Bulletin Daily Paper 05-12-14

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THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, MAY 12, 2014

The Bulletin

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HOW to reaCh IjS

Gay marriage ruling —Arkansas'top lawyer will askthe state Supreme Court to review alower court's decision to overturn a 2004 constitutional amendment banning gaymarriage. Attorney General Dustin McDaniel announced his intent to appeal to the high court late Saturday night, but not before15 licenses were issued for same-sex couples in northwest Arkansas' Carroll County, heralding the arrival of gay marriage in the Bible Belt. Carroll County was believed to be the only county that issued marriage licensesSaturday. Several courthouses wereopen for early primary-election voting but staffers said they were not prepared to issue marriage licenses.

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Egyptiall C8mp8lghillg —Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi, Egypt's former military chief who is poised towin the presidency in elections later this month, said hehas plans to makeimprovements in people's living conditions within two years but will step down if they rise upagainst him — without waiting for the army to removehim. El-Sissi wasspeaking with the Emirates-basedSky NewsArabia, giving his first televised interview as apresidential candidate to foreign media. Thefirst part of the interview wasaired Sunday. Riding on awaveof nationalist fervor, the 59-year old el-Sissi faces asingle rival in the May26-27 vote. The media andsupporters tout him asthe nation's savior for ousting the elected Islamist president, MohammedMorsi, in July following massive rallies against him and arising specter of civilian infighting.

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Residents of two restive regions in eastern Ukraine engulfed by apro-Russian insurgency cast votes Sunday in contentious and hastily organized referendumsfor greater autonomy that have been rejected as illegal by the Ukrainian government and the West.

o e in raine's eas re ion avorsse -rue By Andrew E. Kramer

had cast ballots, a figure that

New York Times News Service

was not possible to confirm independently. Just over 89

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Separatists in two provinces percent of voters approved the of eastern Ukraine conducted measure, he said. Figures for chaotic and sometimes violent Luhansk were not immediately plebiscites Sunday that offered available. voters just one question about But the voting took place in self-rule, while raising many such a raw state of lawlessness more about where events in the that no one other than the orregion were headed. ganizers and perhaps their Large crowds turned out in Russian patrons seemed likely some cities to cast votes meant to accept the results as a demoto legitimize the separatists' cratic expression of the voters' declarations of independent will. "people's republics" in the two The United States, many Euprovinces. But the voting left ropean nations and the governundear whether the two prov- ment in Kiev all condemned the inces, Donetsk and Luhansk, referendums, saying they were will now follow the Crimean illegal and likely to worsen the Peninsula in seeking to be an- violence in eastern Ukraine nexed by Russia. between pro-Russian groups Nearly everyone who cast a and the central government. ballot appeared to be voting in Even President Vladimir Putin favor of greater autonomy from of Russia, who has generally the Ukrainian central govern- supported the separatists, pubment in Kiev. Opponents ap- licly distanced himself from the peared to be staying away from referendums lastweek, saying thepolls, as manyhad saidthey they should be delayed. The would. The ballot papers that separatists still went ahead. could be seen intransparent ballot boxes in two cities, Do-

In one town, Ukrainian se-

that the organizers spirited off quickly, lest they be seized by pro-government forces. By contrast, the atmosphere at polling places in Donetsk city, the capital of the province,

was carnival-like, with balloons decorating the entrances and loudspeakers playing Soviet-era songs. Families with children in tow stood in long lines waiting to vote.

Many people who cast ballots said they hoped the election

would solidify the self-styled independentrepublics in Donetsk and Luhansk enough to tamp down the violence in the region.

But the voting could just as easily escalate the low-level fighting into a civil war between Russian-backed breakaway regions and Kiev. The interim central govern-

ment and many leaders in the West have said that the separatists in eastern Ukraine were

proxies for the Russian intelligence services, and were trying to destabilize the country after mass protests drove Ukraine's

curity forces shot a man to

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death outside a polling station as an angry crowd i tgnormg

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in Donetsk, said that nearly ers took ballots that were run via scenario." three-quarters of the 3.32 mil- off on photocopiers and stuffed — The Washington Post lion eligible voters in the region them into cardboard boxes contributed to this report.

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most all marked yes.

ko, a Ukraiman presidential candidate, said that Russian

Late Sunday night, Ro- warning shots, rushed toward man Lyagin, head of the sep- a building that the soldiers conaratist election c ommission

meddling in the east was splintering Ukraine into a"Yugosla-

trolled. In some other cities, vot-

Nigeriangirl whoescapedcaptors tells of ordeal asoutrage mounts

IIBIil CISSlleS —Militants in Iraq launched anaudacious attack on a military barracks in a remotearea inthe country's north and killed 20 troops overnight, including somewho hadbeen bound andshot at close range, authorities said Sunday asother attacks killed18. The killings at the military barracks in the village of Aynal-Jahish outside of Mosul mirrored two previous assaults earlier this year in the area targeting security forces. It also represents the latest blow to the government's efforts to achieve stability in restive Sunni-dominated areas. Rare tWinS —Twin girls born with a rare condition in Ohio were breathing on their own andtheir mom said she and her husband were able to hold them onMother's Day. Sarah Thistlethwaite said babies Jillian and Jennawere removedfrom ventilators Sunday afternoon after they wereable to breathe comfortably. Shetold The Associated Press that sheand her husbandBill both held them for awhile on Mother's Day.Theidentical twin girls shared the sameamniotic sac and placenta. Such births are called monoamniotic, or "mono mono," and doctors say they occur in about one ofevery10,000 pregnancies. They were born Friday atAkron General Medical Center, grasping each other's hands whendoctors lifted them up for their parents to see after delivery.

BenghaZi Panel —HouseDemocrats onSundaymadeit clear that they do not expect fair proceedings from the Republican-led panel newly tasked with investigating the 2012attack in Benghazi, Libya, but offered no definitive answer onwhether they would appoint any of their own members to participate. Rep.Xavier Becerra, D-Calif., said members of his party would join the proceedings should Republicans — who haveagitated for further investigation into the attack, which killed four Americans —agree not to blocktheir full involvement. HouseSpeakerJohnBoehneronFridayappointedsevenRepublicans to the12-person panel, which wascreated by alargely party-line vote last week.

Hagel On trallSgender pOliCy — Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel said in an interview broadcast Sundaythat the military should "continually" review its prohibition on transgender people in the armed forces, calling into question whether the Pentagon's banmay eventually be lifted, as wasthe ban ongay menand lesbians in the military. While anysuch areversal appears to befar in the future, Hagel, onABC's"ThisWeek"onSunday,pronouncedhimself"open" to a review of the policy andadded, "Every qualified American who wants to serve our country should have an opportunity if they fit the qualifications and can doit." Afghan eleCtlOh —Abdullah Abdullah, the front-runner in Afghanistan's presidential election campaign, announcedSunday that he hadwonthe endorsement of Zalmai Rassoul, the third-place candidate, as part of his effort to gather enoughsupport to win in the next round of voting. Together the two men's tickets took about 55 percent of the vote in the first round of voting April 5. Abdullah's camp as well as someanalysts worry that a runoff could be rife with fraud and that there is aconsiderable risk that it could be disrupted by the Taliban. ChineSe PrOteSt —A huge demonstration against a planned waste incinerator in one of eastern China's biggest cities turned violent Saturday with protesters overturning and setting fires to police cars, leaving at least10 demonstrators and 29 police officers injured, according to Xinhua, the state-run news agency. Theauthorities in the city of Hangzhou said Sunday that they had cleared an expressway that was blocked by the rally a dayearlier, and that 700 officers had beendeployed to maintain order. The protest is the latest indication that China's increasingly affluent residents are willing to challenge the government on health and environmental issues. — From wire reports

By Haruna Umar and Michelle Faul The Associated Press

BAUCHI, Nigeria — One of the teenagers who escaped from Islamic extremists who a bducted m or e t h a n 3 0 0

schoolgirls says the kidnapping was "too terrifying for words," and she is now scared

to go back to school. Sarah Lawan, a 19-year-old science student, spoke Sunday

as Nigerians prayed for the safety of the 276 students still held captive. Their prayers were joined by Pope Francis. "Let us all join in prayer for the immediate release of the

schoolgirls kidnapped in Nigeria," the Roman Catholic lead-

growing dissension between Muslims and Christians, disSpain. agreements exacerbated by "I am pained that my other the increasingly deadly atcolleagues could not summon tacks of the Boko Haram terthe courage to run away with rorist network. Africa's most me," Lawan said. "Now I cry populous nation of 170 million each time I come across their has almost equal numbers of parents and see how they Christians and Muslims. weep when they see me." The Rev. Stephen Omale Police say 53 students have prayed at a church in Abuja, escaped. Nigeria's home- the Nigerian capital. "Wherever they are, God grown Boko Haram terrorist network is threatening to sell will bring them out in his those who remain in captivity own mercy, he will see that into slavery. they are brought out safely, ln churches across the na- without harm and also that tion, Nigerians prayed for this act will bring an end the girls, whose plight has to all those who are perpebrought together ordinary trating these acts," he told people in a year that had seen congregants. negotiators and others from Britain, France, China and

er tweeted, using the trending

¹BringBackOurGirls.

ALL,NEW STATEOF — THE ART DEALERSHIP!

Lawan told The Associated Press that more of the girls

could have escaped but that they were frightened by their

I

captors' threats to shoot them.

She spoke in the local Hausa language in a phone interview from Chibok,her home and the site of the mass abduction in northeast Nigeria.

The failure to rescue those who remain captive four weeks later h a s a t t r acted mounting national and inter-

national outrage. Last week, Nigeria was forced to accept international help in the search, after ignoring offers

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MONDAY, MAY 12,2014 •THE BULLETIN

A3

TART TODAY

• Discoveries, breakthroughs,trends, namesin the news— the things you needto know to start out your day

It's Monday, May12, the132nd day of 2014. Thereare233 days left in the year.

HAPPENINGS Washington Monument

— The national landmark reopens to the public 994 days after an earthquakeshook the marble-and-granite structure. NBA —The Trail Blazers take on the Spurs in ado-or-die game in Portland.B1

STUDY

SCIENCE

Howmany bubblesare in bubbly?

ur u -in a e isma in mi rao ir scomeun u

By Rachel Nuwer New York Times News Service

HISTORY Highlight:In1949, the Soviet Union lifted the Berlin Blockade, which theWestern powers had succeededin circumventing with their Berlin Airlift.

In1780, during the Revolutionary War, the besiegedcity of Charleston, S.C., surrendered to British forces. In1870, an act creating the Canadian province of Manitoba was given royal assent, to take effectin July. In1914, author and broadcast journalist Howard Smith was born in Ferriday, La. In1922, a 20-ton meteor crashed near Blackstone, Va. In1932,the body of Charles Lindbergh Jr., the kidnapped son of Charles andAnne Lindbergh, was found in awooded area near Hopewell, N.J. In1937,Britain's King George Vl was crowned atWestminster Abbey; his wife, Elizabeth, was crowned asqueenconsort. In1943, during World War II, Axis forces in North Africa surrendered. Thetwo-week Trident Conference, headedby President Franklin D. Roosevelt and British Prime Minister Winston Churchill, opened in Washington. In1963, Betty Miller became the first woman to fly solo across the Pacific Oceanas she landed her PiperApache in Brisbane, Australia, having left Oakland, Calif., on April 30, making three stopovers along the way. In1970, the Senatevoted unanimously to confirm Harry Blackmun as aSupreme Court justice. In1982, in Fatima, Portugal, security guards overpowered a Spanish priest armed with a bayonet who attacked Pope John Paul II. (In 2008, the pope's longtime private secretary revealed that the pontiff was slightly wounded in the assault.) In1994, British Labor Party leader John Smith died atage 55.

Ten years ago:Members of Congress expressed outrage after they were privately shown fresh pictures andvideos of Iraqi prisoners being abused by U.S. troops. NBC completed a merger with the Universal television and entertainment businesses to create amajor media conglomerate. Five years ago: The government warned that without changes, Social Security would bedepleted in2037,and the Medicare trust fund would become insolvent in 2017.Five Miami men wereconvicted in a plot to blow upFBIbuildings and Chicago's SearsTower; oneman was acquitted. One year ago:Pope Francis gave the Catholic Church new saints, including hundreds of 15th-century martyrs who were beheadedfor refusing to convert to Islam, as heled his first canonization ceremony before tens of thousands of people in St. Peter's Square. Nineteen peoplewere wounded when shots rang out during a Mother's Day parade inNew Orleans (nine people havebeen charged in connection with the

case).

BIRTHDAYS Baseball Hall-of-FamerYogi Berra is 89. Composer Burt Bacharach is 86. Singer-musician SteveWinwood is 66. Actor Gabriel Byrne is 64. Actor Ving Rhames is55. TV personality/chef Carla Hall (TV: "The Chew") is 50. Actor Stephen Baldwin is 48. Actor Jason Biggs is 36. Actress Emily VanCamp is 28.Actor Malcolm David Kelley is 22. — From wire reports

A study suggests today's high-tech human world might be taking its toll on migratory birds.

Champagne and other sparkling wines owe much of their appeal to their bubbles. But

Electromagnetic "noise" emitted by modern-day gadgetry could be throwing our feathered friends'

before tasting the wine or even

navigation systems for a loop. By Brady Dennis

smelling it, a drinker usually gazes at the profusion of bubbles rising in the glass. "People are hypnotized by the bubbles," said Gerard Liger-Belair, a physicist at the University of Reims Champagne-Ardenne in

than Oldenburg, population

The Washington Post

160,000 — she had never seen

For decades, scientists have known that migratory birds

evidence of "electric smog" interfering with the birds' in-

rely on the Earth's magnetic

ternal navigation.

France. The bubbles are carbon diox-

field as one way to help orient themselves and fly the right

"We never used any shielding, and our birds were

direction.

well-oriented in th e f i eld," Wiltschko said. "Without

tation. Every time Liger-Belair gave a presentation on the sci-

knowing the origin of these

mysterious." Whatever the case, the Na-

ence of Champagne, someone would ask him how many bubbles are in a single glass. He always gave the same answer: about 15 million, which he calculated by dividing the total volume of dissolved carbon dioxide by the average size of a

ture study raises intriguing

Champagnebubble. But that for-

questions about the sensory

mulawasvastlyoversimplified. Now he has finally worked

But researchers in Germany have documented for the first =~

time that the electromagnetic

"noise" produced by modern societies could cause those avian navigation systems to go haywire, according to findings published Wednesday in the

g %j P'

I

magnetic fields, it's hard to know what it means. . ..In order to assess this, we have to know more about where

they come from.... It's really

journal Nature.

Henrik Mouritsen via The Washington Post

"Basically, anything you Henrik Mouritsen, a neurosensory sciences professor at Universiplug into a plug will send out ty of Oldenburg in Germany, is co-author of a study showing that electromagnetic noise at some the electromagnetic "noise" produced by modern societies could frequency," said of the paper's disrupted birds' avian navigation systems. A European robin, co-authors, Henrik Mouritsen,

ide that forms during fermen-

like this one, cannot use its magnetic compass when exposed to

mechanisms inside migratory birds, and how it is that manmade electrical outputs

o ut

t h o s e nu m b ers. A

3.4-ounce pour of Champagne will produce around one million bubbles before it goes flat (about four hours), he reported in The Journal of Physical Chemistry. Liger-Belair said he took into

a professor of neurosensory urban electromagnetic noise in the AM radio frequency range. could be scrambling nature's sciences at Universityof Oldennavigation systems. burg in Germany. He likened It also raises the question the overall effect in urban en- did the birds go in the right di- found their bearings. of whether there are actions vironments to an orchestra of rection again. R oswitha W i l tschko, a that humans could take to "It's significant, because we longtime bird navigation re- avoid the potential of causing potential disruptions at various wavelengths. found avery clear,repeatable searcher at th e U niversity trouble for migratory birds. account the concentration of What might that mean for effect of electromagnetic noise of Frankfurt, said the study Mouritsen said it would be dissolved gas, the shape and the migratory birds trying to made by electrical equipment seemed verywell done but "completely unrealistic" to height of the glass, the temmaneuver through this busy that prevents a bird — in this left unanswered important expect civilization to unplug perature of the wine and the electromagnetic landscape? case a European robin — from questions about the precise everything, everywhere, but surrounding air, the direction The good news is that they using its magnetic compass," source of the disruptions. small steps could help. For inof the pour and a complicating possess other navigation sys- Mouritsen said. She said during decades in stance, perhaps we should refact about the bubbles: They tems,such asrelyingonthe sun He said r elatively m inor which she and her husband frain from placing strong AM grow larger as they ascend and the stars, Mouritsen said. levels of electromagnetic ac- had studied the same type radio emitters along routes and absorb more carbon dioxBut an overcast day in an ur- tivity, with an intensity 1,000 of migratory birds in Frank- wherehuge concentrationsof ide, but smaller overall as time ban area teeming with electro- times below limits laid out by furt — a much larger city birds migrate. passes. magnetic noise could, at least the World Health Organizatheoretically, cause problems. tion, appeared to be enough "If it doesn't have any com- to disrupt the birds. The interpass available, it might not mi- ference that switched off the grate at all ... or it might fly in birds' internal compass didn't a random direction," he said. appearto come from cellphone "We don't really know." signals or power lines, as their Mouritsen and hi s c o l- frequencies were either too low C 0 M M U N I T Y leagues stumbled upon the or too high. Rather, signals in startling findings by chance, the range of AM radio stations and the conclusions were seven or fieldsgenerated by other years in the making. electronic equipment are more Years ago, they were try- likely to blame, though reing to conduct a basic, of- searchers have not pinpointed t en-repeated experiment i n the precise cause. "The levels of radio-frequenwhich European robins are Oregon Community Credit Union placed in an enclosed, fun- cy radiation that affected the isproud to sponsoracom plimentary seminar hosted by the Oregon n el-shaped container l i n ed bird's orientation are substanCommunitylnvestment ServicesTeam and LPL Financial. with scratch-sensitive paper tially below anything previousduring the migration season. ly thought to be biophysically Even inside a cage, without plausible, and far below levels visual cues, the birds typically recognized as affecting human orient themselves using their health," Joseph K i rschvink, internal compass and scratch a professor at the California in the appropriate direction of Institute of Technology, wrote migration. in an essay accompanying But again and again, the Wednesday's study in Nature. birds in Oldenburg couldn't The researchers also causeem to orient themselves, tioned that the effect could Mouritsen said. Only w h en be an intensely localized one. researcherscovered the small Those birds that couldn't ori-

Q R E B Q N

I NV E S T M E N T S E R V I G E S

w ooden h ut s w i t h me t a l ent themselves in Oldenburg? screening and connected it to a When researchers took them grounding wire, blockingman- outside the town limits to a

made electromagnetic noise, more rural area, they easily I '

ll

I

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I ' '

I

CUTTING EDGE

A goal to combatmalaria with the help of arobot

g

I • •

By Donald G. McNeil Jr.

of handdissection has been a

New York Times News Service

bottleneck in the process. The

In its effort to develop a robot, being developed in conunique malaria vaccine, the junction with the Harvard BioU.S. company Sanaria wants to robotics Laboratory, should be build a robot that will do what faster and more efficient, said now requires a line of trained Stephen Hoffman, Sanaria's humans with microscopes: founder. dissecting half-frozen mosquiTo finance the project, the toes with tinyneedles to extract company, based in Rockville, their salivary glands. Md., hopes to raise $250,000 Inside the glands are malaria through Indiegogo, a crowdparasites, the key ingredient of funding site. The company Sanaria's vaccine. The insects turned to crowdfunding behave been allowed to drink cause its government grants blood teeming with parasites, have been restricted by sequesthen dosed with enough radia- tration and foundation funds tion to weaken but not kill those are insufficient, Sanaria said in parasites. its campaign proposal. The enfeebledparasites are Last year, the vaccine was then extracted for injection into shown to protect six volunteers people, where they can create who got five intravenous doses an immune reaction but cannot

over 20 weeks, so it is moving

reproduce quiddy enough to create disease. The time-consuming work

to larger trials in the United States, Germany, Equatorial Guinea, Mali and Tanzania.

8

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"Securities and advisary services offered through LPL Financial and Registered Investment Advisor, member FINRA/Slpe Insurance products offered through LpL Financial orits licensed offrliates. Oregon Community Credit Unian and Oregon Community Investment Services are not registered broker-dealers andare not affiliated with LPL Financial. Not NCUA Insured © 2014 Oregon Community Credit Union.

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A4 THE BULLETIN • MONDAY, MAY 12, 2014

Primary

TODAY'S READ:TROUBLE ON THE NATION'S LAWN

n

said Gentry Collins, a GOP political adviser who serves as the group's treasurer.

Continued from A1

.,se en on e IaSS

A fourth super PAC has registered with the Feder-

al Election Commission, but it has not yet report-

By Nick Corasaniti +New York Times News Service

WASHINGTON — It has played host to civil rights marches, presidential inaugurations, fireworks displays and decades of picnics. But in recent years the National Mall, envisioned more than a century ago as a lush carpet of green connecting the nation's most treasured monuments, has looked more like a West Texas dust bowl. Now National Park Service

officials are trying to teach the nearly 30 million people who gather here each year a difficult lesson: Tread softly or keep off the grass. With the installation of ex-

ed raising or spending money. Enabled by U.S. Supreme Court opinions on campaign finance, super

The super PAC was formed

last year, but it had spent very little money before backing Wehby. It's funded largely by five members of the DeVos family, which has donated extensively to

c o nservative

causes. "We think Dr. Wehby has PACs can raise and spend a compelling story to tell," unlimited sums on federal Collins said. "We think she's races. They must report particularly w e l l-qualified their activities to the Fed- for the office, and she's got eral Election Commission a great profile from which and are prohibited from to explain to voters why our coordinating with candi- principles work to get the dates or their country to a better place." c ampa i g n If she clears the primary, teams. NewRepublican.org intends The money to continue backing Wehby in in Oregon's the general election, Gentry Senate r ace said. Conger has bo u g ht A super PAC called "If He

quisite, expensive newturf on a

a dve r t i s e ments on t elev i s i o n , radio and the I nternet a s

little less than half the mall, the

Park Service has established strict rules that include limits on festivals and concerts, and

Votes Like That I n S a l em Imagine What He Will Do In

Congress" has reported raising $100,000, three-quarters of it from Nevada business-

even restrictions on when pickup softball and Frisbee games may be played. The requirements have created an identity crisis for

well as mailWehby ers ar r i v ing a long w i t h ballots in R epublicans'

man Loren Parks and the rest

donors to Republican candi-

the mall and set off a deeper

mailboxes. Ballots m us t

"It should be used, and it should be heavily used," said Bob Vogel, the mall's superintendent. "It's a place where

dates in Oregon. After deducting operating t hey'll b e c o u nted a n d expenses, the super PAC says results announced. The it's spent $93,000, largely on winner will take on Demo- radio ads, mailers and billcratic Sen. Jeff Merkley in boards blasting Conger, saythe general election. ing he voted with Democrats "We d efinitely a r e on key issues important to making a difference, and Republicans. voters are hearing," said The chairman of the DemGayle Atteberry, executive ocratic Party o f O r egon, director of Oregon Right Frank Dixon last week filed to Life, which has spent a complaint with the FEC al$192,000 through its tra- leging Miller illegally coor-

democracy is in action. But

ditional p o l itical

change is difficult on everyone, induding us."

committee on radio ads, mailers and other communication opposing Wehby. "We'll see how much they respond on Election Day." Wehby is positioning herself as a centrist who can appeal to a general-election audience. She says she personally oppos-

debate.

in Portland. Both are prolific

b e re-

turned by May 20, when

Should the National Mall

remain a utilitarian gathering place, rough and resilient and welcoming to all? Or should it be a more pristine landscape, a monument to the nation's c ommitment t o preservation?

from A ndrew M i l ler, chief executive of Stimson Lumber

p a rk s a n d

The new lawn, on the portion of the mall dosest to the

Capitol, is part of a continuing $40 million restoration project that will eventually trans-

form the entire length of the mall from its longtime state

Stephen Crowley/New York Times News Service

A section of the National Mall's lawn not yet replaced with new turf. With expensive new turf now covering about half the Mell's lawn, the park service is enforcing tougher rules on events and the public to protect the grass.

of weedy disrepair. The Park Service is enforcing the rules for the new portion of grass which produces the festival. and, with exceptions, to the

part of the mall that is not yet refurbished. Festival organizers must pay for turf-friendly panels to protect the grass, event tents

are subject to time limits, and stages and media towers have to adhere to strict weight-distri-

bution restrictions. A flag system similar to one used in New York's Central

Park — a red flag indicates that a field is closed for maintenance or weather — deter-

mines whether pickup softball and Frisbee games may be played. Cleatsare discouraged.

wonderful to lay out on," said

gust. The renovation is to take at least two years.

Patrick Wolfe, 29, referring to

diving horizontally for a Fris- Turfhistory Bipartisan issue bee, with little regard for the Before the restoration, the Members of Congress in landing. "You just slide right Park Service was lenient about both parties have sent letters to across — it's like a carpet." how events were conducted on Jonathan Jarvis, the National The mall's trustees, who like themall. "You have a hard time sayPark Service director, express- to say the expanse has been ing concerns and raising the "loved to death," are hoping the ing, 'Get off my lawn,' when it potential for a turf war. public will adjust. looks like dust," said Michael "While it i s i m portant to "The turf was designed for Stachowicz, the m all's t urf preserve the grounds of this heavy use, but we have to treat management specialist. national treasure, we must en- it differently," said Caroline This is not the first time that sure that its spirit is not dimin- Cunningham, president of the the mall's identity as the nation's premier gathering place ished," Rep. Tom Latham, R-Io- Trust for the National Mall. wa, wrote to Jarvis in April. The Park Service-adminis- has been tested. In the early The Smithsonian Folklife tered National Mall and Me- 1980s, James Watt, then the InFestival, for one, says the re- morial Parks encompass more terior secretary, banned an Instrictions might jeopardize its than 1,000 acres between the dependence Day concert by the celebration, which has been Lincoln Memorial and the U.S. Beach Boys, arguing that they held on the mall since 1967. Capitol, along with West Po- attracted the "wrong crowd." "We feel very strongly that af- tomac Park and Constitution After an uproar and an enter 47 years, the NPS should Gardens. The mall itself is the dorsement of the band by Vice considerus a culturalresource, mile-long stretch running from President George Bush, Watt deserving the same protection Third Street at the foot of the relented and let the Beach Boys as the grass and the trees," Capitol to 14th Street in front of sing to 200,000 people in 1984. said Michael Atwood Mason, the Washington Monument. But the new lawn rules will the director of the Center for The restoration plan calls require a rethinking of how the Folklife and Cultural Heritage, for the eight panels of grass mall is used.

Texting

got involved in the electronic conversations, eventually per-

Continued from A1 suading him to surrender. "He didn't want to talk as Experts say it's happened enough in the last five years much as he wanted to text," to warrant new, specialized Sheriff's Capt. Gregory Savtraining. age said. "It wasn't part of But in Wells' case, he had to the training I got when I went adapt on the fly. through the crisis negotiator "What do you want me to school put on by the FBI, but it's something that they are tell her?" he texted back. "The truth," suspect Jesse incorporating into any new Cook wrote. training." While Wells o r dinarily Red Bank, Tenn., Police would rely on a skill called "ac- Chief Tim Christol includes tive listening," he couldn't hear texting in his sessions and has Cook's voice. Cook couldn't published articles on the topic. hear his. Was he yelling? Besides adrenaline renderCrying'? ing negotiators all thumbs on "It's not the preferred meth- a miniature keypad, Chrisod of communication in a cri- tol said, many of the typical sis, but if it's the only way that skills officers employ to get we have, then we'll engage," people talking don't always said New York State Police translate, things like emotionspokeswoman Darcy Wells. al labeling — telling someO utside Buffalo, N Y., i n

one, "I hear sadness" or "You

government should stay out of it, raising the ire of

which stages its extravagan-

social conservatives. Another social-conser-

to trust everything I do, and that's it.' "

za on the mall for two weeks. This year's festival in late June

and early July will be held on its usual site, the dusty, western expanse of the malL But

to allow for extensive renovations next year, the 2015

festival has been reduced to a smaller area near the National Museum of the American Indian. After that, the festival's

plans and location are up in the air.

"We are certainly exploring a variety of other options working w it h

t h e N a tional

Park Service," Mason said. The mall's trustees are exploring ways to help the organizersof all events reduce some of the new costs. The

Finally, a reply. "Water," Cook wrote. "As soon as he wrote wa-

ter, I thought, 'OK, I can work

March, a suspect who'd shot at sound angry." with this,'" Wells recalled later. "We're losing those verbal "We'll get something figured Erie County Sheriff's deputies responding to a domestic call cues that we want to listen to out." was carrying on text exchang- to help us decide where this Wells asked Cook to r oll es with several relatives when person is — if they're manic down his window so an officer law enforcement negotiators at the time, if they're in a state could toss abottle of water into

vative group, American

Miller said he got to see

Principles Fund, has spent $180,000 on television ads

t he a d v ertisement h o u r s before it went on air, but he

criticizing Wehby and pro- had no ability to change the moting Conger. The group content. is funded almost entirely Another super PAC, Leadby Sean Fieler, an execu- ership Oregon Can Trust, tive at Equinox Partners

BIG

Advanced Technology

radio and the Internet. The

group aims to "re-express

ton Nationals of Major League

conservative principles to fit our time" and "rebuild

Baseball about how to make the protective panels more af-

registered with the FEC on

LP, a New York-based May 2, but it has not reporthedge fund. ed raising or spending any Wehby's getting plenty money. of outside help from other quarters, however. A super PAC founded Little ad by GOP strategist Alex Castellanos called NewRepublican.org has reported spending $491,000 to savings! boost Wehby on television,

trustees talked to the Washing-

25% to

the Republican brand,"

fordable. (The Nationals use

40/o

the panels to shield their stadi-

um's grass duringconcerts and other events.) Amanda Hall, a

s o f tball

player who frequents the west part of the mall and dodges a lot of holes, said she welcomed

the new grass.

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"It's pretty awful out there,"

she said, adding that "there's one particular hole that they

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people running from second to third base didn't fall into the hole." Hall said she had not fallen in,yet.

"Thanks. He does throwlike

a girl," Cook wrote afterward. Then a smiley face.

the unemployed veteran was trying to provide for his girlIt was the cue Wells had friend and daughter when he been waiting for, proof Cook robbed the gas station. had relaxed enough to perThere was no response. haps resume talkingby phone, A minute later, Wells typed which had been the goal all again, determined to keep the along. communication going. Looking back, Wells said "This doesn't have to go having someone's responses down like this." in text form could be beneficial Again, nothing. during negotiations, providing "Do you need anything'? a chance to show them to a relWater? Food?" Wells tried after another minute.

"I have had no editorial input into that whatsoever. And

Among the events most affected is the Folklife Festival,

of depression," Christol said. his SUV, which was disabled "Words areonly 7 percent of by tire-popping spikes laid by communication." police. "This guy throws like a girl," In Kalamazoo, Wells used Cook's text about telling his Wells texted, fishing for Cook's girlfriend the truth as a way to state of mind. show empathy and build trust. He texted that he understood

Miller describes as a friend he's "known for years." He denies the charge, saying he's done nothing more than donate the money. have no input to veto anything," Miller said. "The person running that campaign (the super PAC), his condition was, 'You give me the money and you're going to have

es abortion but the federal

that make up this mile — each The National Book Festival, panel is a bit larger than a on the mall for a decade, has city block — to be replaced picked up its stalls and is mov- and a new irrigation system ing to the Walter E. Washing- installed. ton Convention Center because In the initial phase of the event organizers could not af- plan, three panels of grass — a ford the staging costs caused combination of turf, bluegrass by the regulations. and fescue atop a custom blend But for many of the softball of sand and soil — have been and Frisbee players who dom- installed on the east side of the inate the mall on spring and mall near the Capitol. The five summer weeknights, the new panels in the downtrodden, rules are a small price to pay more heavily trafficked west for grass fields that are soft on end of the mall will be installed the knees. in two phases starting in Au"The new turf is a dream; it's

a c t ion dinated with Wehby, whom

ative or another negotiator for

guidance. But the negatives, including

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MONDAY, MAY 12,2014 •THE BULLETIN

A5

IN FOCUS:POPE FRANCIS

mo ern o e e s 0 s c oo on e e v l

e

By Anthony Faiolae The Washington Post

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VATICAN CITY — A darling of liberal Catholics and an advocate of inclusion and forgiveness, Pope Francis is hardly known for fire and brimstone. Yet, in his words and deeds, the new pope is locked in an epic battle with the oldest enemy of God and creation: The devil.

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A priest reads the Bible last week in Rome during a break at a Vatican-sponsored conference on

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exorcism, which was attended by 200 delegates, most of them priests and nuns, from more than two dozen nations. After little more than a year

cal terms. Evil became less the

atop the Throne of St. Peter, wicked plan of the master of Francis's teachings on Satan hell than the nasty byproduct are already regarded as the of humanity's free wilL Even most old school of any pope Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI, since at least Paul VI, whose a lofty German theologian, papacy in the 1960s and 1970s often painted evil with a broad fully embraced the notion of brush. hellish forces plotting to delivEnter the plain-talking first er mankind unto damnation. pope from L a ti n A m e rica, Largely under the radar, where mystical views of Satheologians and Vatican insid- tan still hold sway in broad ers say, Francis has not only areas of the region. During dwelled far more on Satan in his time as cardinal of Buesermons and speeches than nos Aires before rising to the his recent predecessors have, papacy, Francis was known but has also sought to rekindle for stark warnings against the devil's image as a super- "the tempter" and "the father natural entity with the forces of lies." Now, his focus on of evil at his beck and call. the devil is raising eyebrows Last year, f o r i n s tance, even within the normally un-

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cuso, a Catholic theologian and writer. Among the things lurking behind that door is the alleged gateway to hell guarded by the small cluster of officially anointed exorcists of the Ro-

man Catholic church. By most accounts, the ranks of official exorcists number b etween 500 and 600 i n a

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billion Catholics, with the vast

majority operating in Latin America and Eastern Europe. This week, at the ninth and

Francis laid hands on a man questioning walls of Vatican largest V a tican-sanctioned in a wheelchair who claimed City. convention on exorcism, at"Pope Francis never stops tendees gushed about the to be possessed by demons in what many saw as an im- talking about the devil; it's fresh recognition being afpromptu act of cleansing. A constant," said one senior forded the field. few months later, he praised a bishop in Vatican City who Almost 200 delegates from group long viewed by some as spoke on the condition of ano- more than two dozen nations the crazy uncles of the Roman nymity in order to speak free- — most of them priests and Catholic church — the Inter- ly. "Had Pope Benedict done nuns — talked about how n ational Association of E x this, the media would have Satanic cults are spreading orcists — for "helping people clobbered him." like wildfire in the age of the who suffer and are in need of Yet, as with so many of his Internet. liberation." actions, Francis may simply The new pope, exorcists "But Father, how old-fash- be correctly reading the winds say, has become their chamioned you are to speak about of the Catholic church. pion in the face of modern the devil in the 21st century," skeptics, many of them withFrancis, quoting those who Exorcisms rising in the Catholic faith. Offihave noted his frequent menAlthough difficult to mea- cially, those claiming to be tions of the devil, said last sure, Vatican officials talk possessed must first undermonth while presiding over about a resurgence of mystical go psychiatric evaluations. Mass at the Vatican's chap- rites in the church, including But exorcists say that liberal el in St. Martha's House. He exorcisms — or the alleged Catholic bishops have often warned those gathered on that act of evicting demons from a rejected their services even chilly morning to be vigilant living host. Cardinals in Mi- after such due diligence. "The sad truth is that there and not be fooled by the hid- lan, Turin and Madrid, for inden face of Satan in the mod- stance, recently moved to ex- are many bishops and priests ern world: "Look out, because pand the number of exorcists in our church who do not rethe devil is present." in their dioceses to cope with ally believe in the devil," said Since its f oundation, the what they have categorized as the Rev. Gabriele Amorth, church has taught the exis- surging demand. the 89-year-old priest who tence of the devil. But in recent But by focusing on old- is perhaps the closest thing decades, progressive priests school interpretations of the the church has to a Hollyand bishops, particularly in devil, some progressive theo- wood-style exorcist. "I believe the United States and West- logians complain that the Pope Francis is speaking to ern Europe, have tended to pope is undermining his rep- them. Because when you don't couch Satan in more allegori- utation as a leader who in so believe, the devil wins."

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ed al-Qaida fighters in the

off. Owners of nearby stores

country.

rushed to the barbershop on hearing the gunshots but the

S ANAA, Yemen —

One

The barbershop, owned by

of the two officers at the U.S. a longtime Indian resident, is

Americans already had left,

Embassy in Yemen who shot

the officials said. Yemeni authorities ques-

on Heda Street, a commercial

and killed a pair of suspected road in the southern part of al-Qaida gunmen was get- the city where some of Sanaa's ting a haircut at a barbershop best restaurants, supermarwhen the attempted abduction kets and high-end boutiques took place, Yemeni security are located. officials said Sunday. The Yemeni officials said The attempted kidnapping the armed militants arrived in April 24 is the latest evidence a battered SUV and burst into of al-Qaida's expanding pres- the shop shouting: "Police! Poence in the capital, a serious lice!" The officials said one of challenge to the authority of the two Americans was havthe already weak centralgov- ing his hair cut, while the secernment. It also could strain ond waited for his turn. ties between Yemen and the They said one of the AmerU.S., which

tioned the two Americans and

later gave them permission to leave the country, the officials said. The two fully cooperated with the Yemeni government

investigation, they said. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to

brief journalists. Late Friday, the U.S. State D epartment said t h e t w o Americans, whom it did not

m i l itants identify, were at a Sanaa business at the time of the attack their waiting SUV and drove and have since left Yemen.

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MONDAY, MAY 12,2014 • THE BULLETIN

A7

LOCAL Ee TATE CIVIC CALENDAR TUESDAY

Madras CityCouncil

— The council is expected to meet at 7p.m. at Madras City Hall at125 S.W. ESt. The agenda includes consideration of a resolution authorizing the cityto applyfora $36,580 state grant for trail rehabilitation.

RedmondCity

Councll —Thecouncil is expected tomeetat 6:30 p.m. at 777 S.W.

DeschutesAve.Topics include anupdate onthe city's website andpotential approval of a$58,577 contract with Taylor Northwest for realignment of a paththrough Sam JohnsonPark. WEDNESDAY

DeschutesCoung Commission — County commissioners are expected to meetfor a work session at1:30 p.m. at the county administration building, 1300N.W. Wall St. Commissioners are set to approve aDeschutes CountySheriff's Office request toapply for a nearly $90,000 state grant to support emergencyservices, hear a requestfor loan forgiveness from St.Vincent de Paul in LaPine and listen to adiscussion of a school-basedhealth center at BendHigh. They arealsoset to hold a business meetingat 9:30 a.m., earlier than the typical time for the meeting.

LOWER DESCHUTES

Tri esa touSe aune eS The Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs plan to charge anew fee forboaters onthe

er's Segment 2 and the run between them is known as "Splash and Giggle," Penhollowsaid. About 45,000boaters a year

Lower Deschutes River near

use the two spots along the riv-

Maupin. Starting May 21 the tribes are set to charge $1 per boater

er, meaning the new fee could bring in around $90,000, said

putting in or taking out at Har-

Wasco County Board of Commissioners. Hege is also chair-

By Dylan J. Darling The Bulletin

pham Flat and $1 perboater taking out at Sandy Beach, the last take-out along the river

before Sherars Falls, said Clay Penhollow, spokesman for the tribes. The tribes own the land

at Harpham Flat, about 5 miles upstream from Maupin, and Sandy Beach, about 5 miles

downstream of town, but the areas are not part of the Warm Springs Indian Reservation. The newcharge for boaters is a"use fee," he said."The tribes have owned these lands

BRIEFING

New boatingfee The Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs will be charging a new fee to boaters on the Lower Deschutes River. The $1 per person fee will be collected at Harpham Flat and Sandy Beach, both of which are on land owned by the tribes.

Bendmanmissing at Bachelor

Sharars Falls SherarsBridge

andyBeach

SandyBeach

M Pin

Aii watercraft must exit river here toavoid Sherars Falls

Scott Hege, chairman of the

a pham Flat Shani

man of the Lower Deschutes

Deschtltes

River Management Group, which is made up of agencies

River

that manage the river. These

Warm Springs Indian Reservation

indude the tribes, the Bureau of LandManagement and Ore-

W ar

gon State Parks.

ope i n gs

Maupin

The tribes have talked about a fee for use at Harpham Flat and Sandy Beach for years, Hege said, but there longhas beenthe issue ofhowto collect

Madras Billy Chin k

the money.

for 20years or more, and the

The tribes have saidthey'll put in collection boxes by May

tribes have never really had

21but there still are questions,

any compensation for that." Harpham Flat and Sandy

such as who will enforce the payment and how.

Beach are both in the riv-

Source: The Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs, Oregon State Parks

NarphamFlat

Greg Cross/The Bulletin

SeeRiver IA8

Deschutes County Search and Rescue crews scoured the snow on and near Mount Bachelor Sundayafternoon into Sundayevening, looking for a Bend man who went missing while skiing. Ryan Melrose Deyoung, 21, wasreported missing by the Mt. Bachelor Ski Patrol just before1:30 p.m., said Deschutes County Sheriff's Lt. ChadDavis. Members of the Ski Patrol had discovered tracks going past the ski area's east catchline, tracks which they determined Deyoung likely made. The search for Deyoung, who hasautism, was still underway at 8 p.m., Davis said. Along with crews on the ground, an Air Link helicopter was looking for Deyoung from the air. Sheriff's deputies were also checking to see if Deyoung endedup on the CascadeLakes Highway andcaught a ride into Bend. Deyoung is described as 6 feet tall and156 pounds, according to the Sheriff's Office. He was last seenwearing a dark brown parkaand tan ski pants. Anyone with information regarding Deyoung's whereabouts is asked to call 541-6936911. — Bulletin staff raport

La PineCityCouncil

— City councilors are expected to meetat 6 p.m. at LaPineCity Hall, 16345 Sixth St. Theyare set to consider approval for an agreementwith the Deschutes CountySheriff's Office for enforcement of animal control rules in townandhear details of a landtransfer agreement, aswell as a water sale contract.

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contact:541-B83-0354, news@bendbunetin.com. In emails, please write Civic Catendar in the subject line. Include a contact name and number. Submissions may be edited. Deadline for Monday publication is noon Thursday. c

EVENT

.t.',,

CALENDAR

s

P~ TODAY WILL DURST: The political satirist performs "Boomeraging: From LSD to OMG"; $15 inadvance, $17 at the door; 7:30 p.m., doors open at 7p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub,70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 or www. voicanictheatrepub.com. TUESDAY No eventsListed. WEDNESDAY "THE METROPOLITAN OPERA:LA CENERENTOLA"ENCORE: Starring Joyce DiDonato in the Cinderellatitle role, with Juan DiegoGiorezas her Prince Charming; opera performance transmitted live in high definition; $24, $22 seniors, $18 children; 6:30 p.m.; RegalOldMill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 S.W. PowerhouseDrive, Bend; 541-312-2901. AUTHORPRESENTATION: David Moskowitz presents a talk and slide showbased on his book"Wolves in the Land of Salmon"; $5; 6:30 p.m.; Pauiina Springs Books, 252 W.HoodAve., Sisters; 541-549-0866. REDRAYFRAZIER: The soul-rock singersongwriter performs; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W.BondSt., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www. mcmenamins.com. JESSECOOK:The Canadian jazzguitarist performs; $36-$56, pius fees; 8 p.m., doors open at 7 p.m.; TowerTheatre, 835 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www. towertheatre.org. BIG STICKYMESS:The Calif. funk bandperforms; $5 at the door; 9 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub,70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 or www. volcanictheatrepub.com/.

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Deschutes..... 541-388-6546 Crook.............541-447-6553 Jefferson.......541-475-4451 Salem .............503-986-1518

:h

Joe Kline/The Bulletin

Hannah Harrington, 16, left, talks about a piece of artwork she made with Ryan Reese, right, an instructor of counseling at Oregon State University-Cascades Campus, and other teenagers in the STRIVE program during an outdoor counseling program at Shevlin Park on Friday in Bend.

• An OSU-CascadesinstrLtctor's work integrates nature and counseling By Tyler Leeds

ways to apply it. On Friday, Reese was

The Bulletin

Ryan Reese has set out to study and utilize a phe-

nomenon many Central Oregonians take advantage of every day—the therapeutic

benefits derived from simply being in nature. Reese, an instructor of

counseling at Oregon State University-Cascades Campus, is building on work from his doctoral thesis to develop a way to integrate nature into his counseling work. He currently uses his approach in private practice, but will offer

able to put his skills to work at Shevlin Park with local

students enrolled in the STRIVE program, which Sal Cassaro, Bend-La Pine Schools' directorofsecondary programs, said targets the district's "most at-risk"

middle- and high school students. "My belief is that there

is an inherent, biological connection humans have to

developed from observing the growth and healing he experienced as a fly-fishing guide in Alaska. While fly-fishing worked for him, Reese said nature is "self-de-

fined," and that healing could arise from anything ranging from spending time with a pet to listening to nature sounds. In his work with STRIVE,

Reese aims to create in the students a relationship with nature that may not have ex-

isted before.

to students and non-students

nature," Reese said. "A lot of research has shown that simply being in (natural) spaces can have positive effects, in part by calming physiologi-

— meant to introduce the the-

cal processes."

goal is to have them foster a relationship with nature,

a course this summer — open

ory behind his thinking and

Reese said his interest

The May 20election will serve as aprimary for a variety of statewide offices. Local races and measures will also be on the ballot. VOTING INFORMATION • If you haven't yet received avoters' guide in the mail, you canview it online or request onebe mailed to you. • The Web version is at sos.oregon.gov/voting. • For a physical copy to be mailed, call your county clerk or theSecretary of State's elections office in Salem.

"A lot of these students

• The deadline for new voters to register or change political party affiliation for the May primary has passed.

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something that can be a positive and reliable presence."

On Friday, Reese had students create masks from found materials in Shevlin

Park. One mask was made to represent their true selves, while the other was meant

to represent something they feelothers expect from them.

"Adolescents are trying to figure out who they are, and I think this activity works on

that," Reese said. "There's something really real and raw about nature. It's the

may lack the positive connections to adults that can be so

epitome of authenticity, and

important," Reese said. "My

be influenced just by being around it."

I think students can even See Nature/A8

Well shot! Readerphotos

• We want to see your photos "on the river" for another special version of Well shot! that will run in the

Outdoors section. Submit your best work athendhuttetin.com/ riverphotosand we'll pick the best for publication. Submissionrequirements: Include as much detail as possible — when and where you took it, and any special technique used — aswell as your name, hometown and phone number. Photos must be high resolution (at least 6 inches wide and 300 dpi) and cannot be altered.

THURSDAY HELPINGHANDS GALA:Featuring a dinner, an auction and entertainment; $45; 6-9 p.m.; Awbrey GlenGolf Club, 2500 N.W.Awbrey Glen Drive, Bend; dfr© theparalegalbeagle.com or www.theparaiegaibeagie. com/events. SPEECHAND DEBATE NIGHT:Hosted by the

MVHS competitive Speech and Debate team, open to the public; 6:30 p.m.; Mountain View High School, 2755 N.E. 27th St., Bend; 541-383-6360. CALICOTHEBAND: The California country band performs; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. BondSt., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www.

mcmenamins.com. "ARRIVAL":COTA movie night presentsthe freeride mountain bike film; $5 per person; 9 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. BondSt., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www. secondbasefilms.coml arrival/. FRIDAY REDMONDGARDEN

CLUB PLANTSALE: The nonprofit club will have a variety of plants, fruits and vegetables to sell, with garden tools, books and garden decor; proceeds benefit school horticulture programs; free admission; 8 a.m.-6 p.m.; Private residence, 3688 S.W. 34th Street; 541-923-3825 or www. redmondoregon

gardenciub.org. "DALLASBUYERS CLUB":A screening of the 2013 film about a man working around the system to help AIDS patients (R); free, refreshments available; 7:30 p.m.; Rodriguez Annex, Jefferson County Library, 134 S.E ESt., Madras; 541-475-3351 or www.icid.org.

BEND IMPROVGROUP: The comedy group performs; adult themes; $8 in advance, $10at the door; 7:30 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E.Lafayette Ave.; 541-312-9626 or www.2ndstreettheater. com. THE SOLO SPEAK SESSIONS: JUMP: Local storytellers perform, with special guests; $15

pius fees in advance,$18 at the door; 7:30 p.m.; Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W.Greenwood Ave., Bend; 503-860-5733 or www.solospeak.com.

See Calendar IA8 Contact:54t -383-0351, communitylifeObendbullelin.com or "Submit an Event" online at www.bendbunetin.com. Entries must be submitted at least 10 days before publication.


AS

THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, MAY 12, 2014

River

weekend days from Memorial Day weekend to Labor

Continued from AT

Day weekend. This year that is from between May 24 and

"I think there is a lot of concerns of how it will work and «vI

Joe Kline i The Bulletin

STRIVE students Starr Miller, 15, right, and Makai Plagmann, 16, explore a tree stump while on a walk through Shevlin Park during an outdoor counseling program on Friday in Bend.

Nature

tion soon led to more specifics with plenty of physical or sen-

Continued from AT Cassaro noted that some of the students are victims of

to deepen their connection," ese first meets with patients Reese said. "One thing to do

about what he was feeling." In his private practice, Re-

sory access, but who wants

in a traditional setting. If they

is enhance their sense of en-

approve, Reese will then take vironmental agency, perhaps his clients on walks through- by selecting an environmental "having them connect with out Central Oregon. Some of cause they support and worknature is an important, new his methods include discuss- ing to help it. I'm able to debenefit we can offer." ing times when the client felt termine with my client how to In his research, Reese found scared in nature or identifying better bring the environment that having simple access to with something they encoun- into my client's life, using the nature can be powerful, but ter on the hike. seven areas." that nature also offers a means Reese's method is centered In his course this summer, to explore one's own identity. around seven aspects: phys- titled "Foundations of EcoAs an example, Reese spoke ical access, sensory access, Wellness," Reese will explore of a 10-year-old he worked connection, protection, pres- the seven aspects. "We'll look at practical ways with who identified with an e rvation, spirituality a n d unhealthy tree while on a hike community c onnectedness. to bring it into different setin the forest. Each of these areas contribute tings," Reese said. "It will be "He just walked over and to what Reese termed "Eco- pretty experiential, and the said he felt like he was dying Wellness," which refers to the goal is to have students create on the inside," Reese said. sense of wellness individuals and work on something they "For someone so young as this experience through engaging can use." 10-year-old to say that was in nature. — Reporter: 541-633-2160, abuse and are the district's most persistent truants, and

pretty wild, and the conversa-

"There may b e

s omeone

tleeds@bendbulletin.com

Aug. 31.

how it will be implemented," The new tribal fee evenHege said. tually could be incorporated The fee is of particular con- into the boater pass, accordcern to rafting and fishing ing to an informational webguides who use Harpham site maintained by Oregon Flat and Sandy Beach, he State Parks. "The Tribe and said. Many of them have al- the Bureau of Land Manageready set their prices for the ment have agreed to incorboating season and have porate this new fee into the printed brochures, so they Boater'sPass Website pay may have to cover the new system in future years to alcost themselves rather than low for a convenient single ask their clients to pay it. point of payment for boaters," The stretch of th e r i ver reads a note on the website. is popular for rafting and Just under 10.5 miles sepdriftboat fishing. Boaters al- a rate Harpham F la t a n d ready pay for a pass to float, Sandy Beach, according to which costs $8 per person for descriptions of runs along

redmondoregongardenclub.org. SUMMERSTREETFAIR: Featuring vendors, kids' attractions, Continued from AT entertainment, food andmore; free; COLD RIVER CITY: Funkand soul; 8a.m.4 p.m.;DeschutesCounty Fair 8 p.m.; Silver Moon Brewing & & Expo Center, 3800 S.W.Airport Taproom, 24 N.W.GreenwoodAve., Way, Redmond; 541-385-3364 or Bend; 541-388-833 I. www.streetfair2014.com. CODYBEEBE:The Seattle country CENTRALOREGON LLAMA artist performs; $6 plus fees; 9-11:30 ASSOCIATIONBLACK AND p.m.; Maverick's Country Bar 8 Grill, BLUEFESTIVAL:View lamas 20565 Brinson Blvd., Bend;541-325on display, purchase llamas, see 1886 or www.maverickscountrybar. competitions for obstacle courses com. and more; 9 a.m.-5 p.m.; Crook County Fairgrounds, 1280 S.Main St., Prineville; 541-548-4158, SATURDAY lamabatty©aol.com or www. POLEPEDALPADDLE:Participants centraloregonllamas.net/. will race through multiple sports from Mt. Bachelor to Bend;the Les CIVILWAR REENACTMENT AND Schwab Amphitheater, which marks LIVING HISTORY CAMPS:Afull the end of the race, will host a festival re-enactment by theNorthwest Civil with music andvendor booths; free War Council, with camps presenting for spectators; 8 a.m.; LesSchwab living conditions of early1863 and Amphitheater, 344 S.W.Shevlin more; $8, $5 seniors and students, Hixon Drive, Bend;541-388-0002 or free for agesyounger than 6; 9 a.m.www.mbsef.org. 6 p.m.; House onMetolius, Forest Road 980, CampSherman; 866-904REDMONDGARDENCLUBPLANT 6165 or www.nwcwc.org. SALE:Thenonprofit club will have a variety of plants, fruits and LEARN TO FISH: Useloaner rods, vegetablesto sell, with garden reels and tackle to learn to fish, tools, books andgarden decor; juvenile angling license required for proceeds benefit school horticulture ages14-17, ages17and younger; programs; free admission; 8 a.m.-3 free; 9 a.m.-1 p.m.; Shevlin Park, p.m.; Private residence, 3688 S.W. 18920 Shevlin Park Road,Bend;38934th St.; 541-923-3825 or www. 7275 or www.bendparksandrec.org/.

Calendar

the river on the American W hitewater w e bsite. T h e North Carolina-based non-

profitadvocates for the restoration and conservation of whitewater around the coun-

try. The run includes class IV rapids. "When you hear people talk about doing a day trip on the lower Deschutes, this is the section they are running.

And if you are in the area, this is a great run throughout

the summer. But be prepared to share the river with dozens of rafts, " according to American Whitewater. "There are

several great rapids on this section packed relatively close together." — Reporter: 541-617-7812, ddarling@bendbulletin.com

CENTRALOREGON GREAT STRIDES: A walk-a-thon for cystic fibrosis; donations accepted; 10 a.m., check-in 9 a.m.; Sam Johnson Park, Southwest15th St. and Southwest EvergreenAve., Redmond; 541-480-6703 or www. greatstridescentraloregon.org. JAPANESE FESTIVAL ANDSILENT AUCTION:Enjoy traditional Japanese arts and crafts, children's activities, food booths and more; free, donations accepted; noon-4 p.m.; Summit High School,2855 N.W. Clearwater Drive, Bend; 541355-4053 or www.jnhs2014.weebly. com. CALDERASTUDENTSHOWCASE: Featuring artwork created during classesand workshops by middle andhighschoolstudents;2-5 p.m.; Edwin Brown Education Center, 850 S.W. Antler Ave., Redmond; 541-923-4868 or www.calderaarts. org/. SUNRIVERROTARY WINE RAFFLE BENEFIT: The12th annual event features dinner, silent auction and drawings for wine raffle winners; proceeds benefit local youth, senior and community organizations; $75, reservation requested; 4:30-10 p.m.; Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic & Recreation Center, 57250Overlook Road; 541-593-2934 or www. sunriverrotary.org.

The Bm11etin, U Magamim,e 8r Rohherson Pord, Presemt 0

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WINNERS will be announced in The ttulletin's u MAGAZINE alOng With SOme Of Our faVOrite PhatOPiCS. Look fOr yOur neXt editiOn Of U MAGAZINE PudliShing in The Bulletin On Saturday, June 7. NeW PriZeS Will be aWarded in uPCOming editiOnS Of U MagaZine, SOenter aS Often aS you like!

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GREAT WP)LF L O D G E

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MONDAY, MAY 12,2014 •THE BULLETIN

A9

ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT

' merican's iri wi con inueon TV SPOTLIGHT

feld" (1936) and "The Good Earth" (1937). She was 100

7p.m.onNGC,"Noneofthe Above" — In this series, host Tim Shaw performs over-the-top experiments, challenges viewers to predict how they'll turn out, then explains the science behind those results. In the new episode"What Goes Up,"those experiments include heating up champagne in the microwave for a high-pressure test and sinking a basketball into a hoop attached to a moving vehicle.

years old at the time she did that interview at the inaugural TCM Classic Film Festival, and as close as Osborne was sitting

8 p.m.on10, "Bones"— While Booth (David Boreanaz) is preparing to testify before a con-

out questions for?

By Jay Bobbin

FE,m m 'TELEVISIO r DE ' RLDt o

48 e

'

Zap2it

R ITf

~

— Sally Anderson, Port Orange, Fla. That was Luise Rainer,

$

A •• a winner ofbestactress

I really enjoy "The Amer-

Q ••icans." Will it be back for

Oscars for "The Great Zieg-

anotherseason? — Steve Carson, Fayetteville, N.C. • It will i n deed. FX has

A• renewed the espionage drama starring Keri Russell and Matthew Rhys for a third

round that will consist of 13 episodes, likely starting early next year. In the meantime, Season 2 isn't over yet, though

to her, she couldn't hear himpartially because her hearing

Zumapress.com via Newscom

"The Americans," which stars

aid was broken. The solution

was that he patiently — and,

Keri Russell, is returning for a third season.

we must add, smartly — waited for a marker and something to

it's getting there; its finale will

be shown May 21.

write on, and the conversation continued from there.

much mileage as possible explain why the Q •• Please seasons of "Dallas" are

Zumapress.com via Newscom

The cast of "Dallas" — Brenda Strong, Patrick Duffy, Linda Gray, so short. Jesse Metcalfe, Josh Henderson and Julie Gonzalo — will be back — Maggie DePue, with new episodes on TNT in August. Columbus, Ohio The main reason is that • it's a c a ble series. As been shown again? line for purchase on both DVD has been mentioned here nu— Dixie Elmore, and VHS tape ... but we should merous times,the seasons Washington, WVa. mention that in the case of the for such shows typically are We can't speak to why DVD version, it's not inexpenshorter than they would be • it hasn't been repeated sive in certain instances. It was for broadcastnetwork series. — every network makes its issued in 2001, so it's been out of With that said, Season 3 of own decisions, even Encore, print for a while. TNT's "Dallas" isn't over yet; it which has rerun such minise-

A•

A•

was planned for a midseason ries as "The Thorn Birds" and break, so when it ended last "Shogun" in relatively recent month, that was only the sea- times — but the good news is son's midpoint. It'll be back in that "Scarlett" isn't out of sight August. completely. The made-for-CBS 1994 draI am a big fan of "Gone ma, starring Joanne Whalley

Q •• With t he W i n d ," a nd

as Scarlett O'Hara and Timothy

there was a miniseries titled "Scarlett." Why has that not

Dalton (post-James Bond) as Rhett Butler, can be found on-

I'm glad to see "Mad • Men" back. Why did AMC decide to break up its final season into two chunks

Q•

rather than running all the ep-

isodes this year? — Brian Thomas,

while it still had the show ...

something AMC is becoming known for (see: "Breaking

hen are they going to Q •• Wsettle on a day and time

Bad"). For another, it was aben-

for "Rake"?

efit to executive producer Mat-

— Sheila Burton, Grove City, Ohio

thew Weiner and the cast and

as in the proA•• "They," gramming executives at

crew in terms of scheduling. We spoke with Elisabeth Moss, alias the show's Peggy

Fox, have settled on it ... but

you won't be happy about it: no day, no time. The Greg Kinnear-starring adaptation of an

Olson, just before the drama's April return. At that point, those

involved were just goingbackto start filming the final set of episodes that will be shown next

Australian show had a "soft"

premiere and got softer from year. Whatever the finale turns there, causing its move from out to be, Weiner and compa- Thursdays to Fridays. It got ny had that extra time to get softer still in its ratings, so Fox it ready, a relative luxury that ultimately played off the final "Mad Men" has earned. episodes on a Saturday night. I enjoyed the recent spe— Send questions of general • cial about Turner Clasinterestviaemail totvpipeline@

Q•

Buffalo, N Y. sic Movies' 20th anniversary. Who was the actress Robert • work wanted to get as Osborne was shown writing

tribune.com. Writers must include their names, cities and states. Personal replies cannot be sent.

A

• For one thing, the net-

in wie earns or ori asun

MOVIE TIMESTODAY • There may be an additional fee for 3-0and IMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change after press time. I

Dear Abby:I have been married for 18 years to a wonderful woman who was diagnosed with stage 4 cancer a few years ago. We don't know how much time she has left, but she feels the cancer has

she wants. I understand her desire to live in a warmer climate, but I

need the income.

think she's the one who is being

man came into the insurance of-

selfish. What do you think? — Wants To Stay Put

fice where I work to buy an auto

Dear Wants To Stay Put:I think

warm weather.

DEP,R

Aggy

Abby, for many r easons I d o n o t want to move. We have lived in the Midwest all our lives. My el-

insurance policy. I haven't talked with men out-

now the spring rains

side of my church in a long time, so I was nervous. I thought my heart would explode from beating

have arrived, which

so fast.

robbed her of her "retirement." the winter in th e M i dwest was She is trying to perbrutal this year, and

suade our family to move to Florida so she can enjoy some

Dear Abby: A t a l l, a ttractive

are also depressHe will be coming back in a ing. But in a short couple of weeks, and I'm afraid if t ime t h e f lo w e r s I don't ask him out, I will regret it. I don't know how to approach him will bloom and the warmth of summer and autumn or ask a guy out at all. Help! will last for the next half-year. — Nervous Out West

derly parent would be all alone if Why not take a vacation (or we move, and I have a sibling who leave) from your job for the next is also terminally ill. three or four weeks'? If you teleI have had the same job for 25 commute, you could still get some work done and let your wife have years, and I don't want to give it

Dear Nervous: The man may be married, so take it slow. If he

up because I have the freedom to

and offer to show him.

her dose of sunshine.

do much of my work from home, Surely someone can check which allows me to help my wife on your parent and keep you inand have income as well. If we formed about your sibling for that move, there would be no guaran- short time. tee that I could find a similar work situation that is so beneficial.

I do not r ecommend moving

comes in before noon, casually mention there's a restaurant not

far away that serves good food If he comes in later, use the old "want to grab a cup of coffee?" gambit. Either of these will give you a chance to talk with him and find

anywhere permanently because out more about him without being My wife says I'm being selfish there's no guarantee you'd find a overly obvious. because I'm unwilling to leave my job that compensates you as well — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com job, family and friends to do as as the one you have, and you may or P.o. Box 69440, LosAngeles, CA90069

HAPPY BIRTHDAYFOR MONDAY, MAY12, 2014:This year you often feel uncomfortable in what normally are easy situations; you could feel awkward at work or at the dentist's office. This same feeling might permeate important conversations. Take good care of yourself, and make sure you see the dentist and doctor on a

regular schedule.

Starsshowthekisd Ifyou are single, of dayyou'Ilhave yo u easily could ** * * * D ynamic meet someone ++++ positive through your daily travels or through a co-worker; this * Difficult

person could

knock yoursocks off. If you are attached, the two of you will get into many intellectual conversations and come to agreements more often than you have in the past. You also will delight in time spent together, sometimes even doing nothing. LIBRA is as gentle as you are.

YOURHOROSCOPE

SCORPIO (oct. 23-Nov. 21) *** Assume a low profile in howyou

deal with a personal matter. You also might not want to lie low in other areas. When evaluating a situation, it suits you be difficult, or even impossible. You'll best to be an observer. You will gain inwant to see the big picture. You could be formation that you otherwise would not heading into a more demanding period hear. Tonight: Get some extra R and R. at work. Prepare accordingly. Follow SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) your instincts, and you will land well. ** * * You'll want to zero in on the Tonight: Use your ingenuity! real issue behind a problem that keeps CANCER (Jons21-July 22) being debated in a meeting; otherwise, ** * * Be more playful and forthright you and the others in the group will not about a situation. Know what you want, come toa consensus.Addressthe real and investigate a problem more fully. matter, and you will come to a concluYou might not feel ready to act, and for sion quickly. Tonight: Stop and visit with good reason. A discussion with a friend a friend. will help you understand your behavior. CAPRICORN (Dsc. 22-Jan. 19) Tonight: Nap, then decide. ** * * Take charge of a problem in By Jacqueline Bigar

LEO (July 23-Aug.22)

order to prevent a significant fallout ** * * You might want to encourage a from happening. Allow your creativity discussion. You have many ideas,asdo to flow as you figure out what might be those around you. Some of them will be appropriate and most effective under the better than others. Be wise, air out your present circumstances. Tonight: Join differences and go for the best solution. some friends for a fun adventure. ARIES (March 21-April 19) Trust your sense of humor and your ** * * You might be uncomfortable AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) ability to see the big picture. Tonight: with what an associate and/or friend ** * You might be more stuck on a Make it easy. verbalizes. You understand that this professional matter than you realize. person is not seeing the big picture, VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Remain sensitive to a friend or loved even though he or she seems to grasp ** * * L i sten to news with an eye to one at a distance. This person might be certain issues very well. Attempt to help change. The impact could be finanuncomfortable sharing a problem. Use this individual detach. Tonight: Visit over cial. You might want to step back and your imagination. Stay centered, and dinner. everything will work out well. Tonight: observe more. Be aware of the costs involved at this point. Togetherness con- Consider taking a trip. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) tinues to be a theme. Tonight: Time for a PISCES (Feb. 19-March20) ** * * * Y ou might be deferring to two-way talk. Confirm what you hear. someoneelsemorethanyouneedto ** * * You might want to revise your be. You could feel as if this person has LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) thinking about an investment. A discusa better grasp on a situation. Focus on ** * * You might be less grounded sion with a partner could be difficult. one item at a time. You will tend to go than someone you're working with, but Speak your mind, but also listen to this deeper into one issue, rather than see your creativity and intellectual resource- person carefully, as he or she reveals his the big picture. Tonight: Say "yes" to an fulness are likely to point to the correct or her thoughts in response. Tonight: offer. Return calls, and catch up on a friend's path. Use your charisma when dealing GEMINI (May 21-Jone20) with a friend. Reach out to a loved one at news. *** * Curbing your playfulness could a distance. Tonight: As you like it. © King Features Syndicate

TV TODAY

I

I

I

I

McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 N.W.Bond St., 541-330-8562 • 300: RISE OF ANEMPIRE (R) 6 • THAT AWKWARD MOMENT(R) 9 • After 7p.m.,showsare21andolderonly.Youngerthan 21 may attend screenings before 7p.m. ifaccompanied by a legal guardian. Tin Pan Theater, 869 N.W.Tin PanAlley, 541-241-2271 • FINDINGVIVIAN MAIER(no MPAArating) 5:30 • THE LUNCHBOX (PG) 7:30 I

I

Redmond Cinemas,1535S.W.OdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777 • THEAMAZING SPIDER-MAN 2 (PG-13)3:30,6:30 • HEAVEN ISFORREAL(PG) 4, 6:15 • NEIGHBORS (R) 4:45, 7: I5 • THEOTHER WOMAN(PG-I3)4:30,7 Sisters Movie House,720 DesperadoCourt, 541-549-8800 • THE AMAZING SPIDER-MAN 2(PG-l3) 6 • BEARS (G)5 • THE GRAND BUDAPESTHOTEL(R) 5 • HEAVEN ISFORREAL(PG) 6:45 • NEIGHBORS(R) 7 • THEOTHER WOMAN (PG-13)6:30 Madras Cinema5,1101 S.W.U.S.Highway 97, 541-475-3505 • THE AMAZING SPIDER-MAN 2(PG-l3) 6:40 • THE AMAZING SPIDER-MAN 23-0 (PG-13) 5 • BRICK MANSIONS (PG-13) 7:20 • HEAVEN ISFORREAL(PG)4:20, 6:50 • NEIGHBORS (R) 4:50, 7:10 • RI02 (G)5:05 •

Pine Theater, 214 N.Main St., 541-416-1014 • THE AMAZING SPIDER-MAN 2(Upstairs — PG-13) 6:1 5 • HEAVEN ISFORREAL(PG) 6:30 • Theupstairsscreening room has limitedaccessibility.

O

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

nan (Emily Deschanel) works with Sweets (John Francis Daley) on the case of a community college's swim coach whose body is found in a well. Hints that the victim might have beenhaving an affair lead to the discovery of a secret life in the newepisode "The Drama in the Queen."

8 p.m. on(CW), "Star-Crossed" — Emery (AimeeTeegarden) finds an unlikely ally to help her after Roman (Matt Lanter) is seriously injured. Grayson, Drake,

Sophia andLukas(Grey Damon, Greg Finley, Brina Palencia, Titus Makin Jr.) try to track down the stolen Suvek before it can beactivated, but they're too late. Vega (Merle Dandridge) has set it off in the middle of a Mardi Gras parade. Chelsea Gilligan also stars in the season finale, "Passion Lends Them Power." 9p.m. on6, "Mike & Molly" — Mike (Billy Gardell) has been worried about his mom (Rondi Reed), but his concern kicks into high gear when her bathtub falls through the ceiling. He puts his foot down and insists she seea doctor in the new episode "This Old Peggy." 9 p.m. on10, "24: Live Another Day" —President Heller (William Devane) prepares to speak to Parliament in the wake of a devastating attack, while Kate

Morgan (Yvonne Strahovski)

I

Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680S.W. Powerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • THE AMAZING SPIDER-MAN 2(PG-13) 11:45 a.m., 12:45, 3, 4, 6:15, 7:15, 9:35 • THE AMAZING SPIDER-MAN 23-0 (PG-13) 1:15, 4:30, 7:45 • THEAMAZINGSPIDER-MAN2 IMAX3-0 (PG-13)Noon, 3:25, 6:40, 9:50 • BEARS (G)1:45, 3:55, 6:05 • BRICK MANSIONS (PG-13) 9:05 • CAPTAINAMERICA:THEWINTERSOLDIER (PG-l3) 12:10, 3:40, 6:55, 10 • DIVERGENT (PG-13) 1:35, 4:45, 8 • DRAFT DAY (PG-I3) 1:40, 4:25, 7:55 • FADINGGIGOLO(R) 12:35, 2:55, 7:40, 10:05 • THE GRAND BUDAPESTHOTEL(R) 1:25, 4:15, 7:20, 9:55 • HEAVEN ISFORREAL(PG)12:55, 4:IO,7:30 • LEGENDSOF OZ:DOROTHY'8 RETURN (PG)2:10,4:40, 9:25 • LEGENDS OFOZ: DOROTHY'8 RETURN 3-0(PG)11:50 a.m., 7:05 • MOMS' NIGHTOUT(PG) 1,3:30, 6:45, 9: I5 • NEIGHBORS (R) 12:30, 3:15, 6:30, 9:30, 10 • THEOTHER WOMAN (PG-13)12:20,3:45,6:25,9:10 • RI02 (G) 12:05,2:45, 6,9 • Accessibility devices are available for some movies.

I

gressional subcommittee,Bren-

continues trying to track down Jack (Kiefer Sutherland). Margot Al-Harazi (Michelle Fairley) shows how far she's willing to go for revenge in the newepisode "Day 9: 1:00 P.M.-2:00 P.M." 9 p.m. on HBO,"The (Dsad Mothers) Club" —Womenwho lost their mothers at a young age share their stories in this new documentary. Leticia, whose mother had a genetic predisposition to the cancer that took her life, fears she'll leave her own child motherless. Ginger used art to heal her guilt over her tumultuous relationship with her mother. O Zap2it

Amcrncr. Dishwasher I ~

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A10

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IlV THE BACI4: WEATHER W Tennis, B2 MLB, B3

Cycling, B6

© www.bendbulletin.com/sports

THE BULLETIN • MONDAY, MAY 12, 2014

The week ahea

A rundownof gamesandevents to watch for locally andnationally from the world of sports:

Today

Wednesday

Friday

Friday-Saturday

Saturday

NBA Playoffs, SanAntonio Spursat Portland Trail Blazers, 7:30 p.m. (TNT): It's all or nothing as the Blazers try to become the first team in NBA history to come back from a3-0 deficit to win a best-of-seven playoff series. TheSpurs have bottled up LaMarcus Aldridge and Damian Lillard, and Blazers guard Mo Williams is injured, so something will have to drastically change for Portland.

High schoolboyslacrosse playoffs, Mountain View atBendHigh, 6 p.m., Sisters at Summit, 6:30 p.m.:Thesemifinals of the High Desert Conference pit the Cougars against the top-seededLava Bears, while the third-place Outlaws visit thesecond-placeStorm.Wednesday's winners qualify for the state tournament and will meet Friday night in Sisters for the HDCplayoff title.

College baseball, Washington atoregon State, 4 p.m. (Pac-12Networks): The 2014 Pac-12championship could be on the line asthe conference's two front-runners open athree-game series. The reigning Pac-12champion Beavers and the surprising Huskies (19-5) play againonSaturdayat4p.m.andSunday at 3 p.m., both also to betelevised live via Pac-12 Networks.

High school track andfield, Class 5A Special District1 Championshipsat Summit:The Storm will entertain rivals Bend, Mountain View andRedmond, along with Ashland andEagle Point, in two days of competition. On Friday, field events start at 2 p.m., running events at 3:30. On Saturday, field events start at 10 a.m., running events at noon.

Multisport racing, U.S.BankPole Pedal Paddle:The 38th edition of Central Oregon's signature multisport race will again include some 3,000 participants. The race starts at Mt. Bachelor ski area and finishes at the LesSchwabAmphitheater in Bend.Theelite men's and elite women's divisions start at 9:15 a.m.; first finishers should arrive at the amphitheater shortly before11 a.m.

NBA PLAYOFFS

TRACK & FIELD

TEE TOGREEN: CENTRAL OREGON GOLF COURSE TOUR

Modin 3rd in Pac-12 decathlon PULLMAN,Wash. Oregon freshman Mitch Modin finished third in the decathlon at the Pac-12 combined events championships Sunday at Washington State. Modin, a 2013Mountain View graduate, finished with 7,310 points. Oregon junior Dakotah Keys won with 7,801 points, followed by Southern Cal senir Viktor Fajoyomi with 7,489. On Saturday, Modin won the shot put (42 feet, 9'/s inches) and the 400-meter dash (49.09 seconds). His best finish Sundaywas a second in the javelin (184-8) and a tie for second in the pole vault (14-9). -

t

7

Greg Wahhstephens/The Associated Press

San Antonio's Tim Duncan

is averaging 13.7 points and 8.0 rebounds in the Western Conference semifinals against Portland.

— Bulletin Staff/BPO/t

Mavs

NBA Donald Sterling: 'I'm not a racist'

pusbed

LOS ANGELES-

Spurs to

step up By Anne M. Peterson The Associated Press

PORTLAND — The intensity and focus that has the

San Antonio Spurs rolling 3-0 over Portland in the Western

Conference semifinals can be traced to their Game 3 loss to Dallas in the first round. Vince Carter hit a 3-pointer at the buzzer and the Mavericks went up 2-1. But

San Antonio simply was not goingtoconcede the opening round. "Down 2-1, Dallas really

made it a series. They played great basketball — everybody was playing very well on that team and they made it hard on us," Spurs guard Tony Parker sard. SeeBlazers/B4 SPURS 3, TRAIL BLAZERS0

,«jj>P," Ry

Game1: Spurs116, Blazers 92 Game 2: Spurs114, Blazers 97 Game 3: Spurs118, Blazers103 Today at Portland 7:30 p.m. x-Wed at SanAntonio TBD x-Fri

at P o rtland

TBD

x- May19 at San Antonio TBA x-ifnecessary

Andy Tullis/The Bulletin

A view of the10th green with water flowing by at The Old Back Nine at Mountain High in Bend.

Breakingdown the course A closer look at TheOld Back Nine at Mountain High. For more information on the items below, seeBg. DIFFICULTY The course's narrow fairways makethe layout much more difficult than its relatively short length and bunkerless setup might suggest. STRATEGY Play conservatively off the tee to avoid a run-in with a ponderosa pine, then be aggressive into the mostly roomyand defenseless greens.

VERDICT

• The nine-hole course in southeast Bendis improving

Number ofholes: Nine Status:Open seasonally Location:60650 China Hat Road, Bend Tee times:

Editor's note: This is another installment in a seasonlong series in

which Bulletin golf writer Zack Hall

ZACK

visits each public and semiprivate golf coursein Central Oregon.

HALL

ot long ago, a 20-foot par putt would meananearl y guaranteed bogey on the formerly choppy greens at The Old Back Nine at Mountain High.

N

Desperate for a par after a horren-

dous stretch of holes at the southeast Bend course during a round last week, I

open in 2009 — it had been an 18-hole

541-382-1111

layout until developer Jan Ward shut

Course stats:Par 36, 2,882 yards Green fees: Through May 22 and after Sept. 1: $22 daily. May 23Sept. 1: $26 before noon, $22 after. Power carts:$10 Head golf professional:None Weh:www. oldbacknine.com

down the course in 2002 over a water dispute with the city of Bend — such a satisfying result would have been pure luck. Not now. "I'm trying to get them to where

stood over such a putt on the par-4 14th

hole.

(the greens) are on par with the best

This time1just KNEW I had the perfect right-to-left path. A well-executed

courses around," says Justin Fincher, the course's superintendent, who

putt later, and I had my par. In the first few years after a court

has worked at the course since it was resurrected.

order forced The Old Back Nine to re-

The much-improved conditioning and course tweaks makethe nineHole 1 0 11 hole course adecent value, especially during Par 4 3 summer afternoons Yards* 332 131 when the price dips. * All distances from the back tees

The dasics

SeeOld Back Nine/B8

Scorecard

12 4 3 10

13 5 462

14 4 330

15 5 470

16 4 440

17 3 174

18 4 233

In 36 2,882

Los Angeles Clippers owner Donald Sterling apologized Sundayfor racist comments captured on tape, saying they were a "terrible mistake." "I'm not a racist," Sterling told CNN's Anderson Cooper in excerpts posted from an interview taped Sunday and set to air today. "I made a terrible mistake. I'm here to apologize." In his first public commentssincebeing banned for life from the NBA, Sterling said years of good behavior as an owner should count toward his future. "I'm a good member who made amistake," Sterling said. "Am I entitled to one mistake, am I after 35 years? I mean, I love my league, I love my partners. Am I entitled to one mistake? It's a terrible mistake, and I'll never do it again." The interview came nearly two weeksafter NBA Commissioner Adam Silver banned Sterling, fined him $2.5 million and urged the other league owners to force him to sell the team. Sterling said he waited to make apublic apology becausehe was "emotionally distraught." "The reason it's hard for me, very hard for me, is that I'm wrong," Sterling said. "I caused the problem. I don't know how to correct it." He later added, "If

The Cool Kidz Pole Pedal Paddle team is, from top, clockwise: GraceEckhart, 12, Emma Anderson, 11, Thomas Williams,13, Will Anderson, 13,

the owners feel I have anotherchance,then they'll give it to me."

POLE PEDAL PADDLE

Middle SchaalerSare PPPVeteranS By Beau Eastes The Bulletin

This is not team Cool Kidz's

first multisport rodeo.

Emma Brooks,

Grizzled veterans of the

12, and Kiana Gottschalk,13.

U.S. Bank Pole Pedal Paddle — Saturday's race will be the

Joe Kline/ The Bulletin

group's seventh consecutive PPP together — the Cool Kidz

are out for victory again after winning their co-ed age divi-

Inside • Photos of the Cool Kidz throughout the years,B7 • Community sports,B7 sion last year in the ever-popular Mount Bachelor-to-Bend ski, bike, run, paddle race. Cool Kidz's team members are tested, seasoned PPPersand they are all still in middle

schooL Sixth-grader Emma Anderson joins longtime Cool Kidz teammates Kiana Gottschalk, Grace Eckhart, Thomas Wil-

lilams, Will Anderson and Emma Brooks — all seventh

graders — this year as the group tackles its second full PPP. SeePPP/B7

NBA PLAYOFFS Clippers Thunder

101

Pacers Wizards

9 92

99

Inside • Why does it take so long to complete an NBA game?B4


B2

THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, MAY 12, 2014

ON THE AIR

COREBOARD

TODAY CYCLING

Tour of California, Stage 2

Time TV/Radio 2 p.m. NBCSN

BASEBALL

College, WakeForest at N.C.State MLB, ChicagoCubsat St. Louis MLB, TampaBayat Seattle

3 p.m. E SPNU 5 p.m. E S PN 7 p.m. Roo t

BASKETBALL

NBA Playoffs, Miami at Brooklyn NBA Playoffs, SanAntonio at Portland HOCKEY IIHF World Championship, Russia vs. USA NHL Playoffs, Boston at Montreal NHL Playoffs, Los Angeles atAnaheim

5 p.m. TNT 7:30 p.m. T NT 10:30a.m. NBCSN 4:30 p.m. NBCSN 7 p.m. NBCSN

TUESDAY CYCLING

Tour of California, Stage 3 BASEBALL

MLB, N.Y,Mets at N.Y.Yankees College, OregonState at Portland College, BYUat Utah MLB, TampaBayat Seattle

2 p.m. NBCSN Time TV/Radio 4 p.m. MLB 5:35 p.m. 940-AM

6 p.m. 7 p.m.

P a c-12 Roo t

BASKETBALL

NBA Playoffs, Washington at Indiana NBA Playoffs, L.A. Clippers at OklahomaCity

4 p.m. TNT 6:30 p.m. T NT

HOCKEY

NHL Playoffs, teamsTBA

4:30 p.m. NBCSN

Listings are themostaccurateavailable. TheBulletinis not responsible for late changesmadeby 7Vor radio stations.

ON DECK Today Baseball: Bendat Mountain View,4:30p.mcCrook County atSummit, 4:30p.m.;Ridgeviewat Redmond, 4:30p.mcMadrasatEstacada,4:30p.m.; Elmira at LaPine,4;30p.m.; Sistersat Junction City, 4:30 p.m.; Culverat East Linn Christian, 4:30 p.m. Bolfba ff :RidgeviewatRedmond,4:30p.m4Estacada at Madras,5p.m.; LaPineat Elmira, 4:30p.m. Boysgolf:Class5ASpecialDistrict1 championships at Juniper,TBD;Greater OregonLeaguechampionships atEagle Crest RidgeCourse,TBD Girls golf: Class 5ASpecial District1 championships at BlackButteRanch, 11a.m.; Class4A/3A/2A/1A Special District 5 championshipsat Tokatee Golf Club,TBD Boys tennis: Sisters atClass4A/3A/2A/1ASpecial District 3 championshipsin Medford, TBD;Crook County,Ridgeviewat Class4A/3A/2A/1ASpecial District 5championships in Ontario, TBD Girls tennis: Crook County,Ridgeviewat Class 4A/3A/2A/1A Special District 5championships in Ontario,TBD Boyslacrosse:RedmondatRidgeviewJV,7p.m. Girls lacrosse:OregonGirls LacrosseAssociation state playoffs,West Salemvs. Central Oregonat Summit6:30 , p.m.

Tuesday Baseball: La Pineat Sisters,430 pm. Boftbaff: Sisters at LaPine, 4:30p.m.; Madrasat Gladstone,5 p.m4Culverat Central Linn,3p.m. Boysgolf: Class5ASpecial District1 championships at Juniper,noon;Greater OregonLeague championshipsatEagleCrest RidgeCourse,TBD Girls golf:Class4A/3A/2A/1ASpecial District 5 championshipat s TokateeGolf Club,TBD Boys tennis: Sisters atClass4A/3A/2A/1ASpecial District 3 championshipsin Medford, TBD;Crook County,Ridgeviewat Class4A/3A/2A/1ASpecial District 5championships in Ontario, TBD Girls tennis: Crook County,Ridgeviewat Class 4A/3A/2A/1A Special District 5championships in Ontario,TBD

PREPS StOrm, BearS lead girlS gOlf diStriCtS — Summit shota334 on Sunday to take the leadafter the first day of the two-day Class 5A Special District1 girls golf championships at Black Butte Ranch's Big Meadow Course. Summit's Madison Odiorne andMegan Mitchell ended the first day of play tied for first after both players shot 8-overpar 80. BendHigh is in second at 363, Mountain View is third (403j and Redmond is fourth (525j. The top two teamsadvance to next week's 5A state tournament in Cresvvell.

BASEBALL OSU PitCher Wetzler arreSted —OregonState pitcher Ben Wetzler wasarrested early Saturday morning on charges of second-degree criminal mischief as well as first- degree criminal trespassing, both Class Amisdemeanors. Wetzler, 22, whose legal last name is Holmes, wasreleased andvvasin uniform during both Saturday night's game aswell as Sunday's game. His total bail was $37,500. CoachPat Caseywas not madeavailable after Sunday's11-2 win over UCLAto comment onthe incident.

Conforto SetS reCOrd aS BeaVerS SWeePBruinS —Oregon State junior left fielder Michael Conforto homered twice and broke the school career RBIrecord on Sunday asOregon State routed UCLA11-2 atGoss Stadium in Corvallis to complete aweekend sweep of UCLA.Conforto broke the old mark on athree-run homer in the seventh inning that easily cleared the right-field bleachers. He added a two-run shot over the right-field fence in the eighth to finish the day with five RBls. Conforto has177career RBls; AndyJarvis (2000-03) held the old record of173. OregonState (20-4 Pac-12, 38-8 overall) meets Portland in Keizer on Tuesday before hosting Washington nextweekend.

Rally fallS ShOrt in DuCkS' lOSS to SIin DevilS — Oregon scored four runs in the ninth inning, but couldn't get the tying run on second baseacross the plate asArizona State took an8-6 victory in Tempe, Ariz., on Sundayandwon therubber match of the three-game series. The Ducks(14-10 Pac-12, 36-16overall) trailed 8-2 heading to the top of the ninth before cutting it to two runs with two outs. With runners on secondandthird, A.J. Balta popped out to Arizona State shortstop DrewStankiewicz to end the game.Aaron Paynehit a solo home run in theseventh for the Ducks. Oregon hosts Pacific in a nonconference game on Tuesday before returning to the road for a three-game series with UCLAstarting Friday.

SOFTBALL DuCkS Set to hOSt regiOnal —The nation's top-ranked softball team is also the top overall seed in theNCAAtournament. Oregon, fresh off winning its second straight Pac-12 title, will host a regional, the NCAAannouncedSunday night.. The Ducks (49-7-1j will play host to Albany, UtahValley and Wisconsin in the regional round at Howe Field, with gamesstarting Friday and running through Sunday. Albany (33-11) won theAmerica East Conference tournament to earn its league's automatic bid while UtahValley (18-40j earned the WACbid after winning its tournament. Wisconsin (34-18) is an at-large choice after finishing second in the BigTen.

MOTOR SPORTS Hinchcliffe undergOing anOther eValuatiOn — Doctors still have not cleared James Hinchcliffe to drive after he was diagnosed with a concussion Saturday. The IndyCar driver was injured Saturday during the Grand Prix of Indianapolis when debris from another car appeared to fly into Hinchcliffe's cockpit, striking him in the head following a restart. He wastaken from the track on a stretcher and transported to a hospital where doctors diagnosed the concussion.

SOCCER ManCheSter City WinSEngliSh league — Manchester City won the Premier League for the second time in three seasons with a 2-0 victory over West Ham onSunday that required far less drama than two years ago.City won behind goals from Samir Nasri andVincent Kompany. City finished tvvopoints ahead of Liverpool. In 2012, City vvon the title on goal difference ahead ofneighbor Manchester United after coming from behind to beatQueensPark Rangers on the final day. Nasri scored with a shot from outside the area inthe 39th minute and Vincent Kompanyaddedthe second from close range shortly after halftime.

In the Bleachers O 2014 Steve Moore. Dist. by Universal Uc/ick www.gocomics.comrintheb/eachers

Thursday Track andfield: Sisters, LaPineat Sky-EmLeague championshipsat CotageGrove,11 a.m.;Greater OregonLeaguechampionshipsin Baker City,TBD Friday Baseball: MountainViewat Bend, 4;30p,mcSummit at CrookCounty, 4:30p.mcSisters atLaPine, 4:30 p.m4RedmondatRidgeview,4:30p.m.;North Marion atMadras,4:30p.mcCulver at Perrydale, 4:30p.m. Boflbaff: Bendat Mountain View,4:30 p.m.; LaPineat Sisters,4:30p.m.; CrookCountyat Summit, 4:30 p.m.; Madras at North Marion, 5p.m.; Culverat Perrydale4:30 , p.m. Boys tennis:Bend,MountainView,Redmond,Summitat Class5ASpecial District1championshipsat Hermiston,TBD Girls tennis: Bend, MountainView,Redmond, Summit at Class5ASpecial District1 championships in Sunriver, TBD Trackandfield: Class5ASpecial District1 championshipsatSummit, 4p.m.; Greater Oregon League championshipsinBakerCity, TBD;Tri-Valley Conferencechampionships in Aurora, TBD;Tri-River Conference championships inWaldport, 2p.m. Boys lacrosse:HighDesert Conferenceplayoffs

Saturday Baseball: SistersatRidgeview,noon Boystennis:Bend,MountainView,Redmond,Summitat Class 5ASpecial District1championshipsat Hermiston,TBD Girls tennis: Bend,Mountain View,Redmond, Summit at Class5ASpecial District1 championships in Sunriver,TBD Track andfield: Class5ASpecial District 1 championshipsat Summit, 10a.mcSisters, LaPineat Sky-EmLeaguechampionshipsatCottageGroye, 11 a.m.; GreaterOregonLeague championships in BakerCity, TBD;Gilchrist at Class1ASpecial District 2 championships inRogueRiver, TBD; Tri-RiverConferencechampionships in Waldport, 11:30a.m.

BASKETBALL NBA Playoffs NATIONALBASKETBALL ASSOCIATION

All TimesPDT CONFERENCEBEMIFIMALS

(Best-of-7; x-if necessary)

Sunday'sGames

L.A. Clippers101 / Oklahoma City 99,seriestied 2-2

Indiana 95,Washington92, Indianaleadsseries3-1 Today'sGames Miami atBrooklyn, 5p.m., Miamileadsseries2-1 SanAntonioat Portland, 7;30p.m.,SanAntonio leads series3-0 Tuesday'sGames Washingtonat Indiana,4 p.m. L.A. ClippersatOklahomaCity,6:30 p.m. Wednesday'sGames BrooklynatMiami, 4or 5p.m. x-PortlandatSanAntonio,5;30 or6:30 p.m. Tbursday'sGames x-IndianaatWashington, 5p.m. OklahomaCity at L.A.Clippers, 6:30or7:30p.m.

Bunday'sSummaries

Clippers101, Thunder 99 OKLAHOM ACITY(99) Durant12-24 15-1840, Ibaka2-5 2-28, Perkins 0-21-21,Westbrook10-226-627,Sefolosha2-40-0 4, Jackson 4-8 0-010, Butler2-71-2 6, Adam s 0-0 1-41, N.collison1-30-02, Fisher0-00-00. Totals 88-75 26-84 99. L.A. CLIPPERS (101) Barnes0-60-0 0, Griffin 8-199-1125,Jordan3-5 1-77,Paul10-233-423, Redick2-81-1 6,Crawford 7-162218, Davi23004, s D Collison7-124418, Granger 0-10-00. Totals39-9320-29101.

MLS MAJORLEAGUESOCCER All TimesPDT

EasternConference W L T Pls GF GA S porting KansasCity 5 2 2 1 7 14 6 NewEngland 5 3 2 17 14 10

D.c.

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fighter was takenout on astretcher at the end of a Saturday night fight and then to aCincinnati hospital for evaluation. Ultimate Fighting Championship president Dana White told reporters soon after the fight that Erick Silva would beexamined for a possible concussion and fractured javv.The referee declared Matt Brown the winner by technical knockout at 2:11 of the third round Silvavvasdown and bloodied after a barrage of punches, elbows andkicks. There vvasno update available immediately Sundayfrom the UFCon the Brazilian fighter's condition. — From wire reports

4 4 3 3 3 1 1 1

3 5 3 4 4 2 5 5

2 2 5 3 0 6 5 3

14 14 14 12 9 9 8 6

13 11 15 19 18 17 10 11 7 9 17 18 10 14 7 17

WeslernConference W L T Pls GF GA

Seattle RealSaltLake 5 FCDallas Vancouver Colorado

7 3 1 2 2 22 19 0 5 20 21 12 5 5 1 1 6 20 19 4 2 4 1 6 16 12 4 3 3 1 5 11 12 2 3 4 1 0 10 11 2 2 3 9 8 6 2 5 3 9 12 19 1 3 6 9 13 16

SanJose Los Angele s ChivasUSA Portland NOTE: Threepoints forvictory, onepoint for tie.

t tf~ t

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/L t

DklahomaCity LA. Clippers

82 25 18 24 — 99 15 31 17 38 —151

Pacers 95, Wizards 92 IMDIAMA (95) George12-208-10 39,West 5-124-614, Hibbert 6-12 5-717,G,Hig6-122-415, Stephenson3-80-0 8, Mahinmi0-2 0-00, Turner0-2 0-00, Watson1-4 0 02, Scola010 20. Totals38 7819 2995. WASHINGTON (92) Ariza 6-112-216, Nene5-14 0-0 10, Gortat1-3 0-0 2, Wall4-113-412, Beal7-14 4-620, Gooden 5-10 0-010,Webster 2-30-0 4, Harrington4-7 3-4 11, Miller2-63-37,Tem ple0-00-00. Totals 36-79 15-19 92. 27 11 33 24 — 95 Indiana Washington 26 29 17 25 — 92

HOCKEY NHL Playoffs MATIDNALHOCKEY LEAGUE All TimesPDT SECOND ROUND

(Best-ef-7; x-if necessary) Bunday'sGames Pittsburghat N.Y.Rangers, 4 p.m., Pittsburghleads series3-2 Chicago2,Minnesota1, Chicagoleadsseries3-2 Monday'sGames BostonatMontreal,4:30 p.m., Bostonleadsseries3-2 Los Angeleat s Anaheim,7p.m.,series tied2-2 Tuesday'sGames x-N.Y.Rangersat Pittsburgh, TBA ChicagoatMinnesota, TBA

TENNIS Professional Mutua MadridOpen Sunday At Caja Magica Madrid, Bpain Purse: Men,$5.1million (Masfers1550); Women,$5.1million (Premier) Surface: Clay-Outdoor Singles Men Championship RafaelNadal(1), Spain,def. Kei Nishikori (10), Japan,2-6,6-4, 3-0, retired. Women Championship MariaSharapova(8), Russia,def. SimonaHalep (4), Rom ania,1-6, 6-2,6-3. InternazionaliBNLd'Italia

Sunday At ForoIfalico Rome Purse:Men,$4.77 million(Masters1005); Women,$3.53million(Premier) Surface:Clay-Outdoor Singles Men First Round Jeremy Chardy,France,def. Robin Haase, Netherlands,6-4,6-4. Radek Stepanek,CzechRepublic,def.PabloAndujar, Spain5-7,6-3,6-4. , Mikhai lKukushkin,Kazakhstan,def.JoaoSousa, Portugal,6-3,6-7(1), 6-3. JurgenMelzer,Austria, def.JohnIsner(9), United States,7-6(7), 6-3. Philipp Kohlschreiber,Germany, def. JerzyJanowicz,Poland,4-6, 7-6(6), 6-2. TommyRobredo(16), Spain,def.JuanMonaco, Argentina,7-6(3), 6-4.

BASEBALL College Pac-12 Standings All Times PDT OregonState Washington Oregon

Conference Overall 20-4 19-5 14-10

38-8 36-11 36-16

ArizonaState 14-10 USC 14-14 Washington State 12-12 Stanford 10-13 UCLA 10-14 California 9-15 Arizona 10-18 Utah 4-20 Bunday'sGames Washington State1, Utah0 Arizona State8,Oregon6 Stanford 5, Arizona3 California4,USC1 Oregon State11, UCLA2 Tuesday'sGames Seattle atWashington, 5p.m. SanJoseStateatStanford, 5:30p.m. Oregon Stateat Portland,5:35 p.m. Pacific atOregon, 6p.m. BYUatUtah6p.m. ArizonaStateatUNLV, 6p.m. WashingtonStateat Gonzaga,6 p.m. UCLA atUCIrvine, 6:30p.m. Friday's Games Washington atOregonState,4 p.m. Arizona at California, 4p.m. Utah at ArizonaState 630pm WashingtonStateat Stanford, 7p.m. Oregonat UCLA,7 p.m. Saturday'sGames WashingtonStateat Stanford, 1p.m. Washington atOregonState,4 p.m. Arizona at California, 4p.m. Utah at ArizonaState 630pm Oregonat UCLA,7 p.m. Sunday,May19 Washington Stateat Stanford, noon Oregonat UCLA,noon Utah at ArizonaState,12:30 p.m. Washington atOregonState 3pm Arizona at California, 3p.m.

26-21 26-23 22-24 23-21 23-25 21-25 31-29 15-30

Sunday'sGames Portland1,LosAngeles1, tie ChivasUSA3, Colorado1 NewEngland5, Seattle Fc 0 RealSaltLake5, Houston 2 Wednesday'sGames PhiladelphiaatSporting KansasCity, 5:30p.m. Saturday'sGames NewYorkatToronto FC1:30p.m. NewEnglandat Philadelphia,4 p.m. Montrealat D.C.United, 4p.m. LosAngelesatHouston,5:30p.m. Chiva sUSAatFCDallas,5:30p.m. ColoradoatReal Salt Lake,6:30p.m. SanJoseat Seattle FC,7p.m. Columbus at Portland, 7:30p.m. Sunday,May18 SportingKansasCity atChicago,noon

DEALS Transactions BASEBAL L

AmericanLeague BALTIMO REORIOLES—PlacedCMattWieterson the15-dayDL.Reinstated1BChris Davis fromthe15day DL. OptionedLHPTJ. McFarlandto Norfolk(IL). NEWYORKYANKEES— PlacedLHPCC Sabathia on the15-dayDL Recalled RHPMat Daley from Scranton/Wilkes-Barre (IL). TAMPABAYRAYS— Rel easedRHPHeathBell. TORONTOBLUEJAYS — Designated28 Chris Getzfor assignm ent. Reinstated RH P Casey Janssen from the15-day DL. National League

MIAMIMARLINS—DesignatedRHPCarlos Marmol for assignm ent. Recalled RHPHenry Rodriguez fromNewOrleans(PCL). PllTSBURG HPIRATES—OptionedINFBrent Morel to Indianapolis(IL). Recalled OFJaff Decker from Indianapolis. SAN DIEGOPADRES — Optioned RHP Kevin Quackenbush to El Paso(PCL). AssignedRHPHector Ambrizoutrightto ElPaso.Reinstated38 ChaseHeadley fromthe15-dayDL.AnnouncedOFXavier Nady declinedoutright assignment and electedfreeagency. WASHING TON NATIONALS— Placed 18 Adam LaRoche onthe 15-day DL,retroactive toSaturday. RecalledOFTyler MoorefromSyracuse(IL). FOOTBALL

National Football League CHICAGO BEARS—Agreedto termswith RBJordanLynch,TCodyBooth,GsRyanGroyandJames MOTOR SPORTS Dunbar,DTsBrandon Dunnand Lee Peguesand LBs TanaPatrick, ChristianJonesandDevekeyan LatiFormula One more. NEWYOR KJETS—Agreedto termswith FBChad SpanishGrandPrix Young,TETerrenceMiler, DEAnthonyGrady, DLKerSunday r y H y d e r , OT s TevonConradandBrentQvale,andLBs At Circuit deBarcelena-Catalunya SteeleDivitto andZachThompson Barcelona, Spain PHILADE LPHIA EAGLES— Agreed to termswith Lap length: 2.89miles sKadron Boone 1. Lewis Hamilton, England,Mercedes, 66 laps, TEsBlakeAnnenandTreyBurton, WR and Quron Pr att, RBsDavid Fluellen andHenryJosey, 1:41:05.155,113.265 mph. 2. Nico Rosberg, Germany, Mercedes,66,1:41:05.791. CB JohnFulton, T Kevin Graf, DTWade Kelikipi, S 3. Daniel Ricciardo, Australia, Red Buff, 66, DaytawionLowe, DEFrank Mays, KCareySpear and Gs Josh Andrews,Karim Bartonand DonaldHawkins. 1:41:54.169. PllTSBURG H STEELERS — Agreed to terms 4. Sebastian Vettel, Germany, Red Buff, 66, w ith DEs Ethan Hemer and JoshMauro, QBBrendon 1:42:21.857. Kay, DBDevonCarrington, OLChris Elkins, GWil 5. ValtteriBottas,Finland,Wiliams, 66,1:42:24.448. Simmons, OTKayceeIke,LBHowardJones,DTRoy 6. Fernando Alonso,Spain, Ferrari, 66,1:42:32.898. PhilonandTEEric Waters. 7. KimiRaikkonen,Finland, Ferrari, 65,+f lap. MINNES OTAVIKINGS—Agreedto termswith TE 8. Romain Grosjean, France,Lotus,65, +1lap. A.C.Leonard, QBKainCoulter, CZacKerin,GsAustin 9. SergioPerez,Mexico, ForceIndia, 65,+1lap. 10. NicoHulkenberg,Germany, ForceIndia,65, +1lap. WentworthandConor Bofeli, NT IsameFaciane, HB DominiqueWiliams, DEsJakeSnyder,TylerScott and 11. Jenson Button, England, McLaren,65,+f lap. sErik Loraand DonteFoster and OTs 12. KevinMagnussen,Denmark, McLaren,65, +1lap. RakimCox,WR AntonioRichardson,Pierce BurtonandMatt Hal. 13. FelipeMassa, Brazil, Wiliams,65,+1lap. SANDIEG OCHARGERS— Agreed to terms with 14. DaniilKvyat,Russia, ToroRosso, 65,+1 lap. CBsChrisDavisandGregDucre,DLTennyPalepoi and 15. PastorMaldonado,Venezuela, Lotus,65, +1lap. Ricky Tj o ng-A-Tj oe, LBsColton UnderwoodandAlvin 16. Esteban Gutierrez, Mexico, Sauber,65, +1lap. Scion eaux,RBD.J.Adams,SAldenDarby,TEMichael 17. AdrianSutil, Germany, Sauber, 65,+1lap. Flac co,G D. J.Johnson,OTJeremiahSirles,PChase 18. JulesBianchi, France,Marussia, 64,+2 laps. Tenpenny,OT lanWhite andWRsTorrenceAllen,Brelan 19. MaxChilton, England,Marussia,64, +2laps. C hancel l o r, Mi cahHaffield andJavonteeHerndon. 20.MarcusEricsson,Sweden,Caterham,64,+2laps. HOCKEY Not Classified National HockeyLeague 21. KamuiKobayashi, Japan,Caterham,34,Retired. NHL —FinedBoston FShawnThornton$2,820.52 22. Jean-EricVergne,France,Toro Rosso, 24, Retired. for unsportsmanlikcond e uctduring Saturday's game. Drivers Btandings

(Afler five of19 races)

1. LewiHa s milton, England,Mercedes,100 points. 2.NicoRosberg,Germany,Mercedes,97. 3. Fernando Alonso,Spain, Ferrari, 49. 4. SebastiaV nettel, Germany, RedBull,45. 5. DanielRicciardo,Australia, RedBull, 39. 6. NicoHulkenberg,Germany, ForceIndia, 37. 7. ValtteriBottas,Finland, Wiliams,34. 8.JensonButton,England,McLaren,23. 9. KevinMagnussen,Denmark, McLaren,20. 10. SergioPerez,Mexico, ForceIndia,20. 11. KimiRaikkonen,Finland, Ferrari,17. 12. FelipeMassa, Brazil, Wiliams,12. 13. Rom ainGrosjean, France,Lotus,4. 14. Jean-EricVergne,France, Toro Rosso, 4. 15. DaniilKvyat,Russia, ToroRosso, 4. ConsfrucforsBtandmgs 1. Mercedes,197 points.

FISH COUNT Upstream daily movem ent of adult chinook,jack chinook, steelhead andwild steelheadat selected ColumbiaRiver damslast updated onSaturday. Chnk Jchnk Btlbd Wsllhd Bonneville 3,042 99 2 47 5 John Day 4,649 7 6 0 10 4 McNary 3 774 476 7 0 Upstream year-to-date movement ofadult chinook, jack chinook,steelheadand wild steelheadat selected ColumbiaRiverdamslast updatedonSaturday. Chnk Jchnk Btlbd Wsllhd Bonneville 142,106 10,470 4,289 1,228 T he Daffes 96,284 4,908 47 1 16 2 John Day 80,876 4,476 1,718 1,103 McNary 61,288 2,105

584

32 3

TENNIS

Nadal, Sbarapova get victories in Madrid By Paul Logothetis The Associated Press

MADRID — Rafael Nadai finally won

another clay-court title, although not in a manner that alleviated any concerns

about his recent form on his favorite surface. The top-ranked Spaniard won his fourth Madrid Open on Sunday after Kei

dumbfounded to find Nadai struggling so badly. from a poor start to defeat Simona Halep Nishikori first experienced discomfort 1-6, 6-2, 6-3 to win the women's title. while leading 4-2 and Nadal took advanNadal became the first repeat winner tage to break back. Nishikori soon needin Madrid but it was only his second clay- ed a medical timeout for treatment on his court title of the year, and third overall in back and hip, and his energy then looked 2014. sapped as he hit a shot long to concede the intensity, I was just mentally blocked." Earlier, Maria Sharapova bounced back

Nishikori was forced to withdraw with a

Fighter taken to hOSPital after dout —A mixedmartial arts

Houston NewYork Columbus TorontoFC Chicago Philadelphia Montreal

BALL E STRIKEQ/ QLITrz// VQ 6QB /0Q ~ QJQ /r/Q /2Q Q /6Q Q 7a ~OKQ7DyQIQ I /3 QQ ~qq

Nishikor ns aggressive start allowed him to jump out to a 5-1 lead as his powhip injury when trailing 2-6, 6-4, 3-0 in the erful groLmdstrokes overwhelmed Nadal,

MIXED MARTIAL ARTS

2. RedBull, 84. 3. Ferrari,66. 4. ForceIndia,57. 5. Williams,46. 6. McLaren,43. 7. ToroRosso,8. 8. Lotus,4.

SOCCER

Wednesday

Baseball: Bend at Mountain View,4:30 p.mcCrook County atSummit, 4:30p.m.;Ridgeviewat Redmond,4:30p.m.; Madrasat Molala, 5 p.m.; Delphian atCulver,4:30p.m. Softball: MountainViewat Bend (DH), 3 p,m4Redmond at Ridgeview(DH), 3p.m.; Summit at Crook

County(DH),3 p.m.;Molagaat Madras, 5 p.m.; DelphianatCulver, 4:30p.m. Boys lacrosse: HighDesertConferenceplayoffs, MountainViewat Bend, 6p.m.; Sistersat Summit, 6:30p.m.

SPORTS IN BRIEF

IN THE BLEACHERS

final. who struggled to find an answer against And Nadal, who is coming off to un- his Japanese opponent. "We don't deserve the victory, (Nishikocharacteristic quarterfinal losses on clay, said his mental strength is still lacking just ri) deserves it, he played better than us the two weeksahead oftheFrench Open. whole time," Nadal's uncle and coach Toni "I was blocked. There were some mo-

Nadai told Antenna 3 TV. "We had a lot of

ments where, I don't know, I couldn't find luck today. We didn't really come back, he myself," said Nadal, whose victory guar- was hurt." antees he will stay No. 1 in the rankings Nishikori broke Nadal again to start heading into Roland Garros. "It wasn't the second set to leave the Magic Box centhat I didn't want to play or I was missing ter crowd, which included Queen Sofia,

set. Nishikori, who withdrew from next

week's tournament in Rome to recover in time for the French Open, visibly struggled in the third before eventually retiring. "It was very sad, especially (since) I was winning, playing almost best tennis in my life," said Nishikori, who will become the

first Japanese player in the top-10 when the new rankings are released. "It was

very tough mentally for me. But I get a lot of confidence from this tournament. "You never know what happens today if I'm not hurt. I may have chance to win."


MONDAY, MAY 12,2014 • THE BULLETIN B3

OR LEAGUE BASEBALL Standings All TimesPDT AMERICANLEAGUE East Division W L Pct GB Baltimore 20 15 .571 NewYork 19 17 528 1'/t Boston 19 18 .514 2 Toronto 18 20 .474 3'/t Tampa Bay 16 22 .421 5'/t CentralDivision W L Pct GB Detroit 21 12 .636 Chicago 19 20 .487 5 Kansas City 18 19 .486 5 Cleveland 18 20 474 5 1/2 Minnesota 17 19 .472 5'/r West Division W L pa GB Oakland 23 15 .605 LosAngeles 19 17 .528 3 Seattle 19 18 .514 3'/r Texas 19 19 .500 4 Houston 12 26 .316 11

Sunday'sGames L.A. Angel9, s Toronto3 Minnesota 4, Detroit 3 Houston 5, Baltimore2 Cleveland6,TampaBay5 Arizona5,ChicagoWhite Sox1 Milwaukee 6,N.Y.Yankees 5 Boston5, Texas2 Oakland 9,Washington I Kansas City9,Seatle 7 Today'sGam es Detroit (Porcego5-1) at Baltimore(B.Norris 2-2), 4:05 p.m. N.Y.Mets(Colon2-5) at N.Y.Yankees(Kuroda2-3), 4;05 p.m. L.A. Angel(C. s Wilson 4-2) at Toronto(Buehrle 6-1), 4:07 p.m. Texas(Lewis2-2)atHouston(Peacock0-3),5 10pm. ChicagoWhiteSox (Joh.Danks3-2) at Oakland (J.chavez 2-1), 7:05p.m. TampaBay(C.Ramos 1-1) at Seattle (F.Hernandez 3-1), 7:10 p.m. Tuesday'sGames Detroit atBaltimore,4;05p.m. L.A. Angelat s Philadelphia,4:05p.m. N.Y. MetsatN.Y.Yankees,4:05p.m. Cleveland atToronto,4:07 p.m. Bostonat Minnesota, 5:10p.m. Coloradoat KansasCity,5:10p.m. TexasatHouston,5:10p.m. ChicagoWhiteSoxat Oakland,7:05p.m. Tampa Bayat Seattle, 7:10p.m.

CRUSHING CATCHER nr

San Diego Erlin W,2-4 61-3 5 0 0 0 Thayer 2-3 3 2 2 0 Benoit I 2 2 2 I StreetS,11-11 I 1 0 0 2 Thayerpitchedto 2batters in the8th. WP — Erlin, Benoit. T—3:29.A—17,682 (42,302).

7 I I 0

Cardinals 6, Pirates5

PITTSBURGH — Shelby Miller won his fourth straight start and Trevor Rosenthal induced a bases-l oaded doubleplaytoend the game asSt. Louis held off Reds 4, Rockies1 Pittsburgh. Allen Craig andYadier Molina had two hits each, includCINCINNATI —Aroldis Chapman ing RBI singles in afour-run first made his first major leagueapinning. Craig went 5-for-11 in the pearance since being hit abovethe three-game series after entering eye by a line drive during spring with a.202 batting average. Molitraining, striking out the side in na was zero-for-12 in his previous the ninth with his100 mph fastball four games. to close out Cincinnati's victory over Colorado. ToddFrazier hit St. Louis Pittsburgh r bbi ab r hbi his second 400-foot home run in Mcrpnt3bab 4 0 0 0 Sniderrf 2 0 0 0 three days to backHomer Bailey's JhPerltss 3 I I 0 GSnchzph I I 1 0 H ogidylf 5 I 0 0 Deckerlf I 0 0 0 shutdown pitching as Cincinnati 4 I 2 I NWalkr2b 4 I 1 0 won the rubber match of its three- Craigrf Siegrist p 0 0 0 0 AMcct cf 2 0 1 1 game series with Colorado. CMrtnzp 0 0 0 0 PAlvrz3b 5 0 3 1

D escalsph I 0 0 0 Tabatalf 4 0 0 0 Rosnthlp 0 0 0 0 Morrisp 0 0 0 0 Colorado Cincinnati YMolinc 5 I 2 1 JHughsp 0 0 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi MAdmsIb 4 I I 1 Barmesph 0 0 0 0 Blckmnrf 4 1 1 1 BHmltncf 3 1 2 0 Jaycf-rf 4 I 2 0 I.DavisIb 4 2 1 0 Dickrsncf 4 0 1 0 Schmkrrf 4 0 I 2 M.Egis2b 3 0 I 1 Mercerss 5 I 2 2 Tlwtzkss 3 0 0 0 Phillips2b 4 0 0 0 SMillerp 2 0 0 0 TSnchzc 4 0 2 1 CGnzlzlf 3 0 0 0 Votto1b 4 0 0 0 Manessp 0 0 0 0 Mortonp 2 0 0 0 Arenad3b 4 0 0 0 Frazier3b 4 1 I I MorneaIb 3 00 0 Ludwcklf 3 0 0 0 GGarciph I 0 1 0 Mazzarp 0 0 0 0 4l M cKnrc 3 0 1 0 Brnhrtc 3 0 0 0 Bourioscf I 0 1 1 JHrrsnph-rf 2 0 0 0 Totals 3 7 6 115 Totals 3 6 5 115 LeMahi 2b 3 0 1 0 RSantg ss 3 2 2 0 4 00 000 020 — 6 N icasiop 2 0 0 0 Baileyp I 0 0 0 SI.Louis P ittsburgh 0 0 0 2 0 0 111 — 6 CMartnp 0 0 0 0 MParrp 0 0 0 0 E—PAlvarez 2 (9). DP—St. Louis1, Pittsburgh Barnesph I 0 0 0 Achpmp 0 0 0 0 MarcioJoss Sanchez/The Associated Press 2. LOB — St. Loui s 9, Pittsburgh11. 28—N.Walker Ottavin p 0 0 0 0 Oakland catcher Derek Norris, right, celebrates his second three-run home run with teammate Craig Totals 3 0 1 4 1 Totals 2 94 6 3 (6), Mercer(5). HR —Mercer (I). SB—M.Ellis (2). SF —Ma.Adams. Gentry (3) as Washington catcher Jose Lobaton, left, watches during the second inning of Sunday's C olorado Ogg 1 0 0 000 — I — 4 IP H R E R BBSO Cincinnati 101 1 1 0 Ogx game in Oakland, Calif. The Athletics beat the Nationals 9-1. E—Morneau (3), Arenado(7). LOB —Colorado SI. Louis S .Miller W,5-2 5 1 3 4 2 2 4 2 5, Cincinnati 4. 28 —McKenry (2), R.Santiago (I). 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 38 — B.Hamilton (2). HR —Blackmon (9), Frazier(7). ManessH,1 2-3 2 I I 1 1 Stroman I 2-3 6 4 4 0 2 C leveland 030 0 0 2 010 — 6 SB — B.Hamilton(12). CS—Dickerson(1). S—Bailey SiegristH,9 to stay with an RBIdouble, two C .Marti n ez H,B 1 1-3 2 I I 0 0 Loup I I 0 0 1 0 T ampa Bay 1 0 0 1 0 0 030 — 6 2. batters before Pierzynski's two3 I I 1 0 Delabar I 0 0 0 1 2 E—Tomlin (I), Rzepczynski (1). DP —Cleveland IP H R E R BBSO RosenthalS,10-10 1 Pittsburgh run single. Both went to Boston Cecil I 2 2 2 2 1 I,TampaBay1.LOB— Cl eveland10,TampaBay7. Colorado 6 7 4 I 1 3 — Hutchison. 28 — Bourng2),Chisenhag(8),C.Santana(5),Zobrist NicasioL,4-2 6 5 4 2 I 3 MortonL,0-5 as free agents after being in Texas WP Mazzaro 1 I 0 0 0 1 T—3:24.A—20,871(49,282). (7). HR —Y, omes(5), Morgan(1), Joyce(3). SFC.Martin I 1 0 0 0 I — Pierzynski was theRangers Morris 1 3 2 2 2 1 Aviles,Y.Escobar. Ottavino I 0 0 0 0 I JHughes 1 0 0 0 0 1 IP H R E R BBSO Cincinnati primary catcher last season, and Astros 5,Orioies2 —byS.Miler (N.Walker), byMorton(Jh.Peralta). Cleveland BaileyW,3-2 71- 3 4 I I 2 6 HBP NATIONALLEAGUE Napoli was there the previous two WP — M or ri s . PB — Y .M olina. TomliW, n2-0 6 6 2 2 0 2 M.ParraH,4 2-3 0 0 0 0 I East Division BALTIMORE— JasonCastroand AtchisonH,3 2 3- 1 0 0 0 I A.chapman S,1-1 I 0 0 0 I 3 T—3:37. A—32,065(38,362). W L Pct GB years. RzepczynskiH,3 2-3 1 3 I I 2 Balk—Nicasio. Atlanta 21 15 .583 Marc Krauss homered toaccount Allen H,B 2-3 1 0 0 0 I T—2:49.A—33,143 (42,319). Miami 20 18 .526 2 Boston Texas Interleague for all of Houston's runs, and the Shaw S,2-3 I 0 0 0 0 0 Washington 19 18 ,514 2'/z ab r bbi ab r hbi T ampa Ba y NewYork 17 19 .472 4 Pedroia2b 4 2 2 I Choolf 4 I 1 1 Astros beat Baltimore to avoid a Brewers 6,Yankees5 ArcherL,2-2 5 8 4 4 4 2 Braves 5,Cubs2 Philadelphia 17 19 .472 4 Victornrf 3 0 0 I Andrusss 3 0 1 0 three-game sweep.Jarred Cosart Boxberger I 1-3 1 1 I 2 3 CentralDivision D.Ortizdh 3 I I 0 ABeltre3b 4 0 0 0 B.Gome s I 2-3 2 1 I 0 0 ATLANTA — Evan Gattis hit a tieMILWAUKEE — Mark Reynolds W L Pct GB NapoliIb 4 I I I F ielderIb 4 0 1 0 (2-3) allowed two runs andeight ta I 1 0 0 0 0 Milwaukee 24 14 .632 JGomslf 4 0 I 0 Riosrf 4I 20 hits over six innings for the Astros, Jo.Peral breaking homer, JasonHeyward had a game-ending RBI single Archer pi t ched to1batter i n the 6t h . 19 19 .500 5 Przynsc 4 0 I 2 Morlnddh 4 0 1 1 St. Louis with two outs in the ninth inning, who had lost seven of eight before HBP—by Allen (De.Jennings). WP—Boxberger. added a two-run shot andAtlanta B ogartsss 4 0 I 0 Arenciic 3 0 1 0 Cincinnati 17 19 .472 6 Balk—Boxberger. beat the ChicagoCubs tocomplete and Mil waukee overcame FranPittsburgh 16 21 .432 7r/r BrdlyJrcf 4 I I 0 Choiceph I 0 0 0 ending Baltimore's five-game win- T—3:48. A—23,679(31,042). 12 24 .333 11 JHerrr3b 3 0 0 0 LMartncf 3 0 0 0 Chicago ning streak. a three-game sweep. Gattis gave cisco Rodriguez' s first blown West Division Odor2b 3 0 0 0 Atlanta a 3-2 leadwith his homer save of the season for a win over W L Pct GB Totals 33 5 8 5 Totals 3 3 2 7 2 National League Houston Baltimore Bostori 310 000 100 — 5 SanFrancisco 24 14 .632 off Edwin Jackson in the fourth the New YorkYankees. Rickie ab r hbi ab r bbi Texas 0 00 100 100 — 2 Colorado 23 17 .575 2 4 (10 innings) inning. Heyward added to the A ltuve2b 4 I 3 0 Markksrf 3 I I 0 Giants 7, Dodgers Weeks doubled just inside the E—Fielder (4). DP—Boston I, Texas1. LOBLosAngeles 20 19 .513 4'/r SanDiego 18 21 .462 6'/r Boston 5,Texas5. 28—Pedroia (14), Napoli (8), Fowlercf 3 I 0 0 Machd3b 4 I 2 0 lead with his first home run since first base line with one out before LOS ANGELES — Pablo Sando—Pedroia(2), Choo Jcastrodh 5 I I 3 C.Davis1b 4 0 2 0 Arizona 15 25 .375 10 BradleyJr.(10), Moreland(6). HR April 9, a seventh-inning drive off going to third on a wild pitch MDmn3b 5 I 2 0A.Jonescf 4 0 I 2 val and Hector Sanchezhit RBI (4). SB —Rios2(7). S—Victorino, J.Herrera. IP H R E R BBSO KraussIb 4 I 2 2 N.cruzdh 3 0 0 0 James Russell that landed in the by reliever AdamWarren (1-2j. Sunday'sGames singles with the bases loaded in S pringrrf 5 0 0 0 Clevngrc 3 0 I 0 Boston Cincinnati 4,Colorado1 Braves' bullpen beyond the rightReynolds, who briefly played Presleylf 4 0 2 0 DYongph I 0 0 0 Lackey W ,5-2 7 7 2 2 0 9 the10th inning after San FranNY Mets5, Philadelphia4, 11innings field wall. for New York last year, held his A.Miller H,I 1 0 0 0 0 2 C orprnc 4 0 0 0 Hardyss 4 0 I 0 cisco closer Sergio Romogave Atlanta5, ChicagoCubs2 UeharaS,9-9 1 0 0 0 0 2 Villarss 4 0 I 0 Flahrty2b 3 0 0 0 Arizona5,ChicagoWhite Sox1 right index finger in the air after L oughlf 2 0 0 0 up a tying homer in the ninth to Texas Milwaukee 6,N.Y.Yankees5 Chicago Atlanta Pearce ph-If 2 0 0 0 his hard chopper bounced past R oss Jr. L,1-4 62 3 6 5 5 2 3 Oakland 9,WashingtonI ab r hbi ab r hbi Hanley Ramirez, andthe Giants Frasor 1 I 0 0 0 2 Totals 3 8 5 II 5 Totals 3 3 2 8 2 SanDiego5, Miami 4 K alishcf 4 0 1 0 Heywrdrf 3 1 I 2 diving third basemanYangervis Houston 300 000 200 — 5 beat the Los Angeles Dodgers. Cotts 1 I 0 0 0 1 SanFrancisco7, L.A.Dodgers4,10 innings Coghlnlf 3 0 0 0 Pstrnck2b 4 0 0 0 002 0 0 0 000 — 2 Ogando 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 B altimore St. Louis6,Pittsburgh5 Lakeph-I f I 0 0 0 A.Woodp 0 0 0 0 Solarte at third to drive in Weeks DP — Houston 2. LOB—Houston11, Baltimore7. Brandon Hicks hit a two-run shot Today'sGam es HBP —byA.Miler (Andrus). two batters later. RizzoIb 3 1 1 0 Dcrpntp 0 0 0 0 off Clayton Kershaw, and Buster 2B — Altuve (11), Presley(2), C.Davis(5). HR—J. N.Y.Mets(Colon2-5) at N.Y.Yankees(Kuroda2-3), T—2:47. A—41,407(48,114). Scastross 4 1 2 0 FremnIb 4 0 0 0 C astro (5), Kra us s ( 3). Posey had anRBIsingle for the 4:05 p.m. S chrhltrf 3 0 1 2 Gattisc 3 2 I I NewYork Milwaukee IP H R E R BBSO ChicagoCubs(TWood 2-4) atSt. Louis(Lyons0-2), Athletics 9, Nationais1 Castillo c 4 0 1 0 CJhnsn 3b 4 1 2 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi NL West leaders, who beat the deHouston 5:15 p.m. O lt3b 4 0 0 0 Doumitlf 4 0 2 I Gardnrlf 5 I I 0 CGomzcf 3 I 1 0 CosartW,2-3 6 8 2 2 2 3 fending division champions for the Barney2b 4 0 2 0 Buptoncf 0 0 0 0 Washington(Zimerm m ann2-1)atArizona(Collmenter J eterss 5 0 I 0 LSchfrrf 4 0 1 1 2 0 0 0 0 5 Sipp H,I OAKLAND, Calif.— Derek Norris 1-2),6:40p.m. EJcksnp 2 0 1 0 Smmnsss 3 0 I I Ellsurycf 4 I I 0 RWeks2b 5 I 3 2 QuallsS,2-3 I 0 0 0 0 0 seventh time in10 meetings this Miami (Koehle3-2) r at L.A. Dodgers(Haren4-1), Valuenph I 0 0 0 Harangp 2 0 0 0 TeixeirIb 4 3 2 I OverayIb 5 0 1 1 hit a pair of three-run home runs Baltimore season. The Gi a nts finished their 7:10 p.m. Russellp 0 0 0 0 Varvarp 0 0 0 0 KJhnsn3b 3 0 I 2 MrRynl3b 5 0 2 1 TillmanL,3-2 5 4 3 3 5 3 road trip 7-3 and playederrorless Atlanta(Floyd0-0) at San Francisco (Lincecum2-2), to back Scott Kazmir's fifth win NRmrzp 0 0 0 0 Thomsp 0 0 0 0 Beltranph-rf 2 0 0 0 KDavislf 3 0 0 0 McFarland 3 7 2 2 0 4 7;15 p.m. Bonifacph I 0 0 0 Ugglaph-2b 0 1 0 0 and Oakland beatWashington to Solarte2b-3b 2 0 2 2 Segurass 3 I 1 0 I 0 0 0 0 2 ball over the last five games. Patton Tuesday'sGames JSchafrcf-If 2 0 0 0 I Suzukirf 2 0 0 0 Maldndc 4 I 1 0 complete a series sweep. Both of McFarl a nd pi t ched to1 batter i n the 9t h . LA. Angelsat Philadelphia,4:05p.m. Totals 3 4 2 9 2 Totals 2 95 7 5 A Sorinph I 0 0 0 Garzap 2 I 1 0 HBP—byQuags(Flaherty). WP —Tillman. San Francisco L os Angeles N.Y.MetsatN.Y.Yankees, 4:05p.m. Norris' home runs came onidenChicago 000 200 000 — 2 R yan2b 0 0 0 0 Kintzlrp 0 0 0 0 T—3:21.A—45,944 (45,971). ab r hbi ab r hbi SanDiegoatCincinnati,4:10 p.m. Atlanta 020 100 20x — 5 Warrenp 0 0 0 0Gennettph 0 0 0 0 tical two-out, 3-0 pitches from Pagancf 3 3 2 0 DGordn2b 5 I I 0 Coloradoat KansasCity,5:10p.m. DP — ChicagoI, Atlanta1. LOB—Chicago8, At- J Mrphyc 4 0 3 0 Lucroyph I I 1 1 P encerf 5 1 2 0 Puigrf 5 I 2 I Washington starter and former PittsburghatMilwaukee,5:10 p.m. lanta 4. 2B —S.castro (8), Schierhollz (5),Simmons P helpsp 2 0 0 0 Dukep 0 0 0 0 Twins 4, Tigers3 Poseyc-1b 4 1 2 I HRmrzss 5 2 2 2 ChicagoCubsatSt. Louis, 5:15p.m. 4). HR —Heyward (3), Gattis (8). CS—Schierhollz Thrntnp 0 0 0 0 Wootenp 0 0 0 0 Oakland pitcher GioGonzalez. The Sandovl3b 5 1 3 2 AdGnzl1b 5 0 I I WashingtonatArizona, 6:40p.m. 2). S — J.S chafer. Betncsp 0 0 0 0WSmithp 0 0 0 0 DETROIT —Eduardo Nunezhit two players were part of a 2011 B .Hicks2b 4 1 I 2 Howellp 0 0 0 0 Miami atL.A. Dodgers, 7:10p.m. IP H R E R BBSO B Rortsph-2b1 0 0 0 Gindlph 0 0 0 0 A rias1b 3 0 0 0 Kempcf 5 0 I 0 AtlantaatSanFrancisco,7:15 p.m. a tiebreaking single in the eighth Chicago trade between theteams. FrRdrgp 0 0 0 0 H Snchzph-c 1 0 I I Ethierlf 4 0 3 0 E.JacksonL,2-3 6 6 3 3 2 3 Totals 35 5 115 Totals 3 5 6 126 inning and Minnesota rallied for J.Perezlf 3 0 0 0 JuTrnr3b 4 0 I 0 Russel l I 1 2 2 0 0 N ew York 3 0 0 0 0 101 — 6 Washington Oakland American League B lancoph-If 2 0 0 0 Buterac 3 0 I 0 a victory over Detroit. TheTwins N.Ramirez I 0 0 0 0 I M ilwaukee 0 0 2 0 0 3 001 — 6 ab r hbi ab r hbi Adrianzss 3 0 0 0 Crwfrdph 1 0 0 0 Atlanta Twooutswhenwinningrunscored. S pancf 4 0 0 0 Gentrycf 5 I 2 0 took advantage of poor defense by Affeldtp 0 0 0 0 JWrghtp 0 0 0 0 Royals 9, Mariners7 HarangW4-3 6 6 2 2 2 9 DP — NewYork1, Milwaukee1. LOB —NewYork Frndsnlf 4 0 0 0 Lowriess 5 0 2 0 the Tigers in the late innings. MinCasillap 0 0 0 0 Jansenp 0 0 0 0 Varvaro H, 2 1 -3 1 0 0 0 0 9, Milwaukee 9. 28—Gardner(4), Ke.Johnson(6), 4 II 0 Dnldsn3b 4 I 0 0 Colvinph 0 0 0 0 VnSlykIb 1 0 I 0 T homas H,3 2 -3 0 0 0 I 2 SEATTLE — Alcides Escobar hit a Rendon3b nesota scored three runs in the L.Schafer (6), R. W ee ks (2), Ga rza (1). HR —Teixeira Werthrf 3 0 2 0 Cespdslf 4 2 1 0 Romop 0 0 0 0 Kershwp 1 0 I 0 A.Wood H,1 I 2 0 0 0 2 (7). SB —C.Gomez(6),Segura(7). CS—R.Weeks(1). M cLothrf I 0 0 0 DNorrsc 4 2 2 6 grand slam andJohnny Giavotella eighth, spoiling another fine start Morseph 1 0 0 0 Figginsph 1 0 0 0 D .carpenter S, 2 -3 I 0 0 0 0 I S—Phelps, L.Schafer. SF—Solarte. Dsmndss 3 0 I0 Callaspdh 3 2 1 0 by Detroit rookie Robbie Ray. Machip 0 0 0 0 Withrwp 0 0 0 0 added a three-run shot to give HBP —byRussell (Ugqla). IP H R E R BBSO W altersss I 0 I I Moss1b 4 I 3 0 T Hudsnp 2 0 0 0 Olivoc 2 0 0 0 T — 2: 5 4. A — 26,15 1 (49, 5 86). NewYork Kansas City a comebackvictory Hairstndh 4 0 I 0 Punto2b 4 0 2 3 Bcrwfrss 2 0 0 0 Minnesota Detroit Phelps 5 8 4 4 3 1 TMooreIb 3 0 0 0 Reddckrf 4 0 0 0 Totals 38 7 116 Totals 4 2 4 144 over Seattle. Escobar hadprovided L oatonc 3 0 I 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi ThorntonBS,1-1 0 I I I 0 0 SanFrancisco 100 000 210 3 — 7 a 4-0 lead for the Royals in the Dozier 2b 3 I I 0 Kinsler 2b 4 2 2 I Betances 2 I 0 0 0 1 Espinos 2b 3 0 0 0 Mets 5, Phiiiies 4 (11innings) LosAngeles 000 002 002 0 — 4 W arren L,1-2 12 3 2I I 1 3 33 I 7 I Totals 3 79 13 9 M auerdh 3 I I 0 TrHntrrf 4 0 0 0 DP — LosAngeles2. LOB—San Francisco 7, Los second with his first career home Totals Plouffe3b 4 0 0 0 Micarr1b 3 I 2 I Milwaukee Washington 000 000 001 — I A ngel e s11. 28 — P a gan (9 ), S a ndo va l (6), D. G or don NEW YORK — The New York Mets run off starter Roenis Elias. But Garza 5 6 3 3 4 4 Oakland 430 000 20x — 9 Colaeg1b 4 0 0 0 VMrtnzdh 4 0 I 0 (7), H.Ram irez (14), Ethier 2 (5). HR —B.Hicks (7), Kintzler 1 I 0 0 0 0 DP —Oakland1.LOB— Washington5,Oakland8. Pintoc 4 2 2 I D.Kelly3b 3 0 0 0 Puig(6),H.Ramirez(5). S—Arias,Kershaw. suddenly rallied for three runs in the Mariners rallied behind Dustin 2-3 2 I I 0 0 Nunezlf 4 0 2 I Cstgnsph-3b I 0 0 0 Duke H,4 —Lowrie (12), Moss(5), Punto(3). HR —D.Norris IP H R E R BBSO the ninth inning against PhiladelAckley' stwohomersandKyleSea- 28 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 P armelrf 4 0 I 0 AJcksncf 4 0 I I Wooten H, 1 2(4). SB —Gentry(6). San Francisco 2 0 0 0 T.Hudson phia's improvised bullpen, then W.SmithH,10 1 I 0 0 0 1 ger's one to take a7-5 lead in the IP H R E R BBSO A .Hickscf 1 0 0 0 Avilac 6 8 2 2 I 2 r.Rodriguez WI-0 1 I I I 0 0 Washington DSantnph-cf 2 0 I I AnRmnss 3 0 I 0 2-3 0 0 0 0 I AffeldtH,5 ended a five-gameskid by beating FPhelps fifth. KansasCity took a9-7 lead pitchedto 2battersinthe 6th. G.GonzalezL,3-3 41-3 9 7 7 3 4 EEscorss 4 0 2 0 JMrtnzph I 0 0 0 I 1-3 3 0 0 0 I CasigaH,6 the Phillies on Ruben Tej a da' s in the seventh, scoring four runs RDavislf 3 0 0 0 Thornton pi t ched to I batter i n the 6th. Stammen 12-3 2 0 0 0 1 RomoW3-0BS,1-13 I 2 2 2 0 2 HBP —by Phelps (C.Gomez). WP—Warren. BalkBlevins 1 2 2 2 1 0 Totals 3 3 4 103 Totals 3 2 3 7 3 off reliever DannyFarquhar (1-1), MachiS,I-I I 1 0 0 I 2 single in the11th. Down4-1, the Phelps. Barrett 1 0 0 0 0 1 M innesota 0 0 0 0 0 0 130 — 4 LosAngeles highlighted by Giavotella's threepunchless Mets fought back in the T—3:40. A—Q,544(41,900). Oakland Detroit 1 00 110 000 — 3 Kershaw 7 7 3 3 0 9 E — P ar m el e e (1), R.Davi s (2). DP — D e troi t 1. K azmi r W, 5 -1 7 4 0 0 0 4 run blast over the left-field wall. ninth, sparked byDaniel Murphy's I 1 1 I I 0 —Minnesota 5, Detroit 5. 28—E.Escobar (9), Withrow Savery 1 I 0 0 0 0 LOB J.Wright I 0 0 0 I I two-run homer. Theydid it while Diamondbacks 5,W hite Sox1 Ji Johnson 1 2 I I 0 1 K insler(9). HR —K insl e r(3). SB — D o zier(12), Nu n ez Jansen L,0-2 1 3 3 3 3 2 I KansasCity Seattle Phillies manager RyneSandberg WP — Ji.Johnson. (1). CS—A Hicks(1), EEscobar(1). SF—Mi.cabrera. Howell 2-3 0 0 0 0 I ab r hbi ab r hbi T—2:40. A—28,205(35,067). CHICAGO — ChaseAnderson won IP H R E R BBSO HBP —by J.Wright (B.Hicks). WP—Machi, Jansen, held out closer Jonathan PapelA okirf 5 0 1 1 J.Jonescf 5 1 I 0 Minnesota Howell. his major leaguedebut, Gerardo HosmerIb 5 1 2 0 BMigerss 5 0 I 2 bon, rather than usehim for a third Deduno 6 6 3 3 1 5 T—3:54. A—51,369(56,000). B Butlerdh 5 0 1 0 Cano2b 4 0 I 0 Angels 9, Blue Jays3 Parra and Miguel Montero homBurtonW,1-1 I 0 0 0 0 1 straight day. V alenci3b 4 2 2 0 Hartdh 4 0 I I 2-3 I 0 0 0 0 Fien H,5 ered, and Arizona beatthe Chicago AGordnlf 4 2 3 0 Smoak1b 3 1 I 0 4 TORONTO —JeredWeaverwon PerkinsS,10-11 1 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Padres 5, Marlins Lcaincf 4 1 0 1 Seager3b 4 1 I 2 Philadelphia NewYork White Sox. Recalled Tuesday Detroit G iavtll2b 3 2 1 3 Ackleylf 4 2 3 2 his fourth straight decision, Hank Ray ab r hbi ab r hbi 6 4 0 0 1 2 SAN DIEGO from Double-A Mobile, Anderson — Wi l Venable homA Escorss 4 1 2 4 Romerrf 2 1 I 0 Conger hit a three-run home run GwynJcf 6 0 0 0 E Y o n glf 6 2 3 0 Alburquerque H,5 2-3 I I 1 0 0 Hayesc 4 0 0 0 MSndrsph I 0 0 0 Roginsss 3 1 1 0 DnMrp2b 4 1 3 2 (1-0) hadn't seenanyaction until ered and San Di e go beat Mi a mi for 1 -3 2 0 0 0 1 Krol H,5 and had acareer-high five RBls, Gillespi rf 0 0 0 0 Utley2b 5 0 1 1 DWrght3b 6 0 I I Sunday and hemadehis first C hamberl a i n L,1-2 BS, 1 -2 I 2 3 2 1 its first three-game winning streak Z uninoc 4 1 I 0 andtheLosAngel HowardIb 4 1 1 0 CYoungrf 6 2 2 0 esAngelsbeat 2 big league appearancecount, at Totals 38 9 129 Totals 3 6 7 117 Bastrdp 0 0 0 0 Campg1b 3 0 I 0 of the season. The surging Padres E.Reed I I 0 0 0 2 K ansas City 0 4 0 1 0 0 400 — 9 Toronto for their seventh straight R Hrndzp 0 0 0 0 BAreuph I 0 I 0 one point retiring 12 consecutive HBP —by Deduno (Avila), by Chamberlain (Dozier). offense, which hasscored 24 Seattle 0 03 310 000 — 7 win over the BlueJays. Conger B rignc3b I 0 0 0 Familip 0 0 0 0 PB—Pinto. batters. E—Giavotela (I), Gillespie 2 (2), Smoak(2), went 3 for 4 with a walk. He hit an runs in the three games,also got B yrdrf 4 1 2 0 Ricep 0 0 0 0 T—3:08.A—40,468(41,681). DBrwnlf 5 0 0 1 ZWhelrph 0 0 0 0 Seager (5), Zunino(2). DP—KansasCity 2, Seattle 2. two hits and two RBls from Chris LOB —KansasCity 6, Seatle 4. 28—Hosmer 2 (15), RBI double in the fourth, homered Arizona Chicago N ievesc 4 1 2 1 Lagarscf 5 0 I I Denorfia. ab r bbi ab r hbi J.Jones(2), B.Miger(5). HR —Giavotella (I), A.Esco- in the sixth and added an indians 6,Rays5 Asche3b 4 0 2 1 Reckerc 6 0 2 0 RBI si n Manshpp 0 0 0 0 Teiadass 4 0 2 I GParrarf 5 2 2 2 DeAzacf 3 0 0 0 bar (2),Seager(6), Ackley2(4). SF—L.cain. IP H R E R BBSO gle in the ninth. Prado3b 5 0 2 I LeGarcph I00 0 Miami San Diego Hamelsp 2 0 0 0 Niesep 2 0 0 0 ST. PETERSBURG,Fla. — Josh Hollndsp 0 0 0 0 Grndrsph I 0 0 0 Gldsch1b 4 I 00 GBckh2b 4 0 2 0 KansasCity ab r hbi ab r hbi 42-3 8 7 7 0 2 LosAngeles Tomlin won his secondstraight Monterc 2 I 2 2 Gigaspi3b 3 0 0 0 Guthrie Toronto Yelichcf 5 1 2 I Venalecf 4 2 2 I Revereph I 0 0 0 Matszkp 0 0 0 0 1-3 0 0 0 I 0 Hig2b 5 0 0 0 Konerkph I 0 0 0 K.Herrera ab r hbi ab r hbi RJhnsnIf 5 1 2 0 Denorfirf 4 0 2 2 Mayrry1b I 0 0 0 dArnadph I 0 0 0 start, Nyjer Morgan and Mi c hael Coleman W,I-O I 1 0 0 0 I Aybarss 6 0 I 0 Reyes ss 3 2 1 0 Stantonrf 4 1 2 0 S.Smithlf 5 0 2 I V alvrdp 0 0 0 0 Echavzdh 5 0 I 0 JAreudh 3 0 1 0 Bourn both drove in two runsand CrowH,4 I 1 0 0 0 0 T routdh 5 0 I I Mecarrlf 4 I 1 0 McGeh3b 4 0 0 0 Gyorko2b 4 0 0 0 D udaIb I 0 0 0 C.Rosslf 3 0 0 0 A.DunnIb 3 0 0 0 W.DavisH,6 I 1 0 0 0 2 P uiolsIb 5 0 0 0 Bautistrf 4 0 0 1 J eBakr2b 5 1 2 2 Headly3b 4 I I 0 Totals 40 4 9 4 Totals 4 6 5 165 Inciartlf 0 0 0 0 Viciedolf 3 0 0 0 Cleveland beatTampaBay. Tomlin Pollockcf 3 I 2 0 AIRmrzss 3 0 0 0 G.HollandS,9-10 I 0 0 0 0 I Ibanezlf 3 I 0 0 EncrncIb 4 0 1 2 (2-0), who pitched just once in the GJones1b 3 0 0 0 Grandlc 3 0 0 0 Philad elphia 010 200 001 00 — 4 ss 4 0 I 0 Sierra rf 3 I 1 1 Seattle H Kndrc2b 4 3 3 0 Linddh 3 0 2 0 Hchvrrss 4 0 2 I AlonsoIb 3 I 2 0 New York 1 0 0 000 003 01 — 6 P nngtn Flowrsc 2 0 0 0 Elias 5 9 5 3 I 5 ENavrrrf 4 2 2 I DNavrrc 4 0 1 0 big leagues last seasonafter right M athis c 3 0 0 0 Amarst ss 3 I I I Oneoutwhenwinningrunscored. E—Nieves (1). DP—NewYork 2. LOB —Phila- T otals 36 5 10 5 Totals 2 9 I 4 1 Leone H,3 I 0 0 0 0 2 Congerc 4 I 3 5 JFrncs3b 3 0 0 0 S ltlmch ph-c 1 0 0 0 Erlin p 3 000 elbow surgery in 2012, allowed HAlvrzp 1 0 0 0 Thayerp 0 0 0 0 1 00 020 002 — 6 FarquharL,I-I BS,1-2 I 2 4 4 2 I IStewrt3b 3 I I 0 CIRsmscf 4 0 0 0 delphia12,NewYork17. 28—Rogins (5), Byrd(13), Arizona two runs and six hits over six Beimel I 0 0 0 0 I JMcDnlph-3b2 0 0 I StTllsn2b 4 0 0 0 Solanoph 1 0 0 0 Benoitp 0 0 0 0 Nieves(3), Asche(6), E.Young(2), Dan.Murphy2 Chicago 000 001 000 — 1 E — A.D unn (I). DP —Arizona 1, Chicago 2. Medina I 1 0 0 0 2 Cowgicf g2I I I Sloweyp 0 0 0 0 Hundlyph 1 0 0 0 ( 12), O.Yo ung (5), Te l a da (3). 38 — u tl e y (2). HR innings in his secondouting this HBP —byGuthrie (Romero). —Arizona 10, Chicago2. 28—Pennington (2). Totals 38 9 12 9 Totals 3 3 3 6 3 D ietrchph 1 0 0 0 Streetp 0 0 0 0 Dan.Murphy(2). SB—Nieves (I), E.Young2 (14). LOB year. T—3:01.A—30,447 (47,476). S—Hamels, Z.Wheeler. 38 — G.Parra (2). HR —G.Parra(4), Montero(5), SiL os Angeles 00 0 2 14 002 — 9 HRdrgzp 0 0 0 0 Toronto 100 000 020 — 3 ARamsp 0 0 0 0 IP H R E R BBSO erra (I). SB —Inciarte(I), Pollock2(5). E—Encarnacion (4), D.Navarro (2). LOB—LosAn- Cleveland T ampa B a y Ozunaph 1 0 I 0 Philadelphia IP H R E R BBSO Red Sox5, Rangers2 geles10,Toronto6. 28—Trout(9), H.Kendrick 2(10), ab r hbi ab r bbi Totals 38 4 114 Totals 3 4 5 105 Hamels 7 7 I I 3 10 Arizona E.Navarro (3), Conger(4), Encarnacion (12), Lind(4). Bourncf 5 0 1 2 DeJessdh 3 0 I 0 Miami 0 00 000 040 — 4 HogandsH,2 I 1 0 0 I I C.Anderson W,I-O 51-3 2 I I 1 6 38 —I.Stewart (3). HR —Conger (3). SB—H.Kendrick Chsnhll3b 5 0 1 0 Forsythph-dh2 0 0 0 ARLINGTON, Texas— A.J.PierSan Diego 1 0 0 4 0 0 Ogx— 6 BastardoH,5 1-33 3 3 0 I ThatcherH,1 2-3 I 0 0 0 1 E — Y el i c h (I). LOB — M iam i 10, San Di e go 10. 2 (9), Re y e s ( 5 ). Brantly dh 4 0 1 0 Zobrist 2b 4 2 I 0 R .Hernandez B S ,1-1 2-3 1 0 0 0 I E .Marshag H,1 1 0 0 0 0 2 zynski and MikeNapoli had RBls R.Johnson (5), S.Smith (11). 38—Je.Baker(I). IP H R E R BBSO CSantn Ib 3 0 2 0 J oycelf 5 I 2 2 28 — ManshipL,1-1 I 1 - 3 4 I I 2 0 ZieglerH,B 1 0 0 0 0 0 in the first inning against their HR — Yelich (3), Venable(I). SB—Denorfia (6), Gran- New york LosAngeles DvMrp rf 3 0 0 0 Longori3b 4 I 2 0 O.Perez 1 I 0 0 0 1 eaverW,4-2 61 - 3 4 I I 2 5 Acarerss 41 1 0 Loney 1b 4 I 0 I dal (2),Alonso(3). Niese 6 8 3 3 I 6 Chicago former team andBoston got above W 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 YGomsc 5 2 2 1 M yersrf 4 0 I I Kohn IP H R E R BBSO Matsuzaka 2 0 0 0 2 2 NoesiL,0-3 6 8 3 3 3 4 .500 for the first time since three 1-3 2 2 2 1 1 Morgan Salas If 4 3 3 2 DJnngscf 3 0 0 0 Miami Valverde I 1 I I 2 I Petricka 1 0 0 0 1 1 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 Aviles2b 3 0 1 1 YEscorss 3 0 I I H.Santiago H.AlvarezL,2-3 4 7 5 5 3 2 Familia I 2-3 0 0 0 I I FFrancisco 12-3 2 2 I 1 3 games into the seasonwith a 1 0 0 0 0 2 J Molinc 3 0 I 0 Slowey 2 2 0 0 I 2 RiceW,I-I 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 SDowns 13 0 0 0 0 0 series-clinching victory at Texas. Morin Toronto Hanign ph-c I 0 0 0 H.Rodriguez I 0 0 0 I I HBP—by Rice(utley), byMatsuzaka(Nieves). HBP—byPetricka (Montero). WP —Thatcher. Napoli put the RedSox ahead HutchisonL,1-3 4 1-3 3 3 3 4 5 Totals 36 6 126 Totals 3 6 5 9 5 A.Ramos I 1 0 0 0 2 T—4:22.A—28,926 (41,922). T—3:10. A—18,612(40,615).

I)


B4

THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, MAY 12, 2014

Blazers

NBAPLAYOFFS

Continued from B1 "In Game 7 you haveto

ina secon scan ee i eane erni • In some games, final 60 secondscan take morethan 20 minutes in realtime

showupbecause if you don't the season's over. I think we learned from itand so far,

we're playing good." Boris Diaw also pointed to the Dallas series, which San Antonio won with a

It is hard to take

seriously 20-second

119-96 victory in the deciding Game 7. "We had ourback against the wall and we had to play good," he said. "We've been playing the same way since then — so probably a turningpoint for us." Tonight the Spurs will try to dispatch the Trail Blazers in four games — and hopefully get some rest be-

timeouts that lasted, in order, 1:35, 1:21, 1:15 and 2A6.

By Richard Sendomir New Yorh Times News Service

instead of at their basket af-

The seventh game of the

ter a timeout, saving precious seconds. With time short, that

Brooklyn Nets-Toronto Raptors playoff series last Sunday was about 2 I/2 hours old and seemingly just about finished.

can be a critical strategic advantage: A well-run inbounds play in the frontcourt can pro-

But then the game's final

fore the conference finals against the winner of the

duce an immediate shot, and a length-of-the-court pass is

minute kicked in, and play inched ahead slowly, as if mired in a congressional filibuster. W hen the game would end,no one could tell.

other semifinal between

easier to defend.

Oklahoma City and the Los

"Part of the drama is advancing that ball," Thorn said.

Angeles Clippers. "This is as well as I've seen them play all season,"

The final minutes of any

onds left and can't advance,

game governed by a clock can turn into tense torture, especially tight ones like last Sunday's, in which the Nets' double-digit lead shrunk to 1 point

your chances of scoring are nil."

Trail Blazers coach Terry Stotts said. "By Game 7

"If you have a couple of sec-

against Dallas, they came out of the gate and they haven't stopped since then."

It is hard to take seriously 20-second timeouts that lasted, in order, 1:35, 1:21, 1:15 and 2:46. (The last timeout was the

with 8.8 seconds left. In bas-

ketball, strategic fouls, tactical adjustments and commercials the so-called 20-second timeout — can transform the final

only one during which ABC did not leave for a commercial.) If shifting to commercials and NBA promos in the finalseconds of a close game

moments of a matchup into a

could be considered unfriend-

subject worthy of a reinvestigation into time by Stephen Hawking.

ly to fans, why not stay at the game to let Brown continue to

— not to mention the myth of

No team has ever lost a

seven-game NBAplayoff series after goingup 3-0. T he Blazers were t h e

last team to take a series to sevengames after dropping the first three. Port-

land rebounded in the first round against Dallas in 2003 but ultimately lost the

first-mund series' deciding game. The Spurs have managed

analyze? His exuberant ver-

One of the NBA's problems in the playoffs is present in

bosity suggests that even if the game was in a commercial break, he was still talking. Mark Gross, ESPN's senior vice president for production, said by email: "It's always a balancing act for the production team, particularly in end-

most s p orts'

of-game situations, to ensure

Last Sunday's finish in the

Nets-Raptors game was routine in some respects, but in the end

the teams took nearly 18 minutes to make it through the final 60 ticks of the clock. p o s tseasons:

Games last longer on national

to slow down Portland All-

Star LaMarcus Aldridge, who averaged 29.8 points in the first round against the Houston Rockets.

"Monday is a new game, and we are confident we are capable of winning,"

we document the live game while integrating presold com-

networks, which, to cover ev-

er-growing rights fees, must sell more advertising time, expanding each commercial break.

During this past regular season, NBA games averaged

Lillard said. "It is also about

mercial inventory. In this case,

our pride. We do not want

we followed the story lines, captured all game action and took the appropriate breaks." Five days later, Game 3 of

to come out hereand get swept. We still believe we

can win a game — we have to come out here and play like it."

the Oklahoma City-Los An-

"We'd love to close this

geles Clippers series, which the Thunder won by 6 points,

2 hours 17 minutes. But those

broadcast on national televiRick BowmerI The AssociatedPress sion averaged 2:29, and so far Portland coach Terry Stotts can take four timeouts in the fourth quarter — as can each of his counterthis playoff season, when all parts — which contributes to the ever-increasing length of NBA games. the games are nationally televised, the number has risen to 2:38, up two minutes from last a cknowledged that s o me Four of the six full timeouts like to see each team get one year. games lasted too long but in- are scheduled to last 100 sec- timeout, and that's it," Van In tight games, with coach- sisted that the long final min- onds; the fifth and sixth full Gundy said. "I don't think it es burning through the tim- ute of the Nets-Raptors game timeouts are purportedly 60 would be a problem for playeouts they have hoarded, the was "an aberration." seconds long. A team cannot ers and coaches; they would "More games were happen- carry into the fourth quarter evolve and adapt and know gap between clock time and real-world time can swell to an ing at the end of that game more than three full timeouts they play more in a flow after uncomfortable degree. than you'll see in almost any and one 20-second timeout, a made basketor a mi ssed free "The last two m inutes at game," Thorn said. handy tools for coaches to throw." times drags on and drainsthe Timeouts were the primary strategize, exhort, backslap, But fewer timeouts in the fisuspense out of the game," culprit for the pace of the final point and stall. If a coach is nal two minutes would, under said Jeff Van Gundy, an ESPN minute of th e N ets-Raptors still armed with two full tim- the Van Gundyrule, alsomean and ABC analyst and a former game. eouts with two minutes left fewer chances to advance the Knicks coach. The NBA grants each team in the game, one of them be- ball to midcourt. Under the Rod Thorn, the NBA's presi- s ix ful l t i m eouts and o n e comes a 20-second timeout. league's rules, teams get the "In the last two minutes, I'd ball at the 28-foot hash mark dent for basketball operations, 20-second timeout per half.

thing out," San Antonio's Tim Duncan said. "We've

demonstrated anew the elasticity of NBA time. The final

had pretty decent control of

1:23 on the clock — packed

it throughout and we want

with four timeouts and five fouls — took 12:43 to complete.

to finish it the right way and get some rest."

For those bedeviled or fatigued by all the breaks and the elongated final moments of a game, it can be comforting to watch lopsided games accelerate to their conclusions for a change.

Plae Well, Retire Well

Brad Haun N.~221546 541-280-2564 PPt>S 3-1 >0 EVERGREEN' O2014BegmmHomeloss isaregideeltrade Mmeof men Mon ss e

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Clipp ersmounthugecomeback

er

The Associated Press LOS ANGELES — After be-

QQQ

ing thoroughly outplayed for over 40 minutes, the Los An-

geles Clippers fought back. Leading the way was a player notknown forcoming up big in the clutch. Darren C o l lison s c ored eight of his 18 points in the

final 2:58, rallying the Clippers past the Oklahoma City

Thunder 101-99 on Sunday to tie the Western Conference Fi

semifinal series 2-2.

, C.

"Even though we didn't play well t hroughout the game, we were ableto get a win," Collison said. "That feels more impressive than anything we did." Russell Westbrook, who scored 27 points, missed a 3-pointer and Serge Ibaka's tip attempt was too late at the buzzer, allowing the Clippers to salvage a game they trailed until the final 1:23. "It was a good look," West-

I

brook said. "Just didn't go in." Blake Griffin led Los Angeles with 25 points, making

Los Angeles' Darren Coilison puts up a shot over Oklahoma City's

9 of 11 free throws. Jamal

KevinDurantonSunday in LosAngeles.

Mark J.Terrill /The Associated Press

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Crawford added 18 points. DeAndre Jordan had 14 re-

"We let this one slip away," bounds, helping the Clippers win the boards, 45-43 he said. "We could have took — the first time in 11 playoff

games the Thunder were outrebounded.

control of the series." It was the 14th comeback

Also on Sunday: Pecers 95, Wizerds 92: WASHINGTON

-

Paul

George poured in a career — and largest yet — by the playoff-high 39 points and "We just willed this one. Clippers thi s s eason after added 12 rebounds to lead InWe found a way," said Chris trailing by double digits. diana back from a 19-point Paul, who had 23 points and The Durant and Westbrook deficit to take a 3-1 series lead 10 assists. duo drove the lane with aban- in the Eastern Conference Kevin Durant scored 40 don, drew fouls and made free semifinals. George played 46 points, hitting 15 of 18 free throws in leading the Thunder minutes and scored 28 points throws, for the Thunder. to an early 22-point lead. afterhalftime.

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B6

THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, MAY 12, 2014

MAJOR LEAGUE SOCCER

NHL PLAYOFFS

eS aIr, en I e Ocl

e ec l Nextup

By Anne M. Peterson The Associated Press

PORTLAND — Diego Valeri scored in the final minute of stoppage time to

Columbus at Portland When:7:30 p.m. Saturday TV:Root

pull the Portland Timbers into a 1-1 draw with the Los Angeles Galaxy on Sunday. The equalizer came after Robbie

Seth Wenig /The Associated Press

New York's Martin S. Louis scores on Pittsburgh goalie

39th minute before Chara stole the ball. Donovan is scoreless in all seven league games he's played this season.

Keane's header two minutes into stop-

page time appeared to give the Galaxy the win. Los Angeles peppered Portland goalkeeper Donovan Ricketts

with shots all game, but couldn't break through until Keane's fifth goal of the

i*

p, t

Marc-Andre Fleury on Sunday. The Rangers won 3-1 to tie the Eastern Conference

playoff series at 3-3.

He's had four goals and three assists

in seven career matches against the Timbers dating back to 2011 when

season.

Valeri's goal was his second of the year.

gasped. Ricketts tipped a hard shot

Rangers, Pens head to Game 7

from Galaxy forward Keane in the 82nd minute, but couldn't stop Keane's

The Associated Press

Portland joined MLS.

"Landon was the best player on the field today," Arena said. "Played very

"We fell asleep at the end of the

game," Galaxy coach Bruce Arena said. "A bunch of guys can do better on / the play. But we played very well today, should have walked away with three Thomas Boyd/TheOregonian points." Portland's Diego Valeri celebrates his game-tying goal in stoppage time against Los Neither team was satisfied with the Angeles on Sunday. TheTimbers drew1-1. draw.

well. Good to see."

Futty Danso's header for Portland in the 59th minute hit the far post as the sellout crowd at Providence Park

"Bottom line is, we've not been good

second shot in stoppage time. enough," Timbers coach Caleb Porter his left knee in the first half of the loss game Portland midfielder Diego ChaThere were five total minutes of exsaid. at Colorado. He's being held out as a ra came off after what appeared to tra time at the end of the match. "We certainly deserved to win toArena and Keane were upset that precaution so that he can take part in be a left hand injury, replaced by Ben Portland's Darlington Nagbe wasn't the U.S. national team's training for Zemanski. day, there's no question about that," "For me it's just disappointing," Keane said. called for a foul on Juninho on a break- the World Cup. away before Valeri's game-tying goaL Gonzalez and Landon Donovan are Timbers defender Jack Jewsbury said. The Galaxy finished with 21 shots "Some poor decisions we have to ac- expectedto report Wednesday to the "We're better than we showed today." to Portland's 10. "We can fault the referee as much as cept, and take responsibility ourselves U.S. team's training camp at Stanford. T he Timbers looked t o h av e a as well, because the last minute of the Portland (1-3-6) was hurt early chance in the 34th minute but Valeri we want, but we were still the team in game you shouldn't be conceding a when defender Michael Harrington couldn't get a shot off as he charged control at the end of the game where goal," Keane said. left the match with an apparent right GalaxygoalkeeperJaime Penedo. we could have denied a goal-scoring Los Angeles (2-2-3) was without ankle injury. The ankle had bothMost eyes were on Donovan, who opportunity and didn't get that done," center back Omar Gonzalez, who hurt ered him early this week. Later in the looked to have a shot in the box in the Arena said.

NEW YORK — Martin

St. Louis and Carl Hagelin scored 2 minutes, 51 seconds apart in the first period, and Henrik Lundqvist

made 36 saves and the New York Rangers avoided elimination again with a 3-1 victory over the Pitts-

burgh Penguins on Sunday night. Derick Brassard pushed the Rangers' lead to 3-1 in the second period. Brandon

Sutter scored the lone goal for the Penguins, who got 26 saves from Marc-Andre

CYCLING

Caven is wins 1st ' sta ein Caiornia The Associated Press

with his father and sister

second place

suddenly.

emotional Mother's D ay in attendance, just three days after his mother died

finisher John

St. Louis was the first

Degenkolb,

star of the game. He patted his heart when he came

right, to win Stage1 of the Tour of California on Sunday in

tic climates came down to a

drama-filled finishing stretch — Mark Cavendish surged in steps away from the state ahead of John Degenkolb in a Capitol — and even then it thrilling sprint to win the first took a minute to know who stage of the Tour of Califor- actually won. nia on Sunday in the closest As the bell rang for one lap finish in the event's nine-year to go around the tree-lined history. downtown circuit, the two big Degenkolb pulled ahead of teams of the two big sprinters the most decorated stage win- pulled to the front. ner in Tour de France ever in Cavendish appeared to the final stretch before the wait too long to attack, finally Wiggins. British "Manx Missile" bur- getting free and churning his Defending champion Tejay nished his legacy again. The legs for one powerful closing van Garderen is not compettwo raced shoulder-to-shoul- burst. ing this year, instead focusing der until Cavendish threw the Cavendish came up along on cycling's marquee race in rim of his bicycle's tire just the right of Degenkolb, the July. ahead as he crossed the line German riding for Team GiSix riders — Matt Cooke, in a photo finish. ant-Shiman, and lowered his C harles P l a net , Th o m a s Cavendish completed the helmet to the line. Neither rid- Leezer, Tao Geoghegan Hart, 120-mile stage in 4 hours, 47 er celebrated until learning of Isaac Bolivar Hernandez and minutes, 17 seconds for the the final photo results, when Will Routley — were part of Omega Pharma-Quick Step Degenkolb c o n gratulatedan early breakaway. They Cycling Team. The Nether- Cavendish with a hug. held a lead of five minutes land's Moreno Hofland of The event resumes with a before the peloton reeled Belkin Pro Cycling was third. time trial in Folsom today. them in with about 33 miles Sprinter Peter Sagan, who The race has evolved into remaining. has won an event-record 10 North America's most presA stiff crosswind on t h e stages, got buried in the pack tigious cycling event. This way back split the pack into and finished fourth. year's field includes several two pelotons. The two groups The longest stage of the world-class talents, includ- made for a taxing and tricky eight-day, 720-mile journey ing Cavendish and 2012 Tour ride before coming together through California's eclec- de France winner B r adley — except for Kiel Reijnen and S ACRAMENTO,

Fleury. St.Louis capped offan

Mark Cavendish, left, races to the finish line ahead of

out to an ovation from the

crowd. Also on Sunday: Blackhawks 2, Wild 1:

Sacramento.

Cali f .

1

CHICAGO —

c

27 saves.

Jacob Rathe on a breakaway

ALL,NEW STATEOF THE ART DEALERSHIP(

— in downtown Sacramento, where a three-lap circuit

around the Capitol made for a furious finish. Also on Sunday: Kittel sprints to 2nd straight stage win: DUBLIN — Marcel Kittel sprinted to a second

straight stage victory in a wet third leg of the Giro d'Italia, while Michael Matthews

retained the overall leader's pink jersey. Kittel came from behind to edge out Ben Swift on the line and deny the Brit-

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on a maidenGrand Tour stage victory. Matthews will l ead

The Associated Press KANSAS CITY, K an. Danica Patrick added anoth-

Australian has an eight-sec-

ond advantage over Italian cyclist Alessandro Petacchi.

SMOLlt:HVOLVO.cow

I r

"Chicks rule, huh?" crew

chief Tony Gibson playfully told her at Kansas. She may not have totally

ruled, but she put on a performance that recalled her bet-

,ji. e

can craft a complete week-

end and contend for a top-five finish.

Cup career.

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Orlin Wagner/The Associated Press

Danica Patrick's seventh-place

finish atKansas Speedway on Saturday night was the best of her NASCAR Sprint Cup career.

Ps

Johnson." Patrick hadn't finished better this season than 14th at Fontana and her lone top-10 in the 2013 Daytona 500. In Sunday's action: Hamilton wins 4th straight

I I

54-

big deal because he is Jimmie

the Cup series was eighth in

I

I

the night. I say that with all the respect in the world. It's a

race: MONTMELO, Spain — Mercedes' Lewis Hamilton and Nico Rosberg sped art, Gibson, and her parents She easily had her best away to their fourth straight were among the throng of weekend of the season, spend- one-two finish at the Spanish well-wishers in the garage ing most of the race inside the Grand Prix in a dominant perthat made it a celebratory top 10, and brought a needed formance that does not bode scene straight out of her daz- jolt of electricity to the race, well for the rest of the Formula zling Daytona 500 to kick off passing teammate Stewart One field. Hamilton took off 2013. a nd Dale Earnhardt Jr. t o from pole position and stayed "I've always believed in move into third with 95 laps ahead of Rosberg for a fourth myself and with the right sit- left. consecutive victory to move uation, a good car, that I can She also passed six-time ahead of his teammate in the do it," she said. champion Jimmie Johnson on overall standings. Stewart-Haas Racing boss and teammate Tony Stew-

e I ' I

"The most rewarding part of my night was probably when I drove around the outside of the No. 48 on a restart," she said. "That was probably my most rewarding thing of

er May moment to cherish.

sas Speedway, the best of her

the collection of heavy hitters left in the rearview mirror.

-

Patrick was th e surprise

/

i

a late restart, adding him to

of Saturday night with her seventh-place finish at Kan-

i

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the race back to Italy and the

Patrick shineswith best finish of career

can be a serious driver who

I

TIME TQ TAMEYQURGAMETQTIIE IlEXTlEllEl?

MOTOR SPORTS ROUNDUP

ter ones at the Indianapolis 500. Patrick showed that she

J o n athan

Toews had a rebound goal early in the third period, and Chicago took a 3-2 series lead in the Western Conference s e mifinals. Bryan Bickell also scored and Corey Crawford made

Rich Pedroncelli / The Associated Press

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MONDAY, MAY 12,2014 • THE BULLETIN

O M M U N IT Y

riding with teammates and coaches, www.

ALPIME SKHMG/ SMOWBOARDIMG

bendenduranceacademy.org.

DIRT DIVAS: Women's mountainbike rides;second and fourth Mondays of the JUNE ALPINE CAMP: MBSEFalpine camp month,5:30 p.m., through September; at at Mt. Bachelor;June 13-20; mbsef@mbsef. Pine Mountain Sports; free demos; www. org, 541-388-0002. pinemountainsports.com. JUNE FREERIDESKI SESNOWBOARD CO-ED GROUPMTB RIDES:Firstand CAMP: MBSEF freeride ski and snowboard third Wednesdays ofthe month,5:30 youth camp; at Mt. Bachelor;June13-21; p.m.; co-ed group rides; free demos; www. mbsef©mbsef.org, 541-388-0002. pinemountainsports.com. YOUTH PROGRAMS:After-school program; BASKETBALL Wednesdays; elementaryschoolkids, 2-5 p.m.; middle school kids, 1-4:30 SUMMIT GIRLS CLINIC: Summit High youth p.m.; MBSEF;$75; molly©mbsef.org, clinic for girls;June16-19;girls entering 541-388-0002. grades 2-9; 9-10:30 a.m. for grades 2-4 and 9 a.m.-noon for grades5-9; $55 for younger MOUNTAINBIKEYOUTH PROGRAMS:

grades and$85 for older girls; ryan.cruz©

After-school program;Wednesdays,May

bend.k12.or.us. RIDGEVIEWYOUTH BOYSCAMP: For players enterinG grades 5-8;June 2326,5-8 p.m.; $100, includes T-shirt; at Ridgeview; nathan.covill©redmond.k12.

7-June4; MBSEF;$75;m bsef©mbsef.org, 541-388-0002. SUMMER MOUNTAINBIKEPROGRAM: Sessions run for two weeks inJune, July and August;MBSEF;mbsef©mbsef.org, 541-388-0002. CASCADE TRIPLECHALLENGE:Three-day weekendofroad cycling,hosted by Bowen Sports Performance;June 20-22; June 20, 50-mile ride on Crater Lake Loop; June 21, 73-mile ride on Aufderheide Scenic Driveto Belknap HotSprings; June22, 49-mile ride from Belknap Springs up Three Creeks Sno-park; $375; full supported, cost includes lodging, meals and transportation; bowensportsperformance.com or 541-977-1321. WOMEN'S RIDES: Road rides;Thursdays; meet at Sunnyside Sports; casual pace, 25 miles to start; led by Wenzel coaches Karen Kenlan and Anne Linton.

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RIDGEVIEWYOUTHGIRLS CAMP:For players enterin grades 4-8;June16-18, 9-11:30 a.m.; $45; at Ridgeview; randi. davis©redmond.k12.or.us. PACIFIC UNIVERSITYCAMP: Boys and girls camp at CulverHigh;June 27-29;ages7-12, 8:30-11:30 a.m.; ages 13-18, 1:30-4:30 p.m.; $45; Alex Carlson, 503-467-6241. BEND HIGHBOYS CAMP: Lava Bearboys camp;June16-19, 9 a.m.-noon; at Bend High; $60, includes a T-shirt; for boys entering grades 3-9; scott.baker@bend.k12. or'.Us. REDMONDHIGHGIRLS CAMP: Panthers girls camp;June16-16, 9-11:30 a.m.; at Redmond High; $40, includes a T-shirt; angela.capps©redmond.k12.or.us.

CYCLING MINI MOUNTAINBIKECLASS:Ages 6-8; bike skills and trail etiquette; two sessions, June16-July17 and July 21-Aug. 21;8:30 a.m.-noon; www.bendenduranceacademy. org. MIGHTY MOUNTAINBIKE CLASS: Ages 9-12; bike skills and trail etiquette; two sessions,June 16-July17 andJuly 21-Aug. 21;8:30 a.m.-noon; www.

bendenduranceacademy.org. MOUNTAINBIKEDEVELOPMENT: Ages 13-18; three days a week,June16-Aug. 21;

DODGEBALL MOUNTAIN MANDODGEBALL CLASSIC: Adult dodgeball tourney,May 31-June 1;in Sisters; $249 per team; www. mountainmandodgeball.com.

FOOTBALL RIDGEVIEWYOUTHCAMP: For players entering grades 3-8;July 7-0, 9 a.m.-noon; $60, includes T-shirt; at Ridgeview; andy. codding©redmond.k12.or.us.

MULTI-SPORT DESCHUTES DASH: Deschutes Dash

Emailevents at least 10days before publication to sports@bendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. For a more complete calendar, visit www.bendbulletin.comlcomsportscal.

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Multisport Weekend;July 26-27; Olympic triathlon; sprint triathlon; youth triathlon; two dualthlons; aquabike; 10K, 5K; kids obstacle course;www.deschutesdash.com PPP TRAINING:Specific training for the Pole Pedal Paddle; Wenzel Coaching; www.wenzelcoaching.com/ pole-pedal-paddle-training-program/. LEADMANTRI: 85-, 125-or 250-kilometer triathlons; prices start at $110;Sept. 20. Race starts at Cultus Lake and finishes at Northwest Crossing; www.leadmantri.com. OREGON SENIORGAMES TRAINING: Twelve outdoor training workouts for seniors;through May 31;Tuesdays, 6:30 a.m.; Thursdays, 6:30 p.m.; Saturday's 8:30a.m.; at Farwell Bend Park; $240a person or $200 per person with a friend;

schottschafferfitness©gmail.com; 541-419-6501.

NORDIC SKI MEMORIALWEEKENDCAMP: Youth camp; May 24-26;MBSEF;mbsef©mbsef.org, 541-388-0002. JUNE CAMP:MBSEFFire and Ice youth camp; June13-10,atM t.Bachelor,mbsefO mbsef.org, 541-388-0002.

PICKELBALL BPC MEETING:Bend Pickleball Club general meeting;May22,6p.m.; at Bend Senior Center.

B7

50K,15-mile, and 4-mile options; $35-$85; free kids run; www.smithrockascent.com/ trail. DOG GONE RUN: Dog-friendly 5K and 10K; starts at Weigland Family Dog Parkand goes through Redmond's Dry Canyon;June14, 7 a.m.; $30; www.time2race.com SMITH ROCKROAD RACES: Road races at Smith Rock State Park;June16, 7 a.m.; 5K, 10K, and half marathon options; www. smithrockascent.com/trail. SPARKYOURHEARTSK:5k run, 1Kwalk, kids race;July4; at Bend's Riverbend Park; $15-$30; www.sparkyourheartbend.com, 541-706-6996. STRENGTHCLASSFORRUNNERS: Beginner/Intermediate class, Thursdays, 6:30 p.m.; Intermediate/advanced class, Thursdays, 5:30 p.m.; throughMay 29; $96; at Rebound Physical Therapy's Bend Westside Clinic; 541-419-8208. ADVENTURERUNNING: Runsfrom 3.5 to 5 miles long over trails, roads, parks at10- to12-minute-mile pace;first and third Wednesdays ofeach month, 6 p.m.; run location changes, email lauraO footzonebend.com. for locations; dress warm and bring a headlamp. REDMOND OREGON RUNNINGKLUB (RORK):Weekly run/walk; Saturdays at 8 a.m.; all levels welcome; free; for more information and to be added to a weekly email list, email Dan Edwards

at rundanorun19©yahoo.com;follow

Redmond Oregon Running Klub on Facebook. RUMMIMG REDMONDRUNNINGGROUP:Weekly runson Tuesdaysat6:30 p.m.;meetat314 MOM'S RUNNINGGROUP:Rain or shine, S.W. Seventh St. in Redmond for runs of 3-4.5-mil e runs;Thursdays,9:30a.m .; 3-5 miles; all abilities welcome; free; pia© outside FootZone; lisa.nasr©me.com, runaroundsports.com; 541-639-5953. angela©foot zonebend.com. PERFORMANCE RUNNINGGROUP: 5:30 JUNGLE RUN:Central Oregon Community p.m. onTuesdays;with Max King; locations College Jungle Run; 4-mile trail run or 2-mile vary; interval-based; all ability levels; max@ trail walk with mud bogs, log crossings and footzonebend.com; 541-317-3568. steepascentsand descents;May 22,5:30 MOVE ITMONDAYS: Mondays at p.m.; $5; register at race. 5:30 p.m.; carpool from FootZone to HEAVENCANWAIT SK:Walk/run fundraiser trailhead when scheduled (first and third for breast cancer;June1; at Bend's Drake Mondays of each month); all other runs Park; $25-$35; www.heavencanwait.org; start and finish at FootZone, downtown 541-706-6996. Bend; 3-5 miles; paces 7-12 minutes STORM THE STAIRS: Central Oregon per mile; melanie©footzonebend.com; Community College's Storm the Stairs run/ 541-317-3568. walk;June 5,5:30 p.m.; starts at COCC NOON TACORUN:Wednesdays atnoon; track; $5. meet at FootZone, downtown Bend; order SMITH ROCK TRAIL RACES:Trail races at a Taco Stand burrito before leaving and Smith Rock State Park;June 14, 7:45 a.m.; it will be ready upon return; teague©

footzonebend.com; 541-317-3568. GROWLERRUN: Group run of 3-5 miles; Thursdays,6 p.m.; leave from Fleet Feet and finish with a shared growler of beer from Growler Phil's; free; 541-389-1601. CORK WEEKLYPERFORMANCE RUN: Thursdays;5:30 p.m.; locations vary; call Roger Daniels at 541-389-6424 for more information. WEDNESDAY RUNS: Fleet Feet"s 3-5 mile "RunthisTown" run,Wednesdays,6 p.m .; free; 541-389-1601.

SOFTBALL PROSPECTCAMP: Fastpitch Northwest Prospect Evaluation Camp;June16-17; at Redmond High; open to players who will be

incoming freshmento incoming seniors;

$120; Ken Olson at 360-790-9173 or Tom Mauldin at 541-948-9501.

TABLE TENNIS BEND TABLE TENNIS CLUB: Evening play Mondays;6-9 p.m. (setup 30 minutes prior); beginner classes available, cost $60; at Boys & Girls Clubs of Central Oregon; drop-in fee, $3 for adults, $2 for youths and seniors; club membership available to those who donate $100 or more; Jeff at 541-480-2834; Don at 541-318-0890; Sean at 267-6146477;bendtabletennis©yahoo.com; www. bendtabletennis.com.

TENNIS SUMMIT CLINIC:Youth clinic for ages 6-14; at Summit High tennis courts;July 7-10; 8:30-9:45 a.m. for ages 6-9 and10-11:45

a.m. for ages10-14;coed; $65; ryan.cruz© bend.k12.or.us.

TRACK 5 FIELD YOUTH PROGRAM:Central Oregon Running Klub (CORK) youth track and field club;starts May 26;Mondays, Wednesdays, Thursdays, 4-5:30 p.m.; at CascadeMiddleSchool;ages7-15;$25; centraloregonrunningklub.org.

VOLLEYBALL RIDGEVIEWYOUTHCAMP: For players entering grades 3-8;Aug. 11-13, 8-11 a.m.; $65, includes T-shirt; chefdaniellesteed© gmail.com.

COMMUNITY SPORTSSCOREBOARD Ij ll'

Swimming BendSwimClubLongCourse Invitational al JuniperSwim SFitness, Bend May4 Teamscores—BendSwimClub2,106,PortlandAquatic club1,230,corvallisAquatic Team620.5,sweet Homeswim club 612,Lacama s HeadHuntersswimTeam407, superior stingray swimming317.5, Roseburg YswimTeam248,Hood RiverValleySwimTeam214. (Bsc swimmers in theup eight) Girlsopen 200individual medley —1,JenRobeson,2:3218; 3, Elli Ferrim,2:3a%. 50 free — 3,AudrieStephens,30.02; 5, Emily Brockman, 30.17.

Glrls100 free — 5,KennedyBright,1:05.92; 6,Ali Epple, 1:06.54;8,JuliaGorman,1 :O r.ea Girls400free —1, JenRobeson, 4:40.76;3, AudrieStephens, 4;50.78;4,Elie Ferrin,4:52.01; 7,Ali Epple,4:59.ez. Boysopen Boys200 individual medley — 1, BrandonDeckard, 2:1a68; 2,BenBrockman, 2:21.97; 3, paulRogers, 2;23.83;4, JohnHartmeier,2:25.96; 7, Christian Offenhauser, 2:28.18.

Boys 50free—1,BenBrockman,26.7a Boys 100 free — 1,BrandonDeckard, 56.18; 3, John Harlmeier,58.lt 5, ChristianOffenhauser, 1:00.36; 6, TajMer-

cer,1:01.1a Boys 400free —6, GarrettRoss,4:58.22 GIrls98 over 200free — 2,Emily Brockman,2:16.52; 6, Emma Brady, 2:21.09;7,Elli Ferrin,2;21.7;8,Ali Epple,2;22.52. Boysehover 200 free — 1,BrandonDckard, 2:06.26; 2, TajMercer,

Il

1:47.16;8,ElijahKrause,1:48.6.

100 lly —5, Cannonpotts,1:32.ea

~ Ilvi

100 back — 7, las Hibbard,1:27.76; 8, CannonPoNs, 1:29.06.

ui breasl — 7,lanHibbard,45.75. 50 flr — 7,Gharreterockman,3a52;8,HunterCraft, 3a7. elrls13 S over 100 back — 1,Elli Gerrin,1:09.29;2, AudrieStephens, 1:11.47;5,Ali Epple,1:13.01;6,TeresaCobb,1:13.38. 200 back — f, Elli Ferrin,2:za76; 2,JenRobeson, 2:35.06; 5, AudrieStephens, 2:37.97; 7, EmilyBrockm an, 2:39.85. 100 breast — 1,Ali Epple,1:za67;2,Audrie Stephens, 1:2a99. 100 fly — 1, JenRobeson, 1;09.08;4, Eli Gerrin,1:12.75. Bors13 &over 100 back —1,BenBrockman,1:05.01; 2,JohnHarlmeier, 1:05.57; 5, TajMercer,1:09.06; 8,Garrett Ross,1:10.36. 200 breast — 1,Brandon Deckard, 2:38.19;3, TajMercer 2:4ae; 4,paul Rogers, 2:52.45; 8, christopherDavami, 2:56.88. 200lly — 2, ChristianOffenhauser, 2:3243; 5, Jonathan Davami2:34. , 61. 200 back—1,BenBrockman,2:16.85; 2,JohnHarlmeier, 2:za91; 4,TajMercer,2:27.33; 7,ColeMoore,2;32.21, 1tn breast —1, BrandonDeckard,1:12.77;3, Paul Rogers,1:18.52;5, BenBrockman,1:21.72; 6, Christopher Davami, 1:22.6a 100 fly — 1, erandonDeckard, 1:00.38; 2, PaulRogeres, 1:04.15;8, ColeMoore, 1:08.69; 8, JonathanDavami, 1:08.69.

USMSSpring National Championships Santa Clara,Calif. May1-4 Central Oregon Maslers Apuatics results 2:09.24;3,JohnHaitmeier, 2:12.01. Suzr Campbell, women's30-34—50fly, 31.04,14th; eirls11 r over 800 free — JenRobe son, 9:47.05; 5, EmmaBrady, 100 IM,1:1a23, 12th. Jayna Tomac,women's 40& — 500free,5;32.49, 10:za38. second;1,650free, 19:04.09, third; 50 breast,32.11,third; Boys11 &over 400 IM —1, Paul Rogers, 5:01.04; 2, BenBrockman, 100 breast,1:09.85,fourth; 200breast, 2:3a95, third; 200IM, 2:21.8,third. 5:04.99;3, JohnHartmeier,5;I1.65; 5, ChristianOffenhauseI uenise Stssuner,women' s50-54— 50free,26.99, 5:21.24;7,ChristopherDavami, 5:29.96. 800 free — 2,TajMercer,9:21.8a 11th; 1lm free,5a48, fifth; 200free,2:09.31,seventh; 50fly, Girls12 & under 29.08,sixth;100fly,1:04.42,fourth; 200fly, 2:26.07,third. JanetGeNing,women' s65-69— 50breast,40.78, 50 back — 1,EmmaBrady,35.36;2,MichaelaLorenz, 37.07 ;5,AriaMascall,39.56;6,AniHusaty,39.74;7,Anna first; 1lmbreast,1:28.47, first; 200breast,3:17.21,second; 200 fly, 3:17.13, fi r st; 200 IM, aea89,third; 400IM,6:45.64, Hornbeck,41.04. 100breast —2,AnnaHornbeck,1:29.41;3,SpencerHur- second. peggywhiter,women's70-74 — 50free,4226, ley,1:30.89;5,Maria Wold,1:3a81; t, AriaMascal,1:36.81. 100 sy —f, Emmaerady, 1:15.6; 3, spencer Hurley, 10th; 100free,1:34.18, 11th;200free, 3:25.97,third; 1,000 1:22. 47;6,AmiHusaby,1:27.59;7,Ryam Reid,1:27.87;8, free,18:46.03, third; 50back, 52.75,eighth; 50breast,53.88, olivia schuljz,1:29.05. sixth. 100back —3, MariaWold,1:19.09; 4, Spencer Hurley, Kermit Yensen, men's 60-64 — 100free, 1:01.29, 1:19.32;7,BriannaIntlekofer,1:22.65. 1uh; 200free,2:17.72,18th; 500free, 6:25.59, 19th;200fly, 50 breast —2,AnnaHornbeck,40.72;3,Spencer Hurley, 3:01.57,10th;400IM,6:02.93, 11th. Don schaefer,men's65-69—50free,3251,27th. 4312; 4,GiannaDispenza, 4342;5,Aria Mascall,44.0. 50 lly — 1,Emm aBrady, 33.72;2, Spencer Hurley,34.08; Tom Landls, men's70-74 —100free, 1:00.76,third; 3,MariaWold,34.78;6,AnnaleeGorman,37.50;7,Ryann 200 free,2:16.48,first; 500 free, 6:15.59,first; 1,000 free, Reid,37.68;8, Marli vonHeideken,38.a 12:37.64,first; 200fly, 2:55.65,second. Boys12 aunder GeorgeThayer, men'ste-79 —50free,33.47,fourth; 50 back — 1,6, lasHlbbard, 39.86;8,Hunter Craft, 40.40. 50 back,40.67,third; 100back, I:3a45, third;200back, 100breast —5, lanHibbard, 1:41.52;7, NicolasGorman, 3:27.84,seventh;50breast,45.05, sixth.

COMMUNITY SPORTS IN BRIEF RUGBY BlueS win PlayOff game —The BendBlues wontheir first Rugby Oregon Plate Division postseason game 27-12over Linn-Benton last Saturday at Portland's Delta Park. Jeff Durante, Nolan Holmgren, Joel Arker, Rylind Newmanand Keegan Bloss all scored tries for the Blues. With the victory, Bendwill play North Clackamas at noon onSaturday at Delta Park for the Plate Division championship.

CYCLING RaCe lOOking far vOlunteerS —The BendDon't Break road race on May24 is in need ofvolunteers. Volunteer shifts run from 8 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. and 12:30 p.m. to 4:30 p.m.andinclude lunch. For moreinformation, go to www.benddontbreak.com or contact race director AmandaPorino at benddontbreak@gmail.com.

NORDIC SKI Bend Skier winS inaugural raCe —ZachViolett, of Bend, wontheCanyons 50K near Foresthill, Calif. Violett, 31, crossed the finish line in 5hours, 4 minutes, 7 seconds, topping runner-up AndyStarostka, of Reno,Nev., by17 minutes. — Bulletin staff reports

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Photos courtesy of Michele Gottschalk

The Cool Kidz Pole Pedal Paddle teams through the years, with what grades they were in at the time they competed.

PPP Continued from B1 The Cool Kidz raced in the mini PPP for

five years, from first to fifth grade, before competing in their first full PPP this past

spring.

"It's a iot longer, but that makes it more fun," says Kiana, a Pilot Butte Middle

School Giant, who will do the nordic ieg of or cross-counthe race Saturday. "The kid (competition) try an d several others participate in went by so quick." basketball, soccer and even lacrosse. The "The paddle is a lot harder," adds Grace, team, which won the 2012 mini PPP, could one of five Cascade Middle School Moun- have defended its title last year, but opted taineers on the team, who is set to do the instead to compete with the adults. "It was a l i t tle scary them downhill ski this year but paddled with Kiana in 2013. "In the doing the whole adult race by kids' race you're going downW h e f ) IA/e them s elves," admits Michele stream the whole time and (the fj f sg S]ggeg Gotts c halk, Kiana's mother. " Ou lose sight of them," exw hole team) is paddling. Last d . ~I . ~ > pl ai n s K e v i n B r o oks, E m ma year was harder. We even got stuck." juSt Wanted Brook s ' f ather, about one of Bigger, stronger and faster, tp fj i l jsg ND M/ t h e b i gdifferencesbetweenthe team Cool Kidz expects to immini PPP and the full-length prove on their 2013 time, even ®e , < ~ ~< PPP. "You can basically see though they are not exactly sure Wlr). them the whole time in the kids' what that was. (It was 2 hours, race. But here (in the adult PPP) . ' " " " they're off and gone. You're just 52 minutes, 52 seconds.) Team m embers are competing i n hoping they show up at the next events that better fit their skills, check point." the group says, and they have a year of experience under their belt.

Th e C o o l K i dz, who will be outfitted

in their usual, homemade tie-dyed shirts, "This year we all have (events) we've smile Off their parents' concerns. They done for a long time," Grace says. "Emma have bigger things to worry about. "When we first started doing this, we (Brooks, who is doing the 5-mile run) can run forever, and we've all been skiing." just w anted to finish," says Will, who will "We're more competitive now," adds handle the team's paddling duties Saturday. "Now we want to win." Thomas, the team's cyclist. Members of team Cool Kidz have vari— Reporter:541-383-0305; ous athletic backgrounds. Most run track

beastes@bendbulletin.com.

38th annualU.S. BankPolePedal Paldle What:A six-stage multisport racethat includes adownhill ski stage, an 8-kilometer nordic ski, a 22-mile bike ride, a 5-mile run, a1~/~-mile paddle, and ahalf-mile sprint. Where:A course that starts at Mt. Bachelor ski area and finishes at Bend's Les SchwabAmphitheater. Who:About 3,000 participants competing as individuals or as members of teams. When:Saturday; start waves go from 9:15a.m. to11:40 a.m.; first finisher is expected at about11 a.m. Contact: www.pppbend.com


BS

THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, MAY 12, 2014

T EE TO

R EEN

Tour prosare no longeraces when it comes to holes-in-one

GOLF ROUNDUP

GOLF BRIEFS LOCAL Bend golfer undefeated at PNGA Cup —Bend's Charlie Rice won two matches and halved another last week in the Ninth PNGACup, which was heldatThe Home Course in DuPont, Wash. Representing the Oregon Golf Association team, Rice and teammate DaveLydell, of Aloha, halved their four-ball match with Washington State Golf Association golfers Tom Brandes andErik Hanson. Then in a foursome match, Rice andLydelldownedWashington's Sandy Harper and GregKoster,4 and 3. Finally, Rice won his singles match, 1-up, over Washington's Darren Kuhn. The12-person OGA team finished in second place in the PNGA Cup to British Columbia Golf. The Ryder Cup-style matches featured 48 of the finest amateur golfers representing the Washington, Idaho, Oregon and British Columbia golf associations.

By Karen Crouse New Yorh Times News Service

PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. — At a 2010 PGA Tour event in Las Vegas, Jonathan Byrd

beat long odds with the golf equivalent of a game-ending home run. Using his 6-iron, Byrd holed his tee shot on the 204-yard par-3 17th at TPC Summerlin to defeat Cameron Percy and

Martin Laird in a playoff. The par-3 17th at TPC Sawgrass is less than half as long but twice as intimidating because of its island green. Well before the Players Championship this year adopted a chronological three-hole playoff starting at No. 16, the

likelihood of a deciding ace here Sunday was

LynneSladky/The Associated Press

Crooked River Ranchpro holes douhle eagle —Pat

Martin Kaymer look at his shot on the 18th green during the final round of The Players Championship at TPC SawgrassSunday inPonte Vedra Beach, Fla.Kaymer won the championship.

Huffer, the head professional at Crooked River Ranch hit the shot of his life last week at the Senior Spring Tour, a three-day pro-am hosted by the PGA of America's Oregon Chapter. Playing Glaze Meadowat Black Butte Ranch, Huffer teed off with a driver on the 511-yard, par-515th hole. That left him with 247 yards to paydirt. Huffer hit a 3-wood and after the group was left searching for the ball. A bystander suggested to look in the hole, where they found the ball. "Pat is very excited and I think these are more rare than a hole-in-one," said Terry Anderson, the head golf pro at Black Butte Ranch's Big Meadow course, who reported the albatross.

remote. Since 1986,six holes-in-one have been re-

corded at No. 17 during the Players Championship, most recently by Miguel Angel Jimenez in the first round in 2002. Luke Donald came close

Friday. He tracked his tee shot from 137 yards as it landed on the green and rolled to a stop 16

inches from the flag. Since the tournament was moved to May from March in 2007, one ace has been recorded on the Stadium Course's four par 3s. Robert

Garrigus holed his tee shot on the 13th hole, w hichthenmeasured 164yards,during thesecond round in 2008.

Becausethe temperatures are warmer in May, the Bermuda greens are not overseeded before the event the way they were when it

took place in March. The date change has had unintended consequences. A few u nusually cold winters in the area have made some of the

course's putting surfaces uneven, a problem aggravated this year by the misapplication of a chemical intended to promote growth. Typically, as the temperatures rise, the putting surfaces grow firmer and they become, in effect, a shield against aces. "Since '07, it has become harder to spin the ball on that green on 17," said Johnson Wagner, who entered the week with a career average of 2.5 strokes on the hole, the best in the field. "To a forward pin, the ball's not coming back as fast. And to a back pin, it's just harder to hold." In the first year of the tour's wraparound schedule, precision has consistently, inexplicably declined. In the first 26 official events, there have been five aces, well off last year's pace of 30 in 44 events. See Aces /B10

Old Back Nine

• The Germantakes a one-shot victory at the rain-soaked PlayersChampionship

of the island and a 30-foot par putt that Kaymer chalked up to

which is what you realize when

they're not there anymore. So instinct and luck. to win on those days ... it adds "It was a very strange way to a little bit of a nice thing to the make 3," he said. whole week. "I think about her every day. I But it was enough to carry the 29-year-old German to a one- don't need a Mother's Day." shot victory over Jim Furyk in Furyk closed with a 66, havThe Associated Press a final round filled with stress, ing to wait out a 90-minute rain P ONTE V E DR A B E A C H , emotion and a large dose of delay to make a 3-foot par putt. Fla. — Martin Kaymer never satisfaction. It looked as though it might be lost sight of opportunity even Kaymer got u p -and-down enough to force a playoff, or amid so much evidence of trou- with his putter from short of even win outright when Kaymer ble in the closing stretch Sunday the 18th green for one last par, started to struggle. Just as he at The Players Championship. giving him a 1-under 71 and did last week at Quail Hollow, A bad chip led to double bo- his first victory in nearly 18 Furyk could only watch on TV gey. A bad decision cost him a months. The only time he near- from the locker room and settle chance at birdie. With his lead ly lost his composure was when for second place. "I did what I could," Furyk suddenly down to one shot, he talking about his mother, Rina, watched his ball soar against who died of cancer six years said. "I left it all on the golf the gray sky toward the scari- ago. He has a sunflower, her c ourse, and I h ung i t al l o u t est island in golf and figured it favorite flower, on his golf bag. there today and every cliche would be fine. His brother, Phillip, sent him a you can think of. I played hard What followed was a bounce text that he described only as today." sideways instead of forward, "very emotional." Sergio Garcia (70) finished "To win on Mother's Day ... alone in third, though he never mystifying spin that nearly sent his ball over the edge and into we show our parents way too got within two shots of the lead the drink, a chip with his feet little," he said. "We always need at any point. pressed near the wooden frame some occasions to show them, SeeRoundupIB10

smile. "I said, 'They're per-

becomes obvious on the ap-

Photos by Andy Tullis /The Bulletin

Andy Elliott, of Bend, putts on the13th green at The Old Back Nine

d esign quirks. That w a s

at Mountain High in Bend onWednesday morning.

more typical eighth of an inch instead of its former (and brutally slow) quarter-inch height, and the maintenance

made obvious on the second hole, the 131-yard, par-3 11th,

schedule includes verticut-

Bend where good golfers can

and I both hit terrible wedge

find an elite 18-hole test of

is that The Old Back Nine fi-

shots. Both short, our wayward wedges should have been

golf.

The only difference now nally seems to be a worthy

Instead, The Old Back Nine alternative. is best for n o vices, junior

golfers, seniors and families golf balls sat just off a green — anyone who might typicalputting surfaces. that is far too large for such a ly shy away from the area's " Last year fo r t h e v e r y short hole. championship layouts. first time I had a guy walk But the nine-hole course Says Reisinger: "It's realin here and say, 'The greens does not necessarily cater to ly the only nine-hole course are too fast,' " Mark Reising- experienced golfers like me. close by, so it's an alternative er, The Old Back Nine's club- Then again, there are plen- for people who don't want to house manager, said with a ty of courses in and around go out on an 18-hole course." p unished. Instead, our t w o

Old Back Nine trustworthy

Difficulty of course D espite the fact that t h e The Old Back Nine caters to

lesser-skilled golfers, it is not the easiest layout. The course

tees — ranging in distance

~

from 2,295 yards to

r

,s'

and China Hat roads at Lost

Carefully. Skilled golfers see the short length and a layout void of bunkers and might think that they are due for a birdie binge. But some holes-

years past. Golfers who are looking for an easily walkable course for quick nine holes, novices, seniors, or a family wanting to in particular, a stretch that be- play a relatively inexpensive gins on the par-4 12th holeround (at least by Bend stancan be troublesome for those dards) without leaving Bend, who areoverly aggressive off The Old Back Nine offers a dethe tee. cent alternative. The best strategy is to be

Off the course

The Old Back Nine offers few extras. The course does

2 ,882

— Reporter: 541-617-7868, zhallCibendbulletin.com.

WILSONSsf Redmond 541-548-2066

Adjustablg Beds

yards — are short by just about any

C

the o c t agonal c l u bhouse, which is stocked with drinks

proach shot. Removal of some Tracks Golf Club. key trees has opened up the approach, which once had to Verdict be played over towering ponThe Old Back Nine still has derosapines even aftera solid some issues in the form of drive down the middle of the some quirky holes, but it has fairway. come a long way since it reNow most golfers will play opened in 2009. a midrange iron for a tough, The turf conditions are genbut fair, second shot into an erally good and the quality of accepting green. the greens has been dramatically improved, which makes

features some of the tightest conservativeoffthe tee and fairways in the region, in- play more aggressively into cluding the par-5 13th hole, what are typically massive where the ponderosa-lined greens. fairway dares golfers to pull out driver. The Old Back Nine's three

,v

have a practice green near

How to approach the course it a better value than it was in

when my playing partner

15 a l . ~

— Bulletin staff reports

and snacks, including free popcorn. of ponderosa pines. The Old Golfers will find the closest Back Nine's work on the hole driving range across Knott

Mountain High still has some

,~

physical therapist for Therapeutic Associates at TheAthletic Club of Bend, recently earned theNG360NikeGolf Performance Specialist certification. The certification is for movement specialists who learn aspecific process of golf-specific principles, strategies and techniques according to the NG360 website. Cooperearnedthe certification at a NikeGolf's Functional Performance SystemPowered by Gray Institute course atTalking Stick Resort in Phoenix. Cooper specializes in golf-specific rehabilitation and fitness.

avoid drifting left into a patch

The m a i ntenance s t aff now mows the greens at a

-

CertifiCatian —Chris Cooper,a

left that is fun to play. The hole begins with a wide fairway to freely hit a driver, though players will want to

fect.' " Continued from B1 The course's fairways and Those are some lofty ambi- roughs are also in above-avtions in a region with some of erage condition compared the most heralded courses in with many budget courses. the nation. And the Old Back And a tree-removal program N ine, w h ic h n u m bers i t s has opened the fairways of holes 10 through 18 to match the par-4 10th hole, the par-5 Mountain High's former back 13th, the par-4 14th and the nine, is not there yet. par-4 16th holes, as well as Still, the improvement is opening the greens on the clear after the maintenance 13th and 18th holes. "That has helped a lot," staff spent the past few years establishing a more profes- says Reisinger, who has been sional method of caring for with The Old Back Nine since the course, as I saw firsthand it reopened. "It really has." last week. T he Ol d B a c k N i n e a t

ting (dethatching) and rolling the greens regularly. All have helped give The

Bend physical therapist earns

s t andard. T h at

keeps the course playable for novices. In addition, the course has no bunkers, and water only rarely comes into

play. In fact, it could be that with its tight setup and occasional

quirky hole designs The Old Back Nine is harder on long hitters who struggle with control than it is on beginning golfers who lack the distance off the tee to find too much

trouble.

Favorite hole Once the most unfair hole

on the course — and perhaps Dennis Carr, of Roseville Calif., tees off on the15th tee at The Old Back Nine at Mountain High in Bend

in the entire region — the 440ya r d , par-4 16th hole has been

on Wednesday morning.

turned into a long, mild dogleg

2 locations inBend Main Center 2150NE StudioRd,Suitet0

NWX 2863Northwest CrossingDr,suite iO

541-389-9252 sylvan©bendbroadband.com

RIATTRESS

G allery - B e n d 541-3$0-50$4

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MONDAY, MAY 12,2014 • THE BULLETIN

B9

GOLF SCOREBOARD The Bulletin welcomescontributions to its THE GREEN SAT REDMOND Men's Club,April 30 weekly local golf results listings and events calendar. Clearly legible items should be Team Play'OrangeBall' faxed to the sports deparlment, 541-3851, BobGrabar/BobGordon/Bil Vols/PhilBackup. 0831, emailed to sports©bendbulletin.com, 2,MikeLantz/KenEnnor/RonJondahl/Jim Hayward. ormailedtoP.O.Box6020;Bend,OR97708. 3, Marv Bibler/Bill Armstrong/Ra ndy Bishop/Gene Cartwright. 4, MikeFrier/Gary Duff/PeeWee Blackmore/Bob Ha a k. 5, Joe Ca rp en t e r/Rob Kimbal/Bob Club Results Kanable/JackSmith. 6, RandyShipley/SteveAdamski/ Allen Burnett/JackMorris. AWBREYGLEN April 23 Ladies of theGreens, May6 Stroke Play Two NetBestBall A Flight — Gross: 1,HazelBlackmore, 41.2, 1, Cuck Woodbeck/Ron Lemp/Art Batchelder,114. 2, TomKemph/Shelley Grudin/RonHomer, 119. 3, LynneEkman,42. 3, Sharron Rosengarth, 42. Net: 1, Greg Walsh/Chuck Shepard/Steve Hanus, 122. 4, DeeBaker,31. 2, LynneHolm, 32.3, KayWebb,34. David Hawkins/Gary Chandler/Bill Lindsay/Dave B Flight — Gross: 1, BertGantenbein,48.2, Quattrone,123. RuthChaffey,49.3, CaroleWolfe, 50. KPs — 0-15 handicaps:TomKemph, No.11. Net:1, Lou WayneSteiger,33. 2,RuthBackup,33. 16 and over:JackTibbetts,No.6;Tom Stump,No. 3, JanSaunders, 34. 13. C Flight — Gross: 1, MargaretPickett, 45.2, SaturdayMen'sGame,May3 DagmarHaussler, 47. 3, MaryBohler,51. Net: 1, CombinedNet Stableford Ethel MaeHammock,27.2,RenateFalk,31.3,Evelyn Flight 1 — 1, Ron Homer/SteveHanus,80. 2, Kakuska,34. Ron Foerster/ShelleyGrudin, 73.3, Bill Macri/David D Flight — Gross:1, Nancy Smith, 48. 2, Morton,69. JackieHester,55.3, DorothyFuller, 58.Net 1, Jan Flight 2 — 1,TomLaBissoniere/Blind draw,74.2, Rogerson,33.2, PeggyRoberts, 34.3, Shirley Von Kalinowski37 , RonLemp/MichaelMount,67. Golfer of theWeek— MargaretPickett,45/26. WednesdayMen'sSweeps, May7 Low Putts —Renate Falk13, SharronRosengarth Two NetBest Balls 1, Quanstrom/Jim Kloch/RonLemp/David Dietrich, 13. LDs — AFlight: MichelleOberg.B: Ruth Chaffey. 119. 2,DaveHawkins/EdHagstrom/SteveHanus/Dick Haussler. D;PeggyRoberts. Johnson,121. 3, GregWalsh/Don Fellows/Richard C; Dagmar KPs — AFlight: LynneHolm Gallio/DennisBaird, 124.4, Bill Long/RonFoerster/ Men's Club,May7 KenWaskom/MichaelFlynn,124. Stroke Play Low Gross—DaveMorton, 76. Flight A — Gross: 1,MarvBibler, 69.Net: 1, Women'sSweeps,May8 KenEnnor,61.2, Bil Armstrong,62.3, RichBlakely, Frack 63. Flight 1 —BarbaraLaBissoniere/KayeWilliams/ Flight 8 — Gross:1, JackMorris, 76.Net:1, MaryDietrich/Louann Thomas,62.2,RosieCook/ PeeWeeBlackmore, 55. 2, Phil Backup,58. 3 (tie), Shannon Morton/CarmenWest, 63. Flight 2 — 1, SallyBatchelder/DeeAnderson/ RonMenace,60; BobHaak,60. KPs —MikeFrier, No.4; JoeCarpenter, No.9; ClaudiaArthur, 60.2, Molly Mount/LindaStump/Sue MarvBibler,Nos14,16. Thompson, 62. Flight 3 — 1, ChristineCercone/Carol Moore/ JUNIPER LindaQuattrone/B.J. Mils, 63.2, LynneScott/Darlene Warner/Jean Pedelty,65. Ladies GolCl f ub, May7 Two NetBestBalls Saturda yMen'sGame,May10 Odd/Eyen 1, SandyCameron/Jackie Cooper/Lois Northrup/ 1, Dave Morton/TomLaBissoniere,65. 2, Hi Beck- JoAnnHare,119.2 (tie), DebbieKerr/Carol AnnStil/ er/KenWaskom,72.3, BobScott/DuaneWarner, 77. JackieYake /Carolyn Houghton, 130;ShanWattenGross Skins burge r/JudyGalloway/ArleneLipscomb/DeannaCooLonUlmer ,4.BobJohanson,4.Dave Morton, per,130. 4,PamGarney/CherrySpurlock/Pat Porter/ 4.Tom LaBissoniere,4.BertLarson,3.BobRosen- blind draw,131. Chip-ins — ArleneLipscomb,No. 3; Darlene crance,3.JimLee,3. Ross,No.5; BarbSchreiber, No.6; JoAnneHare, No. BENDGOLFANDCOUNTRY CLUB 10. Ladies' GolfAssociation, April 30 Birdies — RosieCook, Nos.12, 18;ShanWatBest NineHoles tenburger, Nos.3,13; KarenWintermyre, No.13;SanFlight 1 — Gross: 1, NettieMorrison,32. 2, dy Came ron, No.18. KPs — JackieYake, No. 3;SandyCameron,No.8; Robin Prouty,35.Net: 1, NancyBreitenstein, 28.2, JulaneDover,29.5. LindaWakefield, No.16. Flight 2 —Gross: 1(tie), MadelineHenderson, LDs —0-19handicaps: RosieCook. 20-26: Linda 36; Shirleen Chambers, 36. Net 1, JoanneChrisWakef ield.27-32:JackieYake.33-36:DeannaCooper. tensen,26. 2(tie), Cindi Eielson,28.5;Vicki Taylor, 37 andhigher:JoAnnHare. 28.5. Flight 3 —Gross:1, GingerWiliamson,38. 2 (tie), Mary EllenMarlatt,41; SandyEdwards,41. Net: 1, JeannieArchibald,25.5. 2 (tie), DoloresRiquelmie, 26.5;SueWesson,26.5. Flight 4 —Gross:1, AundyMorton,47. Stroke Play Nine-Hole Group—Net1, DorothyStenkamp, 40. 2,JudyArthurs, 41. Men's Day Game,May1 Net Skins First Flight (0-11 handicap) — Bill Degree, No.1; BradChambers, No.6; BobRoach,No.7; Brad Chambers,No.8; TravisMcDermont, No.10;Jerry Mattioda,No.13. SecondFlight (12-14) —Kevin Freihoefer, No. 1; MacRyder, No.4; Bil Boos,No.5; DonKlippenes, No.12;JayBennett, No.14; MikeBinns, No.15. Third Flight (15 and higher) — SidSmith, Nos. 7,12;NealHueske, No.6; RonTokuyama,No. 8; Don Christensen, No.13; EdChernoff,No.14; Brian Case,No.17; ChipCleveland,No.18. Men's SpringGuestDay,May3 BestBall Overall — Gross: 1, Jeff Puffinburger/Dan Puffinburger(EmeraldValey), 69. Net 1, Bill Boos/ Neil Pedersen (Widgi Creek), 59. Jim WilkinsonFlight —Gross: 1,JimDover/ Rich Taylo(Ri r ver's Edge),71. 2, HarryPaik/Craig Johannesen (LostTracks), 73.3 (tie), DougSchmidt/ CorySchmidt(Intel Golf League), 74;Larry Paterson/ Garry Mode(BrokenTop), 74; Scott Robson /Brett Acuff (River'Edg s e), 74.Net: 1, BobBrubaker/Kevin Collins(Tetherow),62.2 (tie), SpencerSanvitale/Derek Davidson(LangdonFarms), 65;Travis McDermont/ BenTupper(Juniper), 65. Owen Panner Flight — Gross: 1 (tie), Josh Wood/JonasNorkunas (Juniper), 76; Bill DeGree/ LeeRamsay(Juniper), 76.3, RichardFunk/Max Merrill (Black ButteRanch), 77.Net 1, MikeBinns/Dan Donaldson(Juniper), 65. 2 (tie), DonChristensen/ Jon Drake,66;RussMitchell/David Garrison (Widgi Creek),66;GeoffHiglin/JeffWeichman(AwbreyGlen), 66. Al Gray Flight — Gross: 1,MacRyder/Gary Rose (Juniper), 76. 2, Neil Bryant/GeorgeSlape BrokenTop), 77. 3, Craig Smith/LesterFriedma n Lost Tracks),78.4, Phil White/TerryDahlquist (Widgi Creek),79. Net:1, RichGagne/John Bradshaw (River'sEdge),61.2, Scott Hakala/BobHakala, 63. 3 (tie), EricAnderson/Kelly Davidson(River's Edge), 64; Oscar Sorlie/John Sorlie, 64; 6ill Anderson/Kyle Frick,64. KPs — Members: CraigSmith(ace), No.3; Rich Gagne, No.6.Guests:Terry Dahlquist, No.11; Norm Stevens,No.16.

KP —Jac kNantz-PumpkinRidgeGC,No.4. QUAILRUN Men's Club,May7 Net Scramble 1, Matt Koski/ErvRemmele, 64.2, DaveRoyer/ SonnyBachman,65. 3,Rick Bauman/MauriceWalker, 66. 4,JimElmblade/Dennis Easly, 67. KPs —MattKoski, No.2; DanaCraig, No.10. Women'sAssociation, May8 Stroke Play Flight1 — Gross:SandyHaniford. Net:1, Linda Bennett. 2,PennyScott. Flight 2 — Gross:LaHondaElmblade.Net: 1, BettyQuinn.2, GwenDuran.

Cost is $100perteamand can include as many as 10 players.Formore information, call theWidgiCreek clubhouse at 541-382-4449.

CLlNICSORCLASSES May 12-14:Adultcoedgolf lessonsat LostTracks Golf ClubinBendofferedbytheBendPark&Recreation District.Sessionsare5:30p.m. to7 p.m.andaretaught by PGA professional BobGarza. Each sessionincludes on-courseinstructionanda maximumstudent/teacher ratio of8-to-1.Equipment wil beprovidedfor thosestudentswithouttheir own.Cost is $55for residents ofthe BendPark&RecreationDistrict, $74for others.Toregister, cal541-389-7275or l visit wwwbendparksandrecorg. May 19-21:Wom en-only lessonsat LostTracks Golf ClubinBendofferedbytheBendPark&Recreation District.Sessionsare5:30p.m. to 7p.m.andaretaught SUNRIVER Men's GolCl f ub,May7 by PGA professional BobGarza. Each session includes at Meadows on-courseinstructionanda maximumstudentheacher ratio of 8-to-1.Equipm entwil be providedfor those One NetbestBall, WhiteTees Flight One —1, Scott Brown/CharlieWell- studentswithouttheir own.Costis $55for residents nitz, 63. 2, RobertHill/TomWoodruff, 63. 3, Brian of theBendPark& Recreation District, $74for others. Guilfoyle/DaveHennessy, 63. 4, Don Wright/Frank To register,call 541-389-7275or visit www.bendparksandrec.org. Schultz,64. FlightTwo—1, TomMelrose/MikeSullivan, 61. May 27-30:BetterGolfin FourDaysis aninstruc2, Dave Long/Daryll Klein,61.3, DaveReynolds/Tom tional clinic offeredby Central OregonCommunity Tullis,62. 4,GaryBrooks/Eric Saukkonen,63. Collegeat JuniperGolf Course in Redmond. Classis Individual stroke play — Gross: 1, Scott taught byJuniperdirector of instructionStuartAllison Brown,77. 2, JimBrown,80. Net1, TomWoodruff, andbeginsatnooneachday.Costis$79.Formore 67. 2,EricSaukkonen,68. informationorto register: www.cocc.edu/continuinged, KPs — Grant Seegraves, No.4; RandySchneider, call 541-383-7270 oremail pro@stuarlalisongolf.com. No. 8;MikeSpaniol, No.13; DonWright, No.16. May 29: Performance Series Clinic at theTetheSkins — 0-18handicaps,gross: Scott Brown3, row GolAca f demyin Bendbegins at6 p.m.Tetherow DanWe ybright, HannesSpintzik. 0-18handicaps,net: Academy instructor MikeLewiswil join Titleist PerRandySchneider,GregCoton, DonWright. 19-36, formanceInstitute-certified fitness instructors Adam netTom Gleason3,DaveReynolds2,DennisWood2, Huycke and ChrisCooper,whoisaBend physical CharlesPearlman,GaryBrooks. therapisfor t, aone-hour clinic on howto usea foam roller tomaximizegolf performance. Clinic wil include instructiononhowto usefoamrollers beforewarming Albatross Report up andforpost-roundrecoyery.Cost is $10and class May8 size is limited.Formoreinformationor to register: BULCKBUTTERANCH GULZE MEADOW ccooper©taiweb.com . Pat Huffer,CrookedRiver Ranch June 3-6:BetterGolf inFourDaysis aninstructionNo.15......................511yards...........driver,3-wood al clinic offered byCentral OregonCommunity College at JuniperGolf CourseinRedmond. Class istaught by Juniperdirectorof instructionStuartAllison andbegins Hole-In-One Report at 5:30p.m.eachday.Cost is t79. Formoreinformation or to register:www .cocc.edu/continuinged, call 541May3 383-7270oremail pro@stuartallisongolf.com. BENDGOLFANDCOUNTRY CLUB June 7: Swinginto Spring golf clinic at Meadow Craig Smith,Bend No. 3 ........................134yards........................8-iron LakesGolfCoursein Prineville is designedto teach beginninggolfersfundamentalsandseasonedgolfersto sharpen their golfskils. Taught byPG AproVicMartin, May3 class isscheduledfor 9 a.m.to 10:30a.m.andcosts THE GREENS AT REDMOND Alan Williams,Sisters $5. Clubsavailable forthosewho needthem.For more No.14......................115yards.......25-degreehybrid informationor toregister, call 541-447-7113. June 8 and 15: Clinicfor beginnersoffered by May4 CentralOregonCommunity Collegeat Juniper Golf CourseinRedmond.Two-dayclass is taughtbyJuniper EAGLECREST RIDGE Allan Falco, Redmond directorofinstructionStuartAllisonandbeginsat1 p.m. No.6........................115yards........................8-iron eachday.Cost is$79.For moreinformation ortoregister: www.ccc. oedu/continuinged, call 541-383-7270or emailpro©stuartallisongolf.com. Calendar June 9-11:Adultcoedgolf lessonsat LostTracks The Bulletin welcomes contributions to Golf ClubinBendofferedbytheBendPark&Recreation D istrict. Sessionsare6p.m.to 7:30p.m.andaretaught its weekly local golf events calendar. Items PGA professional BobGarza. Each sessionincludes should bemailedtoP.O.Box6020,Bend,OR by on-course instructionanda maximumstudent/teacher 97708; faxed tothe sports deparlment at541ratio of 8-to-1. Equipment wil beprovidedfor Ihosestu385-0831; oremailed to sporls@bendbulletin. dentswithouttheir own.Cost is $55for residents ofIhe com. 6endPark&RecreationDistrict, $74for others.ToregisPUBLICLEAGUES l 5oryisitwwwbendparksandrecorg. AspenLakesMen:The Men'sClubatAspen ter, cal541-389-727 Tuesdays beginning June 10: InstructionLakesGolfCoursein Sisters playsonWednesdays al clinic for begi nnersoffered by Central Oregon at 8 a.m.throughthegolf season. Newmembers are welcome.For more information, call AspenLakesat CommunityCollegeat River's EdgeGolf Coursein Bend.Classongolf fundamentals is taughtbyRiv541-549-4653. Bend Park 4 Recreation District Adult er's Edge'sstaff of PGAprofessionals andbegins at League:Fourplayerteamsplayanine-hole scramble 3 p.m.eachThursdayuntil July 8.Cost is$85.For on Mondaynightsbeginning in Juneat LostTracks more informationor toregister: www.cocc.edu/conGolf Club inBend.Cost is $695perteamfor the tinuingedorcall 541-383-7270. Tuesdays beginning June 10: Instructionseason,whichincludesgreenfeesfor four players al clinic for beginnersoffered by Central Oregon and weeklyprizesfor longdrive, KPsandlong puts. Deadlineto registeris May28. Toregister, call 541- CommunityCollegeat River's EdgeGolf Coursein Bend.Classongolf fundamentals is taughtbyRiv389-7275 orvisit www.bendparksandrec.org. BlackButleRanchW omen:BlackButteRanch er's Edge'sstaff of PGAprofessionals andbegins at Women'G solf Clubacceptswomengolfers ofall levels 5 p.m,eachThursdayuntil July 8.Cost is$85.For more informationor to register: www.cocc.edu/confor Tuesday tournamen tinuingedorcall 541-383-7270. June 14 and 21:Short-gameclinic offeredby CentralOregonCommunity Collegeat Juniper Golf Course inRedmond.Two-dayclassistaughtbyJuniper directorof instructionStuart Allisonandbegins at1 p.m,eachday. Cost is $79.Formore information or to register:www.cocc.edu/continuinged, call 541383-7270oremail pro@stuartallisongolf.com. June17: OregonAdaptive Sports will host an adaptivegolf clinic for peoplewithdisabilities at Awbrey Glen Golf Club inBend. Clinic will betaught by AwbreyGlengolf professionals. Clinic is scheduled from4:30p.m,to6:30p.m.and isopentoanyone age 6 orolderwith aphysical or cognitive disability whowantsto try golf. Cost is freeandis part of a monthlyseriesof clinics throughthesummer. Volunteers alsoneeded. Formoreinformation orto register: contactLucy at541-306-4774 or lucy@ oregonada tivpesports.org. June16-18:Wom en-only lessonsat LostTracks Golf ClubinBendofferedbytheBendPark8 Recreation District. Sessionsare6 p.m.to 7:30p.m.and are taughtbyPG AprofessionalBobGarza. Eachsession includes on-courseinstruction anda maximum student/teacherratio of 8-to-1. Equipmentwill be providedfor thosestudents without their own.Cost is $55 for residentsof theBendPark& Recreation District, $74 for others. Toregister, call 541-3897275 orvisit www.bendparksandrec.org.

try formatwww.playjunipercom. May 20-24:Central OregonJunior Golf Association new-mem ber qualification at Awbrey GlenGolf Clubin Bend.Teetimes canbemadeby appointment.Newmembers arerequired to attend. For moreinformation, call COJGApresident Neil Pedersen at 541-480-6288, emailcojgagolf©hotmail.com,orvisit www.cojga.com. May 26: MemorialDayFlagDaytournament at PrineyilleGolfClub.Flagtournament. Formore information or to register, call Prineville GCat 541-447-1354.

May 27-28:OregonChapter ofthePGApro-am tournament.Formatfor bothdaysis anet Stableford. This two-dayevent is heldatBendGolf andCountry Club andPronghornClub'sNicklaus Coursenear Bend.Costfor amateursis $200pergolfer. Contact: 800-574-0503orwww.pnwpga.com. May 27: CentralOregonGolf Trail TourSeries tournamentbeginswith 2 p.m. shotgun at the Nicklaus Course at PronghornClub near Bend. EachCOG TTour Series tournamentis an18-hole event open to thepublic with grossandnetflights for two-personbestball and individual competitions. All playersmusthavea USGA handicap. For moreinformationorto register forthis event: jpickavance©pronghornclub.com. May 27: Oregon Golf Association Tourindividual seriestournament at theRidgeCourse at Eagle Crest Resort inRedm ond. Teetimes begin at 8:30 a.m. OGA Tour eventsareopento anygolfer witha USGAhandicapand include openandsenior divisions. Costfor this event is$79for OGAmembers and $99for nonmembers. Deadlineto enteris May 20. Formoreinformation orto register, visit www. oga.org orcall theOGAat 503-981-4653. May 28:OregonGolf Association Tourindividual seriestournamentat theResort Courseat Eagle Crest Resort inRedmond. Teetimes begin at 8:30 a.m.OGATourevents areopento anygolfer witha USGA handicapandinclude openandsenior divisions. Costfor this event is$79for OG Amembers and $99for nonmembers. Deadlineto enteris May 21. Formoreinformation or to register, visit www. oga.org orcall theOGAat 503-981-4653. May 29: CentralOregonGolf Tourindividual stroke playtournament at Black Butte Ranch'sBig Meadow. TheCentral OregonGolf Touris acompetitive golfseriesheldat golf coursesthroughout CentralOregon.Grossandnet competitions open to all amateurgolfers of all abilities. Prizepool awardedweekly, and membership not required. For more information orto register: 541-633-7652, 541-350-7605,orwww.centraloregongolftour.com. May 31: WildlandFirefighter Foundation Benefit Golf Tournm aent atTheGreensat Redmond. Four-player scramblbe e ginswith8:30a.m.shotgun.Cost is $60 per golferandincludes18holesof golf, cartand barbecue. Proceedsbenefit the WildlandFirefighter Foundation, which helpsfamilies of kiled or injuredfirefighters. Deadline to enter is May24. Formoreinformation or to register,contacttheRedmondHotshotsat541-504-7350 or cbuhrig@ fs.fed.us. May 31: 2014Scrimmage ontheLinks benefit golf tournam ent at LostTracksGolf Club.Four-personscramble beginwi s th2p.m. shotgunstart. Entry fee:$100per person or$400perteamand includes refreshments, beverages, barbxuedinner,gifls andprizes. Benefits the Bend,MountainViewand Summit highschool football teams. Toregister orfor moreinformation, visit www . scrimmag eonthelinks.com. May31: TheMuseumatWarmSpringspresentsThe Boomer Classic Benefit Golf Tournament, a four-person team scrambleat Kah-Nee-TaResort.Tournament begins with 9:30a.m.shotgun. Cost is $75per personandincludeslunch,contestsandprizes.Proceedsbenefit communityeducational program s ofTheMuseumAt Warm Springs.For moreinformation orto register: call 541322-5753, email dstacona@museumatwarmsprings.org, or visitwww .museumatwarmsprings.org. May 31:The15thAnnual Golf ForeKidsatMeadow Lakes Golf Coursein Prinevile is sponsoredbythe KiwanisClubof Prinevile. Four-personteamscramble beginswith9a.m.shotgun.Cost is $75per playerand includes rangeballs, cart,lunch,teeprize,flightedgross and netpayoutsandadditional prizesandgames. The field is limited to thefirst 25teams,andthedeadline to register isMay24. Formore information orto register: www.prinevilekiwanis.orgor contact MeadowLakesat 541-4 47-7113orzach@meadowlakesgc.com. May31:AspenLakesOutlaw SportsDayatAspen Lakes Golf CourseinSisters isafundraiser fortheSisters HighSchoolathleticsteams. Tee timesareavailableall day.Costis $80andincludesgolf, cartandrangeballs. Golfers arealsowelcometoparticipate inasilent auction and soc a ial hourafterplay.Half ofall proceedswil from the day wil bedonatedtoSistersHighathletics. Formore information: www.outlawopen.org. May31dune1:The30thAnnualRiverhouseGolf Tournam entat River's EdgeGolf Coursein Bendis a36hole, four-person scrambletournament Ihat benefits the EveryKid Fund.Begins at 8 a.m.witha shotgun start eachday.Grossandnet prizesawarded ineach division along withawardsforclosest tothepin, longestdriveand aRobberson Ford hole-in-one prize. Costis $198and includes greenfees, cart, lunchbothdays,teeprizesand awards dinnerSaturdaynight.Fieldlimitedtothefirst 136 golfers.Formoreinformationortoregister, call541-3892828 orvisit www.riverhouse.com/lournament. May31dune1:Duff ers8DollsChapmanTournamentatDesert Peaks Golf Clubin Madras. Costis $120 percoupleand includesFriday practice round, two days oftournament golf, KPandlong-drive competitions,teambest ball onSaturdayand aCalcutta on Sunday. Optional nine-holekickercompetition during Fridaypracticeroundis $5. Formoreinformation orto register,call theclubhouseat 541-475-6368 orvisit www.desertpea ksgolf.com to download aregistration form. June 1:Pro-Junior23atAwbreyGlenGolf Clubin Bendisafundraisergolftournamentfor theCentral Oregon JunioGol r fAssociation. Four-person,23-holegolf tournament beginswith a2p.m. shotgunstart. Teams

will playshambleandscramble andplayAwbreyGlen's regulation courseandfive-hole loopcourse.Eachteam will consistofthreejunior golfersbetweentheages of 10 and16 andonegolf professional. Spaceis limited to10 teams. Costis $100per teamandincludesgolf, lunch,drinksandprizes. For moreinformation orto register,callAwbreyGlen headprofessional TimFraley at 541-388-8526oremailhimattim©awbreyglen.com. June 1: SwingsForeStrings at theWoodlands course atSunriver Resort is a fundraisingtournament to benefitSunriverMusicFestival andmusic educationprogramsin southDeschutes County. The scramble tournamentwil beginwitha1p.m,shotgun. Cost is $125perplayerandincludescart, barbecue lunch, drivingrangeandputting greenchallenges, par-3competitions, teeprizesandawards. Areception after playis alsoincluded.Pormore information, call the SunriverChamber of Commerceat 541-593-1084, email infoCtsunrivercham ber.com, or visit www.sunriverchamb er.com. June 2:OregonGolf AssociationTourpartnerseries tournam entatGlazeMeadowat BlackButte Ranch. Teetimesbeginat8:30a.m. OG ATour eventsareopen to any golferwith aUSGAhandicapandinclude open andseniordivisions. Costforthiseventis $79for OGA membersand $99 for nonmembers. Deadline to enter is May26.Formoreinformation or to register, visit www.oga.org orcall theOG Aat 503-981-4653.

Professio nal PGATour The PlayersChampionship Sunday At TPCSawgrass, Players StadiumCourse PonteVedraBeach, Fla. Purse: $10million Yardage:7,215; Par72 Final MartinKaymer(600), $1,800,000 63-69-72-71—275 Jim Furyk(330),$1,080,000 70-68-72-66—276 SergioGarcia(210),$680,000 67-71-69-70—277 JustinRose(135), $440,000 67-71-71-69—278 Jordan Spieth(135), $440,000 67-66-71-74—278 DavidHearn(95), $313,000 70-71-68-70—279 70-74-69-66—279 RoryMcllroy(95), $313,000 Francesco Molinari, $313,000 72-70-67-70—279 JimmyWalker(95),$313,000 75-68-71-65—279 LeeWestwood (95), $313,000 67-71-71-70—279 72-67-73-68—280 BrianDavis (75),$240,000 —280 GaryWoodland(75), $240,000 67-71-70-72 K.J. Choi(63), $187,500 74-70-72-65—281 71-73-70-67 —281 Chris Kirk(63),$187,500 George McNeil (63),$187,500 71-68-69-73—281 SteveStricker(63),$187,500 71-70-71-69—281 RussellHenley(53), $135,333 65-71-80-66—282 JustinHicks(53),$135,333 73-70-71-68—282 M.Hoff mann(53),$135,333 71-70-70-71—282 MattJones(53), $135,333 70-69-69-74—282 MattKuchar(53), $135,333 71-71-69-71—282 BrianStuard(53), $135,333 67-76-69-70—282 MarcLeishm an(47),$96,000 70-72-74-67—283 HidekiMatsuyam a(47), $96,000 70-71-72-70—283 D. Summ erhays(47), $96,000 74-68-69-72 —283 KevinChappell (42),$69,500 72-68-75-69—284 68-71-72-73—284 Bill Haas(42),$69,500 72-70-75-67—284 Billy Horschel(42),$69,500 69-71-72-72 —284 ZachJohnson(42), $69,500 70-74-67-73—284 RyanMoore(42), $69,500 70-69-68-77—284 JohnSenden(42), $69,500 Brendan Steele(42), $69,500 69-73-75-67—284 Bo Van Pelt(42), $69,500 71-70-70-73—284 Erik Comton p (36), $52,750 72-70-74-69—285 RusselKnox l (36), $52,750 72-72-73-68—285 ScottLangley(36),$52,750 71-72-72-70—285 HenrikStenson(36),$52,750 71-70-70-74—285 AngelCabrera(29) $38000 70-74-71-71—286 StewartCink(29), $38,000 70-70-70-76—286 Jamie Donaldson,$38,000 74-67-74-71—286 LukeDonald(29),$38,000 73-69-75-69—286 G. Fdez-C astano(29), $38,000 67-77-72-70—286 Charl eyHoff man(29),$38,000 77-67-71-71—286 JustinLeonard(29), $38,000 68-73-70-75—286 70-69-76-71—286 KevinNa(29), $38,000 RorySabbatini (29),$38,000 71-73-69-73—286 77-67-69-73—286 Adam Scott (29), $38,000 73-69-73-72—287 CharlieBeljan(18),$24,073 69-74-72-72—287 JasonDufner (18),$24,073 MartinFlores(18),$24,073 70-71-74-72—287 RetiefGoosen(18), $24,073 72-70-75-70—287 J.J. Henry (18),$24,073 74-70-72-71—287 Jeff Mag gert (18),$24,073 72-71-74-70—287 Pat Perez (18), $24,073 68-73-75-71—287 CharlSchwarlzel(18), $24,073 72-67-77-71 —287 StevenBowditch(18),$24,073 72-72-71-72—287 BrandtSnede ker(18),$24,073 75-69-67-76—287 Bubba Watson(18), $24,073 69-72-70-76—287 DustinJohnson(11), $22,000 68-74-72-74—288 RyanPalmer(11), $22,000 71-73-71-73—288 73-69-72-74—288 JohnPeterson(11), $22,000 68-71-77-73—289 ScottBrown(9), $21,500 —289 Graeme McDowell (9), $21,500 69-71-77-72 FreddieJacobson(7), $21,200 70-70-75-75—290 71-71-76-73—291 RichardH.Lee(5), $20,800 74-69-72-76—291 lan Poulter(5),$20,800 67-77-71-76—291 ScottStallings(5),$20,800 Sang-Moo nBae3), $20,400 66-73-79-74—292 GeoffOg>lvy(2),(20,200 69-10-76-78—293 BrendondeJonge(1), $20,000 69-74-75-76—294 KyleStanley(1),t19,800 73-69-76-77—295 Made cutdidnot finish ErnieEls(1), $19,400 68-76-75—219 JohnHuh(1), $19,400 69-72-78—219 Seung-YulNoh(1), $19,400 76-68-75—219 71-72-77 —220 JonasBlixt (1), $18,900 72-71-77 —220 JohnMerrick(1), $18,900 71-73-77 —221 StuartAppleby(1),$18,400 11-72-78—221 RickieFowler(1), t18,400 73-71-77 —221 JohnRollins(1), $18,400 68-72-82 —222 JoostLuiten,t17,900 76-67-79—222 ChrisStroud(1),$17,900 JeflOverton(1),$17,600 70-72-83—225



ON PAGES 3&4: COMICS & PUZZLES i The Bulletin

Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.com THE BULLETIN • MONDAY, MAY 12, 2014 • •

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Includeyour name, phone number and address

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Bj u I I e t i n : 206

Pets & Supplies 0

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Building Materials

Fuel & Wood

T HE B U LLETIN

r e - Wanted- paying cash quires computer ad- for Hi-fi audio & stuvertisers with multiple dio equip. Mclntosh, ad schedules or those JBL, Marantz, D yselling multiple sys- naco, Heathkit, Santems/ software, to dis- sui, Carver, NAD, etc. close the name of the Call 541-261-1808 business or the term 261 "dealer" in their ads. Private party adverlis- Medical Equipment ers are defined as those who sell one Wheelchair computer.

Antique Furniture: 3 chests of drawers; secretary desk; dropleaf table, kitchen cabinet. Call 541-408-1154

senlng Central Oregon sincefgtg

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500 rds 2 2LR factory ammo, $80; 200 r ds 25acp, $100; 300 rds .308, $250. 541-647-7950 541-279-1779. Bend local pays CASHI! POODLE,toys & minis, Antiques wanted: tools, for all firearms & 202 also rescued older pup furniture, marbles,early ammo. 541-526-0617 Want to Buy or Rent to adopt. 541-475-3889 B/W photography, CASH!! decoys, jewelry. Pug & Boston Terrier toys,541-389-1578 For Guns, Ammo & CASH for dressers, Reloading Supplies. dead washers/dryers a dorable pups, 1 s t 541-408-6900. shots, vet check and Dark oa k 541-420-5640 2 - d rawer microchipped, will be Wanted: $Cash paid for small dogs, $295. 541- dresser, curved front, vintage costume jew- 233-3566/541-213-1530 $250. White wicker baby crib, u n ique eliy. Top dollar paid for $250. Large dark oak Gold/Silver.l buy by the Queensland Heelers DO YOU HAVE roll top desk, $800. Estate, Honest Artist Standard & Mini, $150 Surveryor's t r a nsit SOMETHING TO Elizabeth,541-633-7006 & up. 541-280-1537 SELL www.rightwayranch.wor 1930-1940, orig. box 205 FOR $500 OR $350. CASH dpress.com LESS? 541-923-5960 Items for Free Non-commercial Red Heeler f emale advertisers may Firewood U-pick up, 1/2 young (year old), The Bulletin reserves the right to publish all place an ad cord+/-. Also 6 white spayed, shots, unads from The Bulletin with our outdoor patio chair able to k eep h er. newspaper onto The "QUICK CASH cushions. Call 541-595-3226 Bulletin Internet webSPECIAL" 541-593-7307 site. 1 week3lines 12 208 or' The Bulletin Pets & Supplies ~2 e s k s 2 0 ! serking Central Ckegon sincetglg Ad must include price of People Look for Information The Bulletin recoma~ ls Ss oi $500 About Products and mends extra caution Whoodle pups, 3 left! 8$/2 or less, or multiple when purc has- wks, 1st shots, wormed, Services EveryDaythrough items whosetotal 2 males O $950; 1 fem, The Bulletin CINNifieds ing products or serdoes not exceed $1150. 541-410-1581 vices from out of the $500. 240 area. Sending cash, Yorkie pups AKC, 2 boys, checks, or credit in- 2 girls, potty training, UTD • Crafts & Hobbies Call Classifieds at f ormation may b e 541-385-5809 shots, health guar., $450 subjected to fraud. & up. 541-777-7743 www.bendbulletin.com BabyLock Ellisimo For more informaBLSO Embroidery Mation about an adver210 chine with extras. Like Exclusive bird hunting tiser, you may call Furniture & Appliances new, has only been used lease available on large the O r egon State 3 times (stitch count S.E. Oregon ranch. ExAttorney General's 432442). S e rviced for cellent upland & waterOffice C o nsumer A1 Washers&Dryers this sale on 03/08/14 with fowl hunting with miles of Protection hotline at $150 ea. Full warthe latest updates in- river frontage. Contact 1-877-877-9392. ranty. Free Del. Also stalled. A s king $5500 Mitch for details: wanted, used W/D's Call 541-390-9723 mjsiegnerofmtcblue.com 541-280-7355 The Bulletin or 541-493-2080.

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Prineville Habitat ReStore

Building Supply Resale 1427 NW Murphy Ct. 541-447-6934

Total Shop - Sheet Metal Equipment 4' air shear; 6'x16ga Hand Brake; Pinspotter; Pittsburgh 20ga w/Acme Rolls', Manual Cleatbender 24nx20ga; Spot

Open to the public. 266

Heating & Stoves NOTICE TO ADVERTISER Since September 29, 1991, advertising for used woodstoves has

WHEN BUYING FIREWOOD... To avoid fraud, The Bulletin recommends payment for Firewood only upon delivery and inspection. • A cord is 128 cu. ft. 4' x 4' x 8'

• Receipts should include name, phone, price and kind of wood purchased. • Firewood ads MUST include species 8 cost per cord to better serve our customers.

Welder w/24" arms; Slip roll (manual) 3'x22 dia; Box & Pan Brake 48" x16 powered ga; Easy Edger (Bench been limited to modwheelchair, type)... will sell complete els which have been certified by the Oror by the piece. in good condition, Call 541-771-1958 egon Department of $450. 257 Environmental Qual541-633-7824 Check out the Musical Instruments ity (DEQ) and the fedclassifieds online eral E n v ironmental 263 www.bendbulletin.com Protection A g e ncy The Bulletin senlng Central Oregon sincefg/8 Updated daily (EPA) as having met Tools smoke emission stanWildland F i r efighting dards. A cer t ified 60 gal. air compressor equip., new & used, w oodstove may b e 6.5hp, little used, nozzles, wyes, identified by its certifi- TURN THE PAGE $625. 541-385-9350 hose, 2006 Gibson Stanreducers, bladder bags. cation label, which is For More Ads dard Le s P a u le Contractor job box, 5' x Steve 541-771-7007. permanently attached 2' x 2', $325. Electric Guitar, one The Bulletin to the stove. The Bul266 54'I -480-1353 owner, dual bridge letin will not knowBuilding Materials and dual controls, ingly accept advertisHilti laser plane kit, great con d ition. ing for the sale of All Year Dependable $500 OBO. La Pine Habitat Fantastic so u n d. uncertified 541-408-5685 Firewood: Seasoned; RESTORE Blue tone c o lor. woodstoves. Lodgepole 1 for $195 Comes with original Power Washer (com- Building Supply Resale or 2 for $365. Cedar, Quality at case. $1200 firm mercial) new in crate, Call The Bulletin At split, del. Bend: 1 for LOW PRICES cash only, no trades. Honda 13 hp - 4000 541-385-5809 $175 or 2 for $325. 541-322-9619 52684 Hwy 97 psi, 4 gpm. Retails Place Your Ad Or E-Mail 541-420-3484. 541-536-3234 $1849, Sell $ 1 349. At: www.bendbulletin.com Open to the public . Steve 541-771-7007. DRUM SET: REMO Master Touch drum set, drums only no hardware, 22" base drum, 8", 10", 12", 13", 16" and 18n 2 toms, 14 snare drum,$800. Excellent condition. 541-410-4983

Pronto

Find exactly what you are looking for in the CLASSIFIEDS

241

ENERATE SOM E Bicycles & Glock 41 (.45ACP Yamaha console piano, Adopt a rescued cat or GEXCITEMENT your Accessories long-slide), kitten! Fixed, shots, ID neighborhood! in exc cond & sound Plan a like-new, w/ three walnut, chip, tested, more! garage sale and don't 13-rnd mags, and $3000. 541-408-1154 65480 78th, Tumalo, forget to advertise in Trek 2120 bicycles, (2) 54cm and 58cm, car260 Sat/Sun 1-5 389-8420 classified! case.$630 obo. bon fiber, Shimano www.craftcats.org 541-977-3173 Misc. Items 541-385-5809. 105, SP D p e dals, Boxers AKC & V alley Just bought a new boat? $400 each. Miyata Bulldogs CKC puppies. Sell your old one in the kids Triathalon bike, Kimber Solo, C-D-P 2012 Sim p licity $700-800. 541-325-3376 classifieds! Ask about our $125. 541-410-7034 (L-G) 9mm pistol Gusto Hepa canisSuper Seller rates! Cavalier King Charles with 3 clips, $975. ter va cuumwith 242 541-385-5809 $1500 Male, 8 mos 541-420-7100 attachments, extra Exercise Equipment AKC 541-639-7541, filter and bags, exc. Mossberg 500C 20 Ga. cond. Retail $1500, Donate deposit bottles/ Shotgun. Cy l i nder Asking $600 obo. Nautilus NS 200 cans to local all vol., 971-221-8278 (cell) like new! Pulley bore, 18-1/2" barrel, non-profit rescue, for blue, synthetic stock. system with extra feral cat spay/neuter. $325 541-350-0642 Cans for Cats trailer weights,$600! 3 00-gallon fuel t a n k LEATHER CHAIR Will deliver! at Grocery Outlet, 694 w/stand, filter 8 hose, Espresso brown 541-388-2809 SE 3rd; or donate M-F Ruger 1022 rifle w/ $1200. 541-480-1353 in very good condiat Smith Sign, 1515 scopes. tion, less than 2 NE 2nd; or at CRAFT, 30 and 10 rd clip 245 years old. $250. Tumalo. Lv. msg. for $250.00 In SE Bend 541-550-9903 p ick up o f la r g e Golf Equipment ing recliner, $200. 541-508-8784 amounts, 389-8420. l Bose stereo'system www.craftcats.org CHECKYOUR AD series 321, $400. Taurus M85 38 special l Oak L-shaped mission oak Entertainment revolver, 5 shot, 2" center, $350. desk, exlnt c o n d, bbl, excellent condi$800. 541-408-1154 Can oe, $300. tion, 10 rounds fired I only, no marks or wear on gu n a nySleep Number Buyfng Dlamonds on the first day it runs where. Original box, King Doxie-Poos: Dachshund bed 8 box, bought /Gofd for Cash to make sure it is cor- packaging and manu0 dad, AKC poodle mom, in October, 2010 for rect. Spellcheck" and Saxon's Fine Jewelers als. $320, 10 wks, healthy, $350. 541-389-6655 human errors do oc541 912 8388. $2199; 541-447-4490, leave msg excellent cur. If this happens to condition, BUYING your ad, please con- Wanted: Collector seeks Lionel/American new foam pad, Koi - small fish - 22- 4", Flyer high quality fishing items tact us ASAP so that $2-$4 each. Prineville, asking $750. trains, accessories. & upscale bamboo fly corrections and any rods. 541-416-2326 or Call 541-678-5436 541-408-2191. Call 541-678-5753, adjustments can be 541-815-5885 (in Bend) or 503-351-2746 BUYING tllt SE LLIHG made to your ad. Lab/Jack Russell pup541-385-5809 All gold jewelry, silver 253 p ies. 7 w k s . $ 5 0 and gold coins, bars, The BulletinClassified Bulletin TV, Stereo & Vide (541)323-1787 or The rounds, wedding sets, recommends extra ' (541)419-6485 class rings, sterling silMens' McGregor set l caution when purver, coin collect, vinchasing products or • complete $150; Latage watches, dental services from out of I dies McGregor set Music/Voice Studio gold. Bill Fl e ming, I the area. Sending I with Mizuno drivers, 541-382-9419. Includes: • cash, c hecks, o r • $100. Taylor Burner • Pro Tools 8 software FAST TREES bubble, $50; other • Mbox 2 mini l credit i n f ormation 8.0 Grow 6-10 feet yearly! may be subjected to mixed irons, $10; • Behringer B1version mic PIT BULL MIX - Ready $16-$21 delivered. ladies shoes, size 6, • Sony headphones For more for adoption, nDino" is 2 l FRAUD. www.fasttrees.com information about an I $10, hats and ball • Samson USB studio rs old, gentle, loving. or 509-447-4181 advertiser, you may l sets. 541-923-3298 mic w/stand; enced property would call t h e Ore g oni • Training books Picnic Table, locally be best. Loves dog park, i' State Atto r ney ' • Corrugated foam custom made from logs, plays well with others, padding $750. 818-922-9074 housetrained, crate l General's O f fi ce PING G-20 driver Packaqe price new, trained 8 doing well with Consumer Protec- • 12'. Calloway RazrX Swamp cooler, heavy $1200+basic commands; he's a tion h o t line a t I irons, 6-9 PWSW, duty, like new, 3ft. x Offered at $550. wonderful companion! i 1-877-877-9392. Sr. shafts. 3 hybrid offers 3 ft., p o rtable o r 253-509-2488; Facebook, a 5 hy b r id, (A/I reasonable TheBulletin > and nDino Cowardly Lion" or > Serving considered) s tationary. $3 7 5 . Centrsl Oregon since 190$ $499. 541-647-0311 Adoptdino@yahoo.com Call 541-639-3222 541-382-6773

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A dd c o l o r p h o t o s a nd s e l l y our s t u f f f a s t .

In print and online with The Bulletin's Classifieds A dd c o l o r p h o t o s f o r p e t s , r eal e s t a t e , a u t o & m o r e !

GOL0ENRETRIEVERPUPPIES,we QUAJNT CABIN ON 10 ACRES! FORD F150 XL 2005.This truck are three adorable, loving puppies Modern amenities and aJJ the quiet can haul it aJJ! Extra Cab, 4X4, and looking for a caring home. Please youwiiineed. Roemtogrowinyour a tough Vs engine will get the Iob call right away. $500 own little paradise! Call now. done on the ranch.

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Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 541-385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com

FOUND: Key attached to short black loop, Summit Sylvan Trail on A wbrey B u tte. PICK UP YOUR 541-322-0951 GARAGE SALE KIT at Found: leaf blower in 1777 SW Chandler SE Bend, Sun. 5/4. Ave., Bend, OR 97702 541-318-8789 Need to get an Bulletin Found Roxy sunglasses, The servingcentral oregon since 19te ad in ASAP? downtown Bend Art Walk You can place it on Fri. 5/2. Call to idenonline at: tify, 541-419-1436. Look at: www.bendbulletin.com Bendhomes.com Found set of keys, Terrebonne Grade School, for Complete Listings of Sun. 5/4. Call to identify, Area Real Estate for Sale 541-385-5809 541-548-8931

Call54 I385580f to promoteyour service• Advertise for 28delt startingat'lf0 pta Sssl irrctrtrt natsilrblr eer erfstrl

Adult Care

Professional Caregiver with 26+ yrs exp will provide private care in your home. Disabled/elderly/ hospice.541-279-9492 Building/Contracting

Landscaping/Yard Care Landscaping/Yard Care Aeration/Dethatching

Serving Central Oregon Since 2003 Residental/Commercial

Sprinkler

1-time or Weekly Services Ask about FREEadded svcs w/seasonal contract! Bonded & Insured.

COLLINS Lawn Maint. Call 541-480-9714 Allen Reinsch Yard Maintenance& Mowing (& many other things!) Call 541-536-1294 or 541-615-5313

Add your web address to your ad and readers on The Builetin's web site, www.bendbulletin.com, will be able to click through automatically to your website.

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3-Horse Trailer, 22' long, 7' wide, 2 rear axles, good cond. Logan Coach Inc. $4900 obo. 305-794-0190 Need help fixing stuff?

Call A Service Professional find the help you need. www.bendbulletin.com

Nice Reg'd Qtr gelding, 25 yrs young, exlnt trail, 4H, packs, parades. Sound, to qood home, $850. 541-549-0985

Employment Opportunities

Driver / CDL ProBuild is c u rAuto Sales rently seeking an Sales professional to e xperienced C D L Join Central for our ProOregon's l a r gest Driver lo c a tion in new ca r d e a ler Build OR. You will Subaru of B e n d. Bend, be r esponsible for Offering 401k, profit del i very sharing, m e d ical driving vehicle or operating plan, split shifts and truck/trailer combipaid vacation. Expenations to transport rience or will train. both standard and 90 day $1500 guarnon-standard width/ a ntee. Dress f o r dimension product, success to work in materials, supplies our drug free work and equipment to place. Please apply and from locations at 2060 NE Hwy 20, and on c u stomer Bend. See Bob or site, including loadDevon. ing, securing and delivering safely and timely del i very. Banking R equires a C D L license to operate ) first communtt delivery vehicle in excess of 2 6 ,001 We are excited to pounds. P r oBuild announce an offers excellent pay available position for Ik benefits. If intera Financial Services ested, please apply Representative in online at Bend, Oregon. http://www.probuild. c om/careers a n d Salary Range: Search by Keyword: $10.00 - $19.00 023086. EOE For more details please apply online: www.myfirstccu.org EOE

DRIVERS

Quality Assurance Inspector needed for our ISO 9001:2008 rated shop. Physical testing and inspection of our product involves use of precision measuring instruments and the ability to read a mechanical drawing. Requirements include: QC training and 2 years experience in an ISO rated company, attention to detail, experience with MS Word and Excel. Hours:7:00am — 4:00pm, Mon.-Fri. Benefit package includes group health insurance, life and 401(k) Plan. Pre-employment drug screen required. Equal Opportunity Employer.

Send resume to: hrofuelsafe.com or fax to (541 ) 923-6015. Aircraft Rubber Nianufacturing, Inc. dba FuelSafe Systems 1550 NE iongvvood Ave. Redmond, OR 97756 CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE Immediate opening in the Circulation department for an entry level Customer Service Representative. Looking for someone to assist our subscribers and delivery carriers with subscription transactions, account questions and delivery concerns. Essential: Positive attitude, strong service/team orientation, and problem solving skills. Must be able to function comfortably in a fast-paced, performance-based customer call center environment and have accurate typing, phone skills and computer entry experience. Most work is done via telephone, so strong communication skills and the ability to multi task is a m ust. Additional projectsmay be assigned as needed. Work shift hours are Friday through Tuesday. Must be flexible on hours, as some Holidays, and early morning hours are required. For qualifying employees, we offer benefits including life insurance, short-term and long-term disability, 401(k), paid vacation and sick time. Drug test os required prior to employment. Accepting resumes through June 23, 2014.

NOTICE: Oregon state Activation/Repair law requires anyone Back Flow Testing who con t racts for construction work to Maintenance The Bulletin be licensed with the ~Thatch & Aerate serving central oregon irncerse Construction Contrac- • Spring Clean up Call a Pro c/o Kurt Muller, PO Box 6020, Bend, OR tors Board (CCB). An .Weekly Mowing 97708 or e-mail resume to: Whether you need a active license & Edging kmuller@bendbulletin.com means the contractor •Bi-Monthly & Monthly fencefixed,hedges No phone calls, please is bonded & insured. Maintenance trimmed or a house Verify the contractor's •Bark, Rock, Etc. The Bulletin is a drug-free workplace/EOE built, you'll find CCB l i c ense at www.hirealicensed~Landsca in professional help in contractor.com •Landscape The Bulletin's "Call a or call 503-378-4621. Construction Coordinator Service Professional" The Bulletin recom- ~Water Feature mends checking with Installation/Maint. Directory the CCB prior to con- •Pavers 541 -385-5809 tracting with anyone. •Renovations Some other t rades •Irrigations Installation Paying too much for also re q uire addiyard services? Senior Discounts tional licenses and Bigfoot Yards Safety Coordinator certifications. Bonded IkInsured 541-633-9895 541-815-4458 This position, located in Prineville, OR, is LCB¹8759 Custom Remodel & Tile T. Schellworth, Gen. NOTICE: Oregon Land- Painting/Wall Covering responsible for overseeing the safety function our Transportation department. ResponsiContractor/Builder scape Contractors Law WESTERN PAINTING for CCB ¹188631 bilities also include providing general safety (ORS 671) requires all 541-588-0958 Richard Hayman, support to other operations including our businesses that ad- CO. Center and Retread Facilities. vertise t o pe r form a semi-retired paint- Distribution Duties include ensuring compliance with DOT, Landscape Construc- ing contractor of 45 Debris Removal FMCSA, EPA a n d O S H A r e gulations, tion which includes: years. S m all Jobs assisting employees with workers' compensal anting, deck s , Welcome. Interior & JUNK BE GONE ences, arbors, Exterior. c c b¹51 84. tion claims, conducting safety investigations, I Haul Away FREE maintaining DE Q s t or m w a te r p l ans, water-features, and in- 541-388-6910 For Salvage. Also maintaining required certificates and other stallation, repair of irCleanups & Cleanouts safety documentation, conducting first aid and rigation systems to be BULLETINCLASSIFIEDS Mel, 541-389-8107 CPR training courses and other safety related l icensed w it h th e Search the area's most duties as assigned. Some travel required. Landscape Contrac- comprehensive listing of classified advertising... tors Board. This 4-digit Home Improvement number is to be in- real estate to automotive, Requires knowledge of FMSCA, DOT, OSHA and EPA standards and regulations, Class A cluded in all adver- merchandise to sporting tisements which indi- goods. Bulletin Classifieds commercial driver's license (or ability to 8 "' cate the business has appear every day in the obtain), and at least 3 years related safety It's time to pressure experience. a bond, insurance and print or on line. wash your workers compensaCall 541-385-5809 HOME! tion for their employ- www.bendbulletin.com Les Schwab has a reputation of excellent cusOther services: ees. For your protectomer service and over 400 stores in the Pressure wash tion call 503-378-5909 Northwest. We offer competitive pay, excelThe Bulletin driveway, patio & servingcentral oregon sincerse or use our website: lent benefits, retirement, and cash bonus. sidewalks. window www.lcb.state.or.us to Please go towww.lesschwab.com to apply. cleaning, gutter check license status Tree Services This position reports to and is posted under cleaning, yard work. before contracting with Headquarters, but the job is physically located the business. Persons MR. STUMP BUSTER Pressure Pros in Prineville, OR. Applications will be accepted doing lan d scapeProfessional Stump & Tree through June 8, 2014. No phone calls please. 541-788-2390 maintenance do not Removal• 24 yrs exp. Free Estimates. r equire an LC B l i - Insured - Free estimates! Senior Discount EOE cense. Call 541-213-9103

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Employment Opportunities

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HR Admin needed for family-owned f a rm. Degree in rel. field OR 3 yrs. exp., Excel exp. req., Spanish speak- chasing products or I ing preferred. Visit services from out of • www.golddustfarms.c I the area. Sending c ash, checks, o r om forinfo

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I credit i n f ormationI • may be subjected to

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I S U BA R U. I FRAUD. more informaI For tion about an adver- I I tiser, you may call I

Sales Sales professional to Join Central Oregon's l a r gest new ca r d e a ler Subaru of B e n d. Offering 401k, profit sharing, m e d ical plan, split shifts and paid vacation. Experience or will train. 90 day $1500 guara ntee. Dress f o r success to work in our drug free work place. Please apply at 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. See Bob or Devon.

I;-,." , „,,1 sponsible, qualified I and motivated tech- I I nicians for our truck/ I chassis department. I Qualified applicants I have experiI must ence in heavy duty I I truck repairs, have I your own tools and a I clean driving record. I CDL is also a plus.

Class A and Class B CDL Drivers needed. Must be able to work hard, pass U/A and background check, plus have furniture moving experience.

R equires ODO T CAgT or ODOT QCT This required to perform Call Bill, advertising tip lab and field testing. 541-383-3362 brought toyou by Successful c a ndifor more info. date will have basic The Bulletin knowledge of Word, servingcentral c cgon a cerrrs Excel and Access and will have out- Caregiver Golf Course standing math skills. Prineville Senior care M eadow L a kes ODL and a ccept- h ome l ooking f o r G olf Course is able DMV record reCaregiver for multiple accepting job s hifts, part-time t o quired along with for ability t o li f t 80 full-time. Pass a pplications pounds. Essential to criminal background cook/kitchen staff position. Position take direction and check. 541-447-5773. pays mi n i mum work independently wage per h o ur, while maintaining a Where can you find a plus tips. We are quality, professional helping hand? service oriented atan equal opportuFrom contractors to titude. Required to nity employer. To work in a fast, safe, yard care it's all here apply, g o to efficient ma n ner. www.cityofprinevin The Bulletin's Benefit p a c kage. ille.com and apply "Call A Service Wage DOE. online. EOE/AAE. Please Professional" Directory fax r e s um e to 541-749-2024 or email Facility Administrator hrmanagerohooker creek.net.

Quality Control — Manufacturing

II

Employment Opportunities

S UBA R U .

Good classified ads tell the essential facts in an interesting Manner. Write from the readers view - not the seller's. Convert the facts into benefits. Show the reader how the item will help them insomeway.

PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Classified ads running 7 or moredays will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday.

don't forget to check The Humane Society Bend 541-382-3537 325 Redmond • Hay, Grain & Feed 541-923-0882 pune ille

Employment Opportunities

AGGREGATE QUALITY CONTROL TECHNICIAN

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541N89-9663

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A Payment Drop Box is available at CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN (*) REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin The Bulletin bendbulletimcom reserves the right to reject any ad at any time. is located at: 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, Oregon 97702

PROMPT DELIVERY

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Employment Opportunities

Community Counseling Solutions is recruiting for a fu l l t i m e F a cility Administrator.

I Excellent pay and I Pl e a se I benefits. submit resume to I I PO Box 730, Red- I

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the Oregon State

I Attorney General'sI

a Office C o n s umer a l Protection hotline atl I 1-877-877-9392.

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LT Just too many collectibles?

Sell them in The Bulletin Classifieds

541-385-5809 Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com

Pressman

The Bulletin, located in beautiful Bend, Oregon is seeking a night time pressman. We are part of Western Communications, Inc. which is a small, family owned group consisting of 7 newspapers, 5 in Oregon and 2 in California. Our ideal candidate will have prior web press experience and be able to learn our equipment (3 t/atower KBA Comet press) and processes quickly. In addition to our 7-day a week newspaper, we have numerous commercial print clients as well. In addition to a competitive wage, we also provide potential opportunity for advancement. If you provide dependability combined with a positive attitude and are a team player, we would like to hear from you. If you seek a stable work environment that provides a great place to live, let us hear from you. Contact James Baisinger, Operations Manager 'baisin er@wescom a ers.com with your complete resume, references and salary history/requirements. No phone calls please. Drug test is required prior to employ-

The Bulletin serving cenrrar oregons/ncersw

Equal Opportunity Employer

The facility is located in John Day, Oregon and is a 9 bed acute care treatment facility working with mentally ill adults who are in an acute phase of their illness.

General The Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our Saturday night shift and other shifts as needed. We currently have openings all nights of the week. Everyone must work Saturday night. Shifts start between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and end between2:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m. Allpositions we are hiring for, work Saturday nights. Starting pay is $9.10 per hour, and we pay a minimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shifts are short (11:30 - 1:30). The work consists of loading inserting machines or stitcher, stacking product onto pallets, bundling, cleanup and other tasks. For qualifying employees we offer benefits i ncluding life i n surance, short-term & long-term disability, 401(k), paid vacation and sick time. Drug test is required prior to employment.

This individual will be responsible for the day to day operation of the facility. The administrator will be responsible for hiring of facility staff, training, and day to day operations. The administrator will assist the Executive Director in meeting the needs of the community, and will report directly to the Executive Director. Applicants should have experience in human resources, staff recruitment and retention, working with the mentally ill, ability to supervise 20+ individuals with varying levels of education, ability to assist the Executive Director in managing a large and complex budget, facility and program development and community relations. A bachelor's degree in psychology, sociology or other human services field is preferred. T his i ndividual w il l b e re q u ired t o participate in an on call rotation at the facility.

Please submit a completed application attention Kevin Eldred. Applications are available at The Bulletin front desk (1777 S.W. Chandler Blvd.), or an electronic application may be obtained upon request by contacting Kevin Eldred via email (keldred@bendbulletin.com). No phone calls please. Only completed applications will be considered for this position. No resumes will be accepted. Drug test is required prior to employment. EOE.

The salary range is $51,200-$76,800 per year. Excellent benefits. Please contact Nina Bisson at 541-676-9161 or nina.bisson tN gobhi.net with questions or to request an application.

The Bulletin

servinscentral oregon since19IB

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Earn $500 to over $1,000 per week! We are looking for a responsible and ambitious individual who wants the opportunity to build their own sales team, work independently, and earn a big weekly income. YOU CONTROL WHAT YOU EARN!Work your own

designated territory and essentially build your own business! • PEOPLE ORIENTED • RELIABLE TRANSPORTATION, CELL PHONE, COMPUTER WITH INTERNET ACCESS • SALES EXPERIENCE (OUTSIDE SALES OR INSIDE SALES EXPERIENCE, RETAIL SALES ASSOCIATE OR TELEMARKETING) PREFERRED. • PROFESSIONAL PERSONAL APPEARANCE.~ I .

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TO PLACE AN AD CALLCLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809

THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, MAY 12 2014 C5 860

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Loans & Mortgages WARNING

The Bulletin recommends you use caution when you provide personal information to companies offering loans or credit, especially those asking for advance loan fees or companies from out of state. If you have concerns or questions, we suggest you consult your attorney or call CONSUMER HOTLINE, 1-877-877-9392.

BANK TURNED YOU DOWN? Private party

will loan on real estate equity. Credit, no problem, good equity is all you need. Call Oregon Land Mortgage 541-388-4200.

Take care of your investments with the help from The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory

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Motorcycles & Accessories Boats & Accessories

Harley Davidson 2011 Classic LimHomes for Sale ited, Loaded! 9500 miles, custom paint NOTICE "Broken Glass" by All real estate adver- Nicholas Del Drago, tised here in is subnew condition, ject to th e F ederal heated handgrips, F air Housing A c t , auto cruise control. which makes it illegal $32k in bike, to advertise any pref- only $20,000or best erence, limitation or offer. 541-316-6049 discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, HDFatBo 1996 familial status or national origin, or intention to make any such preferences, l i mitations or discrimination. We will not knowingly accept any advertisCompletely ing for r eal e state which is in violation of Rebuilt/Customized 2012/2013 Award this law. All persons Winner are hereby informed Showroom Condition that all dwellings adMany Extras vertised are available Low Miles. on an equal opportu$17,000 nity basis. The Bulle541-548-4807 tin Classified 750

Redmond Homes

Triumph Da ytona 2004, 15K m i l es, perfect bike, needs nothing. Vin ¹201536.

$4995 Dream Car Auto Sales 1801Division, Bend

DreamCarsBend.com 541-678-0240 Dlr 3665

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755

627

Vacation Rentals 8 Exchanges

Sunriver/La Pine Homes

Rooms for Rent

2004 Adair Home: 3 bdrm, 2 bath, 1702 sq. ft., 2-car garage attached, 196 sq. ft. storage shed, .96 acres. A d d itional buildable lo t on separate a d dress for extended family or investment. $219,000 or $275,000 all. For more info call 541-876-5639

Furn. room i n q u iet home no drugs, alcohol, smoking. $450 1st/1st. 541-408-0646

Manufactured/ Mobile Homes

Ocean front house, each walk from town, 2 bdrm/2 bath, TV, Fireplace, BBQ. $95 per night, 3 night MIN. 206-369-3144 630

632

Apt./Iillultiplex General CHECK YOURAD

775

FACTORYSPECIAL New Home, 3 bdrm, $46,500 finished on your site. J and M Homes 541-548-5511

Garage Sales on the first day it runs to make sure it ise correct. eSpellcheck and human errors do occur. If this happens to your ad, please contact us ASAP so that corrections and any adjustments can be made to your ad. 541-385-5809 TheBulletin Classified 646

pt JMultiplex Furnished Fully furnished loft apt. on Wall St., Bend with parking, all utilities paid. Call 541-369-2369 for appointment to see. 648

Houses for Rent General

Garage Sales

Garage Sales Find them in The Bulletin Classifieds

541-385-5809

880

881

881

882

Motorhomes

Motorhomes

Travel Trailers

Travel Trailers

Fifth Wheels

18.5' 2003 B luewater

745

Looking for your next emp/oyee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad LOCALMONEYrWe buy will also appear on secured trust deeds & bendbulletin.com note,some hard money which currently reloans. Call Pat Kellev 541-382-3099 ext.13. ceives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5609 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com

880

870

Victory TC 2 0 02, 40K mi., runs great, s tage 1 kit, n e w tires, rear brakes & more. Health forces s ale. $4,5 0 0 . 541-771-0665

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Breeze Open Bow, 4.3L V6, 190 HP, great mileage on the water with plenty of power for skiing or wakeboarding. Pio n eer deck amp with Kicker speakers, seats 7. Great boat. $6,950. Mark at 541-977-2780

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Bigfoot Diesel 32' 2006, Su per C Duramax di e s el, Allison trans., only 3 7K mi., do u b le slide, 5500 Onan diesel gen., to many options to list. Vin¹ 534032, $79,995. Beaver Coach Sales &Service, 18'Maxum skiboat,2000, Bend 541-914-8438 DLR «3447 inboard motor, great cond, well maintained, $8995obo. 541-350-7755

Powerglide Chassis / 425HP Cummings Engine /Allison 6 Spd Automatic Trans / Less than 40K miles / Offered at $199K. Too many options to list here! For more information go to mee ~ e~lle reeue.eem or email trainwatert 57© email.com or call 858-527-8627

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18' Sailboat with trailer,

Dodge Brougham 1978, 15', 1-ton, clean, 69,000 miles. $4500. In La Pine, call 541-602-8652

V-berth, works great. Sell or trade. $2900 .obo. 541-516-8985

2007 Winnebago Outlook Class "C" 31', solar panel, Cat. heater, excellent condition, more extras.Asking $58K. Ph. 541-447-9268 Can be viewed at Western Recreation (top of hill) in Prineviiie.

Fleetwood Discovery 40' 2003, diesel, w/all options - 3 slide outs, satellite, 2 TV's, W/D, etc., 32,000 m iles. Wintered in h eated shop. $84,900 O.B.O. 541-447-8664

(2) 10' Kayaks; Old Generator Kubota 3500 Town Otter, Ocean Frenzy Si t -on-top, as, 60 h rs, $ 1000 both with p a ddles, ASH. 541-923-5960 $225/ea. 541-593-6053

Tick, Tock Tick, Tock...

Ads published in the "Boats" classification include: Speed, fishing, drift, canoe, • house and sail boats. For all other types of watercraft, please go to Class 875. a 541-385-5809 •

...don't let time get away. Hire a professional out of The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory today!

The Bulletin

eeee n Central Oee oe meee 1903

Tioga 24' Class C lillotorhome Bought new in 2000, currently under 20K miles, excellent shape, new tires, professionaly winterized every year, cutoff switch to battery, plus new RV batteries. Oven, hot water heater & air conditioning have never been used! $24,000 obo. Serious inquiries, please. Stored in Terrebonne. 541-548-5174

.

•y Winnebago Adventurer 2005 35/2', gas, less than 20,000 miles, excellent condition, 2 slide-outs, work horse chassis, Banks power brake system, sleeps 5, with al l o p tions, $62,000 / negotiable. Call 5 4 1-308-6711or email a ikistu©bendcable.com

Winnebago Aspect

KOUNTRY AIRE

1994 37.5' motorhome, with awning, and one slide-out, Only 47k miles and good condition.

$25,000.

541-548-0318 lphoto above ls of a similar model & not the actual vehicle)

G R E AT

IRX.JM

National RV Enclosed raft t r ailer, 12'x7', pulley system Tropical, 1997, to help load, wired for 35-ft, Chevy Vortec 12 volt ai r p u mp. engine, new tires, $750. 541-593-6053 new awnings, 12-ft slide-out, queen bed, Italian leather couch and recliner, excellent condition. Ready to travel„ towing hitch included. $19,900. 541-815-4811

875

Watercraft ds published in eWatercraft" include: Kay-

The Bulleti

For Sale

15'

1971 Fishing boat, full top cover, 35 H P Ev i nrude motor, trailer and

spare tire, accessories, good condition. $1100 obo. 541-408-3811

15' fiberglas Sportsman, 75HP motor, trailer, good condition, $950. 541-389-1086 541-419-8034

Providence 2005 Fully loaded, 35,000 miles, 350 Cat, Very clean, non-smoker, 3 slides, side-by-side refrigerator with ice maker, Washer/Dryer, Flat screen TV's, In motion satellite. $95,000 541-460-2019

Alfa See Ya 2006 36' Excellent condition, 1 owner, 350 Cat diesel, 51,000 miles, 4-dr frig, icemaker, gas stove, oven, washer/dryer, non-smoker, 3 siides, generator, invertor, leather interior, satellite, 7'4" ceiling. Cleanl$77,500. 541-233-6520

RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work ... You Keep The Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! Free Advertising. BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond:

Beaver Marquis, 16' 1996 Lowe alum. f ishing boat, 2 0 h p 40-ft,1993 Brunswick Evinrude outbrd & refloor plan. Many mote control Minnkota trolling motor, f i sh extras, well mainfinder, bow f i shing tained, fire supchair, Bimini top, trailer pression behind w/spare tires, anchor, refrig, Stow Master fenders, life jackets, 5000 tow bar, lights, exc. cond. 8 $23,995. reat for local lakes, 541-383-3503

541-548-5254

The Bulletin To Subscribe call 541-385-5800 or go to www.bendbulletin.com

2,995. 541-390-9932

1990 5th Wheel Orbit 21' 2007, used only 8 times, A/C, oven, tub shower, micro, load leveler hitch, awning, dual batteries, sleeps 4-5, EXCELLENT CONDITION. All accessories are included. $13,900 OBO. 541-382-9441

Have an item to sell quick? If it's under '500you can place it in The Bulletin Classifieds for:

Transporter

Low miles, EFI 460,

overall length is 35' has 2 slides, Arctic package, A/C, table & chairs, satellite, Arctic pkg., power awning, in excellent condition! More pix at bendbulletin.com

4-spd auto, 10-ply tires, low miles, almost new condition, $3500. Ask for Theo, 541-260-4293

$28,000

1997 Komfort 27' 13' expandable s l ideout. $5500. With 5th wheel hitch, $5800. With 1993 Ford XLT F250 /mou n ted hitch, $7300 541-536-1962

541-419-3301

,~

in good condition. Has newer Michelin tires, awning, blinds, carpet, new coach battery and HD TV. $31,000 Call Dick at

Pacific Ridge by Komfort 2011

Mdl P 27RL 31', 15' Super slide, power jack, electric awning, solar panel, 6-volt batteries, LED lighting, always stored inside. Must see to appreciate.Asking $28,000. Call Bill, 541-460-7930 RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work ... You Keep The Cash! On-site credit

approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! Free Advertising. BIG COUNTRY RV

Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond: 541-548-5254

Fleetwood Prowler 32' - 2001 2 slides, ducted heat 8 air, great condition, snowbird ready, Many upgrade options, financing available! $14,500 obo.

M ~ •

MONTANA 3565 2006,

exc. cond., 3 slides, king bed, Irg LR, Arctic insulation, all options $35,000 obo.

outs, Leather interior, Power s e at, locks, win d ows, '10 -3 lines, 7 days -~- a I » , Aluminum wheels. '16 - 3 lines, 14 days 17e Flat Screen, Surround s o u nd, (Private Party ads only) camera, Queen bed, Arctic Fox 29' 2003 Foam mattress, Awcovered storage, slide' 8" m ning, Generator, In• g: , - r —out, exc. cond inside & verter, Auto Jacks, outside 2016 tags, Air leveling, Moon $14,900. 541-678-1449 roof, no smoking or or 541-410-8849 p ets. L ik e n ew, Outback Kargaroo 2008 $74,900 CHECK YOURAD Nearly new, 23KRS, 28' 541-480-6900 w/rear queen slide, alum. frame, front cargo ATV area/bdrm, remote AC & heat, micro, dbl sink, tub/shower, AM/FM CD w/exterior spkrs, on the first day it runs WINNEBAGO awning, anti-sway pkg, to make sure it ise corBRAVE 2003 upgraded wheels/tires, rect. eSpellcheck and • 34D, 2 slides springover, exterior human errors do oc• Tires 80% stove, heated underbelly, cur. If this happens to stored inside, more • Just completely your ad, please conextras. $17,500. tact us ASAP so that serviced 541-504-8111 corrections and any • 39,000 miles adjustments can be • No trades made to your ad. • $48,000 firm 541-385-5809 TheBulletin Classified 541-815-3150

aks, rafts and motorIzed personal Winnebago C h ieftain watercrafts. For 30' 1992, $6500/neg. 865 "boats" please see Paul, 8 1 6-231-2201 ATVs Class 670. before 9 p.m. A rcticCat AT V 7 0 0 541-365-5809 Say "goodbuy" 2008 t w o -rider vehicle, EFI LE. L ow Serving Cenmel Oregon since 1903 to that unused hours, high perforitem by placing it in mance. Nice wheels, Honda Aquatrax 2002 Navion IQ Sprinter winch, extra equip., F-12X Turbo, 2005 chassis 2008, 25' The Bulletin Classifieds 850 $5000. Moving causes Honda Aqu a trax MercedesRV Benz diesel, sale. 541-447-3342. F-12X Turbo, b o th Snowmobiles only 24k miles, excel541-385-5809 Seat 3. 2006 Shorelent condition, auto870 lander double place Arctic Cat 580 1994, matic rear slide-out trailer wit h e x tras, w/queen bed, full bath Boats & Accessories EXT, in good Package only $7650. w/shower, deluxe capWinnebago condition, $1000. 12' 1969 Sears alurnWill consider trade for tain swivel front seats, Located in La Pine. Sightseer boat. 541-815-0728 num fishing boat, diesel generator, Call 541-408-6149. 30' 2004 low hours on new 8 awning, no pets/ 860 880 hp engine, with trailer no smoking.$69,500. lillotorcycles & Accessories and extras. Good Motorhomes 541-382-2430 shape!$1600. with living r oom 541-362-2599 slide, 48,000 miles,

PUBLISHER'S NOTICE All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the F air H ousing A c t which makes it illegal to a d vertise "any preference, limitation e or disc r imination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status, 2005 HD Super Glide marital status or nafuel injected tional origin, or an in- custom, mi, new tires, like tention to make any 7knew cond. $6500 such pre f erence, 541-639-9857 limitation or discrimination." Familial status includes children under the age of 18 living with parents or legal cus t odians, pregnant women, and people securing cusFXSTD Harley tody of children under Davidson 2001,twin 16. This newspaper cam 68, fuel injected, will not knowingly ac& Hines short cept any advertising Vance exhaust, Stage I for real estate which is shot with Vance & Hines in violation of the law. fuel management O ur r e aders a r e system, custom parts, hereby informed that extra seat. all dwellings adver$10,500OBO. tised in this newspaCall Today per are available on 541-516-6664 an equal opportunity basis. To complain of d iscrimination cal l Harley Davidson 2009 HUD t o l l-free at Super Glide Custom, 1-800-677-0246. The Stage 1 Screaming toll free t e lephone Eagle performance, number for the heartoo many options to list, $8900. ing i m p aired is 541-388-8939 1-800-927-9275.

Forest River 27' by WildWind River 2011Holiday Rambler 37' wood 2004, winter pkg, 27ORLDS (Four SeaPresidential model slide, AC, oven, sons) 28' by Outdoor RV 2003, all factory optub-shower, outside in LaGrande, OR. tions, slides, 2 A/C shower, micro, awning, 2 Slides in living room, units, 3 4 door fridge, always stored. $12,500. separate bdrm, power fireplace, generator, Prineville, 541-447-9199 jack,elect awning, solar electric jacks front panel, flat screen, surand rear, flat screen round sound, micro, air TV, e n t ertainment cond, day/night shades, center, bay window, ext speakers,ext shower. exc. cond., MUST Like new!$24,000. SEE! Sacr i fice 541-548-2109 $24,500 OBO. 541-223-2218 KeystoneLaredo 31' RV 20 06 with 1 2' Looking for your slide-out. Sleeps 6, next employee? queen walk-around Place a Bulletin help bed w/storage underwanted ad today and neath. Tub& shower. reach over 60,000 2 swivel rockers. TV. readers each week. Air cond. Gas stove & Your classified ad refrigerator/freezer. will also appear on Keystone Cougar 2010 Microwave. Awning. bendbulletin.com 326MKS. Like new. Outside sho w er. which currently reS tored indoors. 4 Slide through storceives over 1.5 milslideouts, queen bed, a ge, E a s y Li f t . lion page views evmirrored w a rdrobe, $29,000 new; ery month at no skylights in bath and Asking$18,600 extra cost. Bulletin bedroom. DVD, TV, 541-447-4805 Classifieds Get ReAM/FM CD p l ayer sults! Call 385-5809 with i n terior/exterior Komfort Ridgecrest 23', or place your ad speakers, retractible 2008,queen bed, on-line at awning, etc. M a ny sleeps 6, micro & AC, bendbulletin.com e xtras. So l d w i t h full awning, living h ousehold and R V room slider, yule tables, outside extras and R e ese 882 shower, 4 closets, Hitch. $29,950(OBO) Fifth Wheels fiberqlass frame, as Ron - 541-549-1069 new, $11,500. La Pine call 541-914-3360 Mttee • M••& Laredo 30' 2009

lg

2009- 32', 3 slide-

Chaparral 2130SS Clean, well maintained 2 1 ' fa m i ly ski/wakeboard Yamaha Ro a dstar open-bow runabout Warrior, 2002 excel- with new Barewest lent condition, 29k, Great Mustang seat, cruise, tower/Bimini. system, new LED signals - fun bike! sound battery system. Sisters, dual $3,900 Stored under cover, 541-410-6522, Tony fresh water use only, 2nd owner. J u st b ought a lar g e r Chaparral! $16,000. 541-419-9510 Yamaha V-Star 650 2003 with less than 7,200 milesand Garaged. Maroon and metallic gold. Chrome and Plexiglass windshield, leather saddle bags. Lots of chrome including En g i ne Guard.$3150. Jeff 541-390-0937

TIFFINALLEGRO BUS 2010 - FULLY LOADED 40QXP

541-420-3250

~s slH

OPEN ROAD 36' 2005 - $25,500

King bed, hide-a-bed sofa, 3 slides, glass shower, 10 gal. water heater, 10 cu.ft. fridge, central vac, s atellite dish, 2 7 " TV/stereo syst., front front power leveling jacks and scissor stabilizer jacks, 16' awning. Like new! 541-419-0566

Recreation by Design 2013 Monte Carlo, 38-ft. Top living room, 2 bdrm, has 3 slideouts, 2 A/Cs, entertainment center, fireplace, W/D, garden tub/shower, in great condition. $36,000 obo. Call Peter, 307-221-2422,

( in La Pine )

WILL DELIVER RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do the Work, You Keep the Cash! On-site credit

Call Dick,

541-480-1687. Want to impress the relatives? Remodel your home with the help of a professional from The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory

approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! Free Advertising. BIG COUNTRY RV

Bend: 541-330-2495

Redmond:

541-548-5254

ALL,NEW STATEOF —THE ART DEALERSHIP!

541-406-2387

Winnebago View, J 24', 2008 221C mi, loaded, Mercedes diesel, 16mpg, stored covered, $62,000. 805-245-0747 (in Bend)

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SIIPERIIIR KEI.ECTIIIIIIIF NEWIIIIKEO

Travel Trailers

YOLVOSEOANS ANOSUY'S

Fleetwood Wilderness NW Edition 2002, 26'

1 slide, electric tongue jack, stabilizers, new brakes, waste tank heaters, ducted heat/AC, micro/stove/oven, tub/shower, couch, elec/gas hot water tank. Sleeps 6. Includes Eaz Lift hitch, storage cover and accessories. $10,500. 541-447-3425

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YOUR WEEKLY GUIDE TO CENTRAL OREGON EVENTS, ARTS &ENTERTAINMENT

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Restaurant Reviews/Movie Reviews • Stay informed on our rich local scene of food, music, fine arts & entertainment

Area 97 Clubs •

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C6 MONDAY MAY 1 2, 2014 • THE BULLETIN 0

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

925

933

935

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Utility Trailers

Pickups

Sport Utility Vehicles

Sport Utility Vehicles

Automobiles

Automobiles

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Pontiac Grand AN SE1 2003

00 908

Aircraft, Parts & Service

Flatbed tandem axle trailer deck length 18, 7' wide, elec. brakes, 2015 tags, good cond. $2900. 541-678-1449 541-410-8849 931

Automotive Parts, Service & Accessories 113 interestin

Columbia400,

Financing available.

$150,000

(located O Bend) 541-288-3333

Ford F150 LIGHTNING Chev Trailblazer LS 2004,

VOLVOXC90 2006, 1993, 500 miles on re- AWD, 6 cyl, remote entry, 75K mi., AWD, 6 speed built engine. Clean inte- clean title, 12/15 tags, auto, leather. rior 8 new tires. $7000, $5995. 541-61 0-6150 VIN ¹276223. $20,495. Iexp. 5/08/04) OBO. 541-647-8723

SMDLICH Ford F-350 2010 Cabeia's Crew Cab

spacing. $250. 541-604-0963 932

Antique & Classic Autos

541-749-2156

smolichvolvo.com DLR ¹366

American Racing wheels (4), cast aluminum dish c style, 15x7, 5 lug, 4.5

V Q LV Q

V8 diesel, 4 wheel drive. ¹A74567 $39,777

ROBBERSON

Ford Bronco II 4x4, 1989Automatic, power steering, stereo upgrade, set-up to tow, runs good. $1700. 541-633-6662

Need to get an ad in ASAP?

Ford Thunderbird 2002 c o nvertible with brand new tonneau cover, white with grey i nterior, loaded, 88,600 low miles, choice condition, everything works. Great fun car to d r ive. I l l ness forces sale. price reduced to $12,500. Call Bill 541-604-9307

FWD, V6 auto., 90k

mi., 29 mpg Hwy, 6,977 ROBBERSON y I M ROR

541-312-3986 DLR ¹0205

Porsche 911 Carrera 993 cou

Fax it ts 541-322-7253

1000

Legal Notices

LEGAL NOTICE Notice o f Pu b lic Hearing M e e ting Type: Public Hearing by Police Chief Jim Porter as the Justice Assistance Grant ma n ager. Meeting Date: Tuesday May 20, 2014. Meeting Time 10am. Lo c ation: B end Police D e p artment 555 N E 15th Street, Bend,

Vin¹572987

Bar ain Corral

I I C CC CII ~

1000

Legal Notices

The Bulletin Classifieds

Oregon. Purpose:

Public hearing for w ritten an d o r a l 940 views to the City of Bend for the pro1996, 73k miles, Vans posed use of t he Tiptronic auto. with hard & soft top, 2014 Justice Assissilver with black transmission. Silver, 1/3 interest in wellFord F-350 4x4, tance Grant for the blue leather interior, interior, equipped IFR Beech BoGMC Yukon XL 1500 City of Bend Police all original, moon/sunroof, new Chevy C-20 Pickup nanza A36, new 10-550i SLT2010, D epartment. Y o u very low mileage, quality tires and 1969,was a special prop, located KBDN. 60K mi., 4WD, leather. can direct q uesin premium condition. battery, car and seat order, has all the ex$65,000. 541-419-9510 VIN ¹284835. $26,995. tions or comments $19,900. covers, many extras. tras, and is all original. www.N4972M.com (exp. 5/18/14) on the above date 702-249-2567 Chrysler Town & Recently fully serSee to believe! SMDLICH by calling (car is in Bend) viced, garaged, 541-923-6049 Country LXI 1997, 2006 XLT 4-door 541.322.2992 from beautiful inside & looks and runs like Crew Cab V Q LV Q 10am to 10:30am. new. Excellent conout, one owner, non541-749-2156 What are you Contact for a ddismoker,. loaded with dition $29,700 6.0L Turbo diesel, full smolichvolvo.com tional que s tions 541-322-9647 options! 197,892 mi. power, a u tomatic, looking for? DLR ¹366 prior to this meeting Service rec o rds 6-disc CD, cruise, fog You'll find it in please call Kristel lights, running boards, available. $4 , 950. 1/5th interest in 1973 Muirhead at Hummer H3 X 2007 pkg, bedliner, grill Call Mike, (541) 815Porsche 911 Turbo Cessna 150 LLC The Bulletin Classifieds tow 5 41.322.2994. A c guard, folding rear 8176 after 3:30 p.m. infinifi G37X 2013, 150hp conversion, low cessible m e eting seat. Tan cloth inte7-Speed Auto, 15K time on air frame and information - this rior, metallic tan extemi., AWD, leather. engine, hangared in 541-385-5809 meeting event/locarior. 91,400 miles. 975 VIN ¹354008. $29,995. Bend. Excellent pertion is a ccessible. (exp. 5/1s/14) Automobiles formance &affordSign Language, inPriced to sell $21,500 able flying! $6,000. S M D L I C H 3.7L 5 cyls, 4WD, 541-350-6925 terpreter s e r vice, 2003 6 speed, X50 541-410-6007 auto., 104k mi, 20 assistive l i stening V Q LV Q added power pkg., vin¹103344 devices, materials in 541-749-2156 530 HP! Under 10k Ford Powerstroke XLT, MPG,$15,977 alternate fo r mat, Ford T-Bird, 1966, 390 2008 4x4, loaded, gasmolichvolvo.com miles, Arctic silver, such a s Br a i lle, engine, power every- raged 99% of time, 53K DLR ¹366 gray leather interior, ROBBERSON large print, electhing, new paint, 54K miles, dark shadow gray, new quality t ires, orig. miles, runs great, $29,900. 541-385-8049 I ICCCIr~ ma ga a tronic formats and BNf Mr328i 2011, and battery, Bose exc. cond.in/out. $7500 33K mi., AWD, alloy p remium sou n d any other accom541-312-3986 obo. 541-480-3179 modations are wheels. VIN ¹658869. stereo, moon/sun172 Cessna Share dlr ¹0205 available upon ad$24,997. (exp. 5/08/14) roof, car and seat IFR equipped, new vance request. covers. Many extras. avionics, Garmin 750 SMDLICH contact Lincoln Navigator 2003 Garaged, p e r fect Please touchscreen, center infinifi M37X 2012, Kristel Muirhead no 4WD, V8 5.4L, tow pkg, V Q L V Q condition, $59,700. stack, 180hp. 7-Speed Auto, 36K later than May 15, aml fully loaded with DVD, 541-749-2156 541-322-9647 Exceptionally clean mi., AWD, leather. 2014 at heated leather seats, FORD XLT 1992 smolichvolvo.com 8 economical! VIN ¹395955. $35,995. 541.322.2994 3rd row seating, runs & Mercedes Benz 1982, DLR ¹366 3/4 ton 4x4 (exp. 5/18/04) $13,500. drives exc., well maint., kmuirheadOben300D Turbo Diesel, 5 matching canopy, Porsche Carrera 911 Hangared in KBDN doregon.gov pro143k mi. Non-smokers. SMDLICH Cyl, 210K miles, auto, 2003 convertible with 30k original miles, Call 541-728-0773 New tires, brakes, rov iding at l east 5 AC, Leather, Sunroof, hardtop. 50K miles, possible trade for V Q L V Q tors and struts. $7,950. days notice prior to new factory Porsche well service, $3,995 classic car, pickup, 541-749-2156 541-604-4166 the event will help motor 6 mos ago with 541-419-3717 motorcycle, RV smolichvolvo.com ensure availability. 18 mo factory war$13,500. DLR ¹366 ranty remaining. In La Pine, call Mazda CX-7i 3 orf LEGAL NOTICE $37,500. 928-581-9190 TRUSTEE'S NOTICE Corvette 1979 541-322-6928 OF SALE File No. L82- 4speed. 7954.20042 R e f e r85,000 miles Advertise your car! 1974 Bellanca ExK E A T ence is made to that Garaged since new. Add A Prcfure! c ertain t rust d e e d Plymouth B a rracudaReach thousands of readers! 1730A I've owned it 25 %%KTT made by Kevin W. 1966, original car! 300 Call 541-385-5809 years. Never damSaturn 2001 station 2011 2. 5 L 4 cyl., Mercedes-Benz CL600 wagon, dark blue, gray Lusby and Karla D. hp, 360 V8, center- The Bulletin Classifieds aged or abused. 2180 TT, 440 SMO, auto., 23k miles, 28 Coupe 2001, lines, 541-593-2597 leather interior, V6, auto, Lusby, husband and 180 mph, excellent $12,900. MPG, Black Cherry 64K mi., leather. exlnt mileage, also set-up wife, as tenants by the condition, always Dave, 541-350-4077 Mica, vin¹362484 VIN ¹010538. $23,995. for RV towing, a qreat entirety, as grantor, to hangared, 1 owner (exp. 5/18/04) $16,977 all-around car! $3950. Regional Trustee Serfor 35 years. $60K. I nternational Fla t 541-788-4844 vices Corporation, as S M D L I C H ROBBERSON ~ Bed Pickup 1963, 1 trustee, in favor of V Q L V Q In Madras, ton dually, 4 spd. ~ na aaa Boeing Employees' Looking for your 541-749-2156 call 541-475-6302 trans., great MPG, Credit Union, as benRolls Royce 1992 Sil541-312-3986 next employee? smolichvolvo.com could be exc. wood eficiary, dated ver Spur II,excellent! CC Place a Bulletin help dlr ¹0205 DLR ¹366 hauler, runs great, 07/02/05, r e c orded Midnight Blue exterior, wanted ad today and new brakes, $1950. 07/25/05 in the mortCORVETTE COUPE Parchment leather intereach over 60,000 Glasstop 201 0 gage records of Desrior, 15-inch chrome RR 541-419-5480. Mercedes SLK350 readers each week. Mercedes Benz chutes County, Orwheels, Alpine Sirius Grand Sport-4 LT 2005 conv., silverYour classified ad C300S orf 2012 loaded, clear bra egon, as 2005-47769 DVD/CD/AM/FM/GPS blue, like new, AMG 935 will also appear on and subsequently asnavigation system, hood & fenders. pkg, low mi, $20K. bendbulletin.com Sport Utility Vehicles signed to by Assign1976 Cessna 150M 77,200 miles, dealerNew Michelin Super 541-312-2328 which currently reJust over 3000hrs, 600 ship maintained, alment recorded as Sports, G.S. floor ceives over 1.5 milhrs since out of frame ways garaged. New, covering the following mats, 17,000 miles, Volvo S6075 2013 lion page views major, Horton Stol Kit. about $250,000; sell described real propCrystal red. every month at Avionics: Apollo 65 GPS $19,500. 541-480-3348 erty situated in said $42,000. Less than 14k mil, no extra cost. Bulle& additional radio (4 fre503-358-1164. county and state, to WHEN ONLY THE tin Classifieds AWD, 7 spd, leather quencies can be moniwit: Lot 5 in Block 2, BEST WILL DO! vin ¹700716 Get Results! Call tored at once). Tranreplat of a part of the 385-5809 or place sponder wimode C, JPI $31,977 Ford Focus ZX4 2005 original plat of BITFuel Flow Monitor, digiyour ad on-line at Sedan, 117K, auto, [photo for illustration only) TERBRUSH SUBDIROBBERSON XC70 2.57 2005, AWD, less than 11k tal density, temp & amp bendbullefin.com FWD, clean title, good Volvo VISION, D eschutes CI C CC I II ~ IM 000 monitor. Nice paint 8 upmi., auto, 6 spd. s hape. $5400 . 73K mi., 5-Speed Auto. County, Ore g on. VIN ¹186101. $12,495. holstery w/memory foam vin ¹202364 541-410-2449. PROPERTY AD(exp. 5/18/14) 541-312-3986 seat bottoms. Oil filter & $31,977 I The Bulletin recoml DRESS: 16715 BitterBuick Skylark 1972 block htr. 1 owner past DLR ¹0205 SMDLICH mends extra caution I brush Lane Sisters, 14 yrs; always hangared, 17K orig. miles. Please FordFusion SPorf ROBBERSON when p u rchasing ~OR 97759 Both the V Q LV Q see hemmings.com for no damage history. f products or services b eneficiary and t h e 541-749-2156 details. $18,900. N9475U.$26,000. Nissan Murano SL from out of the area. trustee have elected 541-323-1898 smolichvolvo.com 541-480-4375 541-312-3986 2011 f S ending c ash , to sell the real propDLR ¹366 DLR ¹0205 checks, or credit in- g erty to satisfy the obli933 formation may be I gations secured by Pickups J subject to FRAUD. the trust deed and a 2011 - 2. 5 L 4 cyl., For more informanotice of default has f FWD, auto., 64k f tion about an adverA'k.y0: been recorded pursumiles, Bordeaux Retiser, you may call ant to O regon Rei serve vin¹324193 black w/ leather seat I the Oregon State vlsed Statutes Save money. Learn $20,997 trim, 3.4L V6, 27,709 Pontiac G6 2007, Attorney General's 1 86.735(3); the default to fly or build hours miles. vin¹362484 Office C o nsumer I BMW X3 2 0 07, 9 9 K just 36,000 miles, ROBBERSON for which the foreclowith your own air6.977 miles, premium packin very good f Protection hotline at s ure i s m a d e i s CI II C 0 C II ~ 000 I 00 c raft. 1968 A e ro 2005 Diesel 4x4 age, heated lumbar 1-877-877-9392. ROBBERSON condition, grantor's failure to pay Commander, 4 seat, Chev Crewcab dusupported seats, pan541-312-3986 when due the followCICCCIII ~ IM 00 0 $8900. 150 HP, low time, ally, Allison tranny, oramic moo n roof, DLR ¹0205 ing sums: monthly full panel. $23,000 541-548-1422 SCrc/00 Central OI0000 since /000 tow pkg., brake conBluetooth, ski bag, Xe541-312-3986 payments of $575.80 obo. Contact Paul at non headlights, tan & troller, cloth split dlr ¹0205 beginning 02/Of if 2; 541-447-5184. black leather interior, front bench seat, plus late charges of n ew front 8 re a r only 66k miles. $28.79 each month T-Hangar for rent brakes O 76K miles, Very good condition, beginning 02/f 6/f 2; one owner, all records, at Bend airport. Original owner, with t itle e x pense, very clean, $16,900. MOTOIICYCLE: Custom Harley Call 541-382-8998. $34,000 costs, trustee's fees 0f360 54148& Davidson 1997 Sportster 1200 XL. or best offer. and attorney's fees 916 541-408-7826 5000 Miles. Lots ofchrome.$10,000. i ncurred herein b y Trucks & Great ride, butno roomforthe softball reason of said default; Nissan Xterra2011, any further sums adHeavy Equipment Chevy Ext. Cab 1991 40K mi., 4WD, 4.0L team. Contact Cheryl at 000-0000. with camper s hell, V-6 cyl., roof rack. vanced by the beneficiary for the protecHyster forklift, H30E good cond., $1500 VIN ¹501307. $22,997. YCLE: Gent (exp. 5/08/04) OBO. 541-447-5504. tion of t h e a b o ve propane, 2 stage, 672 described real prophours, $1900 obo. SMDLICH BMW X3 2011 black 541-389-7596 erty and its interest Dodge Ram 1500 on black, sport/prem V Q L V Q therein; and prepaySLT uadcab 1999 packs, leather, 3.5i 541-749-2156 ment penaltIes/premiturbo, nav., 20k smolichvolvo.com ums, if applicable. By miles, 19" wheels, DLR ¹366 reason of said default cold weather pkg, the beneficiary has Xenons, warranteed d eclared al l s u m s to 9/2015. $38,000 owing on the obliga/ One owner, IC Kenworth 1991 tion secured by the 5 .2L V8 auto . , 503-789-9401 T800 Water Truck trust deed i mmedi1 43,659 mi. R W D 914 350hp diesel (Portland) ately due and payVin ¹ 628726 B areng, 9-spd trans, (photo for /¹ustration only) able, said sums being gain Corral. $5,977 Hendrickson cab the following, to wit: Nissan Aitima2.5 S suspension, double R OBBER N Coupe 2008, $42,376.97 with interframed, self-conVIN ¹10476A. $28,995. est thereon at the rate CICCCIC~ IM RP R tained John Deere (exp. 5/18/14) of 6.74 percent per pony motor, 4000 541-312-3986 annum be g inning SMDLICH gallon water tank, Of /01 if 2; plus l a te DLR¹0205 new battery, 902,832 V Q L V Q Biyfyy X54.81 2007, charges of $ 2 8.79 miles. $22,500 obo. 78K mi., AWD, 6 speed 541-749-2156 each month begin541-589-2209 smolichvolvo.com auto, leather. ning 02/1 6if 2 until VIN ¹Z38373. $24,997. DLR ¹366 paid t ogether with (0xp. 5/0S/04) FIND IT! title expense, costs, Subaru Forester 2004. SMDLICH trustee's fees and atBQV ITI Silver, 40 K m i l es, torneys fees incurred SELL IT! V Q LV Q $10,500, herein by reason of The Bulletin Classifieds Dodge Ram 2500 541-749-2156 541.788.4809 said default; any fur2008 Diesel, smolichvolvo.com ther sums advanced DLR ¹366 exc. towing vehicle, by the beneficiary for Toyota Landcruiser 2WD, 55,000 the protection of the VX 1999 in classified advertising! miles. New batterabove described real ies, rear air bags, property and its interNewspaper classified advertising leads Roll-n-lock bed est therein; and prethe pack when it comes to connecting Peterbilt 359 p otable cover, spray-in payment buyers with sellers. water truck, 1 990, liner. 5th wheel penalties/premiums, if 3200 gal. tank, 5hp c applicable. WHEREp ump, 4 - 3 hoses, hitch available, too. Chevrolet Trailblazer Whethsr you're at s fork in the road or 4.7L V8, 4WD, auto., FORE, notice hereby $19,000. camiocks, $ 25,000. 2008 4x4 16mpg Hwy, Vin¹ is given that the un541-604-1285 541-820-3724 Automatic, 6-cylinder, can fuel the journey. 66902 Bargain Cordersigned trustee will cCcccc.bendbuscrI0.00I0 tilt wheel, power winon August 8, 2014 at ral $9,977 925 Ford 3/4 ton F250 1993 dows, power brakes, If you're ready to get rolling, check the hour o f 1 0 : 00 Utility Trailers Power Stroke diesel, air conditioning, keyROBBERSON o'clock, A.M. in acus out. In print and online, there's turbocharged, 5-spd, less entry, 69K miles. I I C C 0CII ~ IM RD R cord with the stanfreedom in classified! >xl/sabaulerbidgood runner & work Excellent condition; dard of time estabderampe xcellent truck. $4500 obo. Call tires have 90% tread. 541.312.3986 lished by ORS conditi@h100. 541-389-5353 or $12,995. DLR¹0205 187.110, at the fol541-3s5-9350. 541-647-8176 Call 541-596-5111 c lllcccc ~

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541-312-3986 DLR¹0205

Ford Thunderbird 2004 Convertible

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lowing place: inside the main lobby of the Deschutes C o unty Courthouse, 1164 NW Bond, in the City of Bend, County of Deschutes, State of Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the i nterest in th e d e scribed real property which the grantor had or had power to convey at the time of the execution by grantor of the trust deed, together with any interest which the grantor or grantor's successors in interest acquired after the execution of the trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the costs and expenses of sale, including a reasonable charge by the trustee. Notice is further given that for reinstatement or payoff quotes requested pursuant to O RS 8 6 .757 a n d 86.759 must be timely c ommunicated in a written request that complies with t h at statute addressed to the trustee's "Urgent Request Desk" either by personal delivery to the trustee's physical offices (call for add ress) or b y fi r st class, certified mail, r eturn r e ceipt r e quested, addressed to the trustee's post office box address set forth in t his n otice. Due to potential conflicts with federal law, persons having no record legal or equitable interest in the subject property will only receive information concerning the lender's estimated or actual bid. Lender bid i nformation is a l s o available a t the trustee's web s ite, www.northwesttrustee.com. Notice is further given that any person named in ORS 86.753 has the right, at any time prior to five days before the date last set for the s ale, to h a v e t h is foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated by payment to t he beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such portion of the principal as would not then be due had no default occurred) and by curing any o t he r d e f ault complained of herein that is capable of being cured by tendering the performance required under t he o bligation o r tr u s t deed, and in addition to paying said sums or tendering the performance necessary to cure the default, by paying all costs and expenses actually incurred in enforcing the obligation and trust deed, together with trustee's and a ttorney's fees n o t exceeding the amounts provided by said OR S 8 6 .753. Requests from persons named in ORS 86.753 for reinstatement quotes received less than six d ays prior to the date set for the trustee's sale will be honored only at the discretion of the beneficiary or if r equired by the terms of the loan documents. In construing this notice, the singular includes the plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor i n interest t o t h e grantor as well as any other person owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by said trust deed, and the words "trustee" and cbenefi-

ciary" include their respective successors in interest, if any. The trustee's rules of auction may be accessed at ww w .northwesttrustee.com and are incorporated by this reference. You may also access sale status a t ww w .northwesttrustee.com and www.USA-Foreclosure.com. For further information, p l ease contact: Bre a n on Miller Nort h west Trustee Services, Inc. P.O. Box 997 Bellevue, WA 98009-0997 5 86-1900 Lus b y , Kevin W. and Karla D. (TS¹ 79 5 4 .20042) 1002.267223-File No.

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SPRING! SUMMER 2014

H I Q a H , D E S E~ R T • •

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Healthy Living in Central Oregon

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Confenrs HIGH DEs ERTPULsE

COVER STORY HQME SIT88 Babiesdie moreoftenwhenborn at homeversusat the hospital, and Oregonis starting to assesstherlsk

LATINO HI'dLLTH CARE Hispanics'in Central Oregonface many barriers to health care access.

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DEPARTllllEMTS MT',IRS A reader responds to earbud recommendations. HIQLLTHYEATXNG Kid snackface-o$f: We put kid-friendlyconvenience foods to the test GEihRt n systems foryour outdoor lifestyle. ~ W a ter filtratio

LAIIRIDII9E ROSS

PROFILE Olympianiaurenne L Ross trainsyear-round.

Q SmhPSHOT

Whitewater wonder.

GETREADY Tour des Chutes ls in its 10th year. APPS Highlights of some of the best health apps around.

g YSPS What a doctor wears can affect transmission of germs.

ESSAY Tales of aIrnissiIAg tooth.

g meauu

Know yourfood safety for barbecue season. •

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COVER DESIGN: THINKSTOCIC ANOT ZEIGEST CONTENTS PHOTOS,FROMTOP: RYAN BRENNECKF„,ROB KERR,T'HEASSOCIATED PRESS,ROB KERR

SPRING/ SUMMER2014•HIGH DESERTPULSE


H I 0 H

i R T D E 8 E

soesdyn/~rhsouon Greg Cress And'yZeigert

AlitheaiBorck David Wray

Earbud storyignored hearing

• Photogramrhy Ryan Brennecka JeeKline

Healthy Living in Central Oregon

SPRING/SUMMER 20'I4 VOLUME 6, NO.2

~

RohiKerr Andy Tullis

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High Desert Pulse'5 primaryconcernis that all stories are accurate.~lfyouknowof an error in a story, call us at 541-383-030& oremaII pulseNrbendbulletin.com.

• Jblhrertlslng

HOW tareaCh US JugeJohns

Imetor

541-383-030&or johnsorf@bendbulletin.com

• Reyorthsl Tara Bannow 541-383-0304ortbannow@bendbulletinzom

Jay SrandtIadvertising director 541-383-0370orjbrandtobendbulletln.com

Kylie Vigeland health 8t medlcal account executive 541-617-7855 or kvigel'afrdobendbulletln.com

• OntheNeb: www.bendbulletin.com/pulse

Marielle Gallagher 541-383-0361 ormgallaghey@bendbUlletin.mrn MarkianHawryluk 541-617-7814or mhawrylukfilfbendbUIIetin.com Alandra Johnson 541-617-7860or ajohnson@bendbulletin.com

TheBulletin Aigulletln paymentsare~ a t d redropbcrratutyftaff.CheckpaymentsmaybemrwenedtoanefectronfcfundstransgtrTbeBulletln,VSPS r55252ttispubllsheddallybywestemcommunluelensfnc„fT//sw chandlerAve„gend,OR9//02.Pelodicabpostagepaidatgend,OR.Pcetmastec SendaddresschangestoThegulletindlcuiatlondeparene nRQBcwdttttf, BenrtoRBT/oftThegulletinreelnsownershipandcopyrfghtprotectionofall starpieparednewsmpy adsenfsfngmpyandnewseretlillustrarensThey maynotberepreducedwithoutrsrpacftprforagprovaf, Pubflshed:5/12/2014

Letters I enjoygear round'-up artides and I thinkyour piece devoted to earbuds e( Better ear gear," Winter/Spring 2014j was well done. However, I thlnk you let your readership down by failing to inciude an admonition that frequent, PrOIOnged uSe Of eal'budSr eSPeCially at high volumes, can be a mntributing factor to significant hearing loss over time.

Out of ignorance, in rny yeuth I did severe, ~irreparable damage to rny hearing that did not ,manifest until my middle years. Loud concerts,

gunfire and heavy equipment, aii endured without hearing protection, I'eave me dependent on hearing aids today. It is aImost as common to see young people with earbuds or headphones in place as it is to see someone glued to their "smart" phones. I fear we will see a generation of severely hearing-irnpaired thanks to the careIiess use of audio devices. Gven the length of time hearing loss may take to devel'op, we may see multiple generations negatively irnpacted. When the damage is d'one, it is done. No do-overs. — Bany Tabe/, Bend

Why hire an architect? We'll work with you to understand your lifestyle and find creatlve ways to deliver the dreamhouseyou've always wanted. Let's talkl neafhusttsn.cem residential cetntnercial 541.389.099 1


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5R RNI G I 5 UMM E R 201'I I-I I G I-I I? E5ERT RUL5E


Coverstory HoME BIRT Hs

BY RDL|KIAtit HAWBYLUK

Abel A n d r eWS was born in the rniddle of the night on April 5, 2010, at the now-defunct Motherwise Birthing Center in Redmond. And for the first 35 minutes of his life, he took no breaths. Still fuzzy from a prolonged and painful labor, deprived of sleep, her brain flooded with hormones, Kristine Andrews looked to her midwives to bring her son out of what had become a dire situation. "I just rernernber looking at thern and~ thinking, 'Holy crap. They she said.

have no idea, just that look of sornebody who just got a pop quiz It was only laterthatAndrews learned the tragic stories of dozand you're trying to remember something you read three years ago," ens of babies who died or were profoundly disabl'edI as a result of she said. "That was the first time I felt really scared." mishandled home births in Oregon. While the vast majority ofhorne Unable to revive Abel, the rriidwives called 91I but could not re- births iresult in a healthy baby and satlsfied mother, for the small per-

member the address of their own bIrthing center, Andrews said. An- centage of births that tum into crises, the decision to give birth out drews had to tell them, of the hospital tums out to be a tragic one. As they waited for helip, Andrews and her husband, Greg, called Those cases have prompted public health offioials ini Oregon to Abel's name,.told hirn they loved hirn and implored him to breathe. gat'her the most comprehensive data on out-of.'hospital births anyA policeman was the fiirst to respond and the look on Ihis face where in the country. And with the number of home births growing helpedAndrews snap outofherfunk."Icoul d seew hathe wassee- both nationaily and in Oregon, the state may soon become the fiercing — it was a mess. est battleground in the home birth debate. Andrews was.half off the bed; her son lay motionless on a warmComing home ing board. When the paramedics arrived, they tried to resuscitate Abel but didn't have the proper equipment for a newborn. In li900, almost all births occurred outside of the hospital', But by "One of them finally said, 'Let's just get him to the hospital. Let's l940, the rate had dropped to 44 percent. Rates continued to drop just go,"'Andrews recalls. Withln moments, the paramedics, the rnid- through the rest of the century, reaching a low of, 0.87 percent in wife, her husband and her'iiieWbom son were gone, leaving Andrews 2004. alone with the midwife asslstant, wondering what had happened~. Then something changed. Concerns over the high rate of medical None of what she had read online about home births had pre- interventions in hospital birSS, particuiarly cesarean sections, propared her for something like this. liferated over the Intemet, andI parents increasingly turnedI to.home "Nothing came up, noSing but beautiful, orgasmic birth stories," births instead. According to the National Center for Health Statistics,

a home birth assisted by midwives. JOEKUME

SPRIMG/SUMMER 2014 iHIGH DESE'RTPULSE


Coverstory(HOME BIR0-IS

'7heyallseemedto bepointing towardthisreallybeaudfulbirth erperienoe Iwasfairlrerdtedand wereallywantedtodotheverybest wecould." — Kristine Andrews, a mother

by 2012, the rate had inched. iup to l i.36 percent of births, andi in

many states, particuiarly iri the West,.rates were much higher. Oregon now has the third-'highest rate of out-of-hospital births, with 3.8 percent of births ocoorring at home or in birthing centers

in 2012. Only Alaska. (6 percent) and Montana (3.9 percent) have higher rates.

High-risk hirl1m lartaiya85 auggKHhatatvaKtrtIaJGrity QffetII ~

plaiitie@out&ix~spital bitths:could hive baert ~iidedihad the mid v'A~m detiliriedlitor attetidhigh=risk pregnancies:„ =

And now there is concern that the gains made in driving down

Oaolow.HealthAuthotltll {2@'l0) 2p2iI planned ~-of-hospital biiths who choose to avoid the hospitaL 8 aleatha,iricludhng.thefoilcwit|g i high-riakfacttijs. For the first time, in 2012 Oregon collected data on infant birth ~l , r tge@Con, and death certificates regardIng lheirnother's intended place ofbirth. Pcstgestatlondate (In the past, deaths that occurred after wornen or babies were transM'orbld Qbesity maternal and infant mortaliity are being reversed for those women

ferred to a hospital when things went wrong in horne births were counted among hospitA deaths.) The data showed that out of 2,021 fu ill-term, out-of-hospital births, eight chil'dren died during labor or within six days of birtlh, a mortality irate of 4 per 1,000 births. In hospitals, there were 84 deaths iin nearly 40,000 births, a rate of 2 per 1,000 births. At a iminimum, out-of-hospital births were twice as risky as iin hospital births. But the Oregon data i!hid an important distinction. While the

out-of-hospital rates excluded any deaths that happeni before labor

Orolon iHealthkSclonce Vnivelslty QBB4'OB)

2Ã plarinedout-of-hospitalbirthsttarsfeited' toaslngleotegoruhospitaI 8 dtaaAa,Imciudin o'. MKorilurnWaioiedfluiCh........,...,,: Hil'gih bltaod pressure Iralcfh.

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Post-gestatian dwe

which do break out prelaboribirths, public health officials have es-

llltilyrhws NiianceofliotrlhAitiaeaicaliitteI~ BN H W 1i4,989,P@v48cl GU&of-:h~i b r i itta fritt%:V~.S„..VQIt iirtIRPj7rePGttiirtg 22.deaths, iticlitdirrg: Bre85l gÃati aiftlabof' aitel' ceMfean

timated that only four to eight of the 84 in-hospital deaths in Ore-

Mrit.itIIII!iagestatian.

gon are likely to have happened after the start of Iabor. Combined

Iojiabetes.

with the 26 deaths that occurred within six days of birth, the com-

Hlgh blood pressure......,.....-,-.::..-....,,-.-,...,.-...-,...„,, „......,:......,

bega~ — and thus unrelatedl to the place of birth — the hos jital

data included those deaths. Using analyses ofiin-hospital Ibirths from Missouri and Scotland,

i

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . , . . . . . . . . . . ,. . . . . . . . . .,, . . . ; . . . . . „ . . . . , . . . . . . . , . .

parable in-hospital mortality rate would be 0.75 to 0.95 per 1,000 births. "It's not twice as high — »It'5 five to six times as high," said Ju.

dith Rooks, a certified nurse midwife who analyzed the data for investigate every one of the out-of-hospital dlaa&s. The analysis the state.

showed that in six of the eight deaths, the women had conditions

Consider that the anti-infiammatory Vioxx was pulled when data or factors that wouid have categorizedi thern, as hiigh risk births. showed that 3.5 percent of people taking the drug incurred heart Four were»more than two weeks past their due dates; two were carattacks or strokes, cornpared with 1i.9 percent in those taking pla- rying twins, induding one who didn't know hecause she declined cebos, nearly a doublingi of the risk. an ultrasound in her prenatal care. "And then there were people who said, 'All of a sudden, there If home birth were a drug, it wouild be taken offthe market. "These women are basicaily white, mairried women who aren't was no fetal heartbeat,'" Rooks said. srnokers, who aren't obese, who aren't. physically being beaten by

Dr. Arny Tuteur, a Boston obstetrician Who biogs about the risks

thelr husbands — they're low-risk women and they should have of horne births, said that's a common thieme amottig the deaths that been the lowest risk women there are," s'he said. And yet they have occur during out-of-hospital births. "It's diways the same thing. An emergency happens from one these terrible outcomes." Oregon officials wanted to know why so many of these iow-risk rnoment to the next, and they're far away from help," she said. births ended up with babies dying, so they had an epidemiologist "ipeopie say, 'Well, I was only 10 minutes away. from the hospital.' SPRIN'6I SUMillAER ZN4'i HIGHDESERTPULSE


JQE KUNE

says Abels birth, guided by tnidwivesat a nowdosed birthing centerin Redmorid, resultedin hiscerebral palsy.

And I say, 'Cou~ldyou Hold your ~breath for 10 minutes?'" Moreover, she believes that many of the babies would not have died had the mothers given birth in the hospital, where mother and baby could be monitored for signs of troub'le, with a team of physicians and nurses ready to step in if needed. "If you read enough of these stories, everything was supposedly fineand the baby came out dead. Tihat never happens in a hospital, ever," Tuteur said. "It's Ibecause they don't know what they were do-

Birthing. Center in Redmond, they seerned much more professional. 'They were professional women. They were articulate. They had a buiiiding and an office," she said. "I didn't know the difference between a certified professional.midwife and a lay midwife." Andrews said~ the rnidwives described it more as a difference in approach. Nurse midwives had opted to take a more medical approach, whereas they had learned natural birth techniques. "They didn't present their education as any less, just different," she

ing. They didn't ~realize the balby was suffocating, in front of them."

sald.

Andrews also liked how free the midwlves were.with their time. "The amount of attention they were wiliiing to pay me really Abel was the Andrewses'first chi~ld.Shehad been told she woul'd made me feel like they cared for me and were really so invested have trouble conceiving — so when she became pregnant, she in me andimy baby," she said. "I felt like they were on this journey

The beauNul birth

read everything she couldI on the Internet and in birth books about with me, that I was their friend, and that really played into my level of 'tr|ust. the birth process. "Theyall'seemed te be pointing toward this really beautiful birth Although she had previously worked in a gynecologist's. Office experience," she said. "Iiwas fairlyexcited, and we really wanted to and had started.her prenabdi care with a doctor., four months into

do the very best we could," Crowing up in john Day, she.had plenty of exposure to lay rnidwives, who would pull up in the car outside a mother's home carrying a bag of herbs. So when she met Christyn King and Nicole Tucker, the licensed, certifled professional midwives at Motherwise SPRING/SUMMER 2014 iHIGH DESE'RTPULSE

Iter pregnancy she switched to the midwives. Over: the next few months, she set aside concerns about the way they were handling her care. At one appointment, they hadher go to the bathroom and conduct a urine protein testÂťby herself, Andrews said. When shehadtrouble matching up the results wiith the color on


Coverstory(HOME BIR0-IS

the color grid, they told her to just throw away the test strlp. As she got closer to her due date,.herlblood pressure rose to 140/95, reaching the level's used by doctors to designate the condition known as preeclampsia. They recornmended monitoring the 'blood pressure at home and eating cuaumbers to bring it down. When she as'ked if she should Ibe concerned about her blood pressure and whether she should retum to her doctor, the mid-

wives discounted the worry, Andrews said. "I dori't think they wire concerned," she said. 'The general atti-

tude was those levels come frorn a fear.rnongering place. Looking back, all of their approaches were how to get around this, instead of what we do about it."

Despite state guidelines that women with high blood pressure not attempt a home birth, Andrews' blood pressure went unaddressed.

What's a midwife?

Midwife definitions certIIedilNurae.NldwNe(OIN):Aregistered',n@rsewilo'has corni eyattendibi&s piiiin@ril) InlhaspipietedIIa nuise mid»wifeiydegree Th ISI settings,although some,de attendout-afhaspitai»biith»s»In Oregon. IIliianied»oiseet Kntry Nichi8e(LONQ,A'.eii6vAMtetisedto R~ b l r tti, MUst pa%:a wfIEHl Bxaf7l a'nc'f ceri+ I»n» neonatQIIand1wa-

@mial ies~ n .

¹ Sr m al.educatinnb raqwired,

GwSIII»iil"PlefiiISIIQINIIIIA I NI )CPNg A ÃiiiiiIWN'whc»iiIia»i

p~ a w f IMri exam and skllls assessm6nt.'I@ pQxfoii(Q»~ wiith cr withoota license Ne»'formaIedLication req'I»iiredti SfMbt IQItlr IIIMNlfo glINj»' A+'F'riidwife wfxl Is Inatail[Rirs8, Qn beiilicensed c»r unllcensed; rriay of fMy Inot- havecorn~ipl8IFd'aifiorrnaI

leid@%ij program. mlihelfe:,AgenerictermuseAIfor a mJi5viife»wIIioiis neith»er certiIfiedrer liicensed. Mayor may not havecomplded! aforrriai rrii'dwifery prQgrairi'.

In Oregon, there's a continuum ofbirth attendants all sharing the name "midwife." At one end are certified' nurse midwives, who are registered nurses who complete a graduate degree in midwifery ment that operates more like an industry. Physicians, paid by the from an accredited program. Most CNMs practice in a hospital set- procedure, have a financial incentive to do more inductions and ting or in a practice with obstetricians. But many women prefer the mere cesarean sections, and to move women through the d'elivnurse midwife to a doctor, because they spend more time with the ery process qiuickly. As a result, about a third of women deliver by C-sec(ion in the 'United States, despite World Health Organization woman and are more likely to support a natural delivery.

All other midwives are called "direct entry" rnidwives, meaning recornmendations that C-sections should acceunt for no more than they enter midwifery dlrectly, not via a nursing track. In Oregon, liG to:15 percent of total births. Sirnil'arly, inductiori rates continue licensed direct entry imidwives (LDMs) must pass a licensing test, to rise in. the U.S., with an estimated 20 to 30 ipercent of women attend classes about the dr,ugs and devices they're aliowed to use receiving the synthetic hormone pitoon to syeed up contractions,

and attend at.liast 50 births. LDMs, however, can have varying levels. of education. Some have completed three- or four-year academic training programs, while others may have passed the exarn only based on past experience and personal study. Many but not all licensed midwives are also certified professional midwives, meaning they met the certification standards set forth by the Midwives Alliance of North America. CPMs can also have varied levels of forrnal or inforrnal education. At the other end of the spectrum are unlicensedmidwives, sometimes called lay midwives, who aire not vetted by the state in any way and may have any levelofeducation orexpedience. "This group of women who clairn to be rnidwives are really lay people; they didn't warit to get a imidwifery d'egree, so they rnade up their own credential so that'they could make money from go-

'The OB/GYN experience, it's more of a speciatty experience," said,Anna Johnson, a Bend nurse trained at Johns Hopkins 'University who has attended both hospital and home births. "It's more a

need when there's a high-risk pregnancy. But in our country, it's now become the norm. A lot of time you go in arid you're treated li'ke you're high risk even though you're not." J~o'hnson has had two children with rnidwives, one in the hospital and one at home. She is now expecting hier third childi, which will

allso be a home birth. She says the labor process is rnuch easier for a woman if she feels comfortable, and that labor can stall if she doesn't. "lt is a safe option as long you have a trained professional," she said. "And that's where it gets sticky in some of t'hese states. You

h@ve sornebody calling themselves a mid'wife and they have no

ing to births," Tuteur said. "And you have to admit frorn a public credentialing — they may not rnonitor the baby. That seems crazy." relations point of view, it was lbrilliant. Most people don't know the

difference." Proponents and critics of out'of-hospital births often use the

Taking pu~ise

Feta~l heartbeat monitoring is crucial to ensuring a safe birth, beterm midwife generically, further douding the ipicture for proSpe- cause it shows whether the baby. is getting, enough oxygen. With tive parents. every contraction, the supply of oxygenated rnaterna'I b'lood to the

"Home birth is an industry, and it'.s an»industry that uses a lot of baby»is shut off for 30 te 45 seconds. Most of.the tlme the placendeception in order to coritinue toimake money," Tuteur said. "And a ta has enough oxygen to tide the baby over until the contraction lot of babies have diedi." ends..lf the baby has no reserve, the heart rate wi'll drop after the

Horne birth proponents counter )hat it is the medical establish- contraction, known as a late deceleration. SPRiNG I SUMiMER 2014'i HIGH'DESERTPULSE


Hospitals generatly use electronic fetal monitoring devices. But many midWives eschew the 'technology. Some feel it detracts from.a natural experience," others rnaintain it results in more interventions than necessary..The altemative is to monitor heartbeatsirnanually, with a specially designed stethoscope. Rooks said that while the manual approach is perfectly ac-

al Ore gnm

ceptable, it must. be done properly and consistently. "I don't believe the direct entry imidwives have any idea how to do it," she said. 'They're often net listening to the fetal heart

©lca~y

enough." If late decelerations aren't picked uip, there is an increased risk the baby isn't getting enough oxygen, whichi could result in

death. If the baby's heartbeat disappears altogether, physidans will perform an ernergency C-section and attempt to resuscitate the baby. A 2005 study found~'that asphyxia deaths dropped 95

efVIng YQtlf'

al Imagirig Needs Since 1948

percent after the introduction of electronic fetal monitoring in hospitals in the 1970s. But at lhast two of eight deaths in 2012

occurred after. the baby's Iheartbeat was lost during labor. When that happens in a hospital setting, doctors can imrnediately extricate the baby via C-section or other types of assisted delivery and then seek to resuscitate the child. In a home setting, rnid.wives can either transfer the rnother to the hospital or continue with the naturail delivery and then try to resuscitate the baby.

Both options, however, may Ieave the baby without oxygen for

i •

too long. Experts say. it's difficult toiproject whether such babies

could.have been saved at the hospital. "I think IA.ihard to say 'what if' because you didn*t have the opportunity to intervene on that baby's behalf," said Mara Kerr,

' •

foriner director of the famfly birth ce~ter at St. Charles Bend and now a nursing professor at Central Oregon Community College.

0

e,

"We reall y can'tsay we could have saved thatbaby here.Chanc-

es are we could have. But bables die in hospitals, too — just not at the rate they do at heme." The.2912 Oregon data 8'hows how much education and licensing affect outcomes. Certifiedi.nurse midwives had a mortality rate of 2 per 1„000 eut-of-hospital births, Licensed direct

entry midwives had a irate of 3.8 per I,000, while unlicensed direct entry midwives had a rate of 10.2 per 1,000. Naturopathic doctors delivered 21i9 babies out-.of-hospital in 2012, with one death.

r appointments:

With such small numbers of births, mortality rates should be viewed with caution as they can easily be skewedIby one death.

41}3S2-9383

But the rates do provide at least a comparison between provider

types, and analyses with larger numbers of births have shown simllar results. National statistics collected by the Miidwives Alliance of iNorth America show sirelar risks. The group has been collecting data

from midwives since 2694 and recently published the data for the first five years of the registry. It's undear how. reliable the data is, given that reporting! isi voliuntaryand heavily skewed toward licensed midwives. Nonetheless„ that data showed a mortality rate of 1.71 per 1,000 out-of-hoS'pital births, substantially higher than

SPRIMG/SUMMER 2014 iHIGH DESE'RTPULSE

nal I IC

aci Cla en D. obert avi

son, IID - Ji arnes F J'ohnson, NID

rown, MD - Jeffrey Druhnan, IND =ngle, IID - Laurle A. INIarbn, IID bech, IND - Thotnis IF.Koehler, MD ogan, NID - Steyhea SIhu'Itz, IND lauf, IND = Stiven J-.,Nlichel, IND

taesen, MD WBI Nthelr, MD n, IND - Garrett SOIhroedir, INQ bele, IID - Paula Shultz,. IID


Coverstory(HOME BIR0-IS

what occurs in hospitals. Like the Gregon data, the MANA registry showed that many of the women who lost their babies had conditions or factors that wouldbe classified as high risk..

oxegon births and deaths m 2012

tatlonal diabeti.s and preecl@mpsia iin the sample, the intrapartum

Ia @12,Oregon ofiioalsfor thefirsttirnecolle@ed dstaon p!anneCh l pihceofbirthandinfantbirth and death certificstes.7techta showed a ~eh'highermortaiityrate when womea cairyirilite fuil «errngave

mortality rate went up significantly," said Melissa Cheyney, a certi-

kSTkl,at kil'QI7ii&'versus:a't fh& hospltaI; Numibars d(xfxx Irialucla f&t'al

"K you included breech, twins, vaginal birth after cesarean, ges-

fied professional midwife anid professor of anthropology at Gregon

State University in Corvallis. "Many people wondered why those women wouldbe choosing home birth." Some womenmay be choosing home birth becausethey wantto deliver vaginally and d'on't beiieve the hospital will allow them that

option, Cheyney said. Gthers simply mightnot know their risks. "For a woman who is low risk, when the midwife is well-trained, the home birth is!planned, you have access to medicalbackup when needed— home birth can be a viable opti on forwomen,"Cheyney said."The problern is, I don"t think we haveall of those parameters in place all across the United States.'"

But Cheyney, who also serves as the chair of the licensing board for direct entry midwives in. Gregon, doesn't believe stricter rules on what types of patients midwives can serve and what conditions should'trigger hospital transfers will help. ere we need to be focusing our efforts is on education, mak-

tbwhs pl'Ioitothe onsetoflabor. 'Q,OI1 Plaiiriedihospitai. ... . .......................,&990 Pll~ o u t~Hespital..., ..;...:...:..-;; ..:; ...;;,.:;,...-,.-.; -.; .- .-.-.;.-... 2021 pubgrcaps Trarsfer to hospitsl.befored'eiivery,:37R,Af4ardÃiveiy, 24) -

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ment that leads you all the way through to the delivery of the baby," she sai d."Because people can become high diskatany moment."

lndUctlon

Potential hazards

!Proponents of out-of-hospital births point to the studies of home Andrews said that at 39 weeks, the midwives told her they would induce labor. Initially,. they had told her they had a number of births births in Canada and Europe, where a much Ilarger proportion of planned ifor that month, although later they told her it was out of babies are delivered at home. Canada, for exampl'e, had unlicensed concern for her blood pressi!Ire. midwives into the 1990s but no longer does. The proviincial health They used a technique call'ed membrane stripping, where the plans wanted to integrate them into the health, care system through

amniotic sac is gently separated from the wall of the uterus with a licensing and regulations. The midwives agreed to the ~licensing gloved finger, releasing 'hormones that can spur contractions. Stud- mandate as long as the education standards did net require a nursies are mixed about how effect!ive.it is at.ind!ucing labor. ing degree. Andrews' first contraction came the next morning along with exIn countries such as Denmark and the Netherlhnds, midwives cruciating back pain. Shecalled King, who expressed doubt that she practice under strict parameters, with specified iists of what conwas truly in ilabor, and told her to stay in touch. She suggested that stitutes high-risk deliveries that must be handled in a hospital, and Andrews take Tylenol PM,, a pain relief/sleep aid combination. The what Iactors during labor necessitate an immediate trans$er. next afternoon, as her contractions becarne more frequent, her hus- Studies show that high-risk pregnancies Includh twins or breech band drove her to the birthing center. babies; advanced maternal age; or pregnancies carried into the 42nd Kingexamined Andrews and decided the back pain and contrac- week. First-time mothers have a higher risk of stalled! Iabor and gentions were likely a urinary tract infection. She sent the couple home, erally have higher rates of medicA intervention. And! women who telling Andrews to tdke vitamin C for tlhe Infection, Andrews said. have had! previous dhlivery problems, including C-sections or infec"She made me feel like I was being a silly, fust-time mom," An- tions, are. at ~higher risk. drews recalls. "I felt shariied that I wasn't handling the pain very Add women who develop high blood pressure or diabetes during

well." pregnancyand the number of low-ri sk women, those who could The pain continued to get worse and she hadn't slept in days. That safely have a home birth, begins to dwindle. night, her husband intervened. Andrews was in theshower screaming Even low-risk pregnancies can become problematic once labor in pain and not even realizing it. "We've got to go back," hesaid. starts. 'Women who don't deliver within 24 hours of their water Page10

SPRIN'6I SUMiMER 2814'i HIGH'DESERTPULSE


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A rough start When Andrews arrived at the hospital, nobody could give her a straight answer about what had happened to Abel. Doctors were able to revive him when they pulled out the breathing tube the paramedics had put in, and her son was now in the neorratal intensive carie unit.. "I think they were trying to be overly understanding of some ireli-

gious beliefs or some anti-medicine beliefs. we had because everyone just kind of tip-toed around us and said nothing~," Andrews said.

'They wouldn't address the issue, wouldn'5 tell us what or why." At flrst doctors thought Abel might do OK. Whey did not opt for a

head-cooling protocol often used to minimize brain damage in babies depi:ived of oxygen during the birth process. Over the next few d'ays, it. became clear Abel was worse off than ilhey had initially expected. They started to talk about the possibiility of developmental

delays. "You think, 'Oh, it'll be a little bit harder to get where he is supposed to be. You're not thinking about disability," Andrews said. "Our main goal was to get hirn out of the hospital." While Abel was recovering in the NICU'Andrews , and her husband met with the midwives at the birthing center.

"They had some really bizarre theories about what had, happenedt" she said. Had she had any milk with growth horrnone in it? Had she taken any antacid? "They thought something might be physiolbgically wrong with

306KUNE

Tara Clasen holds her 3-vveek-old baby, Maggie Layman„in Maggie's roomatherhomein Bend. Clausen planneda homebirth but ultimately was trunsferred ta St. Charles Bend ta deliver.

my body. T'hey asked me if I had subconsciausly not wantedl ~ baby," Andrews said. "So basically they had a lot of Sings that ultimately pointedback to me;" Suddenly the women who prior to the birth had been her best

friends, she said, had turned on her. "What they sell you is the opposite of what tthey did,," Andrews

said.'This caring, in-tune, womanly connection that I was supposed to be having was much worse than how I think a d'octor, a male move barriers to such transfers and now receives about 20 percent doctor, would have 'clinically and coldly' — theii' words, not mineof all the home~birth trangfers iin the state. helped rne through that." Comparing those transferred cases with women choosing cer- The Andrewses took Abel home after il0 days in the NICU. Now tified nurse midwife deliveries in their hospital, Smith found much that they had hirn on their own turf, they could I'ove him and care for worse outcames. Three of the eight deaths in Oregon, in 2012 were hinti and help him catch up from his traumatic start in life. "We thought that would be it," Andrews said.. "iThe nightmare is fromhome births transferred to Legacy.

Smith said the data should be used by both doctors and midwives over." to help women understand thei~ individual risks when choosing in-hospital or at-home births.

Trust ourbodies

"In order to make thoughtful choices, Ilhe women have to under-

The iresurgence of home birth rnight ibe part af a lllarger socioiagstand all the risks and benefits," she said. "And the problem right ical trend. While in the past, horne birthsimlgkt have been the only now is so many out-of-'hospitai providers and in-hospita~l~ providers option for iower.income women who couldn't affowd a hospital birth, don't know all the risks anid benefiits." the cuitrent growth is occurring in a much different demographic Bad outcomes, Smith said, do prompt midwives to restrict such Studies show that women choosing out-of-hospitaI births are pre-

high-risk cases in the futu~re. d'ominantly white, middle-to-higher-income, cdllege-educated wom"We had a second twin that died from an out-of-hospital birth, and en.~ Many have become skepti calof modern medicine,science and that pravider stopped doing multiple births," Smith said. techNology, preferring to rely on thelr own intuition of what is best

SPRIN'6ISUMMER 2014'HIGHDESERT PULSE


for their bodies and their babies. They seek more control over their When Clasen went iinto labor in March, her labor progressed very birth process and worry that doctors will force them down roads quickly and she was pushing hard before she was cornpletely dilatthey would! prefer not to take. ed. She and her midwife decided a transfer to the hospital was the "I believe that more things are likely to go wrong in the hospital safest option. Hei daughter, Maggie, was born naturally just a few setting, things that IIm not comfortable with," Tara Clasen, a Bend rninutes after arnving at the hospital, delivered by a "verycaring and woman who practices ayurvedic medicine (a forrn of aiternatlve nonjudgmental" doctor. medicine native to India), said,a few weeks before her planned home

"I labored entirely at home, which was important to me. Even

birth, in March. "And I also have complete trust in my body's natural though I transferred, midwifery was still a, part of my natural birth sugcess. II had someone with me the whole tlme telling ime my body process. =section was very intelligent and letting me make the decisions," Clasen said. C@sen was concerned that a hospital birth couldmean a C or being induced into ilabor, not being given enough time to deliver "I. wanted to be in control, and uslngia midwife.al!Iowed me that." naturally. She didn't want to be kept from eatingi or dr'Inking during Many home birth advocates also believe the vast majority of labor or frorn moving around freely. medical birth interveritions are unnecessary, and that healthy wom-

She plannedI a horne birth with a certified professional midwife instead, and had prepared for the birth process by choosing the food and drink she would prepare, even the music she would listen to at home during labor. "(My midwife) is going to be encouraging me to use the natural instincts of my body," SIhesaid. "She's also a very calming presence, and she's someone who I know will watch out for signs of trouble and will just be with me." She, too, worries about unqualified providers setting up shop as midwives. She's seen similar attempts in her field of ayurvedic medidne, individuals who take a weekend worIkshop and start to see clients. But with a qualified.midwife, she believes the risks are minirnal. "I feel like a lotof women experience very troUble free home birth,

en with low-r'isk pregnancies face few risks delivering outside the hospital. Theresa and Nick Reid, of Tumaio, went to Canada to have their first chiid delivered in a home birth. Originally from Colorado, she never thought about using a midwife before she became pregnant. "lt was my hippie husband who brought that up„" she said. The Reids decided to give birth in Canada primarilyso thelr daughter, Rogue, could have dual citizenship. They traveled to Sooke, BritiSh Columbia, about a month before the due date, and rented a house on a cliff, with 85 steps from the driveway to the front door.

Their nurse rnidwife was trained in Germany and fully integrated Into the provincial health care system in Canad~, working with locallI dectors and hospitals. The nearest hospital if something went and for those who get transferred to the hospital, at least those wrong was in Victoria, 45 rninutes away. Reid's husband, a former women know they gave their body time and they were able to labor ernergency medical technician, confirrned that local EMTs had the very peacefully for a lot of hours," she said. "I think a Iot of. peopie specialized equipment needed to biiing his wife down the stairs. But assume without knowing tI1at it's more dangerous, but truth be told, ultimately, the two felt confident the birth would go smoothly and it's not What's most Important is Nat the wornan feels completely their midwife could handle any emergency. corrifortable and happy with her choices." ContlnuedonPayeSO

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IHEALTH CARE Eeature EATlNO

12 percent of Oregonians are Latinos; that percentage includes those in the U.S. illegally, excluded from reforms meant to reduce the number of uninsured BY YARABANNOWI PHOVOS BY RYAN BRENNECKE.

n the Hidalgoihousehold, the chairs surrounding the kitchen table

iUndocumented immigrants also can't particlpate. in the sweeping

are covered in plastic in case of spills. Nearby, a wooden cabinet displays the fine china used on special occasions. Fruit sits in wire baskets. Next door in the llvingiroom, the walls of this modest ranch home in Redmond are covered with the faces of loved ones come and gone. It's a happy househol'd. Alive with the giggles of 2-year-olds and the wide smiles of theirparents. But even though they're surrounded by the comiorts of famiiy,,lgnacia and Rogelio Hidalgo can't shake a pervasive fear that lingers beneath the surface of their outward securlty. The couple, who rnoved to the U.S. in 1992 from Guanajuato>Mex-

set of federal reforms designed to improve the nation's health care systern. Undocumented immigrants are prohibited from buying insurance through the federal and state health insurance exchanges, including Oregon's state-run exchange, Cover Oregon. In the coming years, undocumented immigrants will comprise the largest group of uninsured in the U.S. By2024, 9.3 million of the estimated 31 million uninsured nonelderl'y adults In the U.S. will be undocumented, immigrants, according to an estlrnate by the Con-

gressional Budget Office. A lack of access to health insurance is just one among a long list of obstades thatkeepsmembers ofthe undiocumented Latino commu-

ico, seeking treatment for their son with autism, are undocumented Rity fmm seeing doctors and getting the care they.need when health

imrnigrants. It's a highly politicized ter rn that creates an invisible di- issues arise. That contributes to higher rates of diabetes, obesity and vide between the Hidal'gos.and their neighbors and places them in cardiovascular disease ln the Latino community comparedI with oththe companyof an estimated 6.1 million other undocumented immi- er popuIRTJons. grants in the U.S. from ~Mexico who, for the most part, can*t get driv-

er's licenses, horne loans,.food:stamps or unemployment assistance.

An obvious bamer — the first one most people tendi to think of-

islanguage.

Although recent data frem the Pew Hispanic Center shows irnrniBut that's a small obstacle comparedI with Iblgger things, like culgration into the U.S. frorn Mtexico is at a standstill, Mexicans still rep- tural barriers, said Laura Pennavaria, the rnedical director for Mosa-

resent the largest group of irnmigrants in the U.S., at12 million of the ic Medical's Bend Clinic. Nhen she moved to Central Oregon from country's current 40 million. Southern California nearly two years ago, Pennavaria said,' the hoPaie14

SPRING I SUMMER2014' i HIGHDESERTPULSE


undoeurnented status leaves Igrimia arid Rogelio worried abaut theii lack ofheatthinsurance.

mogeneous population and comparatively small Latino population was a major culture shock. "Culture is the very essence of who we are," she said, "and if you don't have a lot of expos~ure to someone else's culture, you may not

heal on its own. The next morning, a terrible headache forced her to seea doctor,who told hershe w as fine and sentherhome. The next day, the pain forced her to return, and X~rays.irevealed internal b'leeding. recognize the subtle things that come with that culture. I think that's Sitting at her kitchen table on a recent evening, Ignacia, a slight a big barrier for Latino patieIIIts." woman with her dark hair tightly pulled back, recalied rnonths of not For Ignacia and Rogelio Hidalgo, whose household.includes their being ab'le to work because of the headaches, which;persist today. three children and one grandchild, their undocumented status Food orinsurance7 comes with a whole lot of worry. 'You're always thinking, 'If this happens, what would I do?" said In many cases, the barriers to insurance extend even to those who lgnacia,48."It's something that I think we have to live with every day are in the U.S. legally. — just thinking, 'We just can't get sick.'" Children of undocumented immigrants who were born after their Not getting sick was the goal, but it's proved far from reality. parents arrived in the country are citizens and thus legally eligible Three years after, the couple rnovedthemselves and their, two young to benefit from state-funded programs, such as (he.Oregon Health children to the U.S., their. then 4-year-old daughter, Antonia, was dii- Plan, but im any of them don't. That's partly cultural. Many wlthin the Latino community are priagnosed with leukemia and.underwent three grueling years ofbeing driven back and forth to PortlaeId for treatment. vate and averse to the idea of seeking ,'help from pu'blicly funded

Then just last year, 50-year-old Rogelio was diagnosed with Type l diabetes, which he's managlng it on. his own. And as careful as she had learned to be, Ignacia moved an 8-foot ladder last spring without noticing the drill on the top rung. It,fell square on the top of her head'. She went to sleep, hoping it would SPRING/SUMMER 2014 iHIGH DESE'RTPULSE

programs, said Alberto Moreno, executive director of the Oregon Latino Health Coalition. But there's a bigger issue, too. Determining a chiild's eligibility for

such assistance.requires a signifIcant arnount of information from the parents — incomes, proof of residency — just enough to make


iiH CARE Feature LATINO I HEALT

some people too nervous to go through with It out of concem that their information could be passed along to U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services and ultimately get them deported.

"They're afraid of plaang their entire families at risk by seeking out services for those children, even when those children qualify," Moreno said. That's iproved ta be 6 hindrance to getting ~Latinos signed uip for health insurance under thie Affordable Care Act. In addition to U.S. citizens, anyone wlth legali Iresidency is allowed to purchase insur-

Latino poyulations in Deschutes, Crook and Jefferson coumties IiescbisitesCeiiiityi 76'percent

~lend:82ipetcent;Redmond: 12.5perceiit CIreokCeaiwty: 75 percent.Prliieviiis:iiN.',Ipeeent JNtfesseNCoiis+: 198petcerit.Mcicfrhe38.S psfj8tit ~e e e ver6¹AbaLit U. peiesnr.

ancefrom the state and federaIexchanges. Officials with Cover Oregon declined to provide the number of

Latinos who have en~olled in plans, but misconceptions have been rampant across the country that undocurnented individuals who try to enroll their children will be deported. President Barack Obama spoke on the topic at a March event promoting Latino enrollment in health insurance that was broadcast on Spanish-speaking media outlets such as Tielemundo and Univision. He promised. that inforination provlded for the purpose of signing up for heahh insurance wiill not)be given to immigration officials. A host presented Obama with the scenaiio of an undocumented mother who was afraid signing up her children for insurance would put her at risk in a country that sees more than 1,000 deportations per day. "Of course I understand the fear," Obamasaid. For others, the focus is much more immediate than health. insurance. In a lot of immigrant households, the focus is simply on get-

Healthinsurance states

ting by. The estimated 160,000 migrant farm workers in Oregon

X4pssceet ~

have annual salaries of less than $10,000, Moreno said. Heestimates an average of $7,200 of that is spent on rent, leaving about $2,800 for food, clothing and school sepplies Ior the kids.

Rop~ l l vedIn~son ~Ny;

"Many of these families are then faced with a real and painful de-

cision of whether or not to put food on their children's table or purchase a health insuraInce policy that they may or may never need~" Moreno said.

Arreeg Cenlia'IOregan Latinas serredibytheLatinaCqrnttiunity AssetilatiÃx

Ck percentsreu'ninsured;11percent steirisetexli

Clients served by the Latino Community Association in 2M3 Thtellipeepleserved:1434(1,41'I ad'ults,223ahiildieIril Tirtiidiservlcesprevlded 2,933 SIpercentmake between $1G,Q GG.and $2G~QGIIstinusily. tp perse|itmskelless then $'1QQQG snnudiy. % pefsMt@Hlot%6rk. Lsisirtlilsi 2 pertsinl rr@keimaie tihsri $4G ICI(}ti

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Rperesltilvedeisewhee. lopsirveistwerebcrn txoideoftbt U5 'N percentwere barninthe U.S. SivtteL'aOW~mgrAy Asso@go~sutvey.

It's a phenamenon that the ~Latino Community Association — an

organization with offices in Bend, Redmond and Madras that helps "It's ibeen impressive," she said. "People are coming out of the connect iiatinos with legal, educational, health and other services- woodwerk." is intimately familiar with. For its ciients, 90 percent of whom are im- Castillo, a 48-year-old Bend resident who aSked to be referred to migrants and 82 percent of whom are uninsured, health insurance is only ~byone of his two Ilast names because he is undocumented, had a luxury that's simply not on their radar. a similar expedience about three years ago with his wife, who is also "Thefocus becornes very much.just money,money, moneyundbcumented. economic," said Brad Porterfield, the LCA's executive director.'The Gne day Castillo, who spoke with a reporter through an interpretfocus as an organization is just on helping people survive and get er, said he rushed her to the emergency roarn.because of severe by." pain iniher head and neck Her blood pressure had gotten so high, it

OMt of the woochivork

serit her into a one4ay corna.

Castillo, who moved to the U.S. from Mexico ini 1989, also strug-

Aches and bumps go unchecked. Coughs persist. Until, months or gies with high blood pressure and high chalesterol, which he mainyears later, they becorne something far more serious. talns with ihelp from providers at Voiunteers iiii Medicine in Bend, a

In ane case, Pennavaria said she recently saw a Latino patient on clinic that provides services to uninsured Centrali Oregoniians regardthe first day his insurance kicked in. She admitted him straight to tihe less of their ability to ipay. hospital with a seriaus respiratory.infection — a side eflIect af inot Castillo first learned about VIM when a friend gave him a pam-

having seen a doctor for qulte some time. Peoe16

phlet. The clinic provides more than medical care — they've helped SPRIN'6I SUMiMER 2814'i HIGHDESERT PULSE


their Redmond home.

him sort through medical bills and connected him with programs to help pay them. That help was especially. important four years ago when his stepson got in a car accident tihat required four ambulance rides, transports to three hospitals and an airlift to Portland. He died from his injuries. Castillo, who works as a cook, said the naturalization process is extremely cornplicated, but he's ju~st rnonths away from the finish line. Like most people he knows, he's had to hire a lawyer to help navigate the paperwork at a prlce tag of-$5,000. Patients like Castillo, once they become citizens and obtain insurance, no longer will be able to go to VIM for care, as the dinic only

Since many of the patients are low-income, they gained coverage under OHP — and almost immediateiy began making appointments wit'h Mosaic Medical, a provider with clinics in Bend, Redmond, Madras and Prineville that accepts Medicaid recipients and offers services on a sliding fee scale. Leaders at Mosaic expected an uptick, but the number of new OHPpatients who called the clinic in January exceeded their predictions for the entire year. "It felt like a tsunami," Pennavaria said. "lt would Ibe patient after patient, VIM transfer, VIM transfer, VilM transfer because they sud-

di.nly have insurance." Castillo has been trying to get appointrnents outside of YIM but

said other clinics are too busy to get him in. In. eesponse, VIM has seives uninsured patients. decided to allow patients to keep coming evenifthey. have insurance VIM's executive dlrector, IKatherlne Mastrangelo, expects undoc- until they can see a different provider, said Jennie Davis, VIM's refer-

urnented immigrants will cornprise a rnuch larger proportion of the ral coordinator.and interpreter. c8nic'-s patient population afterthe Implementation of the Affordable

'"Once you're in, it's a little bit easier," she said, "but your first ap-

Care Act, although — as with most medical providers — immigra- pointment can be months out just because the clinics are. super' tion status is not a question«theyask.

VIM has been aggressive in getting eligible patients insured under the ACA, even requiring that everyone go through the eligibility determination process. SPRIMG/SUMMER 2014 iHIGH DESE'RTPULSE

jami IIied'

Getting momtothe dcxtor For years, Carmelo Felix and his family have focused nearly all of


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SPRIN'6ISUMMER 2814'HIGHDESERT PULSE


Feature LATINO I HEALTHCARE

"They don't know why their gums are bleeding or they don't know why their teeth hurt," she said, "There's not a cavity there. It's just the periodontal (gum) disease, and they do go to the ER for that." Emergency physicians tend to simply send such patients home with antibiotics, which actually don't help in cases of gum disease, Hammerquist said. Infections in the mouth can cause blood sugar spikes, which can be dangerous for diabetics, she said. One way or another, dental problems tend to spill over to the rest of the body, Hammerquist sald. "Because they can't see that periodontal disease, they let it go and then pretty soon they're losing teeth," she said. "And pretty soon

But Ignacia persisted. She began taking English classes at Central Oregon Community College, hopeful that she eventually would be able to get help for Mel, who is now 24 years old. "I did care, but I was more focusing on finding help for my son," said Ignacia, who now speaks English fluently. That fear and mistrust is common arnong new immigrants to Central Oregon; many of whom feel they don't belong, and, as a

result, don't hold much hope for the future, said Miguel Angel Herrada, who worked with the LCA to enroll Latino.iridividuals in health

insurance through Cover Oregon. "That's a very human concept that is important. to our welfare," he said. "If you don't trust the organizations, if you don't trust your government, if you don't trust other people, if you don't trust your

their chewing ability is not there, so they're not eating properly." community, you feel isolated." Latino immigrants also face a higher risk of accidental injuries But ~RuthZambrana, a women's studies professor at the Universithan the general population given the large proportion that end up ty of Maryland and director of its Consortium on Race, Gender and working in fields, on construction sites or in meat processing, More- Ethnicity, said placing the blame entirely on. the immigrants is an no said. Ironically, those jobs tend not to offer health insurance. uninformed perspective. The bigger problem, she said, is a public But for many immigrants, it's still preferable to the environment that is generally unfriendly toward imrnigrants, especially in prethey came to the U.S. to escape. dornlnantly white, English-speaking areas. More than half of the LCA's clients came from Michoacan, a

"The greatest issue I think the Latinos and Mexican immigrants in

southwestern Mexican state plagued with violence and economic particular face is the lack of welcoming from a society which then inequality. Some people still struggle with extortion plots against

pushes them not to interact," said Zambrana, who has studied Lati-

them even after the+e moved, Porterfield said.

no populations for decades. "I mean, who wants to be rejected and given loo'ks?"

"Michoacan seems to be one of the worst areas right now," he sald. Health care reform has brought positive changes for many Latino families. Felix and his parents, with help from the LCA, recently were enrolled in OHP through Cover Oregon. Now, Felix said, he will try to see a bone specialist who can treat the knee injuries he sustained playing soccer years ago that still hurt today.

Too often, research into Latino health disparities places too much ernphasis on the Latino culture and not enough on their socioeconomiic status and longstanding patterns of uniequal treatment, Zarnbrana said. She advocates for increased research into the institutional barriers and structural inequalities that contribute to such disparities. Residents of many small, predominantly white communities in

But first, he'll make sure his mom, who also suffers from kidney the U.S. quite simply haven't been exposed to people who look difstones and had tumors rernoved in the past, sees a doctor. ferent from them, which naturally creates a "your way is the only "Now Ican take my mom to get checked outand make sure ev- way" rnentality„said de Leon Siantz, the UC Davis professor. "If you don't have high levels of education that have opened your erything is OK with her after everything that's been going on," Felix said. "Ican go and getmy rnom checked outand make sure she's mind to thinking more broadly, that tends to color the lens that you're looking through when different people come in," she said. healthy."

Isolated families

The V.S. is currently experiencing a second irnmigration boom

that involves more people of color, whereas the first wave at the turn For a long time after Ignacia and Rogelio Hidalgo arrived in Red- of the centuiry involved Western Europeans, de Leon Siantz said. "Central Oregon is a microcosm of what's occurring in small commond with their two young chlldren, they didn't talk to anyone. "At that time, we did'n't see a lot of Hispanic people around," Igna- munities around the United States," she said. cia said. "We almost didn't see any. It was pretty hard." By 2050, de Leon Siantz says the Hispanic population in the The family first lived in California for eight months after moving U.S. will increase by 188 percent. Within the same time frame, the to the U.S. while they pursuedltreatment for their son, Mel, who was non-Hispanic w'hite population will increase byjust 7 percent. 2 years old at the time. They ~moved to Central Oregon so that RogThat rneans promoting education among t'he Hispanic children elio could donate a kidney to his ibrother, who was suffering from a In the country today must be a priority„she said. Currently, about deadly kidney disease. 50 percent of Latino children do not graduate from high school, After the surgery, Rogelio constantly urged his wife to move the d'e Leon Siantz said. They also experience a higher rate of teenage

family back to California. Or Mexico. Anywhere where people spoke pregnancy and depression. 'There's really a strong need to focus on how can we promote Spanish and would understand them. iRTPULSE SPRING/SUMMER2014„H'IGHDESE


Feature LATINO I HEALTHCARE

the academic achievements of the children goes to the doctor. In fact, he's only been of thesedocumented and undocumented to the doctor once since coming to the U.S. "It's just because he doesn't like it," Herimmigrants," she said, "because on their shoulders rests our economic success and nandez said.

terpreting, a laptop on a cart that's wheeled

He's not alone. U.S. Census Bureau data in 2010 found that 42 percent of Hispanics Bridging the language gap said they didn't visit a doctor once in 2010, In both her job and in 'her persona'I life, almost double that of white and black reCabriela Hernandez gets a close look at the spondents. In the same survey, 73 percent barriers Latinos face to seeing doctors. of Hispanics said they never used prescripThe 21-year-old COCC student works part tion medication. time as a medical interpreter. She sees and JennÃer Fuller, a nurse manager at Volunhears about the intense fears patients har- teers in Medicine, said she's noticed a tenbor. Those who are undocurnented often dency among Latino patients more than believe if they go to the doctor's office, the other groups to stop taking their medicastaff will tuin their information over to im- tions once they start feeling better, even if migration officials, ultimately resulting in they're supposed to keep taking them. "A lot of education goes into, 'OK, you their deportation. "Once I interpreted for a patient that did have this diagnosis of diabetes. It's very imnot want to give me any information," Her- portant to keep taking this rnedication until nandez said."She didn't want to give me her the doctors say,"' she said. address, Social Security number. She didn't The patients Hernandez talks to say want to show me her ID.... The Hispanic they would feel more comfortable seeing community is afraid. They're afraid they'll a doctor who speaks Spanish rather than give up the information and lt will separate one who speaks English and using an intertheir families." preter. For most patients in Central Oregon„ Hernandez, whose parents moved to the though, that's not an option. Mosaic Medical does allow patients to U.S. from Nicaragua more than two decades

doctor, and vice versa. The provider spec-

and hopes to graduate in June. Both of her small number who prefer an interpreter if a parents are legal residents, but they're not friend or family member recommended a yet citizens. specific provider who does not speak SpanFor Hernandez's mother„who doesn't ish, Pennavaria said. speak English, language is the primary barMosaic has the most providers in Cenrier that keeps her from seeing a doctor. For tral Oregon — around 100, half of its total

Spanish-speaking patients. Ideally, clinics would hire bilingual physicians rather than

our scientific future."

into the room with the patient and doctor. The program works a lot like Skype in that the interpreter can see the patient and the ifies the language and gender that the patient prefers in an interpreter (often female

patients prefer female interpreters, for example). St. Charles Madras was the first to implement the video interpreting service about three years ago, and ~Redmond and Prineville followed suit in fall 2013. Before that, St. Charles' ER interpreters worked on an on-call basis. If a patient needed one,he orshe had to waitbetween 15 and 20 minutes for one to arrive at the hospital'. Porterfield, of the LCA, said he thinks St. Charles, particularly in its Madras hospital,

should have bilingual providers who are able to work with patients rather than using interpreters. "It blows my mind that Madras doesn't have more Spanish-speaking staff at their hospital'," he said.

Nearly 39 percent of Madras' population

is Latino, according to 2010 Census data. In Bend, that nurnber is about 8 percent, comago, was born in Los Angelles. Her family choose whether they prefer to see a Span- pared with 12.5 percent in Redmond. Moreno, with the Oregon Latino Health m oved to Redmond aboutseven yearsago, ishwpeaking provider or use an interpreter. and to Bend three years ago. She is study- If they don't speak English, most prefer a Coalition, said interpreters are not the most ing to earn her medical assista~t certificate Spanish-speaking provider, but there are a culturally competent way to provide care to

others, it's cultural. Hernandez knows many

Latinos who prefer using horne remedies over prescription drugs. Then. there's the invincibility factor present to some degree in all communities.

"Especially the males — since most of

employing physicians in addition to interpreters, he said. "Not only does it make service sense, but it makes financial sense to make use of and staff — who are at feast proficient in Span- hire providers who are bilingual and biculish, said Haine Knobbs, Mosaic's director of tural," Moreno said. programs and development. The clinic also In other parts of the state, Moreno said has full-time interpreters on staff and anoth- he's seen situations in which male interer staff member who trains others in health preters were called in for a female patient's literacy and cultural cornpetency, she said. visit, a situation that could rnake some For scheduled visits, St. Charles Health female patients uncornfortable. In other

them have a very dorninant role — they feel they don'tneed to get checked out," she System usually arranges to have an inter- cases, patients' children were used as insald. preter in the room with the doctor and pa- terpreters, a practice he said is "grossly That's true for Hernandez's father, who tient. St. Charles does not track which of its inappropriate."

"Imagine a 9-year-old child or a 12-yearworks as a merchandiser for a wine and providers speak Spanish. beer distributor. Even though his job proFor emergency room visits, St. Charles old child having to tell their mother that vides insurance — which also covers Her- Bend in March implemented a new video she's pregnant all of a sudden or that she nandez and her mother — he very rarely interpreting program called InD~emand In- has cancer," he said.

SPRING l SUMWtER 2614 HIGH DESERTPULSE


'He's a m|mcl'e' After she finished her leukemia treat-

ments, doctors warned .Antonia Hidalgo that future pregnancies would come with a high risk of gong into early 4bor

cates for equal access to education, health care and economic opportunities for Latinos in Central Oregon. Not all ofher siblings are so lucky, Sough. Her older brother, Mel, who.is severely impacted by autism, lost eligibility for services

lupe, and two younger brothers, 13-year-old .Daniel and 20-year-old Miguel, all were born in the U,S. and are thus citizens. Still, Antonia

said they don't qualify for OHP and her parents can't afford to buy private insurance for the kids while supporting the family on one

due to the damaging effects of the chemotherapy and radiation. A little rnore than two years. ago, An= tonia — Ignacia and Rogelio's 23-year--old daughte~ — learned~ the Ihard way. that

three years ago when he turned 21 t. IMe'I, who income — lgnacia cleans.houses but Rogelio graduated ifromi Redrnond High School in is out of work. Fortunately, unlike their fami. 2008, previously. was able to attend different ly members, the kids have thus far remained camps and benefited ffom various disabil- healthy. Although it's not possi'ble to get an official ity Iprograms. Antonia stIII d'rives him to the they were right. After she became preg- Opportunity Foundation, a nonprofit organi- count on the number of'unfdocurnented indi;

nant, she had.two bleedingi episodes., Af- zation in Redrnond that serves people with ter the first, she went to the hospital and intellectual disabilities, every. Wednesday to commenced months of worrying wheth- interact with other clients. "He likes to go there," Antonia said. "He er her son would be OK. Antonia went into preterm labor at loves people, he really does. But that's an16 weeks of pregnancy and spent rnore other worry. If he gets sick, he doesn't have

viduals Iiving in Central Oregon, Ignacia said, there are many imixed-immigration status families like hers, and everywhere they go,

than three months in the hospital before health care, either."

their families, she said~.

people ask for iidentification. Many of them

have lived in the U'.S.for decades, and they've spent that time trying to build a better life for

"People that I know Woiik rea'Ily hard and the delivery. Her son, Jose Loreto, was Mel is not eligible for the sarne legal status born more than 2Ã months premature as Antonia because his disability renders him they don't d'eserve not to have what they and spent the first rnonth of his life in the unable to work. need," Ignacia said. 'That's sad. For me, that's neonatal intensive care unit. Antonia's younger sister, 2«year-old Cuada- sad."• Today, he"s a healthy, energetic 2-year-old. "He's a miracle, he really is," Antonia sald.

Antonia was able to have the expenses from her pregnancy and delivery cov ered under OHP, which saved the single =

mom from what would ~like have been

insurrnountable debt. Antonia, whose parents moved her to the U.S. with them as a~ 1-year-oid, lives in the U.S. legally und'er Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, a policy iimplemented through a June 2012 memorandum issued by President Obama. It doesn't allow her to get federal student financial

aid, but she managed to land two private scholarships that have helped her becorne trained as a nursing assistant. She first attended classes at COCC and, more

recently, at Regency Paofic, a senior care provider that also hosts a nursing assistant training program. Stle has completed the coursework, hut ~has yet to take

the firral exam. Antonia's legal residency depends on her staying employed. She works as a secretary at a nonprofit organization called Recursos Latinos, which advo-

D esigning the ~

4 a"

ar oun d y a u . C omplemett ts Hom e I t t t e t i o t s 70 SW Century Dr. Suite 145 3end, OR 97702 541.322.7337 www.entnpletnenteitome.cotn

SPRIMG/SUMMER 2014 iHIGH DESE'RTPULSE


Healthy eating sNAcKpAcKIMG

How do some home-packed snacks stack up to their prepackaged competitionT Read on to find out. BYALANDRA JOHNSON

t's a well-esta5ished fact."Kids love snacks. The best snacks for children are portable, healthy, easy for kids to eat and easy on parents'wallets. Grocery aisles are now packed with snack choices, specifically packaged and marketed for kids and the parents who feed thern. But we wondered how these.relatively new packaged snackscompared with,you know, regul ar food..So we

putthem i n head to-head racesto see how these.snacks stacked up. In almost ali cases the prepackaged snacks required less preparation but ended up costing more. Here's a detailed breakdown for various packaged snacks and some regular food alternatives, as each item tries to win the snack race into your kid's belly.•

0• 0,"

Crunchy, bite-sized matchup

Yogurt matchup

aoldSshcrackers:Ubiquitousfish-shaped cracker comes in espeCialy handy packagesperfect for smallihands; Nutritioninformation (per snack packet):Calories 130'fat45 g; saturated fat1 g; sodium 240mg;.carbohydrates 19 g; fiber lessthan 1 g; protein 3 g. Handt'ulofll®htlyselta+toastediallnonds:Small, crunchy nutsoffer a satisfying,lightlysaited snack Nuttition information (per V4cup):Calones 180'fat 16g; satuiated fat 1 g;sodium 60 mg;carbohydrates 6cl; fiber4 g;

Plalniyoguttmixedwith appIesauce:This yogurt requires a 'dish arid

protein 7'g. ResultaWithtvvice as rnuch protein and more.than four times the fjber (not

to mention one-fourththesadhium)> a'lrnandssurge in fiont ofthe goldfish.,

6olust: Easy-to-eat sticks offruit-flavored yogurt a'Iso come with added sugar. ¹trition information (per2.25 oztube): Calories 60„fat..5 g;sodium 30 rng; sugars 9 g;protein 2 g;calciurn100 rng. spoon, which meansadded preptime.But this corn'bo also means noadded sugars or artifidai flavors. Nutriiion information (bassed on 2 oz plain nonfat Nancy'syogurt mixed with 2 ozunsweete~edTree Tapapplesauce): Calofies SS fat0 g; sugar 83 g;fiber1 g; protein 3 g;calciurn 117mg. Rosults:Gogurt has the dear prep-time advantage here,ibut with sugar as its second~ingredient it ultimatelycould notovertake the powerfdl combinatlan of plain yogurtand applesauce,which eked out a leacl

SPRiNG I SUMIIAER 2014' HIGHDESERT PULSE


Fruity matchup

pFU q pS

Crnlt hltespackaye:Portable, tasty,gummy and rnade with some fruit juice, these snacksarequite popular. They also stickto teeth, rriaking thern a dentist's nightmare, and — atleast samebrands —contain corn syrup, sugar, artif!Ciall flavors andcolors. Nutritioninformation (per.8oz package of Sunkist brand!):Calories80;fatQ g; sodium 25mgI carbohydrates19 g; sugars 12g; !protein 0; alsocontains100 percentofdailyvitarnin c. 6rapes:Tasty, portable:and naturally sweet, grapes make agreat snack. Mutritlocninforrnation (per1 cup}: calories 62;fat,3 g; sodium 2 mg; carbohydtates 15.8 g;fiber-0.8 g; sugars 149 g; protein 6.8 g.

ResnltnThis one wasn'teven dose. Grapesarejustaseasy toeatarid!prep as frurit bites, yet their natural sugarsare afar better choice than the sticky, artficial sugars found in 'the fruit snacks. Grapes bya rnile,

Cheesy-p'Ius-cracker matchup

+

rf

• i 1 'p;.

Lunchahle:There's a reasonthese packaged cracker.,cheese and.lunch meatcombos have beenaround so long. They're easytoeat, easy to pack anChsuper processedandifilled with sodium. Nutritiori,inforrnation (per one 3.20zturkey; cheddar and crackerLunchable):Calories.256; f'at13 g;saturated fat 6 g;trans fat,5 g; cholesterol40mg; sodiurn 670mg,'carbo'hydrates 22g; Aber lessthan1 g; sugars4g; protein 12g. Strlnycheeseandcrackers:Get thatquick hitofzheeseand crackers with a stringi cheeseand a handful of whole wheatci'ackers. Nutrition lnform!ation (per one Trader Joe'sbrand string cheese and 148Ite SizeEverything Crackers); calories 22Q; fat t0 g; saturated fat 3 g; traris fat 6 mgi cholesterol 15

mg; s'odiurn 370mg;carbohydrates 22 g; Aber2,g; sugars 2 g;protein 11 g. Resalts:Yes,you could probablyfind healthier chaicesthan either'of these, butstii'ng cheeseand a cracker containing fiber packs n!eaiiy as rnuch protein andI Iess saturated fat than the Lunchables slternativei not to mention about

!half of the sodlum. Thestring cheeseand crackersare cruisingto victory in this cornpetition,.

Bar versusIPBMmatchup g. •

',cc +'e:

Cliff BarXhar:On-the-goeating is easywith these bars aimed at kids, which havs protein and fiber. Nutrition informatien, (per 1.27bar,chocolate brownieffavoi): calories 120;fat 3.5 g;saturated fat1 g; sodlum135 mg; carboti!ydrates 22 g;fiber 3 g; sugars11 g protein 2 g. (Aisocontains variety of ,added vitamins andminerals). Half'peanat hntterandjelllrsandwlch:The dassic is backlYes,it requiressome prep work, but peanut butterandjellysandw!ichesare apretty qu'ick flx. Nutdition iinformstion (per one piece whole wheat brea'd, 1 TBS

homernad'e raspberryj!'am„ T85/Idam' 1 s peanut bu!Iter): cateries 240;fat85g; sati!Irated fat125;,sodium 275 mg.. carbohydrates 37 gi fiber 4 g sugars 125 g; iprotein 7.5 g,

ResaaltaThis one is the tightest raceyet. While the dsssic half P88dhas more protein and fiber(andis cheaper), italso hasmore tugar and sodium. When rall edge to the Zbar; you add in the prep time, weare giving an ever-so-srn PHOlO ILUJSTRATIONSBYROBKERR ANDANDY ZEIGERT

SPRING/SUMMER 2014 iHIGHDESE'RTPULSE

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5

AIES'SAHDRQTROVATI r IHE ASSQCIATED PRESS

Bends LaurenneRossmakesajumpduring the women'sdownhillat the Sochi Gamesin February. Ross finished 11thin theevent.

World Cup skier and Olyrnpian Laurenne Ross find's ways to maintain fitness during her offseason

Canada, and she talked about her workout regiirnen, herinutritional choices and life as a competitive ski racer. A typical day this time of year for Ross, 25, staits with weight lift-

ing in the morning and then some cardio or core/balance work. For cross training, she often cruises singletrack trails near Bend on her moiIIntain bike.

BY 1WARKMORICAL

pring and eatIly summer is the only tirne of year that Laurenne

Ross is not imrnersed i~n the woi'ld of alpine ski racing and trainingi

Tlhe U.S. Ski Team mernber and 2014 Olympian from Bend uses this time as sornewhat of an esca,pe,when she can go rock clirnbing, mountain biking and surfing, or play music and take dasses at the University of Oregon in Eugene.

By late July she will be in South America or New Zealand, training with the rest of the 'L.S, team. But during the spring and early summer offseason, she~mu~st find ways to stay in ski-racing shape on her own. We reached Ross via email while she was betweeniracing events fn

"Itt's such a good cardio workout, and also strengthens your legs and fast-twitch musdes, which you don't getwith many other cardio sports," Ross says of mountain biking. "lt's another sport that I often find my flow in, and I can work on my timing and line When I'm downhill riding, which is relatable to skiing. i think skiing and mountain blking possess a lot of similarities and require a lot of the same physical and mental.strength. Plus it's one of the rriost fun ways to get an iinsane'ly good workout." Rock dimbing at Smith Rock State Park in Terrebonne is another

enjoyablIe way that Ross maintai~s her edge — both physically and mentally„ Ross says her favorite clirnbing routes at Smith Rock are Magic Light and Toxic. The most challenging route she has attempted is Chain Reaction, which is a 5.12c, in the "very diflIiculIt" range.

SPRIN'6I SUMMER 2814'i HIGHDESERTPULSE


"Rockdimbing providesamentalchallenge sirnilartoskfing,atleastforme I.tfsseemingly dangerouswhenyou'reactuallyon thewall, withevervmovebeingaNcalaridrigorous. You eithermaketherightmoveand position your bodyconectiy, oryoufall — Laurenne Ross

Aneailystaiton theslopes Born in Edmonton, A'Iberta, Ross got her start iin skiing near Cal-

gary when she wasjust 2. Her father, Rob Ross, had been aski racer andI was eager to get his three daughters on the slopes at young ages. The family moved frorn Edrnonton to Klamath Falls when Laurenne,the middle daughter, was 5,and she.began skii ing and training with the Bend based Mt. Bachelor Sports 'Educaton Foundation. On winter weekends, the farnily would drive the 140 miles to Bachelor. Ross was involved in a range of other sports, but skiing eventually won eut over another love, gymnastics. Laurenne was named to the U.S. Ski Team jIust after graduating fram Kfamath Union Wigh School, and she has .now been on the tearn for seven years. She made the Wold Cup Circuit in 2010, and after:a few injury-plagued seasons, she posted, asecond-place finish in:a down'hill event during the 2012-13season. Laurenne moved to Bend about three years ago> about the same tiRIre Iher parents did so. Rob is the medical director of comrnuni. pHGToQxlRTEsYlANEYPURvls

Ross has mony otherinterestsbesidesskiing,including rockciimbing at

ty health strategies for St. Charles Medical Group, and janey Purvis, Laurenne's mother and Rob's wife, is a farnily physician at Bend Me-

Smith RockState Park.

rnorial Clinic.

An Olympicopportunlty "Rock climbing provides a rnental. challenge similar to skiing, at least for me," Rosssays. "It is seemingly dangerous when you're acAt the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi, Russia, in February, Ross fintually on the wall, with every rnove being critical and'rigorous. You ished 11th in the downhill. She also competed in the super cornbined either make the right move and position your body correctly, or you (dowrihlll and slaiom) and super-G but did not Inish those events. fall, But the falls typically are net as dreadful or impacting as they are "I was really happy with how the races went for me," Rosssays. "I in skiing, which is quite nice. went into the games with no expectations. I just wanted to soak it "I enjoy rock dlirnbing so much because everything else in the up, enjoy the experience, race my hardest and I leave with no regrets. world just disappears when you're on the wall; it's just you andI the "Unfortunately, I was unable to finish two out of the three events I rock, and that flow is something that is so rare for me when I'm not racedin at the Olympics, so that was a bummer. But.l deflnitely skied on my skis." fast, even when I:didn't make it to the frnihh line, and that's what I While rock climbing and mountain biking are a crucial component went there to accomplish." of her offseason regimen, Ross also grinds it out in the gym about Aside frorn her llth-place finish in the d'ownhlll, the highlight of iour tirnes per week,, worIking on ski-specific muscles. Such work- the Sochi Gamesfor Rosswas the opening ceremonies. "It started imy whole experience off with a bang, and left me feelouts include power cleans, box jumps, bike sprints and core work Maintaining, strong core mu~scles for balance, Ross exphins, is in-

ing so motivated and blessed to be ama'ng, so many taiented ath-

credibly important for'alpine skiracers. letes, part of such an incredible team, performirig with and in front "A lot of peopfe think we just get in the gym and squat for hours, of the world," she explains. Rass' parents and sisters — Allana, 29, and Hilary, 22 — traveled but core workouts are actiiaily more common," Rosssays."Fighting g-forces at high speeds takes a lot of core strength, along with leg to Sochi to watch Laurenne make her Olympic debut. and upper-body strength." She wrapped up her season in late March byIplaeing 11th in the giSPRIMG/SUMMER 2014 iHIGH DESE'RTPULSE


Pefile (LAURENNEROSS

ant slalorn at the U.S.National Championships in SquawValley, Calif.

you would if you ate aquickand easy(not as healthy) meal~,"she says.

~Eatlng right

Making timetojarn

Training and preparation is a constant in the life of a World Cup Apart from skiing, mountain bikingi and rock clirnbing, Ross has and Olympic skier — and maintaining proper nutrition is a crucial many. interests. Perhaps her most profound inon-sports passion is factor in that preparation. Ross says she does not have a strict diet, mMsic. She grew up around music and has blossorned into an avid but she tries to eat as healthy as possible, not always an easy task guitarist, pianist and singer who travels with her Little Martin guitar when traveling throughout the world about eight months of the during the World Cup season.

"It is such a good stress-reliever when I'rn on the road, and it puts year. "It's really hard to keep up with the amount of cal'ories we burn me in a whole other world wheri my skiing world gets small and during the winter, so semetimes your diet can't be all greens and tough to understand; Ross says of playing music.. "Music allso just meats," Ross explains. "A lot of tirnes during the winter we don't have rnakes rne feel so full and it's such a great way to relate to peoplemuch of a choice as to what.our meals are (when we're staying iin getting together andjamming is one of my favorite social activities." hotels, etc.) so I typically ship a box of food over to Europe at the beDrawing and knitting are two other hobbies for Ross, who.admits ginning of the seasoniin order to stay healthy and get the nutrients that sometimes she has trouble spreading herself too thin with all that I need. her passions. Shesays ski racing and training always come first, but "I have learned to really love and appreciate American natural she is constantly seeking a balance with her other interests. "I fIInd that I.'m always happiest when I've got my drawing pad, food stores from spending so mutIh time in Europe. When I'rn over there I dearly miss kombucha, hearty seeds and nuts, and popcorn!" knitting, skis and my guitar by my side," Rosssays. "They're my best Ross adds that taking the extra tirne to cook a healthy meal-

friendis: all so different, but they all contdbute to my completeness

when she has the time — Is well worth it. Her advice in preparing andihappiness." meals is to"make time and take your: time." Ross no doubt will enjoy this offseason, but soon she will be back "It canbe so muchmore delicious andyou'll f'eel so muchbetter than chasiing snow, Such is the life of a World Cup skier,•

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Laurenne Ross, left is pictured withher motherJaney Purirf'5, her father Rob Ross,and'her youngersister Hifary Ross in Hawaiilast year.

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The charity ride benefiting cancer survivors and their families offers 5 routes of varying distance and new this year a foot race BYTABABAMIOW

n two months, hundreds of, people frorn around the country will

arnass in Bend for the annual cancer fundraiser Tour des Chutes. But this year — the nonprofit bike tour's 10th anniversarythe vision and mission are bigger than ever before. The most obvious change is an expansion f'rorn being, a bicyclist-only event to including runners as well. That's to honor the memory of the late Johanna Olson, a runner who inspired many in Bend while battling the sarne type of brain turnor that Tour des Chutes' founder, Gary Bonacker, lives with. "She and l were chemo pals; we would sit next to each other during chemotherapy," said Benacker, who continues to suffer seizures from the tumor doctors first discovered in 2003. Olson, a Minnesota native, di'ed in 2013 at age 34 after battling

cancer for15 years. Shecame to Bend to train for the Olympic trials in marathon running, which she qualified for twice, and worked at Central Oregon Comrnunity College. The proceeds from the event's running component will benefit the Pediatnc Foundation, a new charity launched in part using $20,000 of the proceeds from last year's Tour des Chutes event that

will provide financial assistance to families of children with cancer. As in previous years, the bicycBst proceeds will go to St. Charles

cancer survivorship programs, which support cancer survivors and their families with camps, actlvities and support groups. Last year, $75,000 of the roughl'y $109,600 donated went to the St. Charles 6a ry lonacker,in frantoftheblkeshophecoowns,Sunnyside Sports, cancer survivorship programs. is loaking f'orward to thisyear's 10th anniversary ofthe Tourdes Chutes Tour des Chutes organizers donated $100,000 in 2012. In 2011, bicycleevent,scheduledfor July 12.

SPRIMG/SUMMER 2014 iHIGH DESE'RTPULSE


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that number was close to $90,000, Cogswell said. The bulk of the money raised through Tour des Chutes comes from corporate sponsorship, which this year range from $1,000 to about $10,000, Cogiswel~l said.. Adults pay $50 to bikeand $25 to run in the event with discounted rates for fami-

lies, and individuals also can donate if they're not participating.

Bonacker founded the Tour des Chutes in 2005 — two years after his dlagnosis — and used the proceeds to help launch. St. Charles' survivorship programs. Leslie Cogswell, executlve director of-the Tour des Chutes, said she thinks this year will be the event's biggest ever with the addition of the running component. She said she hopes to see 200 runners. The number of bicyclists is still Iimited to its usual 1,500 people to maintain the event's intimate feel.

"I's really important for our participants to feel that community," she said, "and that's a big part of what this event is. It's a reunion."

Organizers say that's w'hat separates the tour from other events in Bend„For one, it's not a race. Rather,

it's a recreational event for farnilies. And while people can certainiy bike their hearts out — the event'does include a 100-mile route, after

all — they can also take it easy and just have fun. The bicycling routes. start as short.as 7 miles and inciude 25-, 50-, 75- and 100-mile routes. For runners, there's a 5K route.

Planning for your route

off party (the first of its kind), participants this year are invited to a preparty at Worthy Brewing the night before the tour for a free pint

ofbeer and snacks. (It's a ride, not a race, Cogswell emphasizes, so a beer the night before is permissible.) After the tour, bicyclists and runners wlll be treat-

"A lof ofrides, youknow, youdo the ride andyou handthem a cookieat the end. This is one ofmy favorite days oftheyear. It always will be." — Gary Bonacker, founder of. Touir des Chutes and co-

ed to a beer garden in Bend's iN'orthWest Crossing

~neighborhood. There will also be bands and food, and — the part Bonacker said tends to start the tears flowingi — yel-

low roses will be handed out to cancer survivors as they cross the finish line. As the co-owner ofSunnyside Si ports in Bend,Bonacker has hosted his share of bike races in the past. Tour des Chutes is different, he said. "A lot of rides, you know, you do the iride and you

hand them a cookie at the end," ~hesaid. "This is one of my favorite days of the year. It aiways will be." For Bonacker, an avid cyclist throughout his life, cancer has stripped him of the balance!required to ride a bike. Even though he can't bike alongside his friends, the Tour des Chutes rernains Bonacker's favorite day of the year.

Sonacker is feeling ~much dearer Since doctors put him into a threeday cornaat the end of January in order

to draw down his dosage of anti.seizure rnedication. Before that, the drugs made him constantiy groggy and absentminded. Now, he takes napsevery day and tries to maintain as low a stress level as possible. Fatigue and

stress are the main triggers for a seizure, he said. He's down to oneseizure aboutevery fourto seven days, which is far fewer than he had been experiencing before the coma. So things are looking up for now, and Bonacker said he always tries to.stay positive. It not only helps him — it helps those around him as well. "I will not fool you ~by saying I'm ~happy-go-I'iKky, kicking my heels all the time — this is really hard~," .he said, "and I'm working on

owner of Sun'nyside Sports

Preparing for the Tour d'es Chutes isn't like preparing for a race, Cogswell said. Bicyclists planning to ride 75 miles don't have to train ito ride 75 .rniles before the event, s~he said.

There's no rush along the reute. In fact, camaraderie is encouraged, and there are eight rest stations along the way.

Mechanics will be at the event and safety riders will bike alongside participants with food, water and other supplies. it all the time." That said, Cogswell suggests each participant bring at least one Doctors tell Bonacker that his tyipe of siow-growirig tumor tends water bottle — probably two — sunscreen, a light jacket, an extra to reach a breaking point after 10 years v&ere it becomes less rebike tube and a camera. The aid stations also will be stocked with

food, water and supplies, Helmets are required. When Cogswell and Bonacker get together to talk about the

sistant to the anti-seizure drugs. So far, the drugs still work for him, And he still has hope. He even built a bike without pedals that he rides back and forth from his house to his bike shop and~ a inew., red bike ~he hopes to be ab1e to ride soon.

"I want to see my daughter graduate from college and graduate from high school and I'd love to grow old with my wife and "People love to come to Tour des Chutes not just to ride but to that may not happen," Bonacker said. "Not to sound like a IHallmark gather together at the end.," Cogswell said. This year, participants card, but I try to live each day as full as I can and live t'he next day will have more opportunities te do that. Aside from the May1 kick- fuller than the day before."• everit, there's just as much focus on creating fellowship during, before and after the tour than oni the actual biking and running.

SPRIN'6I sUMiMER 2014'i HIGH'DEsERTPULSE


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• 100-rnile bike ltde:.6a,m; 75-mile bikeride; Sa.rn. • 50-mlle bile fide: Sa»rn • 25-mile bike ride:9a.wi.

• 7-mile bikeride: 9:26 a:.m.. • 5KfurL 10:30 fa.rn »

• 8eer garden frorn 2 to4plnf,off NcrtJwvest Crossing Drive v/herefshe,netlhisorhaerdfarrners market is hetdh SFactnters • fhosecheeringon farntiIe.nr friendsareencofuraged to do so attheeventvenue:2500

INIWHighLakesLoep.vkeretjsey&nkluy IILInch 5TQforrenpalttel~» wrid cheer oll jpsitidpantsas thsy. ~arildtfill&flkt5r ~ aL"ttvl5 tgvIIas. RnllstrntlenFndQ@IFlclaINpNlllasfs -Thursday »July 16,4xr7pflfn; PkJ'fuppackets at

S unnysldeSpoits,936"~at A e / l3end'. • Friday,.July 11 / lli a.mlto 7prn"Pickula pad»ets at Sunnyslde Sports. • Satufday, Ju'ly lr2, &39axA. to BI3G a»rn.(tintif IO.

a.m.forrunnersI:iPickup,'~ts a$event, 2500 iNiw.,i-ligh Lakes,Loop,8efictt

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perlocaI forecasts andstorm alerts" in a easy-to-use, beautiful design

with great accuracy,w'hich can.be a moving target in Central Oregori. The app reports the weather in your exact location so you canp'lan, a bike or boat ride during the right part ofthe day. Forthose especially interestedin planning their day around the weatiher, a notification canbe set upto send analert shortily, before any predpitation hits a given location. The notification threshold can be set to send an"alertfor "aliy

rain,""light rain,""moderate rain" or. "heavy rain only. The horne screen dispiays current condit'ions, the next hour forecast an'd th~e fleaiest

storm,"Asecond page shows the 24-hour forecast witb a temperatuie line-graph showing the rising and falling temperatures to come. Italsg displ aystimeofsunriseand.sunset.

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, 'Cost:Free , 'Oipetotings~to:iOS

, 'This easy-to-use app lets youbrowse , 'availabIIIty ofcampsitmlnnational ', par'ks, forests andother federal rec, 'reation facilities.'Ui.serscan:specify , 'the sitetype, including RV, cabin, ,' tent, group, day-use,horse orboat. ' Recreation sites canbe foundby , searching'fora specific city, state or , 'ZIP code and can.be further, filtered ,' by campsite arnenities, Includirig , waterfront, drive-up or walk-in , accessibi~lity, restrooms, pet-friendli, ness arid water, sewerand electrical , hookups. Included withmostofthe , site proflles arep'hotos ofthe area,. , a description and a list of arnenities ; available. Onceyou've refined the ', search and foiund IIhe pelfect spot,

plnpoint cBmpgioundst restareas, overnight parking facilities, truck include: GPS navlgationu compass, stops; RV hookups andmore. The search 'bycoordinates, estimation of app uses theGPSlocation (or you hiking times and charting hikes by can enter a city in the searchfield) to dropping place-markersand photos firid the;relevantarea. Theuser cari along the way,Included types of filiter results to lookonlyat national maps are camping and' hiking in na- par'k camping, public lands camping tional par'ksand topographic rnaps. or RV hookups sothat only those A firee map of the Deschutes Nation- pop up on the map.Additional iriforal Forest is available. rpiatiiorn includes shopping locations fqr camping,and sporting goods iterns and low-clearance underpasses alorig the road.The usercan set the clearance in feet to ensure that the camper or all of the gear , there aretwo options to,reserve a .strapped to the top ofthe car will ; site:"8'ook oniine" puts you through d'ear thi overhead. , to an easy-to-use orifine system, or ; "Call agent,"whichirnrnediatelydials , a representative at Recreation,gov. I

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Apps like these will get you outside... SYMAKELLE GALLAGHER

But you may actually want to have it handy to try out a few fun t's true that getting outside is often prornpted by a desire to get

andi»titseful apps designed to enhance the greatness of the outdoors.

away from the incessant buzzing and ringing of the cellphone Many of these apps were designed to use offline when in the wilderand all that it represents, so the idea of bringing it along for a trip mess where no reception can be found. And there are solar options may sound off-putting. available for charging gadgets in the field,•

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ta getcomprehensive Information aboutthe luminosity,decltnattoni, distance and other more in-deptih xiientificspedttcations.Theapp works oflline,so itcanbe usedinfarawey placeswherethe sky isdarkest

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on' ouc our o o s ie ... or any of doc's other clothes and tools, which could spread infection BYlGLRKIAKHAWRYLUK

urveys haveEhowri that patients prefer rs todress professiarially. But,a recent analysis rnaysoon change what that means..TheSodety for Healthcare Epldemialagyof America, agroup that sti;Ives to reduce

tannEirF.The group recommended frequentwashing ofwhite mats and other physiCianattireat least once aweek Whilefree lsundering ef white coats iby haspitals liieiit!Iedtot incresse the ifrequency of cleaning, iristitutional launchywas not

found,to beany better in killing micrabesthanhome laundrywith tum'blie drying ol"iran'In'g.

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other health caresettings, reviewed the evidence that physician,clathing!.may playa part intransmitting nasty bugs to patients. While there wss little direct evidencethat anyone was infectedbya doctor's tie.or white coat, the group dld'mme up with a set ofrecommenda-. tions based primarily on where they found microbes on physi-

stud'yfound that dectors'stethoscopes frequentlycarrled twice the amount of contaminatian,as their hands,Many doctors use anallcahal swab to dean the diap'hragm, theflat part ofthe stethoscope that is placed on a patlent's skin, before eachuse.

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stucfies found that 5 to 29 percenit

ofwhitecoats.carried Staphylamccus aureus,and lessfrequently much more mncerningbugs. 5leeves wereparticularly vulnerabie to infection. Thegroup recomrnendedthatdactors.mntinue ta wear white coats, but hang thern on a hook when conducting patient exams.

has adopted a bare-bel'ow-theelbows policy for its doctors that iincl'ud'es no watches orjewelry, as well asshort sleeves, Footwear:The,'research suggested thatwearing shoeswith closed toes, law.heelsandnonskid soles can d'ecressethe riskof exposureto bloadk orothet'infectious materiall,,slipping and accidental stick injuries framneedles or scalpels. Onestudyfound thatd'actors in Japan, whereit is cornrnon

ZiesrThree studies found that up to a third ofdoctors'ineck ties grew Staphylococcusaureus,and one studyfound signiflcantly mare bacterin on ties than physicians'frorttshtrt pockets. Twosurveysfound that up ta 70 percent afphysicians ad'rnit to never cleaning their ties.The youp remmrnended dactars!justforgo wearing ties.

practice tct'retTtove autdaar shoes

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ILLUStRATIQII BYGREGCROSS

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SPRiNGI S UMMER 2814' HIGHDESERT PULSE










014 CENTRAL OREGON M E D ICAL DIRECTOR I

929SWSiinpsonkvenue• Bend 5 4 1 - 389-7741 www, lhigldaheshealthcare.com

LIEDA CARROLLO MD

HighiLahen Health Care Upper MN

TIM mLL, MD

The Csnta".ORricpob«k N«u cRIMjial CRI«4I RRRR «db

EAECY IL MALOEEY D MD

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41414RERROR RR M:

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JOE NFIFT, DO

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1501 NE MediadiCenter Drive• Bend

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klUD STEWARF,

Lacstions, ih Bsnd!tbRedmond

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EROOEEHALL, MD I

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2508.'NK.NINRoad» Bend

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kMIE DAVID MmL, LOUIS DIAVIGEOEI MD

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XEHE SHERER, MD •

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TRAIN CLkUTICE ENGLERMD ~

ROBERT HOGAE,MD

Ih eg o n RadioBIGykssodaass, RC.1480t@Medirsd ~ E r r» Bend 541-B82-9383 ~

~ Centml Oregon Radlologykssodatesd P.C.

MICHEL', MD •

www s tcharteslrmlthcare.org

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JOEATHOE BREWER,DO

541- 7 06-2949

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Central Oregon RadiologyAssodates, P.C. ) 1460 NE Medicai Center Dr • Bend

PATRICKBROWE, MD

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541-382-9383

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GARRETT SCHROEDER,MD

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541-382-9383

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DAVR ZULAUF,MD

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www.COrapeCOm

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JltmIEY DRUTMkE, MD

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• Bend 541-382-9383

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014 CENTRAL OREGON M E D ICAL DIRECTOR . LAURIE MARTIN,MD I

I

I

PAULA SHULTZ,MD I

Cantral OregonRadlologf Assodates, P.C.

1460 NB Medicsi Center Dr • Bend 541-382-9383

wwwstnmPc.'com

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STEPHEN SHOLTZ 4 MD

Central Oregon Radlologykssodates, P.C. 1460NB Mehcsi Center Dr • Bend 541-382-9383 C eiled

NORESN C.MILLER, FKP

Ra

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RC.

~ St. Chasles Rehahilltation Center

1460 t tS ~ C ent i9 Br • SemI

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2500 NBNdfRoad• Bend

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GREG BORSEAD MD CHRISTINA BRIGRT, MD

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2208 itE)telf B}}adti,gidte 5Ns Bend 541 i-388-3978

JONATHON BREWER,DO

Bend Bsstside 4}Qedmond

541-382-4900

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ARTHOR E,CONRAD,MD

St. Charles Slaep Center

4}ra@anafn Bandk Bedmond

541-706-6905

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DAVID L. DEDRICK, MD

St. Charlm} Sleep Center

Locations in Send' 4}Sedmond

541-706-6905

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T. CHRISTOPHER EELLET, DO

Send ~ I'

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DAVID HERRm, DC

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IL CHRNTAKTE,MD B eak Memorhd CRni

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ARREN M.KOWAINI, MD,PACB Bend Memurial Ciinl

UZAKm MARCATO,PA'

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SP ROAT, MD

GEORGE T.TSAI, MD, FACS St . Charles Snrgkal SpedaRsts

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014 CENTRAL OREGON M E D ICAL DIRECTORY ADkM KAPLAE,'Pk-C YMAWDSLEY, lrNP

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Bend Eastside,Westside k Behnond ' 1 01 t t t er . • Bend

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ATHAE SCHIEfX

PATRICKL. SIMEIEG, MD

di Memorbd CBjtic

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Sand Mssatoihil Chaic

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lead Urolomr Assodates

MEREDITH BAKER, MD

OEALD

2890 ÃI Wyatt CounI Send

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MD FACS Send IIrolotlr Assodates

M ICHEL BOILEAU, MD, PkCS ACK BRE M D ANDREWEEEB, MD

IIrologySpecialsts ofOregon

BRIAE O'HOLLAREE,MD

Bend Wrology Asaoehtes

MATTHEWE. SIMMOES, MD

Iirology Spedalsts of Oregon

EORk TAKLA, MD

Sjrologrks~

ROD Bmgkg MD

DARREE KOWALSKI) MD

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wws krob v,aw wtnv,urofogyinoregon.com

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SAMIL CHRISTEESEE, Pk.C Bend Memorlal Clhdc Bead

P AID AD V E R T ISING SU P P L E M E N T To be included in the next issue of the PULSE/Connections Medical Directory, contact:

Kylie Vigeland, Account Executive (Heailth & M ieclical) 541.6%7.7855

I 1501 NB Medical' Center Drive • Bend 541-382-4900 ~ www,bendmemorialdinic.com ' 1501 NRM'bdtcal Center Drive• Bend 541-382-4900 ww w am o' com


Coverstory)HOME BIR1HS

Continued fromPele t3

idealized vision of some sort of transcendent birth experience.

"I think that peopl'e think doctors are more qualified than midwives, and I don't think they have confidence in what the human body can do," she said. "I think that's the biggest misconception, that it's a medical procedure that needs intervention." That's a common theme arnong home birth proponents, that women need to trust their bod'ies, to have confidence in themselves, and they can give birth on their own. Medical interventions such as C-sections, inductions and pain midications are often portrayed as weakness or failure, or giving in to the pressure of an aggressive, intrusive medical system. "My sister wussed out. She did have drugs, which I think is unfortu-

"It's the relatively well-off white women, the anti-vaccine crowd, the natural this and the natural that," she said. "It's a lifestyle choice,

nate. If she had had rnore mental power, she could keep it together,"

"So I didn't have a doctor following up with me, and I didn't have mid'wives either," she said.

Reid said. "If you think you can do tit, you can do it."

not a medical choice."

A diagnosis Gnce home, Abel continued to struggle. He seemed to be in con-

stant pain and screamed all day. It reminded And~ews of a coyote's caII or a wounded animaL He wouldn't fied and Andrews had difficulty pumping enough milk for him. The midwives were supposed to provide weeks of postpartum support but were nowhere to be

found.

Tiffany Seiders, an unlicensed midwife in Bend, went even further. At his one-year checkup, doctors finally helped Andrews underShe and her husband,.Lonnie, dellvered their fourth child in an unas- stand what was going on. '"This is cerebral palsy,"' she recalls him telling her. "'I'm really sisted home birth earlier this year. Seiders began learning midwifery and attending births at age 11 and has now attended more than 250 sorry that no one has more directly explained to you what's going births. According to her website, she completed course work in mid- on. Hie was born not breathing; he was deprived of oxygen, which wifery through the Ancient Art Midwifery Institute home study course caused brain damage, which equals cerebral palsy.' He really laid it as well as through continuing education courses. out for me." Her first child was born in a hospital 16 years ago, her middle two The lack of oxygen at birth damaged the motor control portion children with a rnidwife. ofhis brain. He lacks the core strength to stand on his own. He uses "The third one, I felt the midwife took away all of my control and his left arm to stabilize his trunk and has about 30 to 40 percent took away all of the things I wanted to do," she said. "It just left me use of his right arm. He can walk with the help of a gait trainer, into

feeling that it was an incomplete experience. Nobody knows my whichhemustbestrapped.He usesjusta few wordsand sounds to body the way I know rny body." comrnunicate. An intuitive person can catch on. faifly well, Andrews The Seiders monitored the baby's heartbeat themselves and de- said„but some people don't. Now 4 years old~, heattends an early livered the baby successfully after 12 hours of on-and-offlaboring. intervention school for children with developmentaI disabilities in Seiders said she haschosen not be licensed so that she is not limit- Redinondj "He has gone through some really hard times for him at school, ed in the types of services she can provide to her clients. "I'm offering something to women right now that licensed mid- andl he has just gotten it in the last few months that he is different, wives can't always offer," she said. "I try to follow the same rules andllhe is upset about it."

they do, but somebody will come to me and say,'I've had three

Faced with a lifetime of added costs, Andrews contacted Mother-

C-sections; will you attend rny birth?' I have the ability to say, Yes, I wise about its liability coverage. ''We had tried to take the high road and not be bitter or angry," she will,' or, 'No, I won't.'" The Seiders also maintain that licensing is a way for the state to said. "So I was basically asking, 'What do we do here?"' exert control over midwives, and that current laws reflect the heavy It was then that Andrews found out for the first time the birth-

lobbying by various interest groups on the Legislature. "If you are licensed and break the rules, you're subject to fines and a suspensionofyourlicensure, " her husband,Lonnie,said."Then you've got a bfack mark on your record for trying to do what's right for the mother and sornething that you know you're perfectly capable of doing."

ing center had no liability coverage. They had signed an arbitration agreement, which had been presented as a way to avoid "the ugliness of lawyers." "In my mind, it's the same as a lawsuit, only faster," Andrews said. "So ~l thought there were funds backing that arbitratlon up." She said that Tucker told her she should have known that home birth was risky and that she wouldn't get a dime from the birthing center. The Motherwise midwives were later disciplined by the Oregon Board of Direct Entry Midwives for failing to disclose they carried no liability insurance. The center has since closed, defaulting on a loan from the Central Oregon Intergovernmental Council. Tucker is now working as a lactation consultant in Bend, while King is providing craniosacral therapy to mothers and infants in Vermont. Neither

Seiders said some insurance comipanies will cover her services, but most of her dients pay out of pocket, about $3,500, including prenatal and postparturn care. "Birth trauma doesn't have to do with pain; birth trauma has to do wiih loss of control," Seiders said. "You don't have control over yourself in the hospital." Such statements rile medical iproviders like Tuteur, who believe that women are risking the safety of their babies for the sake of an couldbe reached forcomment.

Pnle50

SPRING l suMMER2014 HIGH DESERTPULSE


TheAndrewses, meanwhile,arefacing thousands inextracoststo states have just started collecting data ori deaths, but there is no provide for Abel and are redWced to one incorne, as Andrews must good analysis of how many babies are injured during in-hospital or take her son to school herself. His gait trainer does not allow him to out-of-hospital births.

ride a bus. Researchers at Cornell University looked at the use of head cool"We're strapped for money;: we're strapped for time," she said. ing protocols in NICUs as a way to approximate krain damage. They "There's just a lot of things that youi don't have to pay for with a reg- found that balbies delivered at home had 17 tirnes the risk of requirular Idd." ing head cooling treatment than did babies delivered at the hospital, Their house has not been adapted for the gait trainer, nor cani they andI ~horne biirth babies were nearly four times intore likely to have

afford avan that could better accommodate hirn. "I wish that ipeople could see that because

I think they think of a lawsuit and they think ing to get rich," she said, "lt's not about that.

It's about providing for this person who has been injured." According to Ann Geisier, presiclent of Southem Gross InsuranceSolutions, licensed midwives in Oregon can pu~rtbhase about $1

se1zures or neurological problems than hospitaldlelivered babies, The Comell group also Iooked at five-min-

'ApgarSCOreSOfZerOiS

ute Apgar scares, a standardized way of

associateeither with a deadbabyOrifthe Qaby

judging the health of the baby after delivery.

SurViVeS, mere Often than t at d W ' " n

tients, But midwives in freestanding birth

damage lfa baby haSan

Cerbfied nurse midwives in hospitals had

half the rate of zero Apgar scores of obstetricians, likely reflecting their lower-risk pacenters had 3.5 times higher rates than physicians and midwives at home births had 10.5timeshigherrates. "Apgar scores of zero is associated either

million per claim.liability coverage for about Apgar SCOre OfZerO at hame,

wit h a dead baby or, if the baby survives,

$4,500 per year. Nationwide, .she.estimates team, there are that oniy 10 percent of rnidwIves purchase tr sereS nO coverage. nO dOCtOrSthat are aQQ tO

more often than not, it is associated with

They're rarely sued because ithey.'re serv=

ing low-risk momsand' theyjhave lower-vol-

suNclentlyresuscitate the

brain damage," said Or. Amos Grunebaum, a Cornell obstetrician who conducted the research. "If a baby has anApgar score of zero

at hom e, there's no team, there are no doc-

ume practices," she said. h s„ . /I -~P' Midwives also have a different relationship with women than physicians. — Dr. Amos Grunebaurn, 'The midwife empowers a mom to have Comeil obstetrlciani

tors,thatare able to sufficiently resuscitate the baby."

the chikL The midwife is not deiivering that

tions but says most obstetricians will accom-

Grunebaum says he understands women's concern about uinnecessary interven-

child; the mom is delivering the 'baby, and she knowingly recognizes modate requests for a fully natural birth if posslbie. Other than lightthe risk and the benefits of havingi ainatural childbirth, and because ing candles in the delivery room, almost every reasonable request of that you don't see as manyclaims,"Geisler said."The mom is like, can be granted. 'Oh right. I made this decision, I'm going to take responsibility for B u t if something goes wrong, the hoSpital has a team of physithis decision.'The buok has to stop somewhere." cians andnurses ready to take care of the baby. "When a (pregnant) mother comes in with a live baby, it is highly Ceisler also advises midwives to take precautions to protect their assets. She advises midwlves who aren't going to purchase liability unusual — it still happens, butiit is highly unusual — for this baby insurance to incorporate to protect their personal assets and to re- to be born dead," he said, "because we monitor it extremely well. At quire binding arbitration. home, the monitoring available is less than optimal~." . "It basically allows grieva,nces to be handled more efficiently, typI t ' s clear that doctors do err on the side of caution, perhaps out ically fairly," she said. tli tell rny clients it's a great way to screen your of liability concems, perhaps because they've seen too rnany bad elients, because if they don't want to agree to binding arbitration, outcomes. So some wornen do. get C-sections they don't need; some

maybe they're looking to you as adeep pocket." women will Ibe induced when they might have delivered just fine on Arbitration, as the Andrewses found, tends to protect the midwife their own. On the other hand, those medical procedures do save much rnore than. the family. Physlcians carry liability insurance not babies. only to protect themselves flnancialiy but to protect their patients in

"'it's the interventions that save babies' lives," Crunebaum said. "If

case they rnake a mistake. Asbitratlon agreements offer no means of you reduce interventions to a point where it"s unavailable, you will paying a family when a midwife is found negligent. The Andrewses have babies die." optednot to pursue what theysaw as a futile effort Midwives attending out-of-hospital births may. err on the side of It's unclear how many families are dealing with lifelong disabiii- letting the birth progress naturally, and in the vast rnajority of cases, ties that could be. attributed to a Ihome birth. Oregon and other that occurs without a problem. But the consequences of avoidlng

SPRING/SUMMER 2014 iHIGH DESE'RTPULSE

Paleli


Coirerstory)HOME BIR1HS

needed medical intervention: are much harsher. Andrews, for one, finds it frustrating that women seem to worry more about the medicai interventions than about the risks to their

babies. "I think that those wornen who get C-sections are very lucky. You're lucky to live in a time where we have people who do this and you have a choice,*' she said. "I think it's very elitist and detached to not recognize that, and to appreciate that you lived and your child

lived, instead of feeling like, 'You ruined my beautiful day.'"

A babjjs death After learning they had little recourse to hold their midwives ac-

countable for Abel's injuries, Andrews began reading much more about licensing and regulations in Oregon. Then in the summer of

2011, she read about Margarita Mareboina, a Eugenewoman whose son, Shahzad, died at birth. Like Andrews, she had been under the

care of physician when she first became pregnant. But she watched the movie, "Pregnant in America," which promotes home birth over hospital birth. "I just kind of got sucked into what they call 'the woo,"' she said.

"They glamorized home birth as being so special." Shefound an unlicensed midwife,Darby Partner,who had done apprenticeships in Mexico and India. The two hit it off at once. Mareboina loved the attention she was getting from the midwife, a big difference from the 15-minute appointments at the OB's office.

She was more than a week past her due date when she felt her first contractions. It would be another eight days before she would deliver. After five days of on;and-off contractions, she was exhaustSVBMITTED PHOTO ed and told the midwife and her partner she need to go the hospital. They persuaded her to stick it out. Margarita Mareboina holds her son,Shahzad, who died during child"They were telling rne things like, You're doing so great. Look how birthin Eugenein201 l.

far you've come. Everything is fine. You're such a warrior,"' Mareboina said. When her water finally broke on a Friday morning, it was stained with meconium, the baby's first bowel movement. The presence of meconium is generally considered a reason to transfer the mother to the hospital, but t'he midwives downplayed any concern. The midwives took away her phone and turned concerned friends away at the door, as Mareboina ~labored another two days. By Sunday morning, Mareboina was in extreme pain and in active labor.

they all piled in and took Shahzad to the hospital, but doctors were unable to save him.

"He had no chance at all," Mareboina said. In the hospital, the nurses cleaned up her son. He looked perfectI'y healthy. An autopsy report listed it as a stillbirth, indicating there was 1 milliliter of meconium in his stomach and. that his lungs had

nevertakena breath.

"I thought I was doing the right thing. From all the research I did She begged the midwives to take her to the hospital, but again they talked her out of it. on them, I thought they knew what they were doing," she said. "I'm

By early afternoon, they told her she was ready to push and two not saying we shouldn't allow home births. Theyjust need to be safe hours later, Shahzad was born. The midwives had told Mareboina to catch the baby herself, and that they would stay quiet if everything was OK. But Shahzad ernerged lirnp and motionless. He wasn't breathing. He was completely blue, coverediin green meconiurn. The midwives started rubbing his back and sald, 'Just call his name. Usually they

for everybody, and all birth providers needh to be held to that same standard of accountability, safety and transparency." Mareboina's story revealed to Andrews that there were more families that experienced problerns with a home birth. Soon she found more than a dozen farnilies that had written about their experiences online. Eager to protect other families from similar come back when you call their name." fates, she filed a lawsuit against Motherwise, her midwives and After six rninutes they called 911 and tried to follow the operator's the state of Oregon. The suit alleged the state's regulations govinstructions on how to per'form CPR. When the ambulance arrived, erning when midwives must transfer cases to the hospital were

SPRING l SUMMER2614 HIGH DESERTPULSE


inappropriate and not evidence-based, nor did it have a manda- T uteur is much more frank about the division between OBs and tory disclosuire form if a midwife didn't have liability coverage. midwives. "Most OBs look at these women as ,'killers," Tuteur said. "They The state was eventually granted sovereign immunity and the suit can't understand how anyone could be so cavalier about the life of went nowhere. But the I'egal action and Mareboina'.s story prompted state leg- somebodyelse's child. It isn'tjust a medical thing. It's a reallyvisceral islators to consider a mandatory Iicensing statute for midwives in reaction." Oregon in 20I3. The bill» was eventually watered down with exKe r r saidtheantipathykeepsmidwivesfromtra6sferring patients ceptions to the point that the imandate became meaningless, said earlier, and often patients arrive at the hospitaI too late. "I know that women wili continue to choose hame births. They're Sharran Fuchs, a legal assi!stant fram 'Portland who has fought far

strang oversight of midwives ~inOregon. Thase calling for greater going to see themseives as not a good fit for a hospital birth, and reguiation of out-of-hospital births say the biil just adds to the state's theylre going to continue to choose it„" Kerr saidL "So we need to fighistory of inaction on the issue; ure out a way to make it safe, and rnaybe not even»ta make that safe,

"Oregon has failed .miserably in tjhe regulation of this group, because they were man- "I kApW fhQt WOmen Will dated by law in 1993 to keeptrack ofbad out~ ~ " 5 " I comes and they didn't do It," said Fuchs, who was injuredin a home birthIn the 1980s. Q/ffh5 They<f egp/Qgtp5ee Midwife groups had sought licensure in the state as a way of securing, payment fh 8 m 5 elye5 Q5 npf Qgppd through the Oregon Health Plan in the 1990s, she said.

f f

h

' /g h I

en these people went to the Legisla- f hey'ppgplpg

ture, they marketed therriselves as low risk,

d

fp Cppfl<Ue fp

but to make that. transition safe and give them thebestoutcome we can." Doctors at St. Charles Redmond are trying to move in that directian. Unlike in Bend,

where all of the obstetriclans delivering babies at the hospital are in private practice, the Red mond Hospital employs its own obstetricians and the region's only certified nurse rnidwife. '%e have a catchment from Prineville to Madrasand we work with and knaw of f ay

low risk, low risk. But as soon as they got ChOOSeit. Sp We need tp figure

mi dwives and licensed r!nidWNeswho prac-

a license, low risk went out the window,' I' Fuchs saicL 'They started adding higher;risk p~ Q ~ V I Qke ~ care inta their scope af ~practice and the Qgj dmQybe gpfeyeg fp mgke

tice heie," sard Dr; Barbara Newman, medical director at the St. Charles Redmond birthing

state of Oregon did nothing."

Fuchs doesn't want to ban home!births fh Qf 5Qfie, t7Uf fp IQ ke f hQf and sympathizes with the notion that doc-

tors may be overiy eager to turn to medical interventions. "On the other hand~ there are probably hardcore women wha are hell''bent on having an out-of-hospital birth, and anyilhing short of that is a disaster or they.'feei they've failed,"!Fuchs said. "And any sort of help is

f f On51ffPn 5QfeQndglye them

fhe Qe5f pUfgpmeyye CQg — Ni» Kerr.«rmerdirectar«the+mliy

center. "We've been reaching out to them tiy to make a better rei!atlanship." .There are

seven certiAed professional midwives with active licenses inCereal Oregon, but it is undear hawmanyUnlicetmdmidwives are attending

births In' the regian. At the sarne tirne„both the Redmond and

Bend hospitalsare trying to make in hospital birth centerat St Ch'a"es Bend»dnow births a much more natura~iexperience for a nursing professor at Central Oregon women. "" y g ''We don't monitar every!body; we don't met with hostility.' put Ivs in everyone; we have peapl'e eat and drink," she said. "T~herooms are homey and warm, it's not a sterile Local tensions atmosphere and nobody is encouraging a cesareian sect!Ion. It's not Home birth remains a.higllly divisive issue in Oregon, and. par- your home, 'but it's a good alternative." ticularly in Central Oregon, where there is great tension between She does acknowledge that doctars may have been a little too agobstetricians and midwives. That leaves midwives unable to con- gressive in intervening in the past, particularly those trained on the sult with local doctors about a case and creates a barrier to trans- East Coast,

ferring patients to the hospital when concerns arise. The midwives "I think that is reversing. The pendulum. is swinging backward!," know they are likel'y to get an unweicame reception at the hospital. she said. "Tim residents that are coming out are far less aggressive "There would be a ntiuchi safer environment for wamen giving than I was."

birth,at hame if there were a bridge from home to the hospital," Kerr, T ime also tempers that aggressiveness, she said. More experithe CGCC nursing professor, said. "But nobody here has effectively enced' dactors are more likely to be comfortable sitting and waiting. "Everybody's goal is the same, to help the baby and to help the built that bridge. When a miidwife gets into troLIble, they can't just call up their consult and say this is what's going on and have them rnom," Newman said. "It's not the old~ model of doctor says and that's meet them at the hospital.'" what happens."• SPRING/SUMMER 2014 iHiGH DESE'RTPULSE


One voice ApERsoNAL EssAY

The tooth and nothing but the tooth tin, pulled No. 8 using biggertool's and more brute force than I expected. (To be clear, there was, amazingly, ze'ro pain during the

BY BENSALMON

started what turned out to be a very long

goodbye to one of my two front teeth nearly 20 years ago.

extraction.)

I don't iremember the date, or even the year.il know I was in my late teens. (I'm 37

The day before the Iprocedure, I experienced an od'd, mild sadness about losing a

now) I don't know where it happened, only that it was in the stuffy gymnasium of one of the dozen or so middle schools in rny hometown of Lexington, Ky. I certainly don't remember who did it. Some nameless kid on another city-league basketball team who carne down with a rebound and bounced straight back up, pre-

tooth that hadj served rne well enough for

more than three decadhs. During the procedure, Dr,iKrueger warnedirne a few times that I might hear some unsettling noises; I

quickly cranked up the volume on rny iPod, And afterward, he told me the tooth was stubborn, but that it definitely needed to come out.

sumably to try to lay the bill »into the basket and not to drive the top of.his skull directly Be nSalmonistheente rtainmenteditor into the front of rny rnouth. at TheBuiietin.

My most vivid memories of the injury are: l) Doubled over, taking my hand away from my mouth and watching bright red blood pour out onto che polished-to-a-shine gym floor, and 2)Looki ng up and~watching rnydad ashebounded.dow n the rickety oid woodenbleachers toward the court. Dad took me to a nearby urgent~e facillty, where they ... did something, I'm sure. I don"tiremernber. Mostly, I remember being annoyed that I was missing the.end of my game.

Now, I'm in the middle of che healing process. I'm scheduled to get the post for an implant in mid June. Then that has to heal.

At some point after that they'll create the fake tooth. And then at sorne point after that th'epl lnstail it. I assufne.

Remember that Bananarama song "Gruel Summer7 Wetll, this is rnyToothl essSummer. The dental team gave me acrude take to wear solely for cosrnetic purposes while waiting for the rml deal, but I haven't wom iit much.-

Once to a 4-year-old's birthday party, w'hen I knew I'd be making small talk with adults I don't know welL Otherwise ildon't.bother. My

I split my lip that day, but I didn't I'ose a tooth, at least immedlately. wifie and kids have gotten used to che look, and I've worked at The Bulleciin for eight years, most closely with people who've been there

Within weeks, thoug~h, it became dear that my front tooth on the right — No. 8, I have since learned —took the brunt ofthe blow. Uke a river rerouted by an earthqiuake, it had moved a bit, dropping even farther out of alignment with its naturally crooked top-row buddies than it was before. No. 8 also eventually began to feel different. It wasn't pain, but a sort of dead feeiing, as if it were rnade of wood or p'lastic and not dentin and enamel. It might've discolored; I'mnot sure: Discoloration

as long or longer, They can deal. I will say, though: I have never been a iparticularly self-conscious guy. IIam fortunate, I think, to be able to float through the world without much care about what anyone chinks of me or tny appearance. But rnissing a prominertt tooth has led me to a whole new level of selfmnsciousness.WhenI'm out and about and having basic daily interactions with strangers, I find myself tightening myjaw, lowering my is a relative term in my mouth. LIpper lip, talking in a more reserved way, I might look off to the side But it stayed solidly in place, and totally usable. It never wiggled, or put my hands to my face to try to hide my new, black hole. And if never hurt. So I went about rny business of eating and talking and I know I'm going to have an actual conversation with someone, I will living life doing things ocher than beingi a model who smiles for a acknowledge the issue as soon as I can: "By the way," I've said 20ish INIng. times in the past three weeks."I'm not normally missing a tooth."Then About five years ago, on rny flrst or second visit to dentist Jeff I make a joke about being from Kentucky. BecauseSouthern hillbillies Timm in Bend, he asked about the tooth. I told him the story and he are the last group of folks on Earth that it's OK to make fun of, see?

explained that itwas experiendngiresorption, which is basicailyafian-

I wish I had a better story. A bar brawL A past life as a hockey

cy way of sayingiiit was Ibreaking down. At some point — maybe five goon. Scurvy. But nope. I just got smashedh in the face a Iong time years, maybe rnore —I'dbe parting iways with it, Dr. Timm toldme. ago iby sorne kid. An injury on one side of the coiitntty when I was a Turns out it was five years. I'n eariy March, Dr. Keith Krueger, an teen has left me toothless in Bend, Oregon, at age 37. oral surgeon whose offlce I can see firom my window at The BulleLife is funny like that.•

SPRING ISUMIIAER 2014 HIGH'DESERTPULSE


Body ofknoyyledge FoF ouiz

sr

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BY JULiE JoKNsoN

ummer is right around the corner, and with it, the season of backyard barbecuesr casual 'buffets and picnics in the parik. But keep in mind: a lot of summer cooking. habits could set the stage for inviting foodborne bacteria or other pathogens to your

iilLLUSTRATilON SYGREGCROSS

iHowlongcanfoodbeleftoutat roomtemperaturein a 'fabuffet lineoron a picnictable beforeit runstheriskof

next get-together, and that's not the kind of party anyone wants.

developing harmful bacterla?

Testyour food safety knowledge with this quiz, and do us ali a favor: Put that shrimp salad on ice.

A. 30 minutes

Nhatisthemostcommonfoodbome pathogeninthe

1 • United States? A.Salmonella

B.60 minutes C.2 hours D. 3 ihours Towhattemperatureshouldc}roundmeatbecookedte

5 cd enSure Safetlf?

B.E. coli C.Norovirus

A. il 55 degrees

D.Staphylococcus

B.160 degrees C. 165 degrees

Atv&at ternpemturesheuldyour refrigeratorbeset?

D. li70 degrees

2 • A.42 degrees

B.32 degrees C.38 degrees D.35 degrees

Whatpopulationsubsetismostat-riskforfoodborne

6 • iillness?

Underoptimum conditiens,bacieria can:

3 • A.Double in number every 20 m!nutes B.Multiply by10 percent a day C.Double in number every 24 hours D.Triple in number every 24 hours

fsfarsea L C - Naravirus. With 5A milBani casesannually, this virus represents 58' percent of 4I foodborne illnesses in the U.S., dwarfing,the inddence of.Saimarfella (I million cam per year, or ll percent of instances of faodborne illness}. E. coli doesn't even rrrdke the list af top flve foodbome pathagens bynumber oflrfcideri ce.However,foodbame salmanelia hospitalizes more ipeople each yearthan foodborne norovirus and is the No. li deadly foodborne pathogen, killing nearly 400 peaple per year compared with about 150 who die of faodbame norovirus. Tiie best pmtection from foodbome namvirus is following good hand hygiene (washhands ibefore and after handling food) and thoroughly washing alliproduce.

A.Women B.Men C.Pregnant women D. Ti. he elderly

7hue.or f'alse:Rinsing chickenbeforecooking helps reduce

? • theamount ofbacteria thatmaybe present.

to 32 and yau'll freeze the milkl. Bacteria cangrow quiddy ground meats require a IBMegree finished temperature in the "dangerzone"between 40 and 140 degrees — not beforeservlng. All poultfyshauldhibecoakedito 165 degrees. cald enough to slow bacterlal growth significantly, but not hot enaughta killh, either. fLBoth C and D are correct. Pfegnant women, the elderiy, young childrenandithese with cpmpramlsedimmune sys3. A - If provided optimai conditians= ilnduding food, tems are pardcularly suscep5bleta'faad peisoning. mai'sture, axygen andia warm temperature-.ibacteria can dauble every 20 minutes. Tihat's w'hy faad leftona sumrrer X False. Studies shaw that rinsing, poultry mainly serves bufiet table or, picnic table is rife with, potential for harbor- to inaease the chance of spreading bacteria around the ing bacteria. Keepcald faads cald and hcitreads hot. ,kitchen, where it may come in can'tact with othef food. This uosscantamlnation is a:major way.foodbome illness 4. C - 2 hours. After that, the risk af bacterial growth in- .Is spread, The best way to reduci. bacteria in chicken is to ueases, so get those leftavers in the fridge. cook it tothe cerrect temperature.

B.iBoth C and Oare carrect. Refrlgeratars should be set no B.B - While whole meats only need(ta be cooked to 145 de- Sourroecentorsforoiseesecontrol; Arsrdemyof Nutrftion end fss„conAngreFoods'Heme Feed'sefety higher than 40 degrees to keep food~,'safe to eat (but get it grees (with three minutes of resting time befare serving), fzetet SPRING/SUMMER 2014 iHIGH DESE'RTPULSE


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8UNILYCANE IMMEDIATE CARE PREOPERATIUECARE PEDWWCS EMERGENCY MEDICMECARQIQLQGY

GENERALSURGERVBLEEP MEDICINE BENAVIQRAL NEAOTI OB/GYN

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ONCQLOGYINFECTIQUS DMEABE MOSPITAl MEDICINEMOSPICE


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