (6)TrevorBayne,Ford, 157.123. 32. (38)DavidGililand, Ford,157.054. 33. (10)DanicaPatrick, Chevrolet,156.658. 34. (46)MichaelAnnett, Chevrolet,156.638. 35. (26)JebBurton,Toyota,156.624. 36 (83)MattDiBenedetto Toyota 15575 37. (35)ColeWhitt, Ford,owner points. 38. (34)BrettMoffitt, Ford,ownerpoints. 39. (98)JoshWise,Ford, ownerpoints. 40. (23)J.J.Yeley,Toyota, owner points. 41. (62)BrendanGaughan, Chevrolet, ownerpoints. 42. (32)MikeBliss, Ford,owner points. 43. (40)LandonCassil, Chevrolet,ownerpoints.

DEALS Transactions BASEBALL

American League

BALTIMOR E DRIDLES — Dptioned RHPTyler

Wilson toNorfolk(IL). AssignedCRyan Lavarnway outright toNorfolk.Agreedtotermswith RHPMikey O'Brienonaminorleaguecontract. CHICAGO WHITESDX— Optioned RHPChris Beck toCharlotte(IL). HOUSTO NASTRDS—Sent RHPSamuel Deduno to Fresno(PCL)for arehabassignment. KANSASCITY RDYALS — Activated OF Alex Rios fromthe15-day DL. LDSANGELESANGELS—Agreedto termswith RHPsGeovannyAcostaandCesar Melendez onminor leaguecontracts. OptionedRHPVinnie Pestano to Salt Lake (PCL). Recalled INFEfren Navarro from Salt Lake. NEW YORKYANKEES — Placed OF Slade Heathcott on the 15-day, retroactive to Friday. Recalled DFRamonFlores from Scranton/Wffkes-Barre(IL). OAKLANDATHLETICS — Placed LHPSean Doolittle onthe15-dayDL,retroactiveto Thursday. RecalledRHPAngel Castro fromNashville (PCL). SEATTLE MARINERS— PlacedLHPJoeBeimel on the restricted list. RecalledLHPLucas Luetge fromTacoma(PCL). TAMPABAYRAYS— Dptioned LHP C.J.RiefenhausertoDurham(IL). TEXASRANGERS — Designated INF Tommy Field forassignment.Selectedthecontract of RHP Chi ChiGonzalezfrom RoundRock(PCL). TORONTOBLUE JAYS— AssignedRHPTodd Redmondoutright to Buffalo (IL). Sent 28Devon Travis toBuffalo for arehabassignment. National League ARIZONADIAMDNDBACKS — Sent OFJoey Terdoslavich to Carolina (Carolina) for a rehab assignment. CHICAGO CUBS— Agreed to termswith RHPs Miguel Estevez,Julian AybarandLuis Aquinoon minorleague contracts. COLOR ADOROCKIES—Placed18 Justin Morneau onthe15-day DL Sent38 Charlie Culberson to Albuquerque (PCL)for arehabassignment. LDSANGELESDODGERS— DptionedOFChris Heisey toOklahomaCity (PCL). ReinstatedCYasmani Grandalfromthe7-day DL MIAMIMARLINS—Sent CJeff Mathis to Jacksonviffe(SL)for arehabassignment. MILWAUKEE BREWERS — PlacedRHPBrandon Kintzler onthe15-dayDL,retroactive to Thursday. ReinstatedSSJeanSegurafrom the15-day DL. SANDIEGOPADRES— Sent1BYonderAlonso to El Paso(PCL)for arehabassignment. WASHING TONNATIDNALS—PlacedRHPStephen Strasburgonthe 15-day DL. Recalled RHP Taylor Hill from Syracuse(IL). Sent 3BAnthony Rendon to Harrisburg(EL)for a rehabassignment. FOOTBALL National Football League ATLANTAFALCONS— SignedGChrisChester. Released LBDerrick MaloneJr. CLEVELANDBROWNS — Signed DL Christian TupouandWRJosh Lenz.

FISH COUNT Upstreamdaily movement of adult chinook,jack chinook,steelheadandwild steelheadat selectedColumbiaRiverdamslast updated Friday. Chnk Jchnk StlhdWsOhd Bonneville 2,584 39 0 52 14 The Daffes 2,226 46 2 16 4 John Day 1,616 31 6 3 2 McNary 1,146 188 2 0 Upstream year-to-date movement ofadult chinook, jack chinook,steelheadand wild steelheadat selected ColumbiaRiverdamslast updatedFriday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd Bonneville 214,403 12,627 5,087 2,527 The Daffes 183,694 11,009 436 182 John Day 154,091 9,865 597 340 McNary 142,157 6,931 71 8 404


SUNDAY, MAY 31, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

D3

OR LEAGUE BASEBALL DON'T BE THAT GUY

Standings AU TimesPDT AMERICANLEAGUE East Division

NewYork Tampa Bay Baltimore Toronto Boston Kansas City Minnesota Detroit

Cleyeland Chicago Houston LosAngeles Texas Seattle Oakland

W L 26 24 25 25 23 25 23 28 22 28

CentralDivision W L

29 18 29 19 28 23 23 26 22 26

West Division W L

31 19 26 24 25 25 24 25 19 33

5'

Pct GB .520 .500 I .479 2

.i

.440 4

v

pm GB

.617 .604 r/t .549 3 .469 7

in Philadel-

phia. Umpires

.365 13

ruledita

ground rule double be-

cause ofthe interference. Colorado won 5-2. Matt Slocum /The Associated Press

11:10a.m.

Washington NewYork Atlanta Miami Philadelphia St. Louis Chicago Pittsburgh Cincinnati Milwaukee

28 21 27 23 24 25 20 30 19 32

.571

W L 32 17 25 22 26 23 21 27 16 34

Pct GB .653 .532 6 .531 6

CentralDivision

.540 1'/2

.490 4

.400 Br/t

.373 10

cannot catch a ball hit by Philadelphia's Jeff Fran-

ning Saturday

.490 6'/t

Pct GB

CINCINNATI —Joey Votto hit a two-run homer — his second in two days — andZack Cozart doubled with the bases loaded in the eighth inning to rally Cincinnati, which won its second straight to end Washington's club-record streak of winning nine consecutive series.

during the seventh in-

Pct GB .620 .520 5 .500 6

12:05 p.m. N.Y.Yankees (Warren3-3) at Oakland (Chavez 1-5), I;05 p.m. Cleveland(Salazar 5-1) atSeattle(Happ3-1),1:10pm. Detroit (Price4-1) at LA. Angels(Shoemaker 3-4), 5:05 p.m. Monday'sGames TorontoatWashington, 4:05p.m. Minnesotaat Boston, 4:10p.m. BaltimoreatHouston, 5:10p.m. Tampa Bayat LA. Angels, 7:05p.m. N.Y.YankeesatSeattle, 7:10p.m.

Reds 8, Nationals5

Rockies left fielder Bran-

coeur as a fan interferes

.458 7'/t

KansasCity (Guthrie 4-3)at ChicagoCubs(Hammel 3-2),11:20a.m. Boston (J.Kelly 1-4) at Texas(W.Rodriguez 2-2),

Colorado don Barnes

.451 3'/t

Saturday'sGames Minnesota 3, Toronto2 Tampa Bay3, Baltimore 0 Housto n3,ChicagoWhiteSox0 Texas 8, Boston 0 Kansas CityatChicago,ppd.,rain L.A. Angel8, s Detroit 6 N.Y.Yankees5, Oakland3 Cleveland 4,Seatle 3 Today'sGames Tampa Bay (Odorizzi 3-5) at BaltimorePilman2-6), 10;35a.m. ChicagoWhite Sox(Danks2-4) atHouston(R.Hernandez 2-3),11:10a.m. Toronto(Hutchison4-1) at Minnesota(Nolasco5-1),

NATIONALLEAGUE East Division W L

National League

,«x

Marlins 9, Mets 5 NEW YORK — Giancarlo Stanton homered twice andChristian Yelich snapped aseventh-inning tie with a two-run single to lift Miami. New York ab r hbi ab r hbi DGordn2b 5 I 2 0 Grndrsrf 3 2 1 1 Prado3b 5 I 3 0 Tejada3b 4 0 2 3 Stantonrf 4 2 2 2 Duda1b 4 0 1 1 JBakerIb 5 I I I DnMrp2b 4 0 0 0 Ozunacf 5 I I 0 Cuddyrlf 5 0 1 0 Y elichlf 5 I 2 2 WFlorsss 5 I 2 0 R ealmtc 4 2 2 2 Lagarscf 4 I 1 0 DSolanss 4 0 I 2 ATorrsp 0 0 0 0 Koehlerp 2 0 0 0 Campllph I 0 0 0 Mazzarp 0 0 0 0 Plawckc 4 0 1 0 I Suzukiph I 0 0 0 Niesep I 0 0 0 M orrisp 0 0 0 0 Munoph 0 I 0 0 Dunnp 0 0 0 0 Goeddlp 0 0 0 0 Cappsp 0 0 0 0 Lthrschp 0 0 0 0 Harenph I 0 0 0 Mayrryph 0 0 0 0 SDysonp 0 0 0 0 Roblesp 0 0 0 0 A Ramsp 0 0 0 0 Cecilincf I 0 0 0 Totals 4 1 9 149 Totals 3 6 5 9 5 Miami 0 21 200 202 — 9 N ew York 100 4 0 0 500 — 5 E—J.Baker (1), Prado(3), Granderson(2), W. Flores(10). DP—Miami1. LOB—Miami6, NewYork Miami

Washington Cincinnati ab r hbi ab r hbi Spancf 4 0 1 1 Phillips2b 5 0 0 0 D smndss 4 0 0 0 Votto1b 3 2 2 2 YEscor3b 4 1 2 0 Frazier3b 4 2 3 0 U ggla2b I 0 0 0 Brucerf 2 1 0 I Zmrmnfb 5 0 2 1 B.Penac 4 1 2 I CRonsnrf 4 1 2 0 Byrdlf 40I 0 L oatonc 4 0 0 0 Cozartss 4 1 I 2 Espinos2b-3b4 2 2 0 Rlglessp 2 0 0 0 MTaylrlf 4 1 1 3 Matthsp 0 0 0 0 GGnzlzp I 0 0 0Boeschph I 0 0 0 Treinenp 0 0 0 0 Hooverp 0 0 0 0 Thrntnp 0 0 0 0 Schmkrph 0 0 0 0 Janssnp 0 0 0 0 Achpmp 0 0 0 0 TMooreph I 0 0 0 BHmltncf 4 1 2 2 Totals 3 6 5 105 Totals 3 3 8 118 11. 28 —Prado(8), Ozuna(9), Realmuto(6), D.Solano W ashington 15 5 0 1 3 000 — 5 (2), Tejada(4), Duda(16). HR —Stanton2(15), J.BakCincinnati 052 0 5 2 0 4x— 8 e r (I), Realm uto(2). SB—Realmuto(2). DP — Washington2, Cincinnati1. LOB—Washington IP H R E R BBSO 8, Cincinnati 5.28—YEscobar (6), Frazier2 (10),Cozad Miami (8). HR —M.Taylor(4), Votto (9).SB—B.Hamilton(20). er 31-3 7 5 5 4 1 IP H R E R BBSO Koehl Mazzaro 12-3 0 0 0 0 0 Washington Morris 1-3 0 0 0 2 0 G.Gonzalez 51-3 7 4 4 2 6 DunnW,1-3 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 Treinen H,3 2-3 0 0 0 0 2 CappsH,I 1 I 0 0 0 2 ThorntonH,9 I 0 0 0 0 I S .Dyson H,4 2 3- 0 0 0 0 0 JanssenL,O-I BS,1-1 I 4 4 4 2 0 A.RamosS,4-6 1 1-3 I 0 0 0 2 Cincinnati 52-3 9 5 5 0 8 NewYork R.lglesias Niese 4 7 5 4 0 3 I 1-3 1 0 0 0 I Mattheus 12-3 I 0 0 0 2 HooverW3-0 , I 0 0 0 0 0 Goeddel Leathersi c h 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 A.chapman S,9-9 I 0 0 0 2 2 RoblesL,0-1 1 3 2 2 1 2 HBP—byR.lglesias(G.Gonzalez,G.Gonzalez). WPA.Torres 2 3 2 2 0 1 Treinen.PB—Lobaton. HBP —byKoehler(Granderson). T—3:08.A—36,294 (42,319). T—3:07. A—39,095(41,922).

Dodgers 5,Cardinals1 ST. LOUIS —Yasmani Grandal's three-run homer capped a four-run sixth inning that ended adrought of 42 straight scoreless innings on the road. LoeAngeles St. Louis ab r hbi ab r hbi Pedrsncf 5 0 1 0 Wong2b 4 1 0 0 JuTrnr3b 4 1 2 0 Mcrpnt3b 4 0 2 0

Rockies 5,Phillies 2 PHILADELPHIA — Nolan Are-

nado, MichaelMcKenryandBen Paulsen eachhomered for Colorado, which won for the sixth time in seven games. Philadelphia lost its sixth straight and fell a season-worst13 games under.500. Colorado

Philadelphia ab r hbi ab r hbi Blckmncf 3 0 0 0 Reverecf 4 0 1 0 LeMahi2b 5 0 I 0 G a l v i ss s 4 0 0 0 West Division T lwtzkss 4 I I 0 Utley2b 3 I 1 0 W L Pct GB zrf 4 0 I 0 Howard1b 4 0 1 1 C allaspph I 0 1 1 Jaycf 3 0 I 0 CGnzl Los Angeles 29 19 .604 Arenad3b 4 I 2 2 Franco3b 4 0 0 0 YGarcip 0 0 0 0 Rynlds1b 2 0 0 0 SanFrancisco 30 21 .588 r/t PaulsnIb 4 I I I JGomzp 0 0 0 0 Lieratrp 0 0 0 0 Wachap 2 0 0 0 Arizona 23 25 .479 6 cKnrc 4 I I I Aschelf 4 0 1 0 Roll insss 4 0 0 0 Manessp 0 0 0 0 M SanDiego 24 27 .471 6r/t Friasp 3 0 1 0 MHarrsp 0 0 0 0 B Brwnp 0 0 0 0 Francrrl 4 0 2 0 Colorado 21 26 .447 7'/t A xfordp 0 0 0 0 Ruizc 4010 KHrndzlf I 0 0 0 Belislep 0 0 0 0 BBarnslf 4 I 2 0 Harangp 2 0 0 0 T.cruzph I 0 0 0 Saturday'sGames E Butlrp 2 0 0 0 LGarcip 0 0 0 0 Villanvp 0 0 0 0 Colorado 5, Philadelphia2 Ynoaph I 0 I I Diekmnp 0 0 0 0 Totals 3 5 5 9 5 Totals 3 01 6 I Arizona7,Milwaukee3 Obergp 0 0 0 0 DeFrtsp 0 0 0 0 Los Angeles OBB 054 010 — 5 Miami 9,N.Y.Mets5 St. Louis 155 O BB 000 — 1 B etncrtp 0 0 0 0 Gilesp 0 0 0 0 Cincinnati8, Washington5 E—H.Kendrick(2), VanSlyke(1). DP—LosAnge- Loganp 0 0 0 0 CHrndzph-3b2 I 1 1 L.A. Dodgers 5,St. Louis1 les 3, St.Louis1. LOB —LosAngeles7, St. Louis4. H undlyc I 0 0 0 Kansas CityatChicago,ppd., rain Totals 36 5 105 Totals 3 5 2 8 2 28 — Ju.Turner(7). HR —Grandal(5). Atlanta 8, SanFrancisco0 020 0 0 0 210 — 5 IP H R E R BBSO C olorado Pittsburgh5,SanDiego2 P hiladelphia 10 0 000 510 — 2 LosAngeles Today'sGam es E — Ar en ado (4). DP —Colorado1. LOB—ColoraFriasW,4-2 7 5 I 0 2 3 Miami (Phelps2-2) at N.Y. Mets(B.colon 7-3), Y.Garcia I 0 0 0 0 2 do 6, Philadelphia8. 2B—Tulowitzki (16), B.Barnes 10:10a.m. (11), Francoeur(6). HR —Arenado (11), Liberatore I 1 0 0 0 3 (5), Howard Washington (Roark1-2) atCincinnati (Lorenzen1-1), Paulsen(3), McKenry (2), C.Hernandez(I). SB—ReSt. Louis 10:10a.m. WachaL7-1 52- 3 3 4 4 3 7 vere(10).S—Blackmon. Colorado(Lyles2-5) at Philadelphia(Wiliams3-4), IP H R E R BBSO Maness 1-3 0 0 0 0 I 10:35a.m. M.Harri s I 1-3 5 I I 0 2 Colorado Arizona (C.Anderson1-1) at Milwaukee(Wagner 0-0), 4 I I 1 3 Belisle 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 E.ButlerW3-5 6 11:10a.m. ObergH,3 1 I 0 0 0 0 Viganueva I 1 0 0 0 I LA. Dodgers(B.Anderson2-2) atSt. Louis(C.MartiH BP — by W a ch a (A .G onz ale z). W P — W ac ha. Betancourt 0 I I I 1 0 nez4-2), 11:15a.m. Twins 3, BlueJays2 Rangers 8,RedSox0 Angels 8, Tigers6 LoganH,B 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 T—2:53.A—44,754 (45,399). KansasCity (Guthrie 4-3)at ChicagoCubs(Hammel B.BrownH,B 1 3- 0 0 0 0 0 3-2),11:20a.m. AxfordS,9-9 1 2 0 0 0 1 Brian Dozier ARLINGTON,Texas — Chi Chi ANAHEIM, Calif.— Mike Trout and Braves 8, Giants Atlanta(Teheran 4-2) at SanFrancisco (Bumgarner MINNEAPOLIS — 0 Philadelphia 6-2), I:05p.m. drove in the tiebreaking run with Gonzalez took ano-hitter into the Albert Pujols were amongfive Los H arang L,4-5 6 4 2 2 0 7 Pittsburgh (Locke3-2) atSan Diego(Despaigne2-3), a triple in the seventh inning to 1-3 2 2 2 0 1 sixth inning of his major league Angeles Angels to homer in the L.Garcia SAN FRANCISCO — Juan Uribe 6;10 p.m. 1-3 I 0 0 0 0 lift Minnesota. Twins starter debut and preserved the shutout first two innings, andJered Weav- hit a two-run drive in the ninth for Diekman Monday'sGames 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 De Fratus TorontoatWashington, 4:05p.m. Kyle Gibson got Toronto to hit with some smart fielding to lead er won his fourth straight decision his first homer since joining Atlan- Giles 1 2 I I 0 1 ChicagoCubsat Miami,4:10 p.m. J.Gomez 1 I 0 0 0 1 into a double play in each of the Boston. He gloved acomebacker over five starts. ta, and Williams Perezearned his Milwaukee atSt.Louis, 5:10p.m. Betancourtpitchedto 2batters inthe8th. L.A. Dodgers atColorado,5:40p.m. first three innings, and heleads by Pablo Sandoval with oneout first major league win. HBP—byHarang(Blackmon). AtlantaatArizona, 6:40p.m. Detroit LocAngeles T—3:23. A—23,510(43,651). in the sixth and got David Ortiz the majors with13 double-play N.Y.MetsatSanDiego, 7:10p.m. ab r hbi ab r hbi PittsburghatSanFrancisco, 7:15p.m. trapped in a rundown between groundballs. G osecf 5 1 I 0 Giavtll2b 4 0 I 0 Atlanta ab r hbi San Francisco ab r hbi Pirates 5, Padres2 K insler2b 5 1 I I Troutcf 3 2 I I third base andhomeplate. P etersn2b 5 3 3 0 Aokilf 4000 M icarrIb 5 0 2 I Pujolsdh 4 I I 3 Toronto Minnesota M aybincf 5 1 2 2 Machip 0 0 0 0 History C espdslf 4 2 2 I Calhonrf 4 I I I ab r hbi ab r hbi — Charlie Morton reF Frmn1b 5 0 1 1 Ariasph I 0 I 0 SAN DIEGO Boston Texas THIS DATE IN BASEBALL J Mrtnzrf 4 2 3 0 Freese3b 4 I I 0 Reyesss 5 0 I 0 Dozier2b 4 0 1 1 M arkksrf 4 1 1 0 Panik2b 4 0 I 0 tired his last11 batters and drove ab r h bi ab r hbi T ycllnsdh 4 0 I I Joycelf 3 I I I Dnldsn3b 5 0 I 0 Nunezdh 3 0 0 0 U ribe3b 4 3 3 2 Pencerf 4 0 I 0 P edroia2b 4 0 I 0 DShldslf 5 I 3 I May 31 JMccnc 3 0 I I Niwnhspr-If 0 0 0 0 Cnghmlf 5 0 0 0 BeltIb in the go-ahead run in the sixth B autistdh 3 0 I 0 MauerIb 4 I 1 0 30I 0 Bettscf 3 0 0 0 Andrusss 5 0 I I 1937 —CarlHubbe l's 24-gamewinningstreak EncrncIb 3 0 0 0 Plouffe3b 4 0 2 1 Cstllns3b 3 0 0 I C.Perezc 4 I 2 2 ASmnsss 4 0 2 2 Bcrwfrss 4 0 I 0 Ortizdh 4 0 2 0 Fielderdh 4 0 I 0 inning to lead Pittsburgh. endedwith a 10-3 loss to theBrooklyn Dodgers. RuMrtnc 3 I I 0 ERosarrf 3 0 2 0 H Rmrzlf 4 0 0 0 Beltre3b 5 I 0 0 J lglesisss 4 0 2 0 ENavrrIb 3 I I 0 B thncrtc 4 0 1 1 Pagancf 4 0 I 0 Hubbell'slastdefeatcameonJuly13, 1936,1-0tothe C olaelllf 4 0 I 0 EdEscrlf 4 0 0 0 Greenss 2 0 0 0 WPerezp 3 0 1 0MDuff y3b 4 0 0 0 Pittsburgh B ogartsss 0 0 0 0 JHmltnrf 3 I 0 0 San Diego ChicagoCubs. Carrerrf 3 0 2 0 SRonsnlf 0 0 0 0 Fthrstn ss 2 0 0 0 CJhnsn ph I 0 0 0 Susac c 2 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 Rosales1b 4 2 4 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi 1954 — TheNewYorkMetsandtheSanFrancisco P illarcf 3 I I I H rmnnc 3 I 1 1 Sandoyl3b Totals 3 7 6 I3 6 Totals 3 3 8 9 8 Avilanp 0 0 0 0 Linccmp I 0 0 0 NapoliIb 1 0 I 0 LMartncf 4 2 2 2 J Hrrsn3b 5 I 2 I Venalecf 2 I 0 0 Giantsplayedthelongest doubleheader inmajor league G oins2b 3 0 I 0 Hickscf 2 I 2 0 Detroit 5 11 155 021 — 5 JiJhnsnp 0 0 0 0 Kontosp 0 0 0 0 P eguerlf 1 0 0 0 Chirinsc 4 I I 2 5 I 2 0 Gyorkoph I 0 0 0 history —ninehours, 52 minutes—with thehelpof Smoakph I 0 0 0 DSantnss 2 0 0 0 Loc Angeles 255 BBB 01x — 8 C unniffp 0 0 0 0 Maxwllph I 0 I 0 Polancrf B.Holtss-Ib 4 0 I 0 Alberto2b 4 0 I 2 Mcctchcf 3 I 2 I Qcknshp 0 0 0 0 a23-inninggamein the nightcapthat waswon bythe Totals 33 2 9 I Totals 2 9 3 9 3 S.Leon c 3 0 0 0 E—Joyce (1). DP—LosAngeles1. LOB —Detroit Y Petitp 0 0 0 0 SMartelf 5 0 0 I Solarte1b 4 0 1 1 visitingGiants8-6. Thesecondgametook7:23to play. Toronto 0 00 101 500 — 2 6, LosAngeles 4. 28—Mi.cabrera (10), J.Martinez2 GBlanc ph-If 2 0 I 0 Rcastllrf 3 0 0 0 N Walkr2b 4 0 I I Uptonlf 4 0 1 0 1997 —la Bordersbeca methefirst womanto Minnesota 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 0x — 3 (6), Giavotela (7),C.Perez(3). HR Totals 4 0 8 148 Totals 3 4 0 8 0 Totals 3 1 0 5 0 Totals 3 88 138 (11), J.Mccann P AlvrzIb 3 I I 0 Kemprf 4 I 1 0 pitchin a regular-seasonprofessionalgame,inthesixth E—Herrmann 2 (2). DP—Toronto 1, Minnesota Boston Kinsler (I), Cesp e de s ( 7), T rout (12), Pu j o l s (11), Ca l Atlanta 0 11 115 013 — 8 SRdrgzIb I 0 0 0 DeNrrsc 4 0 1 0 500 500 BBB — 0 inning oftheSt. PaulSaints' NorthernLeague game 3. LOB —Toronto 9, Minnesota 6. 2B—Carrera (4), houn(5), Joyce(4), C.Perez(2). SB—Ty.cogins(I). San Francisco OBB OBB 000 — 5 100 410 2gx — 8 3 0 0 0 Spngnr2b 3 0 0 0 againstSiouxFalls. Shegaveup threeearned runs Goins(4), Mauer (11), Plouffe(10). 38—Dozier (3). Texas E—Avilan (I), Susac(2). DP—Atlanta 1, San Cervellic Castelanos. E—Miley (I), B.Holt 2 (4). DP—Boston I, Texas SF — Mercerss 4 I 2 0 Mdlrks3b 3 0 0 0 withoutgettinganout. HR — Pillar (2), Herrmann(I). SB—Reyes(4). CSIP H R E R BBSO Francisco1.LOB —Atlanta7,SanFrancisco11. 2B1. LOB —Boston9,Texas9.2B—Ortiz (9), Napoli (5), 3 0 0 I Amarstss 2 0 0 0 Nunez(2), E.Rosario (I). S—Carrera, D.Santana. Peterson (3), Uribe(3).38—Peterson(2). HR—Uribe Mortonp Andrus(9), LMartin (9), Chirinos(9). CS —Rosales Detroit Watsonp 0 0 0 0 Barmesph-ss1 0 0 0 IP H R E R BBSO (3) (2). SB —Peterson(6), Maybin(7), Uribe(2). GreeneL,4-4 12- 3 6 7 7 I I American League Tabataph 0 T.Rossp 2 0 0 0 Toronto 32-3 0 0 0 0 0 IP H R E R BBSO Melncnp 0I 00 0 IP H R E R BBSO A.Wilson 0 0 Thayerp 0 0 0 0 6 7 2 2 3 5 Aa.Sanche z Boston B.Hardy I 2-3 1 0 0 0 3 Atlanta Garcesp 0 0 0 0 LoupL,1-3 1 2 I I 0 0 Miley L,4-5 4 0 0 4 3 Indians 4, Mariners3 4 9 6 5 2 2 Alburquerque I 2 1 I 2 2 W.PerezW,1-0 7 K elleyp 0 0 0 0 Delabar 1 0 0 0 0 1 RossJr. Avilan 2-3 2 0 0 0 I 3 3 2 2 0 3 LosAngeles Almontph-cf I 0 0 0 Minnesota Ji Johnson I 3 0 0 0 0 0 Totals 3 7 5 10 5 Totals 3 1 2 4 1 M.Barnes I I 0 0 0 1 W eaver W ,4-4 6 1-3 9 3 3 0 3 SEATTLE — Jerry Sands hit a 52-3 8 2 I 4 3 Texas Gibson Cunniff I 2 0 0 0 I C .Ramos H,2 1 3 0 0 0 0 0 P ittsburgh 1 1 0 0 0 1 502 — 5 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 Ch.GonzaleW two-run homer, his first of the Duensing San Francisco z ,1-0 52-3 2 0 0 5 2 SalasH,6 I 3 2 2 0 I S an Diego 1 0 0 1 0 0 500 — 2 resslyW,2-1 1 0 0 0 0 1 Scheppers L,5-3 4 1-3 8 4 4 2 5 11-3 I 0 0 0 2 J.SmithH,14 1 3- 0 0 0 0 0 Lincecum E—PAlvarez (6), Middlebrooks (2). DP—Pittsseason, andDavid Murphy added P Fien H,6 1 I 0 0 0 2 Kontos 2 -3 0 0 0 0 0 S.Freem an I I 0 0 0 0 StreetS,16-18 I 1 1 I 0 0 burgh1,SanDiego1. LOB—Pittsburgh10,SanDiego a pinch-hit RBI single to lift Cleve- BoyerS,1-2 1 0 0 0 0 0 Claudio Y.Petit 2 1 0 0 0 2 3. 2B I I 0 0 0 1 HBP —byWeaver(J.Mccann). —Mccutchen(12), PAlvarez(8), Solarte(12). T—2:41. A—32,076(39,021). Machi 2 5 4 4 0 3 SB — Miley pitched to3 batters inthe5th. land. Seattle's Robinson Cano, T—2:50. A—40,369(45,957). J.Harrison(4), Polanco(13),Mercer(2). T — 2: 5 1. A — 42,00 5 (41,91 5). HBP —byRossJr.(Fielder). IP H R E R BBSO back in the lineup after missing T — 2:49. A — 42,831 (48,114). Pittsburgh Rays 3, Orioles0 Yankees 5,Athletics 3 two games with an inner ear inMortonW,2-0 7 3 2 I 1 2 Diamondbacks 7, Brewers3 WatsonH,I1 1 0 0 0 0 3 fection, homered for the first time BALTIMORE Astros 3,WhiteSox0 — Erasmo Ramirez — Carlos Bel t ran OAKLAND, Calif. M elancon S, 1 3-14 1 I 0 0 0 1 since April 14, lining a two-run MILWAUKEE — Paul Goldschmidt San Diego threw three-hit ball over seven hit a go-ahead, two-run homer in HOUSTON — Dall as Keuchel shot in the third inning. It snapped innings, continuing a streak of had two homers andfour RBls, T.RossL,2-5 6 7 3 2 2 2 the sixth, andNewYork endeda 2-3 0 0 0 1 2 struck out a career-high11 and a string of171 plate appearances 25'/5 scoreless innings byTampa and Arizona handedMilwaukee its Thayer 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 Garces four-game losing streak in Oakl a nd. pitched a four-hitter for his secwithout a homer for Cano,tying seventh straight loss. 2-3 0 0 0 0 2 Kelley Bay starters, and theRaysended Brian McCann drove in a run in hi s Quackenbush 1 3 2 2 1 1 ond career shutout. The Houston the longest streak of his career. a six-game losing streak. Steve HBP — by T .R os s (C er ve l i ) . eighth straight to helptheYankees Arizona Milwaukee starter didn't walk a batter and T—2:50. A—43,207(41,164). ab r hbi ab r hbi Souza Jr. andJoey Butler homered finished Cleveland Seattle win their fourth in six games. with a 1.76 ERA after I nciartlf 5 1 1 0 CGomzcf 4 1 I 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi for the Rays. P ollockcf 5 0 0 0 KDavislf I 0 0 0 throwing his eighth complete Kipnis2b 4 0 0 0 AJcksncf 5 0 2 0 Leaders NewYork Oakland GldschIb 5 2 3 4 GParralf 3 0 0 0 Aviles3b 4 1 1 0 S.Smithdh 5 1 I 0 TampaBay Baltimore game overall. ab r hbi ab r hbi T rumorf 5 0 3 0 Braunrf 4 0 I 0 AMERICAN LEAGUE B rantlycf-If 4 0 1 0 Cano2b 4 1 2 2 G ardnrcf 5 0 0 0 Burnscf 5 I 2 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi A .Hill3b 5 1 1 0 Lind1b 4 0 I I BATTING —Fielder, Texas, .361; Kipnis, CleveRaburnlf 2 0 0 0 N.cruzrf 3 0 0 0 Headl y 3b 5 1 3 I Semienss 5 I 2 I Guyercf-If 4 I 3 0 MMchd3b 3 0 0 0 Chicago Houston Pachecc 4 0 1 0 ArRmr3b 4 0 I 0 land, .338;Ncruz,Seatle, .337;Micabrera,Detroit, Bournph-cf I 0 0 0 Seager3b 3 0 2 0 40I 0 J Butlerlf 3 I 2 I Sniderlf 4 0 0 0 ab r h bi ab r h bi ARdrgzdh 4 0 I 0 Vogtc Owings2b 4 1 1 0 Segurass 4 2 2 0 .333; AvGarcia,Chicago,.325; Ellsbury,NewYork, S wisherdh 2 1 0 1 MorrsnIb 4 0 I 0 TeixeirIb 4 1 I 0 BButlerdh 3 0 I I Kiermrph-cf I 0 I 0 Paredsdh 4 0 0 0 Eatoncf 4 0 0 0 Springrrf 2 0 0 0 A hmedss 4 1 1 1 Maldndc 4 0 I 0 .324; Paredes,Baltimore, .322; Gose, Detroit, .322; YGomsc 4 0 0 0Zuninoc 4 0 I 0 BMccnc 3 1 I I Reddckrf 4 0 3 I Longori3b 3 0 0 I C.DavisIb 3 0 0 0 Bonif a cdh 4 0 0 0 Al t u v e2b 4 0 0 0 H llcksnp 3 1 2 1 Lohsep 0 0 0 0 Vogt, Oakland,.322;Moustakas,KansasCity,.322. MossIb 3 1 1 0 BMillerss 3 1 I 0 Beltranrf 4 1 2 3 Lawrie3b 4 0 2 0 Forsyth2b 4 0 0 0 DYongrf 3 0 0 0 RBI — Ncruz,Seattle, 38;Donaldson,Toronto, 38; A vGarcrf 4 0 I 0 Tuckerlf 4 I 2 0 D elgadp I 0 0 0 Blazekp I 0 0 0 S andsrf I 1 1 2 Ackleylf 3 0 I I CYoungrf 0 0 0 0 Muncy1b 2 0 0 0 SouzJrrf 3 I I I Clevngrc 3 0 2 0 Mecarrlf 4 0 I 0 CIRsmslf 0 0 0 0 Goforthp 0 0 0 0 Fielder,Texas,38; KMorales, KansasCity,37; Teixeira, DvMrpph-rf I 0 1 1 Weeksph I 0 0 0 Elmore1b 4 0 0 0 JHardyss 3 0 0 0 RFlorslf 4 0 0 0 Canhaph-1b 2 0 0 0 L aRochIb 3 0 0 0 Gattisdh 4 I 2 I HGomzph I 0 0 0 New York, 35;Vogt, Oakland, 35; Micabrera, Detroit, JRmrzss 4 0 1 0 Blmqstlf 0 0 0 0 G regrsss 4 0 I 0 Sogard2b 4 I I 0 A IRmrzss 3 0 0 0 Carter1b 3 I I I WSmithp 0 0 0 0 34. Totals 3 0 4 6 4 Totals 3 53 113 Acarerss 4 0 I 0 Loughcf 3 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 Flahrty2b 3 0 1 0 P irela2b 3 1 I 0 Fuldlf 3000 G Bckh3b 3 0 I 0 Villar3b 3 0 I I JRogrs ph I 0 I I HOMERUNS—Ncruz, Seattle, 18; Donaldson, C leveland 125 0 5 1 000 — 4 TBckhdh Frnklnph-dh 2 0 0 0 Sotoc 3 0 I 0 Jcastroc 4 0 0 0 Drew2b 1 0 0 0 Zobristph 1 0 0 0 EHerrr2b 2 0 0 I Toronto,14;Teixeira, NewYork,14; CDavis, Baltimore, Seattle 052 OBB 100 — 3 Rivera c 2 0 I 0 Totals 3 7 5 105 Totals 3 7 3 123 Shuckpr 0 0 0 0 MGnzlzss 3 0 I 0 Totals 41 7 136 Totals 3 3 3 8 3 12; Encarnacion,Toronto, 12;HR amirez,Boston, 12; DP — Cleveland 1, Seatle 1. LOB —Cleveland 5, N ew York 155 5 1 2 015 — 5 Arizona 031 SBB 000 — 7 Trout,LosAngeles,12. Seattle 9. 28 —Moss (10), Seager2 (11), B.Miler Totals 3 2 3 9 3 Totals 2 90 3 0 Flowrsc 0 0 0 0 Mrsnckcf 2 0 I 0 Tampa Bay 1 1 1 0 00 500 — 3 CSnchz2b 3 0 0 0 Oakland 552 155 OBB — 3 ERA — Keuchel,Houston,1.76;Gray,Oakland, Milwaukee 115 OBB 001 — 3 (8). HR —Sands(I), Cano(2). CS—Dav.Murphy(I), B altimore 000 0 0 0 500 — 0 Totals 31 0 4 0 Totals 2 9 3 8 3 E—Lawrie (8). DP—Oakland1. LOB —NewYork E—ArRamirez (3), Lohse (1), Maldonado(5). 1.82;FHernandez,Seattle,1.91. A.Jackson(4).SF—Swisher. DP — B alt i m ore 2. LO B — T am pa B ay 5, B al t i m ore 6, Oakl a nd 8. HR — B eltran (4). SB — T eixe i r a (I). Chicago 500 500 BBB — 0 LOB — Ar iz ona 8, Mi l w aukee 6. 28 — T r um b o (9), NATIONAL LEAGUE IP H R E R BBSO 3. 28 — Guyer2 (8). HR —J.Butler (3), Souz a Jr. (9). Houston SF — B.Butler. 500 100 52x — 3 Ahmed(4), J.Rogers(3). HR—Goldschmidt 2 (14). BATTING —DGordon, Miami, .374;Goldschmidt, Cleveland A.cabrera (2). CS—Souza Jr. (4). SF—LonE—Vilar 2 (8). DP—Houston 2. LOB—Chicago IP H R E R BBSO SB — E.Herrera(I). S—Lohse. SF—E.Herrera. Arizona,.345;AGonzalez, LosAngeles, .331; Harper, MarcumW,2-0 5 1-3 5 2 2 3 5 SB — New York 4, Houston7. HR —Gattis (11), Carter(8). SBIP H R E R BBSO Washi ngton,.329;LeMahieu,Colorado,.325;McarRzepczynskiH,7 1-3 1 0 0 0 0 goria. Eoval d i 4 2-3 11 3 3 0 2 IP H R E R BBSO Marisnick (10). SF — V ill a r. Arizona penter,St. Louis, .318;YEscobar, Washington, .318; McAllisterH,3 I 3 I I I I 1 - 3 0 0 0 0 4 HellicksonW3-3 6 TampaBay IP H R E R BBSO ShreveW,2-1 I 5 2 2 I 3 Holliday,St.Louis,.318. Hagadone H,4 I 1 0 0 0 I E.RamirezW,3-2 7 3 0 0 1 7 Chicago J.WilsonH,7 2 3- 0 0 0 0 0 DelgadoS,1-3 3 Allen S,11-12 I 1-3 1 0 0 0 I 3 I I 0 2 RBI — Stanton, Miami, 44; Harper,Washington, I 1 - 31 0 0 0 3 Milwaukee Seattle B.GomesH,6 1 0 0 0 0 0 QuintanaL,2-6 6 1 - 3 5 I 1 4 7 BetancesH,II 43; Goldschmidt,Arizona,42; Braun,Milwaukee,37; 0 0 0 0 I Elias L2-2 51-3 5 4 4 4 3 BoxbergerS,14-14 1 0 0 0 0 1 Petricka 23 I 0 0 0 1 A.MillerS,15-15 I LohseL,3-6 31- 3 11 7 7 0 2 Upton, SanDiego,37;AGonzalez,LosAngeles,35; Wilhelmsen 2-3 1 0 0 0 0 Baltimore Da.Jennings I 2 2 2 0 2 Oakland Blazek 22-3 1 0 0 0 I SMarte,Pittsburgh,34. Furbush I 0 0 0 0 I W.chenLI-4 7 6 3 3 1 4 Houston HahnL,2-5 6 7 4 3 I 4 Goforth I 1 0 0 I 0 HOMERUNS—Harper, Washington,18; Frazier, I 2-3 3 1 I 0 2 Lowe I 0 0 0 0 I Roe 1 2 0 0 1 1 KeuchelW,7-1 9 4 0 0 0 11 A.Leon W.Smith 2 0 0 0 0 3 Cincinnati, 15; Stanton,Miami, 15; Goldschmidt, I 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 WP — Beimel I 0 0 0 I 0 Tom.Hunter 1 I 0 0 0 1 PB—J.castro. Abad Hellickson, Lohse. Arizona,14; Braun,Milwaukee,12; Pederson, Los T—3:04.A—32,287(47,574). T—2:09. A—38,177(45,971). T—2:29.A—29,720 (41,574). T—3:06. A—25,223(35,067). T—2:58.A—39,552 (41,900). Angeles,12;Upton,SanDiego,12. .438 fgr/t .320 16'/2

A Gnzlz1b 4 1 0 0 Hollrdylf I 0 0 0 HKndrc2b 3 2 2 1 Heywrdrf 2 0 2 0 Ethierrf 4 0 1 0 JhPerltss 4 0 0 I Grandlc 3 1 1 3 Grichkrf-If 4 0 0 0 V nSlyklf 3 0 0 0 Molinac 3 0 I 0


D4

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MAY 31, 2015

NBA FINALS

on a o sui s avs, arriors us ine By Michael Lee

NBA FINALS

The Washington Post

ence finals in just four games. The ninecombined games

iri I'

The Golden State Warriors have had to wait 40 years to get back to the NBA Finals for

ljlhibi4

a chance to play for a another championship. The Cleveland Cavaliers have gone eight Thursday atGoldenState 6p.m. years since their last appear- June 7 at Golden State 5 p.m. ance, and all 45 years of their June 9 at Cleveland 6 p.m. existence without winning June11 at Cleveland 6 p.m. even a game in the Finals. x-June14 at Golden State 5 p.m. So what's another week or x-June16 at Cleveland 6 p.m. so of anticipation'? By the time the teams meet x-June19 atGoldenState 6p.m. Thursday in Game I of the Fi-

All Times PDT; x-if necessary

nals, the Warriors will have had a full week and the Cavaliers eight days to rest, recuper- ther team are complaining. ateandprepare foraseriesthat Golden State earned its vawould guarantee the end of a cation Wednesday by clinchgenerational title drought. The ing the Western Conference combined 15 days off — the re- with a five-game series win sult of logistical demands and against the Houston Rockets. television commitments that

Cleveland won th e

E astern

scuttled attempts to move up Conference on Tuesday by the start of the championship completing a sweep of the Atseries— isunprecedented.Not lanta Hawks, becoming the thatplayersand coaches on ei- 13th team to win the confer-

sionerAdam Silver reported- pares for his fifth straight NBA ly explored the possibility of Finals. After taking two days for the conference finalsis starting the Finals on 'Ittesday to celebrate their first Finals the quickest finish since 1986, after the Warriors and Cava- appearance since 2007, the when Boston swept Milwau- liers won the first three games Cavaliers were back on their kee an d H o u ston n e eded of their respective conference practice court Friday. "It allows some guys who Ralph Sampson's off-balance finals before sticking with the turnaround jumper to dispatch original schedule, which called are bangedup,including mythe Los Angeles Lakers in five for a start date of June 4. self, to get some rest and be games. That season, the CeltNo scheduling conflicts ex- able to get back as close as ics and Rockets had a total of isted ateither the Warriors' full strength as possible. I 13 days off before meeting in home venue, Oracle Arena, or don't think we're going to be the first game of the Finals. the Cavaliers' Quicken Loans able to get there, but as close While other t eams have Arena, butother factors came as possi ble,"James said ofthe had extended layoffs— San into play, including hotel avail- break. "I'm going to do a lot of Antonio had nine days off be- ability and travel for interna- shooting to get my shot back fore facing Miami in the 2013 tional media. on point, where it was kind of Finals — this is the first time The Cavaliers are hoping missing in the last round. Be since 2008 that both confer- the time off will help star point able to get my body feeling ence champions have received guard Kyrie Irving recuperate better. Work my game and get breaks of five days or more. after left knee tendinitis and ready for next week." The NBA used to protect it- a foot problem cost him two The Cavaliers went 3-1 in self from the possibility of the games against Atlanta before the regular season when they postseason losing momentum he returned to score 16 points had at least three days' rest, because of a delayed Finals by in the series clincher. LeBron outscoring opponents by an having a fle xible "move-up" James played to the point of average of 11.5 points in those date, buttheleagueabandoned exhaustion in Game 3 of the contests. The rest was espethat policy because of the lo- conference finals and plans to cially helpful to James, who gistical challenges. Commis- recharge and refresh as he pre- shot 55.3 percent from the field

in those games, compared with 48.8 percent over the entire regular season. The Warriors were 4-0 with

at least three days' rest in the regular season, winning those games by an average of 13.8 points. But that was only a slight improvement from their

seasondifferentialaverage of 10.1. Golden State was knocked

around in its series against the Rockets. Klay Thompson must clear the league-mandat-

ed concussion protocol after he absorbed a flying knee to the head from Trevor Ariza in

Game 5 against the Rockets. Andre Iguodala hurt his right shoulder when Dwight Howard elbowed him on a screen. And league MVP Stephen Curry had a nasty fall in Game 4, leaving him with a head contusion and a dinged-up elbow that required him to wear

a protective sleeve in the series clincher.

NHL PLAYOFFS

MOTOR SPORTS ROUNDUP

Hawks hold off Ducks to make final

Munoz wins1stDetroit weekend IndyCarrace The Associated Press DETROIT — Carlos Munoz understands that his first

IndyCar victory comes with a footnote. That won't stop him from enjoying it. Munoz won Saturday at Belle Isle when the race was

Andretti ended up second, followed by Simon Pagenaud and pole-winner Will Power. This was the first of two IndyCar races this weekend

at Belle Isle. The second is today. Munoz, in the No. 26 Hon-

nals with a blowout victory, the Blackhawks get another

da, gave that manufacturer laps. The 23-year-old Colom- only its second victory of the bian driver had a substan- season in a series dominated tial lead when a caution flag by Chevrolet of late. "I think we mastered tocame out with just over 30 minutes remaining in what day's conditions, and that's was supposed to be a 2-hour why he won the race," said race. The yellow flag was due Andretti, who drove the No. to lightning in the area, and 27 Honda. "I think both Anthe race went under a red flag dretti Autosport and Honda not long after that. are up to the task, and we're "Not the way I wanted to not giving up." win," said Munoz, who had Also on Saturday: his first career victory in 28 Bueecher wins Xflnity starts. "I wanted to win this race:DOVER, Del. — Chris

chance to raise the Stanley

one, 100 percent, all the laps

Cup. Toews scored two goals in the opening minutes, Corey Crawford made 35 saves and Chicago roared into the Stanley Cup Finals with a 5-3 victory over the Anaheim Ducks on Saturday night.

complete. But a win is a win."

calledbecause ofrain after47

By Greg Beacham The Associated Press

ANAHEIM, Calif. — Jona-

than Toews and the Chicago Blackhawks dealt with Game 7 pressure in the same way

they've handled just about everything during their incredible seven-year playoff run. Like champions. And after ending a remarkable Western Conference fi-

B randon

Buescher stretched his fuel, connected with a teammate The anticlimactic ending and held on to win the Xfindetractedfrom a bold per- ity Series at race at Dover

formance by Munoz and Andretti A u tosport t e ammate Marco Andretti, both of

whom stayed out on the track for a while on dry-weather

S a ad , M a r i a n

Hossa and Brent Seabrook also scored for the Black-

International S p e edway. Buescher won for the second time in the past three races

and added to his lead in the series points race. He went

tires before making pit stops 98 miles on his final run, savtoward theend. Munoz took ing just enough fuel to pull the lead when Andretti en- into victory lane. Buescher tered pit rowon lap 40, and he knocked his Roush Fenway remained in front after mak- Racing teammate Darrell ing a stop of his own two laps Wallace Jr. out of the way late

I

cs co

hawks, who will play for their third NHL championship in six seasons when they face

the Tampa Bay Lightning beginning Wednesday night in

later.

in the race to take the lead.

Florida.

After six games of tense hockey in an extraordinary s eries, Game 7 was an i n -

congruous rout. Toews was responsible for it, burnishing his reputation for big-game brilliance with a rebound goal just 2:23 in and another power-play score before 12 minutes elapsed. "There was no easy games,"

Mark J. Terrill/The Associated Press

Anaheim goalie Frederlk Andersen, bottom, looks away as Chicago's Brandon Saad, right, celebrates hls goal with his teammates durlng the second period ln Game 7 of the Western Conference final Saturday in Anahelm, California. The Blackhawks won 5-3 to reach the Stanley Cup final.

we had to earn everything

said. "They played better than complishments in here and us tonight. I'm not telling you some things to be proud of," they are a better team than us. Kane said. "But at the same teams." We didn't do enough to win." time, who knows if these Anaheim lost a Game 7 at The Blackhawks led 4-0 be- opportunities are going to Toews said. "There was noth- home for the third straight fore Ryan Kesler scored late come around this often? We ing given to us. There was no season. in the second period for the thought we were right there "We took another step this moments in this series were Ducks. Corey Perry scored for last year, but we didn't get the there any lulls, where we felt year, going a round farther, Anaheim with 8:24to play, but job done, so it's great to come Anaheim maybe didn't play but ultimately that Game 7 Seabrook scored on a power back a year later and have their best hockey and we we've got to be able to finish," play shortly afterward. that same opportunity and "We've had some good ac- capitalize on it." got away with it. We felt like Ducks captain Ryan Getzlaf against that team. That was an incredible test for b oth

GOLF ROUNDUP

Bowditch takesNelsonlead, leavingSpieth behind The Associated Press

Tour title, was much steadi-

er a day after a wild second round of seven birdies and six Saturday for his second PGA bogeys. IRVING, Texas — Steven Bowditch positioned himself

"I was able to grind it out

on 18 for a double bogey that dropped him into a tie with

2-under 69 to maintain a onestroke lead in the ShopRite

Johnson,Texan Jimmy Walker, Scott Pinckney and Jon

LPGA Classic. Pressel had three birdies and a bogey to

Curran. Pinckney shot 64, reach 7-under 135 on Stockfavorite Jordan Spieth might and still create not a bad golf Randolph 65, and Walker and ton Seaview's Bay Course. have to keep waiting for his score yesterday when things Curran 67. The 27-year-old American first. were looking not so good," Spieth had a 68. The Mas- won the last of her two LPGA Bowditch shot a 4-under Bowditch said. "It was pretty ters champion was tied for Tour victories in 2008. Sweden's Anna Nordqvist was 65 on Saturday in the AT&T important yesterday I felt just 18th. "I just didn't have it," said second. She birdied the last Byron Nelson to take a two- to put myself in position to go stroke lead and leave Spieth again." Spieth, whose first PGA Tour three holes for a 69. six shots back heading into Dustin Johnson was in the start was in th e Nelson as Kjeldsen leads Irish:NEWthe final round. group tied for second after a 16-year-old amateur five CASTLE, Northern I r eland On a mostly sunny day the day's low round of 62 on years ago. — Denmark's Soren Kjeldsen that started w it h t h e s e c- the rain-altered par 69 at TPC Also on Saturday: shot a 4-under 67 to take a twoond straight three-hour de- Four Seasons. Pressel maintains ShopRlte stroke lead in the Irish Open. lay because of earlier rain, Jonathan Randolph, play- lead: GALLOWAY TOWN- The 40-year-old Kjeldsen had Bowditch got to 13-under 195. ing with Spieth and sitting SHIP, N.J. — Morgan Pressel a 7-under 206 total at Royal The Australian, who won the 266 spots behind him in the kept her patience despite a County D o wn . G e r many's Texas Open last year in San world ranking, briefly held steady breeze and greens Maximilian Kieffer was secAntonio for h i s l on e P GA the lead but went in the water that grew bumpy, shooting a ond after a course-record 65. Tour win in Texas. Hometown

COLLEGE BASEBALLROUNDUP

Ducks avoidelimination, cruise pastCanisius The Associated Press

last 10 batters in the final 4'/

SPRINGFIELD, Mo. Scott Heineman hit a two-run double and Shaun Chase had

1I1Illngs.

Jesse Puscheck and An-

t hony Massicci each h ad a two-run homer in Oregon's three hits for the Golden Grif-

four-run first inning, and the fins. J.P. Stevenson (7-4) alDucks cruised to a 12-6 victo- lowed six runs in 2'/~ innings. ry over Canisius in an elimiAlso on Saturday: nation game Saturday at the Rain washes out Dallas reSpringfield regional. glonal:DALLAS — Oregon Heineman and Chase com- State's game against VCU bined for five hits, five RBIs was rained out at the Dallas and five runs for Oregon (38- regional. Today, Texas (3024), which will play against 26) will play Dallas Baptist Iowa, which lost 5-3 to host (43-14) in an elimination Missouri State on Saturday game, followed by a winners' night. game betweenOregon State Oregon led 8-0 after the top (39-16-1) and VCU (38-22). of the fifth and withstood ev-

ery rally by Canisius (34-30).

The Texas-Dallas Baptist winner will then face the Or-

Oregon reliever Trent Pad- egon State-VCU loser in andon (2-3) retired eight of the otherehmmatton game.

Ducks Continued from 01

but Ducks coach Mike White said the program is on the right track.

"We've won t h ree PacHawkins, w h o e n t ered the tournament with a 30-3 12 championships in a row,

record,lost for the second straight game. Janie Takeda's RBI single in the third inning produced the only run for Oregon (51-8). Oregon has not finished higher than third in its four World Series appearances,

which puts us on the level playing field with Arizona and UCLA," he said. "But un-

fortunately, we haven't found a way yet to get over the hurdle here at the big one. But

that doesn't mean we didn't try."


SUNDAY, MAY 31, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

D5

TENNIS: FRENCH OPEN

Trioo oun stan outs itveteranwa By Ben Rothenberg New Yorh Times News Service

PARIS — The three young-

est men remaining in the French Open took the court for their third-round matches

Saturday, and all three lost without taking a set.

Nick Kyrgios, the 29th seed and the most established of the three, was unable to

summon his customary firepower in a 6-4, 6-2, 6-3 loss to third-seeded Andy Murray on Suzanne Lenglen Court. Kyrgios, a flashy 20-yearold Australian with meticu-

Familiar foesFederer,Nonlls to face off PARIS — RogerFedererand GaelMonfils know eachotherand each other's games —quite well. Their fourth-round match today will be their13th meeting overall (Federer leads 8-4) and fourth at the FrenchOpen(Federer leads 3-0). "Roger asks manyquestions," the13th-seeded Monfils said, "and I have to find manyanswers." Monfils has won their most recent two matches, both on clay, and both in straight sets.

It shapes up asthe most intriguing singles contest of the eight on the schedule today, whenrain is in the forecast. Switzerland's Federer is, of course, a17-time GrandSlam champion. France's Monfils has oneonly major semifinal appearance to his credit, but it came in 2008 at RolandGarros, where the showman-at-heart feeds off the partisan fans' support. — TI/e Associated Press

lously styled hair, has built his game around abooming serve thatwas recorded this

year at 137 mph. But with his Kyrgios reached his first right elbow bothering him, he ATP Tour final at a tournaaveraged 106 mph in the loss ment in Portugal this month and struck only two aces. and beat top-seeded Roger " I don't k no w

w hat t he

problem is, but you guys can see for yourselves on the stats, I'm not serving anywhere near the pace I usually serve," Kyrgios said. "It's heartbreaking, really."

Federerin Madrid days later.

But Kyrgios, who also lost to Murray in the quarterfinals of the Australian Open this year,

said he thought his greatest hope remained at Wimbledon, where last year, ranked 144th,

he stunned Rafael Nadal to reach the quarterfinals.

event in Illinois last year when

he watched Kyrgios break through against Nadal, and he said he had been driven by Kyrgios' results as well as those of another young Australian, 22-year-old Bernard Tomic. "It was definitely tough last

year watching Nick break through; I'm not going to lie," Kokkinakis said, adding that

Jae C. Hong /The Associated Press

Aaron Baker, right, a former motocross racer who was paralyzed from the neck down in a crash while practicing on a

when he lost in the first round

motocross track in1999, exercises at the Center of Restorative Exercise in the Northridge section of Los Angeles.

of an event in the wake of Kyrgios' big victory, "I was like, 'Wow, what am I doing?'" Kokkinakis continued, "I

Quadriplegic

had a look at it, and I worked

hard to put myself in these positions to play the greatest players on big courts." The third member of the

Another y oung

p l ayer, young crop had the toughest 8 4th-ranked T h anasi K o k - outing of all. Borna Coric, an kinakis, lost t o t o p -seeded 18-year-old Croatian who was Novak Djokovic, 6-4, 6-4, 6-4, the youngest player remainon Philippe Chatrier Court. ing in the tournament, was Kokkinakis, a 1 9 -year-old swept by the American Jack Australian who broke into Sock, 6-2, 6-1, 6-4. "Today, I b a sically got the top 100 only this spring, was at a c h allenger-levelkilled," Coric said.

Continued from D1 It began with learning to do just one thing, beginning with getting just a few muscles in an arm to work and

one and forgetting about the m i llion,'" Isaacs said, recalling their first meeting when Baker struggled just to shake hands.

then moving on to another

He d i d not make too many

task. promises beyond that, but "Atfirstitwasevenonein p u t B aker on a r egimen a million that I would feed

s t r essingnutrition, flexibility

myself, so walking seemed and repetitive exercise. "But the key part is huout of the question," said Baker, who recently complet- m a n

d e t ermination," said

ed a leg in the international Isaacs, adding he had never Wings For Life run to raise seen anyone with more than awareness of spinal cord research. "So after

a time we learned tofocusonjustthe one. Our approach to the whole Pro cess became just one breath, then until small victo-

B a k er.

The o utgoing

I waS ready

sports his racing

rnyejeCtrjC

t attoos, m ost of

wh e e I Chalr

his mot h er, who

rfgh t Intp th

He walked 20

miles across the gy Mojave Desert last WeI'eri t year for a docu- adapted mentary, t e ntaeP tively titled "Com- to ing ToMySenses" SOmepne like

Photos by Joe Kline/The Bulletin

Participants in the Happy Girls 5K run along the Deschutes River Trail on Saturday.

t h e 1 0 K a w a r d s,

Averi Hartford, a 13-year-old from Redmond, and Kelsey Swenson, 14 and from Bend, sat on the ground and divid-

p art,

Conw a y said she never e n visioned her son walking 20 miles a c ross the dese r t. S he just w a nted him to get better. "We just knew that if w e d i dn't

pur s ue aggressive t herapy all t h e pro g noseswould remai n cor r e ct and Aaron would

remain a quadriplegic ," she said. There i s

no

magical medical cure for an injury like Baker's, in w h i ch he fractured the fourth, and s i xth

Liu, director of the

I t t o o k B aker five days to

"I mean, I wanted to work

e r . T hese days he pedals a

hard. I wanted to overcome home-builtthree-wheeler. "I can ride a two-wheeler this thing," he said. "But

of a second ahead of Swenson

to claim third place, the running buddies had planned to

there were no other options. b u t it's not safe for me stop-

Insurance wasn't going to p i ng and starting," he said. cover any more at the hos- When physicians rebuilt his pital and local gyms weren't body, some of the nerve roots adapted to help someone like on the right side were jettime." soned, leaving him with bal-

stick together during the race

and shared the podium when the awards were announced. "We wanted to run togeth-

er and we wanted to run an

His mother, having quit

8-minute mile, but we ended

up going faster," Hartford said. (The pair finished the 10K at 45:44, which works Half-marathon participants run along the Deschutes River Trail toward the finish line.

Looking for complete results? Find themonline at raceresults.spertstats.us

we both pushed each other to get to this point. Being together and being able to do this was really cool."

She took him to the Center of A c hievement T h rough

mond Oregon Running Klub (RORK) last fall, said this was the first 10K for each of them and their first time run-

f r o m spinal cord and oth-

that represents us," said 10-minute-mile pacer Scott

tation therapies.

White as he gestured to his bright purple skirt. "Lay It

She had heard there was a kinesiology professor who had some success in working with people with spinal-cord injuries.

Out Events has these for us, because I don't have a lot of

finished less than a minute

these in my closet." White, who also owns Fleet Feet Sports i n B e nd, said

good pacers should communicate with th e r u nners in

addition to running a steady race. "(The key to being a good own, while Kristine ran miding for half marathons online. pacer is) being able to talk and "We really enjoyed the let everybody know what's dle-distance events for Doane College in Nebraska until her run — it was gorgeous on the coming, because not everytrack and field season ended trails," Kate said. one that comes to this race "I hadn't been to Oregon in particular is from Bend," Kristine and Kate Mullen, last week. "We ran track together before, and I really wanted to White explained. "They see 22-year-old twin sisters visiting from Omaha, Nebraska, all our lives and then went come," Kristine added. the map and they don't see also crossed the finish line to- to different colleges, and we A few happy guys joined the hills, but I know to get gether, wearing T-shirts that missed running together," the women on t h e c o urse them ready for it so they can said "Happy Twins." Kate explained. "I signed us Saturday, including several be mentally prepared for it." Kate, a recent graduate of both up and told her she was official race pacers who kept Mentally prepared and, of the University of Wyoming, doing it with me." a steady time while sporting course, happy. said she trained by running Kate said she choose the bright, sequined skirts. — Reporter: 541-383-0305, "We try to have something 4 or more miles a day on her Happy Girls run aftersearchvjacobsen@bendbulletin.com Connie Peters sprints to the finish of the Happy Girls half-marathon.

Un t i l then, he keeps busy a t t he Center For Restorative

known for its pioneering er debilitating injuries that work in developing rehabili- he, his mother and Isaacs

ning a race together. They

Oj' I I'

n e n talUnitedStates.

Adapted Physical Activity, Exercise, the small gym dean institution at California signed for people recovering StateUniversity,Northridge,

Swenson an d H a r t f ord, who met through the Red-

a n c e issues.

her job the year before to Sti l l , he has an even more care for him, had exhaust- ambitious goal in mind for ed her savings and sold her next year. He hopes to climb home. California's Mount Whitney, Laquita Conway had her the highest peak in the contiown idea about his future.

that one person won, because

other in middle school track," said Swenson, who attends Sky View M iddle School (Hartford attends Obsidian Middle School). "It was really fun — it was perfect running weather. It looks cloudy, but it was nice."

afterward. F or he r

first moved to. A year earli- walk those 20 miles across er, he thought, he had been the desert last year. When a hotshot racer who had al- he bicycled from San Diego ready landed a professional to Florida in 2007, he rode a sponsorship. tandem bike with his moth-

ed the spoils awarded to the

of Bend, who won in 44:55. "We've run against each

on the first day or let h im quit exercising on any day

f ifth

modest motel that he ha d

third-place finishers, including a tank top, a growler for kombucha, a track bag and snacks. Although Hartford technically finished a fraction

behind Stephanie Hackbarth,

roll into that pool

University of Southern CalWhen he left the hos- i f ornia's N eurorestoration pital after his injury, he C enter. n ever i m a gined s u c h "He just kept working at accomplishments. it like crazy," said Liu. "The "I was ready to drive my message is you should never electric wheelchair right into give up." the swimming pool" at the Not t h atanyofitwaseasy.

Continued from D1

out to about 7:21 per mile.) "It wasn't super important to us

cr e d i ts that t o

— Aaron Baker cervicalvertebrae, said Dr. Charles

the United States — twice.

Happy After

f r i end i s

doing on him. In previous years he bicycled a cross

let e, who proudly

tp drjye

g ries began to add up to the larger po o l . I mea n, one. I Wanted tp Baker, who now gets around work hard. with just a cane, I w a n t ed tO emphasizes h e p y e r C pm e . d id not r u n f a r g his leg at th i S thing. last month's event; But t h e re maybe just a quar- Were n p ter of a mile. One of the poster chil Othel' OPtlofiS. dren for the event, InSuranCe the 3 6 -year-old wasn't gpjng was busy welcom" ny ing others, signing autographs and mOr e at t he PosingforPhotos. hpspjtaj and

t hat a

but modest ath-

For 15 years, he went to

opened in 2011.

Heh a stheplacefestooned with motivational messages, including one counting the steps needed to get to a sushi place down the street t h a t i s favoredbysomeofthe

see Taylor-Kevin Isaacs, the clientele. "My whole process has former CSUN professor. "When Aaron told me been kind of anexception,"

he thought he had a one in he said, "and we would like a million chance of walk- t o make that the rule." Aaron Baker, front, and his mother, Laquita Dian, ride their bikes near the Golden Gate

Bridge in San Francisco in 2008. Mike Hughes via The Associated Press


D6

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MAY 31, 2015

NFL

WOMEN'S SOCCER

Seahawks'Bennettwants a new deal U.S. completesWorld By Bob Condotta

tract worth up to $28.5 mil-

The Seattle Times

lion, with $16 million guaranteed, signed in March 2014, just days before he could have become an unrestri cted free agent.

SEATTLE — Michael Ben-

nett's presence at a dinner in Bellevue, Washington, for his foundation Friday night speaks to his stated desire to

That

r a nk s him

footballoutsiders.com. " I just want to be i n t h e

realm of the guys that play like me," he said. "There are only so many guys that do what I do, and I would love

ti ed

for 14th in average salary per year ($7.125 million) H is absence from t h e among defensive ends in a team's organized team activ- 4-3 defense, according to ities this past week, however, overthecap.com. speaks to another desire — to Bennett said he would like get a new contract from the to be paid at least among the Seattle Seahawks. top eight at his position. AcAnd in comments before cording to o v erthecap.com, h is dinner an d a u ction t o that would give Bennett a raise money to fight child- yearly average salary of $10 h ood obesity, Bennett a c million. "Somewhere near the top knowledged he has asked the Seahawks for a new contract seven at my position, top eight and for now is staying away at my position," Bennett said. from team activities in hopes "Not a lot of guys play inside of getting a new deal. and out (meaning both tack"Trying to get the contract le and end). Not a lot of guys right," said B ennett, when do what I do. So I feel like I asked about sitting out the should be somewhere near set down long-term roots in the Seattle area.

to be like somewhere in there where they are at."

Cup prepwith draw

fined roughly $70,000 for skipping minicamp. Asked how long he would stay away, Bennett smiled

By Ronald Blum

and said: "I will miss whatev-

The Associated Press

er I can miss. Depends how much the fine is."

HARRISON, N.J. — The U nited States' fate at t h e

Women's World Cup may hinge on Alex Morgan's left knee.

Bennett's desire for a new

deal has led to rumors that he ed by Drew Rosenhaus, said would like to be traded, one he has had "a couple conver- specifically mentioning AtBennett, who is represent-

sations" with the Seahawks

T he

ly. "They are going to do their thing and I have to do what I have to do," he said.

It has been regarded as unlikely, at best, that the Seahawks would seriously consider renegotiating Bennett's contract, in large part due to

T hat

r a n ke d h im

ni n t h

we have something special

bruise, hasn't played in a month but says she will be

here and the things that we do

in the community, the players that we have and the team

Bennett is entering the sec- among all defensive linemen in the NFL, according to

ond season of a four-year con-

49ers Continued from 01 "The success rate depends a lot more than on just the ACL itself," Andrews said,

referring to rehabilitation and recovery, both physically and mentally. No other NFL t eam h as

more than four players com-

end of the day, it's all about the business part of it, and

claims ACL

-

No-contact drills in OTAs

do not come without risk.

The ideal situation would be that I get a raise and that will

hold a mandatory minicamp in mid-June. Players can be be something great."

erage is about two players Of course, not per team, and only six rosters all AC L c o me- ~ have no such comebacks in backs s u cceed,de C reaSed, the works. and La t t imore gg ) g jt Sljggg/y ' To get back into Super Bowl retired from his ~ contention, no team needs tri- gutsy try last Noumphantcomebacks as much vember. He toiled ye a rS: 63 as the 49ers, with lineback- for two years af- jf l 2p f 2 er NaVorro Bowman's chief ter a multiple-lig2 ~ among them. ament tear ended "I'd say we're more treating his s e nsationalBr ld 49 Irl Bow like a vet than we are South C a r olina g p g 4 p f l l y treating Bow like a post-inju- career. ry guy,"coach Jim Tomsula It has been 15 said Friday. "We go straight months since Bow- >BBI'S ACL off what the trainers and m an's left k nee t g ~ I S Dgm ~ sports medicine guys rec- r eached Dr. A n "8 ommend, andobviously con- drews' operating verse with the guys to see table in Pensacola, SeaSOn how they're feeling." Florida. Bowman ~c ~ jpii QU $ s ustained a t o r n A CL a n d MCL ~

""

a nd win t h e N F L MVP award in 2012.

Every ACL is different, too.

throughout this World Cup."

jet Tuesday for its training base in Winnipeg, Manitoba.

The Associated Press COMMERCE

CITY ,

Western Conference.

to give Portland a 1-0 lead.

to NFL research.

at Seattle. Also, de-

ball to an open Fernandez, who beat Rapids goalkeep-

"These trainers are on top of it," Andrews said, "particular-

"You have ACL (tears) beAndrews con- in p r a C tiCeS. fen d ers are prevent- ly with the 49ers." ed from striking a cause there are high-speed firmed that Bowpractices with big guys put- man's was a "compasser in the knee MSIINNIINNB~I ting torque on their knee," plex injury," as opposed to an area or below. s aid Dr. D a vid C h ao, t h e isolated ACL tear, which are San Diego Chargers' phy- most common and occur in sician from 1997 to 2013. "A noncontact action.

Jeff M i l l er, the NFL's senior vi c e p resident of health and

ACL."

liberty to discuss Bowman's

u f a ctures. Said Miller: "We're

The 49ers will continue to exercise caution. Sharing that

progress nor any other of a n alyzingcleatpatterns, shoe his 49ers patients, including f lexibility and softness and

prescription isformer 49ers

Dockett and Reaser. (Both

safety policy, said the league h a s a committee dedicated

walk-through becomes a "Multiple ligament tears run-through, and that high a re more complex and take t o "lower-extremity issues." intensity is how you get a foot longer to come back from," Current initiatives are undercaught (in grass) and tear an said Andrews, who was not at w a y w ith shoe and turf man-

cornerback Chris Culliver,

the 49ers' lead orthopedist, artificial versus natural, to opDr. Tim McAdams, and their head trainer, Jeff Ferguson,

layed his 2014 comeback into a free-agent payday with the Washington Redskins. "It's a building block. You're not going to get back and think you're Superman," Culliver said of OTAs. "You have to keep building so the knee gets better through practice. You can't go 1,000 mph." Stark reminders ofpractice-field pitfalls came recent-

declined interview requests ers Association is funding research at Harvard University, for this story.) After sitting out last seathe

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w h er e D r . M a r th a M u r ray ne c t t orn ends of a ligament

practice field, well aware that for self-repair. Another study he faces many more tests. "I there intends to develop more continue to work through the

f l e x ible knee braces.

for at least another year, and

b u t also with the rehab and re-

s

"The medical advances, not little aches I have," he said, "but that's going to be there only in the surgical techniques I've got to figure out a way to covery, it's night and day what these guys get to do," Baalke deal with it." He is not the only one in

reported Thursday that Bron-

c alledofhisA CL rehab."You

cos Pro Bowl left tackle Ryan Clady tore his left ACL during practice Wednesday. Running back K e ndall Hunter, wide receiver Chuck Jacobs, g uar d Br a ndon Thomas, cornerback Keith Reaser and fullback Trey Mil-

have to be patient. It's not go- taken from a patellar or haming to be a weekly or monthly string tendon or from a cadav-

Thomas tore his right ACL

look at their work ethic, look

before the offseason program began in April, and he is rehabbing on the reserve/ non-football-injury list.

at their mental toughness,"

"For an ACL recovery, you

Baalke said, "and you bet on

n e ed three things," Chao said.

his locker room, and he is not sonville Jaguars' Dante Fowl- the first, nor the most famous er (No. 3 overall pick) and the (see: Jerry Rice, 1997). "So many things challenge Denver Broncos' Jeff Heuerman (third round). It was also you mentally," Culliver re-

Wh e n John Madden tore his ACL and MCL as a Philadelphia Eagles rookie in 1958, it was not as if he could choose f r om today's methods of knee r e c onstruction, w it h g r a f t s er. "No, they just stitched it,"

deal."

Baalke, after using three M addenrecalledrecently. draft picks last year o n Whe n R easer reported to ACL-recovering

p r o spects, t h e N F L c ombine last year,

t e n don.

where you think those guys "You need a good injury that's are going to take themselves amendable to recover. If you "A lot of us have worked postinjury." have a multiple ligament injuAndrews w h olehearted- ry it's very tough. Second, you together and motivated each other to get back on the field," ly agreed: "There's a certain have to have a good surgeon. amount of

s a i d l astyear.

hedged that gamble on his m edical exams revealed his staff's analysis of those play- body was rejecting his ACL's cadaver graft, prompting a lard also missed last season ers' mindset. "You try to look at the in- v i sit to Dr. Andrews for a secdue to ACL reconstruction. Outside l i n ebacker C h a se tangibles, look at the wiring, ond surgery using a patellar

years, general manager Trent

SWE> ElmlEh Y'S

t i m i ze player safety." For i t s part, the NFL Play-

ly when two teams saw rookies rip their ACLs: the Jack-

Hunter said. For the sixth time in three

SHSW

REITILS, FITBIKESISKIS

son, Bowman rejoiced last h as developed a bridge to conmonth at r e turning t o

ASSURANCE Iswhatyou getwhen EVERGREEN manages your lovedone's medications

er Clint Irwin i nside the

h a r d ness of turf, in terms of

who missed the 2013 season with an ACL tear and par-

Nextup

Gaston Fer na n d ez scored in the 38th minute Maximiliano Urruti beat three defenders and fed a

2013 ankle fracture

The U.S. leaves by charter

f rom ninth t o s i xth i n t h e

4 9ers n ose 49ers have cornered the martack l e Ian Williams' ket in learning that.

.

Lloyd said. "We'll be just fine."

es, going 1-4-2.

led to

Seattle.

before we head over there."

first time in seven match-

in the 49ers' 2013 i n the NFC c hampion- ~<<S<>SDf)' practice (61 of 224), according ship game loss at . Since 2011, nearly one in four ACL tears has occurred in

"Now's the time to get ev-

erything out of our system

Colo. — Jack Jewsbury New England scored in the 93rd minute at Portland and the Portland Timbers When: 7:30 p.m. rallied in stoppage time to Saturday TV: None beat the Colorado Rapids 2-1 on Saturday night. far post. Portland (5-5-4), which Portland goalkeeper Adam has won tw o s t raight, Kwarasey recorded his sixth snapped a two-game road shutout of the season — tying losing streak and won at him for second in the MLS Colorado (2-4-7) for the — to help the Timbers move

known as more difficult to

Every recovery is unique. The

minute after Morgan Brian pulled the ball back.

Late winnerfor Timbers

ye a r's A C L tears recover than baseball, for came i n regular-sea- example. son a c t ion. But 22 "A defensive back and wide occurred in the pre- receiver needs everything season, including 12 perfect to make it at their posiin pra c tices. tion," Andrews said. "Power is Rule chan g es extremelyimportant for alinehave helped, some- man coming out of a stance. A what. Blockers were running back has got to cut banned last y ear and change direction. Everyf rom r o l ling up on one is a little different." er's leg. Such a play

open 10-yard shot in the 49th

MAjOR LEAGUE SOCCER

back muscle. That is common in AC L p a tients, Andrews

the side of a defend-

"We need her. We need her

to win," said forward Abby Wambach, who may get more playing time because of Morgan's injury. "I'm comfortable if she doesn't start games. I'm comfortable if she comes offthe bench, that we still are successful

Three days shy of her 35th birthday, Wambach started The Americans' first-round in her 2 42nd i nternation- group also includes games al appearance in the only against Sweden and former change by Ellis from the coach Pia Sundhage on June starters in the 5-1 win over 12 and Nigeria on June 16.

said, noting that athletes esThe NFL cl a ims pecially have a lot of muscle to AC L i n j uries have not only lose and thus reclaim. The degree of difficulty also decreased, a l beit slightly, in r ecent varies among a player's poyears: 63 in 2012, 57 sition, just as does it among in 2013, a nd 49 in different sports, with soccer 2014. Only 27 of last

Americans had few good scoring chances. The best

opener against Australia on from an open goal line and June 8. Coach Jill Ellis, try- c ouldn't get her h ead on ing to lead the U.S. to its first Meghan Klingenberg's cross World Cup title in 16 years, from the left flank. South said Morgan will have to Korea goalkeeper Kim Jungbuild her minutes at the tour- mi stuck out her right hand nament in Canada. to bat away Carli Lloyd's

and the coaches. I think it's a great organization. But at the

Baalke has drafted a player when we get in rehab and be- well to his patellar graft (performed by McAdams at Stancoming off a torn ACL: Geor- come cheerleaders to them." g ia Tech wide receiver DeAnInsp i r ation a l s o co m e s ford) that he started 14 games dre Smelter (fourth round). He from success stories. Frank last year. His free-agent stock is expected to "medically red- Gore tore the ACL in both of soared, and he scored a fourshirt" as a rookie. That was h i s k n ees in college but be- year, $32 million deal from the the tactic for 2013 draft picks came the 49ers' all-time lead- Redskins. Culliver still vividly recalls Tank Carradine and Marcus ing rusher. Adrian Peterson Lattimore, as well r ushed back f r o m his 2013 post-surgery strughis December 2011 gles, from his leg "feeling like as last year's trio of Thomas, Reaser The NFL knee inj u ry to total Jell-0" and needing to build

ing offan ACL tear. The av-

the South Koreans 15-7, the

was in t h e 3 6t h m i n ute, A m ericans' when Wambach was 1 yard

ready for t h e

the team's stated policy of not

could end when the Seahawks

June8 TViFS1

2 5 - year-old s t a r Mexico on May 17. Wam-

warmup match. Morgan, outwith a bone

Seahawks," he said. "I think

sometimes people see your redoing deals that have more value as something else and first three OTAs this week. there." than a year remaining. sometimes you see your value "I'll be there shortly. I don't Bennett played a l most Bennett, who led the Se- as something different, and know when I'll be there. De- 85 percent of the snaps for ahawks in 2014 with seven it's just part of the business. "We'll see what happens. pends on the team and stuff. the Seahawks last season. sacks, hinted that his holdout See how it works out."

United States vs. Australia When:4:30 p.m.

forward missed her third bach replaced Megan Rapistraight game, a listless 0-0 noe, who had a sore quadridraw against South Korea ceps in training Friday. on Saturday in their final While the U .S. outshot

lanta. But he reiterated what

about his contract, but none he has said previously in resince OTAs began Tuesday. gard to those stories: that he But Bennett said "it's un- hopes to stay in Seattle. "I see myself being with the derstandable" that the team has not talked to him recent-

Nextup

d e pression that A n d t h en, you need good re-

comes with any injury. That's hab. You have to be 3-for-3." w hy we need to be upbeat Cul l iver's ACL t ook s o

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Market Recap, E4-5 Sunday Driver, E6

© www.bendbulletin.com/business

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MAY 31, 2015

Bing no longer a search site blip

Autism

innovation

may be headed to market

By Matt Day The Seattle Times

By Dugan Amett

REDMOND, Wash. In Microsoft's expensive,

The Kansas City Star

decadelongbattle against Google's search engine, no

In the year and a half or so since a group of Kansas

-

KANSAS CITY, Mo. „.

"n

detail is too smalL Derrick Connell, a Mi-

City-area students in a

school district engineering program helped bring

crosoft vice president in chargeoftheengineering side of the 4,000-person team that builds the company's Bing Web search, takes work home with him every weekend.

it to fruition, the Sensory

Lounger has enjoyed quite a run.

The high-tech chair has warranted significant attention across the Kansas

City area recently. And last month, the project received a prestigious Ed-

Connell reviews lists

of common queries people type into the search boxesatGoogle.com and Bing.com. His team has spliced the universe of

-

Photos by Joe Kline/The Bulletin

Bruce Cleveland, founder of the Bend Polytechnic Academy, stands inside the1001 Tech Center, where the new program will be starting in July.

ison Award for health and

wellness innovation. (For context, products from

possible search requests

Motorola, the Dow Chem-

into 40 areas, like nearby

ical Co. and Gillette also were honored.)

places or news. Those cat-

egories break up into 152 sub-segments. In some, Bing displays more helpful results, he says. Others favor Google.

Each is a battleground. "We want to be the best,"

Connell says. "We believe in our technology."

L

How much the rest of the

world believes in Bing is up for debate.

By one measure, the search engine now exe-

• Bend Polytechnic Academy aimsto bridge gap between college, employment

cutes a record one out of

By Stephen Hamwaye The Bulletin

every five searches made on desktop computers in the U.S., a milestone Mi-

n early July, 16 college students and recent graduates from

crosoft Chief Executive Satya Nadella touted last

Tammy Ljungblad/The Kansas City Star

Joshua Jackson, 11, a fourth-grade student at

around Oregon will gather at the 1001 Tech Center for a six-

month in a meeting with Wall Street analysts. But

Timber Creek Elementary

week digital marketing course that program founder Bruce

Bing's standing internationally, and in fast-growing mobile search, is a

Cleveland says will provide students with the skills necessary to

Kansas, tests out an early model of a Sensory Loung-

fraction of that. Still, executives and

succeed with technology companies.

er, designed by students from the Blue Valley Center

School in Overland Park,

outside observers say Bing has gone from the butt of jokes and awk-

for Advanced Professional Studies.

The program is Bend Poly-

ward product placement

technic Academy, known

in movies to a tool comparable to Google's in terms

colloquially as Bend Poly. Clevelend said it's designed to bridge the ever-widening gap betweencollegeandemployment at a tech company by teaching students how to use sales and marketing

of its technology. The calls to shelve the business or sell it to a competitor

have quieted. Microsoft has integrated Bing's underlying data-crunching technology into its other

programs that companies are adopting. "What if we were to create

a program where we took these bright kids in Oregon out of these great universities here, and we begin to teach them these skill sets that are

in high demand?" Cleveland

salcl. A Silicon Valley veteran, Cleveland spent time at Ora-

which focus on software that helps companies market more efficiently and with better

de, Apple and AT&T before joining the Menlo Park-based

data. But many of these applications have a significant

InterWest Partners in 2006. At InterWest, Cleveland worked with companies Marketo and Salesforce.com,

learning curve, making it dif-

Now, the man behind the chair — which provides the kind of full-body, deep-touch pressure many

ficult for companies to imple-

children with autism

ment the software effectively.

crave — has even bigger plans. Stuart Jackson, a local

software, and plans to tie system.

Bing's predecessors Bing was officially unveiled six years ago June 1, emerging from earlier, largely unsuccessful forays into search. Microsoft, like many

IL

companies, was inconsistent in its early response to the growth of the Internet. In 1995, then-CEO Bill

Gates wrote a now-famous memo exhorting employees to convert Microsoft's tools so that they could be SeeBing/E5

stts

The Bend Polytechnic Academy will be held in a shared conference room inside the

The New York Times

Center for Advanced Professional Studies pro-

gram,recently formed a business, the Sensory Chair Co., with an eye to-

ward getting the chairs to market. This summer, he'll

offer a number of paid internships to members of the CAPS program in an effort to produce enough chairs to begin undergoing testing for safety and effectiveness. There are plans, too, to hire on several people with autism to

aid in the process. SeeChair/E5

school. At the Zietz family dinner

en e ra iono C ie exeeu ive sweet-talking in search of a

laterbedtime or special favors. They're genuinely interested

offer."

"Why not?" he asked. "Because he doesn't even

Perhaps the most compelling familybusiness narrative has longbeen about passing

table in Boca Raton, Flori-

on an enterprise to the next

after, sometimes long after,

TouchSuite's recent acquisition of a Canadian company that

generation. But with small business startups proliferating, and frequently growingin step with the children of company

one of the children asks their

added 42 employees to the

punch.

father, Sam, about his day at work as the chief executive of

family company's nearly 80 workers in the United States. The family's favorite binge-viewingis a show Rachel started watching soon

"I always wanted to be an entrepreneur," said Zietz, 47, who explained that he did so

da, the question "How was school today?" often comes

TouchSuite.

The company, founded in prise but the spirit of enterprise 2003, offers an array of finan— the desire to create a new cial and technological services one — that is being passed on for small businesses. By 2014, to the next generation. it had grown to $28 million More and more successful in annual revenue. The children — Rachel, 14, Jordan, 13, entrepreneurs are grooming their children to be chief exec- and even 9-year-old Morgan, utives of startups, sometimes who has aspirations just like starting as early as middle her older siblings — are not founders, it is not just the enter-

with the students in the

Bend Poly will be taking place at the 1001 TechCenter, which formally opened this month at1001 SWEmkay Drive, the former home ofthe Deschutes National Forest Supervisors Office. The center, referred to as BendTech, is a27,000-square-foot building designed to act as ahub for Bend's local tech communities. The space includes amix of co-working spaces andconference rooms. Stackhouse Coffee, a local coffee shop, is also part of the space. Companies working in the spaceor that have signed on tomovethere include: Pneuma33Creative Agency, FiveTalent,SevenPeaksVenturesand Kollective.

1001 Tech Center, a new co-working space and hub for tech-related companies.

aisin e n e By John Grossmann

businessman and driving force behind the project who has worked closely

Bend'snewtechhud

it closely to its upcoming Windows 10 operating

used for the Web.

SeeBend Poly/E2

in business developments, like

after her 10th birthday. With

the pride of a father pointing to a child executing a perfect double axle, Zietz recalled his

young daughter announcing at the end of one entrepreneur's pitch on "Shark Tank":

"This guy is not getting an

own his own IP," she said, referring to intellectual property, and beating the "sharks" to the

only after becoming a lawyer and specializing in tax law and deal-making. "In the '80s it wasn't cool to be an entrepre-

e.

Sl'i "p: c, e

neur, like it is now. Back then,

if you were an entrepreneur it was because you couldn't get a job." (Of course, that can sometimes be the case today) SeeCEO grooming/E3

Angel Valentin /The New York Times

The Zietz family watches the television series "Shark Tank" together at their home in Boca Raton, Florida. Two of the children, Rachel

and Jordan, have already created their owncompanies after completing the YoungEntrepreneurs Academy program.


E2

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MAY 31, 2015

BUSINESS MONDAY Career InReal Estate Workshop:Jim Mazziotti, Exit Realty Bendprincipal managing broker, todiscuss careers in real estate; 6p.m.; Exit Realty, 354 NE GreenwoodAve., Suite109, Bendor 541-480-8835.

TUESDAY What's Brewing?Bend'e TownHall: Clearing theHaze AroundMeasure 91:Looking at howMeasure91wil impactyour workplace, theblack market, taxes, economicdevelopment and law enforcement; 5p.m.; Deschutes Brewery & Public House,1044 NW Bond St., Bend;541-382-3221.

WEDNESDAY BusinessStartup: Coverthe basics

END

in this two-hour class anddecide if running a business is for you; 11a.m. $29; registration required; COCC Chandler Lab, 1027 NW Trenton Ave., Bend; www.cocc.edu/sbdc or 541-383-7290. What's Hot inFranchising!: Explore the possibility of owning your own franchise; 6 p.m. $29; registration required; COCC Chandler Lab, 1027 NWTrenton Ave., Bendor 541-383-7290.

THURSDAY Nonprofits OpenLab:Search for grants using Foundation Directory Online with assistance from staff, use one of our laptops or bring your own;1 p.m.; RedmondPublic Library, 827 SW DeschutesAve., Redmond or 541-617-7089. Real World Project Management:

To submit an event, visit bendbulletin.comlevents and click "Add Event" at least 10days before publication. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Questions: businessibendbulletin.com, 541-383-0323.

Learn to navigate all phases of project management, including howto successfully initiate, plan, execute, control and close out projects applying industry accepted project management best practices; 8:30 a.m.; $125; registration required; Central OregonCommunity College, 2600 NWColleg eWay,Bend or 541-383-7270. Team DevelopmentForGreater Productivity:Explore team development, the keyto highperforming teamwork andsteps to creating synergy;1 p.m.; $95; registration required; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NW College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270. Central Oregon Impact Summit: The Central Oregon lmpact Summit is a project of BendChamber's Leadership BendClass of 2015. At this inaugural competition, five organizations will compete for

a $10,000 prize; 5:30 p.m.; $25; Central Oregon Community College — Wille Hall, 2600 NWCollege Way, Bend; www.bendchamber.org/or 541-382-3221.

SATURDAY ArduineWorkshop: Work with an Arduino kit to create aproject; noon; East Bend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Road, Bend;www. deschuteslibrary.org or 541-312-1032.

June13 HemebuyerEducationClass:Learn about services that can helpwith the process of purchasing ahome;9 a.m.; $45 per household; Redmond Neighborlmpact Office, 2303 SWFirst St., Redmond; www.neighborimpact. org/homebuyer-workshopregistration/or 541-323-6567.

Open ComputerLab: Freetime to practice your computer skills or get your questions answered. Bring your own device or useoneof our laptops; 1:30 p.m.; RedmondPublic Library, 827 SW DeschutesAve., Redmondor 541-617-7089.

WordPress, Intermediate:Learn to customize yourWordPress site with themes andhow to best protect your site from spammers, hackers and malware; continues through July1; 6 p.m.; $179; registration required; Central OregonCommunity College, 2600NW CollegeW ay,Bend; 541-383-7270.

June 18

June 25

BusinessStartup: Coverthe basics in this two-hour class anddecide if running a business is for you; 11a.m.; $29, registration required; Central Oregon Community College Redmond Campus— TechnologyEducation Center, 2324 NE College Loop, Redmond; www.cocc.edu/sbdc or 541-383-7290.

Meet with Haggenleaders: The new grocery chain in Bendinvites those interested in selling their wares on Haggenshelves, nonprofits that want to learn about the community giving program andsmall businesses that want to explore co-marketing programs; 5 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College Hitchcock Auditorium, 2600 NWCollege Way, Bend; www.haggen.com/or 502-250-4750.

June 16

June 22 Build a BusinessWebsite with

DEEDS • Nicholas D.McCallion andDenis M. Huyler to Michael B.CokerandDeborah L Allen, North Pilot ButteFirst Addition, Lot 2, Block 3,$248,900 • Lands Bend Corp.to Franklin Brothers LLC, Mirada,Phase1,Lot58, $322,800 • Franklin Brothers LLC to Wiliam C. Janulewiczand LisaB.Janulewicz, Mirada, Phase 1, Lot58,$322,800 • William C. andLeianneL.Stinton, trustees ofthe Stinton Trust, toTimothy R. Gray, Deer ParkI, Lot9, Block 2,$295,000 • The MelMcDougalFamily Foundation to Sarah E.andDavidC. Kailin, Township17, Range12,Section16, $399,900 • Christopher D.Roschto MichaelJ. and Barbara M.Cotton, Quail PineEstates, Phase 7,Lot4, $335,000 • Rogue Builders LLCto Robertand Cynthia Enderby,LavaCrest South, Lot 1, $189,000 • Mark A. and Erica L. Ellis to Johnand Evita A.Tompkins, SunCountry Estates, Lot 2, Block1, $247,500 • Roger W. andCynthia M.Grossmannto Janet E.Morris, Township17,Range12, Section 30,$350,000 • HaydenHomesLLCto Christopher M. andConnieG.Heim,Vilage Pointe, Phases4-7,Lot173, $209,936 • Joseph E.andPamelaA. Moritz to Eagan J.Irish, Tanglewood,Lot20, Block 12, $240,000 • Steven E. andCarol A. Hall andAndrew andStephanieH.Zurek,to RonaldT.and Laura E.Bailey, FairwayCrestVilage 5, Lot17, Block26, $360,000 • Christopher Reddy andKarenWeiner to Zachary A.andSabrina L. Robinson, Stage StopMeadowsFourth Addition, Lot 47, $219,900 • Terry A. Vollertsen, trustee ofthe Vollertsen LivingTrust, to EdwardJ. Mouillesseaux,ObsidianEstates No.2, Lot 88, $155,000 •LouisN.Weischedel,also knownas

Louis Weischedel, toRalphV.Alcocer, Mountain ViewPark, Phase2, Lot 91, $199,000 •Johannes 0.and JoyceY. Mosbo, trustees oftheMosbo Family Revocable Trust, to RebeccaL Jones,WestRidge Subdivision, Lot 4,Block2,$660,000 • Craig andCynthia L.Alacano, trustees of the CraigandCynthia AlacanoJoint Trust, to RDMNAPA LLC,Planerville, Tract13, $1,470,000 •FannieMae,alsoknownasFederal National MortgageAssociation, to Anthony J.andAustin J. Fletcher, ChoctawVillage, Lot1, Block 5,$186,000 • Joshua Murrayto Patrick B. andKelly B.Jordan,Awbrey PointTownhomes,Lot 8, $339,900 •HaydenHomesLLCtoCarieRomain, GlenedenII, Lot11,$256,000 • Donald K.andCorinne Prayto Edward D. andJoanH. Helton, andJacob E. Helton, Partition Plat2006-33, Parcel2, $272,000 • RaoulP. and Janice G.Furryto Bryan D. and JessicaFurry, DiamondBarRanch, Phase 1,Lot16, $161,000 • Marian Cosner, trustee of theJack C. CosnerandMarianCosner Revocable Living TrustAgreement, to RobertS. and Maria E. Jackson, Wilow Creekat Mountai nHigh,Lot35,$349,000 • Shawn A.and Patricia Wallace to VVI LLC, TownsiteofRedmond,Lots2-5, Block15, $550,000 • Robert T. and SarahR.Agnewto Craig R. andSusanJ. O'Connor,AwbreyGlen Homesit es,Phase6,Lot126,$727,000 •FannieMae,alsoknownasFederal National MortgageAssociation, to Justin B. GoodkindandNicole M. Bassett, Shevlin Ridge,Phase1,Lot 5,$507,000 • Robert J. LuomaandMarilyn M. Luoma to Dale F. andPamela S.Rockwell, Tillicum VillageSecondAddition, Lot11, Block 6,$265,000

• Brandon J.andNicole M.Conover to Thomas D.andMaria L. Rowley,First Addition to Bend Park, Lot20-22, Block 112, $295,000 • Debuki Properties LLC to Stephanie Donovan,Deschutes,Lot12, Block9, $450,000 • BrendanS.andSennehP.O'Reily to Robert E.Porter,Sterling Pointe, Phase1, Lot 32, $239,000 • Rutherford Properties LLC to SeanD. Hellwig, LavaRidges, Phase4, Lot174, $285,000 •ThomasJ.andGailL.Hanoverto Cynthia A.Norgaard,CanyonPoint Estates, Phase 4, Lot89, $232,500 • Lands Bend Corp.to Franklin Brothers LLC, Mirada,Phase1,Lot72, $300,000 • Franklin Brothers LLCto David E.and Cleo Morgan,Mirada, Phase1, Lot72, $300,000 •CraigGribskovtoJamesE.andAmanda West, RiverTerrace,Lot 21,Block10, $671,100 • Choice One Builders LLCto Ronald and Jessica Klinski, Chase Vilage, Lot11, $278,900 •HaydenHomesLLC toJohnD.Olson, MarketplaceSubdivision, Lot 5,$255,000 • CombinedResources LLCto Patrick W. Kennedy,Ridgewater II P.U.D.,Lot49, $350,000 Crook County • Mario and Bonnie L. Villastrigo, trustees of the Villastrigo Living Trust, to David E.Chambers, Township 15, Range15, Section 18, $270,000 • Raymond and Linda D. Cuellar to John W. Sullivan, Township14, Range16, Section 29, $175,500 • Shawn Adamson to Evert and Suzie Twiss, Hidden Springs, Lot2, Block 14, $150,550 • Jeffery E. McShatko, trustee of the Jeffery E. McShatko Revocable

Deschutee County • Michael D.andKristin Laneto TyeJ. and Lani L. Voyles,GoldenMantle Second Addition, Lot8, Block3, $330,000 • Matthew Laub to MarkR.andWendy M. Burkhardt, Sundance East, PhaseII, Lot7, Block 3,$345,000 • Pahlisch Homes Inc. to Lamont D. Boileau III andTiffany A. Boileau, Lava Ridges, Phase4, Lot142, $325,000 •DannyS.LovelesstoStephanieA. Howe,Arrowhead,Phases1-4, Lot19, $255,000 •FannieMae,alsoknownasFederal National MortgageAssociation, to Kathl eenandTerryQuick,Squaw Back WoodsAddition to IndianFordRanch Homes,Lot 50,$185,000 • Kevin L. andCindy M.Sparks to Bradley D. andDanielle Y.Tilden, BrokenTop, Phase1E,Lot74,$680,000 • Tetherow Glen 58LLCto Gregory J. and SusanL. Hawkins, trustees of the HawkinsFamilyRevocableLivingTrust, Tetherow,Phase2, Lot66, $228,000 • SACE Inc.,doingbusiness asBend Trend Homes, to ChehabChehaband Gail Chehab, Tetherow, Phase1,Lot 73, $1,147,273 • Monty K. andMaureenC.Vandermay, doing businessasTheVandermay Law Firm, to DannyS.Loveless, Forest ParkII, Lot 6, Block15,$292,500 •StevenP.OlinandCandyceSouza-Olin, trustees ofthe StevenP.andCandyce Souza-OlinRevocableTrust, andKelly M. i Ol n,toJamesC.and NancyE.Hoyt, Skyliner Summitat Broken Top, Phase2, Lot 94, $333,500 • Inga S. Manskerto MichaelT.and Kathleen M.Blesius, trustees of the Blesius FamilyTrust, McCaffery's First Addition to Sisters, Lots1-2, Block 7, Partition Plat2004-20, Parcel2, $432,000 • Yvonne M.Pauley,whoacquired title as

YvonneM.Nugent,toJaniceF.andDaniel J. Stern, trustees oftheJanice Fang Stern andDaniel JasonStern Revocable Trust, NorthwestTownsiteCo.'sSecond Addition to Bend,Lot2, Block31,Bonne HomeAddition to Bend,Lot22, Block20, $425,000 • Robert K. Smith, trustee ofthe Ronald W. Smith Trust, toJaniceE.Sandberg, Foxborough,Phase2,Lot110,$215,000 • Matthew W. andTamara M. Mitchell to Neil andHilary Lahey,North Rimon Awbrey Butte,Phase4, Lot 87,$1,161,000 • Bryan T.Reinhardt to ShaneR.andAnna M. mbeck Li ,Oakview,Phase2,Lot1, $296,000 • Hayden HomesLLCto Garland P.and Judy M.Master,Village Pointe, Phases 4-7, Lot181,$173,865 • Becky Vaughn,trustee of the KipilaGertler Trust, toPabloPena,Township15, Range13,Section21,$780,000 • Vergent LLC to MarkW. andHeather M. Weiermann,Wiestoria, Lots 3-4, Block 15, $215,000 • Lands Bend Corp. to Franklin Brothers LLC, Mirada,Phase1,Lot 69,$315,000 • Franklin Brothers LLC to Christopher E. Barth andKimberly K.Rodriguez,Mirada, Phase1, Lot69, $315,000 •GeneM.andSusan L.ParktoRichard J. SchuurmanandHeidi A.Wright, Orion Greens,Lot34, $380,000 • Bella Villa HomesCorp.to ToddC.and Marni M.Seneker,CalderaSprings, Phase 3, Lot14, $625,000 • Northwest TrusteeServices Inc. to FannieMae,alsoknownasFederal National MortgageAssociation, Tollgate Eighth Addition, Lot376, $402,023.67 • Frank V.andElizabeth M.Jacobsen to Christopher E.andErin M. Borla, Starr Ranch, Lot12, Block1, $925,000 • Bryant Greento Jonathan K. Pauole and RyanC.Cauthron RevocableTrust, Tetherow,Lot169, $315,000

BendPoly

tially become a "professional skills academy" that could "What can we do to transform Bend from being hireoncethe program ends. "These students are going draw young professionalsas a community that's really reliant on tourism, to have a real understanding well as college students,crewhich is highly cyclical?" of howprogressi ve com panies ating a pipeline of technology are approaching marketing," talent that could buoy Bend's — Bruce Cleveland, founder of the Bend Polytechnic Academy Baldwin said. economy. "I can't add a lot of value to In addition, each group will be pairedwith a mentor, some- the Bay Area, but I might be ing skills to intelligent, driven Whilethe final details of the one unaffiliated with the com- able to help transform Bend," students without backgrounds projects are still being ironed pany whomstudents can go to Cleveland said. intechnology. out, Baldwin said companies with questions aboutthe proj— Reporter:541-617-7818, S ixteen students wil l b e such as G5 and the San Fran- ect, or about the techindustry shamway@bendbuffetin.com part of the initial course, from cisco-based software compa- in general. "We're hoping the relationuniversities suchas OSU-Cas- ny InsideViewhad signed on cades, University of Oregon's to design projectsfor students, ship doesn't end on August14," Lundquist School of Business rangingfrom digital marketing Baldwin said. and George Fox University. campaigns to designing conGoing forward, Cleveland BUV •TRAOE •SEll • CeleleNMEITS Christine Coffin, director of tent strategiesfor mobile appli- plans to add courses other Great supply of Ammo s Guns At Great prices! •OPEI 1 eavsA W EEK communications & outreach cation releases.The companies than digital marketing. He 541.526.06tz 2625 NE Butler Market Rd • Bend for OSU-Cascades,said Bend benefit because it allows them said Bend Poly could potenTriggerHappycunseendoregon©gmail.com Poly offered scholarships to two OSU-Cascadesstudents to alleviate the $2,500 cost of the program. "We're obviously supportive of education in all fash-

Continued from E1 "There's justnot a lot of people in senior positions who've actually used that software,

and they're trying to h ire people who have," Cleveland said. "It's very challenging to find them, and when they do, they're expensive and difficult to recruit."

He saidBend Poly developed as a solution to that problem. Cleveland, who currently splits his timebetween the San Fran-

ciscoBay Area and Bend, said the goal is to improve the tech

community in hi s adopted home. "What can we do to trans-

form Bendfrom being a community that's really reliant on

tourism, which is highly cyclical?"Cleveland said. "We want to create a talent pool in Bend."

Such a talent pool has been one of the missing pieces for

to cultivate talent that they can

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ions, and Bend Poly's addition

Bend's tech community. Corey Schmid, an investment partner with Seven Peaks Ventures, pointed out that, unlike

should make it an important part of the educational landscape,"Coffin said. While a handful of the stu-

many techhubs, Bend lacks a stand-alone four-year college, although Oregon State University-Cascades is developing into one.

dents are from Bend, others are from the Willamette Val-

"Local high school students

Living Trust, to Janeen M.Wienke, Township14, Range15, Section 36, $239,000 • Blane C. andPatricia C. Boles to Garry and Kathryn Likens, Partition Plat1999-03, Parcel 1, $205,000 • Andrew H. and SusanY. Erskine to Jerry D. Stone, Township15, Range 16, Section 29, $265,000 • Kirk Adamsto Kristina M. Sherwin, Township14, Range16, Section 32, $168,000 • Pahlisch Homes Inc. to Christine M. Hulstein, Ochoco Pointe P.U.D., Phase 2, Lot137, $243,000 • Margo Matthews to Cindy L. Jones, Aspen Heights Subdivision, Phase3, Lot 23, $178,000 • Matthew C. andAmanda L. Shaffer to Julie G. Anderson, Northridge Subdivision, Phase 6, Lot167, $168,000 • Ochoco Mint Growers Inc. to Gerald and Melinda Wilkinson, Township l4, Range 16, Section 19, $450,000 • Darryle A. and Margaret Mendes to J.M. and L.S. Dunn, Partition Plat 2004-18, Parcel1, $176,000 • Rand R Ranches LLCto MichaelS. Eldridge, Prineville Lakes Acres, Unit 2, Lot 2, Block16, $184,500 • Ryan S. and Andrea R. Couchto Jeffrey B. and Judy A. Fields, trustees of the Jeffrey B. andJudy A. Fields Revocable Trust, Township15, Range 15, Section 29, $330,900 • Michael A. and Shanon Shatto to Jimmy S. andHeather D.O'Daniel, Puckett Estates, Unit1, Lot3, $245,000

ley and elsewhere in the state, which helps pitch Bend to stu-

dentswho might not be as familiar withit.

don't have to look elsewhere, "Bend kind of sells itself," they can stay in the commu- Cleveland said. nity where they grew up," Cari Baldwin, president of Schmidsaid of regions with es- the Be nd-based ma r keting tablished research universities. agency Bluebird Strategies, For companies that are tryvolunteered to bethe chief ining to grow in Bend, this short- structor of the pilot program. age of qualified local talent She said the dass will be dimeans hiring from outsidethe vided roughly into two parts, region,which Schmid said can with the first four weeks taught be expensivefor companies by executivesand industry anddifficult for employees, due experts from local and multito Bend's limited supply of af- national companies. Baldwin fordable housing. said students would be learn"We would loveto have a ing programs like Salesforce, bigger pipeline of talent in Nanigans, LinkedIn, Zendesk Bend,"Schmid said. and Marketo,among others. "The Marketo training is a Cleveland emphasized that the program is designed to big one," Baldwin said, "The augment,ratherthan supplant, headhunters are looking for a traditional university edu- anyonewith Marketo training." cation. Rather than targeting She said thefinal two weeks, computer science s tudents, starting at thebeginning of Auwho already have a leg up gust, will featuregroup projwhen attemptingto find work, ects designed to apply these Cleveland saidthe focus would digital marketing concepts, be on teaching digital market- primarily for local companies.

"With every graduate of OSU-Cascades, there is greater potential for this

L

community over the long term."

pt •

Jaime Aguirre Co-owner, Ginger's Kitchenware Former board member, Latino Community Association

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SUNDAY, MAY 31, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

E3

Interns i scan a o, utsometimescar a ea cost By Eric Adler and Mara RoseWilliams

know, and it's probably true, is

The Kansas City Star

that says they didn't do anything. So it's got to be some-

K ANSAS CITY, M o .

tigious White House internships, are not paid.

p$p Ig ) p'

that they don't want a resume

Rarely since the days of Mon- thing ... It shows that 'I was ica Lewinsky and President trying, learning something. I Bill Clinton have scandalmon- was willing to work.'"

Qas

Many of these internships

work the same way. Students pay regular university tuition, minus campus fees. At KU,

Loomis said, the school tries

gers been so fixated on the

to get students the best deal

prizes and pitfalls of a college Paid or unpaid internship. Not all internships are cre-

on dormitory-style housing in Washington — about $3,000 for

The reason is obvious: the

ated equal. Nor are all intern-

four months — and offers need-

revelation by Th e K ansas City Star that Missouri House Speaker John Diehl — 49-yearoldmarried fatherofthreeand one of the most powerful play-

ships equal in their power to generate future jobs. One of the biggest determiningfactors is whether aninternship comes with a paycheck.

based scholarships to some. "They get terrific experi-

ers in state politics — had been

ence," Loomis said. "Twen-

ty years ago, a lot of interns would be stuffing envelopes or standing by the copy machine. But these days in many cases, interns are crucial to how the

The National Association of

swapping sexually charged Collegesand Employers'2014 cellphone texts with a 19-year- student survey included 44,000 old Capitol intern.

responses from students, in-

Diehl apologized, saying, "I am wrong and truly sorry," and resigned. The scandal comes at a time

duding 10,210 from seniors getting bachelor's degrees at nearly 700 colleges and universities. when millions of students in Nearly 61 percent of the 2014 Keith Myers/The Kansas City Star two- and four-year colleges graduates had internships be- Intern Austin Ryan, 19, of Lawrence, Kansas, helps set upfor the T-Bones gamethat night. find themselves clamoring for fore they graduated, the report competitive internships, see- said. Slightly more than half ing them as must-have resume of those who had an intern- critical to our overall recruit- juries. job discrimination as other buildersand keys to coveted ship, either paid or unpaid, ment strategy." The U.S. Department of La- employees. Eighty-five percent of Burns bor publishes six guidelines jobs. received job offers before they But in most states, unpaid inBut just as the perceived val- graduated. & McDonnell's interns are con- that for-profit companies must terns do not have similar rights. "They are working on faith, ue of internships has grown, But data collected over the verted to full-time employees, meet to hire unpaid interns. so too have questions over last four years comparing the she said. Among them: Internships are hoping they will get something who benefits most from the results of paid internships to Unpaid interns, on the oth- for the benefit of interns, not (a job) at the end," Pianko said. arrangements. While intern- unpaid internships to having er hand,fared comparatively employers; interns do not dis- "But most of the time, they shipscan hold great value as no internship at all have re- poorly. No matter which sector, place other workers; and in- don't get the job. They are becareerstarters,they also can peatedly turned up the same only about 40 percent of un- terns receive career training of ing usedforfreelabor." create an environment — with result: Students with paid in- paid student interns received a sort that might further their Many unpaid interns receive college students hungry for ternships did far better in the job offers before graduating. educations. college credit for their work. jobs and employers able to feed job market than those with unThat outcome is a statistiConde Nast, publisher of Eisenbrey, for one, thinks that that desire — that's ripe for paid internships. cal wash with that of peers magazines that include The arrangement is worse. "In many ways, I consider it exploitation. Students with unpaid intern- w ith n o i n t ernship a t a l l . New Yorker, GQ, Vanity Fair Few doubt the importance of ships, in fact, generally did no Among non-interns, 39 per- and Glamour, last winter set- a double scam," he said."The internships to college students, better than students who grad- cent receivedjob offers before tled a $5.85 million class action employee in this case, the ineven as the economy moves uated havinghad no internship. graduating. lawsuit, filed in 2013 on behalf tern, is paying for the college "The bottom line," said of thousands of interns, alleg- credit. It comes out of the emfurtherout of the recession's In the 2014 report, students shadow. While unemployment with paid internships came Eisenbrey, "is that you can be ingthat they were illegallypaid ployee's pocket. "They're not getting a profor those ages 25 and older out better on job offers in ev- worse off with an unpaid in- little or next to nothing. stands at 4.5 percent, the fed- ery sector:for-profit compa- ternship than if you had no inMeanwhile, Com cast's fessor; they're working for eral Bureau of Labor Statistics nies, nonprofits, government ternship at all." NBCUniversal paid out $6.4 someone and not beingpaid for says it's more than double that, agencies. Startingsalaries for those million in a similar suit. it. And they are really not get"If an internship is paid, that ting the education they've paid 9.6 percent, for people ages 20 Students with paid intern- who had an unpaid internship, to 24.It'striple,15 percent,for ships from for-profit compa- he said, not only tend to be low- is basically the same as being for. They're being exploited by 18- and 19-year-olds. nies had the best outcome: erthanforthosewho once held an employee. It creates an em- the employer, who gets their Although lawmaker-intern 65 percent of those with in- paid internships, but they also ployer-employee relationship," work for free, and the universexcapades have upended ternships got offers before tend to be lower than for those said New York attorney Mau- sity gets their money without lives and careers in the past, graduation. who had no internship. rice Pianko, who since 2012 providing anything." "Having an internship prosuch ill-conceived affairs hardhas built a practice suing comB urdett Loomis, who f o r ly rank as a top concern for gram helps us identify talent," Ending up incourt panies for what he considers 30 yearshas directed the legstudents. said Renee Gartelos, director Unpaid internships can cost intern employment abuse. islative intern program at the "They think they've got to do ofhuman resources for Kansas employers too. High-profile With p ai d in t ernships, University of Kansas, said he something, right?" said Ross City engineering firm Burns cases regarding the legality Pianko and others said, in- knows that some employers Eisenbrey, vice president of the & McDonnell, which last year of unpaid or even low-paying terns possess the same work- do take advantage of interns. Washington-based Economic hired morethan 200interns, all internships have been finding place rights and protections Many internships in the naPolicy Institute. "What they paid. "Internship programs are their way before judges and against sexual, racial or other tion's Capitol, induding pres-

CEO grooming

Jagel said. "And don't focus on

Continued from E1

cus onthe possible.Create an

He affectionately called Ra-

chel "a clone" of himself. "You couldtake Rachel and puther in any household in America — that girl would have been an entrepreneur. My son, on the other hand, would not be an en-

have jobs to do. They are working, doing stuff they would not have an opportunity to do on campus."

Going for broke Many interns know the deal when they take their jobs.

Long hours, hard work, maybe the possibility of a job. And even if not, the possibili-

ty of making connections and earning goodwill that could lead to something else. Nick Restivo, 25, knew that

he'd be working hard last year as a sales intern for the Kansas

City T-Bones baseball team. The organization is known for putting its 40 or so season-

al interns through their paces from May to September. When the team is out of town, work

slows. But when the T-Bones are playing at home, the college students can find them-

selves at the ballpark for 12 hours or more a day. Working unpaid for college credit while he got his master's degree, Restivo said he made money by also working 12hour shifts, often on Saturdays and Sundays, at a fast-food restaurant. "I'm a sports nut," Restivo

said. "I knew when I graduated I wanted to get into the sports

industry." After hi s

i n ternship last

year, he now has a full-time job in the T-Bones front office as a group sales associate. His unpaid internship paid off.

the risks and the negatives, foenvironment that allows for success. Ask a lot of questions

CENTRALOREGOI'8 ORIGINALHOME AID llVING NIAGAZIIE

to help them think how they might accomplish their idea. What would they need? Who

could they ask for help?" Additional advice comes

trepreneur. He's off-the-charts from Joanna Strober, founder bright, but he doesn't have that and chief executive of Kurbo entrepreneurial skill set in his Health, a mobile app to help DNA that Rachel has. But he's teenagers and tweens manage growing up in my house, and their weight and make healththat's what we talk about." ier choices. She started the "I treat the kids like adults business ayearago inherPalo and I talk to them as peers," Alto, California, home, enlistZietz said. "I try to share ev- ing the help of her three chilerything I've learned over the dren, ages 7 to 15. She stressyears. The old adage: If I knew es the l earning-by-osmosis then what I know now. I'm giv- principle of grooming young ing them the knowledge now, entrepreneurs." and they're taking it an applyHer oldest child, Sarah, has ingit." caught the startup bug. She has Indeed. Rachel projects already amassed thousands that her startup, Gladiator La- of followers and her first incrosse, which began when she come-generating sponsors for was 12, will this year top $1 mil- her food Instagram, Tasteslion in sales of lacrosse goals likeSF, which tags local restauand training rebounders, prod- rants and food trucks, displayucts she imports from China ing photos of recommended and sells online. She presented dishes. The elder Strober's tips her business plan at the end of for raising entrepreneurial a 30-week program offered by children: • Share the frustrations as a local chapter of Young Entrepreneurs Academy, which well as the triumphs, and show operates some 113programs in that there will be hundreds of 38 states. Her brother, Jordan, "no's" for every "yes" — espewho is already mastering app cially when raising money. • When they get a "no," endevelopment, created a business called GameReef, to step courage children to ask for into the open niche of renting feedback as to why they were video game systems,rather turned down and use that to than video games. improve the pitch. • Let them get involved in He, too, signed on for the after-school Young E ntre- the family business and try preneurs Academy program, lots of different jobs — not just which helps sixth- through social media and app develop12th-graders identify their in- ment, but customer service and tereW and skills; come up with

institution functions. Like at the White House, those kids

A sneakpeek at the next CentralOregon Living coming 3une 27th... Chefs onTour Learn about the third annual pre-Tour of Homes™event and how it has evolved since 2013. Find out which builders and restaurants will be participating.

Tour ofHom es™ Preview A showcase of some of the finest homes in Central Oregon. Get t e what, when andwhere plus the history and what to look for this year.

"OutdoorLivinl" Features • Outdoor kitchens • BBQ innovations • Backyard trends 8 must-haves • High desert gardening

human resources tasks — to

an idea for abusiness; pitch that see that small business leaders business to apanel, indudinglo- need to be able to wear all the cal business owners; and finally hats. • Encourage them to find openthe enterprise — withseed money awarded to the most jobs outside the family busipromisingbusiness plans. ness to see how other compaGayle Jagel,founder and nies are run. chief executive of the acadeAnd how does 14-year-old my program, which is based Rachel Zietz, owner of a sevin Rochester, New York, said en-figure company, define en50 percent of the student entre- trepreneurship today? "An entrepreneur is a person preneurswere the children of entrepreneurs. And 50 percent who creates their own busiare girls. Her advice on raising ness out of something they young company founders? love, or out of a need. They "First and foremost, help are hardworking. They are your kids identify their inter- passionate. They are definitely ests and passions, not yours," competitive."

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For moreinformatioo and to subscridecall

541-382-1811 OEQGN MS N I I IN%SI CRORIINGNOME 8

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. The Bulletin



SUNDAY, MAY 31, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

Bing

Chair

Continued from E1 What that meant for search wasn't immediately clear. Ex-

ecutives wavered on whether the company should build its own Web search technology, or acquire tools built by competitors. Microsoft's first

search engines relied on technology to crawl the Web from Inktomi and, later, AltaVista.

Google, the Mountain View, California, company founded by graduate students studying in a Stanford University computer science building

E5

essary to take the next step. This summer, the graduContinued from E1 ating CAPS students will be J ackson opted t o a n - hired to build enough chairs nounce the c ompany's to enable a m ulticenter relaunch at the American search trial. CAPS students Occupational Therapy who aren't set to graduate, Association c o nference meanwhile, w i l l co n t i nue in Nashville, Tennessee. working on another iteration In his eyes, those in atof the chair. tendance represented the C urrently, Jackson i s i n perfect focus group, and discussions with a local uniwhen it became clear that versity to set the parameters their feedback was highly of what he says will be a rigorpositive, Jackson says, it ous study. He has spoken with helped solidify his belief potential investors and advis-

o n the autism spectrum -

that the chair could benefit

on, the response served as yet

ers about how best to intro-

wandered toward a model of the Sensory Lounger for a test-run.

One by one,the children nestled into the chair, and as their parents looked on,

sat calmly and quietly as the Sensory Lounger worked its magic. "He's so chill," marveled Alison Anderson, as her 6-yearold son, Max, sat nestled in

one of the two models on hand. For Jackson, who looked

cent in April, gaining mostly at the expense of Yahoo, as Times reported at the time. well as fading search portals " That w a s a c t ually t h e Ask.com and AOL. Google's Google pursued a public stock listing instead. Micro- thing that I w a s m ost ner- share has remained relatively soft opted to build its own vous about, that the redirect steady. (Put another way, Consearchplatform. wouldn't happen. It was" nell says, "Google was grow"Looking back, that was a Connell rapped his fist on a ing until we launched Bing.") big decision," Sally Salas, then wooden table - "your heart The bottom line? The techan employee with Microsoft's beating." nology improved, Sullivan nascent search group. "And it Microsoft's marketing ma- said. "Now, it's a credible alterwas the right decision. It took chine, which spends more native to Google." us a long time." than $1 billion each year, MSN Search, named for kicked into action to promote The mobile-devices hurdle Microsoft's popular Web por- Bing. Connell and his team Work remains, however.

duce the product, and is also another example of the prodin the process of determining uct's potential. how the business' ownership And with a plan in placestructure might look. as well as a team of students while proceeding with takIdeally, Jackson says, he'd devoted to a project that has ing the Sensory Lounger like to get the chair to market already garnered n ationto market," Jackson says. by the end of the year. Multi- al attention — the future, at "But ... there were lots of ple factors, he concedes, will least at the moment, appears (occupational therapists) ultimately determine whether promising. that's possible, but the feed"Without (the CAPS prowho knew of patients or students who would deeply back so far has left him opti- gram), it would have just rebenefit from the Sensory mistic that it's only a matter of mained an idea, a frustration Lounger." time. that exists within my family The chair, which those On a Saturday morning last and in that of many others involved tout as different month, for instance, during around the world," Jackson from anything else avail- the first Just Be You Walk says. "And now, it's on the verge able, is meant to provide for Autism in K ansas City, a calming effect to chil- a steady stream of children of being a potential solution to dren with autism, many of — many of them somewhere families across the world." whom are prone to maladaptive behaviors such as

tal, launched in 2005. A year

self-injury or meltdowns. It

named for Gates, didn't have

such hesitation, quickly rising to dominate Web search. In

children on a widespread

Ken Lambert/The Seattle Times

"We want to be the best," said Derrick Connell, vice president of Microsoft's team for search engine Bing, which had a rough start but is now a credible competitor in the U.S.

scale. " If they d idn't l ik e i t , then it wouldn't be worth-

2003, Microsoft, based outside

Seattle, approached Google about a potential partnership or takeover, The New York

for "Bing" in Scotland as a heap of mine waste wasn't a deal-breaker).

-

worked to iron out the kinks

later, a wholesale rebranding in a search engine that, at of Microsoft' s online services first, spit out search results dubbed the engine Windows noticeably worse than Google. "There was a time when Live Search. Bing launched that it was 'A credible alternative' almost embarrassing," said Connell, 47, developed an Danny Sullivan, founding early interest in technology, editor of Search Engine Land growing up in a home with and a longtime observer of the a computer, but, in peculiar industry. "Even Bing people Irish fashion, no telephone. A would tell you they were kind hobbled Irish economy with of embarrassed." double-digit unemployment But months after Bing's didn't offer much use for his launch, and after the breakexpertise. down of high-profile merger "It was a recession country." talks, Microsoft and Yahoo Technology, he says, "was a signed a 10-year agreement way out." that made Bing's technology The day before Bing's un- the underlyingsearch engine veiling, Connell asked a de- for desktop searches on Yaveloper to write a few lines of hoo sites. Yahoo's search techcode that would redirect us- nology, and more than a few ers to the live page from the employees, including advertest site engineers had been tising chief David Ku, migratusing. A blank space was left ed to Redmond. for the name of the site, still a Microsoft sites accounted secreteven to employees after for 8.4 percent of U.S. desktop months spent vetting poten- search traffic when Bing detial names. buted in 2009, less than half Candidates already taken the share of Yahoo and well or having an unintended of- behind Google's65 percent, fensive meaning were tossed according to comScore. Bing's share has steadily (executives evidently decided that an antiquated definition increased since, to 20.2 per-

Yahoo CEO Marissa Mayer, critical of the search deal with Microsoft, told The Wall

features two inflatable air cylinders and a sophisticated pump and pressure-sensor system that produce persistent deep-touch pressure, approximating a tight and continuous full-body hug.

Street Journal that the renegotiated pact sealed last month

was structured to "put more pressureon Microsoftto m ake the product better."

Web advertisi ng, a $59 billion business for Google

I

For Jackson, whose son,

enough to make Bing profitable for Microsoft. The company's online division lost nearly $18 billion from 2006 to 2013. (Beginning in mid-2013, Microsoft lumped Bing and some other businesses into another

T ICKER

BroadcomCorp BRCM Humana HUM Avago Technologies AVGO Tiffany & Co TIF Eli Lilly LLY Nvidia Corporation NVDA T-Mobile US Inc TMUS Centene Corp CNC Time Warner Cable TWC Alnylam Pharmaceutic ALNY NXP Semiconductors NXPI F reescale Semi Ltd FSL Zoetis Inc ZTS skyworks solution sw K S Mylan NV MYL

FRIDAY C LOS E

apists, as well as teachers and parents of those with autism, the feedback has

performance since.) Microsoft officials have set a target for Bing to break even on an annual basis in the company's fiscal year beginning in July, a goal Connell affirmed

been almost unanimously positive.

without hesitation. "2016," he

school senior who worked

said. "For sure." Meanwhile, Bing still suf-

on the project and next

"It's one thing to build

something and just kind

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of get it out there," says Austin Edmondson, a high

year plans to study mechanical engineering at the

fers from much more limited

exposure globally. Surveys of

Call Dan Steelhammer, Broker

Colorado School of Mines. "It's another thing to build

541-389-4212 I 541-585-2446

share put Microsoft and Yahoo each in the low single dig-

something and see the

dangcolmcommercial.com

its, and Google at more than

Now, it's simply a matter of doing the legwork nec-

international search market

results."

80percent.

9.74

20.7

26.2

214 .6 5

56 . 8 5

35. 6 5

19 . 9

29.0

1 4 8.0 7

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20.6

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4.23

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109 .3 6

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72.63

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80.8 Geeknet Inc G KNT 44.4 One Horizon Group O H GI 105.0 ITT Educ Svcs ESI -1.7 Heron Therapeutics HRTX 31.3 Vascular Biogenics VBLT 18.5 Rally Software RALY 11.4 Mirati Therapeutics MRTX 97.8 Actinium Pharma ATNM 32.1 IDI Inc IDI 107.4 Five Prime Therap FP R X 79.2 Idera Pharmaceutical IDRA 99.6 BioSpecifics Tech BSTC 62.1 Zogenix Inc ZGNX 1 56.0 Hydrogenics Corp HYGS 48.7 Galmed Pharma GLMD

46. 50 88.91

-15.13

-24.5

-25.7

-52.8 Tilly's Inc

-15.98

-15.2

-t 0.4

-5.9 Arch Coal Inc ACI -4.6 Alpha Nat Rescs ANR 1.4 Xcerra Corp XCRA -38.5 Capstone Turbine Cp CPST -37.5 Noranda Aluminum NOR -46.4 CHC Group Ltd HELI - 10.5 Taseko MinesLtd TG B -22.4 Neff Corp NEFF -50.1 Thompson CreekMtls TC

78. 9 2

-13.26

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35.3 7

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53.4 9

-3.15

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1 0 0.69

-5.85

-5.5

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TLYS

Information is f rom sources d eemed reliable but i s n o t

guaranteed.Subject ro prior sale or lease, price change, correction or withdrawal.

Licensed Broker in the State of Oregon since 1997.

I

I

GlobalMarkets

FRIDAY C L OS E

19. 9 0

INDEX S&P 500 $CHG %CHG %CHG % RTN Frankfurt DAX 1WK 1WK 1MO 1YR London FTSE100 12. 0 0 1 51.9 1 2 0 .0 37.4 Hong Kong HangSeng

3.68

2.08

1 30.0

11 2 .7

16.2 Paris CAC-40 -86.5 Tokyo Mikkei 225

4.37

1.89

76.2

-5.2

19. 7 6

7.29

58.5

79. 5

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2.80

53.3

1 1 7 .0

0.0

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42.7

34. 8

36. 6 6

9.85

36.7

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25.64 3.84 47. 6 4 1.70 11 . 1 4 10 .5 7

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279

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LAST FRI. CHG 21 07.39 -1 3.40 11413.82 -263.75 6984.43 -56.49 27424.19 -30.12 5007.89 -129.94 20563.15 111.69

FRI. CHG WK MO QTR YTD -0.63% +2.36% -2.26% >t 6 40'/ -0.80% 6 37% 0110/

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22.4 Amsterdam 73.0 Brussels Madrid -26.2 Zurich -30.0 Milan 53.8 Johannesburg Stockholm

493.56 -8.68 3708.66 -44.96 1137.01 -1 6.01 9237.79 -156.46 23495.68 -248.45 52270.86 -539.50 -22.07 1644.99

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+0.1 9% -0.75% +1.06% -0.12% -0.18%

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ASIA

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-37.7

7.72

-1.91

-19.8

-25.1

0.42

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-19.1

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Seoul Composite 2114.80 +3.91 Singapore Straits Times 3392.11 -25.66 -84.7 Sydney All Ordinaries 5 7 74.90 +60.30 -19.9 Taipei Taiex -11.77 9701.07 -69.2 Shanghai Composite 4 6 1 1.74 -8.53

1.76

-0.37

-17.4

-47.5

-41.8

1.33

-0.27

-16.9

t 3.7

-78.6

Quotable

0.65

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t 0.26

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SOUTHAMERICA/CANADA

38.8 Buenos Aires Merval 1 0 800.86 -170.97 447 0 3.62 -103.69 77.2 Mexico City Bolsa

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personal significance.

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project has also taken on a

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Joshua, is onthe severe end of the autism spectrum, the

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— Todd Fryhover, president of the Washington Apple Commission, on how a port slowdown led to nearly $100 million worth of apples being dumped in fields to rot

Note: Stocks classified by market capitalization, the product of the current stock price and total shares outstanding. Ranges are$100 million to $1 billion (small); $1 billion to $8 billion (mid); greater than $8billion Ilarge).

InsiderQ&A

Changing times

Richard Anderson CEO, Delta Air Lines

It's a good time to run a U.S. airline. Jets are full, the price Of fuel is down and, thanks to a series of mergers, there isn't much competition. Atlanta-based Delta Air Lines, the nation's third-biggest carrier behind American and United, posted a $746 million profit in the first quarter, traditionally the worst-performing part of the year. Richard Anderson has been leading the airline slnce 2007 and recently shared his perspective.

What's the current state of the airline business? The industry is healthy and a healthy industry, just like a healthy railroad industry or a healthy manufacturing industry, is important to the economy. The marketplace Is a good marketplace and a marketplace that is very sustainable over time and one that will allow for the investment back in the

business. It will allow for innovation and it'll allow for improvements for our customers.

How will customers beneflt from your profits? We're making It very easy to reissue tickets in the event of irregular operations, like a big storm. We're automating more and more of the interface wlth the company through reservations. It will auto-rebook, and push the new flights to your phone. It will give you all the options for your rebooking. You manage your life in that circumstance, rather than getting in that long, wlndIng line. Not all destlnatlons are popular. Where are you cutTeng struggling? Russia, with the sanctions that are currently in place against the government there, is

more difficult. We expect Russia and Eastem Europe to continue to be a bit tough. The Middle East Is just tough, because of the unrest there. Hopefully, in Africa we're going to see a recovery. Africa has historically been a strong marketplace for Delta and for our alliance partners at Air France and KLM; but unfortunately, the Ebola outbreak, in many people's minds, when they think AfrIca, they think Ebola is in every market.

back, and went down the road of dramatically reducing the number Of regional jets. So at one time, thls airline was probably operating 700 or 800 regional jets. We've cut it in half.

Do lower fuel prlces change the way you purchase airplanes? When you buy a new airplane versus an existing airplane, much of the economic payback comes in the form of better fuel Wlth larger planes, or at least more efficiency. When the cost per gallon Is seats on jets, do regional airlines still fill lower, there's less fuel efficiency from that a role? investment, which has an effect on We're golng to have the smallest regional investment decisions. It's not going to fleet among the majors. We're pretty much change our strategy. We're committed to a capped at 450 airplanes. There is a growing capital investment Of about $3 billion a year. shortage of pilots in the regional arena. Fortunately for Delta, we started moving to Intenriewed by Scott Mayerotrtirtz. Answers edited for clarity and length. bigger planes in a significant way, years AP

Index closing andweekly net changesfor the week ending Friday, May29, 2015

NASDAQ 5,070.03

+

1g

S&P500+ 2,107.39

-18.67

RUssELI. 2000 ~ I,246.53

5 69

N

I

+ -190.13

22,259.70


E6 THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MAY 31, 2015

UNDAY D

R

Om etin wit mi sizese ment Acrankshaftsensor is a mustfor yourcar

By G. Chambers Williams III Fort Worth Star-Telegram

Chrysler may finally have gotten the midsize sedan right. Afteryears ofcreating cars in the most-popular vehicle

i a

Elji

By Brad Bergholdt

In your case, a magnetic crankshaft positioning sensor is used. It's the simplest of several types. It contains a coil of very fine wire and a starting, and I was told the magnet, and is mounted at the cause was a broken crank- front of the engine, adjacent shaft sensor. The repair to a toothed pulse wheel. As seems tobe successful and each iron tooth of the wheel the cost was reasonable. I passesnear the tip ofthe senwas curious, though, what sor, a small electrical pulse is is this part and why is it generated. Thewheel contains necessary'? 35 teeth (36 spaces with one • It's great someone missing). This setup results in • figured out the prob- a signal pulse being sent for lem and was able to make every 10 degrees of cranka successful repair. Crank- shaft rotation and an indicator shaft position sensors are (missing pulse) occurring 60 used on all modern vehi- degrees before top dead center cles to determine engine for cylinders 1 and 4. speed, crankshaft position Problems with a crankshaft and engine speed fluctua- position sensor can be comtions. Speed information plete failure, likely caused by is used for many engine the fine wire breaking, or a management operation- more frustrating to diagnose al decisions. Positioning intermittent fault that causes information is i m portant the engine to cut out or sputter. so that fuel and ignition It's tough to say what the cause can occur at just the right was for your failure. Heat and time for each cylinder. And vibration likely played a role. fluctuations are studied to Odds are your replacement determine if misfiring is part should last the remaining occurring. life of the Escape. The crankshaft position sensor is the most importThe gas tank door on ant of all engine man• my 2011 Hyundai Sonaagement sensors, and the ta is making me crazy. Someengine will absolutely not times it won't open unless I

Q

• I just got my 2010 • Ford Escape (a four cylinder) back from the repair shop. It hadn't been

class that were so dull that they

were mostly relegated to rental-car fleets, the automaker now has a credible entry in the

segment: the2015 Chrysler 200. While many of us have already sung the praises of the big Chrysler sedans — the Chrysler 300 and the Dodge Charger — we've

R EVIEW been

without it.

Tribune News Service

:,tsttrtrrr'jrreIrl

har d -

pressed to say much positive about the pre-

Courtesy Chrysler via Tribune News Service

vious midsize entries from the The 2015 Chrysler 200 is elegant without being ostentatious, with performance and technology feecompany, including the 200 tures that help build on the 200's good looks. (formerly the Sebring) and the Dodge Avenger. With the complete redesign materials throughout. $26,225), which came with a of the Chrysler 200 for 2015, the There are performance and bunch of options that ran the Base price: $21,995automaker dropped the Avengtechnology features that help total sticker price to $35,285, $30,825 er, although it kept the Charger build on the 200's good looks, including freight. As tested: $35,285 in the Dodge lineup. The new though, giving it more than just Power was quite impressive Fiat Chrysler Automotive boss, Type: Midsize, four-door, a great appearance. with the V-6 engine — it gave five-passenger, four- or Sergio M a rchionne, w a nts For instance, it has the first the car more pep than it does in six-cylinder, gasoline-powto differentiate the Chrysler standard nine-speed automat- the larger Dodge and Chrysler brands, and intends for Dodge ered, front- or all-wheelic transmission in its segment, modelsbecausethe200weighs to be known for it s perfordrive sedan which allows it to boast Envi- less. Handling was crisper and mance cars. In that respect, the ronmental Protection Agency more responsivethan IexpectEngine: 2.4-liter inline Charger and its first cousin, the ratings of up to 36 mpg from ed — it felt more like a Charger four-cylinder; 3.6-liter V-6 Challenger coupe, fit the imits base 2.4-liter four-cylinder than a regular midsize family (optional) age,buttheAvenger would not. engine. sedan. Mileage: 23 mpg city, So what's so great about the Also rare in its class is the We had theUconnect mul36 mpg highway new Chrysler 200 that makes available all-wheel-drive sys- timedia command center as it a likely key player in the segt em, which comes with a n part of the navigation/sound ment'? It's hard to put a finger automatic-disconnecting rear upgrade. It helps keep the pason anyone aspect,as the entire strong design competition axle, which helps to improve sengers connected with inforcarhas been so carefully craft- from rivals such as the Altima fuel economy — something mation such as fuel prices and ed andengineered to m ake the and Focus, the all-new Chrys- that almost always suffers with movie listings. The system is vehicle quite compelling. ler 200 is arguably the nicest all-wheel drive versus two- voice-activated for navigation But because looks are im- looking car in the pack. wheel drive. and other features. It's elegant without being portant, it's easy to see from There are two engine choicEPA ratings for our V-6 tesfirst glance that Chrysler's de- ostentatious, looking like a es: the standard 2.4-liter Multi- ter were 19 mpg city/32 highsigners were given a free hand luxury vehicle not from the old- Air2 Tigershark inline four-cyl- way/23 combined. With the to create an exterior that sets school Detroit vein, but in the inder, with 184horsepower and optional all-wheel drive, the the 200 apart from the cook- context of a Mercedes, BMW 173 pound-feet of torque; and ratings are 18/29/22. For the ie-cutter styling of so many or Infiniti. the optional 3.6-liter Pentastar four-cylinder engine, the ratof the stalwarts in this class And it's not just the exterior; V-6 — the same one used in the ings are 23/36/28. All-wheel (think Camry, Accord). the car is beautiful inside, as Chargerand a variety ofother drive is not available with the While both Toyota and Hon- well. Chrysler refersto the car's Chrysler/Jeep/Dodge vehicles, four-cylinder engine. da have been stepping up their "understated, simple elegance," with 295 horsepower and 262 The trunk has 16 cubic feet design efforts lately to give the and touts its craftsmanship, pound-feet of torque. of cargo space, which is on the Camry and Accord more curb which is in p art achieved Our tester was the 200C high end for the midsize seappeal, especially with such through the use of high-quality front-drive model (base price dan class.

2015 Chrysler200

Q•

run without it. Determin-

poke and fiddle with it quite

ing that a faulty sensor is preventing a vehicle from starting is actually pretty easy, as the engine will not have ignition spark, fuel injector pulses or an rpm reading on the tachometer

a bit. I'm afraid I'll become stranded if I'm not able to buy gas at the right time. Help! • This has an easy fix! • Hyundai issued a service campaign bulletin in December 2010 providing instructions for adjustment of

A

or a scan tool. Camshaft

position sensors are also the door's actuator and latch used, so the management spring tension. It's a quick and system knows what stroke effective fix if the instructions the crankshaft is in at any- are carefully followed. This time. Many systems are can be done by the dealer or smart enough to try guess- an independent shop with ing should this sensor fail access to the needed service and allow the engine to run information.

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INSIDE BOOKS W Editorials, F2 Commentary, F3

© www.bendbulletin.com/opinion

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MAY 31, 2015

DAVID BROOKS

Building spiritual capital L

rff ~

isa Miller is a professor of psychology and education at Columbia University. One day she

'f

entered a subway car and saw that

half of it was crowded but the other half was empty, except for a home-

,f r~

less man who had some fast food on

r~

%~

his lap and who was screaming at anybody who came close. At onestop,a grandmother and

granddaughter, about8,enteredthe car. The homeless man spotted them and screamed, "Hey! Do you want

to sit with me?" They looked at each other, nodded and replied in unison, "Thank you," and, unlike everybody else, sat directly next to him. The man offered them some chicken from his bag. They looked at each other and nodded and said, "No,thank you."The homeless man offeredseveralmore times, and each

time they nodded to each other and gave the same polite answer. Finally, the homeless man was calmed, and they all sat contentedly in their seats. Miller was struck by the power of thatnod.

"The nod was spirituality shared

between child and beloved elder:

spiritual direction, values, taught and received in the loving relationship,"

• One-time bonuses and benefits muscle out payraisesfor workers By Patricia Cohen ~New York Times News Service

she writes in her book "The Spiritual Child."

The grandmother was teaching the granddaughter the wisdom that we

acht-sized bonuses for Wall Street big shots and employee-of-the-month plaques

were once all strangers in a strange land and thatwe'rejudged by how

for supermarket standouts are nothing new, but companies' continued efforts to

we treat those who have the least.

Miller's core argument is that spiritual awareness is innate and that it is an important component in human

development. Miller defines spirituality as "an inner sense of relationship to a higher power that is loving and guiding." I'd say Miller doesn't pay sufficient attention to the many secular, this-

world ways people find to organize their lives. Still, it does seem true that most children are born with a natural

sense of the spiritual. They have a natural sense of the oneness of creation, and a sense of a transcendent, nonmaterial realm. Miller cites twin studies that suggest that the strength

keep costs down have pushed employers to increasingly turn to one-off bonuses and nonmonetary rewards at the expense of annual pay raises. "There is a quiet revolution in compensation," said be n efits have spread further down the ranks than ever Ken Abosch, a partner at Aon Hewitt, a global human b e fore. Although pay-for-performance rewards for resources company. "There are not many things in the top achievers and signing bonuses to attract talent acworld of compensation that are all that radical, but this count for most of the one-shots, they also include comis a drastic shift." panywide amenities and targeted perquisites, such as According to Aon Hewitt's annual survey on salaried lunches out with the boss or Visa gift cards. "It affects the CEO all the way down to the guy who employees' compensation, the share of payroll budgets devoted to straight salary sweeps thefactory floor," increases sank to a low of Abosch said. Ninety-one 1.8 percent in the depths of "There tS a quiet reVOlutiOn in percent of the companies the recession It dropped to COmpenSatiOn. There are nOt many surveyed have at Ieas«ne

t~irI gs frI the ~ofld of com~efIsatfo

of a child's spiritual awareness is about 29 percentbecause ofbroad ge-

It has rebounded modestly

netic heritability, 24 percent because of family environment and 47 percent

increase was 2.9 percent in 2014, the survey of 1,064 organizations found. (These figures are not adjusted for

because of a person's unique individual environment.

Spiritual awareness, she continues, surges in adolescence, at about the same time as depression and other threats to well-being. Some

level of teenage depression, she says, should be seen as a normal part of

the growth process, as youngpeople ask fundamental questions of themselves.

Teenagers commonly suffer a loss of meaning, confidence and identity.

tl 1 8t Bl'e Bll tlIBt f'BdfCBI, t)Ut tt1IS IS 8

f

2005 a n d47percentin1991. Perhaps more surprisingly, the trend now extends to

— Ken Abosch, a partner at Aon Hewitt, sectors such as higher ed-

a global human resources company ucation and agriculture, as well as to the government, which historically resist

Aon Hewitt did not start tracking short-term rewards and bonuses — known as variable compensation — until 1988, when they accounted for an average

perf o r mance-based rewards because they often rely o nsubjective judgments. Wi th t h e economic recovery nearing its sixth anni-

of 3.9 percent of payrolls. Ten years later, that share had more than doubled to 8 percent. Last year, it hit a

ver s ary, stubbornly sluggish wage growth has become a c entral issue, eroding people's faith in the American record 12.7 percent. dream, shaping the economic messages of potential Of course, companies have long rewarded top exec- p r esidential candidates and weighing on the Federal utives and rainmakers with bountiful bonuses — and that continues to be true — but compensation experts

saytheprevalence and types ofone-time rewards and

Res e rve Bank's decision of whether to raise interest r at e s from their near-zero levels.

SeeCompensation/F5

Some of them try to fill the void with

drugs, alcohol, gang activity and even pregnancy. But others are surrounded by people who have cultivated their spiritual instincts. According to Miller's research, adolescents with a strong sense of connection to a

transcendentrealm are70percent to 80percent less likely to engage in heavy substance abuse. Among teenage girls, having a strong spiritual sense was extremely protective

against serious depression. Innate spiritual capacities can wither unless cultivated. The larger

question is whether public schools and other institutions should do more to nurture spiritual faculties.

Public schools often give short shrift to spirituality for fear that they would be accused of proselytizing religion. But it should be possible to teach the range of spiritual disciplines, to familiarize students with

the options, without endorsing any one. In an era in which so many people slip off the rails during adolescence, we don't have the luxury of ignoring a resource that, if cultivated, could

see them through. Ignoring spiritual development in the public square is like ignoring intellectual, physical or social development. It is to amputate people in a fundamental way, leading to more depression, drug abuse, alienation and misery. — David Brooks is a columnist for The New York Times.

Photos by Eve Edelheit/The New YorkTimes

ABOVE: Aidan Harvey works on his laptop at the Squaremouth offices in St. Petersburg, Florida, on May 22. TOP: Kelly

Calkins works onher laptop while sitting in a bubble chair, also at Squaremouth. Most employees at the companyreceive a small annual raise, but they're also treated to benefits such as the new Apple Watch Sport. Companies' continued

efforts to keep costs downhave pushed employers to increasingly turn to one-off bonuses and nonmonetary rewards at the expense of annual pay raises.


F2 THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MAY 31, 2015

EDj To

The Bulletin

s

ernesss ou e u i c in Go lvlp~

hen people insist that government is locking up

r

access to federal lands, the doubtful say: Show us an example. Well, look at what is happening in Jefferson County. There's a deal that's been in the works since 2009to make two beautiful spots — Cathedral Rock and Horse Heaven — wilderness areas. Land swaps would knit together private and federal land, instead of the patchwork that is out there now. With Congressional action, the areas would get strict protections so future generations could get the same raw and rugged wilderness experience. What's not to like about that? Well, the reason this good concept has been opposed by the Jefferson County Commission and gone nowhere in Congress is that it has a

poison pill. There is no road access to Cathedral Rock. Horse Heaven gets two places with road access. Cathedral Rockgets none. The only way for the public to accessCathedral Rock would be to float the John Day River. And not onlyis it true that the John Day can't be floated several months of the year,but the Bureau of Land Management also has discussed plans to limitboat access to the river. If you look at a map, this should be fixable. Muddy Creek Road goes rightalong the proposed border of Cathedral Rock. In fact, when Jefferson County commissioners went out to take a look at Cathedral Rock, guess how they got there'? They didn't floatthe John Day. They drove out Muddy Creek Road and hiked in.

But instead of giving the public that same road access, the proposals have created a moat of private land between the road and the wilderness. A handful of private landowners would get easy exclusive accessto Cathedral Rock. What's worse is that there have even been proposals to limit access to Muddy Creek Road. Supporters of the w i lderness have come up with a new proposal. Craig Kilpatrick, a land use consultant for Young Life, one of the private landowners in the area, unveiled it at a public hearing Wednesdaynightbefore the Jefferson County Commission. "It upset people that they could be a stone's throw away and not access the area," he said, which is true. But the so-called compromise solution is bewilderingly awful. Ratherthan give people road access, the fix is to make it so people can't see what they can't get to. The fix is to expand the moat of private land between Muddy Creek Road and the wilderness area. Some acreage wouldbe removed from Cathedral Rock, and Horse Heavenwould be expanded. Kilpatrickthen ominously stated: "This is the last compromise." That shouldmake the response fromthe Jefferson County Commission and from Congress simple. Reject it. Wilderness areas should not be carefully plotted to discourage easypublic access.

Report medical errors

p

eople can learn from mistakes, but not if the mistakes are kept secret. This is the problem that the Oregon Patient Safety Commission has been hamstrung bysince its formation. The commission was set up to help reduce preventable medical errors. It examines the errors, looks for patterns and tries to set up procedures to reduce their likelihood. The commission has created tools. It's sent out information and suggestions. But if it doesn't know what's happening, it's hard for it do a good job. And as Bulletin reporter Tara Bannow wrote in Thursday's paper, "only about 11 percent of health care facilities in Oregon reported their mistakes." That percentage slipped down from 13 percent in 2013. All the hospitals in Oregon are regularly reporting their mistakes. But only about 1 percent of phar-

macies do. The wrong dose and the wrong prescriptioncan harm orkill. It's important to remember that when medical providers report errors to the commission, the information is confidential and protected from subpoena. So that can't be why they are not reporting their errors. The more likely reason is that they don't have to.When the Legislature created the Patient Safety Commission, it was cautious. The commission was new. Would it work right? Would it be too much of a regulatoryburden? So the Legislature made reporting medical errors voluntary. That might have made some sense at the time. It doesn't any

longer. Patient safety is something Oregon should require medical providers to take seriously. That means reportingwhen mistakes happen. Make reporting mandatory.

We support Senate Bill 129A IN MY VIEW

By Anthony DeBone, Alan Unger and Tammy Baney, Deschutes County Board of Commissioners

and individuals who have signed on to support SB 129A is vast, intension services and research pro- cluding, to name just a few: Oregon grams in all 36 of Oregon's counties, Economic Development Associaith the Oregon State Legis- including the Deschutes County Ex- tion, Friends of Family Farmers, lature currently in session, tension program in Redmond and Hillsboro School District, Associresidents of D eschutes the Central Oregon Agricultural ation of Oregon Counties, League County may want to take particular Research Center in Madras. These of Oregon Cities, Oregon Business notice of Senate Bill 129A. If passed, are assets which directly benefit Association, Oregon Business Plan the proposed legislation will gener- Central Oregonians and the envi- (including the Portland Business ate much-needed funding for valu- ronment in which we live. Alliance), Oregon Environmental able school programs while also The bill accomplishes these goals Council, Oregon Farm Bureau, Orproviding the means to attract busi- by enhancing the gain share pro- egon Forest Industries Council, Asnesses to Oregon, which then create gram, created by the Legislature sociated Oregon Industries, City of and sustain jobs, support the local in 2007. Gain share is an essential Gresham, Clatsop County Board of economy and invest in community component of Oregon's Strategic Commissioners, Oregon State Asinfrastructure. Investment Program, widely known sociation of Electrical Workers, OrSenate Bill 129A creates a dedi- to be the single most effective tool egon State Building and Construccated revenue source for a variety that local governments have to re- tion Trades Council, Oregon State of local and state education services, cruit and retain major employers. Chamber of C o mmerce, Plumbincluding Career and Technical Although property tax reductions ing and Mechanical Contractors Education programs. CTE class- are madeavailable under the pro- Association, Hillsboro Chamber, es in engineering, manufacturing, gram as an incentive to attract these Sheet Metal Contractors Associanatural resources and business employers, the businesses in turn tion, Strategic Economic Developmanagement are currently offered provide Oregon with the income tax ment Corporation, Plumbers and in Bend, Sisters, La Pine and Red- revenue needed to fund K-12 schools Steamfitters. mond high schools. These programs and other public services statewide. We hope legislators will take don't currently have a stable fundSimply put, the changes proposed in note of this broad base of statewide ing sourceand so are often the first SB 129A would increase the bene- support and approve SB 129A, supto be cut when the economy takes a fits for all Oregonians by providing porting economic development and dip. Committing stable and ongoing more money to public schools, CTE recognizing the important role lofunding will help train students for programs and other initiatives con- cal communities play in supplying the workforce while boosting grad- sidered crucial to rural communities money for the state's general fund. uation rates statewide. in our state. As citizens of Oregon and DeIn addition, the proposed legislaThe improvements under SB schutes County, please join us in our tion will provide stable and ongoing 129A are possible while still protect- support for SB 129A and consider funding for Oregon State Universi- ing our state and local communities' contacting our local legislative delety's Statewide Public Service Pro- most important economic develop- gates to be sure your voice is heard. grams, which play an important ment tool for producing revenue and — Deschutes County Board of role in creating and retaining rural jobs, an unqualified success of the Commissioners, Anthony DeBone, chair; jobs.These programs include ag- gain share program. Alan Unger, vice chair; and Tammy That's why the number of groups ricultural experiment stations, exBaney, commissioner.

w

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Containment might be better anti-terror strategy he Arab world is a pluralistic region that lacks pluralism — the ability to manage and embrace differences peacefully. As such, the Middle East's pluralistic character-

T

THOMAS

FRIEDMAN

Sunnis, Shiites, Kurds, Christians, Druze, Alawites, Jews, Copts, Yazidis,

Turkmen and an array of tribes — has ties they think might keep them safe: long been managed by iron fists from tribe and sect. above. But after we removed the fists It is a measure of how far things in Iraq and Libya, without putting a have unraveled that many Iraqi Sunnew bottom-up order inplace, and

We cannot effectively intervene in a or Syria are ready to do with their region where so few share our goals. power, but we must not substitute added, "There is no doubt that they For instance, in Iraq and Syria, both our power for theirs. This has to be are much better than the criminal Ra- Iran and Saudi Arabia have acted as their fight for their future. If the fight fidites (Shiites), who kill the Sunnis "arsonists" and "firefighters." First, against ISIS is not worth it to them, it because of their Sunni identity." Iran pushed the Iraqi Shiite govern- surely can't be for us. For now, I see only two ways coher- ment to crush the Sunnis. When that Iwas behind a carthis weekendthat ent self-government can re-emerge in produced the Islamic State, they sent had a Virginia license plate bearing Libya, Iraq, Yemen and Syria: If an pro-Iranian militias to put out the fire. the motto "Fight Terrorism." Sorry, outside power totally occupies them, Thanks a lot. And Saudi Arabia's long but I don't think that should be on any snuffs out their sectarian wars, sup- promotion of the puritanical, anti-plu- state's license plate. We've spent more presses the extremists and spends ralistic, anti-women, Wahhabi brand than a decade of lives and treasure trythe next 50 years trying to get Iraq- of Islam helped to shape the thinking ing to "fight terrorism" to fix a part of is, Syrians, Yemenis and Libyans to of ISIS and the Sunni fundamental- the world that can't be fixed from the share power as equal citizens. Even ists who joined them. The Saudis, too, outside. It has been a waste. I wish it that might not work. Anyway, it's not are arsonists and firefighters. Indeed, had worked. The world would be betgoing to happen. The other is just wait ISIS is like a missile that got its guid- ter for it. But it didn't. And the beginfor the fires to burn themselves out. ance system from Saudi Arabia and ning of wisdom is acknowledging that The Lebanese civil war ended after 14 its fuel from Iran. and stopping throwing good money years by reconciliation-through-exU.S. policy now should be "contain- after bad. We need to stop being the haustion. All sides accepted the prin- ment, plus amplification." Let's help "United States of Fighting Terrorism." ciple of "no victor/no vanquished," those who manifest the will to contain If Virginians need a license plate motand everyone got a piece of the pie. ISIS, such as Jordan, Lebanon, the to, how about: "Contain and Amplify on education at Mansoura University north of Cairo, criticizing ISIS, but he

nis prefer the lunatic Islamic State, or

the people themselves tried to remove ISIS, than to fight and die for apro-Irathe fists in Syria and Yemen, without nian Shiite-led government in Baghputting a new live-and-let-live order in dad. I have never seen it this bad. The place, a horrifying war of all against Middle East analyst Simon Henderall has exploded. son captured the disintegration well The fighting has laid bare just in an essay in The Wall Street Journal how much the last 60 years of pred- in March, writing, "The violent chaos atory leadership in that region failed in Yemen isn't orderly enough to merit at human development and citizen- being called a civil war." ship-building. The whole Arab world The fundamentalist mindset seems package, with its artificially straight- to be taking hold everywhere. The line borders, was held together by oil Middle East Media Research Insti- That's how Tunisia's factions manand brute force. In the wreckage, peo- tute posted a video from last month of aged to find stability: no victor/no ple are falling back on the only identi- Sheikh Ahmad Al-Naqib, a lecturer vanquished.

United Arab Emirates and the Kurds

in Iraq, and amplify any constructive things leaders in Yemen, Iraq, Libya

Abroad. Build Virginia at Home." — Thomas Friedman is a columnist for The New York Times.


SUNDAY, MAY 31, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

F3

OMMENTARY

n oc in o n or a t ime, reset, concessions

F

and appeasement work to delay wars. But finally, nations wake

up, grasp their blunders, rearm and face down enemies. That gets dangerous. The shocked

VICTOR

DAVIS

e oo r o w a r boy — not the statesman later to be known for restoring U.S. prestige and global stability, and for helping to bring down Soviet imperial

vacuum in Iraq. Syria imploded. So did most of North Africa. Iran sent

communism.

can embassy in Tehran was stormed.

Street.

DOUTHAT

The Islamic State appeared to fill the

agents, surrogatesand specialforces into Iraq, Syria and Yemen, even as it HANSON Barack Obama, like Carter, came pressed on to get a bomb. aggressors cannot quite believe that into office promising a sharp break China stepped up its violations of their targets are suddenly serious great to Americans after Vietnam from past U.S foreign policy. The the watersand airspace ofAmerica's and willing to punch back. Usually, — and even greaterto America's public was receptive after the costly traditional Asian allies. Putin did the bullies foolishly press aggression, enemies. wars in Afghanistan and Iraq and the the same in Eastern and Northern and warbreaks out. Then Iran imploded. The Ameri- recent financial meltdown on Wall Europe. It was insane of Nazi Germany and its Axis partners to even imagine that

ROSS

Is Islamic State able to survive'?

By 2015, America's enemies had

Diplomats were taken hostage. RadiTroops were withdrawn from Afthey could defeat the Alliedtrio of Im- cal Islamic terrorism spread through- ghanistan on pre-announced deadperial Britain, the Soviet Union and out the Middle East. Communist lines. The post-surge quiet in Iraq the United States. insurrection followed throughout fooled Obama into eagerly yanking But why not try? Central America. The Soviet Union out all U.S. peacekeepers. Hitler figured that for a decade invaded Afghanistan. China went A new outreach to radical Is-

created chaos and defined it as the

e fall of an autocrat leads to

new normal. The next president will face a terrible dilemma. To restore order, he

foreign occupation and civil

America had been unarmed and iso-

security. Any red lines issued will have to be enforced. Agymsors such as Russia,

lationist. Britain repeatedly had appeased the Third Reich. The Soviets initially collaborated with Hitler.

into Vietnam. Dictators such as the Soviet Union's Leonid Brezhnev and Iran's Ayatol-

lam went to ridiculous lengths. The Muslim Brotherhood was i nvited

to Obama's speech in Cairo, which

lah Khomeini assumedthat Carter no claimed the West owed cultural debts Hitler met no opposition after mil- longer was willing to protect the U.S. to Islam for everything from the Reitarizing the Rhineland. He annexed postwar order. naissance to the Enlightenment. Austriawith impunity. He gobbled up Then, Ronald Reagan defeated Terms such as radical Islam, jiCzechoslovakia without opposition. Carter in 1980 on the promise of had and Islamic terror were excised Why shouldn't Hitler have been restoring U.S. power. At first, both from the official American vocabustunned in 1939 when exasperated America's friends and enemies were lary and replaced by a host of silly Britain and France finally declared aghast at Reagan's simplistic worl- euphemisms. war over his i nvasion of d istant dview that free markets were better In symbolic tours, Obama offered Poland? than communism, that democracy apologies for past American behavSix years of war and some 60 mil- was superior to dictatorship and that ior in the Middle East and Asia. The lion dead followed, re-establishing in the ensuring struggle, the West defense budget was cut. Reset with what should have been the obvious would win and the rest would lose. Vladimir Putin's Russia assumed fact that democracies would not quite Foreignmedia damned Reagan as that the Bush ad~ ati o n , not Pucommit suicide. a warmonger for beefing up the U.S. tin's prior aggression in Georgia and By 1979, the Jimmy Carter admin- defensebudget,reassuringAmerica's threats to the Crimea, had caused the istration had drastically cut the de- allies and going after terrorists with estrangement between Moscow and fense budget. Carter promised that miTitary force. Washington. he would make human rights govern From 1981 to 1983, Reagan was Predictable chaos followed as the American foreign policy. It sounded caricatured even at home as a cow- U.S. became an observer abroad.

or she will have to convince our allies that we are recommitted to their

China, Iran and the Islamic State will

havetobewarned to cease and desist or facepushback from farstronger U.S.-led coalitions. Just as Reagan's teturn to normal U.S. foreign policy was considered radical after the Carter years, so, too, the next administra-

tion will be smeared as dangerously provocativeafter Obama's recession

war. A revoluti onary movement with a messianic vision capitalizes on

the chaos to gain power. The revolutionaries rule through terror and the promise of utopia and inspire copycats around the world. But other nations

impose a quarantine, internal rivals regain ground, and despite initial successes, thenew regime seems unlikely to survive — especially once outside powers join the fight against it. This is the storyto date of the Islam-

ic State, which defied predictions of its imminent collapse by capturing Ramadi in Iraq and Palmyra in Syria this month. A "tactical setback," President

homtheworldstage. The Obama foreign policy cannot

Barack Obama called these develop-

continue much longer without provok-

it's still hard to imagine that the self-

ing more chaosoralargew ar.Yetcorrectingit will be nearly as dangerous. Jumping off the global tiger is dangerous,but dimbingback on will seem riskier.

styled caliphate can long endure. But this is also the story of the Sovi-

— Victor Davis Hanson is a classicist and historian at the HooverInstitution, Stanford University.

for seventy-odd years. When the Bol-

Driving Uber mad: They're rating you

ments, and quite possibly they are;

et Union's early days, when it seemed

highly implausible that a cabal of Bolshevikswouldrulethe Russianempire shevik regime was about the age that the Islamic State is today, the United States, France and Britain were sup-

porting its White Russian adversaries and landing troops in Russia; Japan and a reborn Poland were pressuring the Bolsheviks from east and west;

By Maureen Dowd

ed to say, as I got out of the car, "Five

New Yorh Times News Service

for five." If I promised to give them five stars, they would give me five

and the fear instilledby the Red Terror seemed like the primary force keeping thepariah state from crumbling. A generation later, that pariah was a global superpower. The differences between the situations are legion, of course. The Bol-

stars.

sheviks controlled key urban and in-

Bribery. Lies. Cover-up. My Uber app turns out to have all the usual Washington vices. An article in Business Insider advised giving an extra cash tip and not passing gas if you want a five-star rating. Enough passengers throw up that there's an official policy. (A fine between $50 and $200.) As The Wall Street Journal recently reported, "There's an Uber for everything now. Washio is for having someone do your laundry, Sprig and SpoonRocket cook your dinner and Shyp will mail things out so you don't have to brave the post office. Heal

dustrial centers, whereas ISIS is truly dominant only in the Iraqi and Syrian

n a reporting expedition to Los Angeles recently, I realized I could stop renting cars. I would never again have to brave the L.A. freeway behind the wheel. I

O

would never have to obsess, like the

characters in the "Saturday Night Live" skit, "The Californians," about taking the 101 to the 110 and Canyon View Drive over to San Vincente and

getting dumped out onto Mulholland. I had Uber.

Even inthe land of movie stars, you could feel like a movie star whenyour Uber chauffeur rolled up. Standing in front of the Sunset Tower Hotel,

Sam Hodgson/The New York Times

An Uber driver In New York In March.

I tapped my Uber app and saw five little cars swarming around my location. But, suddenly, they scattered in company that plays dirty tricks and

hinterland. The Soviet Union's foreign

enemies were exhausted by world war, and their ability to project military power was far more limited than

America's is today. However geopolitically important, Russia in 1919 was peripheral to many great powers' immediate security concerns, whereas ISIS is sitting at an oil-rich crossroads and murdering Western citizens every

chance it gets. But the Soviet example is still a useful reminder that the "inevitable"

fall of fanatical upstarts is not always

sends a doctor on a house call, while

actually inevitable. And it offers a few

Saucey will rush over alcohol. And by Jeeves — cutesy names are part of the schtick — Dufl will pack your suitcase and Eaze will re-up a medical marijuana supply."

lessons in how, against all odds, the Islamic State might actually survive. First,because great powers get war-weary and distracted. As different as our situation is from the after-

But it is a boon for women out on

developed your audience'? How much have you been shared? How much have you engaged your reader? Are you trending? I was trending on Uber, all right, and not in a good way. Now, instead of quietly sitting in

There is also Luxe, which uses

their own — unless you get a driver

the back seat of my Uber and check-

GPS to offer a personal parking valet dressed in a blue uniform who will

math of World War I, it's clear that the United States would be more involved

the opposite direction. I stood in the

proves that convenience "makes hyp-

driveway, perplexed. Finally, a car pulledup, andthe driverwavedme in. "Do you know why no one wanted to pick you up?" he asked. "Because you have a low rating." I was shocked. Blinded by the wondrous handiness of Uber, I had missed the fact that while I got to rate

ocrites of us all," as John Naughton put it in The Guardian, noting that its very name has connotations of Ni-

etzschean superiority.

ing my phone or reading the paper, I you live. (After a driver allegedly had to start workingto charm. meet you at your destination and park "Your husband likes oysters?" I en- your car for you. them, they got to rate me back. raped a New Delhi passenger in DeRevealing that I had only 4.2 stars, cember, Uber introduced an in-app thused to one woman driving me in But they'll no doubt allhave mutualmy driver continued to school me. emergency button in India.) San Francisco. ly insured destruction rating systems, "You don't always come out right "What are the kids up to this sum- too, so Saucey will reveal how politely What I had loved about Uber was away," he said, sternly, adding that I that, unlike in every other aspect mer?" I chirped to another. I grab mybottle of Grey Goose. I've yanked my rating up only a would have to work hard to be more of my high-tech world, I didn't feel It was starting to have the vibe of appealing if I wanted to get drivers to judged. My worth wasn't being mea- friending, liking and sharing on Face- tenth of a point in the last two weeks. pickme up. sured by dicks, likes, hits, views, book, and that always gives me acid I'm hoping Uber's self-driving cars Uber began to feel less like a de- retweets, hashtags, Snaps, thumbs-up flashbacks to the '80s, when I was will like me more. But somehow I pendable employee and more like an or repins. forced to go to mybrother's house and think the robots will be even more irritatedboyfriend. Except then I learned that sitting in watch slides of his wedding. Finally, judge-y. I know Uber has the image of an an Uber car was pretty much like sit- my nephew explained that I didn't — Maureen Dowd is a columnist obnoxious digital robber baron, a ting in my office: How much have you need to grovel or gush. I simply needfor The New York Times. who harasses you and knows where

Strong leaders know not everything is relative

militarily against ISIS if we didn't have the recent disillusioning experience of abloody occupation in Iraq. Second, because a regime fighting forits survival has an edge over a coa-

lition of less-invested adversaries. Yes, the Islamic State has made enemies of just about every neighboring government and military. But that means

its leaders and foot soldiers know that they're in a victory-or-death situation,

which creates incentives to fend off attacksfrom allcomers. Third, because realpolitik can help even fanatics find allies of convenience. The Bolsheviks came to power in part because Germany deliberately shipped Lenin to St. Petersburg, and Berlin cultivated secret military ties with the Soviets across the 1920s. In

a somewhat similar way, the Islamic State has already been funded by Sunni donors from Saudi Arabia, Ku-

By Frank Bruni

sexual orientation. And he said that

New Yorh Times News Service

it was important to "have a sense of ay anything critical about a perspective." person or a n o r ganization "In Iran," he noted, "they hang you and brace for this pushback: for the crime ofbeing gay." At least he, she or it isn't as bad as I see. If you're not hauling homosomeone or something else. sexuals to the gallows or stoning Sure,the Roman Catholic Church them,you're ahead ofthe game, and hasn't done right by women. But maybe even in the running for a huthose Mormons have more to answer manitarian medal. for! As I said, you can set the bar anyYes, there are college presidents where you want. And you can justify with excessive salaries. But next to almost anything by pointing fingers the football and basketball coaches at people who are acting likewise or on many campuses, they're practical- less nobly. lymonks! Naturally, this brings us to the curSet the bar low enough and all rent presidential campaign. blame is deflected, all shame exThis month, Hillary Clinton not punged. Choose the right points of only made peace with the super PACs reference and behold the alchemy: that will be panhandling on her benaughty deeds into humdrum con- half, but she also signaled that she'd formity. Excess into restraint. Sinners do her vigorous part to round up dona-

S

re-election effort.

inoculate him or her from disparShe did this because Jeb Bush and agement — simply because he or she

other potential Republican rivals

represents the alternative to someone

were either doing or poised to do this. fromthe other side. Beingthe lesser of And she did this, no doubt, because evils is confused with being virtuous, of the Koch brothers and their politi- though it's a far, far cry from that. cal network's stated goal of raising Obama stumbles or falls and is parand spending nearly $1 billion on be- doned by all-or-nothing partisans on half of Republicans during this elec- the grounds that he's not George W. tion cyde. Bush. Those same partisans wave Democrats tell themselves they off any naysaying about his foreign have a ways to go before they sink as policy by bringing up the invasion low as Republicans do. Republicans of Iraq. And the bungled rollout of tell themselves none of their machina- Obamacare? A mere wisp of incontions rival the venal braid of conflict- venience in comparison with the inginterests andoverlappingagendas botched response to Hurricane Kain the Clintons' messy world. trina. Everything's relative. When it comes to money, almost

Except it's not.

everybody looks up — not down or sideways — to determine how he or she is doing and what he or she might be owed. One titan's bonanza becomes the

There are standards to which government, religion and higher education should be held. There are examples that politicians and principled

She did this despite high-minded next titan's yardstick, and the pay I mention Arkansas because of a talk previously about taming the in- of the nation's top executives spirals classic bit of deflection performed last fluence of money in politics. ever further out of control. month by one of its senators, Tom CotShe did this without the public Then there's the moral jiujitsu that ton. He was rationalizing a so-called hand-wringing of President Barack American voters have become esreligious freedombill that would have Obama when he reluctantly em- pecially adept at in these polarized permitted the state's merchants to braced his super PAC, which hap- times. Many of them unreservedly deny services to people based on their pened at a later point in his 2012 exalt their party's emissary — and

set,regardless ofwhether theirpeers are making that effort. There's right

into saints.

Arkansas into Elysium.

tions for one of them, Priorities USA.

businesspeople should endeavor to and wrong, not just better or worse.

And there's a word for recognizing and rising to that: leadership. We could use more of it. — Frank Bruni is a columnist for The New York Times.

wait and Qatar, and so long as ISIS remains at war with Iran and its proxies, the Sunni powers won't root unreserv-

edly against it. If the Islamic State remains permanently at war with them, of course, co-

operation will be impossible. But messianic ideologies are sometimes more adaptable than you expect. In a compelling Atlantic essay on the Islamic State's theological commitments, Graeme Wood argued that the caliphate will be "hamstrung" by its apocalyptic vision, which rules out any real truce or suspension of jihad. But sometimes they find a way to

tweak their ideologies when survival requires it and to rely on ethnic and national loyalties as well. Which the

Islamic State has done already. Whether it can compromise further depends on power struggles that are probably already underway, invisible to Western eyes. And it's still likely that no strategy will preserve the caliphate. But it hasn't collapsed yet. And the

longer it survives, the longer it might. — Ross Douthat is a columnist for The New Yorh Times.



SUNDAY, MAY 31, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

F5

est-se in aut orto aunc im rint orc i ren's oo s By Alexandra Alter New Yorh Times News Service

Novelist James Patterson is

new imprint and will acquire books by other writers. "We're not going to buy a lot

so prolific, his annual output rivals that of many small publishing houses. Last year, with help from his stable of co-au-

of books, but if we buy them,

thors, he published 16 novels

during BookExpo America, the publishing industry's an-

and sold around 20 million copies of his books. Now Patterson is seeking to

we're going to publish them with gusto," said Patterson,

nual trade convention. P atterson, wh o i s be s t -

known for his popular Alex

imprint, Jimmy Patterson.

panded into children's publishing in recent years, with three young adult series and five middle grade series, including "Treasure Hunters," "I

part of Little, Brown % Co.,

will release eight to 12 children's books a year, with a focus on middle grade and young adult fiction. Patterson will oversee it all, choosing manuscripts and shaping the marketing plan for each title. He will publish

Cross crime novels, has ex-

Funny" and"House of Robots."

His children's books have sold more than 30 million copies. "It's an opportunity for us to

expand the voice and reach of a writer who's already one of

four to six of his own chil-

the best-selling writers in the

Compensation

workers such as Ping-Pong

dren's books a year under the world," said Michael Pietsch,

Continued from F1 Over the past 12 months, real average hourly earnings have increased 2.2 percent. Since 1979, most of the gains in pay have gone to those at the top of the salary pyramid while, except for brief periods in the 1980s and late 1990s, those in the middle and at

the bottom have been losing ground. There are several developments that help account for wage stagnation. The economy's globalized and technological nature has placed more bargaining power in the hands of employers, and long periods of relatively high unemployment— compounded by waves of layoffs and ex-

tables and on-site dry cleaning. "We wanted to find in-

novative ways to keep people happy and keep people surprised," Harvey said. Alternative forms of compensation can be popular among workers, too. Some like the idea that good work is recognized and rewarded. But although across-theboard benefits such as free food or lunchtime yoga can make the workplace more pleasant, others support performance-based bonuses.

"I personally love suddenly finding an unexpectedly

— James Patterson

"The Miracle Girl" by Andrew Roe (Algonquin Books, 336, $24.95) By Angela Lutz The Kansas City Star

From weeping statues of

the Virgin Mary to apparitions of Jesus' face on burnt toast, hope can have strange

origins. In Andrew Roe's debut novel, "The Miracle Girl," a

semicomatose 7-year-old girl named Annabellebecomes

smattering of humanity just these things — these simple, wanting to spend a few min- apparently random things utes with the girl. that do not appear to mean "There's the 10-year-old anything at the time — have w ith A I D S . T h e re's t h e their repercussions; they add 3 9-year-old w i t h can c e r up and (hurt) you and shape and advanced arthritis and your future whether you reglaucoma. There's the un- alize it or not," Roe writes. employed single mom who "And why h adn't he been saw it on TV and was just able to avoid the other car'? curious. There's the woman All crashes are avoidable, who loves too little. There's

aren't they?"

the woman who loves too much. There's the wom-

in 1999, the novel accurate-

an who loves just the right

worldly comfort when sick people claim they've been healed after visiting her bedside. Afflicted with a strange

in return." The novelty of the situa-

tion, however, does not extend to Annabelle's mother, Karen.

c a l le d a k i n etic Caring for her daughter mutism due to brain damage around the clock, Karen forsustained in a car accident, gets to eat and rarely sleeps. Annabelle cannot move or Her husband, John, who was speak — but she can inspire, driving at the time of the and she quickly becomes accident, fled to Las Vegas a celebrity. It doesn't take to drown his guilt in anonlong for the lines outside her y mous conversations a n d middle-class Los Angeles booze. Both parents torment home to stretch around the themselves with what-ifs. "(Karen had) learned that block, representing a diverse condition

ees would walk to the top of

to PerSOnal gOalSand relatiOnShiPS,

drops and the labor market tightens. Employers like one-shots precisely because they are temporary. They save money over the long run because they don't lock in raises, giving managersgreater control over budgets, particularly during downturns. "It's so much easier to

the building and drop them off the side to show their displeasure." Their m essage: cash preferred. To Stephanie T homas,

not give a bonus than to cut

someone's pay," Barrington sard. At Squaremouth, a

Studies, says some industries nuses (a sales commission, for example) work well when employees have direct controlover their performance

s oft- and results can be objectively

ware company in St. Petersburg, Florida, most employees received an annual raiseof 0.8 percent for 2015, enough to match last year's rise in consumer prices. But

staff members have been treated to other sweeteners such as new Apple Watches

— preordered with choice of size and color — a $200 "beer" b o nus, b i r thdays off and the installation of a "hangover couch" for midday snoozes.

Chris Harvey, the chief

measured, she said. But "it's not right for all employees and all organizations," Thomas said, referring to professions including teaching. The big question now, said Kerry Chou, a compensation specialist at Worldatwork, a nonprofit membership organization of human resources professionals, is not so much whether variable compensation will continue, but wheth-

to where they were before the recession, or do have a new

try, which pioneered creative incentives and amenities for

normal now?" Chou asked. "The jury is still out."

Alternative forms of compensation can be popular among workers, too. Some like the idea that good workis recognized and rewarded. But although across-the-board perks such asfree food or lunchtime yoga can make the workplace more pleasant, others support performance-based bonuses.

little girl who can't communicate either. But there she

was. It was a shock. She just lies there in her room. That's

her whole world, that room. armpit," the fear of Y2K cre- While all this whirls around ates a tumultuous climate

her."

in which widespread belief in the "Miracle Girl" seems not only possible but also plausible. Told from several points of view, the perspectives ex-

Despite the heavy subject matter, the story ends on an

tend to reporters, skeptics,

readers on a w o rthwhile journey highlighting the necessity of seeking the miraculous in the mundane.

and religious officials, as well as nosy neighbors and a particularly down-to-earth

optimistic note, and in some

ways, the resolution feels too easy. B ut Roe does t ake h i s

U Magazine offers its readers content to eduCate, emPOWerand inSPire.

Each edition highlights women, their families and the positive impact they have on Central Oregonandtheir communities.

WHEN TO LOOK POR IT:

Saturday, June 6 tsshsi ' 'i

The Bulletin 541-$82-1811

s rs

www.bendbulletin.com

executive of S q u aremouth, a cautionary economy where ultimately budgets get back which produces a travel inhis cues from the tech indus-

what to expect, a paralyzed

from a sauna to "the devil's

er wage gains are permanently stuck in a low gear. "Are we just dealing with

surance website, said he took

Even though I knew this, I'd seen her on TV and knew

on family, health, and SPirit WhiCh featureS

or turkeys, he said, "Employ-

and jobs are more suited than others to rewards. Merit bo-

"I still don't know w h at

to make of it all," says one priest charged with investigating the phenomenon. "She's paralyzed. It's sad. That was the shocking thing.

intelligent and inspiring magazinewith a focus

as the unemployment rate

• srrtesr atna ioeti,aad IeK

tIIIriters l 4 Reade

com-

mentary on the nature of hope and mysticism, all told in Roe's straightforward, down-to-earth prose.

WOmen of Central OregOn. U MagaZine iS a bright,

the trend to continue even

a research associate at the Institute fo r C o mpensation

ly captures the panic of the approaching m i l lennium. Coupled with the region's dry, barren landscape, likened by Roe to everything

a tes a w h irlwind o f

They raise families, focus on their careers andstill manage to find time to make a difference in their communities. Theyare the

recession." forts. In the days when bossS ome e x p e rt s ex p e c t es handed out holiday hams

when workers can see a di-

more nimble you can be in a rect return for specific ef-

Set in Southern California

physical therapist. This cre-

U MAGAZINE CBITRALOREGON'S WOMEFS AND FAMILY MAGAZINE topics of interest to today's womenand their families. From subjects such as health, style and professional success

can give in other forms, the

dren's books. This year, he announced plans to give more

'The MiracleGirl' combineshopeandtragedy

pay," said Michele Heisler, an

of a range of other benefits, sion, it really skyrocketed," such as Social Security and she said. "It's really hard to pensions. cut wages and salaries, so Abosch says that the bigthe more compensation you gest bang for the buck comes

Last year, he donated more than $1 million to indepen-

braries around the country. roles and created their own tising executive who started Patterson said he planned The Associated Press file photo imprints and book packag- publishing novels in the 1970s, to donate his own earnings as James Patterson is launching ing businesses. Author Liz- is particularly well-positioned the publisher of Jimmy Pata "Jimmy Patterson" imprint zie Skurnick started a young to run a publishing imprint. terson to his literacy projects for children's books, featuring adult imprint, Lizzie Skurnick His books have sold more than and stressed that his goal was books by the prolific author Books, which publishes new 300 million copies globally. He not just to sell more books. He himself, who has written numer- editions of classic young adult has published 114 New York aims to make reading habituous kids' stories already, and by novels dating from the 1930s Times best sellers, according al for children, by writing and other authors. to the 1980s. Novelists Lauren to his publisher. publishing books that "make Oliver and James Frey both He has dedicated part of his people turn the pages." "I do think I can get a lot created their own book pack- fortune to philanthropic projthe chief executive of Hachette aging companies, allowing ects aimed at increasing liter- more kids reading," Patterson Book Group, which operates them to acquire and commis- acy and bolstering struggling said. "The mission is simple. Little, Brown. sion works by other writers independent booksellers. Any kid who finishes a Jimmy A handful of other writers and sell them to publishers. He has given away hun- book will say, 'Please give me have moved into publishing Patterson, aformer adver- dreds of thousands of copies another book.' "

amount but is not loved back

salaries are the foundation

lic school students in Chicago, New York and Baltimore.

than $1.5 million to school li-

one such source of other-

associate professor of internal medicine at the Univer-

of his children's books to pub-

dent bookstores that sell chil-

large sum added to a month's

sity of Michigan, who can cessive numbers of discour- receive a yearly bonus based aged and u n deremployed on quality-of-care ratings of workers — have left some her work as a physician at employeesfearfulto ask for Veterans Affairs Ann Arbor more. Healthcare System. Such The shift in compensation pay-for-perf ormance policies that f a v or s o n e -shot-only are steadily becoming the rewards over incremental norm among both private inincreases in salary that com- surers and the government. "It is like getting a surprise pound over time also appears to be playing a significant gift," Heisler said. "It probarole. bly wouldn't seem nearly as "This i s s o mething t h at thrilling if it were just spread has not gotten as much at- out acrosssalary payments tention in conversation about each month." flat wages," said Linda BarAlthough a few more dolrington, executive director of lars in each paycheck might the Institute for Compensa- lack that Christmas-morning tion Studies in the Industrial feeling, a raise is the gift that and Labor Relations School keeps on giving. The benefits at Cornell University. of wage increases are comThe shift to short-term re- pounded each year, with evwards took off after the econ- ery future raise building on omy went into a nose-dive in the one before it. In addition, 2001, she said. "Then in the Great Reces-

book.'"

who announced the initiative

extend his brand further, by creating his own publishing The imprint, which will be

"l do think l can get a lot more kids reading. The mission is simple. Any kid who finishes a Jimmy book will say,'Please give me another

INSPIRED BY IRAiltfti%L VtIBICI


F6 THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MAY 31, 2015

u nn,t at itt e

eanut oesn't 00

an erous

"Another Person's Poison: A History of Food Allergy"

The timing for this bookis certainly right.

A new book, "Another

by Matthew Smith (Columbia University Press,

Allergies have been on the rise, with the most

Person's

290 pages, $29.95) By Alexander Nszaryan

Poison,"

deadly food allergy, to peanuts, doubling in incidence from 1997 to 2002 among American

explores the rise of allergies to nuts, especially peanuts.

children. An estimated 15 million Americans

New York Times News Service

If you grew up food-allergic in the late 20th century,

are believed to have a food allergy of some kind.

Thinkstock

you probably grew up haunted by the ghost of Katherine Brodsky, the Brown Univer-

craft," as one allergist com-

down Reese's Pieces.

sity student with a peanut allergy who died in 1986 after

plained in 1956. Smith makes the distinction between or-

eating chili at a restaurant in

thodox allergists, steeped in hard-core immunology, and the food allergists who were often seen as renegades be-

When I was done with the c hronicle of my t r avails The Dark Night of the Pista-

Providence, Rhode Island. The chili had been thickened with peanut butter. It took two

spoonfuls to kill Brodsky. The lesson of Brodsky's death — repeated by my parents, and, I imagine, many

chio-Studded Cannoli, etc.

-

the doctor looked at me with

ronmental causes and took patients' complaints seriously,

a befuddled expression, as if something obvious was eludingme. "It's very simple," she said.

even if those complaints could

"Just don't eat any nuts."

cause they considered envi-

not always be scientifically not difficult to grasp: Threats confirmed. are everywhere, and your vigSmith writes that throughilance must be mighty to meet out much of the 20th century, them. Ask about the mole po- some in the medical establishblano and the samosa. Avoid ment "believed that allergy the pad thai. Carry an EpiPen. was not much more than a Cook your own food. In the glorified craft practice rathothers across the land — was

absence of a cure, constant

er than a medical science."

anxiety will be your savior.

Those plagued by food al-

Matthew Smith, a medical lergies were sometimes mahistorian i n S c otland, tells ligned as hypochondriacs, the

Brodsky's story, and those of many other allergy victims, in "Another Person's Poison,"

. US. Cellular.

true nature of their suffering suspected to be neurotransmitters, not antibodies.

a cultural history of people Where American medieating things that made them cine goes, American busisick or killed them. The author ness eagerly follows. Smith of two books on hyperactivi- quotes an advertisement that ty, Smith acutely grasps that sought to capitalize on the informed, or vitiated, by history and culture. He knows, too, that

politics is a primary ingredient in most everything we ingest.

ANOTH El< PE 8.SON'S POISQN

pop-med master Mary Roach ("Stiff" "Bonk," "Gulp"), "Anoth-

RICH! BE FIRST

in your area to open a very lucrative a llergy testing centermoney-maker."

ademic in tone to compete with r o mp s o f

push for allergy "GET testing:

an A L L -CASHU P-F R O N T

While too acthe

150 back instant y.

late-20th-century

medicine is often

M ore I

tt, HIGTQRr IIF EGQG hl.I.EIIG'I

L

X'lsnhcwSnsish

er Person's Poison" shouldn't

frighten away those who don't know their varieties of immunoglobulin. The story Smith tells is fundamentally fascinating, and for the most part he tells it well. The timing for this book is

h on e s t

entrepreneurs figured out that riches could be

made from allergen-free foods and recipes. As early as 1939, an author

was extolling the fact that "in Oakland, California, there is a bakery where counters are

filled with nonallergic delicacies" and that, more broadly, the "potentialities of the soy-

bean are being explored." I, certainly right. Allergies have personally, am waiting for been on the rise, with the most

deadly food allergy, to peanuts, doubling in incidence

New York's first nut-free Thai restaurant. The peanut is the complex

hero of this book. A killer, yes, but one that "finally gave allergists the scientific legitimacy, public profile, and medical allergy of some kind. One status that they had always person may break out in hives desired." In 2004, Congress from eating shellfish; anoth- passed the Food Allergen er may go into anaphylactic Labeling and Consumer Proshock from eggs. tection Act, mandating that Society no longer ignores food-makerslistthe presence food allergies as oddities. of any of the eight most comThere is a gluten-free pizzeria mon allergens on their labels. from 1997 to 2002 among American children. An estimated 15 million Americans are believed to have a food

in Manhattan; Fenway Park

what substances may be discovered as causes of allergy," an allergist wrote in 1957. Echoing some autism activists, a few doctors have even linked the rise of the peanut

allergy to mass vaccination, in a show of how readily the imagination will supply answers that science cannot. The Pulitzer Prize-winning author and doctor Siddhartha Mukherjee called his book

rooms, who has the right to tell you otherwise'? Because the etiology of allergies proved elusive, those who treatedthedisorder were accused of practicing "witch-

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sonal freedom in the face of suspicious public health goals. His book opens in Edmonton,

Canada, where a stadium in 2009 banned peanuts from an AC/DC concert.

The outrage was predictable, with one fan complaining that he would "end it all"

if forbidden from chomping on peanuts while fist-pumping to "You Shook Me All Night

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Side of Manhattan who I had

a psychological reaction and a been told was one of the finphysiological one'? If you de- est practitioners in the city. clare that you can't eat mush-

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become a celebration of per-

Long." A Florida school started to use a peanut-sniffing about cancer "The Emperor dog in hopes of protecting a of All Maladies"; allergies, 6-year-old girl with a severe conversely, were deemed "the allergy.Some parents comstrangest of all maladies" in plained about the classroom a 1942 volume, a description time usurped by that school's with which Smith explicitly anti-peanut measures, proagrees, and for good reason. testing in front of the school There are no universal crite- with signs that proclaimed ria of diagnosis, no standard "Our Children Have Rights Too!" treatments and plenty of disagreement about the very D espite promising r e contours of the battlefield: search, the ailing continue to What are the bounds of aver- ail. A few years ago, I went to sion, intolerance and allergy? see an allergist on the West What's the difference between

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And in f all 2013, President

in Boston has a peanut-free Barack Obama, whose older zone for some Red Sox games; daughter, Malia, has a peaand peanuts on airplanes have nut allergy, signed a bill that become nearly as verboten as encouraged schools to stock cigarettes. EpiPens, which can a r rest Some have speculated that anaphylaxis. food all ergies are "a disease Smith gives an amusing of civilization," a physiologi- summary of the culture wars cal mutiny against the addi- raging over the peanut, the tives in our diets. "In this age consumption of which has of chemicals and synthetics there is truly no limit as to

P us, we' pay off your o d contract.

As I sat in her office, detailing

the tree nut and peanut allergies that had plagued me for three decades, I awaited the

moment in which she would reveal an imminent cure that

would soon have me scarfing

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Place an ad in The grill. 1131 21st Place, Call 541-383-2371 ads from The Bulletin Older Pete & Supplies • Pe ts & Supplies Redmond. 24 hrs. to cancel newspaper onto The $1000. 1996 65050 Hwy. 20 West, Bulletin for your ga$2000. Bend. 541-388-2706 rage sale and reyour ad! Bulletin Internet web- Easy-Go, Good carts - can de- Fri-Sun, 10-?? site. ceive a Garage Sale The Bulletin recom292 liver within reason. FIND IT! Kit FREE! mends extra caution 541-576-2477 Sales Other Areas The Bulletin when purc h asServing Central Oregon sincetggt B4IY IT! KIT INCLUDES: ing products or serALL C LUBS R I GHT SELL ITr May 30-31. 9am-4pm. • 4 Garage Sale Signs vices from out of the 215 Back yard at 55928 H AND F R FLE X , The Bulletin Classifieds • $2.00 Off Coupon To area. Sending cash, Standard Poodle pupCoins & Stamps Use Toward Your W ood Duck Dr. i n G RAPHITE. 201 5 checks, or credit inpies, 5 weeks old. Next Ad OWWII. H o usehold m int T / M spe e d MOVING/DOWNSIZ202 PATIO TABLE f ormation may b e M om is r e d A K C 54" Private collector buying items, fishing gear, Tropitone table blades, 6-SW, 7 pcs., ING SALE! 35 yrs ac- • 10 Tips For "Garage Want to Buy or Rent subjected to fraud. purebred, da d is Sale Success!" fabric, baby i tems, postagestamp albums & $440. Call a way cumulation Sat. 9-4, 4 chairs, tilt For more informachampion ap r icot. Sun. 9-1, 1145 NW collections, world-wide Wll, Media cabinet. Driver, x2hot, 12-15, awning, $350. Wanted: $Cash paid for tion about an adverPups are dark apricot Kingston. No e a rly and U.S. 573-286-4343 Lots more. Rain or a djustable-h.c p l u s 541-382-6664 vintage costume jewelry. tiser, you may call and red. B oth parPICK UP YOUR birds! 9-drawer oak (local, cell phone). shine. Don't miss! tool, $140. Callaway Top dollar paid for the O r egon State GARAGE SALE KIT at ents a r e fr i endly, Titanium five wood, dresser 8 small furn., Gold/Silver.I buy by the Attorney General's sweet and very ath1777 SW Chandler books, dishes, table with 3 chairs 240 $100. Mizuno JPX TV, Estate, Honest Artist Office C o nsumer letic. B ot h parents Patio a rtwork, pict u r e Ave., Bend, OR 97702 Moving Sale: make offer. M any wedges 54-60, $80 Elizabeth,541-633-7006 Crafts & Hobbies Protection hotline at genetically te s t ed, misc., 541-647-2009 Sisters/Cloverdale frames, collectibles, ea. All c lubs obo. The Bulletin area, 69875 Goodrich 1-877-877-9392. passed hips, eyes, clothes, linens, basServing Censrai Oregon sinceiggt 951-454-2561 WANTEDwood dressB abylock Serger, 4 etc. Puppies will be Rd. Fri-Sun, 9-5. kets, lots of misc.! ers; dead washers & The Bulletin thread, threads incl., socialized, chipped, Serving Centrnl Oregon gncetgta dryers. 541-420-5640 has carrying case, vaccinated and have ' used twice. $200 obo. n' csn„, 1-year health guarirrlrs 203 4 turkeys, 2 male, 2 fe- a ntee. 54'I -548-3230 $2,00 0 . qs' ' -. s'Jr .'J&~~ m ale, $35 ea . 1 2 Call Holiday Bazaar Ron at chickens, laying, $5 541-480-3378, POTor Queen bed Se alyCOMPLETE & Craft Shows ea. 8 geese, African ron.guileyogmail.com Posture-Pedic Excep- TERY SET UP - Inand white, $30 ea. cludes Skutt kiln, two tional Plush with bed Patchwork Antiques 541-815-0686 f rame, $400, e x c. wheels, clays, glazes, 2nd Annual Summer cond., cas h o n l y. small library shelves, Carrier for 15-20lb dog, Sale scales, heat e rs, Buyers will need to food/water dish, mint. Antiques, vintage, move items. Other tables, booth and too shabby 8 rustic finds, $15. 541-389-1821 large furniture avail. much to list. $2,500 or furniture, quality German Shepherds including queen Flex- best offer. Contact handmade crafts, www.sherman-ranch.us at isteel slumber sofa, Rodney jams, baked goods, Standard Poodles, Quality. 541-281-6829 541-728-0604 exc. cond., $ 3 50. and more! Beautiful black grand 29th-31et, Fri-Sat 9-6, champion bred pups. Large desks, patio Find exactly what Sun 10-4. 797 C. Av- you are looking for in the 13 weeks, fabulous swing set, etc. Mornings only ( T errebenue, Terrebonne. c oats, heathy a n d poushers • Saws CLASSIFIEDS 541-419-8637 or happy. Will bring great onne) 541-504-0056. Take advantage of our 541-480-8469 joy to y our h ome.Washer/dryer Combo specialmerchandise Repair & Supplies $2000. 541-601-3049 unit for RV or small Central Oregon pricing starting at a partment. $50 0 . Saturday Market Yellow Lab, AKC Reg- 541-460-1853 nWhere the seller is the istered, 3M.; $700/ea, maker" since 1974. Two V i king s e wing .('4 4F; $750/ea, all yelOpen this Sat. from /quilting m a c hines Take care of low. P arent g r eat Havanese rare 10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, with extras. Very good your investments hunters. Avail. to go chocolate color. Parin Downtown Bend, condition. $700 each ents are our pets. 2 July 4th. 541-934-2423 across from the Public with the help from Call 54 1 - 706-0448 b oys available o n Library. The largest eves or weekends. The Bulletin's selection of local artists 6/1 3. 503-812-9217 210 "Call A Service to sell the things you and crafters, 241 AK C f e male Furniture & Appliances East of the Cascades. Mastiff no longer use! Professional" Directory Bicycles & pup, 7 wks. Call for Call (541) 420-9015 or info. 541-536-7869 5000 series M aytag Accessories visit us on Facebook "Ad runsuntilSOLD or up to 8 weeks dryer, like new, 4000 (whichever comes first!) series Maytag dryer, The Bulletin 2013 Santa Cruz Solo NNS+ ss&t n a 205 a~ will hold 2 queen size recommends extra ' mtn. racing bike, med. .Alace gtas hN gtl W ag ssgt Items for Free P eople giving p e ts quilts. $850. Brand l caution when pur- full-suspension, good sgltei, ul SLZS oals Item Priced ai: our To lAd Cos onl: away are advised to new, still under war- chasing products or • cond, must sell, $2800. gg Free BBQ, 5 b urner be selective about the ranty, Whirlpool con- services from out of I J,'a e oq, b gelal 541-480-2652 • Under $500 .....................................................................$39 Brinkman. new owners. For the vection 5 burner glass k the area. Sending k gto Otl.' aLong ug lsretl sJJJJr, • $500 fo $999 .... $49 541-480-6311 protection of the ani- top stove with warm- ' cash, checks, o r ' biglt'laY h elves 'P® mal, a personal visit to ing station. Has Aquo- l credit i n f ormation • $1000 fo $2499............................................................$59 Old upright piano with the home is recom- list technology. $700. may be subjected to uach • Over $2500.....................................................................$6e bench. FREE. Call mended. l FRAUD. For more 1 909 $ 2 .50 g o l d 541-548-1326 information about an c Includes: 2" in length, with border, fuff color photo, bold $400. 2 viles of The Bulletin piece, Servtng Central Oregnn sincefgtg gold nuggets, a little advertiser, you may l headline and price. i call t h e Ore g on i over a gram ea. $45. RANS Wave recumUSE THE CLASSIFIEDS! POODLE or POMAPOO ' State Atto r ney ' bent. 60" WB, older ea. Sterling silver, 24 puppies, toy. Stud also diamond earrings, still l General's O f f i ce your adwill a/so appear in: Serving Central Oregon since igttg Door-to-door selling with model some wear on 541-475-3889 in box, $200. 2 (set) Consumer Protec- • frame. W e l l mainfast results! It's the easiest • The Bulletin, • The Central Oregon Nickel Ads 541-385-5809 h o t line at I tained. New: c hain cubic zirconia sterling tion Queensland Heelers way in the world to sell. • Central Oregon Marketplace • bendbulleun.com i 1-877-877-9392. Standard 8 Mini, $150 silver e n gagement r ings, t i res, s e a t & up. 541-280-1537 Cateye Velo Somerestrictions app/y rings, sizes 7 and 8, The Bulletin Classified TheBulletin > cushion. www.rightwayranch.wor $50 e a . Mi c hael> Serving 7 computer/odometer. 'Private party merchandise only - excludes pets 8 livestock, autos, Rvs, motorcycles, boats, airplanes, and garage sale categories. Centrat Oregon since tggg 541-385-5809 dpress.com 541-589-3092 $350 541-504-5224 ITEMS FORSALE 201 - NewToday 202- Want to buy or rent 203- Holiday Bazaar & Craft Shows 204- Santa's Gift Basket 205- Free Items 208- Pets and Supplies 210 - Furniture & Appliances 211- Children's Items 212 - Antiques & Collectibles 215- Coins & Stamps 240- Crafts and Hobbies 241 - Bicycles andAccessories 242 - Exercise Equipment 243 - Ski Equipment 244 - Snowboards 245 - Golf Equipment 246-Guns,Huntingand Fishing 247- Sporting Goods - Misc. 248- Health and Beauty Items 249 - Art, Jewelry and Furs 251 - Hot TubsandSpas 253 - TV, Stereo andVideo 255 - Computers 256 - Photography 257 - Musical Instruments 258 - Travel/Tickets 259 - Memberships 260- Misc. Items 261 - Medical Equipment 262 - Commercial/Office Equip. 263- Tools

264- Snow Removal Equipment 265 - Building Materials 266- Heating and Stoves 267- Fuel and Wood 268- Trees, Plants & Flowers 269- Gardening Supplies & Equipment 270- Lost and Found GARAGESALES 275 - Auction Sales 280 - Estate Sales 281 - Fundraiser Sales 282- Sales Norlhwest Bend 284- Sales Southwest Bend 286- Sales Norlheast Bend 288- Sales Southeast Bend 290- Sales RedmondArea 292 - Sales Other Areas FARM MARKET 308- Farm Equipment andMachinery 316- Irrigation Equipment 325- Hay, Grain and Feed 333- Poultry, Rabbits and Supplies 341 - Horses andEquipment 345-Livestockand Equipment 347 - Llamas/Exotic Animals 350 - Horseshoeing/Farriers 358- Farmer's Column 375 - Meat andAnimal Processing 383- Produce andFood

SPRING CLEANING SPECIAL

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The Bulletin

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G2 SUNDAY, MAY 31, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

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

T HE N E W

YO R K TIMES CR O S SW O R D

A TALE OF MANY CITIES BY KEVIN G. DER / EDITED BY WILL SHORTZ

1

When thispuzzle is completed,the circled letterswill form a path (starting in the shaded circle) spelling out the puzzle's theme. Each long Down answer contains a hiddencity, readhg; in order from top to bottotn, not necessarily consecutively. The location of the city, and its number of letters, are indicated.

20

ACROSS I Exactly 5 Obama vis-avis Columbia 9 Deg. from Columbia 12 Much-anticipated nights out 20 Company with a fleet 22 Prefix with watt 23 Window shopper's cry 24 Like the roots of

66 Goesforthegold? 67 Not quite right 69 Alternative to metal 70 Goddess in 'The Tempest" 71 Win at auction, say 72 Warrior in the "Discworld" fantasy books 73 Small force 74 Form a coalition 76 Jokesters democracy 77 Personnel list 25 Mario's brother,in 78 ch ic h'uan gaming 7$ Travelers at the speed 26 Breeding ground of light 28 Eventually became 80 Former Jets coach 29 Relative of a kite Ewbank 30 Proofer's mark 81 Tavern menu heading 32 "0, never say that I 82 One with a stiff upper was false of heart flp'? ...," e.g. 83 Speed-skating 34 "Not only that ..." champion Kramer 35 Used apouffe 85 Captain's spot 36 Language whose own 87 Kind of adapter name is represented 89 Act the rat as rt Itfl]rtu Sl It's folded before a 37 Once, old-style meal 38 Competitor ofP etro93 Dodge Aries, e.g. Canada 95 "Walk " (1964 hit) 40 Laura who wrote and sang "Wedding Bell $7 Red Rock dweller $9 Magazinemogul, Blues" familiarly 44 Join 102 "Pretty Maids All in 46 "That's a 48 Stuck in a mess? 103 The sun's "10th 50 "Ain't gonna happen" planet," once 52 Heart 104 Half of a Senate vote 54 Imminent 105 'This looks bad" 56 Local theater, slangily 106 S inger R o s e 58 Ones in an annual hunt 107 Barber's supply 60 Ulan(capital of a 108 Routine response? Russian republic) 10$ Kyrgyz province 61 Vehicle with a folding 110 Trite top 112 Needle holder 62 Suffix with stink 113 Parad i se of "On 63 Fulda tributary the Road" 64 Jack's partner 114 Was bankrupt, say 65 Cousins 115 Blue shade

117 Stupefy 118 Like some missed pitches 11$ Stupefy 120 Baritone in "The Mikado" 121Dyspepsia rehever 122 All at the start? 123Home oftheB ig12's Cyclones 124 One who's behind 126 Solomonic 1 28 co l a da 130 Plantation machines 132 Holes in Swiss cheese 133 Grasps 135 "The Night Circus" author Morgenstern 137 Chicago mayor Emanuel 139 Yamaha Grizzly, e.g., for short 142Trunk part 144Pond or sand trap 146One of the Jackson 5 147 " -hawl" 148 Long-running event? 152"Et voila!" 154One following an order 156 Countermanded 157 Verdi's " tu" 158 Power-play result, often 159 Pope's vestment 160They're blown at some weddings 161Yahoo! alternative 162Do a body scan? 163Meanie DOWN I With 141-Down, author whose work is the basis of this puzzle's theme 2 Shipmate of Spock 3 Brooklyn Heights school [U.S.; 3,9]

2

3

5

4 21

29

$0

35

36

52

61 66

54

0

91

84

58

0

82

86

87 88

11$

114

115

119

120

'"0

89 90

96

97

8

117

118

122

12$

128 129

152

130 1$1 1$7 1$8

1$9 140 141

146

147

154 155

153

157

156

10 0 101

106 112

1$5 1$6

151

99

105

144 145

148 149 15 0

98

110 111 116

126 127 1$$134

4$

70

81

~109

42

65

80

104

19

60

77

108

142 143

59

76

95

18

50 51

69

107

125

40 4 1

74 75

0

10$

17

34

48 49

68

93 94

1$2

42 Send off 43 Popularparty feature 45Often-illegal turns, informally 47 "Hmm, gotcha" 4$ Wolfeofm ystery 51 Sugar suffixes 52Benjamin 53Mitchell heroine 55 Firehouse catching fire, e.g. 57"Someone Like You" singer, 2011 5$ Overdo it at dinner 68 Two-masted craft 73 Dr. of hip-hop

ae a9

63

85

92

124

8] 41"Get it?" [Japan; 8]

ay

56 57

67

102

33 Sci-fi narcotic 3$Military trial for a misdemeanor [India;

aa

55

g 79 8$

24

15 1 6

Q

28

47

73

78

1 2 1$ 1 4

11

a2

62

0

10

27

46

5$

9 23

$1

45

72

seasons [U.S.; 3,4]

8

26

44

Dogs" 9 Spooky sounds 101988Bon Jovi hit [India; 6] 11 Words said with a sigh 12Witchy woman 13 Others, in Oaxaca 141996 Geena Davis thriller [China; 4,4] 15Mountain (soft drinks) 16 What chemists find attractive? 17 Cookie holder 18 "Dig in!" -Cat 19 21 Leans 27As an example 31 PBS craft show for 21

7

22

25

4 Yank 5 En route, as a tanker 6 Relaxing [U.K.; 6] 7 Host of the first World Cup, 1930: Abbr. 8 Michael of "Reservoir

6

159

158

161

75 Ones pressed into service in the kitchen? [Egypt; 4] 76 Spitball, e.g. 77 Mens (legal term) 84 Asseverate 86 Ambulance destinations, for short 88 Anatomical sac $0Book before Esth. $1 Event often in a front yard

$2 Passage between buildings

112 McGregor of "Big Fish"

94 Stream $6 T a te, onetime English poet laureate $8 Secretariat's org. 100Send off 101Pilots 108 One-liner, e.g. 10SStable bagful 111Gets broadcast

116 Dream 125 A neighbor 127 "Kind of" ending 120Rainbow color 131 'Ta-ta"

141 See 1-Down 143Longfellow bell town 145 "Um, pardon ..." 148 Rabble 149 A.I. woman in 2015's "Ex Machina" 150Std.

134Lyric poem 151Old game console 136Eager,inform ally uuts. 138 Overflowseating area 153Dress (up) 1 40 "Coffee, Me? " 1551990s Indian P.M.

PUZZLE ANSWER ON PAGE G3

541-3 8 5 - 5 8 0 9 AD PLACEINENT DEADLINES

PRIVATE PARTY RATES

Monday.. . . . . . . . . . ... 5:00 pm Fri. Tuesday... . . . . . . . ... . Noon Mon. Wednesday.. . . . . . . ... Noon Tues. Thursday.. . . . . . . . . ... Noon Wed. Friday.. . . . . . . . . . . Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate .. ... 11:00am Fri. Saturday.. . . . . . . . . ... 3:00 pm Fri. Sunday.. . . . . . . . . . ... 5:00 pm Fri.

Starting at 3 lines *UNDER '500in total merchandise

o r g o t o w w w . b e n d b u l l e t i n acom

Place 3 photo in your private partyad for only $75.00 per week.

OVER 3500in total merchandise 7 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 0 .00 4 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 8 .50 14 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 6.00 7 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 2 4 .00 *Muet state prices In ad 14 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 3 3 .50 28 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 6 1 .50

Garage Sale Special

4 lines for 4 days .. . . . . . . . . . $ 2 0.00 (call for commercial line ad rates)

A Payment Drop Box i s CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: available ai Bend City Hall. MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00p.m. CLASSIFICATIONS BELOW MARKED WITH AN*() REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any oui-of-area ads. The Bulletin ServingCentralOregon since 1903 reserves the r]ght to reject any ad Is located at: at any time. 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave., Bend, Oregon 97702

The Bulletin

PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour ad for accuracythefirst day it appears. Pleasecall us immediately If a correction is needed. Wewill gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reservesthe right io accept or reject any adat anytime, classify and index anyadvertising basedon the policies of these newspapers. Thepublisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for anyreason. Private Party Classified adsrunning 7 or moredayswill publish In the Central OregonMarketplace eachTuesday. 245

246

Golf Equipment

Guns, Hunting & Fishing

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260

261

267

270

325

Tra v el/Tickets

Misc. Items

Medical Equipment

Fuel & Wood

Lost & Found

Hay, Grain & Feed

Sisters Rodeo Tickets, M ust sell: s old R V . Aff Year Dependable Looking for your 10 box seats. Saiur- R eese 5t h wh e e l Firewood: Seasoned; next employee? day night, June 13th, hItch, 20k p ounds, Lodgepole, split, del, REMEMBER: If you 2015. Get your friends used once, $800 obo. Place a Bulletin B end, 1 f o r $ 1 95 have lost an animal, help wanted ad together and e njoy Slide oui jack, $20. or 2 cords for $365. don't forget io check this g r eat r o d eo. 15' 50 amp electric today and Multi-cord discounts! The Humane SocIety $320. 541-410-5970 c ord, $ 4 0 . TIr e Hoyer Classic LIft wIth 541-420-3484. reach over Bend on the first day ii runs shocks, $20. TowIng sling. Will lift up to Model 12, 60,000 readers 541-882-3537 to make sure It Is cor- WInchester 421 260 269 r e c eiver, mirrors, used once, 400 lbs. $125. Temeachweek. Redmond rect. "Spellcheck" and complete pur-pedIc twIn electric Gardening Supplies $25. KIng-pIn siabISchools & Training $100. 541-548-3408 IIIIisc Items • 541-923-0882 Your classified ad human errors do ocIIzer, $15. b ed 8 remote. T op & Equipment Madras will also cur. If this happens to mattress h as a 247 541-548-7154 Buying Diamonds 2ITR Truck School 541-475-6889 appear on your ad, please conwater-proof mattress REDMOND CAMPUS /Gold for Cash Sporting Goods PrInevIlle tact us ASAP so that bendbulietin.com cover. SOLD. 4 wheel Reduce Your Past Tax Our Grads GetJobs! BarkTurfSoil.com Saxon's FIne Jewelers 541-447-7178 correctIons and any - Illlisc. which currently Bill by as much as 75 Scooter. New batter1-888-438-2235 541-389-6655 or Craft Cats adjustments can be receives over Percent. Stop LevIes, Ies purchased April PROMPT D ELIVERY WWW.IITR.EDU 541-389-8420. made to your ad. Slumberjack all weather 1.5 million page BUYING LIens and Wage Gar- 2 015, c harger I n 541-385-5809 542-389-9663 sleeping bags, used 1x, LIonel/AmerIcan Flyer viewsevery SOLD! nIshments. Call The cluded. 476 The Bulletin Classified $45 ea. 541-548-8913 traIns, accessorIes. month at no Tax DR Now to see if 541-317-1188 Tick, Tock 541-408-2191. Employment extra cost. Golf balls, 52/dozen, you Qualify 245 For newspaper 1-800-791-2099. Tick, Tock... Bulletin good cond I tIon. Opportunities 265 delivery, call the BUYING a SE LLING Health & 541-383-4231 Claeeifiede All gold jewelry, silver (PNDC) Circulation Dept. at Building Materials ...don't let time get Beauty Items Add your web address Get Results! and gold coIns, bars, 541-385-5800 246 away. HIre a you r s t ructured REDMOND HabItat to your ad and readCall 541-385-5809 rounds, weddIng sets, Sell To place an ad, call Guns, Hunting Got Knee Pain? Back class rIngs, sterling sII- settlement or annuIty ers on The Bulletin's or place your ad 541-385-5809 professional oui RESTORE Pain? Shoulder Pain? ver, coIn collect, vIn- payments for CASH Building web site, www.bend& Fishing on-line at or email Supply Resale of The BulletIn's Get a pain-relieving tage watches, dental NOW. You don't have classified@bendbulletin.com bulletIn.com, will be bendbulietin.com Quality at "Call A Service able to click through 1943 303 British Long brace -little or NO cost go1d. Bill Fl e ming, to waIt for your future LOW PRICES The Bulletin payments any longer! automatically to your Branch wi a m mo. to you. MedIcare Pa- 541-382-9419. servfns central oregonslnce Ias Professional" 1242 S. Hwy 97 iIents Call Health HoiCall 1-800-914-0942 website. $199. 541-548-3339 541-548-'I 406 DIrectory today! 341 line Now! 1- DID YOU KNOW 7 IN (PNDC) Open to the public. New Sunmojoe Lawn Bend local dealer pays 10 AmerIcans or 158 800-285-4609 Horses 8 Equipmen People Lookfor Information mower, electric, 5100 CASH!! for firearms 8 million U.S. A dults SOCIAL S E C URITY (PNDC) About Products and ammo. 541-526-0617 obo. 541-516-8957 read content f r om 266 D ISABILITY B ENARABIAN MARE 14H, ServIces EveryDaythrough newspaper m e d Ia E FITS. Unable t o 253 Heating & Stoves grey, salt and pepper CASH!! Just too many each week? DIscover work? DenIed benFor Guns, Ammo & TV, Stereo & Video tail and mane, trailers, The Bvlletin Classiffeds the Power of the Pa- efIts? We Can Help! collectibles? Reloading Supplies. NOTICE TO bathes, does well wIth cIfIc Northwest News- WIN or Pay Nothing! 541-408-6900. traffIc, easy keeper, DIRECTV Starting at ADVERTISER paper Advertising. For Contact Bill Gordon & S UBA R U FREE InSInce September 29, Sell them in lots of t r ai l m i les. Compound Bow wIth $19.99imo. a free brochure call AssocIates ai s tallatIon. FREE 3 1991, advertising for 5500. All shots curThe Bulletin ClassIfIeds Auto Sales case, practIce and months o f or 1-800-879-3312 to used woodstoves has HBO 916-288-6011 rent. 541-390-7366 Sales professional to hunting arrows, like S HOWTIME email start your application been limited io modCIN Join Central new, 5240. EMAX, STARZ. FREE cecelIa©cnpa.com today! (PNDC) 306 els which have been 541-385-5809 Oregon's l a rgest 541-233-6520 HDiDVR U p g rade! (PNDC) certified by the OrFarm Equipment new ca r de a ler 2015 NFL S u nday Digital film s c anner, The Bulletin Offers egon Department of • ., I O , Subaru of B e nd. & Machinery SPECfaLS 1 IOI'I IIS TII Ticket Included (Se- scan color or mono- Free Private Party Ads Environmental Qual- I + RaIsed Offering 401k, profit Bed Soil lect Packages) New c hrome f i l m an d • 3 lines - 3 days Ity (DEQ) and the fedsharIng, m e d ical CASE 530 diesel trac• PrIvate Party Only + Peat MIxes C ustomers Onl y . mounted slides. Never eral E n v ironmental plan, split shIfts and tor wIth backhoe atDO YOU HAVE • Total of Items adver+ JunIper TIes CALL 1-800-410-2572 used. $60 tIsed must equal 5200 Protection A g e ncy + Paver Discounts paId vacatIon. Expetachment, $4500. Deluxe showman SOMETHING TO iPNDC) (EPA) as havIng met 541-382-6816 rience or will train. 541-389-7669. 3-horse trailer SilSELL or Less + Sand + Gravel smoke emission stan90 day $2000 guarverado 2001 29'xs' FOR $500 OR FOR DETAILS or to + Bark dards. A cer t ified How to avoid scam 325 TURN THE PAGE a ntee. Dress f o r 5th wheel with semI Instantlandscaping.com LESS? PLACE AN AD, w oodstove may b e and fraud attempts P l e ase living quarters, lots of success. For More Ads Hay, Grain & Feed Non-commercial Call 541-385-5809 identified by Its certIfIVBe aware of Internaextras. Beautiful con- apply ai 2060 NE advertisers may Fax 541-385-5802 The Bulletin catIon label, whIch Is Hwy 20, Bend. See tIonal fraud. Deal loWheat Straw for Sale. dItIon. $21,900OBO place an ad permanently attached Yardman Tiller Plus, Bob or Devon. cally whenever pos541-420-3277 Also, weaner pIgs. with our New! Pd $100, sell io the stove. The BulD Ish Network - G e t sible. 541-546-6171 "QUICK CASH 560. 541-593-0312 letIn will not knowM ORE fo r LE S S ! V Watch for buyers SPECIAL" Ingly accept advertIsStarting $19.99imonth who offer more than 270 1 week3lines 12 Ing for the sale of ifor 12 months.) PLUS your askIng prIce and OI' Lost & Found uncertified Bundle & SAVE (Fast who ask to have ~2weeks 2N woodstoves. Internet f o r $15 money wired or Ad must Found: 5 /2 6 Si l v er more/month.) CALL TRAEGER TEXAS handed back to them. include prIce of charm bracelet (four Now 1-800-808-1563 ELITE GRILL 267 Fake cashier checks round c harms) o n ~si le i e D f $500 (PNDC) LIke new, 646 sq. and money orders or less, or multiple Fuel & Wood boat ramp at Sparks Inch grilling area, are common. items whose total Lake. Call to identify 255 bronze color, comYNever gIve out perdoes not exceed 541-385-6206 pleie wit h c o ver, Computers sonal financial InforWHEN BUYING $500. digital t h e rmostat FOUND: Child's campmation. SK ABOUT OUR $50 REFERRAL BONUS PROGRAM FIREWOOD... and cookbook. Ing-iype folding chaIr T HE B U LLETIN r e - YTrust your instincts Call Classifieds at To avoid fraud, on Hunnel Rd. on the quIres computer ad$695! 541-385-5809 and be wary of The Bulletin 22nd. 541-389-1449 vertisers wIth multiple someone using an 541-480-7837 Work at the NEW www.bendbulleiIn.com recommends payad schedules or those escrow servIce or FOUND: Pocket knIfe In Lakeside Bistro ment for Firewood selling multiple sysDRW, descrIbe It io Remington 22 ca. auto temsl software, to dIs- agent to pIck up your only upon delivery this summer! Say "goodbuy" claim It. 541-389-0185 reset target, $35 cash. close the name of the merchandise. and inspection. 541-382-4537 • A cord Is 128 cu. ft. busIness or the term to that unused The Bulletin Lost blue key case with sen ru central oregon sinceelo 4' x 4' x 8' Positions include: 3 keys InsIde on Wed. R uger G P100, 3 2 7 "dealer" In their ads. item by placing It In • Receipts should PrIvate party advertIs5/20 at Macy's or In m ag, 7 s h ot, S S , Infrared Sauna, 220-V The Bulletin ClassIfIeds I I IT>I I I I ' Brick Oven Pizza Cooks include name, hook-up, no building, parkIng lot, or vIcInIty Ammo $475. ers are defined as those who sell one $3000 value, asking phone, price and o f Bed Bath 8 B e 0•541- 678 -5646 BaltenderS kind of wood computer. $1000. 541-536-7790 yond. 541-923-4384 5 41-385-580 9 Sig mdl 239 com.,40 purchased. Baristas • FIrewood ads LOST: Fly rod and reel S&W, $9 00. R e m . Call The Bulletin At 257 11-87 12 ga. 3" semI at lava lake. MUST include 541-385-5809 WantedpayIng cash Musical Instruments 541-593-5847 Apply online at auto, 20" brl, $650. species & cost per Place Your Ad Or E-MaII for HI-fI audIo & stuPTR 91, semI auto 308 BlackButte cord to better serve Lost weddIng rIngs, 55 dio equip. Mclniosh, The Drum & Guitar [ackButteRanch.com/jobs Ai: www.bendbulleIIn.com $900. 541-550-7189 our customers. JBL, Marantz, D yyrs. o f m e mories, Ranch Shop now open! Taurus . 357 Mag, 7 vo l t naco, HeathkIt, SanMId-May, no Idea 63830 NE Clausen K ool-A-Tron 1 2 POSITIONS ALSOAVAILABLE IN OTHER DEPARTMENTS The Bulletin shot, 6 In, SS, NIB Rd., SuIte 103, Bend cooler. $25 suI, Carver, NAD, etc. where. RE W A RD serving cantreloreyansince els 541-382-2884 541-548-1422 Call 541-261-1808 541-316-1736 5425, 541-678-5646 CHECKYOUR AD

WANTED: Collector seeks hIgh quality fIshIng Items & upscale fly rods. 541-678-5753, or 503-351-2746

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THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MAY 31, 2015 G3 THE NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD PUZZLE ANSWER

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Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

J U S T UHA U Disbursement Agent HOUSEKEEPERS! TELEFUNDRAISING C onstruction Ris k LU I G FINANCEANDBUSINESS EMPLOYMENT McMenamins Management firm loERN Tele-funding for 410 - Private Instruction 507 - Real Estate Contracts cated in Sunriver is Old St. Francis •Meals On Wheels SAT seeking highly moti421 - Schools andTraining 514 -Insurance Noyr/HIRING vated individual to as454- Looking for Employment 528 - Loans andMortgages F U app l icants Seniors, students sist with construction Qualified 470- Domestic 8 In-HomePositions 543 - StocksandBonds COR E funds disbursements. must have an open & and all others wel476 - EmploymentOpportunities 558 - Business Investments Position is Full-Time. flexible schedule income. No exp. SHA 486- Independent Positions 573 - Business Opportunities Individual should have cluding, days, evenecessary, will nings, weekends and PAN S a minimum of t wo train. 476 holidays. W e ar e year experience in ORC PART TIME Home Delivery Advisor construction adminis- looking for applicants Employment Mon-Thur. TA I The Bulletin Circulation Department is seeking tration or commercial who have previous or Opportunities 4:30-8:30 p.m. a Home Delivery Advisor. This is a full-time lending. Construction exp. related exp. and S V '&9.5omour.' position and consists of managing an adult enjoy working in a terminology and acT A C 0 carrier force to ensure our customers receive busy customer sercounting experience Caregivers superior service. Must be able to create and needed. Must be pro- v ice-oriented e n v i- Call 541-382-8672 ARO W perform strategic plans to meet department wanted to join ficient in Microsoft Ex- ronment. We are also GE L objectives such as increasing market share cel. Excellent com- willing to train! We o ur carin g and penetration. Ideal candidate will be a offer opportunities for S A L munication, w r i ting memory care self-starter who can work both in the office and or g anizational advancement and exA WE and in their assigned territory with minimal community. All skills required. Com- cellent benefits for eli- chasing products or I supervision. Early a.m. hours are necessary shifts available. petitive salary DOE 8 gible employees, in- I services from out of I L AG G with company vehicle provided. Strong vision, pkg. Firm is cluding EY E S M ust b e r e l i- benefit customer service skills and management skills medical, chiropractic, f the area. Sendingf an EOE. e-mail to: H c ash, checks, o r are necessary. Computer experience is able. For more dental and so much ali.schaal ©tetra required. You must pass a drug screening more! Please apply f credit i n f ormationf M A R A tech.com information, or and be able to be insured by company to drive online 24 / 7 at ~ may be subjected to ~ any questions, OV E R vehicles. This is an entry-level position, but we www.mcmenamins.co FRAUD. The Bulletin For more informab elieve in p r omoting from w i thin, s o p lease cal l m or pick up a paper B AG P To Subscribe call I Can be found on these pages:

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a pplication at a n y tion about an adver- ~ McMenamins location. f tiser, you may call PUZZLE IS ON PAGE G2 Mail to 430 N. Killing- the Oregon State Look at: sworth, Portland OR, f Attorney General's 628 646 Duck Delivery Pro- 97217 or fax: s Office C o n s umer s Bendhomes.com Loans 8 Mortgages Houses for Homes for Sale I Protection hotline at I 5 03-221-8749. C a l l duce has immediate for Complete Listings of 503-952-0598 for info I 1-877-877-9392. Rent General openings for e nerThe Bulletin Area Real Estate for Sale getic and motivated o n other w ays t o LOCAL NIONEyrWe buy NOTICE c/o Kurt Muller secured trustdeeds & L ocal A, B a n d C a pply. Please n o LThe Bulletin g PUBLISHER'S All real estate adverPO Box 6020 note,some hard money phone calls or emails NOTICE tised here in is subclass Delivery Drivers! Bend, OR 97708-6020 Concrete Finishers loans. Call Pat Kellev All real estate adver- ject to th e F ederal or e-mail resume to: (Experience Re- to individual locations! WILDLAND Wanted! 541-382-3099 ext.13. E.O.E. tising in this newspa- Fair Housing A c t, FIREFIGHTERS kmullerObendbulletin.com Roger L a ngeliers quired) per is subject to the which makes it illegal GFP Ente r prises No phone calls, please. Construction Co. is We offer competitive Landscaping F air H o using A c t to advertise any prefc ompensation a n d Sisters Landscaping Inc./ASP Fire - curThe Bulletinis a drug-free workplace. EOE Get your looking for experibenefits inc l uding Company has open- rently seeking qualified which makes it illegal erence, limitation or Pre-employment drugscreen required. enced concrete finbusiness to a d vertise "any discrimination based medical/dental. ishers. $23.00 per ings in all phases of applicants for CRWB, preference, limitation on race, color, reliFFT 1 /ICT5 hour base pay and Compensation: $1 3/hr. landscaping. Willing to ENGB, or disc r imination gion, sex, handicap, Banking C Class / $15/hr. B train, experience wel- AND FFT2. No experi- a ROW I N G $ 6.00 p e r ho u r based on race, color, familial status or naClass / $18-$19.50/hr. come. Call for appt. ence necessary: Entry Fringe pay on prireligion, sex, handi- tional origin, or intenA Class. vate work. Current 541-549-3001. sisters level and a d vanced with an ad in cap, familial status, tion to make any such BOLI w a g e of Qualifications: 2 yrs. landscape@gmail.com training provided. $14 marital status or na- preferences, l i mitato $32/hour DOE. The Bulletin's $ 26.97 pe r h o u r or 50,000 miles verifiCredit Union tional origin, or an in- tions or discrimination. able experience drivFor more information base p a y and Need to get an "Call A Service tention to make any We will not knowingly ing a box truck. Satplease reply to: $13.43 Fringe pay ad in ASAP? Professional" such pre f erence, accept any advertisMember Service Representative (Teller) isfactory background hr@gfpenterprises.com on public work, plus You can place it limitation or discrimi- ing for r eal e state check. Negative drug or call 541-967-8425. Directory Full-Time full benefit package nation." Familial sta- which is in violation of test. Ability to lift 50 Apply on line at: including health inonline at: tus includes children this law. All persons pounds, walk for ex- www.bendbulletin.com www.gfpemergency.com Mid Oregon Credit Union is looking for a surance, 401(k). We 573 special person to join our dynamic, growing t ended periods o f Drug Free workplace- Business Opportunities under the age of 18 are hereby informed are a drug free comliving with parents or that all dwellings adEOE - Veterans enteam. Duties include greeting members and p any, EE O e m - t ime, and must b e 541-385-5809 cus t odians, vertised are available able t o dr i v e a couraged to apply. WARNING The Bulletin legal providing them with information, completing a ployer, an d an pregnant women, and on an equal opportumanual/stick-shift. variety of financial transactions, handling cash E-Verify participant. recommends that you Medical Reception/ people securing cus- nity basis. The Bulleand balancing a cash drawer. Minorities, w omen APPLY TODAY! Once Looking for your next i nvestigate eve r y tody of children under tin Classified Nledical Records you have completed and veterans are employee? phase of investment Bend Urology Associ18. This newspaper Applicants should have excellent customer the questionnaire, we encouraged to apPlace a Bulletin help opportunities, espe- will not knowingly acwill contact you to set ates, LLC is seeking wanted ad today and service and sales skills, sound decisionply. Interested applic ially t h os e fr o m cept any advertising positive, s e l f-moti- reach over 60,000 making aptitude, and the ability to understand up an interview. cants apply at our Redmond Homes out-of-state or offered for real estate which is vated front office per- readers and retain a variety of complex product and office: 62880 Mer- B/C Job Code: 2245. each week. son for phone, recepby a person doing in violation of the law. services information. The person we hire must A Class Code: 0915. cury Place, Bend. Your classified ad business out of a lo- O ur r e aders a r e Looking for your next tion a n d me d ical will also appear on www.tsjobs.net/duckbe able to work in a team environment and records. Candidates cal motel or hotel. In- hereby informed that emp/oyee? have strong computer skills. delivery bendbulletin.com vestment o ff e rings all dwellings adver- Place a Bulletin help D ID Y O U KNO W *Duck Delivery P r o- must exhibit excellent which currently must be r e gistered tised in this newspa- wanted ad today and Newspaper-generduce is an equal *op- communication skills, Go towww.midoregon.com receives over 1.5 with the Oregon De- per are available on have electronic medireach over 60,000 a ted content is s o portunity employer. for an application. million page views cal record experience, partment of Finance. an equal opportunity readers each week. valuable it's taken and Please send resume, every month at We suggest you conbe able to multi-task basis. To complain of Your classified ad repeated, condensed, cover letter and application to: no extra cost. Wiidiand with multiple phone sult your attorney or d iscrimination broadcast, t weeted, ca l l will also appear on Mid Oregon FCU Bulletin Classifieds Firefighters call CON S UMER l ines and h av e a HUD t o l l-free at bendbulletin.com discussed, p o sted, To fight forest fires must Attn: Human Resources Get Results! knowledge of medical HOTLINE, 1-800-877-0246. The which currently recopied, edited, and P.O. Box6749, Call 385-5809 be 18yrs old 8 Drug 1-503-378-4320, terminology. toll f ree t e lephone ceives over emailed c o u ntless free! Apply 9am-3pm Bend, OR 97708 or place This is a full time posi8:30-noon, Mon.-Fri. 1.5 million page times throughout the number for the hearyour ad on-line at Mon-Thurs. Bring two tion in a fast paced ing im p aired is views every month Mid Oregon Credit Union isa drug-free workplace day by others? Disbendbulletin.com forms of ID fill out DID YOU KNOW that 1-800-927-9275. environment with mulat no extra cost. cover the Power of not only does newsFederal 1-9 form. tiple providers. CusBulletin Classifieds Newspaper Advertis- No ID = No Application 486 paper media reach a tomer service is high 658 Get Results! ing in FIVE STATES priority. This position Independent Positions HUGE Audience, they Call 385-5809 or with just one phone Houses for Rent a lso reach an E Noffers a full benefit place your ad on-line call. For free Pacific Redmond GAGED AUDIENCE. p ackage. Ple a se at Northwest NewspaDiscover the Power of Help send your resume and Sales bendbulletin.com per Association Net3 Bdrm w/den, 1550 sq. Newspaper Advertiscover let t e r to Wanted: En erwork brochures call ing in six states - AK, ft., 1.75 bath, gas fireCentral Oregon Community College has jenniel©bendurology. getic kiosk sales 916-288-6011 or PatRick Corp. open ceilings, openings lis t e d bel o w . Go to com. 1199 NE Hemlock, person ne e ded ID,MT, OR & WA. For place, email a free rate brochure 2-car garage, fenced Recreational Homes https://jobs.cocc.edu to view details & apply cecelia@cnpa.com Redmond immediately for the 916-288-6011 or yard, auto sprinklers, online. Human Resources, Newberry Hall, 541-923-0703 EOE (PNDC) Registered Nurse Central O r e gon call & Property great n eighborhood email 2600 NW College Way, Bend OR 97701; area. Secured loclose to schools & cecelia@cnpa.com (541)383 7216. For hearing/speech impaired, T he Oregon D ecations, high comshopping, NW Red- Cabin in the woods on (PNDC) Truck Drivers Oregon Relay Services number is 7-1-1. partment of Correcmissions paid m ond. $1250 m o . trout stream, private, Roush Industries has an immediate need for COCC is an AA/EO employer. tions has a permaweekly! For more Check out the W/S/G included plus off the grid, 80 mi. Class A CDL Truck Drivers in Madras, Oregon. nent, full- t ime information, please deposit. Avail. June 5, from Bend. 638 ac. classifieds online Test drive prototype trucks and give feedback Part Time LatinoCollege Prep Registered N urse $849K. Fo r d r o ne c all H oward a t 2015. 541-504-4624 to the development team!! Home every day! www.bendbulletin.com Program Coordinator vacancy at the Deer video li n k , call 541-279-0982. You Retirees and Veterans welcome! Serve as primary coordinator for students preRidge Correctional Updated daily 541-480-7215. can a ls o e m a il Must have valid CDL-A license. Part-time posiparing for post-secondary education. EstabCall a Pro Institute in Madras, tions, 4 - 6 hour shifts. Driving positions are lotcoles©yourneighlish goals and objectives of the program. OR. Salaries range Whether you need a 776 cal to the Madras, Oregon, area. 401K benborhoodpublica$19.32 - $23.00/hr. 30hr/wk. 11months per from $4,885.00 Manufactured/ fence fixed, hedges efits offered to all employees. year. Extended to open until filled. tions.com for more $7,072.00 per To apply, please send an email with resume Mobile Homes information. trimmed or a house month with an addiattached to careersOroush.com Please refer End User Support Coordinator tional 4 75%-9 5% built, you'll find to "CDL Driver Madras" in your email InterServe as lead technician for EUS team. ReList your Home depending on level views will be scheduled in Madras or If you professional help in sponsible for project planning, implementation, Jandlr/IHomes.com of education. meet all requirements listed above you may RBEljjiCCI We Have Buyers troubleshooting, installations, train and assist The Bulletin's "Call a ODOC is an equal also apply in person at 3449 N. Anchor, Portcampus technologyusers.Associates + 2-yrs Get Top Dollar opportunity, affirma® RIAR(IM Service Professional" land, Oregon 97217. Financing Available. exp. A+, MCDST and MCSA Certifications. t ive a c tion e m Directory $45,755-$53,082/yr. Closes June 12. 541-548-5511 ployer committed to 541-385-5809 a diverse workforce. General Part TimeMazama Gym For further informaVacation Rentals Open Hours Supervisor(2 positions) tion and to apply, go & Exchanges Jefferson Count Job 0 ortunities : I. Provide supervision of the Mazama Gym and to ODOCjobs.com. '- ij 5@RnRs Fitness Center. Summer schedule June 15 to Deluxe furnished condo Maintenance Worker I 626 Sept 25. Shift hours are 6:00am-1:00pm 7th Mtn Resort, avail lWv Mw Public Works Department Mon.-Fri., and 1:00-8:00pm Mon-Thur. SalesNlanager Loans & Mortgages June-Sept.nightly, $2,693.58 to $3,116.94 per month — DOQ Non-benefited position 10-15hrs/wk. $9.57/hr. Join Tourism Walla weekly, 5 star, many Closes June 26th, 2015 Open Until Filled. Walla as the new WARNING a menities. 541 8 15 Group Tour Sales The Bulletin recom7707, kar e nmichFor complete job description and application Assistant Professor of HIT Manager. This posimends you use cauellen@hotmail.com form go to www.co/efferson.or.us click on HuProvide classroom and lab instruction in the tion is responsible tion when you pro650 man Resources, then Job Opportunities; or Health Information Technology Program. for sales and marvide personal 632 call 541-325-5002. Mail completed Jefferson 744 Snowmobiles Provide student advising and assistance. keting activities to information to compaApplication forms to Jefferson County A ssociate Degree + 1 - y r e xp . i n H I T County promote Walla Walla nies offering loans or Apt JMultiplex General Open Houses Human Resources, 66 SE D Street, Suite E, profession. $42,722-$49,202 for 9mo contract. to meeting planners credit, especially Madras, OR 97741. CHECK YOUR AD Open until filled. and tour product dethose asking for advelopers. Activities vance loan fees or Open 12-3pm Jefferson County i s sn PT Instructor Positions include i d entifying companies from out of 19175 Chitoquin Equal Employment Opportunity Employer NEW - College Level Writing, potential target marstate. If you have Drive Developmental Writing, kets, collecting, orconcerns or quesShevlin Pines 4-place enclosed InterVeterinary and Librarian tions, we suggest you ganizing and pursuSo Much To See! Human Resources Manager state snowmobile trailer Looking for talented individuals to teach i ng l e ads, an d consult your attorney on the first day it runs Phyllis Mageau, w/ RockyMountain pkg, part-time in a variety of disciplines. Check our making local referor call CONSUMER Broker The Human ResourcesManager supports the to make sure it is cor$8500. 541-379-3530 employment Web site at https://jobs.cocc.edu. rals. The successful HOTLINE, 541-948-0447 rect. "Spellcheck" and overall HR functions of Western CommunicaPositions pay $543 per load unit (1 LU = 1 candidate will be a 1-877-877-9392. Theearnereroup.com tions. Primary responsibilities include emhuman errors do oc860 class credit), with additional perks. resident expert on ployee relations, benefits, payroll, safety, reBANK TURNED YOU cur. If this happens to liilotorcycles & Accessories cruiting, tr a ining and perf o rmance the travel industry in your ad, please conDOWN? Private party tact us ASAP so that order to promote the management. General area an d a s s ist will loan on real escorrections and any tate equity. Credit, no travel b u sinesses. adjustments can be If you have a passion for improving the workproblem, good equity For complete job made to your ad. Open 12-3pm place and want to take Western Communicais all you need. Call d escription go t o : 541-385-5809 tions to the next level as an employer of 2056 NW Oregon Land Morthttp://bit.ly/1 EatkcS * choice, come join our team. The Bulletin Classified Glassow Driye * Great Supplemental Income!! gage 541-388-4200. / Cascades, City View Harley Davidson requirements: 634 From Awbrey Butte IThe Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our Satur- I Minimum IS Heritage Soft Tail • 5-7 years HR experience with thorough Jody Tuttle, Broker Apt./Multiplex NE Bend 8 day night shift and other shifts as needed. We8 knowledge of HR functions Classic 2006, black 541-41 0-6528 • currently have openings all nights of the week.• cherry pearl, Stage 1 • Experience in employment law and regulaTheearnereroup.com Only a few left! / Everyone must work Saturday night. Shifts tune Vance & Hines tory compliance Two & Three Bdrms start between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and pipes, always ga• Bachelor's Degree in Human Resources or with Washer/Dryer / end between 2:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m. Allporaged. TLC, 8100 preferred and Patio or Deck. • sitions we are hiring for, work Saturday nights.• •Business miles, new tires, Background in employment, compensation, (One Bdrms also avail.) I Starting pay is $9.25 per hour, and we pay aI benefits, employee relations and training / $11,400. Help Desk Analyst Mountain Glen Apts 541-388-8434 8 minimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shifts8 development Advertise your car! • are short (11:30 - 1:30). The work consists of• 54L383.9313 Add A Picture! • Well organized and detailed-oriented with Responsible for providing support services to Professionally / loading inserting machines or stitcher, stackReach thousands of readers! strong communication skills Company-wide IS users. D u t ies include managed by ing product onto pallets, bundling, cleanup and Call 541-385-5809 • Work with management to determine recruitresponding to c a lls r egarding computer Norris & Stevens, Inc. The Bulletin Classifieds / other tasks. ment needs and staffing objectives hardware and software related issues, training • Develop recruitment programs to attract apusers on new technology and technical Good classified adstell IFor qualifying employees we offer benefitsl Open 1-4pm identify a n d s o u rce q u alified processes and providing technical knowledge the essential facts in an I including life insurance, short-term & long-term plicants, candidates to assist with 1148 NW 18th St. Harley Road K i ng disability, 401(k), paid vacation and sick time. interesting Manner. Write • Recruit for key positions through interviews NorthWest Crossing Classic 2003, 100th from the readers view not and sourcing Requires a CIS or MIS degree and 1 year Mid-Century Modern Anniversary Edition, the seller's. Convert the ~ Please submit a completed application • Help resolve concerns and issues between experience or a minimum of 3 years' experiShelley Griffin, 16,360 mi. $ 12,499 attention Kevin Eldred. facts into benefits. Show managementand employees ence working in technical support. Must have Broker Bruce 541-647-7078 Applications are available at The Bulletin the reader howthe item will 541-280-3804 • Identify, develop and implement training prostrong knowledge of computer hardware, softfront desk (1777 S.W. Chandler Blvd.), or help them insomeway. Theearnereroup.com Honda Magna 750cc grams ware, terminology and iSeries. R equires an electronic application may be obtained This • Recommend improvements to HR policies, strong analytical and problem solving skills, motorcycle. 1 2 ,000 upon request by contacting Kevin Eldred via advertising tip benefits and training programs, etc. excellent verbal and written communication miles, $3250 . email (keldred@bendbulletin.com). brought to youby 541-548-3379 • Local candidates strongly preferred skills, ability to work in a fast paced environ• Experience with California laws and regulament with multiple priorities and excellent I No pho ne calls please. The Bulletin tions a plus customer service skills. ServingCentral Oregonsince f9tB OPEN HOUSE * No resumes will be accepted * 12:30 - 4:30 We offer benefits including paid vacation and Les Schwab has a reputation of excellent 636 Sat. & Sun. sick time, 401(k), life insurance and limited customer service, with over 450 stores and Drug test is required prior to employment. AptJMultiplex NW Bend 2839 NE Forum Drive medical, dental, vision benefits. 7,000 employees in the western United States. EOE. 3 bdrm, 2.5 bath, large EOE/Drug Free Workplace We offer competitive pay, excellent benefits, master suite, great Honda Shadow Saretirement and cash bonus. Please go to Quiet 2 bedroom, w/s/g/ room, loft, family area, bre, 2002, 1 100cc, c able p a id , d i s hIf interested please submit your resume and www.lesschwab.com to apply. No phone calls The Bulletin charming backyard. washer, laundry faciliexcellent condition w/ Servmg Central oreyon since $03 cover letter to: Heidi Wright, CFO/HR Officer, please. Lovely home ties, oak c a binets, extras, 13k orig. mi. Western Communications, Inc., PO Box 6020, New battery and new $735 mo./$700 de$264,900 Bend, OR 97708 or e-mail hwright@wescomLes Schwab is proud to be an I p osit. N o dog s . Call Steve ct front tire. $3100 obo. newspapers.com.No phone calls,please. equal opportunity employer. advancement within company is available to the right person. If you enjoy dealing with people from diverse backgrounds and you are energetic, have great organizational skills and interpersonal communication skills, please send your resume to:

541-385-4717

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RENTALS 603 - Rental Alternatives 604 - Storage Rentals 605- RoommateWanted 616- Want ToRent 627-Vacation Rentals& Exchanges 630- Rooms for Rent 631 - Condos &Townhomesfor Rent 632 - Apt./MultiplexGeneral 634 - Apt./Multiplex NEBend 636 - Apt./Multiplex NW Bend 638 - Apt./Multiplex SE Bend 640 - Apt./Multiplex SWBend 642 - Apt./Multiplex Redmond 646 - Apt./Multiplex Furnished 648- Houses for RentGeneral 650- Houses for Rent NE Bend 652- Houses for Rent NWBend 654- Houses for Rent SEBend 656- Houses for Rent SW Bend 658- Houses for Rent Redmond 659 - Houses for RentSunriver 660 - Houses for Rent LaPine 661 - Houses for Rent Prineville 662 - Houses for Rent Sisters 663- Houses for Rent Madras 664 - Houses for Rent Furnished 671 - Mobile/Mfd. for Rent 675 - RVParking 676 - Mobile/Mfd. Space 860

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870

Moto Guzzi B reva 19' Bayliner 1998, I/O, 1 100 2 0 07 , on l y great shape, call for 11,600 miles. $5,950. info. $8500. In Bend 206-679-4745 661-644-0384.

Two Twin Yamaha 19' Pioneer ski boat, TW200 sto c k w i th 1983, vm tandem fatty tires 2007 with trailer, V8. Fun & 1155 miles, 2007 with fast! $5350 obo. 1069 miles. $3600 for 541-815-0936. one or $7000 for two obo. 5 4 1-588-0068

Yamaha V-Star 250cc 2011, 3278 mi., exc. cond. $4700 OBO. Dan 541-550-0171. 870

Boats & Accessories 10'

Pelican Scorpio boat, 56" wide, takes 7 HP motor. $275. 541-280-0514

14' Klamath, 15 hp Johnson, all the extras, $3, 2 50. 541-389-3890

FUN & FISH!

2006 Smokercraft Sunchaser820 model pontoon boat, 75HP Mercury and electric trolling motor, full canvas and rnany extras. Stored inside $19,900 541-350-5425

Garage Sales Garage Sales Garage Sales Find them in The Bulletin Classifieds

541-385-5809 16' 1976 Checkmate ski

boat, 90HP Mercury Ads published in the motor, restored; new "Boats" classification seats, new c a rpet include: Speed, fishfloor, new prop, with ing, drift, canoe, trailer. Have receipts. house and sail boats. $2500. 541-536-1395 For all other types of watercraft, please go to Class 875. 541-385-5809

The Bulletin

Servin Central Ore on since 1903

17.5' Bass Tracker 2011, V175, 90HP, less than 40 hrs. All welded hull. S eats five, walk-thru windshield. Folding tongue, custom cover, trolling motor, stored inside garage. Surge brakes, new tires and spare. Rad i o/disc player. 2 Live wells, ski pole, $ 1 6,000. 541-410-2426

682- Farms, RanchesandAcreage 687- Commercial for Rent/Lease 693- Office/Retail Space for Rent REALESTATE 705 - Real Estate Services 713 - Real Estate Wanted 719 -Real Estate Trades 726- Timeshares for Sale 730 - NewListings 732- Commercial Properties for Sale 738 - MultiplexesforSale 740- Condos &Townhomes for Sale 744- Open Houses 745- Homes for Sale 746-Northwest Bend Homes 747 - Southwest BendHomes 748-Northeast Bend Homes 749- Southeast BendHomes 750- RedmondHomes 753 - Sisters Homes 755 - Sunriver/La Pine Homes 756- Jefferson County Homes 757- Crook CountyHomes 762- Homes with Acreage 763- Recreational HomesandProperty 764- Farms andRanches 771 - Lots 773 - Acreages 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes 780 - Mfd. /Mobile Homeswith Land

Motorcycles & Accessories Boats & Accessories

cell, 541-549-4834 hm

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Bayliner 185 2006 open bow. 2nd owner — low engine hrs. — fuel injected V6 — Radio 8 Tower. Great family boat Priced to sell. $11,590. 541-548-0345.

Motorhomes

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882

908

932

Fifth Wheels

Aircraft, Parts & Service

Antique & Classic Autos

CHECK YOUR AD

i • •

i Call 54 /-385-5809

to romote our service Monaco Monarch 31 ' 2006, Ford V 10, miles, 28,900 auto-level, 2 slides, queen b ed 8 hide-a-bed sofa, 4k gen, convection microwave, 2 TVs, tow package. PRICE REDUCTION! $59,000.

on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. "Spellcheck" and human errors do occur. If this happens to

Save money. Learn to fly or build hours with your own air-

Building/Contracting Landscaping/Vard Care

Mustang Hard top 1965, 6-cylinder, auto trans, power brakes, power steering, garaged, well maintained, engine runs strong. 74K mi., great condition. $12,500. Must see! 541-598-7940

NOTICE: Oregon state NOTICE: Oregon Landlaw requires anyone scape Contractors Law c raft. 1 96 8 A e r o who con t racts for (ORS 671) requires all your ad, please con- Commander, 4 seat, construction work to businesses that ad150 HP, low time, tact us ASAP so that be licensed with the vertise t o p e r form full panel. $21,000 corrections and any Construction Contrac- Landscape Construcobo. Contact Paul at adjustments can be tors Board (CCB). An tion which includes: 541-447-5184. made to your ad. active license l anting, deck s , 541-385-5809 means the contractor ences, arbors, 541-815-6319 The Bulletin Classified is bonded & insured. water-features, and inVerify the contractor's stallation, repair of irJust bought a new boat? FOUR WINDS 2003 5th l i c ense at rigation systems to be Sell your old one in the wheel 26L, A/C, CD, F ord p i ckup 1 9 5 1 CCB licensed w i t h the classifieds! Ask about our micro, awning slide c ustom, o a k b o x . www.hirealicensedcontractor.com Landscape ContracSuper Seller rates! o ut, m u c h mo r e AM/FM cassette, new 503-378-4621. tors Board. This 4-digit 541-385-5809 $9000. 541-876-5073. Superhawk N7745G brakes, 289 V-8, '67 or callBulletin recom- number is to be inOwners' Group LLC Mustang engine in this. The mends checking with cluded in all adverCessna 172/180 hp, Edelbrock intake and the CCB prior to con- tisements which indifull IFR, new avionics, carb CFM. 10,461 mi. tracting with anyone. cate the business has Safari 1998 motorGTN 750, touchon engine. $12,500. Some other t rades a bond, insurance and home 30', low milescreen center stack, 541-610-2406. also req u ire addi- workers compensaage, 300 HP Magexceptionally clean. tional licenses and tion for their employnum Cat motor with Healthy engine certifications. ees. For your protecKeystone Everest 5th turbo, always inside, reserve fund. tion call 503-378-5909 Wheel, 2004 white leather inteHangared at KBDN. or use our website: Model 323P - 3 slides, Handyman rior, like new, has One share www.lcb.state.or.us to rear island-kitchen, available,$13,000. m any extr a s . check license status fireplace, 2 TV's, $55,000. S e r ious Call 541-815-2144 before contracting with CD/DVR/VCR/Tuner Mercedes 380SL 1982 I DO THAT! callers only. the business. Persons w/surround sound, A/C, Roadster, black on 541-548-8415 The Bulletin's doing lan d scape custom bed, ceiling fan, black, soft & hard top, maintenance do not W/D ready, many extras. "Call A Service exc.cond., always gar equire an LC B l i Washer/dryer Combo New awning & tires. raged. 155K miles, Professional" Directory cense. 880 unit for RV or small Exc. cond. Tow vehicle $11,500. 541-549-6407 is all about meeting a partment. $50 0 . also avail.$17,900 obo. Motorhomes your needs. 541-460-1853 Morepics. 541-923-6408 CPR Property Handyman/Remodeling Call on one of the Maintenance Residential/Commercial Laredo 31'2006, landscaping &Painting professionals today! Small Jobs to 5th wheel, fully S/C • Spring CleanUps Enlire RoomRemodels one slide-out. 925 • Aeration/De-thatching Garage Oraanlxation Awning. Like new, VW CONV. 1 9 78 Utility Trailers • Lawn Repairs Home Ivspectlon Repairs $8999 -1600cc, fuel hardly used. • Weekly Maintenance Winnebago Outlook Quality, Honest Work ALLEGRO 27' 2002 Must sell $20,000 Tow Dolly, new tires, 2 injected, classic 1978 • Bark Mulch Volkswagen Convert2007 Class "C"31', 58k mi., 1 slide, vacaor refinance. Call sets of straps, exc. ible. Cobalt blue with Dennis 541-317.9788 tion use only, Michclean, non- smoking 541-410-5649 ccBn51573Bonded/Inmred c ond., capable o f a black convertible exc. cond. Must See! elin all weather tires p ulling a f u l l s i z e top, cream colored w/5000 mi., no acci- Lots of extra's, a very pickup truck. If inter- interior & black dash. LandscapingNard Care dents, non-smokers, good buy.$47,900 ested we will send This little beauty runs RV Workhorse e n gine For more info call pictures. $1000 obo. and looks great and CONSIGNMENTS 261-A, Allison Trans., 541-447-9268 951-961-4590 turns heads wherever WANTED backup cam e r a, it goes. Mi: 131 902 Superchief We Do the Work, heated mirrors, new Winnebago 929 Phone 541-382-0023 Zoue4 Qua/ieI You Keep the Cash! refrig. unit., exc. con- 1990 27' clean, 454 Automotive Wanted hevy, runs v e r y On-site credit L'a~< C'~ r,. ditioned, well cared Cood. oo d t i r es, approval team, for. $3 4 ,000. obo! 8500. g541-279-9458. CASH for V I NTAGE Full Service web site presence. 541-549-8737 Iv. msg. CARS Mercedes conCOLLINS Landscape We Take Trade-Ins! vertibles, P o r sche, B ounder, 1999, 3 4 ' , winnebag o Management vi a Jaguar, Alfa, Lancia, BIG COUNTRY RV one slide, low mile- 2 011 2 5R , 1 2 , 5 0 0 Ferrari, C o r vettes, Bend: 541-330-2495 age, very clean, lots m il es , N e r c e d e s Clean Up Aeratlon/llethatchlng M ustangs. Earl y VW SunBug 1 9 74 Spring Redmond: of storage, $28,500. l sshpurbd i e s e l . •Leaves • Mowing «Ed aina Japanese Cars exc. cond. Total inte541-548-5254 541-639-9411 •Cones New $ 136,000 , • Pruning «weedeatina 714-267-3436 rior refurbish, engine Yours • Needles 8 85,00 0 , rstevensjr@gmail.com OH, new floor pan, • Fertuizina ~Haulina • Debris Hauling 541-389-1188 885 Other collector cars of plus lots more! Sun• Grounds Keeping significant value de- r oof. C l ea n ti t l e. WeedFree Bark Canopies & Campers oee-nme or sired. (PNDC) 881 $9500. 541-504-5224 aeealy servrcssop6oe & FlowerBeds Serving Travel Trailers DONATE YOUR CAR, 933 Canopyfor short Bend, Redmond TRUCK OR BOAT TO Lawn Renovation box, lined interior, a Eagle crest Pickups Fleetwood D i scovery HERITAGE FOR THE Aeration - Dethatching Call now ro scbedulel green, good locking 40' 2003, diesel, w/all BLIND. Free 3 Day Overseed system. excellent j41-480-9714 options - 3 slide outs, V acation, Tax D e Compost shape. $995. BONDED a INSURED satellite, 2 TV's, W/D, ductible, Free Towing, Top Dressing 541-389-7234. etc., 34,000 m iles. All Paperwork Taken Wintered in h eated Care O f. CALL Landscape Find It in shop. $78,995 obo. Heartland Pro w ler 1-800-401-4106 Maintenance The Bulletin Classfgeds! 541-447-8664 2012, 29 PRKS, 33', (PNDC) o Chevrolet Silverado Full or Partial Service 541-385-5809 like new, 2 slides-liv• Mowing ~Edging Ford Motorhome 1992, i ng area 8 Got an older car, boat 2009 1500 Crew Cab, la r g e 0 0 •Pruning ~Weeding 28', exc., lo w m i ., closet. Large enough or RV? Do the hu4x4, 5.3 Itr, 6 speed Painting/Wall Covering mane thing. Donate it auto, HD t r ailering Water Management good tires, $12,500. to live in, but easy to 541-383-5186 to the Humane Soci- pkg, black int, remote tow! 15' power awFertilizer included ety. Call 1- start, 68k, 24 m pg ning, power hitch 8 800-205-0599 hwy. $25,900. with monthly program stabilizers, full s i ze (PNDC) 541-382-6511 queen bed, l a r ge Weekly, monthly shower, porcelain sink 931 908 or one time service. & toilet. $2 6 ,500. CA L L . Cb Automotive Parts, • Interior and Exterior 541-999-2571 Aircraft, Parts TODAYW Managing Service & Accessories ChevyPickup 1978, • Family-Owned & Service Freightliner 1994 Central Oregon Keystone Sp ringlong bed, 4x4, frame • Residential & Custom Dodge truck bed cover, Landscapes up restoration. 500 dale 20 1 0, 2 1 ' , Commercial Truxedo, fits 94-01. Since 2006 Motorhome sleeps 6, DVD & CD Cadillac eng i ne, • 40 years experlence $200. 541-536-9534 Will haul small SUV fresh R4 transmisplayer, 60 g a llon • Senior Discounts Senior Discounts or toys, and pull a freshwater, 7 cu.ft. New LT- 2 25-75-16" sion w/overdrive, low 541-390-1466 • 5-year Warranties trailer! Powered by fridge. Leveling hitch Sears R o adhandler mi., no rust, custom 8.3 Cummins with 6 Same Day Response & j acks, awning, tires with 8-hole GMC interior and carpet, /tvkabout our speed Allison auto n ew wheels a n d spare tire, lots of rim, from Class C 1/3interest in spRlrvG spEcIALr trans, 2nd o wner. storage. New cond., tires, You must see m otorhome. $ 1 2 5 . Columbia 400, Very nice! $53,000. Call 541 420 7846 only 3,000 m iles. it! $25,000 invested. 541-280-0514. Financing available. 541-350-4077 CCBr204918 Priced below Blue $12,000 OBO. $125,000 932 541-536-3889 or Book, $10,500. Call SERVINQCENTRAL OREGON (located I Bend) Rick for more info. 541-420-6215. slnce 2003 Antique & Have an item to 541-288-3333 541-633-7017 Resldenuala commerclal Classic Autos sell quick?

00

G rand Manor b y Thor 1996, 35' very good condition, 454 gas engine, 50,050 miles, 2 pop outs, new tires, $18,999. Call 541-350-9916

Sprinkler Activation/Repair Back Row Testing MAL(VTI1VAIVOl • Thatch & Aerate • Spring Clean up • Weekly Iylowing & Edging

RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work ...

You Keep The Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins!

1/5 share in v ery nice 150 HP Cessna Estate Sale 150; 1973 C e s sna Olds Cutlass Calais 150 with L ycoming 1981. 14,500 orig. 0-320 150 hp engine miles, new transmisc onversion, 400 0 sion w/warranty new BIG COUNTRY RV Kayak - Easy Rider tires, battery and hours. TT airframe. Bend: 541-330-2495 very fast, $150. Approx. 400 hours on fluids. Factory Redmond: 541-593-0312 0-timed 0-320. Hanbucket seats, con541-548-5254 gared in nice (electric sole shift, Beautiful 875 door) city-owned han- condition. Drives like Watercraft gar at the Bend Airnew!$7900. 541-419-7449 port. One of very few ds published in "Wa C -150's t h a t ha s Jayco M e l bourne tercraft" include: Kay never been a trainer. 2010 29D Class C, 3 CAR AUCTION aks, rafts and motor slide outs, 1 2 ,500 $4500 wi ll consider Ized personal miles on Ford 450 trades for whatever. Sat., July 11 17.5' Seaswirl 2002 Springdale 2006 26' watercrafts. Fo Ji m Fr a zee, Roseburg Graffiti chassis, Immaculate bunkhouse, Wakeboard Boat exc. Call "boats" please se cond., loaded, f u ll Weekend I/O 4.3L Volvo Penta, cond, 12' p o p-out, 541-410-6007 Class 870. body paint, cherry stored in RV garage. tons of extras, low hrs. Call fo Consign Full wakeboard tower, 541-385-5809 cabinets, s t a inless Well cared for. Many 541-689-6824 appliances, very petersencollectorcars.com light bars, Polk audio $13,500 obo. home-like in t e rior. extras. speakers throughout, 541-588-0068, c e l l, Serving Central Oregonsince 1903 completely wired for AutoSeek dish, two 541-549-4834 home amps/subwoofers, unTVs, Nav., CD/DVD, 880 derwater lights, fish back up a n d s i de F35 Bonanza. Aircraft finder, 2 batteries cusMotorhomes cameras, 500 0 l b. Looking for your is in exc. cond., w/ next employee? tom black paint job. trailer hitch. $74,500. Place good paint 8 newer a Bulletin help $12,500 541-815-2523 541-312-8974 interior. Full IFR. Auto wanted ad today and pilot, yaw d amper, reach over 60,000 CHEVELLE 18' Bayliner 175 Capri, engine monitor. RV readers each week. 6/IALIBU 1971 like new, 135hp I/O, 6485TT, 1815SMOH, CONSIGNMENTS Your classified ad low time, Bimini top, 692STOH. Hangered 57K original miles, WANTED will also appear on 350 c.i., auto, many extras, Kara- Alfa See ya 2006 36' We Do The Work ... in Bend. $32,000 or bendbulletin.com stock, all original, van trailer with swing Excellent condition, 1 $16,000 for ~/~ share. You Keep The Cash! which currently reHi-Fi stereo neck, current registra- owner, 350 Cat diesel, On-site credit Call Bob Carroll ceives over 1.5 miltions. $8000. 541-550-7382 $15,000 approval team, lion page views ev52,000 miles, 4-dr frig, 541-350-2336 arcarroll9@gmail.com web site presence. ery month at no icemaker, gas stove, 541-279-1072 extra cost. Bulletin w a s her/dryer, We Take Trade-Ins! 1968 Cuddy 21 foot, oven, HANGAR FOR SALE. Classifieds Get Renew outdrive rebuilt non-smoker, 3 slides, 30x40 end unit T sults! Call 385-5809 inv e rtor, BIG COUNTRY RV motor, many extra generator, hanger in Prineville. Find It in or place your ad interior, satellite, Bend: 541-330-2495 parts. Excellent con- leather Dry walled, insulated, 7'4" Redmond: on-line at ceiling. C lean! The Bulletin Classfgeds! d ition. $5,75 0 . and painted. $23,500. 541-548-5254 bendbulletin.com $72,000. 541-233-6520 541 -385-5809 541-480-1616

DodgeRam 2500

1998, 8.0L V-10 cyl VIN ¹217888. $7,588

(exp.5/31/1 5) DLR ¹366

541-548-1448

smolichmotors.com FIND IT! B4IV ITI

SELL IT! The Bulletin Classifieds

The Bulletin

Tom, 541.788.5546

s' I THURS - SUN 12PM - 4PM Popular Pahlisch Homes community featuring resort-like amenities: pools, clubhouse, gym, hot tub, sports center & 2 miles of walking trails. Tour a variety of single level and 2 story plans.

Hosted 6 Listed by:

TEAM DELAY Principal Broker

EDIE DELAY

Ford F-350 Super Cab 2013, 6.7L V-8 cyl VIN ¹A92462. $39,997.

(exp. 5/31/1 5) DLR ¹386

SMOLICH

V Q LV Q 541-749-2156

smolichvolvo.com

• Bi-Monthly & MonthlyMaintenance • Bark, Reck, Etc. LAMlSCAPI1VG • Landscape Construction • Water Feature InstattattoniMatnt. • Synthetic Turf • Pavers • Renovations • Irrigations Installation Senior Discounts Bonded and Insured

If it's under '500 you can place it in The Bulletin Classifieds for:

'10- 3 lines, 7 days '16 - 3 lines, 14 days (Private Party ads only)

Mentionthisadtosaj(L10% on entire Interior or ~

Exteriorlobbooked~ Some restrictions apply J7

541-815-4458 LCB¹ 8759

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61056 Manhae Loop, Bend Directions:East on Reed /Ifarket /rd,, firsI ex/I ai roundabou/ onIo 15th, at Road Detour Sign turn le ft on Ferguson. Right at SageCreek

Drive, left ar ManhaeLane, righl a/ Go/den Gate.

Homes Starting M id-$200 s Q llltscllHOIIles a|!a a v o a I

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THURS - SUN 12PM - 4PM Recently finished Pahltsch Homes Model in NE Bend. Homes feature quartz counters, laminate flooring, gas cooking, stainless steel 20802 NE Sierra Drive appliances and all the Directiom: North on Boyd Acres, quality Pahlisch Homes is righr on Sierra OR north on 18rh known for, Now selling Pom Empire,le/I on Sierra. Lookfor Phase Two — stop by for SlgrK more information, Homes from the

Hosted 6 Listed by:

RHIANNA KUNKLER ABR, SRS

541-420-2cy50

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THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MAY 31 2015 G5

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

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975

975

975

975

975

Automobiles

Automobiles

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Automobiles

Automobiles

Automobiles

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BOATS 8 RVs 805- Misc. Items 850 - Snowmobiiss 860 - Motorcycies And Accessories 865 - ATVs 870 - Boats & Accessories 875 - Watercraft 880 - Motorbomss 881 - Travel Trailers 882 - Fifth Wheels 885- Canopies and Campers 890- RVs for Rent

975

AUTOS8iTRANSPORTATION 908 - Aircraft, Parts and Service 915 - Trucks and Heavy Equipment 925 - Utility Trailers 927 - Automotive Trades 929 - Automotive Wanted 931 - Automotive Parts, Service and Accessories 932 - Antique and Classic Autos 933 - Pickups 935 - Sport Utility Vehicles 940 - Vans 975 - Automobiles

935

935

935

Sport Utility Vehicles

Sport Utility Vehicles

Sport Utility Vehicles

DID YOU KNOW 144 million U.S. A dults read a N e wspaper print copy each week? Discover the Power of PRINT N e wspaper Mercedes Benz E Advertising in Alaska, Class 2005, Idaho, Montana, Or(exp. 5/31/1 5) egon and WashingVin ¹688743 t on with j us t o n e Stock ¹82316 p hone call. Fo r a FREE ad v e rtising$11,979 or $155/mo., $ 2500 down, 72 i n . , network brochure call 916-288-6011 or 4 .49% APR o n a p proved credit. License email and title i ncluded in cecelia@cnpa.com payment, plus dealer in-

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S US A R U .

Looking for your next employee? Scion TCcoupe 2007, (exp. 5/31/1 5) Vin ¹198120 Stock ¹44193B

$10,379 or $149/mo.,

$2800 down, 60 mo., 4 .49% APR o n a p proved credit. License and title included in payment, plus dealer installed options.

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SUSBSUOSSSHD.OOH

SubaruLegacy LL Bean 2006, (exp. 5/31/1 5)

Vin ¹203053 Stock ¹82770

$16,977 or $199/mo.,

$2600 down, 84 mo. at 4 .49% APR o n a p -

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S US A R u 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354 Dlr¹0354 Ford Fusion SEL2012, (exp. 5/31/1 5) Vin ¹117015 Stock ¹44382A

BllllW X3 35i 2010

Exc cond., 65K miles w/100K mile transferable warranty. Very clean; loaded - cold weather pkg, premium pkg & technology pkg. Keyless access, sunroof, navigation, satellite radio, extra snow tires. (Car top carrier not included.) $22,500.

(Photo for ittustration onlrl

Hyundai Veracruz 2008, 63.8L V-6 cyl VIN ¹061266.$17,997.

(exo. 5/31/15) DLR ¹366

S MOu CH

V Q LV Q 541-749-2156

smolichvolvo.com

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 940

Vans

BMNf X3 Sl 20 07,

$2400 down, 84 mo., 4 .49% APR o n ap proved credit. License and title included in payment, plus dealer installed options.

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S UBA R U .

Mustang Conv. 2011,

Subaru GTLegacy 2006, (exp. 5/31/1 5) Vin ¹212960 Stock ¹83174

6 speed auto, pony pkg. 1 5 , 000 mi. $20,000. 54'I -330-2342

$14,972 or $179/mo., $2500 down 84 mo.

Subaru Outback XT 2006, (exp. 5/31/1 5) VIN ¹313068 Stock ¹44631A

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Have an item to sell quick? Volvo XC60 2014, If it's under 3.2L 1-6 cyl VIN ¹522043.$36,997. '500 you can place it in (exp. 5/31/1 5) DLR ¹366 The Bulletin S MOu C H Classifieds for: V O LV O 541-749-2156 '10 - 3 lines, 7 days smolichvolvo.com '16- 3 lines, 14 days (Private Party ads only)

4 .49% APR o n a p - $11,999 or $149/mo., 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Where can you find a proved credit. License $2800 down, 72 mo., 877-266-3821 helping hand? 4 .49% APR o n ap and title included in Dlr ¹0354 From contractors to payment, plus dealer in- proved credit. License and title included in stalled options. yard care, it's all here Want to impress the payment, plus dealer in The Bulletin's ® s u a aau installed options. relatives? Remodel "Call A Service S US ARu your home with the 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. SUBBSUO1HSHD.OOH 877-266-3821 help of a professional Professional" Directory 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Dlr ¹0354 VI¹/Passet2014, from The Bulletin's 877-266-3821 1.8L 1-4 cyl "Call A Service Dlr ¹0354 VIN ¹099227.$24,997. Professional" Directory Vehicle? Need help fixing stuff? (exp. 5/31/15) DLR ¹366 Call The Bulletin Call A Service Professional S MOu C H and place an ad find the help you need. today! V Q LV Q www.bendbulletin.com Ask about our 541-749-2156 "Wheel Deal"! smolichvolvo.com for private party advertisers Toyota Camry 2011, fphoto for ieostration ontr) clean, good c ond., Take care of Ford Musfang2001, 88k m i . $1 2 ,000. your investments 2 door coupe, 541-536-1853 VIN ¹235073. $4,995. with the help from (exp. 5/31/15) DLR ¹366 Subaru lmpreza 2013, The Bulletin's (exp. 5/31/1 5) Porsche Cayman S Vin ¹027174 "Call A Service 2 008, L i k e new , Stock ¹83205 14,500 miles, Professional" Directory $20,358 or $249/mo., $35,000. $2600 down, 84 mo., 360-510-3153 (Bend) 4 .49% APR o n a p 541-548-1448 proved credit. License ToyotaCamry Hybrid WHEN YOU SEE THIS smolichmotors.com USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! and title i ncluded in 2012, 2.5L1-4 cyl payment, plus dealer VIN ¹005123. $22,997. Find exactlY what Door-to-door selling with installed options. (exp. 5/31/15) DLR ¹366 you are looking for in the fast results! It's the easiest SMOLICH On a classified ad S US ARu CLASSIFIEDS SODBSUOHISHD.OOH way in the world lo sell go to V Q LV Q 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. www.bendbulletin.com 541-749-2156 The Bulletin Classified 877-266-3821 to view additional Dlr ¹0354 smolichvolvo.com 541-385-5809 photos of the item.

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541-915-9170

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Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 Toyota Corolla2013, readers each week. (exp. 5/31/1 5) Your classified ad Vin ¹053527 will also appear on Stock ¹83072 bendbulletin.com which currently re$15,979 or $199 mo., $2000 down, 84 mo., ceives over 1.5 mil4 .49% APR o n a p lion page views proved credit. License every month at and title included in no extra cost. Bullepayment plus dealer in tin Classifieds stalled options. Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place S UBA R U . your ad on-line at 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. bendbulletin.com 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354 People Lookfor Information About Products and Services EveryDaythrough The Bellefie Clessineds

Jeep Grand Cherokee Laredo 2004. 4X4, trailer hitch. Excellent car with lots of TLC. 161,000 road fphoto for illustration only) Dodge Grand miles. $500 0 .00 Caravan 2007, 541-350-8849 auto, 133K mi. VIN ¹192261. $6,888. What are you (exp. 5/31/1 5) DLR ¹366 looking for? You'll find it in The Bulletin Classifieds

Low Miles - 68,500, AWD, leather Interior, sunroof, blue541-385-5809 tooth, voice command system, and Jeep Grand Cherokee too much more to list Trail Rated here. $15, 9 00. Overland 2014 MSRP $47,585+ Please call Dan at $1,400 options = list 541-815-6611 of $48,985 4500 mi., asking $42,000 firm. Dr. Roy: 541-419-8184

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Chevy Silverdo 2013, 4.8L V-8 cyl VIN ¹295291. $28,770

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Jeep Grand Cherokee Overland 2012, GEO Illletro 1991 4x4 V-6, all options, 5 spd manual trans., 3 CHECK VOUR AD running boards, front the first day of pub- cyl., 40+ mpg, 115k guard, nav., air and on miles. Runs good,. heated leather, cus- lication. If a n e rror $1800 ob o / trade? may occur in your ad, tom wheels and new 541-548-1448 541-419-5060, Ron p lease contact u s tires, only 41K miles, smolichmotors.com and we will be happy Lincoln LS Sport 2005, $31,995 to fix it as soon as we V8, Moon-roof, White, 541-408-7908 can. Deadlines are: Excellent condition., Weekdays 12:00 noon $5,900. 503-781-0360 for next d ay, S a t. or 541-593-0130 1000 1000 1000 1000 1000 11:00 a.m. for SunLegal Notices Legal Notices Legal Notices Legal Notices Legal Notices day; Sat. 12:00 for Monday. hearing. Documents line a t www . des- grams and activities. c hutes Count y Chevy Tahoe 1995, 4 LEGAL NOTICE 541-385-5809 Des- This event/location is encourages persons dr. 4x4, auto, tow pkg, Former students who are also available on- chutes.org. Jeep Willy's, metal The Bulletin Classified www . des- chutes County accessible to people w ith d isabilities t o leather, a/c, like new were served by the line a t Des - encourages persons with disabilities. If you participate in all proHigh Desert ESD may c hutes.org. tires. reg. to 10/16. top, big tires, ps, new paint, tow bar, new Count y w ith d i sabilities t o need a c commoda- grams and activities. Runs great, very good request their records. c hutes Mercedes Benz CL c ond., $4800 . gages, etcB. $5500. Records will remain encourages persons participate in all pro- tions to make partici- This event/location is 2001, 541-233-7272 w ith d isabilities t o grams and activities. pation poss i ble, accessible to people 541-385-4790 confidentially filed un(exp. 5/31/1 5) til the age of 26 for participate in all pro- This event/location is please call the ADA with disabilities. If you Vin ¹016584 Central Oregon Re- grams and activities. accessible to people Coordinator at (541) need a c c ommodaStock ¹83285 tions to make particigional Program and This event/location is with disabilities. If you 330-4640. $8,979 or $169/mo., pation poss i ble, Chevy Malibu 2012, until the age of 22 for accessible to people need a c commoda$1800 down, 48 mo., I n t ervention/with disabilities. If you tions to make participlease call the ADA (exp. 5/31/1 5) LEGAL NOTICE 4 .49% APR o n ap - Early a c c ommoda- pation poss i ble, NOTICE OF PUBLIC Coordinator at (541) Vin ¹299392 proved credit. License Early Childhood Spe- need tions to make partici- please call the ADA 330-4640. Stock ¹44256A c ial E ducation, a t and title i ncluded in HEARING Lexus 400H 2006, Dodge Journey pation poss i ble, Coordinator at (541) payment, plus dealer in- which time they will be $15,979 or $189/mo., premium pkg., sunSXT2014, $2500 down, 84 mo., stalled options. destroyed. C o ntact please call the ADA 330-4640. The Desc h utes roof, hitch, heated AWD, auto 4 .49% APR o n a p 541-693-5700 for Coordinator at (541) County Hearings Ofleather, DVD, no acS UBA R U PUBLIC NOTICE VIN ¹193140. $22,888 proved credit. License 330-4640. more information. ficer will hold a public AUCTION cidents, kids, smoke NOTICE (exp. 5/31/15) DLR ¹366 and title included in 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. hearing on Tuesday, or pets. K eyless, payment, plus dealer inOn Thursday, June LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE June 30, 2015, at 6:30 877-266-3821 NAV, 28/31 Hybrid stalled options. 11, 2015 a t 1 0 :00 Dlr ¹0354 NOTICE OF PUBLIC NOTICE OF PUBLIC LEGAL NOTICE p.m. in the Barnes A.M., there will be a M PG, exc.cond.,all S US A R u HEARING HEARING NOTICE OF PUBLIC and Sawyer Rooms of records, Ca r f ax, f oreclosure sale o f SUDBSUOBSBHD OOBB Call The Bulletin At HEARING the Deschutes Ser- personal property at garaged, new tires, 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 541-385-58N The Desc h utes The Desc h utes vices Center, 1300 Storage Reduced to $13,500. S o l utions, 877-266-3821 541-548-1448 C ounty B oard o f County Hearings Of- The Desc h utes NW Wall St., Bend, to 2669 NE Twin Knolls Place Your Ad Or E-Mail 541-410-1452 Dlr ¹0354 ficer will hold a Public smolichmotors.com County Hearings Of- consider the following Dr., Suite 109, Bend, At: www.bendbulletin.com County Commissioners will hold a Public Hearing on Tuesday, ficer will hold a public request: FILE NUM- OR 97701. The conHearing on July 8, June 30, 2015, at 6:30 h earing on July 1 , BERS: tents of these units 2015, at 10:00 a.m. in p.m. in the Barnes 2015, at 6:30 p.m. in 247-15-000170-CU, will be sold unless the Barnes and Saw- and Sawyer Rooms of the Barnes and Saw- 247-15-000171-SP p ayment in f ul l i s yer Rooms of the De- the Deschutes Ser- yer Rooms of the De- and made prior to the time schutes Ser v ices vices Center, 1300 schutes Ser v ices 247-15-000172-LM. of the sale. CASH Center, 1300 NW Wall NW Wall St., Bend, to Center, 1300 NW Wall APPLICANT:Oregon ONLY - NO CHECKS St., Bend, to consider consider the following St., Bend, to consider Solar Land Holdings, NO CR E D IT the following request: request: FILE NUM- the following request: 3519 NE 15th Ave., CARDS. Units to be FILE NUM B ERS: BERS: FILE NUM B ERS: Ste. 325, Portland, sold are: Ewert-Unit 247-14-000242-CU/ 247-15-000168-CU 247-15-000226-CU, OR 97212. OWNER: 1529; Wisecarver-Unit 243-TP, 244- C U/ and 227-CU, 228 - L M. M. Thomas Collier, 301. 1000 1000 1000 1000 2 45-TP, 246- C U/ 247-15-000169-SP. SUBJECT:CondiP.O. Box 5609, Bend, Legal Notices Legal Notices Legal Notices Legal Notices 247-TP, 248- C U/ APPLICANT:Norwest tional use permit ap- OR 97708. ATTOR2 49-TP, 250- C U/ Energy 2, LLC, 3250 plication for surface NEY FO R AP P L I251-TP, 158-A , Ocean Park Boule- mining to establish a CANT: Laura Craska PUBLIC NOTICE FORMLB-1 NOTICEOF BUDGET HEARIMo 159-A, 160-A, 161-A, vard, Suite 355, Santa reservoir in conjunc- Cooper, 15 SW 162-A, 163-A, 164-A, Monica, CA 9 0405. tion with an irrigation Colorado A v e nue, T he Bend Park & A public megtog oithe la pine RuralFire pgtgcgggDigiggtwi11iHshgtl gs June11, 2015siegggmgi 51550Hgslisttos Road,ts pine, oiogon.ThepogposooiIhs 165-A, 166-A, 167-A. OWNERS:Harland district. C o nditional Suite 3, Bend, OR Recreation D i s trict mogtsg is iodisaussths budgetfor the iiiogi yearbeginningJHV1, Ãtg ss apisoHHt bythe ta PineRural RHS iBmtectos OisbictBNigotCammeoo. Asummaryoiihs iDidgot ispissoslodbelow.Acopyoiths budgst msybe isspoohd or ottsisod si 515ggHsgtsegs Road, la plso, oregon, lHgggss eohoursoi8 a m.Dnd5p m.Di SUBJECT:Appeals of Hafter and J o lene use permit applica- 97702. PROPOSAL: Board of Directors will UHiingsiDDHHID¹nsiiroorg, This budgei s I'g as annual budgetperiod. this tssigstwas tsspsgsi os atsgts oisoooustsg est is the ssmsss igsg es peeling year. Deschutes C o u nty Hafter, 62435 Erick- tion to establish a rec- T he a p plicant r e - meet in a work sesHearings Officer's de- son Road, Bend, OR reation facility requir- quests approval of a s ion a t 5 ' 3 0 p m ' cisions on requests 97701. A T TORNEY ing large acreage (ski conditional use per- T uesday, June 2 , t g gK 541 5t8-2gg5 E m ail Ohigfgu ' iO.COm Cggiagt NtteSu itg, Rig Chief FOR AP P LICANT: for conditional use lake). La n dscape mit and site plan re- 2015 at the district ofpermit and tentative Laura Craska Cooper, management site plan view to allow the de- fice, 799 SW ColumRNIMCIALSUsMARY -RESOURCE8 Adotigt Budggi ApprovedBudget TOTAL OFAu. RINDS AgiSSIAmmmt plan approval to es- 15 SW Colorado Av- review to establish a velopment of a solar bia, Bend, Oregon. 201ggg14 This Year20142015 Next Year2015-2018 t ablish fi v e structure in the Land- voltaic array (solar A genda topics i n (5) enue, Suite 3, Bend, ggg ggg 1,176 526 8 issi FHDd Bslssogittewg ' ca ' Gesoral Fusd ios,tioe 97 7 02. P RO- scape Management farm) on planned unit/cluster OR p r operty clude a First Street 12,$35 12 910 TruSt SSgAgenCyFundBaiSSOO n 670 s ubdivisions. E a c h POSAL:The applicant Combining Zone. AP- zoned Exclusive Farm Rapids project up0 SO145 0 DebtSWVICO FundBatiSOO subdivision would in- requests approval of a PLICANT:Hurley Re, Use-Tumalo/Reddate and discussion 228 027 229 250 342 800 iai ReseneFundBalance c lude t e n (10), conditional use per- PC, 747 SW Mill View mond/Bend on affor dable housing. 728 000 728,000 SeViOD FeeSAmbutSDOO Snd FiHMO General Futnd 688,785 two-acre residential mit and site plan re(EFU-TRB) subzone. A regular business 10915 0 0 Way, B e nd , OR Fedosg slalegndsii Olhsreggts ReVenuetHSOBOndaSSdC iho Debt 221 622 0 0 lots, for a total of 50 view to allow the de- 97702. OWNER: KC Landscape Manage- meeting will convene 0 lofsglHsdTrmstgsi InlDHHgSsrvios RsimloossmsDts 43 787 0 residential lots. A to- velopment of a solar Development Group, ment (LM) Site Plan a t 7:00 pm fo r t he I OSSO RSSOOiOSS CUHSOt Year TaXe aGSDSgg Fund gg342 81 MO 93,158 tal of 422.8 acres of voltaic array (solar LLC, 63560 Johnson Review is also proBoard to consider ap2474 547 2,95,1o 744 rgg cugssi Year Te e s Mtmsied ioRecei bo vedGeneralFund open space would be farm) on a portion of R oad, Bend, O R posed as the devel- proval and adoption of 0 247 000 s5 255 COHSSi YearP TS SSS EOtmsteg ig be ReCeiVedCS ReSerVe Fugd preserved. A P P LI- the subject property 97701. Tumalo Irriga- opment would be vis- the following: Colo•,rgltltm t,ettBttg TotSI ItDSOSB gDS 4B74uet C ANT/S: The T r e e zoned Exclusive Farm tion District, 64697 ible from Highway 20, rado Avenue UnderFarm, LLC, 409 NW Use-Tumalo/RedCook Avenue, Bend, the LM feature. LO- crossing co n t ract, RNNtCNL SUttttARY -RseslRESIEMISBvOstsci CLASSRCAllON 2,809 88$ 3,1gi 509 Franklin Ave n ue, OR 97701. L OCACATION:The subject Resolution 378 - SDC PSISODODISSOtOOS 2695 rgg mond/Bend 851 S18 389438 tsissstsSDgeliicDD B end, OR 977 0 1 . (EFU-TRB) subzone. TION:19210 K l ippel property has an as- fee classification - as2960D 0 0 iiSiOuii OWNER/S:Miller Tree LOCATION: The Road, Bend; Tax lot signed property ad- sisted living facilities, 208 000 0 0 Debt SeViOS Farm, 110 NE subject property has 8 24 and 8 2 8 , o n dress of 21850 High- Resolution 379 - SDC 0 i47000 245,200 i ReaeneFugd dilgiea Greenwood Avenue, an assigned property Assessor's Map way 20, Bend and is fee schedule annual 0 25,000 25 000 IsggrsndTransfers STAF F also identified as Tax adjustment, ResoluB end, OR 977 0 1 . a ddress o f 62 4 3 5 1 7-11-13. 0 54Srt 50,000 cgnt 'ea LOCATION: The Erickson Road, Bend CONTACT:Anthony Lots 100, 300 and 400 tion 376 - Capital Im1$55 0 Tesigod os Fund gd itggg 1125 p roperty does n o t and is also identified Raguine, on Deschutes County p rovement Plan , ' ied Endig Bafggcg and RSmVedfar Fgtgig Iblig i ns526 935,809 1 176 526 USS Anthony. Raguine@de have a c o unty-as- as Tax Lot 501 on Assessor's Map Resolution 380 - Bud• Btei,tgl •,ggl,gn TOtal R HIDDmgntS STA F F get, and Resolution signed address. It is Deschutes C o u nty schutes.org. Copies of 1 7-12-36. identified on Asses- Assessor's Map the staff report, appli- CONTACT:Chris 381 - Impose and catsvORGINitATIONAL UNITOR PROGRlM* FINANCIAL SUttMARY- RsttUIRetistnsAND FULLTIMEEQUIVALENTENPLOYE¹s sor Map 17-11, as tax 1 7-12-25. STAF F cation, all documents Schmoyer, Associate egorize taxes. ts PIHDRurolFie Pwlsotlos Dlgglot 25 CONTACT:Chris 25 25 lots 6205 6209 6212 and evidence sub- Planner (541) rrs far Ihst Uhii gi lam tt tt 2$ 6 213 a nd 6214 . Schmoyer, Associate mitted by or on behalf 317-3164. Copies of The board will conTOtal uligmegtg 25 tt 25 TgtgiFTE STAFF C O NTACT: Planner ex e cutive (541) of the applicant and the staff report, appli- duct a n Anthony R a g uine, 317-3164. Copies of applicable criteria are cation, all documents session following the STATENENT OFCHANGESItt Acllvmss Sgg SOURC ESOFRttAllcgts' Anthonyr©deschutes. the staff report, appliavailable for inspecbusiness me e t ing and evidence subThsrs hssbeensochangein aevisileggiggusssroitnanoirti. o rg. Copies of t h e cation, all documents tion at the Planning mitted by or on behalf pursuant to ORS staff report, applica- and evidence sub- Division at no c ost of the applicant and 192.660(2)(i) for the pRopERlY Tix tsvist tion, all d ocuments mitted by or on behalf a nd can b e p u r - applicable criteria are purpose of reviewing Ratg grAmgugl APPrOVed Rgtg OifOggllllt Illlggtgt RateOiAmougtImPO Sed and evidence sub- of the applicant and chased for 25 cents a available for inspec- and evaluating the 2013.2014 This Year2N4.2015 ttgSt Ygai20154016 mitted by or on behalf applicable criteria are page. The staff re- tion at the Planning performance of an of1.5$97/$1000 permanentRsislg igte i mii 1.53$7 e 000 1.5ggtttt 000 1.5ggrtt1 ON of the applicant and available for inspec- port should be made Division at no cost ficer, employee, or .8441,000 svgaitggalo oot .Stst 000 .gtit1 000 applicable criteria are tion at the Planning available 7 days prior a nd can b e p u r - staff member. 10-Yeai c iai ts 0 .23/$1 000 .2SISt OM 0 0 available for inspec- Division at no cost to the date set for the chased for 25 cents a tgr GgggglObll ' n Bggd S!28¹87 tion at the Planning a nd can b e p u r - hearing. Documents page. The staff re- T he a genda a n d siAtvttattrOFIttssslaltass Division at no cost chased for 25 cents a are also available on- port should be made s upplementary r e LONGTERhlDEBT Ealms& Debt Ogigiggdigti EsSmated Debtgegiized, Bgi a nd can b e p u r - page. The staff reline a t www . des- available 7 days prior ports are posted on OnJS 1. Ngtlggigedon JU i chased for 25 cents a port should be made c hutes.org. Des - to the date set for the the district's website, tg GgggglOblaiignBOnda si page. The staff re- available 7 days prior chutes County hearing. Documents www.bendparksancegr Bonds tg tg $0 Oihor Boggsigg tg port should be made to the date set for the encourages persons are also available on- drec.org. Fo r more Tolal si to available 7 days prior hearing. Documents w ith d i sabilities t o line a t www . des- information call to the date set for the are also available on- participate in all pro- c hutes.org. Des - 541-389-7275. (exp. 5/31/1 5) DLR ¹366

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G6 sUNDAY, MAY 31, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

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To receive your FREE CLASSIFIED AD, call 541-385-5809 or visit The Bulletin office at: 1777 SW Chandler Ave. (On Bend's west side) *Offer allows for 3 lines oftext only. Excludesall service, hay,wood, pets/animals, plants, tickets, weapons, rentals andemployment advertising, andall commercial accounts. Must bean individual item under$200.00 and price of individual itemmust beincluded in the ad. Askyour Bulletin SalesRepresentative about special pricing, longer runschedules andadditional features. Limit 1 ad peritem per30days to besold.


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