Bulletin Daily Paper 07-30-15

Page 1

Serving Central Oregon since 1903$1

THURSDAY Jujy30,2015

gin ennu Ni an ve? HEALTH• D1

bendbulletin.corn

ore consrueion in unincor orae esc ues, TODAY' S READERBOARD El Minn —The weather phenomenonisexpectedto be its strongest in more than a decade. Goodnewsfor some — but not all.A3

Retired war dogs — un-

ooel u e

S reServoir eve

By Scott Hammers

but area reservoirs are run-

Central Oregon for the next

37 and 52 percent capacity as

not unprecedented — water

The Bulletin

ning low as the region enters what's normally the driest

severaldays. The two primary reservoirs

of Wednesday, respectively. Kyle Gorman, regional water

levels have been similar at the end of July at Wickiup once

month of the year.

that store most of Central Or-

master with the Oregon De-

over the last 11 years and three times at Crane Prairie.

A cool-down in the second half of July has helped stretch supplies of water available to local farmers and ranchers,

And temperatures well into the 90s are predicted in

egon's irrigation water, Wickiup and Crane Prairie, were at

partment of Water Resources, said those levels are low but

SeeReservoir/A4

like other veterans, they don't receive free medical care.A4

Fitness trackers — Products like the Fitbit are top sellers. But after a while, they tend to end up wherethey won' t help you: off your wrist.D4

Facebook gives '16 hopefuls a boost

romcri ers ...

air in

And a Webexclusive

— Do you hug apope? U.S. lawmakers seeketiquette tips for visit. bendbulletin.corn/extras

By Ashley Parker The New York Times

WASHINGTON

EDITOR'SCHOICE

— When Gov.Scott Walker kicked off his presidential bid this month, sup-

L

Copyright suit rages

porters who visited

his website could view photographs of him, peruse his announcement

speech and read

over'Happy

about the Wisconsin

Republican's life and accomplishments. Using a bit of code

Birthday'

embedded on its website, the Walker team was able to track who visited the donation

By Christine Mai-Duc Los Angeles Times

LOS ANGELES — For

page, tell which

generations, "Happy Birthday" — a tune sung to

potential backers shared interests with

lih» l

almost every American every single year of his or her life — has made millions of dollars for its aggressive copyright owners. Although the song that was originally written for kindergartners is free to sing at your dinner table, any performance deemed public could cost you money or a legal headache.

existing supporters and determine who

was learning about the candidate for the first time. It could then use that infor-

mation to target prospective voters with

highly personalized appeals.

SeeFacebook/A5

In the 1930s, Irving Ber-

lin had to pay up after using "Happy Birthday to You" in a musical.

Why Scout

In the 1980s, the copy-

right holder contemplated pursuing Congress for singing "Happy Birthday" to President Ronald Reagan.

decision is

a loss for Mormons

After the rights to the

song were acquired by Warner Music Group in

1988, proposed fees for the Girl Scouts prompted an

outcry. The organization responsible for collecting royalties quickly said it was all a misunderstanding. Singing around the campSome have argued the song isn't bound by copyAnd now new evidence in a 2-year-old copyright lawsuit could end Warner's

decades-old grip on the ubiquitous ditty. Or not. SeeCopyright/A5

REDMOND-

hen most people think of judging day at the fair, they picture prizes for the tastiest pie, the biggest

This year's Deschutes County Fair guide for exhibitors is 31 pages long with more than 20 of those devoted to animals, plants and crafts eligible for recognition. Gardens planted in dish-

A story headlined "Local pot dispensaries prepare for open access" that appeared on Wednesday, July 29, onPage A1, reported that counties in which a majority of voters rejected Measure 91mayenact laws that prohibit commercial activities associated with recreational marijuana. Specifically, a county mayenact a ban if 55 percent of voters or more rejected Measure 91 in November.

The Boy Scouts' vote this week to lift

What if you found out there was a category for vegetables deemed more monster than food? That goats could run obstacle courses and a giraffe sculpture could indude a banana and broccoli?

TODAY'S WEATHER Sunny High 96, Low 59 +r f s~ Page B6

Kemp has been a judge at the fair since 2013 and claims a garden that, at 1,400 square feet, is larger than many apartments.

blow to traditional faith groups heavily involved in scout-

ing, but perhaps to

So what to make then of the

can be grown or sewn, someone judged it Tuesday in advance of the fair's opening day on Wednesday. "Growing food is like growing money,"vegetable judge Vicky Kemp said, gesturing to the tables of produce up for small monetary prizes.

none more than the Mormon Church,

in which scouting and the religious life of boys are deeply

counterfeits in the eyes of the

intertwined. Mormons have

judge' ?

been deeply invested in Boy Scouts for

Indeed it does. Kemp awarded

first place among the deformities to a yellow squash plant that re-

more than a century,

and any boy who goes to a Mormon congregation is automatically part of the Boy Scouts. SeeMormons/A4

sembled a conjoined twin with

two fleshy bulbs joined at the rind; it beat out a greener squash, which resembled a roundabout. SeeFair /A4

INDEX Business Calendar Classified

troop leaders was a

"monstrosities" category, where ware and wagons drew praise Kemp says many entries are along with a child's cake decorat- vegetables or plants that were ed with lopsided booths and tee- allowed to grow far past peak tering rides made out of fondant. ripeness? Does that make them It's not a stretch to say that if it

pumpkin and the tallest stalk of corn.

Clarification

The Washington Post

its ban on openly gay By Will Rubin •The Bulletin

fireremained free. right protections at all.

By Michelle Boorstein

Photos by Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin

ABOVE: Vicky Kemp looks over a Boston pickling cucumber entered in the "Monstrosities" vegetable category while judging vegetables entered in the Deschutes County Fair on Tuesday. AT TOP: Entries are made from produce by local kids in the "Crazy Critters" category.

01-6 Obituaries B5 C5 - 6 C omics/Puzzles E3-4 Health C1-4 B2 Crosswords E 4 H o roscope 06 Sp o rts E 1 - 6Dear Abby D6 Lo cal/State B 1-6 N '/Movies D6

The Bulletin An Independent

vol. 113, No. 211, 30 pages,

s sections

Q l/i/e userecycled newsprint

0

88 267 0 23 29


A2

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JULY 30, 2015

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NATION Ee ORLD

e risma ave come rom missin e Incr New York Times News Service

that the object was about 9 feet long and 3 feet wide, and that

OffiCer Charged in Slaying —A University of Cincinnati officer who shot a motorist during a traffic stop over a missing front license plate was indicted Wednesday on amurder charge, with a prosecutor saying the officer "purposely killed him" and "should never havebeen a police officer." Hamilton County prosecutor Joe Deters announced the grand jury indictment at a newsconference to discuss developments in the investigation into the July19 shooting of motorist Samuel DuBose byOfficer Ray Tensing. Authorities have said Tensing spotted a car driven byDuBoseandmissing the front license plate, which is required byOhio law. They sayTensing stopped the car and a struggle ensuedafter DuBose refused to provide adriver's license and get out of the car.

of the control surfaces that pi-

lots use to guide the aircraft in it appeared to have been in the flight. a large object that washed up water for a very long time. Peter Goelz, a former manWednesday on the shore of The French aviation safety aging director of the National Reunion, a French island in bureau, known as BEA, said Transportation Safety Board, the Indian Ocean, came from in a statement Wednesday that said it seemed clear from the a Boeing 777, making it likely it "is studying the information photos that the object "is a that it was debris from Flight on the airplane part found in wing flap, and it's about the 370, the Malaysia Airlines La Reunion, in coordination right size." jetliner that d isappeared in with our Malaysian and AusNoting that investigators March 2014. tralian colleagues and with the should be able to tell quiddy A person with knowledge judicial authorities." It added whether the object came from of the inquiry into what hap- that "it is not possible at this a 777, Richard Aboulafia, an pened to the plane said that hour to ascertain whether the analyst at the Teal Group in U.S. government officials and part is from a B-777 and/or Fairfax, Virginia, said that "if expertsfrom Boeing based from MH370." that happens, there is only one their conclusion on photoThe French official said possibility." graphs and videos. The inves- that the authorities were in Malaysia's transport mintigators noted that no other the process of designating a ister, Liow Tiong Lai, said Boeing 777 was known to be laboratory in F r ance where Wednesday afternoon that it missing, suggesting that the the object would be taken for was too early to know if the piece was part of the missing examination. debris was from Flight 370 but aircraft. The person added Agence France-Presse re- that he had sent investigators that the Americans were wait- ported that the object was to Reunion. "We hope we can identify ing for French aviation experts found by people cleaning a to examine the object and de- beach, and cited a witness who it as soon as possible," he told termine if it contained a serial said it was partly encrusted reporters at the United Nanumber matching that of the with shells. tions, where he was attending Malaysia Airlines jet. Aviation ex p e rt s who a Security Council meeting A F r ench o ff i cial w i t h viewed published photos of the on the other Malaysia Airlines knowledge of the investigation object said it strongly resem- disaster last year — the downsaid that the object appeared to bled a part of a modern jetliner ing of Flight 17 over eastern be a wing flap. The official said wing known as a flaperon, one Ukraine. PARIS — American investigators have concluded that

HOLISO VOtSS — TheHouse voted overwhelmingly Wednesday to shore up federal highwayaid andveterans' health care before heading out of town for its August recess, leaving unresolved anarray of sticky issues that are sure to complicate anautumn agendaalready groaning under theweight of indecision. In one of their last decisions before adjourning for a month, the Housebacked abill that would extend spending authority for transportation programs through Oct. 29, and replenish the federal HighwayTrust Fund with $8 billion. That' s enough money to keephighway and transit aid flowing to states throughmid-December.Thevotewas385-34.TheSenateplansto take up the Housebill before a midnight Friday deadline, whenauthority for the Transportation Department to process aid payments to states will expire. Planned Parenthood —Under fire for its role in providing fetal tissue for research, PlannedParenthood askedthe government's top health scientists Wednesday to convene apanel of independent experts to study the issues surrounding the little-known branch of medicine. PlannedParenthood's request to the National Institutes of Health came asSenate Republicans pressed their fight to bar the organization from receiving federal aid. Likely opposition from at least one GOP senator highlighted the long odds the GOPwill face in a Senate showdown voteexpectedearlynextweek.

Slain 8-year-Old girl —Prosecutors chargeda15-year-old boy with murder, kidnapping and rapeWednesday in the death of an 8-year-old girl in an artists complex in aCalifornia beachtown. Police say Adrian Jerry Gonzalez lured Madyson Middleton into his family' s apartment from a courtyard where shehad been riding her scooter over the weekend.Onceinside, hetied her up, sexually assaulted and killed her, according a charging document. Gonzalezremains in custody at the SantaCruzCounty juvenile detention center, where he has been held since the girl's body was found in arecycling bin Monday evening. Santa CruzDistrict Attorney Jeffrey Rosell said Gonzalezwill be charged as anadult and added that in his two decades in Santa Cruz, he's never seena15-year-old charged with murder.

SUEZ CANAL EXPANSION

ROlling StOne Sued —Three University of Virginia graduates and members of a fraternity profiled in a debunkedaccount of a gang rape in a retracted Rolling Stone magazinestory filed a lawsuit against the publication and thearticle's author Wednesday, court records show. The three men,George Elias IV, StephenHadford and Ross Fowler, filed suit U.S. District Court in NewYork. They are also suing Rolling Stone's publisher, WennerMedia. A lawyer for the men said they suffered "vicious and hurtful attacks" because of inaccuracies in the November 2014article, which was written by journalist Sabrina Rubin Erdely. In their lawsuit, the three 2013graduates said the article "created a simple anddirect way to match the alleged attackers" from the alleged gang rape tothem based ondetails provided in the story.

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Lian hIloter baCklaSh —A Minnesota dentist who hasbecomethe target of worldwide outragefor hunting and killing a protected lion in Zimbabweadvised patients Wednesdayto seekcare elsewhere andsaid he rarely discussedhis big-gamehunting because it can bea"divisive and emotionally chargedtopic." Walter James Palmer remained secluded in the face ofprotests at his suburbanMinneapolis clinic andintense condemnation online. Hehasnot appeared inpublic since being identified Tuesdayas aparty to the lion's death. Palmer,whosepractice offers general andcosmetic dentistry, is anactive big-gamehunter, with many kills to his name,someof them registered with hunting clubs.

I ur"re%%

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India: MOSt pOpulOuS? —Demographers have known for some time that the number of people in India would surpass the number in China. But they did not anticipate that the changewould happen so quickly. The United Nations reported Wednesdaythat India's population will probably surpass China's by 2022, not 2028, as theorganization had forecast just two years ago. In its 2015 revision report, the population division of the U.N.Department of Economic and Social Affairs said China's population was now1.38 billion, compared with 1.31 billion in India. But in sevenyears, the populations of both are expected to reach 1.4 billion.

NarimanEl-Mofty / The Associated Press

A journalist looks at a boatpassing through the new section of the SuezCanal as she takes a media tour in Ismailia, Egypt, on Wednesday. Work on a parallel waterway to allow two-way traffic on Egypt's SuezCanalwill be finished in time to

allow ships to transit for a gala inauguration at the key trade route onAug. 6. With the expansion, the canal authority projects it can double the number of ships transiting daily to 97 by2023, boosting toll incomes to $13.2 billion.

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AfghansdeclareMullah Omar, chief ot Taliban,died 2yearsago

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Oregon Lottery results As listed at www.oregonlottery.org and individual lottery websites

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by some wings of the Taliban,

KABUL, A f ghanistan After months of speculation,

the peace process could force

further rifts within the group Afghan officials announced without a widely accepted Wednesday that they were successor to Omar to support

Osama bin Laden, another former mujahedeen fighter who used the shelter offered

by Omar to build up his terrorist group, aI-Qaida. Omar's movement quicknow certain that the Taliban's them. reclusive leader, Mullah MuSome of the official hedging ly became known for harsh hammad Omar, died in a Paki- about the details of Omar's justice and a fearsomely rigM stani hospital in 2013. condition may be understand- enforcement of the most conThe announcement is not able: The Afghan spy agency servative social mores, staging likely to conclusively settle also pronounced him dead in public executions and beating the question of Omar's fate. 2011, only to back off those women who did not completely Afghan officials offered no ev- claims later. And a spokes- cover themselves in burqas. idence regarding his death or man for the Taliban, ZabihulWithin the Taliban, Omar how they had come to find out lah Mujahid, told the Voice of ruthlessly purged disloyal about it. And though U.S. offi- America on Wednesday that commanders or w o uld-be cials called the report credible, the new death claims were defectors, and adamantly rethey, too, were publicly reticent false. fused to talk peace with the about details or to explain how Even given his impene- Afghan government while forthe news was only coming to trable reclusiveness, and the eign military forces remained light now, even as the Taliban growing mystery around him in the country. insurgency is gaining momen- in recentyears, Omar proved Now, the reports of his tum on Afghan battlefields. a remarkable unifying figure death cast further uncertainBut if true, the death of the forthe Taliban'sfar-flung fac- ty over the fate of the current Taliban's legendary unifying tions for decades. peace talks, which began figure offers a likely explaBorn in 1960, Omar became July 7 at a resort in Murree, nation for a brewing power a respectedveteran of the Pakistan. struggle within the group's mujahedeen fight against the The peace process has r anks. Co n f usion ab o u t Soviets in the 1980s, and he proved a divisive issue within Omar's condition led some began the Taliban movement the Taliban. The insurgents' commanders in recent months with a small band of support- official political office, in to publicly question whether ers and students from his ma- Doha, Qatar, initially declared he was alive or even to break drasa in rural Kandahar prov- that the July meeting was inaway and claim loyalty to oth- ince in the early '90s. Born out valid because Taliban officials er groups, including the Islam- of disgust with the corruption in Qatar were not present and ic State. and excesses of feuding Af- had not approved it. It would also cast more un- ghan warlords, the Taliban At the same time, Afghan certainty on the new peace rose to conquer the country. officials said they had been processbetween the Taliban It ruled as the national gov- told that the talks were authoand the Afghan government, ernment from 1996 until the rized by the Taliban's deputy who were scheduled to have

American invasion in 2001-

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their second official face-to- and presenteda rallying suc- Mansour, suggesting that he face meeting in Pakistan on cess story for jihadists around carried the imprimatur of Friday. Already not accepted the world. Among them was Omar's leadership.

~0Ã~~iooratrvaNU DowN owN BEND


THURSDAY, JULY 30, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

A3

TART TODAY

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

It's Thursday, July 30, the 211th day of 2015.Thereare 154 days left in the year.

HAPPENINGS 2nd quarter — Thegovernment's estimate of economic growth is scheduled for release.

HISTORY Highlight:In 1965, President Lyndon B. Johnson signed a measure creating Medicare, which began operating the following year. In1729,Baltimore, Maryland, was founded. In1864,during the Civil War, Union forces tried to takePetersburg, Virginia, by exploding a gunpowder-laden mineshaft beneath Confederate defense lines; the attack failed. In1918, poet Joyce Kilmer, a sergeant in the 165th U.S. Infantry Regiment, was killed during the SecondBattle of the Marne in World War I. (Kilmer is remembered for his poem "Trees.") In1932, the SummerOlympic GamesopenedinLosAngeles. In1942, President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed abill creating a women's auxiliary agency in the Navy known as"Women Accepted for Volunteer Emergency Service" — WAVES for short. In1945, the Portland class heavy cruiser USSIndianapolis, having just delivered components of the atomic bombto Tinian in the Mariana Islands, was torpedoed by aJapanese submarine; only 317out of nearly 1,200 mensurvived. In1953, the Small Business Administration was founded. In1956, President Dwight D. Eisenhower signed ameasure making "In God We Trust" the national motto, replacing "E Pluribus Unum" ("Out of many,

SCIENCE

NEED TO KNOW

ren enin ino can ive — or a e

How marital status can affect your car insurance rates

fj

s II

i

f

h

Y +

4

than married people, but the

The consumer advocacy CFA says that it "was based on association collected quotes data collected in New Zealand for state-mandated miniOscar Paredes / The Associated Press file photo

— State Farm, Farmers In-

ficially be termed a strong El Nino early in August, peak

The Associated Press

s ometime near th e en d o f

WASHINGTON — In Cal-

ifornia, they' re counting on it to end a historic drought;

year and peter out sometime next spring. Meteorologists say it looks like the biggest such event since the fierce El

gency to prepare for devasCalifornia mudslides nottating flooding. It's both an withstanding, the U.S. econeconomic stimulus and a reomy benefited by nearly $22 cession-maker. And it's likely billion from that El Nino, acto increasethepriceofcoffee, cording to a 1999 study. That chocolate and sugar. study found that 189 people

clared a pre-emptive emer- Nino of 1997-98.

strong, what happens next is not exactly certain. But Peruvians are worried.

Abraham Levy, director of A mbiental A n d i na,

w h ich

advises businesses on meteorology- and hydrology-re-

A United Nations-backed study said that El Nino cost

we don't have fruit."

s hift and the w ater i n t h e

Peru and Venezuela nearly

tive state of emergency this

Pacific Ocean gets warmer

$11 billion. Flooding in Peru month for 14 of its 25 states, destroyed bridges, homes, appropriating some $70 milhospitals and crops and left lion to prepare. Hipolito Cru354 dead and 112 missing, chaga, the civil defense direcaccording to the Pan-Amer- tor inPeru's northern region

places. Every few years, the winds than usuaL That water sloshes back and forth around the

equator in the Pacific, interacts with th e w i nds above

and then changes weather worldwide. This is El Nino. Droughts are triggered in places like

clearingriver beds of debris, reinforcing river banks with rock and fortifying reservoir walls. Sandbags and rocks are also being piled on some river banks. "If the sea stays this hot at

hurricanes; the Atlantic few-

the end of August I'm afraid

er. Winter gets milder and wetter in much of the United States. The world warms,

goosing Earth's already rising thermometer from manmade climate change. Peruvian sailors named

because theworld's intercon-

four of the six major insurers didn't charge higher prices fordomesticpartners than for married couples, but that both

status, the report found. Why should marital sta-

did in certain cities, citing Baltimore, Tampa, Louisville, Min-

Worters, vice president of c ommunications fo r t h e Insurance Information In-

stitute, a nonprofit group •

e •

View our presentation at Tompkinswealthpresents.corn

charlesTompkins, cFPI 54M044667

nected economy has changed we' re doomed," he said. with more vulnerable supply chains, said risk and climate expert Ferrari.

Sponsored by: Central Oregon Classic Chevy Club

lOCK t iOlCS GIEATESI HITS

Indonesia gets hit particu-

lia has started and may trim as much as 1 percent off of

the world, so you don't have to hide under the bed. The re- the country's GDP, said Anality is that in the U.S. an El

drew Watkins, supervisor of

Nino can be a good thing," said Mike Halpert, deputy

climate prediction services at the Australian Bureau of Meteorology.

director of the U.S. National

Oceanic and A tmospheric

Tony Barn ston, lead El

Administration's Climate Prediction Center.

Nino forecaster at the International Research Institute

This El N i n o o f ficially started in March and keeps getting stronger. If current trends continue, it should of-

for Climate and Society at Columbia University, cautioned that while El Nino has pre-

dictable effects and this one is

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

2015

Spectators Welcome!

services for agriculture at the

"El Nino is not the end of

H o me I n t e ri o r s

541.322.7337

August 7, 8, 9

Economic winners include the U.S.,China, Mexico and Europe while India, Australia

larly hard because an expectColorado firm aWhere Inc. ed El Nino drought affects Around the world, crops the country's mining, power, fail in some places and thrive cocoa,and coffee industries, elsewhere. Commercial fish- said IMF study co-author ing shifts. More people die of Kamiar Mohaddes, an econoflooding, fewer from freezing. mist at the University of CamAmericans spend less on win- bridge in London. ter heating. The global econoT he e x pected E l Ni n o my shifts. drought in parts of Austra-

C om p l e m e n t s

securities & Advisory services offeredthrough KMS Financial Services,Inc. MemberFINRNSIPC

and Peru are among El Nino's (Christ) Child — because it biggest losers. was most noticeable around On average, a healthy El Christmas. Nino can boost the U.S. econAn El Nino means the Pa- omy by about 0.55 percent cific Ocean off Peru's coast of Gross Domestic Product, is warm, especially a huge which would translate more patch 330 feet below the sur- than $90 billion this year, an face, and as it gets warmer International Monetary Fund and close to the surface, the study calculated this spring. weather "is just going to be But it could also slice an ena river falling from the sky," tire percentage point off Indosaid biophysicist Michael nesia's GDP. c l i mate

pricing, and that the CFA has

person's risk, said Loretta

the formation El Nino — the

Ferrari, director of

Geico and Progressive often

studied over the years. In 2013, noted in a press release that it released a study about the single, separated, and di- impact of credit scores on auto vorced people tend to have insurance rates, saying that the lower incomes than married use ofcredit scores by insurpeople and that therefore ers discriminated against lowusing marital status in pric- er-income drivers. It has also ing "tends to discriminate released a study looking at the against low- and moder- connection between auto insurate-income Americans." ance rates and education. Marital status is a legitimate factor in judging a

O r g anization. of Piura, said authorities are

The mining industry in Peru and Chile was hammered as flooding hindered exports. A ustralia a n d In d i a , b u t Though this year's El Nino e lsewhere, droughts a r e is likely to be weaker than quenched and floods replace the 1997-98 version, the ecothem. The Pacific gets more nomic impact may be greater

The CFA study found that

gressive — in 10 cities ranging from Baltimore to Portland. Among the six, only State Farm didn't charge different rates based on marital

factors. The CFA's executive director, Stephen Brobeck,

And then there's the floodBolivia, Colombia, Ecuador, ing. Peru declared a pre-emp-

ican H ealth

Insurance, Geico, and Pro-

tus factor into pricing? Good neapolis, Denver and Phoenix. question, says th e C FA, Progressive also charged more which wants state regula- in Houston, the study said. tors to take a harder look at Marital status is just one of whether it's fair to use mar- many elements that can work ital status and certain other their way into auto insurance

lated issues, believes this El

Nino could lead Peru into recession. Important export crops such as mangos and asparagus that grow in coastal valleys are already being adversely affected by the unseaIt's El Nino — most likely, were killed in the U.S, main- sonably high temperatures, the largest in well over a de- ly from tornadoes linked to said Levy. "The export mango crop cade, forecasters say. A lot El Nino, but a n e s timated more than mere weather, it 850 lives were saved due to a has not yet flowered," he said. "And if we don't have flowers affects lives and pocketbooks milder winter. in different ways in different

torcycles. And the difference in

surance, Nationwide Mutual injury rates was only about one Insurance, Liberty Mutual percentage point."

this year hes declared e pre-emptive emergency, reinforcing protection against devastating flooding. By Seth Borenstein end Frank Bajek

around 1990 involving only 138

mum liability insurance from injuries, a substantial minority the websites of six insurers of which involved driving mo-

A woman sifts through rubble near her ruined home in 1998 after much of the town of Santa Teresa, Peru, wes destroyed by e mudslide brought on by persistent reins attributed to El Nino. The country

in Peru, they' ve already de-

— From wire reports

~

the study found.

In1975,former Teamsters union president Jimmy Hoffa disappeared in suburban Detroit; although presumeddead, his remains havenever been found. In1980, Israel's Knesset passed a lawreaffirming all of Jerusalem asthecapital of the Jewish state. In1990, British Conservative Party lawmaker lan Gowwas killed in a bombing claimed by the Irish Republican Army. Teeyears ege: President George W.Bushwas pronounced "fit for duty" after a checkup that showedthat the59-year-oldcommander-in-chief, an avid mountain bike rider, had lost 8 pounds since his last physical exam in December 2004. Five yearsege:President Barack Obama toured Chrysler and General Motors assembly plants, where heoffered an upbeat assessment of the U.S. auto industry a yearafter the big government bailouts. A 12-year-old Florida girl was seriously injured whenshe plunged about 100 feet to the ground from anamusement park free-fall ride in Lake Delton, Wisconsin. (Nets and air bags that were supposed to catch TeaganMarti had not been deployed.) Oeeyeer ege:The House overwhelmingly approved, 420-5, a landmark bill to refurbish the VeteransAffairs Department and improveveterans' health care.

Actor Edd "Kookie" Byrnes is 82. Former Major League Baseball Commissioner Bud Selig is 81. Movie director Peter Bogdanovich is 76. Singer Paul Anka is74. Jazz musician David Sanborn is 70. Former California Gov.Arnold Schwarzenegger is 68. Actor William Atherton is 68. Actor Jean Reno is 67.Blues singer-musician Otis Taylor is 67. Actress Delta Burke is 59.Actor Richard Burgi is 57.Movie director Richard Linklater is 55. Actor Laurence Fishburne is 54. Actress Lisa Kudrow is 52. Actress Vivica A. Fox is51. Actor Terry Crews is 47.Actor Simon Baker is 46. Movie director Christopher Nolan is 45. Actor Tom Green is44. Actress Hilary Swank is 41.Actress Jaime Pressly is 38.

supported by the insurance industry. Actuarial studies show Bloomberg News that someone who is married Your driving r e cord is less likely to be in an acciseems a legitimate risk for dent than someone who is sininsurers to consider when gle, she says: "It's not 'I'm not they price auto insurance. marriedand am beingcharged But your marital status? m ore.' There' s a bigger picture Yes, young men in red that has to do with your driving sports cars will pay more for habitsand how they affectyou. coverage than everyone else, It's about the accidents." but it's hard to see how being Typically, when people get widowed, divorced or sepa- married, they become more rerated has much to do with the sponsible and more concerned odds you' ll be in an accident. about their health, Worters Yet single, separated and said, and their increased risk divorced people and widows aversion shows in their driving often pay more for policies record. than married customers, acThe CFA said that pricing cording to a new study from differ ences between single the Consumer Federation of and marriedcouples persistAmerica. In the study, when ed regardless of age and that a husband died, the cost of a 2004 National Institutes of state-mandated liability cov- Health study that the induserage for the widow rose by try likes to cite is flawed. That an average of 20 percent at study shows single people havfour ofsix major insurers, ing higher driving injury rates

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Reservoir

Reservoir. Irrigation districts draw their water from the Deschutes, primarily in the Bend

er, he said many of the crops grown locally are either harvested in August or purposely

Continued from A1 Both reservoirs are at a area. starved of water to dry out in "That dip in July is very sig- preparation for harvest. level that in an average year would not be seen until early

nificant. We went from 1,900

to mid-September. Gorman and others involved in managing irrigation in the area have raised concerns about supplies since the

cfs to about 1,300 cfs, and that's due to the rain and con-

In mid-October, the watermaster's office shuts down the canal system and restricts

serving water the best we can water flowing out of the resto maintain supplies through- ervoirs to replenish the supout the summer." ply of water for the following end of winter, when it became Gorman singled out the year. Gorman said it's a little clear the snowfall that replen- North Unit Irrigation District, early to be making predictions ishes reservoirs as it melts was which provides water to near- about next year's supplies, but not going to materialize this ly 59,000 acres in Jefferson a snowy winter would be a big County, for its efforts to limit help. year. The atypically snowless water usage. As a junior water Gorman said the lack of winter was followed by a rights holder, the North Unit spring and summer snowmelt warmer than usual spring, district would be among the has left lakes relatively low and a record-hot June in most first water users to be cut off if and reduced the flow of natthe watermaster's office were ural springs. Both help to reparts of Central Oregon. Gorman said the rain and to implement strict conserva- charge the reservoirs and, just cooler weather that arrived tion measures. as importantly, boost summer earlier this month allowed his Gorman said i r r igators flows in the Deschutes and office to cut back the num- typically use more water in reduce the need for r eserber of cubic feet per second July than any other month. voir-stored irrigation water. of water it releases into the Although August is normally — Reporter: 541-383-0387, Deschutes River at Wickiup as hot as July and slightly drishammers@bendbullet in.corn

Fair

"It's the hardest thing I judge here," Allan said. "I want

Continued from A1 to give the child credit for the It's not just the adults who creativity and work they' ve get to be creative with their produce, either. Children up to

done, but I know I wouldn't let

my 8-year-old carve up a wa18 are eligible to enter the Cra- termelon, for example."

zy Critters contest.

The oddities are not limited

The rules are simple: The entry must resemble an ani-

to living organisms. Chickens were banned from this year' s

mal, be made from fruit and

fair along with m ost other

vegetables and the entrant cannot have had help from

poultry after a recent bird flu outbreak in Tumalo. parents. That didn't keep the young Entries this year included participants from the 4 -H an aptly named "potato ninja" Club from strutting their stuff, with a toothpick for a weapon though. Wednesday was the and a giraffe with a banana second time 14-year-old Jed for a neck nibbling at the top Montagner participated in the of a broccoli tree. poultry show, and this year was Redmond florist Vicki Allan far different from his first. "They had stuffed animal was in charge of judging the critters on Tuesday. She passed

over some of the more elabo-

birds for us to use," he said with a chuckle. "It wasn't what

features as their living inspirations, Montagner said the process was a lot like a quiz bowl with diagrams and other reference material taking the place of a live chicken. Most young 4-H members first enter the showmanship circuit with chicken or other poultry, so it was still a popular competition. Montagner estimatedhe was onstage for more than an hour — twice the time a normal event would take.

"I got asked a lot of questions I don't normally get asked when being judged," he said. "By the time we got down

to the last three (competitors), I was getting asked about emus and ostriches."

As for the goats, they' ll be running across teeter-totters

I was expecting at all; we were and jumping through hoops planning to share a taxider- this afternoon beginning at 1 because she considered them mied bird." p.m. rate pieces, such as a lion made out of squash and cauliflower, too cleanly made to have met the criteria.

Because stuffed a n imals don't have the same detailed

Mormon S

light on the new tension over If Scouting is good for young the Scouts: The sole require- A merican men, then it w i l l ment church leaders had at surely remain good whatev-

Continued from A1 The rites and rituals of

the time was that there be an

— Reporter: 541-382-1811, wrubin@bendbulletin.corn

er the outcome of the vote.

exemption in the compromise legislation for the Boy Scouts, scouts: As you rise through so they could continue to not becoming a deacon, a teach- hire openly gay employees. er and then a priest — rites On T u esday, M o r m ons of passage for Mormon teen and longtime church observ-

And to be grumpy like this in public seems remarkably impolitic," Ronan J a mes Head wrote on the popular progressive Mormon blog bycommoncon sent. males — at the same time ers were trying to sort out Some complained that the you rise through scout po- what was going on. Was the girls' youth programs aren' t sitions as well. The local church being sidelined by its as extensive. bishop selects scoutmasters. longtime partner? Why did Commenters o n the Many of the 16 presidents of the church seem blindsided c hurch-run k s l .corn n e w s the Church of Jesus Christ by a vote that had been in the site debated the wisdom of of Latter-day Saints received making for some time? Was church officials who said high scout honors. this really a shift away from this week that the Mormon The Boy Scouts is, literal- compromise'? Is it possible to Church may break off and ly, the youth program of the imagine the Mormon Church form its own youth program, Mormon Church for boys, separating from scouting? one that m a t ches c h urch a bond forged because the Jim Dabakis, an openly teachings and thus would be church saw their core values gay Utah senator who was easier for the church to adapt as the same: Patriotism and involved in that compromise, to its m any o verseas misdevotion to God. The Mor- said the church statement sions. Some said the Scout mon Church is also the larg- was "puzzling" but that he vote was a good reason to est Boy Scout charter; about suspected it was part of the leave, while others said the 20 percent of all scouts are overall flux in a country feel- prominence and history of Mormon. ing the push-pull of compet- the Boy Scouts would not be Reconciling its relationship ing rights — those of tradi- simple to replace. "I' ve been waiting for the with the Boy Scouts as the tional religious believers and national youth group become those of LGBT people. day when the church will "I suspect there is some drop the scouting program. I more accepting of gay equality appears to be growing post-same-sex-marriage- hope this was the last straw. m ore difficult for th e M orruling jitters there," he said, It overshadows the Duty to mon Church, whose press referring to t h e Supreme God program which is paraoffice put ou t a s t atement Court's recent finding of mount to anything regarding Monday, saying leaders were a c o nstitutional r i g h t to the young men these days. "deeply troubled" by the lift- same-gender marriage. "It' s Forget the basket-weaving ing of the ban, as well as by been a long, hard road on merit badge; time to refocus the church are intentionally connected with those of the

the fact that they had asked

LGBT issues for all sides, and

for a delay in the vote because these social battles go back the church bureaucracy takes

and forth, s ometimes you

off in July. F acing l i t igation, t h e Scouts on Monday approved a new policy allowing troops to pick openly gay volunteer leaders and banning discrimination in the hiring of employees. But it leaves it to

win, sometimes you lose." Rather than making a

individual troops and coun-

cils, most of which are faithbased, to choose leaders who reflect their own values.

Church officials declined to elaborate on the statement. But it puzzled some observ-

ers, because the Mormon Church has made high-profile efforts in the last year or so to soften its comments about sexuality and the place

of gays and lesbians. This spring, gay advo-

d ramatic move away f r om

scouting, a core of Mormon life, Dabakis — who grew up Mormon — said he hopes his bargaining partners would wait a while to see how the changes plays out. "Don' t respond in the heat of either

showed a range of views, from church members applauding the move either because they don't like Boy Scout programming or because they oppose gay equality, to those who were embarrassed by the church's

Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

-

MILWAUKEE

Flo

knows explosives. She knows how to find buried IEDs, how to detect

the smells of more than 50 types of chemicals, and how to alert her handler

when she finds something designed by humans to kill humans. Flo knows love. She knows the unconditional affection of the Ma-

rine who stayed by her side for seven intense months in

Katie Klann/ Milwaukee Journal Sentinel via TNS

Afghanistan, a Marine who Cody Crsngle, 23, plays with his retired Marine service dog, Flo, 8, loved her so much he pes- on his porch in Milwaukee. Crangle adopted Flo after both served tered the military until he

was finally able to adopt and bring her to Milwaukee. Flo knows pain. She knows something is wrong with her rear left leg, injured while playing fetch, so she hops on her three good legs and wags her tail. Last month, Cody Crangle, 23, was playing with Flo

in Afghanistan. for health care once they' re retired.

Crangle is not seeking financial help for Flo's surgery, but he wants to bring to light the dilemma faced by owners of retired military dogs. The Wisconsin-based v olunteer in apark near theirhome on group War Dogs, which honors Milwaukee's east side when military dogs by marching in she began to limp. Crangle parades and giving historical suspected she had pulled a presentations, has helped with muscle, but a veterinarian

told him Flo had tom her ACL.

She needs surgery that could cost around $4,000. Crangle made an appointment for ACL surgery in early August, and though

not a veterinarian or a doctor. I can't tell if she has PTSD, but I think in that environment she

became more skittish," said Crangle. "She is so good at her job. She'sso sensitive there were some days she was so stressed

she wouldn't go out. She just shut down. I could tell she just wanted to go home," Crangle satd.

Flo's veterinary bills so far.

"I think it's surprising to most Americans who d on' t know that veterans with four

Upon returning from Afghanistan, Flo went back to the war dog faciTity for medical

and mental health assessment legs and a tail don't get services and to meet her next handler when they retire," said Robin for another tour. Crangle freGanzert, president and CEO of quently called the facility to the American Humane Society. see if Flo was going back to Afhe's a University of WisconWhen Crangle joined his ghanistan and with which unit. sin-Milwaukee student who company in the 2nd Battalion, Months later, he learned she works in a bar, he said he' ll 4th Marine Division, he was was beingretired and placed figure out some way to pay told he would be the squad's up for adoption. the tab. dog handler. He and others Crangle adopted Flo and While Flo was serving in from his unit w ere sent to drove to O'Hare International the military, she had access North Carolina, where they Airport in Chicago to pick her to top veterinary care. But were assigned dogs. up during the 2012 Christmas "When I met her, one of the holiday — their emotional reunlike other retired service members, there's no trainers came up to me and union not unlike other returnVA medical system for war said, 'Oh, you have a really spe- ing warheroes greeting loved dogs. cial dog,"' Crangle said in an ones. "If they need veterinar- interview. "She was the biggest Flo stayed with Crangle's i an services, I think t h e sweetheart in the world. Flo parents when he deployed to government should do that. right away made me feel like I Asia with the Marines in 2014. ... They have served, and loved her and she loved me." Now they live together as Cranserved with honor, and they When Flo and Crangle were gle, who left the Marines when deserve to be taken care of stationed in Helmand province, his hitch was done last year, just like any other veteran," they always walked at the front studiesfor a business degree said Jerry Witt, an Army of foot patrols. and works. dog handler who credits the Crangle knew bomb detecLike many Marines, both two dogs he worked with in tion dogs and their handlers Crangle and Flo sport tattoos. Vietnam for saving his life. were high-value targets of ter- Flo's left ear is tattooed with her During the Vietnam War, rorists. Protective of Flo, Cran- ID — R670. Among Crangle's U.S. military dogs were gle usually kept her close as numerous tattoos is one on his consideredequipment and they discovered all manner of right biceps — his pup's dog not m i l itary p e r sonnel. bombs — from hand grenades tag, R670. None returned home at the hanging from trees attached to end of the war — half were trip wires to daisy chains of a euthanized, while the oth-

dozen mortars.

ers were given to the South Vietnamese army. Military dog handlers from Vietnam lobbied Congress to change the rules and bring dogs Clinton signed legislation

Though Flo was exposed to recordings of explosions, gunfire and screams during training, eventually her demeanor changed in Afghanistan. Initially, she was OK as long as she was at Crangle's side, but one day when his camp

that ensures all m i litary

came under indirect fire, Flo

dogs are treated like true

changed. "She was terrified, shaking

home once their service is done. In 1992, President Bill

veterans.

But they' re not eligible

nonstop for like 24 hours. I'm

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ally matters," one ksl.corn commenter wrote. Quin Monson, a political scientist at Brigham Young University — who is also a Mormon who was in scouts,

and whose son is in scoutssaid Tuesday that the church statement doesn't reflect the fact that the Mormon Church

has sought more conciliatory positions on hot-button issues

Land: Mormons and Ameri can Politics," said hi s r e -

search shows that Mormons more than evangelical

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Protestants, among others-

are more open to compromises such as civil unions and

are becoming increasingly so. "I think if you read beUtah made headlines when statement because it seemed t ween the l i nes (of t h e they announced they'd been condemning of gays. secretly meeting for many When the Scouts wel- church's statement Monday), months and had hammered comed openlygay youth in they were just trying to get out a compromise to ban dis- 2013, the Mormon Church this to slow down and have crimination in housing and made clear that its teachings a conversation. My guess is employment against LGBT call all youth to chastity and it's not necessarily a visceral people. that gay youth are welcome negative reaction," he said. Mormon Church l e adBoth sides said they were along with straight youth. willing t o r e cognize the In other words, they tried to ers said Tuesday that they wouldn't expect any comment needs of the other. downplay the difference. "Wow. What a n I ' m -tak- until August, when their full O ne detail o f t h a t c o m promise, however, may shed ing-my-ball-home comment! leadership regroups. cates and Mormon leaders in

By Meg Jones

our efforts on that which re-

victory or losing. It's just bad than some other religiously policy." conservative faiths. Mormon blogs, from proMonson, who last year pubgressiveones to those close- lished "Seeking the Promised ly affiliated with the church,

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THURSDAY, JULY 30, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

As Medicare and Medicaid turn 50,

use of private health planssurges By Robert Pear New York Times News Service

WASHINGTON — As Medi-

Warner's

Care Act as a logical extension

of the two social insurance In the original versions of Medicare and Medicaid, beneficiaries could go to any and the government would pay providers a fee for each service. By contrast, in pri-

"Facebook is going to be the

said Zac Moffatt, a co-founder of Targeted Victory, a Republican technology firm that ran Mitt Romney's 2012 digital effort. "They have the largest

'

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~

.

ad

N e w Y o rk-based

e, @ Christine Mai-Doc i Los Angeles Times via TNS

A 1922 copy of "The Everyday SongBook," containing lyrics to

1927 edition of the songbook that was induded in a cache of

cording to some estimates. As it stands, Warner can charge anyone who wants to the plaintiffs have argued sing or play "Happy Birthday that the song's original au- to You" as part of a profit-mak-

federal or state government pays insurers, which receive a fixed amount per member per month.

Zach Gibson / New York Times News Service

Washington, D.C. The company,working to expand its digital dominance in the political realm, has pitched its tools and services to every presidential campaign in the 2016 race to showcase new

about them or how Facebook is able to infer from even a post to a friend what their political

orientation might be," said M are Rotenberg, president of the Electronic Privacy Infor-

mation Center, a privacy rights group. "If you' re a Facebook user, Facebook knows everything you' ve said, everything you' ve posted, everything you' ve clicked on." Facebook also learns the behavior of its users, allowing the

site to optimize for voter preferences. Those who are more

• sess\a .

e-

' q gr

twined in hundreds of mil-

lions of private and public celebrations every year.

likely to stop and watch a video

will be shown one, while those inclined to click a link and sign

The fact that the birth-

day tune can't be played or sung without permis-

a petition or donate money, for

example, will receive a link. "There's a level of precision

/f

sion has been fodder for

cocktail party trivia, but for Warner Music Group, it

that doesn't exist in any other

medium," said Crystal Patterson, a government and politics

()t

means business. The com-

outreach manager at F ace-

book, who works with Democrats. "It's getting the right message to the right people at the right time." Which is why, several days before his official announcement on July 13, Walker's digital team convened a con-

pany has been enforcing its copyright daim since it paid $15 million to buy Birch Tree Group, the successor to Clayton F. Summy Co.,

which owned the original copyright. Royalties on the song bring in about $2 million a year for Warner, ac-

ference call with a roomful of Facebook employees to walk

W~

through the final touches of the candidate's online kick-

off, featuring everything from behind-the-scenes glimpses of him taking the stage to aping them out on Election Day, peals to buy T-shirts. "We cangetaway with dorather than trying to win over ing a little bit more, because uncommitted voters. But the practice also raises this is our prom night, this is potential privacy concerns. our Super Bowl," Justin Lo"I think most users really Franco, the creative and conhave no idea how much in- tent director for the Walker formation Facebook collects campaign, said on the call.

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Underneath the song's title was

ing enterprise. That most often

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documentsreleased by Warner's defense team on July 13.

a line too blurry to read, so the perform the song and failed happens with stage produc- attorneys called around to lito assertany copyright over tions, on TV, in movies, in ring- braries, seeking an original. it. Then, a little over two tones or in greeting cards. But They found it, and in small, weeks ago, they received even those who want to sing it neat lettering the book read, what they say is a "smoking publicly as part of a business, "Special permission through gun" that proves "Happy such as r estaurant owners courtesy of The Clayton F. Birthday to You" has been giving out free birthday cake, Summy Co." "(Warner) says Summy nevin the public domain for de- technically have to pay to use cades: a 1922 songbook that the song. er authorized or knew about publishes the tune and its The plaintiffs have argued any prior publications with lyrics without any copyright that Patty Smith Hill allowed permission," said R andall notice. the public to use her song wide- Newman, a New York attorney If the plaintiffs are ulti- ly without asserting any copy- representing one of the plainmately successful, Warner right. Among other things, they tiffs. "This shows that that's not could be on the hook for the pointed to a 1935 Time article, true." millions of dollars in licens- which said Hill had "long ago After Newman found the ing fees that it has collected resigned herself to the fact that original of the 1927 songbook, since 1988. the ditty had become the com- he ordered it, and another verThe story of this song be- mon property of the nation." sion from 1922 — on Amazon gins in 1893 with a schoolThe plaintiffs assert that for about $3 each. Music that teacher and her sister and though Warner owns the rights was published before 1923 is a little-known tune t h at to a specific sheet music ar- generally considered to be in shares the same melody. rangement of the song, it does the public domain. Warner has Patty Smith Hill and Milnot own the song itself. filed a motion opposing the dred Hill wrote the song for Warner attorneys disagree. plaintiffs' request for a judgPatty's kindergarten stu- They argued in an eight-page ment based on the new evidents, titling it "Good Morn- court document filed Tuesday dence, and Judge George King ing to All." Its original lyrics that Jessica Hill, who had in- has given the plaintiffs a week were: "Good morning to herited part of Mildred Hill's to respond. A final ruling on you/Good morning to you/ rights to the song, renewed the the copyright issue could come Good morning, dear chil- copyright to "Good Morning" within a few weeks, according dren/Good morning to all." in 1921, and that the "Happy to plaintiffs' lawyers. The song evolved into the Birthday" song was copyrightIf the plaintiffs succeed, the well-known birthday song, ed by Summy with authoriza- trial case would proceed to a with lyrics by Patty Smith tion from the family in 1935. secondphase to determine how Hill, and became what the Summy renewed the copyright much of the fees, if any, Warner Guinness World Records in 1962, decades before Warner would have to repay. Newman book has said is the most Music bought Summy's succes- says the plaintiffs are prepared widely sung song in the En- sor company. to argue that Warner knowingglish language. But attorneys for the plain- ly hid the songbook. A Warner spokesman deToday, it has secured a tiffs believe their strongest evplace not only in the canon idence came via a copy of the clined to comment. of the American songbook, but also in the nation's cultural fabric, becoming interthor allowed the public to

its tools and services to ev-

advertising monster of 2016,"

~a l

main as early as the 1920s. For months, attorneys for

features as candidates seek to reach andrecruit new supporters United States — has pitched and potential donors.

this month.

tydeyny, etdceyy Dody

to drift into the public do-

A poster encourages voting at the Facebook headquarters in

tools for advertising and the case new features as candi- most aggressive approach to datesseek to reach and recruit allowing campaigns to levernew supporters and potential age their data to maximize efdonors. ficiency and minimize waste." Some estimate that 2016 will Campaigns can now include usher in roughly $1 billion in what Facebook describes as online political advertising, a "call to action" at the end of and Facebook says it is on their videos — in most cases, track to increase its revenue a link that allows users to dofrom previous cycles. nate to the campaign or sign a Since 2012, Facebook has petition. doubled its government and Video represents a tremenpolitics team, which includes a dous growth area generally. political ad sales group, a data When Facebook announced communications team and em- its new video capacities in Sepployees devoted solely to Dem- tember 2014, it had 1 billion ocrats or Republicans. Katie video views a day. Now, the Harbath, who was previously site gets four times as many. the chief digital strategist at Another innovation allows the National Republican Sen- a campaign to upload its voter atorial Committee, oversees file — a list of those they hope the political strategy side of will turn out to vote or can be Facebook's Washington-based persuaded to do so — directly team. to Facebook, where it can tarAnd Facebook has rolled get those users. Integrating out several tools since the last this deep and rich source of presidential election to help information about voters also campaigns reach voters more allows campaigns to find and efficiently and effectively. The reach other Facebook users two most i m portant, cam- who resemble, in behavior and paigns and operatives said, interests, those in their existare the site's improved video ing voter file. capacities and the ability for The emphasis on reaching campaigns to upload their vot- increasingly segmented voter files directly to Facebook. ers reflects the narrowing of A nother f e ature a l l o w s the electorate, in which camcandidates to h ol d q ues- paigns are devoting more and tion-and-answer sessions on more money and effort to findthe site, as Hillary Clinton did ing their supporters and turn-

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inal author allowed the tune

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song, against Warner Music "Happy Birthday," is part of litigation to free the often-used song Group. from copyright claims because it was published in 1922 — sans At issue is whether the copyright notice — before it was registered with the copyright 1935 copyright on the song office in 1935. is valid, or whether the orig-

doctor who would take them,

tives, Facebook, already a ma-

jor player in past cycles, has been working to expand its digital dominance in the political realm. Facebook — which has 189

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a documentary about the

But new supporters received a

paign's online store. While it is no surprise that campaigns are devoting a greater share of their budget and energy on digital initia-

• Aj

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Good Morning to You Productions, which is making

Continued fromA1 Those supporters who had already given money, for instance, were served an ad seeking another donation.

to click on a link to the cam-

attorneys

their clients until it expires in 2030.

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tene. Enrollment has soared This week, the White House as the government,in an effort is using the half-century annito control costs and improve versaryofMedicare and Medcare, pays private insurers to icaid to portray the Affordable

care and Medicaid reach their 50th anniversary today, the provide and coordinatemeditwo vast government programs calservices for more and more that insure more than one-third beneficiaries. of Americansare undergoing Although the programs rea transformation that none of main highly popular with patheir original architects fore- tients, skeptics question whethsaw: Private health insurance er the use of private plans will companies are playing a rapid- save the government money in ly growing role in both. the long run and worry that the More than 30 percent of the plans may skimp on care. But 55 million Medicare beneficia- both programs served as founries and well over half of the 66 dations for the 2010 Affordable million Medicaid beneficiaries Care Act which, like the newer are now in private health plans versions ofMedicare and Medrun by insurance companies icaid, uses a combination of like the UnitedHealth Group, governmentmoney and private Humana, Anthem and Cen- insurance to provide coverage.

Copyright

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Saturday,August1 Jr. livestock Buyers BBII 11 am-1:30 pm Beef Auction at noon,all animals to be auctioned inSwine Ring

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Fair Hours: 10am-10pm

Thursday,July 30

THE BUL LETIN 85 MID DREBD NCREDIT UNIDNDAV

CARNIVA L

Fair Hours: 10am-10pm

Friday, July31

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Ages 12 and under are admitted to the Fair for FREE! 12 years and under

*One FREE Carnival Ride Ticket*

835 DayofSale www.expo.des chutes.orl Rodeo - gates open at5:30 pm, performancestarts at 6:30 pm. Rodeo Free with Fair admission. Seniors 62+ AdmittedFREE!

Visit www.events.ktvz.corn for details!

CENTRALOREGON SHDPPER DAV

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Saturday,August1

Fair Hours: 10am-5pm

Fair Hours: 10 am-11pm FREESport Pack

$6 Admission for everyone.

Fair Hours: 10am-11pm

CARNIVA l WRISTBANDDAV-

All Carnival Games $2.00 Rodeo - gates open at 5:30 pm, performance starts at 6:30 pm.

while supplies last at Central OregonShopper booth.

Chute ¹9 rodeo dance to follow

Rodeo - gates openat 5:30 pm, performancestarts at 6:30 pm. Rodeo Freewith Fair admission. Chute ¹9 rodeo dance to follow.

Rodeo - gates open at5:30 pm, performance starts at 6:30 pm. Rodeo Freewith Fair admission.

Sunday,August2

Rodeo

Mid Oregon

825 Pre-SaleOnline 835 DayofSale www.expo.desch ntes.ore Wild WestShows Juniper Arcana 11 amand2 pm

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Old-fashioned, Affordable Fa mily Fun! For The First Time! Fair and Carnival Tickets Available Online!

www.Expo.deschutes.org

New this year-Jest In TimeFamily Circus, Mutton Bustin', bicycle obstacle course, giant water ball/firehose competition area. Plus our traditional free pony ridesandfree petting zoo, Campfire, andspecial areahosted by local fire co-op memberswill be there too!

Watch TheBulletin for a detailedschedule. ThebalmilyFunZoneismadepossihlehytheselinesponsorsandpartnersolTheBulletin

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© www.bendbulletin.corn/local

THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JULY 30, 2015

BRIEFING Suspicious letters sender ID'd Investigators have identified, interviewed and released aEugene man they believe mailed suspicious letters to government offices in about 20 Oregoncounties, including Jefferson County. Oregon State Police said in a newsrelease Wednesday that in interviews, LanceStorm, 34, denied including harmful substances in the letters and said he didn't intend to "alarm" recipients. Police determined Storm was not a threat and he was released. Preliminary testing indicates no harmful substances were in the letters. Crook County Sheriff Jim Hensley said Tuesday that his office had also received asuspicious letter, though Crook County is not included in the state police's list of affected counties.

REDMOND

ver reen ui In re esi nunveie By Ted Shorack

1922.

The Bulletin

The designs presented Wednesday

REDMOND — Th e city o f

R ed- indicate much of the existing open

mond u nveiled i n i tial d e signs space in the interior will be used for Wednesday for preserving the his- public meetings and common areas. "We want the prime space to be toricEvergreen Elementary School building in addition to upgrading it to the public space," said Mayor George a new city hall and civic center. Endicott. "The grand spaces are for City officials expect to change very public meetings. It's going to be pretty little of the building's facade to pro- neat when it's done." tect its historic integrity. The inside While designs are still being forwill see significant alterations while mulated for the inside, the city plans Submitted rendering also integrating interior designs from to start construction in September. A rendering shows what the interior of the Evergreen School will look like once the the era when the school was built in SeeEvergreen/B2 refurbishing is complete.

ear nin w a i 's i c o ivewi 8 l S B i i

REDMOND

Councilor

Ginny McPherson

BMC to cuthours at Redmondclinic

steps down

Bend Memorial Clinic plans to close its Redmond UrgentCareclinic facility on weekendsin August andSeptember, BMC announcedTuesday. The facility was closed on Sundays inJuneand reopened for weekend hours in July, according to a news release. The BMC'surgent care clinics in Bend,at 1501 NEMedical Center Drive on theeastside, and 815 SW Bond St. in

Bulletin staff report Councilor Ginny McPherson has resigned from the Redmond City Council after accept-

ing a job with the city' s community development department.

McPherson, who has served on the City Council for more than two years,

made her decision to leave the position on Saturday. "What I have enjoyed most about serving on the City Council is the involvement I have had in shaping Redmond," McPherson said in a released state-

the Old Mill District, will

be open 8a.m. to 4p.m. Saturdays andSundays, according to the release.

ment. "My new position

Stabbing suspect awaits review A Bend manaccused of stabbing hisCentral Oregon Community College roommatelast fall will undergo apsychological evaluation Aug. 25 at the OregonState Hospital. Eric Norgaard, who has yet to plead, is charged with first-degree assault, attempt to commit murder andunlawful use of aweapon inconnection with the incident in November. A status hearingwas delayedWednesdayto Aug. 27 to allow timefor the evaluation. Norgaard's attorney, Timothy Fleming, said in Deschutes County Circuit Court on Wednesday that about a monthand a half ago, thecourt had handed down anorder for an evaluation to be completed within 30 days. If that evaluation was not complete, a representative from the Oregon StateHospital was to appear incourt to explain why. "None of thosethings have happened,"Fleming said.

A notice of intent to rely on aguilty except for insanity defensewas filed June19, according to the OregoneCourt Case Information system.

AG will visit Bend to talk seams Attorney General Ellen Rosenblum will visit downtown Bend to talk about consumer seams next month. Rosenblum will hold office hours for Central Oregon residents to learn about seamsand file consumercomplaints from 12:30to 2 p.m. Aug. 19 attheDowntown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St. — Bulletin staff reports

affords me the opportunity to increase that involvement in a very hands-on

manner." According to a news release, McPherson will begin working as the temporary assistant program

.r~

administrator with the

t

community development department. McPherson and her

Jarod Opp erman/The Bulletin

husband, Steve, are pastors

Wearing light-blocking glasses, Bend Councilor Barb Campbell gets a taste of what it's like to live with blindness while being led by Michael Funke down Third Street in Bend.

at City Center Foursquare

Church in Redmond. She ran in a tight race for the By Tyler Leeds The Bulletin

Bend City Councilor Barb

Campbell had a hard time traversing a 5-foot ramp

Wednesday. Being in a wheelchair didn't make things easy for her, and that was the point, as the able-bodied councilor,

"I think this event has made attitudes better. I don't sit in my room and think about how my

city council seat in the

by Central Oregon Coalition for Access, an accessibili-

ty advocacy group. Carol Fulkerson, a member of the

almost been hit a couple of times."

organization, said, "For some

— Jordan Ohlde, who uses a motorized chair

others were participating in than it looks, and it was a "Disability for a Day" event. way too fast going down," she said. "At first, I thought,

'Yay, I don't have to push too hard for 10 feet.' And then I thought, 'Oh, no, where are

November 2012 election but was ultimately elected along with councilors Joe Centanni and Camden King. Mayor George Endicott will choose McPherson's replacement, and the remaining city council members will vote on and decide whether to approve

The event was sponsored

disability has taken over my life; I get out. And when I'm out, cars don't watch for me.I' ve

government staffers and "That ramp is steeper

my brakes? '"

person who hasn't had to live with a disability in their life, it's easy to make assumptions about what works and

what doesn' t, so events like these can be very helpful."

the candidate.

SeeMcPherson/B2

See Disabilities/B2

Paid Advertisement

Third Sisterscity councilor resigns, citing the 'toxic' political climate By Kailey Fisicaro The Bulletin

In four months, three mem-

bers have stepped down from Sisters City Council. Wendy

"It's a nightmare for her, what she's going through."

Holzman, who was in her fifth

— Sisters City Manager year on the council, turned in Andrew Gorsyeb her formal resignation Friday. Mayor Chris Frye confirmed her resignation Wednesday, thinking about it for quite explaining some time," said Gorayeb. "It' s Holzman had let anightmareforher,whatshe's him know in ad- going through." vance she would

In her formal resignation,

Holzman

li k e ly be leaving, released to The Nugget newsbut he declined paper, Holzman explained to provide further comment. her daughter was in a serious City Manager Andrew Gor- bicycle accident in April in ayeb also said Holzman let him which she fractured three know ahead of time she proba- vertebrae in her cervical spine. bly would be leaving the coun- Holzman's plan now, she said cil before her term expired.

"I' ve known Wendy's been

in the resignation statement,

is to help her daughter recov-

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current 'contentious and toxic'

political climate (as I' ve heard it described many times), I do not believe this is possible."

Bill Hall, who was appointed to the council at the end of May, resigned earlier this month. McKibben Womack, whom Hall replaced, stepped down in April. Both cited the

"toxic" atmosphere as the

cause,according to The Bulletin archives. See Sisters /B5

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B2

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JULY 30, 2015

E VENT TODAY DESCHUTESCOUNTYFAIR& RODEO:Featuring rides, concerts, a rodeo, food, live animals and more;

free for seniors onWednesday, $6 admissionon Sunday;10 a.m.;$12, $7 for children 6-12 and seniors, free age 5 and under; Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center, 3800 SW Airport Way, Redmond; www.expo. deschutes.org or 541-548-2711. MUNCH ANDMUSIC: KATTAND THE ROOTSREVOLUTION:The Afro-Caribbean band performs, with The Rum andThe Sea; 5:30 p.m.; Drake Park, 777 NW Riverside Blvd., Bend; www.c3events.corn or 541-389-0995. MARTINA MCBRIDE: The country

singer performs; 7 p.m.,doorsopen at 5:30 p.m.; free, ticket and fair admission is required; Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center, 3800 SW Airport Way, Redmond; 541-548-2711. "ALL WORKALLPLAY:THE PURSUITOF ESPORTS GLORY LIVE":A documentary about the Intel Extreme Masters, a progaming tour that for teams and players all around the world to compete for the championship title in their respective eSports; 7:30 p.m.; $15; Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 and IMAX, 680 SWPowerhouse Drive, Bend; 844-462-7342. "MAC ONTHE MOVE": Featuring

a performance ofShakespeare's classic "Macbeth";7:30 p.m .; gates open at 6:30 p.m.; $10 plus fees; Maragas Winery, 15523 SW U.S. Highway 97, Culver; www. bendticket.corn or 541-546-5464. KEITH ROSS NELSON: Featuring the comedian chosen "Best of the Fest" at the 2014 Burbank and Ventura ComedyFestivals;8 p.m.;$8 plus fees in advance online, $10 at the

ENDA R

To submit an event, visit bendbulletin.corn/events and click 'Add Event" at least 10 days before publication. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Questions: communitylife@bendbulletin.corn,541-383-0351.

door; The Summit Saloon & Stage, 125 NW Oregon Ave., Bend; www. bendcomedy.corn or 541-419-0111.

FRIDAY ART OFTHE WEST EXHIBIT OPENS:A juried art show with artists from around the country, the show culminates with a silent auction to benefit the High Desert

Museum'seducational programson Aug. 29; 9 a.m.; free for members, $15 for non-members; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754. DESCHUTESCOUNTYFAIR & RODEO:Featuring rides, concerts, a rodeo, food, live animals and more; free for seniors on Wednesday, $6 admissiononSunday;10a.m .;$12, $7 for children 6-12 and seniors, free age 5 and under; Deschutes County Fair 8 Expo Center, 3800 SW Airport Way, Redmond; www.expo. deschutes.org or 541-548-2711. BEND FARMERSMARKET: Featuring food, drinks and more; 2 p.m.; Mountain View High School, 2755 NE27th St., Bend; www.bendfarmersmarket.corn or 541-408-4998. SISTERS FARMERSMARKET: Featuring fresh vegetables, fruits, locall y made goodsand more;2 p.m.; Barclay Park, Hood Street, between Ash and Elm, Sisters; 541-719-8030. MILL QUARTERBLOCK PARTY: Featuring music, drinks, food, an arcade and more; 6:30 p.m.; ATLAS Cider-Old Mill Marketplace, 550 SW Industrial Way, Bend; 541-390-8096. AMERICA:The American rock band performs; 7 p.m., doors open at 5:30 p.m.; free, ticket and fair admission is required; Deschutes County Fair 8 Expo Center, 3800 SW Airport Way, Redmond; www.expo.deschutes.org

Submitted photo

Country singer Martina McBrlde will perform at 7 p.m. tonight at the Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center. or 541-548-2711. TONY SMILEY& KEEZ:The loop artist from Portland performs, with Keez;9:30 p.m.;$5 plus fees in advance, $7 at the door; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.corn or 541-323-1881.

MARKET:Featuring local organic

SATURDAY

food andmore; 10a.m.; across

MADRAS SATURDAYMARKET: Featuring food, drinks, live music

and more; 9a.m.; SahaleePark, 241 SE Seventh St., Madras; 541-546-6778. NWX SATURDAYFARMER'S

artisans in produce,meats, baked goods, skincare and more; 10 a.m.; NorthWest Crossing, NW Crossing Drive, Bend; www. nwxfarmersmarket.corn or 541-350-4217. CENTRALOREGONSATURDAY MARKET:Featuring crafts, music, from the Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NWWall St., Bend; 541-420-9015. DESCHUTESCOUNTY FAIR & RODEO:Featuring rides, concerts, a rodeo, food, live animals and more; free for seniors on Wednesday, $6

cilor Barb

Evergreen

Campbell

Continued from 61

BendCountries out a wheelchair

Square. Jarod Opperman The Bulletin

when participants had their

dential streets.

eyes coveredand were led by guides acrossthe intersection

The current parking lot design would allow for 67 on-site spaces. Pa rking would also be allowed along the curbs adjacent to the new city halL The city has 30 employees on staff who would be using the parking

Continued from B1 The participants were given wheelchairsand led on ajourney from a building off Third Street to a nearby Taco Bell,

this city. It's part of

a route Fulkerson said would

director, said she knew the city's roads were inbad shape, a Day group but having to crossthe street without sight made that even clearer. Walking along Third seemed to be about a 13-point Street, Eagan said thesounds turn. of passing cars made it feel Jordan Ohlde, who uses a like she was in t h e s treet, motorized chair, smiled when something she wouldn't like saying the route laid out for to experience alone. the participants avoided some There was also a le sson of the steeper, rougher patches in the stigma that can come of sidewalks and curbs along with a disability, as someone

be "the longest six-tenths of a mile they will ever travel." To replicate navigating smaller spaces,there were also rugs marked with lines to show how much room a restaurant

is required to leave clear, as well as the amount of area required in front of a cluster

mailbox. Michelle Healy, the Bend Park & Recreation District's

the ballgame."

of Third Street and Green-

for the Commission for the Blind, after someone yelled from a truck at the Disability for

Bend'seconomic development

wood Avenue. Carolyn Eagan, the city of — Pat Wetmore, representative

About 30people attended an open house Wednesdayabout the project.Many were concerned about impacts to the surrounding neighborhood, especially the potential for increased traffic and parking on residential

vators. Construction inside

will include laying Brazilian cherry hardwood flooring in the wide hallways. "I'm very impressedwith the way t hey' re moving forward on th is," said Bill

Groesz, a Redmond resident. "I'I re a l ly optimistic after seeing this."

Groesz said the proposed designs surpassedwhat he had envisioned for the build-

ing's historic restoration and see what the inside looked upgrade. like at the time. The renoJon Fessler, of Redmond, vation process will include alsoapproved of the designs some design elements from and attention to ke eping yearbooks and pictures to

that era, in cluding crown

the interioropen spaces for

public meetings and places for community membersto "We're looking to bring gather. lot. all that back as we move it Fesslersaid he would like "That way w e w on't b e forward into a modern city to see the city turn the gym impacting the neighborhood hall," said Richards. into a community event cenaround us with parking," The initial plans also call ter and theater for residents. said Heather Richards, the for refurbishing the main — Reporter: 541-617-7820, Redmond community devel- staircaseswhile adding eletshorack@bendbulleti n.corn

McPherson

director of strategic planning and design, noted that trying to simply turn about-face without crossing the lines was "very difficult." While ridinga power scooter, Campbell said it wasgoing to take a 20-point

Third Street in Bend. "I think this event has made attitudes better," he said. "I

don't sit in my room and think city," said Pat We tmore, a about how my disability has local representative for the taken over my life; I get out. Commission for the Blind, a And when I'm out, cars don't state agency. "It's part of the

derway in Redmond ... we need someone who can hit the ground running," Endicott saidin a newsrelease."It

turn for her to reverse course.

watch for me. I' ve almost been

is important that candidates for appointment understand

In the end, Campbell said she hit acouple of times." gave up after making what A fear of cars was acute

541-420-0279. SUNDAYAFTERNOONDANCE: Featuring a dance with The Notable Swing Dance and Betty Berger; 2 p.m.; $5 per person; Bend Senior Center, 1600 SEReedMarket Road, Bend; 541-388-1133. WILDERNESS:Thefolk-rock band performs, as part of the 2015 Bend Memorial Clinic Free Summer Sunday Concert Series; 2:30p.m.,gatesopen at1 p.m.; LesSchwab Amphitheater,322 SW Shevlin Hixon Drive, Bend; www.bendconcerts.corn or 541-312-8510. SUNRIVER MUSICFESTIVAL: FESTIVALFAIRE:An evening of player from Portlandperforms, fine dining, silent and live auctions, with Stephanie Schneiderman; 9 and musicprovided bytheYoung p.m.; $12 plus fees in advance, Artists Scholarship winners, to $15 at the door; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; benefit the Sunriver Music Festival's 38th season; 5 p.m.; $100; Great www.volcanictheatrepub.corn or Hall-Sunriver Resort, 17600 541-323-1881. Center Drive, Sunriver; www. sunrivermusic.org or 541-593-01 84. SUNDAY ALIVE:A family-friendly night DESCHUTESCOUNTYFAIR& of music, prizes and more, with RODEO:Featuring rides, concerts, a Mission Church;6:30 p.m.;Les rodeo, food, live animals and more; Schwab Amphitheater, 322 SW free for seniors on Wednesday, $6 Shevlin Hixon Drive, Bend; www. admissio nonSunday;10a.m.;$12, facebook.c orn/MissionChurchBend $7 for children 6-12 and seniors, free or 541-306-6209.

In addition to t he m a in

at Red Oak

"There arejerks in

centraloregonshows.corn or

building,the site includes an annex building on the north sideand a gym. City officials plan to de- streets. molish the annex to allow for more parking, but they'll savethe gym. opment director. The city expects to be The city p u r chased the ready to m o v e in t o t h e 3-acre lot and school from two-story Evergreen build- the Redmond School Dising by October2016. trict in 20 11 for $250,000. About 30 people attended To create a new city hall an open house Wednesday the city expects to spend $9 about the project. Many million. were concerned about imThe building was used as pacts to the surrounding the Redmond Union High neighborhood, e specially School after co nstruction. the potential for in creased Richards said the design traffic and parking on resi- team has looked at o l d

Wednesday afternoon

Disabilities

age 5 and under; Deschutes County Fair 8 Expo Center, 3800 SW Airport Way, Redmond; www.expo. deschutes.org or 541-548-2711. COMAG ANNUALJEWELRY+ METAL ARTSSHOW:Featuring a show with a diverse group of Central Oregon metal artists; 11 a.m.; The Oxford Hotel, 10 NW Minnesota Ave., Bend; 541-639-6578. CENTRAL OREGON WILDWEST SHOW:As part of the Deschutes County Fair, shows at11 a.m. and 2 p.m.; Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center, 3800 SW Airport Way, Redmond; www.

admissionon Sunday;10 a.m.;$12, $7 for children 6-12 and seniors, free age 5 and under; Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center, 3800 SW Airport Way, Redmond; www.expo. deschutes.org or 541-548-2711. THORN HOLLOW STRINGBAND: Stompyourfeetand doe-see-doe to the pioneer-inspired jigs of the frontier; 11 a.m. free for members, $15 for nonmembers; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; www.highdesertmuseum.org or 541-382-4754. COMAG ANNUALJEWELRY+ METAL ARTSSHOW: Featuring a show with a diverse group of Central Oregon metal artists; 11 a.m.; The Oxford Hotel, 10 NW Minnesota Ave., Bend; 541-639-6578. JOE NICHOLS: The country singer performs; 7 p.m., doors open at 5:30 p.m.; free, ticket and fair admission is required; Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center, 3800 SW Airport Way, Redmond; www.expo.deschutes.org or 541-548-2711. TWILIGHT CINEMA:"THE SPONGEBOB MOVIE: SPONGE OUT OF WATER": A outdoorscreening of the 2015 movie; 7 p.m.; free; The Village at Sunriver, 57100 Beaver Drive, Sunriver; 541-585-3333. TONY FURTADO: The banjo

leaned out of their truck to yell

at theblindfolded group. "There are jerks in this

Continued from 61 "With all the projects un-

ballgarn e." — Reporter:541-633-2160,

molding and pendant light fixtures.

See us for retractable awnings, exterior solar screens, shadestructures.

demonstrate the ability t o

communicateand collaborate effectively and have a desire

Sun I/I/hen you wantit, shade when y0IJ needit.

to assume the responsibili-

ties and accountability inherent in the work of a council member."

SH

AI I I I I V

The replacement would servethe rest of McPherson's term, which ends Dec. 31,

the role of city government, 2016.

tleeds@bendbulletin.corn

CI

O >N DEMA N D

541-389-9983 www.shadeondemand.corn T HIR D A N N U A L

NEWS OF RECORD arrest made at 8:31 a.m. July 28, in the 61500 block of S. U.S.Highway 97. The Bulletin will update items in the Theft —A theft was reported at11:59 Police Log whensuch arequest a.m. July 28, in the 60900 block of is received. Any newinformation, Zircon Drive. such as the dismissal of charges or acquittal, must be verifiable. For more Theft —A theft was reported at 3:27 p.m. July 28, in the area ofSW information, call 541-633-2117. Bradbury Wayand SWShevlin Hixon Drive. BEND POLICE Theft —A theft was reported at10:27 DEPARTMENT a.m. July 27, in the 1000 block of SE 15th Street. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported and an arrest made at6:32 p.m. July 24, in DESCHUTES the area of NEButler Market Road and COUNTY SHERIFF'S NE BoydAcres Road. OFFICE DUII —Beverly May Wagner, 73, was arrested on suspicion of driving under Theft —A theft was reported at 7:30 the influence of intoxicants at12:53 a.m. July 27, in the area ofCrane a.m. July 26, in the 600 block of NW Prairie Reservoir. Franklin Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at 7:51 Theft —A theft was reported at 8:14 a.m. July 27, in the area ofCrane p.m. July 27, in the 61100block of Prairie Reservoir. Concho Street. Theft —A theft was reported at1 Theft —A theft was reported and an p.m. July 27, in the 63900 block of W.

POLICE LOG

Quail Haven Drive. Theft —A theft was reported at1:03 p.m. July 27, in the 5600 block of SW Impala Lane. Theft —A theft was reported at 3:17

5KRII-Ialk

p.m. July 27, in the area ofCrane Prairie Reservoir. Theft —A theft was reported at 3:40 p.m. July 27, in the 200 block of W. Cascade Avenue.

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THURSDAY, JULY 30, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

B3

REGON

e 0 I'I e e ICe I ' eci eI'

AROUND THE STATE

C IVIS Sfci

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BuSineSSOregOndireCtOrStepS dOWn—Theheadof Oregon's economic developmentagency is stepping downafter a little more than ayear in thejob. Gov.KateBrown's office announcedWednesdaythat Sean Robbins is leavingBusinessOregon in the fall. Brown's office said Robbins is returning toWisconsin to becloser to family. Thegovernor credits Robbins with shifting Oregon's focus ofeconomic development efforts. Thestate nowemphasizes growing existing businessesover using incentives to recruit firms from other states. Beforetaking the helm of BusinessOregon inJune2014, Robbins ledGreater Portland Inc., an economic developmentagencyfor the metro area.

By Steven Dubois The Associated Press

Man getS priSOn fOr SeXWith teen — AnOregon manwho

PORTLAND — E n v i ronmental activists rappelled off

taught at a church in Idaho isspending at least ayear anda half in prison for having asexual relationship with ateenagestudent. Police arrested 24-year-old CaseyDyck in February. CanyonCounty prosecutors say hehadsexual contact with the girl at his homeandthe church. Investigators say healso sent inappropriate text messages tostudents at Centennial Baptist Church, and told one girl she would get extra credit for wearing low-cut tops andshort skirts. Dyck has to serve at least18 months of his 11t/~-year prison sentencebefore hecan become eligible for parole. Hewasordered to paypenalties and fines aswell as register as asexoffender andsubmit a DNAsample to the state.

Portland's tallest bridge early Wednesday in an effort to stop a Shell Oil Arctic icebreaker

from leaving the city. Thirteen prote stere dangled from the St. Johns Bridge while another 13 remained on the bridge as lookouts. Greenpeace USA executive director Annie Leonard said the activ-

ists have enough water and

Illegal frisking case dismissed —Thecaseof asecurity work-

food to last for days and can

er charged with illegally frisking concertgoers at theMcDonald Theatre in Eugenehas beendismissed after the case's investigator didn't show up at trial. Dustin Rowlandsaid hewas qualified to perform pat-downs as part of his duties when he wascited by Oregon Liquor Control Commission Inspector JoeyMcGlinchy. Ajudge dismissed the caseTuesday after McGlinchy failed to attend thetrial. A supervisor paid $440 in court for fines imposedagainst the other two workers.

hoist themselves to allow other marine traffic to pass. The Royal Dutch Shell PLC

icebreaker Fennica arrived in Portland for repairs last week. The vessel was damaged ear-

— From wire reports

lier this month in the Aleutian Islands when it struck an underwater obstruction, tearing a

gash in its hull. The icebreaker is a

v i t al

part of Shell's exploration and spill-response plan off Alaska's

Womansuesafter falling out window whileasleep

Don Ryan I The Associated Press

northwest coast. It

p r otects Activists unfurl colored banners while hanging from the St. Johns Bridge in Portland on Wednesday Shell's fleet from ice and car- to protest the departure of Royal Dutch Shell PLC icebreaker Fennica, which is in Portland for repairs. ries equipment that can stop The icebreaker is a vital part of Shell's exploration and spill-response plan off Alaska's northwest gushing oil. coast.

Opponents of Arctic drilling worry that the area's remoteness and rough conditions will hamper deanup efforts should a spill occur. "These climbers hanging on the bridge really are at this point the last thing standing between Shell's plan to drill in the Arctic and the Arctic,"

Leonard said. Shell s p okesman C u r t is Smith said in a n email the Fennica will return to Alaska once final preparations are

complete. "As for the activities of the day, we respect the choice that

anyone might make to protest

based on Shell's Arctic aspi-

rations; we just ask that they do so safely and within the boundaries of the law," Smith wrote.

The Associated Press

tenants of the fully opening

doesn't have critical emergen- that future production will help cy response equipment on-site sustain the country's energy

EUGENE — An Oregon State University student is

t hird-story w i n dows a n d that they neglected to install

to cap a well in case of a leak.

needs and limit reliance on

That equipment is aboard the

imports. The U.S. Geological Survey

suing a Eugene property window bars. management company af- Officials with the propter she fell from a third-sto- erty management firm on ry window while asleep. Tuesday did not return teleThe Register-Guard re- phone messages requesting

Fennica.

Environmental groups had

Activists hope any delay will estimates the Arctic offshore give the Obama administration reserves in the Chukchi and tration to reject permits sought time to reconsider granting the Beaufort seas at 26 billion barby Shell to drill in the Chukchi final permit. They also want to rels of recoverable oil. Sea because of the absence of use up days in the short winSgt. Pete Simpson, a Portthe icebreaker. dow for summer drilling. land Police Bureau spokes"Shell's under e n ormous man, said officers were monThe government, however, gave Shell approval to begin pressure to get this thing back itoring the protest and no limited exploratory oil drill- up there," Leonard said. arrests had been made. The ing, with conditions. Shell can Supporters of arctic drilling bridge remained open to vehionly drill the top sections of say it can be conducted safely cles, but pedestrians were told wells because the company with existing technologies and to stay off. wanted the Obama adminis-

'=-

.A

Portland manpleads gui to abstract art forgery scheme By Steven Dubois

filed a l a wsuit Monday seeking $230,000 from Principle Property management to cover her medical expenses and other damag-

comment on the lawsuit. The lawsuit states that on July 27, 2014 Macholz went

to sleep on her boyfriend's bed near the open window. While still asleep, she man-

aged to fall from the window. She suffered broken bones, including her spine and pelvis.

es related to her pain and

suffering. Macholz says the company should have warned

= - . SM O L I C H . ~

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"I'm really interested in how you got into this

The Associated Press

P ORTLAND — A n

ports that Shelbi Macholz

O re-

gon man confessed to faking works created by well-known

situation — this abstract painting, which I don' t -t

give a hoot for but other people do."

artists and selling some of the

-I

— U.S. District Judge Robert Jones, to Larry Ulvi

knockoffs to a gallery owner. "I wasn't in it for the mon-

ey; I was having fun," Larry Ulvi, 74, told a federal judge Wednesday after pleading guilty to mail fraud. "And now I'm paying for it."

According to court documents, Ulvi approached a Cal-

ifornia galleryowner with the

initials W.K. in May 2013 and

Mail fraud carries a maximum penalty of 20 years, but U.S. District Judge Robert

Jones assured Ulvi he won' t

offered to sell work supposedUlvi, an ex-smoker with an ly done by Tobey. The gallery oxygen tube inserted in his owner paid $9,000 for three nose, remains free until his paintings, much less than Nov. 4 sentencing. what original Tobey works Authorities arrested Ulvi would fetch. in March after a search of his The gallery owner soon northwest P o rtland a p a rt- bought another half-dozen ment yielded 160 fake paint- forgeries. When Ulvi offered ings and sketches, most of three more paintings, the them copies of work done by owner became suspicious that Mark Tobey. Th e a b stract one man could own so many painter who died in 1976 was Tobey works.

get anywhere near that much time when sentenced in No-

part of the Northwest School art movement.

cepting a guilty plea, the judge reminded Ulvi of his right to a

The owner contacted Hein-

vember. In the meantime, he will await a pre-sentence

report on Ulvi's background and conduct. "I'm really i nterested in

how you got into this situation — this abstract painting, which I don't give a hoot for

but other people do," the judge sard. As is standard when ac-

er Hachmeister, an expert on Tobey's art. Hachmeister ad- trial. sheet of paper that had been vised that the paintings were Ulvi said he was "too old used to practice the signatures knockoffs. The expert had and tired to go through all of Tobey and another North- said the same thing to a Seat- that." "You' re just a youngster," west School artist, Kenneth tle dealer solicited by Ulvi in Callahan. 2011 and 2012. quipped the 88-year-old judge. Investigators also found a

,ALL NEW 2015 JEEP„

=CHEROKEE=SP'ORT-

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Oakridge imposingwater restrictions The Associated Press

"Are we out of water? No,"

the city shutting off water service. strictions in a city 40 miles take that risk." California and Oregon govs outheast o f E u g en e a r e Gomez said the restrictions ernors have both imposed orkeeping residents from wa- will be revisited in a couple ders intended to reduce water tering lawns and filling up of weeks and could become consumption as drought conswimming pools. more s t r i ngent. W a t ering ditions persist. A community well at 23 plants, for example, could be Oakridge joins Junction feet below the normal lev- reduced from 20 minutes to City in imposing mandatory OAKRIDGE — Water re-

el for this time of year had

he said, "but we don't want to

10.

"If our wells are not replenmembers of the Oakridge city c ouncil u n animous- ishing themselves at the norly approving the Califor- mal rate, then the chances of nia-like restrictions Tuesday, us depleting the wells is that The Eugene Register Guard much greater," Gomez said. reported. Residents are also banned C ity A d m i nistrator L o u from washing cars in driveis Gomez says it's been four ways, with repeat violators decades since O a k ridge facing fines starting at $250. saw drought conditions this A fourth violation carries a severe. $500 fine and could lead to

r estrictions. A

d o zen o t h -

er local governments have implemented voluntary u se restrictions.

Gomez says city officials are working to warn people about the new rules. "We' re not going to be jumping on anyone (Wednesday),s Gomez said. "We' re trying to get the message out."

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w ermain end's City Council got an earful in mid-July when residents whose homes were damaged after a city water main broke lined up to tell their stories. T he homeowners, some o f whom saw basements flooded and landscaping washed away, had turned to the city for help after the accident in June. They were understandably upset to discover none was forthcoming and turned to the council for help. It's a thorny problem for the city. Its insurance provider is unwilling to pay damages because itsays there was no negligence on the city's part. The water main broke, apparently, because it was old and resting on Central Oregon's notoriously rocky soil. And, initially at least, the city was reluctant to dip into its own funds. Officials feared that doing so would set what could become an expensive precedent. Yet the precedent had already been set. Back in 2011, the city shelled out moneyforrepairsto ahome on NW Congress Street after — you guessed it — a water main broke and flooded a nearby dwelling. The cost was well under $100,000. But as it did in June, the insurance company said there was no negligence on the city's part and declined to pay.

Meanwhile, homeowners and renters living on the edge of the High Desert, as those in Bend and most other communities in the area do, are likely to discover their own insurance policies won' t pay forflood damage. That comes extra, and it can be costly, ranging from about $450 to asmuch as $1,800 per year if you live in one of the region's flood zones. Only a tiny percentage of residents have purchasedit ,insurance agents say. No one could rightly expect the city to pay for damages had the homeowners somehow been responsible for the problem in the first place. But in this case, as in the earlier one, they weren' t. And while no one argues the city caused the problem, the fact remains that it was a city-owned pipe that broke and city water that did the flooding. The City Council plans to revisit the problem next month. As it discusses the matter, it should remember doing only what's legally requiredmay not be the same as doing what is right. In this case, that means paying for r epairs homeowners wereforced to make after their homes were flooded.

Government needs tools to track terror

S

en. Ron Wyden, D-Oregon, blocked a bill this week that would have required social media companies to police what' s sent or posted with their services for terrorist activity. Wyden was right. It's not reasonable for the government to compel private companies to monitor every tweet or message.But somebody must. Terrorists use social media. ISIS, Hamas, Hezbollah and al-Qaida all tweet. They post what they have done and they use social media for recruiting. FBI Director James Comey said recently that the Islamic State has tried to convince an unknown number of Americans through social media to "kill where you are." U.S. government officials say the companies that run social media siteshave been responsive.Some

ing weeds,though. One account is shut down and another will sprout Up.

The bill Wyden blocked contained a passage that would have required Internet and social media companies to report any "terrorist activity" that they know is using their services. Companies would have to decide if what's posted is a terrorist action. That' s both overbroad and vague. "There is no question that tracking terrorist activity and preventing online terrorist recruitment should be top priorities for law enforcement and intelligence agencies," Wyden said in a statement. "But I haven' t yet heard any law enforcement or

intelligence agencies suggest that

this provision will actually help catch terrorists." A betterapproach would be to ensure the U.S. government has have ways postings can be flagged the tools it needs to monitor comfor terrorism. Shortly before the munications. If it needs to collect beheading of American journalist social media and phone metadata, James Foley, Twitter began dosing it should have it. It's foolishly restricaccounts. It now monitors for terror- tive to gut that ability when terrorist activity. ists are using social media to plan The monitoring can be like pull- how to kill us.

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M nickel's Worth Egan's unwarranted jibe

Recreation Department of a com- mind. Unfortunately, the editors mercial bungee jumping conces- don't seem to feel that the same adI read with interest the article, sion on the pedestrian bridge over vice applies to themselves. "Heritage and healing in small- the Crooked River Gorge at Peter An open-minded editorial would town Joseph." What I objected Skene OgdenScenicViewpoint. have mentioned at least a few of to was not the column (actually This strikes us as a really terrible the many studies showing a sinwell-written), but the reference to, idea, and we are writing to oppose gle-payer system costs about half "The elderly live away their days in it and urge others who care about as much to administer, leaving a haze of 1950s nostalgia and Fox the viewpoint to join us in opposi- more money available for actual News-induced paranoia." tion. The site is unique and iconic health care. How condescending is t hat? — a magnificent intersection of geAn open-minded editorial should Why should Timothy Egan care ology, local history and spectacu- have noted that a single insurer what news outlet anyone watch- lar Central Oregon scenery — and covering the entire state could nees? It's another blatant put-down for OPRD to approve of commer- gotiate the lowest possible rates for by the "sophisticated" New York cial bungee jumping off the bridge services, saving money for actual Times writers. that is the key to the site's public ac- health care. I would call the New York Times cess is both incomprehensible and An open-minded editorial would a fish wrap, but that would be dis- reprehensible. have pointed out that a state-run paraging to fish (and we all know There is no way that this oper- single-payer system would only be how we love fish here in Central ation won't compromise the view- required to break even. Private inOregon). point and the public's pleasure in it, surers, in spite of expensive adverJames R. Shores to say nothing of it causing danger- tising about how much they care, Bend ous distractions along U.S. High- exist only to make a profit. Private way 97 just to the east. insurance profits are not available The article indicated that "tests" for actual health care. Books are better will be carried out at the bridge,

In addition to mentioning the

with commercial jumping to start $300,000 cost of the study, an Aug. 1. open-minded article might have computerized equipment. RememWe urge everybody with ques- provided examples of other costs. ber when computers, headphones, tions and concerns to contact the For example,a quick Web search etc., had warnings about radiation'? following officials without delay: showed that a total of $12.6 million We were warned not to sit close to Lisa Van Laanen, director, OPRD, was paid to just 27 health insurthem because of minute emissions 725 Summer St. NE, Suite C, Sa- ance company executives in Oreof radiation, which can build up in lem, OR , 9 7 301, 503-986-0707; gon in 2012. one's body. Dave Slaught, OPRD/Smith Rock Finally, an open-minded editoriThe Bulletin recently ran an excellent article about libraries and

With the competition in librar-

State Park ,

ies with books and electronics, I would like to have an expert radiol-

run single-payer system is not

gee Adventures, Bend.

socialized medicine. Doctors, hos-

Jarold and Dorothy Ramsey pitals and other medical providers Madras would remain private.

ogist tell me how much radiation

amounts are emitted by a book! Alice KeIser Greth Bend

Don't jump into bungee

5 4 1-548-7501; and al should have noted that a state-

James Scott, Central Oregon Bun-

Editors need a more open mind

The Bulletin editors ar e c o r-

rect to call for an open-minded approach. I hope that in future they will

take the trouble to follow their own egon Health Authority to approach advice. the study of a single-payer system Ken Hadlock The Bulletin editors urge the Or-

Page 1 of the July 22 Bulletin fea-

tured an article reporting the authorization by Oregon Parks and

for health insurance with an open

Bend

Letters policy

In My Viewpolicy How to submit

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

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

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

Surgeon complication rates contained questionable data By J. TImothy Hanlon,M.D. read with considerable concern and disappointment the

t

front-page article "Most Central

Oregon docs see moderatecomplication rates," published July 15. Although my primary residence is no longer in Bend, I do maintain a home there, my family resides there and I practiced medicine there for

30 years.For these reasons, Ifeel morally compelled to comment on this article.

Historically, when New York state decided to publish the unadjusted (for preoperative risk) mortality data for individual cardiac surgeons in New York, an interesting and most unfortunate event

predictablyoccurred. Cardiac surgeons, able to determine rather ac-

curately preoperative risk, began to turn down the high-risk patients, r egrettably th e p atients i n

m ost

need of these potentially life-saving operations. During the early phases of the

IN MY VIEW

isting (read high-risk) conditions that might be the actual cause of

publication o f t h e s e u n adjusted death'? mortality figures, New York state Furthermore, 30-day rehospitalresidents traveled to nearby states, ization, a Medicare favorite target

and during that lengthy period of time higher-risk cardiac surgery pa-

because of cost implications, is likely a very poor measure of surgical tient numbers with New York state skill, and the decision as to which ZIP codes increased greatly at both readmissions are surgically relatthe Cleveland Clinic and Mayo Clin- ed is generally quite subjective and ic, where such numbers remained never adjudicated by experts. For unpublished. Thus, such publication this reason, the numbers are likely resulted in this unintended and unmeaningless. fortunate consequence. To drill down more specifically: Such a consequence may occur To my total chagrin, the surgeons in Central Oregon as a result of this with the highest presumed complipoorly considered and inadequately cation rates (assuming any statistievaluated data. cal power with such small numbers, In addition, the article makes ref- which is nonexistent), would genererence to complications "defined as ally be my choice of surgeon, based instances of when the patient died on my years of experience practicin the hospital or was readmitted ing and working with them. for problems related to the proceFor example, Dr. Timothy Bollom dure." Death is a hard, unarguable replaced my right knee three years end point, but who decides whether ago and is a kind, compassionate the death is related to the surgery physician with impeccable training or tovarious co-morbid and pre-ex- and the highest moral and ethical

Had The Bulletin been aware of the questionable nature of this data, I am confident they would have not chosen to publish this article.

Kathleen Moore, though I know her less well, is the back surgeon of choice for many physicians and patients in Eastern Oregon who are

meaningful conclusions. The publishing of these small, unadjusted numbers lacking any statistical validity potentially does considerable damage to these fine

more than willing to travel the ex-

physician's reputations, causes un-

tra distance to Bend for her surgical expertise. Many have told me of

needed concern among patients, may deny needed surgery to those

her compassionate and expert care

in greatest need and thus at highest

for the most complicated low back issues. I personally know Dr. Timothy Beard to be a particularly skilled surgeon and would permit him to

risk, and is just plain bad for the en-

take out my gallbladder should that

have not chosen to publish this article. Hopefully The Bulletin and St.

values.

be necessary when I again reside in Central Oregon. And yet this article singles out these excellent

physicians as somehow deficient, all based on totally flawed numbers too small from which to draw any

tire community.

In closing, had The Bulletin been aware of the questionable nature of this data, I am confident they would

Charles will set the record straight. — J.Timothy Hanlon, M.D., practiced cardiology in Bend for30 years. He lives in Bend and Pendleton.


THURSDAY, JULY 30, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

B5

Sisters

BITUARIES DEATH NOTICES

Robert (Bob)

Vincent Stephen Paskewich, of Bend

Michael Schuma cher

Dec. 20, 1919 - July 27, 2015 Arrangements: Deschutes Memorial Chapel (541) 382-5592. Please visit our online register book at

Continued from B1 Holzman and Councilor

FEATURED OBITUARY

October 28,1957- July28,2015

chapel.corn.

Contributionsmay be made to: The American Cancer Society

https://donate. cancer.org/

John "Jack" A. Ensworth, of Bend Dec. 9, 1925 - July 18, 201 5 Arrangements:

Niswonger-Reynolds

Funeral Home is honored to serve the family. 541-382-2471 Please visit the online registry for the family at www.nlswon ger-reynolds.corn Services: A celebration of his life will be held Saturday, August 8, 2015 at 2:00 PM in the Ensworth Elementary School, 1250 NE Daggett Ln., Bend, OR 97701. Contributionsmay be made to:

Ensworth Elementary School.

Donald E. Fagen Aegust15, 1944- July 26, 2015

an adviserto presidents and

tivists who have made sure their voices are heard at

His daughter, Leah Pis-

scholarship at Eastern Oregon State College. A fter college, he t u r n ed his focus to homebuilding. W ith hi s a r t i stry an d h t s d ad's strong w o r k e t h i c , Bob started hi s c ompany, Schumacher Construction, Inc., which became more t han a h om e b u i l d i n g company. " Yes there a r e premier bu i l de r s . ..and then there's Bob Schumacher," a s q u o t e d i n th e C entral O r e gon T o u r o f Homes brochure. His com-

n ot only on th e k i d s w i t h t alent but t h ose t hat h a d p otential; not o nl y o n t h e skills of b aseball but a l so the skills of life.

sur v i ve d b y

DEATHS

any's

Cheri Fagen (Don) Knapp,

the camps of Majdanek, Auschwitz and Dachau, emerging at 16, hardened and wild, his family gone to ash. He spent a year and a half with older survivors as a hooligan and black marketeer in the American occupation

zone of Germany, living high for revenge, riding a liberated

and make ju niper a r ticles for family and friends. Before serious health i ssues, Don d r a gged r a ced cars at Pacific Raceways, Seattle and W o o d burn Drag S t r ip . H e w as a member o f t h e C o r v e tte club and NHRA. Don "The L ion", w it h a w a r m a n d soft heart w i l l b e m i s sed

fellow prisoners, too. I was a cute kid, and there were a lot of psychotics around." At the end of the war, he es-

caped during a death march.

ing Lucky Strikes and used coffee grounds stolen from

But to r ejoin th e w o r ld, "I had to wipe out the first

to Presidents Frant;ois Mit-

dy, asked Pisar to write them

terrand and Valery Giscard d'Estaing of France; advocating detente between the

instead. Pisar refused, feel-

took up an appeal of the construction of an assisted

— From wire reports

living and memory care facility, which a nother builder opposes. The session lasted more than three hours before the council came to the decision to let

to the victims of the Warsaw ghetto, and it was also, to his

construction begin. "(The meeting) probably

daughter Pisar-Haas, a sort of homecoming.

added to the turmoil," Asson said. "I think the vari-

"It was so much more resonant there than elsewhere,"

ous issues, we have some

v oted himself t o t h e v i t a l obligation to transmit what

activists in town who seem

to be winding down a little bit, but they still want to have their voices."

As son disagrees with the idea that the different viewpoints on council

have created a "toxic" environment, as it has been

described. "I know that (Holzman) often disagrees with me, and I think her viewpoint

and mine are different," Asson said. "I don't think it's the existing council-

even during the last two

cated his singular life to the

Soviet Union and the West through t r ade; an d e stab- in 1990, and prompted by lishing himself as a lawyer the terroristattacks of Sept. to corporate executivesand 11, Pisar finally accepted the movie stars like Rita Hay- task, writing a version of the

memory of those who experienced the horror of the Nazi camps."

people who proposed different things." Asson said he doesn' t

worth and Elizabeth Taylor.

yer and statesman were only

H e became a c i t izen of the United States by an act

he had lived and thus dedi-

ing that his talents were not equal to the music. But after Bernstein's death,

Vice President Joe Biden

said: "His success as a law-

Kaddish, the Jewish prayer forthe dead, first performed

surpassed by the courage he showed in speaking of his

in 2003 with the New York of Congress and had homes Philharmonic. in New York and Paris. The Pisar called it "A Dialogue French government made With God," and he kept refinhim a Grand Officer of the ing the text.

Legion of Honor and an Of-

With the same "visceral

ficer of Arts and Letters. The

voice I once raised against

H olocaust e x perience. H e

confronted not only the brutality of his experience but the person he had to become to survive."

Pisar's parents, David and

Polish government made him you as a skeletal kid" at the a Commander of the Order of edge of the gas chamber, he Merit. demands of God: "Why do Pisar, pressed to confront You abandon us? How can his carefully hidden demons You allow such carnage? Do by his second wife, Judith, You even care?" and his children, wrote a He described Jews heading

two other daughters, Helaina P isar-McKibbin a n d A l e x -

memoir in 1979, "Of Blood

andra Pisar-Pinto; a stepson,

for the gas chambers "with Your name on their lips," and

and Hope," a saga of the nearly unspeakable, of survival said that imposed obligations

Helena Suchowolski P i sar,

and his younger sister, Frieda, died in the Holocaust. Besides his daughter Leah, survivors include his wife;

A ntony Blinken, who i s

a

deputysecretary ofstate;and three grandchildren.

think it's fair t o

c harac-

terize Sisters as an "upset community." He believes the three councilors, in-

cluding Holzman, who have recently resigned have done so mostly for

personal reasons. Amy Burgstahler's first meeting on council was Holzman's last meeting, although Burgstahler wasn' t aware of that at the time.

"I really respect her," Burgstahler said Wednesday. "I was really looking forward to serving with her."

Bur gstahler acknowledged she knew Holzman was having "some family

and self-recovery. "I couldn' t

on God, too. "The Auschwitz

move around any moreli ke a shadow," he said, "with all

number engraved on my arm reminds me of it every day,"

liked to say, a feral child still

length about it."

these taboos."

he said. "And today, Father, I remind You!"

l ived haunted w ithin h i m , mocking all his fitted suits,

Burgstahler added she had worked as a reporter

He said he was no lon-

lovely furnishings and worldly renown.

for The Sacramento Bee in California, where she

In a series of interviews with The New York T i mes in 2009, he described how

For all his success, Pisar

ger furious with

G od. But pressed, he said: "I'm an-

" The little one w it h

the

gry. And he may not even be sunken eyes and shaved head there. But I love him, too. Be- helps a lot," he said. "He' s cause we have loved him for very severe with me; he disso many thousands of years." approves of so many things; A highlight for Pisar was he's a kind of conscience."

things and stresses," but

they "really never talked at

saw a lot of issues over the years on city councils. She said taking on this position isn't making her nervous. — Reporter: 541-383-0325, kfisicaro@bendbulletin.corn

cap so that the stripes on the

An old-fashionedaffordable CountyFair with something FIIII for everyone! '

The Bulletin

"I had to learn bad habits,"

Ollee yau'Iieilaill far general alllisliOII, CO meenjaygamee, CO nteete, Sh O WS,88II mO re! Allll it'Sall FR H!

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

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Mail:Obituaries

Jest In Time Circus Topper Toils and Lili Zucchini perform super stage shows for the entire family! Check main schedule for days and times. POlllSR PROOU

p res e n t s t l a a

ROli D e s c h u

t e s C o u u tp

deeply.

A military graveside serv ice will b e h e l d a t D e s chutes Memorial Gardens, Thursday, July 30, 2015 at 11:00 a.m.

of that. He said 100 people attended as th e c o uncil

years — that's caused the strain. I think it's the issues and the activists and the

( Cherri) F a g en , Ha r r y (Bev) Fagen of Bend, John

go fishing, polish r ocks

guards and torturers, but my

The council's most recent meeting last week, As-

son said, was the opposite

he said, "to be good at lying t he ability t o p e r form h i s and make instant judgments Kaddish in Israel in 2009, to a a bout p eople, w h a t t h e y hushed audience at Yad Vashwere saying, what they real- em, the Holocaust museum. ly thought, and not just the The concert was a memorial

BMW motorcycle and sell-

into body weight regulation top perfectly met the stripes and Debra Fagen T i bbets helped establish the biological on the side. of The Dalles, Oregon who underpinnings of obesity — inHe was condemned to die s urvive. H e w as p r e d e - duding that a person's weight at least twice but managed ceased by both his parents. O ther s u r v i v or s i n c l u d e is in part determined by the to slip back into the general four grandsons, James Fa- body's own p redisposition. prison population, once cong en, M i t c h K n a p p , T i m Died July 23 in Englewood, vincing a guard that he was there only to wash the floor. T ibbets, an d Daw so n New Jersey.

with n u m erous n e phews, nieces. Don was a person with a larger than life, infectious, f un l o v in g a t t i t ud e w h o loved to play games, hunt,

Ed Alcock I rhe New York Times file photo

was swallowed by Hitler and Stalin. He somehow survived

years, luring in brand-name he had survived the death camps by becoming pitiless and cruel, finding older protectors and ways to appear privileged in a hierarchy of despair, like persuading a prisoner-tailor to refashion a

for years expanding to full designers and marketing newblown l o g g in g o p e r ation ly discovered gemstones like a nd t o a l s o o w n i n g a n d tanzanite, which he named. operating a t r ucking comDied July 22 at his home in pany. He ma r r i e d San d r a Palm Beach, Florida. Jules Hirsch, 88: Physician Anglesey on June 5, 1964. They had t w o d a u g hters, whose clinical investigations

sie (Mark) Wirges along

calm situations."

she said. "It was as if he was saying Kaddish for all the 6 pany each year won rec- the kitchens of the American 17 years of m y l i fe," he million." o gnttion f o r h i s b u i l d i n g occupying troops, re-roast- said. "I muted the past" and Pisar alsoperformed his achievements. ed and repackaged for the "turned to the future with a Kaddish in Warsaw and reB ob married the l ov e of vengeance." mained engaged in instituh is life, Sandy, w ho m h e Germans. Pisar was rescued by a Years later, having been tions dedicated to preserving m arried i n 1 9 8 6 . Th ey r aised t h ei r t h r e e b o y s , F rench aunt, and w it h t h e pressed by his wife's friend the memory of the Holocaust. Rhett, Jacob an d C l i n t on help of uncles in A ustralia Leonard B e rnstein, P i sar, In 2012 he was named an i n Sunriver a n d t h e n i n he slowly created a life of like Job, took his arguments honorary ambassador for Bend. As a f a m i ly , b a se- manifold accomplishments: to God. Bernstein, always un- UNESCO and a special enball was their center point, becoming an adviser on for- happy with the lyrics of the voy for Holocaust education. where the boys excelled at eign economic policy to John "Kaddish" Symphony No. 3 In a s t atement Tuesday, the sport like their f ather, F. Kennedy, whom he met at he wrote in 1963 and dedicat- President Frant„ois Hollande and Bob was t h eir coach. of France said Pisar had "deAs a c o ach, Bob f o cused Harvard, an d a c o n f i dant ed tothe assassinated Kenne-

ELSEWHERE School. H e enlisted in the US Army i n 1 961, serving until 1964. R eturning t o B e nd , D o n Deaths of note from around the world: worked for Jan Ward ConHenry Platt, 91: The greats truction an d B o b C o u c h grandson of Tiff L ogging u n t i l h e es t a b - greatlished hi s o w n l o g ging founder who helpedsteer the company in 1970. Don ran Tiffany 8 Co. empire for 34

(Patti) Fagen of Fr uitland, Idaho and on e sister, Su-

but she does work best in

Bob a t tended K e l logg the Nazi death camps, and on Samuel Pisar, pictured here in Paris in February 2009, died MonGrade School and gradgu- to education in Australia, at day in New York at age 86. He survived three Nazi death camps ated from J o h n M a r s hall Harvard and at the Sorbonne. and went on to become a lawyer, a presidential adviser and the H igh School in 1975. B o b He was 10 when Poland author of the test for Leonard Bernstein's symphony "Kaddish." was aw arded a b a s eball

B en d H i g h

H eka. Also, b r others N i k

council. "Wendy is a very sensitive woman," Asson said Wednesday. "She has done a good job on the council,

Bob, born to Howard and ar-Haas, said the cause was H arriet S c hum acher, i n Portland, O r egon, g r aced pneumonia after a stroke. Pisar had an extraordinary this earth o n O c t ober 28, 1957, and sadly d e parted life that arced from Bialystok, Poland, where he was born w ith hi s l o v ing f a m ily b y his side on July 28, 2015. on March 18, 1929, through

Marian (Schaedler) Fagen.

a "one man logging show"

I feel badly about it."

t he creator of th e t ext f o r Leonard Bernstein's symphoin New York. He was 86.

Sandy, his sons, brothers, H arry, B r i a n , R o n an d s ister, Kathy M u r p hy . H e has countless nieces and nephews wh o a l l l a b eled h im t h ei r f a v o r it e U n c l e Bob. A v i gi l s e r v ice w i l l b e held on Friday, July 31 at 7:00 p.m. Th e service will be on Saturday, August 1, at 11:00 am. Both services w ill b e h e l d a t t h e N e w Donald Elroy F agen, 70, Hope Church, 20080 Pinepassed away o n S u n d ay , brook Blvd in Bend. H is entir e o b i t uary c a n July 26, 2015. He was born i n Keewatin, MN , o n A u - be viewed at: w w w .bairdg ust 15, 1944 t o J o h n & mortuaries.corn/obituary

S chool and

subjected to some pretty tough, harsh pressure, and

also acknowledged the council has been facing some tough issues lately, namely at the hands of ac-

ny "Kaddish," died Monday

B ob i s

The f a m i l y m o v e d t o B end, OR i n 1 9 5 0 w h e r e Don attended St . F r ancis

w ho was elected at t h e same time as H o lzman,

Samuel Pisar, who sur-

Partners In Care Hospice 2075 NE Wyatt Court Bend, Oregon 97701

Services: No services at this time. Please sign our online guest book at www.deschutesmemorial

By Steven Erlanger vived Auschwitz as a boy to become a successful lawyer,

to:

w ww.deschutesmemorial chapel.corn

becameanadviserto severalpresidents

but these volunteers are

New York Times News Service

Services: A private gathering of family and friends will take place at a later date. Contributionsmay be made

June 13, 1936- July 28, 2015 Arrangements: Deschutes Memorial Chapel 541-382-5592

Samuel Pisar,who survived Holocaust,

Councilor David Asson,

deschutesmemorlalchapel.corn

partnersbend.org Eisa A. Gulko, of Bend

Nancy Connolly could not be reachedforcomment. "Wendy is a really great person and she did a great job as a city councilor," Gorayeb said. "She was contributive and positive and focused on results,

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

DD

P.O. Box 6020

Bend, OR97708

' •

.

.

July 89 THROUGH

AuguSt st


B6

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JULY 30, 2015

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

i

l

i

I

'

TODAY

it

TONIGHT

HIGH

FRIDAY

' '

LOW

SATURDAY

"'"

96'

SUNDAY

95'

Hot with blazing sunshine

1

ALMANAC

Hot with sun andsome clouds

Mostly sunnyandhot

A moonlit sky

EAST: Sunshineand sizzling temperatures Seasid will continue to 78/57 build into the region Cannon Thursday. 74/58

TEMPERATURE

/

i

Yesterday

Today

River

Rufus

104/59 we ermiston lington '103/59 Mesc eac am Lostine

City

Juneau Kansas City Lansing Las Vegas Lexington Lincoln

UV INDEX TODAY

POLLEN COUNT

NATIONAL WEATHER

l

Wickiup 74018 37% Crescent Lake 6 4 4 62 74% Ochoco Reservoir 18695 42Vo Prineville 75000 5095 River flow Sta t io n Cu. f t./sec. Deschutes R.below CranePrairie 259 Deschutes R.below Wickiup 1850 Deschutes R.below Bend 139 Deschutes R. atBenhamFalls 2020 Little Deschutes near LaPine 132 C rescent Ck. below Crescent Lake 1 3 2 Crooked R.above Prineville Res. 1 Crooked R.below Prineville Res. 226 Crooked R. near Terrebonne 61 Ochoco Ck.below OchocoRes. 9

FIRE INDEX

Wifing~

48 contiguous states) National high: 119 at Death Valley,CA National low:27 at West Yellowstone, MT Precipitation: 2.24" at Hurlburt Field, FL

SS/67

Bisms k

i

2/62

8

Amsterdam Athens

63/52/0.74 64/51/sh 99n7/0.00 ggn7/s Auckland 54/49/0.03 55/43/s 86/ 86 <~ w York Baghdad 120/88/0.00 122/89/s n4 Che n Bangkok 92/73/0.44 92/80/sh 3/4 ' ss/es ss/5 • gadelphls Beijing 89n7/1.08 86/74/t Cofu bus 8 ee Beirut 86n9/0.00 87/78/s ah shclsco 92/61 Berlin 71 /56/0.08 68/52/pc 75/61 ington 89/4 90 0 ass tr 4 Las V ss Bogota 66/50/0.05 66/50/1 Ka isa City so/es 100/ Budapest 70/64/0.20 68/55/pc 87/ 4 BuenosAires 64/55/0.00 65/61/r k +Cherie s An les Cabu San Loess gsnrio'.o4 96/78/t 8 7 1 Cairo 97nzio.oo 100/78/s Phoen Allcllul'aee Albuqu P + klshoma Ci Calgary 73/52/Tr 79/49/s • 103/8 68/ Cancun 91 n5/0.04 92/74/pc 7 n1 Juneau Sl Pa Dublin 61 /48/0.07 61/48/pc Dallas %'e en Edinburgh 63/48/0.84 60/47/pc 61/52 102/81 Geneva 72/63/0.20 74/51/pc ' < rt sndo ad', Harare 75/51/0.00 79/46/s w Orleans X 9/79 4 Hung Kung 85/80/0.14 89/80/t Honolulu 94/79 Chihuahua vr ~ . t Istanbul 97ng/0'.00 94ns/s sons 90/41 Miami Jerusalem 89/69/0.00 gfno/s Monte y 97/70 Johannesburg 66/43/0.00 68/37/s 4 Lima 72/60/0.00 69/61/pc Lisbon 82/66/0.00 81/65/pc Shown are today's noonpositions of weather systemsand precipitation. Temperature bandsare highs for the day. London 68/50/0.03 67/49/ah T-storms Rain S h owers S now F l urries Ice Warm Front Sta t ionary Front Madrid Cold Front 100n2/0.00 94/67/s Manila 86/79/0 02 gon7/t

0

'

Bend/Sunriver

~

R edmond/Madras ~

V e ry high~

Extreme ~

~Mode~rate

Sisters Prineviae ~~ La Pine/Gilchrist ~

xt rem~e ver y~high ~

Source: USDA Forest Service

5:

77/53/s 67/46/r

97n7/t

100/77/s 84/53/s 93/74/s 62/47/r 62/48/sh 78/59/pc 82/51/s 89/80/sh

Sgns/s

92/67/s 55/32/s 68/61/pc 76/64/pc 70/52/pc 90/65/t 91/78/pc

ssnfir'r

5

I

of Redmo nd s

92no/s

85/68/pc

gonois 84/58/s 93n2/s

90n8/t 86/63/s 81/61/s 90/66/s

92n8/t

gon4is

92n2/s 88n4/pc 89/69/t 90/64/s 88/74/t 104/80/t 88/65/s 91/73/s 107/88/t 84/66/s 85/62/s 89/67/s 89/67/pc 87/59/s 97/67/pc 90/68/pc 83/64/s 96/65/pc

92n2/s 94/65/s 100n9/pc 78no/pc 74/61/pc 81/62/pc 80/57/1 90n4/t 91/61/s 85/56/s 99/65/s 89/67/pc

85n7/t

100/78/t

89no/pc 92n4/s 87/69/pc 105/63/s 109/84/t

113/90/0.00 114/81/c 80/58/0.10 78/53/1 Montreal gonz/0.00 84/65/sh Moscow 73/63/0.00 73/56/c Nairobi 73/59/0.04 74/57/1 Nassau 91ns/0'.01 93/78/pc New Delhi 86/77/0.01 90/80/c Osaka 91/79/0.02 91/77/1 Oslo 61/51/1.03 62/49/sh Ottawa 93/68/0.00 86/60/s Paris 70/52/0.00 70/49/pc Riu de Janeiro Tsno/Ti 78/69/s Rome 86/68/0.00 86/71/s Santiago 73/39/0.00 59/37/pc Sau Paulo 73/52/0.00 76/54/s Sappuru ssnz/0.09 83/70/pc Seoul 86/76/0.14 89/76/1 Shanghai 100/83/0.00 96/81/s Singapore 88/82/0.02 89/79/1 Stockholm 66/57/0.87 64/53/t Sydney 61/48/0.00 67/48/pc Taipei 92/74/0.05 gfngn Tel Aviv 87/68/0.00 92/78/s Tokyo 89/80/0.00 90/79/pc Toronto gono/o.oo 86/61/s Vancouver 75/59/0.00 79/58/s Vienna 70/59/1.03 69/57/pc Warsaw 72/55/0.02 71/51/pc

114/81/pc 77/54/1 78/61/pc 71/57/pc 77/56/pc 93/80/ah

gongic GSnzlpc 58/50/c 80/56/pc 74/55/pc 80/68/s 87/70/s 61/42/pc 79/57/s 80/69/r 87/76/t 97/82/s 88/79/t 66/52/c 65/48/s 92/79/t 91/79/s 91/80/s 84/60/pc 79/58/s 76/54/pc 70/49/s

J y

•ITRAL RECON S ARtmEST ELECTION • LIVERY PECIALI INANCINtE ' VAilULBLE

Jl

92/62/1

I

~

87/64/s

Mecca Mexico City

•$•

84/60/s 101/82/t

F4

-Wasoas

66/52/pc 98/80/s 56/48/pc 121/90/s 92/79/c 84/75/pc 87/80/s 68/50/pc 63/47/c

Friday Hi/Lu/Prec. Hi/Le/W HiRe/W 58/52/0.31 61/52/sh 61/52/r 85/70/1.31 87/64/pc 88/68/s

83/63/s 104/80/0.00 100/80/1 90/70/0.41 86/63/s 88/59/0.00 91/66/s Little Rock 101nivo.oo93/71/s Lus Angeles 82/65/0.00 87/70/1 Louisville 94ns/o.os 90/68/s Madison, Wf 84/69/1.42 84/62/s Memphis 99/82/0.00 92/71/pc Miami gsng/Ti 92/77/1 Milwaukee Szn4/rr 86/65/s Minneapolis 82/66/0.00 84/66/s Nashville 95/73/0.03 88/67/pc New Orleans 99ngio.oo 94/79/pc New YorkCity gsns/o.oo 89/74/1 Newark, NJ gsnsio'.00 89/73/t Norfolk, VA gfn4/0'.00 91/76/1 OklahomaCity 96/69/0.00 94/72/1 Omaha 86/62/0.00 90/69/s Orlando 93/74/1.36 sgn48 Palm Spdings 104/83/0.00 101/82/1 Peoria 87/75/0.43 87/66/s Philadelphia 93/76/0.00 89/73/1 Phoenix 100/87/0.00 103/88/1 Pittsburgh 91/69/0.00 86/65/pc Portland, ME 88/63/Tr 81/65/1 Providence 93/69/0.00 86/70/pc Raleigh 91/75/Tr 91/72/t Rapid City 84/48/0.00 88/55/s Rene 95/58/0.00 98/66/s Richmond 87/73/Tr 91/71/1 Rochester, NY 91/68/0.00 86/64/s Sacramento 107/64/0.00 101/66/s St. Louis 91/82/0.00 90/70/s Salt Lake City 86/53/0.00 92/61/s ggn7/0'.00 99/80/s San Antonio San Diego 78/69/0.00 79/71/1 San Francisco 81/57/0.00 75/61/pc San Jose 89/64/0.00 85/64/s santa re 79/63/Tr 77/57/1 Savannah gsns/0.00 92/74/pc Seattle 90/58/0.00 92/61/s Sioux Fags 83/59/0.00 85/61/s Spokane 87/57/0.00 95/63/s Springfield, Mo 94n4/0,00 87/68/s Tampa 88/79/1.84 85/77/1 Tucson 93/72/0.07 97/78/1 Tulsa 96/71/0.00 92/73/pc Washington, DC 92/78/0.00 92/74/1 Wichita 84/74/0.14 86/69/t Yakima 95/51/0.00 102/59/s Yuma 101/86/0.00 104/85/1

WATER REPORT

Yesterday Today

Friday

City Hi/Le/Prec. HiRe/W Hi/Le/W Abilene 101/76/0.00 97/76/pc 98/74/t High 88 84 100' i n 1929 Portland 103/66 Akron 91 /69/0.00 85/63/s 85/63/s • 48' 49' 30' in 1917 Low 102/ Albany 95/67/0.00 87/65/1 85/63/s 64 • W co 94/51 Enterpnse dletOn + he Oaa 1 /67 Albuquerque 83/68/0.23 83/64/1 85/65/1 • • 92/50 Tillamo 1 /66 PRECIPITATION CENTRAL:High andy • Anchorage 67/57/0.17 68/56/pc 70/57/pc 107/67 83/53 Mc innvie Joseph Aganfa 93n5/0.03 94/74/pc 89/69/1 9/64 Govee nt • u pi • He p pner Grande • 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.00" pressure will promote 0 • Condon 9/62 Atlantic City 86n4/0.00 85/72/t 87/72/s Cam • 10 85 50 Record 0.23" in 1984 sunshine andwarmer Lincoln union Austin 99n1/0.00 99/74/pc 100/75/pc 93/ Month to date (normal) 0.4 2" (0.53") temperatures across 74/58 Sale Baltimore 88/69/0.12 90/67/t 91/68/s • pray Granitee Year to date(normal) 6.53 " (6.25") the region Thursday. 106/ • 02/68 Billings 84/53/0.00 88/57/s 93/60/s 'Baker 0 Newpo 90/48 Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 30 . 16" • 100/61 Birmingham 95n7/0.17 94/71/pc 92/69/t )OB/63 Mitch II 73/55 93/44 Bismarck 83/58/0.00 86/54/s 86/58/s C a m P S h m a n R 8 d WEST: Scorching heat 9 8 / 61 l\ O7 V HI8 SUN ANDMOON Boise 89/58/0.00 94/62/s 99/66/s gg/ss • John eu will remain across the Yach 105/5 Boston /0.00 88/71/pc 90/69/s 73/56 • • • Pr i nevige Day 48 Today Fri. tario Bridgeport, CT 92n1 region Thursdayas 92n2/0.00 84/71/t 88/70/s 99/60 • P a lina 9 5 / 6 0 Sunrise 5:51 a.m. 5: 5 2 a.m. 55 Buffalo 91 /68/0.00 an upper-level ridge Floren e • Eugene 83/65/s 81/64/s e Re d Brothers 95 63 Sunset 8:32 p.m. 8: 3 1 p.m. remains overhead. Vates 79/57 Burlington, VT 93/67/0.11 86/65/t 82/63/pc 106/60 $u iver 9 6/59 56 Moonrise 7 :51 p.m. 8:34 p.m. 94/61 Caribou, ME 80/54/0.00 82/63/pc 78/58/t Nyssa • 94/ Ham ton Charleston, SC 93n4/Tr 91/75/pc 90/73/t Moonset 5:0 7 a.m. 6:1 6 a.m. La pine untura 84/ 5 5 Grove Oakridge Charlotte 92n2/Tr 94/71/t 92/67/pc • Burns J95/57 OREGON EXTREMES Co 104/6 /67 Chattanooga 95/75/0.34 92/70/t 91/68/pc 7 7 • Fort Rock Riley 94/47 YESTERDAY e' Greece t • 93/55 Cheyenne 82/47/0.00 84/55/s 82/55/pc 93/51 93/57 Chicago 88n5/Tr 87/66/s 87/63/1 High: 104' Bandon Ros eburg • Ch r i stmas alley Cincinnati 91 no/0.94 87/64/s 87/64/s Jordan V Hey Jul 31 A ug 6 A u g 14 A ug 22 at Medford 74/58 Beaver Silver 93/54 Frenchglen 108/66 Cleveland 93/66/0.02 85/65/s 85/65/s Low: Se' 91/53 Marsh Lake 96/53 ColoradoSprings 80/56/0.00 81/58/t 79/56/1 Tonight' ssky:TheGreatSquareofPegasus 94/55 at Meacham 94/56 Gra • Burns Jun tion Columbia, Mo 87n2/Tr 88/66/s 90/67/s • Paisley is emerging abovethe eastern horizonaround as Columbia, SC ggnsio.oo 97ns/t 93/69/1 • 95/54 Chiloquin Columbus,GA 100/76/0.01 97nS/pc 93/72/t /74 MedfO d '95/58 midnight. Gold ach Rome 0' Columbus,OH 91 no/0.05 84/64/s 85/65/s ,Togisg 97/54 Klamath Concord, NH 96/62/0.00 90/62/t 86/59/s Source: JimTodd,OMSI Fields• • Ashl nd F a l l s • Lakeview McDermi Corpus Christi 97ngio'.00 97n4/s gsnS/pc Rro ings 1 05 2 97/5 5 8 /5 94/54 94/53 Dallas 102/79/0.00 102/81/pc99ng/t Dayton 90n1 /0.93 84/64/s 85/64/s Denver 85/55/0.00 89/60/pc 88/59/1 10 a.m. Noon 2 p .m. 4 p .m. Yesterday Today F riday Yesterday Today F riday Yesterday Today F r iday Des Moines 86n1/1.70 88/68/s 88/64/s 5 I~ B ~ B I 5 City H i/Le/Prec. Hi/Le/W Hi/Le/W C i t y Hi/Le/Prec. Hi/Le/W Hi/Le/W City Hi/Le/Prec. Hi/Le/W Hi/Le/W Detroit 91/69/0.35 86/65/s 87/64/s The highertheAccuWealher.rxrm IIV Index number, Asturia 97/6 1/0.00 101/64/s 99/64/s Duluth 83/53/0.00 80/56/s 77/57/s La Grande 90/ 46/0.00 95/50/s 99/50/s Portland 78/63/Tr 81/61/pc 77/58/s the greatertheneedfor eysandskin protsdiun. 0-2 Lcw Baker City 87/38/0.00 93/44/s 96/48/s La Pine 86/37/0.00 93/56/s 94/59/s Prinevige 90/ 43/0.00 99/60/s 94/61/s El Paso 94n1/0.33 96/73/t 95/73/t 3-5 Moderate;6-7 High;8-10 VeryHigh; 11+ Extreme. Brookings 102/86/Tr 81/59/s 77/60/pc M edford 104/ 59/0.00 109/69/s 108/69/s Redmond 92/ 46/0.00 100/52/s 100/54/s Fairbanks 68/47/0.17 71/52/ah 71/55/pc Gums 88/42/0.00 94/47/s 98/55/s Ne wport 70/5 0 /0.00 73/55/s 70/55/s Roseburg 103 / 60/0.00 108/66/s 108/66/s Fargo 82/64/0.00 85/59/s 80/57/s Eugene 100/56/0.00 106/60/s 104/59/s N orth Bend 7 5 / 54/0.00 76/57/s 74/57/s Salem 99/61/0.00 106/63/s 102/63/s Flagstaff 81 /54/0.00 74/54/1 77/54/1 Klamath Fags 90/50/0.00 97/55/s 98/56/s O n tario 89/46/0.00 94/55/s 100/60/s Sisters 88/41/0.00 99/55/s 99/56/s Grand Rapids 87n2/0.00 84/65/s 84/62/s G rasses T r ee s Wee d s Lakeview 88/45/0.00 94/54/s 96/54/s Pe ndleton 94/ 5 2/0.00 102/66/s 104/66/s The Dages 9 9 / 58/0.00 107/67/s 106/68/s Green 6ay 85n1 /0.00 84/61/s 83/57/pc Greensboro 89/72/0.03 90/69/t 89/67/pc Weather(W):s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy,c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow l-ice, Tr-trace,Yesterdaydata asof 5 p.m. yesterday Moderate g Lo~w A bse nt Harrisburg 91 /68/0.00 90/66/1 88/66/s Source: OregonAgergyAssociates 541-683-1577 Harffurd, CT 95/66/0.00 89/66/1 88/63/s Helena 83/48/0.00 88/54/s 93/55/s Honolulu 91 /79/0.01 90ns/s gons/s ~ os ~ 1o s ~ 2 0 8 ~ 3 0 8 ~ d o s ~ 5 o s ~ e o s ~ 7 0 8 ~ s o s eos ~100s ~ 1106 ~ 1 08 ~ o s Houston 1oonsio.ooggng/pc ggn7/pc As uf 7 a.m.yesterday Huntsville 89n8/0.20 90/67/pc 89/66/pc Indianapolis 91n5/Tr 85/63/s 86/64/s Reservoir Acr e feet Ca p acity NATIONAL Jackson, MS ggngio.oo 97nz/pc 94no/pc EXTREMES C rane Prairie 286 1 2 52% Jacksonville 94n3/0.00 93/73/t gonz/t YESTERDAY(for the

Yesterday Normal Record

Partly sunny andvery warm

TRAVEL WEATHER

Shown is today's weather.Temperatures are today's highs andtonight's lowe. umatiaa Hood

ria

88' 51'

55'

Very warm with sunshine and patchy clouds

OREGON WEATHER

Bend Municipal Airport through 5 p.m.yest.

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IN THE BACK BUSINESS Ee MARUT NEWS W Scoreboard, C2 M LB, C3 Sports in brief, C2 NFL, C4

THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JULY 30, 2015

O www.bendbulletin.corn/sports

WCL BASEBALL

CASCADE LAKES SWIM SERIES

OLYMPICS

Elks lose 2 at home to Bells

Hostin no

Bend lost its three-

game series with Bellingham after the Bells

on er ea sto reat ene its

took both ends of a West

Coast Leaguedoubleheader onWednesday. Bellingham pulled ahead of Bendwith two runs in the fifth inning to win the first game4-3. The second gamewasn' t nearly as close asthe Bells jumped to a9-0 lead en route to an11-4 victory. Both games were seven innings. Bend (31-13WCL)beat Bellingham (29-16) in the series openerTuesday night, 6-5. Louis Wolf hit a home run in the third for Bend in Wednesday's opener, while Patrick Flynn belted two doubles. Bellingham starter Andrew Kemmerer got the win after giving up three runs and eight hits. Reliever JakeForrester suffered the loss. Starter NateHunter took the loss in thenightcap for Bendafter giving up nine hits andnine runs in three innings. The Elks return to the diamond Friday at 6:35 p.m. when they travel to Medford to take onthe Rogues in athree-game series.

2022

• In America and abroad the Olympicsareviewed more as afinancial drain

Winter Games vote CHINA

By Adam Kilgore The Washington Post

As the Boston 2024 Olympic bid crumbled this week, International

Olympic Committee members headed to Kuala Lampur, where on Friday the

governing body will choose the host of the 2022 Winter Olympics. The IOC will decide between Beijing and Almaty, Kazakhstan, the remaining contenders after four European cities backed out, three of which — Oslo, Stockholm and

Krakow — failed to summon popular support. The only cities left standing are in authoritarian countries where public

dissent could not crush the bid. Kelly Gossett, one of three founders of the group No Boston Olympics that helped organize public backlash that ultimately prevailed over that city's bid, returned from a victory celebration

Monday to an email inbox containing messages from Toronto and Los Angeles seeking advice. The emailers from two cities primed

— Bulletin staff report

to replace Boston in the running for the 2024 Games wanted to know how No

NFL

Boston Olympics had done it. Even as the party in Boston still raged, they were asking, "Can you help us?" SeeOlympics /C4

Brady fights to

stop suspension

Pluses:Large population base; facilities from 2008 Summer Olympics would be Used.

Minuses:Long distance between Beijing and events; pollution; human rights issues. KAZAKHSTAN Pluses:The host city of Almaty is close to several venues, including an outdoor rink on the side of a mountain. Minuses:Little

experience hosting big events; pollution; human rights issues.

FOXBOROUG H,

Mass.— Tom Brady took the fight over his "Deflategate" suspension to social media and federal court Wednesday, and NewEngland Patriots owner Robert Kraft backed the threetime Super Bowl MVP, saying "I was wrong to put my faith in the league." One day after NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell rejected Brady's appeal, the star quarterback posted a 507-word statement on Facebook with his firmest denial yet, writing: "I did nothing wrong." Kraft followed with an unscheduled address to the media gathered at Gillette Stadium for

the opening of training campandtheteam'sdefense of its fourth Super Bowl championship. Just before the courts closed in Minnesota, the NFL Players Association asked the court to overturn Brady's four-game suspension — or at least put it on hold until the case can beheard. The union askedthe court to throw out the suspension before Sept. 4; that would keepBrady from missing any practices before the Patriots' Sept. 10 season-opener against the Pittsburgh Steelers. The lawsuit argues that the NFLmade up its rules as it went along and misapplied the ones that were already on the books. In an interview with the AP, Kessler called it "offensive" that the

NFL

participates in a drill at

training camp Wednesday in St. Joseph, Missouri. Charlie Riedel/The

Associated Press

• Some competitors look to take part in all 5 weekend events By Victoria Jacobsen

but Bruce said each race can draw up to 100 competitors.

The Bulletin

Bob Bruce, director of this weekend's 21st

triathletes look at the 1,500-meter (race) as a

spectacular view.

"It's so quintessentially Bend," said Bruce, longtime coach with Central Oregon Masters Aquatics, which hosts the long-running open-water series."W ecome back year after year because it's beautiful." Bruce said 'Ilresday that 182 swimmers have

already registered for at least one of the series' fiveopen-water races,closetotherecord 199 participants who raced in 2014. The 1,500-meter swim, which starts at 11:45 a.m. Saturday,

attle with cancer

good test for them," Bruce explained. The 1,500-meter race is also part of both the

"Short Series" (along with the 500-meter swim

By Dave Skretta

at 9:30a.m. Saturday and 1,000-meter race at

The Associated Press

11:45 a.m. Sunday) and the "Long Series" (which also includes the 3,000-meter swim at 6 p.m.

ST. JOSEPH, Mo.— There was a moment in the

Fridayand the 5,000-meter race at8:45 a.m.

early stages of chemotherapy when Eric Berry was having breakfast with his fa-

Sunday). Bruce said he has recently seen an increase in the number of swimmers attempting the "Survivor Series" — completing all five events (10,000 meters of swimming) in one weekend. "We' ve had 55 to 60 complete all five swims-

that's a lot of swimming," Bruce acknowledged. "It's become known as a tough-guys event."

is usually the most popular of the events,

gl8i'

IC.C. sa e returns to practice ater

"It's a standard triathlon distance, so a lot of

annual Cascade Lakes Swim Series, admits Elk Lake has limitations as a race site. The beach area used by swimmers has no running water, no electricity and extremely limited parking. The one advantage? A spectacular lake with a

SeeSwim/C4

ther, and the enormity

of what faced him was

sas City Chiefs wept. Then, he resolved to beat c a ncer.

I"Si"e

Eight months later, Berry walked

' Adriarl

triumphantly onto

Peterson returns to Vikings, C4

so great that he broke down

the practice fields at Missouri Western State University,

joining rookies and

se l e ct veterans Wednesday

and cried. for the start of training For 30 minutes,oneofthe camp. toughest players on the KanSeeBerry/C4

MIXED MARTIAL ARTS ,

Rouse u oran c a en e By Lance Pugmire

with a hard knee to the

sixth women's bantamweight

Los Angeles Times

midsection. Now, as an unbeaten Brazilian challenger has emerged in the UFC's hottest

championship bout.

As dominant as Ronda Rousey has been in the UFC

— The Associated Press

MLB

Major LeagueBaseball roundup,C3

Eric Berry

'7

league accused Brady of destroying his cellphone to obstruct the investigation, a claim NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell made in upholding the suspension on Tuesday.

Tulowitzki starts fast in Toronto

Kansas City strong safety

The Bulletin file photo

Swimmers compete in the 5,000-meter race at Elk Lake on Aug. 4, 2014.

Jae C. Hong / The Associated Press

octagon, she is also among the organization's most compliant employees.

Mixed martial arts fighter Ronde Rousey trains at Glendale Fighting Club, on July15 in Glendale, California. Rousey the UFC bantamweight champion, will return to the octagon against Brazil's unbeaten Bethe Correia at UFC 190 in Rio de

Last year, when the UFC

needed a main-event fighter only 56 days after Rousey's toughest bout yet, she immediately agreed — then beat

Janeiro on Saturday.

Sara McMann in 66 seconds

international market, Rous-

ey has again jumped into a situation where others might have balked. On Saturday night in Rio de Janeiro, she will fight Brazilian Bethe Correia (100) in what will be Rousey's

"I want to be the most reli-

able champion in the company," the 28-year-old Rousey said of her willingness to step into difficult situations.

"I need to challenge myself ... give myself the underdog feeling where I feel there' s more to work for, putting more on myself."

SeeRousey / C2

Next up UFC 190: Ronda Rousey vs. Bethe Correia When:7 p.m. Saturday TV:

Prelims: FS1; Main event: Pay-per-view


C2

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JULY 30, 2015

ON THE AIR

COREB DARD

TODAY GOLF

Women's British Open EuropeanTour, Paul Lavvrie Matchplay PGA Tour,Quicken LoansNational Web.corn Tour,UtahChampionship

Time TV / Radio 6 a.m. ESP N 2 8 a.m. Golf 1 1:30 a.m. Go l f 3:30 p.m. Gol f

BASEBALL

MLB,SanDiegoatN. Y.Mets MLB, KansasCity at Toronto MLB, Seattle at Minnesota

9 a.m. 4 p.m. 5 p.m.

MLB MLB

Root

FOOTBALL

College, Pac-12Media Day Canada, B.C.atW innipeg

9 a.m. 5:30 p.m.

Pac-12 ESPN2

PREPS Calendar

6 a.m. 6 a.m. 9 a.m.

ESPN2

Golf Golf Golf Golf Golf

11:30 a.m.

3:30 p.m. 3 a.m.

AUTO RACING

NASCAR,Sprint Cup,Pennsylvania 400, practice 8a.m. NASCAR,Truck Series, Pocono practice 11 a.m. NASCAR,Xfinity, Pocono 250, practice 1:30 p.m. NASCAR,Sprint Cup,Pennsylvania 400, practice 1:30 p.m. NASCAR,Xfinity, Pocono 250, practice 4 p.m.

NBCSN FS1

CSNNW NBCSN NBCSN

BASEBALL

4 p.m. 5 p.m.

MLB

6 p.m. 9 p.m.

ESPN2 FS2

Root

FOOTBALL

CFL,Saskatchewan atEdmonton Australian, Collingwood vs Melbourne

LETS 66~ eE. gE NEED%Wk

geTw FEu

i5 Go@& 08.

WESTCOASTLEAGUE AU TimesPDT

GOLF

MLB, Washington at NewYork Mets MLB, Seattle at Minnesota

/

WCL Tennis

Listingsarethe mostaccurate available. TheBulletin is not responsible for latechangesmadeby TVor radio stations.

SPORTS IN BRIEF

South Division W L 31 13 24 20 21 24 10 34

Kelowna YakimaValey WallaWalla Wenatchee Belling ham Victoria Kitsap Cowlitz

East Division W L 20 23 21 20

15 22 23 24

West Division W L

29 16 21 22 19 26 10 26

Pct GB 705 545 7

467 10'/2

227 21

Pct GB 651

511 6 477 P/z 455 0'/2

Pct GB 644

4BB 7 422 10 409 10'/z

Wednesday'sGames Bellingham 4-1I, Bend3-4(7innings) Kelowna12,Wenatchee0 Cowlitz 5,Victoria3 Kitsap4,Walla Walla 3 Klamath Fals 5, Corvallis 0 Yakima Valey 2,Medford 0 Today'sGames Cowlitz at Victoria, 1:05p.m. Wenat cheeatKelowna,6:35p.m. KlamathFalls atCorvallis, 6:40p.m. FridayrsGames YakimaValey at Cowlitz, 6:35p.m. KitsapatKlamathFalls, 6:35p.m. BendatMedford,6:35p.m. KelownaatBellingham,7:05 p.m. VictoriaatWenatchee, 7:05p.m. Saturday'sGames KitsapatKlamathFalls, 6:35p.m. YakimaValey at Cowlitz, 6:35p.m. BendatMedford,6:35p.m. Corvallis atWala Walla, 7:05p.m. VictoriaatWenatchee, 7;05p.m. KelownaatBellingham,7:05 p.m. Wednesday's linescores (Both games7 innings)

BASEBALL

Bells 4, Elks 3 (First Game)

PhillieS agree to trade HamelS to RangerS —Twopeople familiar with the dealsaythe Philadelphia Phillies haveagreedto trade ace left-hander ColeHamels to theTexasRangers for a packageof prospects. Both peoplespoke toTheAssociated Press late Wednesday night on condition of anonymity becausethe trade has not beenfinalized. Hamelshas alimited no-trade clause but doesnot haveto approve a deal to theRangers. Hamelswould becomethe first pitcher in major league history traded during aseason immediately after throwing a no-hitter — heno-hit the Chicago CubsonSaturday at Wrigley Field.

BASKETBALL TimderWOIVOS agree to termS With Miller — Andre Miler's agent tells TheAssociated Press his client has agreed to terms with the Minnesota Timberwolves. TheWolves hosted Miller for a visit to the team's facility on Wednesday. Afew hours later, he reached agreement, agent Andy Miller says. Terms of the dealwere not immediately available. With Ricky Rubio coming off of ankle surgery and rookieTyusJonesasthebackup,theTimberwolveshadaneedforan experienced point guard who could play at theend of gamesand step in in case of aninjury. The 39-year-old Miller will be playing his 17th season in the league. He has averaged 12.8 points and 6.7 assists in his career andhaslong beenconsidered one of the smartest players at his position. Hespent last year with Washington and Sacramento.

TENNIS Federer PullS Out Of MOntreal tOurnament — RogerFederer pulled out of next month's Rogers Cuphard-court tournament on Wednesday. Aspokeswoman for Tennis Canada,Valerie Tetreault, wrote in an email to The Associated Press that Federer "wants to make sure hewill be (jnj top shape for" the U.S. Open,the year's last Grand Slam tournament, which begins Aug. 31.Federer, owner of a record 17 major championships, has not competed since losing to Novak Djokovjc in the Wimbledon final on July 12.Federer, who turns 34 onAug.8,wontheRogersCuptwice,in2004and2006,and he was the runner-up ayear ago.

HOCKEY WinterClaSSiCto bring BruinS to hOme Of PatS — The Winter Classic is coming to the home of the NewEngland Patriots. NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman joined officials from the Boston Bruins and Montreal Canadiens onWednesday to saythe Original Sjx rivals would meet atGillette Stadium onNewYear's Day. TheBruins will be the first team to host the event twice. Theyalso hosted it in 2010, at FenwayPark.

Major LeagueBaseball OFFICE OFTHECOMMISSIONEROFBASEBALL — Suspended NewYork Yankees RHPs Anderson Acevedo,Anthoniris Santanaand Carlos Santana (DSL)72gameseachafter positive testsfor metabolites ofStanozolol inviolation of theMinorLeague DrugPreventionandTreatment Program. AmericanLeague BOSTONREDSOX— PlacedCFMookieBetteonthe seven-day DLRecalledCFJackieBradleyJr. fromPawtucket(IL). AddedINFJoshRutledgeto themajor league roster.DesignatedINFJemile Weeksfor assignment. CHICAGO WHITESOX— PlacedINFEmilio Bonifacio onthe15-dayDL.Recalled INFLeury Garcia fromCharlotte(IL).

www.gocomics.corn/inthebleachers

BASEBALL 5 a.m.

BASEBALL

In the Bleachers O 2015 Steve Moore. Dist. by Universal Ucack 7/30

Sisters Registration dates set — SistersHigh has scheduled datesforfall sportsregistration, whichwil be held intheschool's athletic office:Aug.3 through 7(0 a.m.to noon)andAug 10through 14(noonto 4 p.m.). All studentslookingto participatein sports this fallmustbeclearedwith paperworkand physicals and have paidanyfeesandfines beforethefirst day of practice,whichis slatedfor Aug.17. Amandatory playerandparentmeetingwil beheldAug.13.

TENNIS

Women's British Open EuropeanTour, Paul Lawrie Matchplay Champions Tour,3M Championship PGA Tour,Quicken LoansNational Web.corn Tour,UtahChampionship EuropeanTour, Paul Lawrie Matchplay

Transactions

To submit information tothe prep calendar,email TheBulletin at sports@bendbugetin.corn

FRIDAY ATP, bet-at-home Open

DEALS

IN THE BLEACHERS

Begingham 2 0 0 020 g — 4 7 2 Bend 030 ggg g — 3 B T Kemme rer, Howard (6), Way (7) andHarris. Newman, Forrester(4), Gaul(5), Twe edt (7) andWolf. W— Kemm erer. L —Forrester. 2B— Belingham: Stroosma,Beati; Bend: Flynn(2), Hurd.HR— Bend: Wolf.

Bells 11, Elks 4 (SecondGame) Bellingham 1 4 4 011 g — 11 10 3 Bend ggt 011 1 — 4 4 3 Summervile,Anderson(5), Schneider(6), Haworth (7) andLarsen.Hunter,Boone (4), Jackson(5), Mets (0), Bennett(B)andWolf. W— Summervile. LHunter.2B—Bellingham: Breshears, Branton, Brady; Bend;Davis, Hurd.HR—Bellingham: Scott.

Little League In Hermiston 10/tt State Tournament Tuesday'sGame StateSemifinals: LaGrande2,Bend North 0 9/10 StateTournament Tuesday'sGame StateSemifinals; BendSouth 15,Sprague5

BASKETBALL

TENNIS

SOCCER

ATP

MLS

Atlanta Open Wednesday Atlanta Singles RicardasBerankis, Lithuania,def. TimSmyczek, UnitedStates,6-4,6-4. RadekStepanek, Czech Republic, def.Christopher Eubanks,UnitedStates, 6-2, 6-2. SecondRound GillesMuller(7), Luxembourg, def.JaredDonaldson, UnitedStates,6-3,6-2. VasekPospisil (2),Canada, def.Yen-hsun Lu,Tai-

MAJORLEAGUESOCCER AR TimesPOT

wan,6-4,6-7(3), 6-4.

Go Soeda,Japan,def. Adrian Mann arino (4),

France,6-2,6-4. MarcosBaghdatis (5), Cyprus,def. SamGroth, Australia,7-5, 3-6,6-3.

bet-a t-home Open Wednesday Hamburg,Germany First Round PabloCue vas (5), Uruguay,def. DiegoSchwartzman,Argentina,7-6(4), 6-4. Jiri Vesely,CzechRepublic, def.AndreasHaider-Maurer,Austria, 3-6, 6-1,6-0. SecondRound Aljaz Bedene,Britain, def. RobertoBautistaAgut (3), Spain7-6 , (2), 7-6(7). LucasPouile, France,def. JuanMonaco (6), Argentina,6-1, 7-5r FabioFognini(0), Italy, def.Albert Ramos-Vinolas, Spain,6-2,3-6,6-3. BenortParre,France,def. Tomm y Robredo (2), Spain 2-6 6-37-5.

Swiss Open estaad Wednesday Gstaad, Switzerland SecondRound Santiago Giraldo(B),Colombia, def. Marsel lhan, Turkey,6-2,6-3.

Pablo Andujar(4), Spaindef. , DusanLajovic,Ser-

EasternConference

W L T 11 7 5 Columbus 0 7 7 NewYork B 6 5 TorontoFC B 7 4 N ew England 7 9 7 Montreal 7 B 3 N ew YorkCity FC 6 9 6 O rlando Cit y 6 9 6 P hiladelphia 6 12 4 Chicago 5 11 4

P ts BF GA 38 2 7 2 2 3 1 34 33 2 9 29 23 2 0 31 31 20 29 3 5 2 4 25 27 24 2 9 3 1 24 26 3 1 2 2 2 8 37 19 2 2 3 0

FC Dallas 11 5 5 Vancouver 11 B 3 L os Angele s 9 7 7 S porting KansasCity 9 4 6 Seattle 10 10 2 Portland 9 B 5 R eal SaltLake 7 7 0 Houston 7 B 6 SanJose 7 9 4 Colorado 5 6 9

30 32 3 6 27 34 36 3 3 29 32 25 3 2 24 29 2 3 2 7 27 2 5 22 2 4 18

D.C. United

WesternConference W L T P tseF GA 25 22 20 20 21 20 27 26 27 19

Wednesday'sGame MLSAll-Stars2,TottenhamHotspur1 Saturday'sGames MontrealatNewYorkCity FC,11 a.m. RealSaltLakeatD.C. Umted,4 p.m. NewYorkatPhiladelphia 4 p.m. Toront oFCatNewEngland,4:30p.m. ColumbusatOrlandoCity,4:30p.m. Houston at Sporting KansasCity,5:30 p.m. Los AngelesatColorado,6 p.m. Vancouver atSeatle, 7p.m. sunday'sGames Portland at SanJose,2p.m. FC Dallasat Chicago, 4p.m.

bia, 7-5,6-2.

Thomaz Bellucci (5), Brazil, def.Stephane Robert,

GOLF

FelicianoLopez(2), Spain,def. JulianReister, Ger-

PGA Tour

France,6-3,6-2.

many,2-6, 6-4, 6-1.

STATISTICS

WTA

Brasil TennisCup Wednesday Florianopolis, Brazil WNBA Second Round WOMEN'SNATIONAL Maria-Teresa Torro-Flor, Spain,def. TatjanaMaria BASKETBALLASSOCIATION (1), Germ any,6-3, 6-1. AU TimesPOT Tereza Martincova, CzechRepublic, def. AjlaTomljanovic(2), Croatia,6-1,4-6, 6-1. EasternConference BethanieMatek-Sands (5), UnitedStates, def.Ana W L P c t G B Bogdan,Romania, 6-2,6-3. NewYork 12 6 . 6 67 LauraSiegemund(7), Germany, def. ElitsaKostova, Washington 10 6 . 6 25 Bulgaria,6-3, 6-1. Chicago 11 7 . 611 1 GabrielaCe,Brazil, def.PaulaKania(0), Poland, Indiana 10 B . 556 2 6-2, 7-6(7). Connecticut 0 0 .5 0 0 3 AnnikaBeck(3), Germany, def.Alize Lim, France, Atlanta 7 1 1 . 3 09 5 6-1, 6-2. WesternConference AnastasijaSevastova, Latvia, def.VeronicaCepede W L P c t G B Royg,Paraguay,7-6(4), 4-6, 6-4. Minnesota 13 4 . 7 65 TelianaPereira (C), Brazil, def. RisaOzaki, Japan, Phoenix 10 7 . 5BB 3 6-4, 6-1. Tulsa 10 B . 556 3'A SanAntonio 6 1 2 . 333 TA Baku Cup Seattle 5 1 4 . 263 9 Wednesday Los Angeles 3 1 4 . 176 10 Baku, Azerbarjan First Round Wednesday'sGames Karin Knapp (2), Italy, def.StefanieVoegele, SwitWashington 07, Seatle 74 zerland,6-1,6-4. Indiana 04rNewYork72 EvgeniyaRodina,Russia, def. DankaKovinic (9), SanAntonio102,Atlanta05 Montenegro,6-0,2-0, retired. Minnesota 02, LosAngeles 76 SecondRound Today'sGame AnastasiP aavlyuc , Kateryhenkova (1), Russiadef. PhoenixatTulsa, 5 p.m. na Bondaren ko,Ukraine,3-0, retired. Friday's Games MargaritaGasparyan,Russia, def.Yang Zhaoxuan, SeattleatConnecticut,4 p.m. China,6-4,6-4. WashingtonatSanAntonio, 5p.m. Donna Vekic, Croatia,def. ZhuLin, China,6-4, 0-6,6-3. Atlantaat Minnesota, 5 p.m. Alexa ndraPanova,Russia,def.AndreaHlavackova, LosAngelesatChicago,5:30p.m. CzechRepublic, 7-6(4), 6-2.

ThroughJuly 26 FedExcupSeasonPoints 1,Jordan Spieth,3,763.309.2,BubbaWatson, 2,042.614.3,JimmyWalker,1,951.333. 4,JasonDay, 1,793.333. 5,Dustin Johnson,1,607.219. 6, Robert Streb,1,525.566.7,ZachJohnson,1,522.242. B,Rory Mcllroy, 1,510.433.9, PatrickReed,1,496.009. 10, Charl ye Hoff man,1,472.975. ScoringAverage 1,JordanSpieth,BB039.2,BubbaWatson,69.637. 3,DustinJohnson,69.660.4,SergioGarcia,69.726. 5, BrooksKoepka, 69.700. 6, Wil Wilcox,69.004.7, Zach Johnson,69.072.B, RyanPalmer, 69.090. 9, JimmyWalker, 69.901.10, BrandtSnedeker, 69.945. Driving Distance 1, Dustin Johnson, 310.2. 2,JasonDay,311.5. 3, BubbaWatson, 311.1. 4, Charlie Beljan, 310.1. 5,Adam Scott,309.6.6,TonyFinau,300.9.7,J.B. Holmes, 300.7.0,BrooksKoepka,300.2.9,Patrick Rodgers,307.5.10,GaryWoodland, 305.5.

Driving AccuracyPercentage

1, FrancescoMolinari, 79.115L 2, David Toms, 74.20%. 3,ZachJohnson,73.42%. 4, JasonBohn, 72.55%. 5,HenrikStenson,72.24%.6,ChezReavie, 71.90%. 7,BrendonTodd, 71.76%. 0, StevenAlker, 71.15%.9, Colt Knost,Tt.f1%. 10,JustinLeonard, 71 .06'Yo.

Greens inRegulation Percentage

1, HenriSt kenson,74.23%.2,AdamScott, 73.17%. 3, France scoMolinari,72.59%.4,Stewart Oink,72.46%. 5, JimHerman,72.37'/0. 6,Wil Wilcox,71.04%.7, Paul Casey ,71.03%.B,HidekiMatsuyama,70.92%.9,Robert Streb,T0.61%.10, Russell Knox, 70.47%. Total Driving 1 (tie), HenrikStensonandKeegan Bradley, 63. 3, Adam Scott, 66.4, Hideki Matsuyama,73. 5, Wil Wilcox,75. 6,GrahamDeLaet, 04. 7, Charlie Beljan, BT.B,Russell Henley,Bg.9, Justin Rose,93. 10, 2 tied with104.

CLEVEL AND INDIANS— Recaled OFTyler Holt from Columbus(IL). AcquiredLHPJayson Aquino from Pittsburghfor cashconsiderations andoptioned to theLynchburg(Carolina). LOSANGELESANGELS— OptionedOF Daniel Robertsonto Salt Lake(PCL). DesignatedOFEfren Navarrofor assignment. ActivatedOFsDavid Murphy andDavidDeJesus. MINNES OTATWINS— Placed3BTrevor Plouffe on thepaternitylist. RecalledINFJorgePolancofrom Rochester (IL). NEWYOR KYANKEES—Selected thecontract of RHPCalebGothamfrom Scranton/Wilkes-Barre (IL). Designated LHPChris Capuanofor assignment. TEXASRANGERS — Recalled LHP Alex Claudio and RHP JonEdwardsfrom Round Rock(PCL). Optioned RHPPhil Klein toRoundRock. DesignatedLHP WandyRodriguezfor assignment. TORONTOBLUEJAYS — Designated LHPFelix Doubrontforassignment. National League ARIZONADIAMONDBACKS— Placed RHP Randall Delgado onthe15-day DL.Recalled RHPAddison ReedfromRene (PCL). CHICAGO DUBS— PlacedRHPNeil Ramirez on the 15-dayDL.Optioned RH P Dallas Beeler to iowa (PCL).RecalledRHPYoervis Medinafrom iowa.Selected thecontract of RHPBenRowenfromiowa.DesignatedINF-OFMikeBaxter for assignment. COLOR ADOROCKIES— Optioned INFCristhian Adamesto Albuquerque(PCL). WASHING TON NATIONALS — Optioned LHP Sammy Solis to Syracuse(IL). BASKETBALL National Basketball Association MILWAUKEE BUCKS— SignedFChrisCopeland. TORONTORAPTORS— NamedJerryStackhouse, RexKalamianandAndyGreer assistant coaches. CYCLING International CyclingUnion ICU —Suspended Italian teamAndroni Giocattoli-Sidermecfrom international racesfor 30 days, beginningAug. 1, after FabioTaborre andDavide Appolloniotestedpositive for doping. FOOTBALL National Football League ARIZONACARDINALS — Pl aced TE Jermaine Gresham onthe PUPlist andTETroy Niklas andLB ZackWagenmannontheactive/non-football injurylist. ReleasedCBAlfonzoDennard. ATLANTA FALCONS— SignedOLDeMarcusLove. CHICAGO BEARS—Announcedthe retirement of GChadHamilton. CINCINNATI BENGALS — Pl aced WR James Wright on theinjuredreserve list. CLEVEL ANDBROWNS— Re-signed DBLandon Feichter. INDIAN APOLIS COLTS — Signed CB Raymon Taylor. JACKSONVI LLEJAGUARS — Placed RBStorm Johnsonontheactive/non-football illnesslist. KANSASCITYCHIEFS— ReleasedRBCyrusGray. MIAMIDOL PHINS— Signed DTCalvin Barnett, WR KaiDeLaCruzandOTChris Martin. WaivedDT Ellis McCarthy.PlacedS DonJonesandWRDeVante ParkeronthePUPlist andTEGerel Robinsononthe active/non-footbalinl jurylist. NEW ENGLANDPATRIOTS — Signed CB Tarell Brown. NEWYOR KJETS— PlacedGWillie Colon,RB Stevan RidleyandDLKevin Vickerson onthe PUPlist. SANFRA NCISCO49ERS— Activated RBCarlos Hydefromtheactive/non-football injurylist. TAMPABAY BUCCANEERS — Signed CBJude Adjei-Barimah,S Kimario McFadden and CBAl-Hajj Shabazz. WaivedSDeshazor Everet andSDerrickWells. TENNE SSEETITANS—Agreed to terms with TE Chase Coff manandRBDavidFluellen. WASHIN GTONREDSKINS—Agreedto termswith LB Ryan Kerrigan onamultiyearcontract extension. HOCKEY National HockeyLeague ARIZONACOYOTES — Named CoreySchwab goaltendingcoach.SignedGNiklas Treutle to a oneyearcontract. NEWJERSEYDEVILS— PlacedFDainiusZubrus on unconditionalwaiversfor thepurposeof terminating hiscontract. MOTORSPORTS NASCAR — Suspended Premium Motorsports crew chiefScottEgglestonandcar chief KevinEagle for this weeke nd's Sprint Cupraceat Poconoand placedbothonprobation throughDec.31, because an unattached weight fell offthecardriven byTimmy Hill duringpracticelast weekendat Indianapolis. Fined Eggle ston$25,000anddockedteam ownerMikeCurb 15 championshipcarowner points for theincident. COLLEGE CLEMSO N—Named BrianYale volunteer assistant volleybalcoach l and AlexaRandvolleyball graduate directorof operations. GEORG E MASON— Named Emm a Thomson women' sassistantsoccercoach.

FISH COUNT Upstreamdaily movement of adult chinookjack chinook,steelheadandwild steelheadat selectedColumbiaRiverdamslast updatedTuesday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd Bonneville 1,270 12 5 3 , 040 1,001 TheDalles 971 1 2 2 1 , 9161,201 John Day 1,126 17 0 571 354 McNary 96 4 60 315 195 Upstream year-to-date movement ofadult chinook, jack chinook,steelheadand wild steelheadat selected ColumbiaRiverdamslastupdatedTuesday. Chnk Jchnk Sllhd Wstlhd Bonneville 377,049 30,409 54,000 30,342 The Dalles 311,996 27,000 19,264 11,664 John Day 267,056 21,604 9,460 5,513

McNary 243,256 16,603 7,340 3,02

CYCLING SPOnSOr leaveS AfriCan CyCling team — The title sponsor of the African cycling team that made animpressive debut at the Tour de France says it is ending its agreement. Despite praising the team's performance, cellphone network MTNsays its partnership with South Africa-based MTN-Qhubekahas "reached its conclusion." The announcement onW ednesdaywasasurpriseafterMTN-Qhubeka achieved aseries of firsts at this month's Tour, becoming the first African team in theTour's modern era and allowing two Eritreans riders to become the first from their country to ride at cycling's top race.

UCI SuSPendS Italian team after 2 dOPingCaSeS —The International Cycling Union hassuspended Italian team Androni Giocattoli-Sidermec from international races for 30 daysafter two riders tested positive for doping. TheUCIsays the ban starts Aug. 1. The second-tier team becomesthe first to be suspendedsince the UCI's team rule took effect in January. Teamscan bebarred from major races for up to 45days for "two potential anti-doping violations within the sameteam within a12-month period." Two Italian riders with Androni Giocattoli-Sidermec tested positive for bannedsubstances in June.

MOTOR SPORTS NASCARPenaliZOSPremium MotorSPOrtS — NASCARhas penalized PremiumMotorsports because anunattached weight fell off the car during practice last weekendat Indianapolis. The P3penalty against the teamTimmy Hill drove for last weekendwas issued Wednesday.Crewchief Scott Eggleston wasfined $25,000. Heand car chief KevinEaglewere also suspendedfor this weekend's Sprint Cup race atPoconoand placed on probation through Dec.31. Team owner MikeCurb waspenalized 15 championship car ownerpoints. Hill has driven thecar for the pasttwo Sprint Cupraces. Hereplaced Josh Wise, who left the teamafter the race at Kentucky threeweeksago. — From wire reports

Rousey

mission of Cat Zingano in a February pay-per-view bout

Continued from C1 The UFC's branding of Rousey has allowed her to remain true to her tough-

that generated a live gate of $ 2.675 million. He r d o m i - South America, either. At a nance and popularity give her news conference in Brazil to the clout to fight when and announce Saturday's bout, whom she wants — similar to White said Rousey received undefeatedboxing champion more enthusiastic cheers than

ness while accentuating her

intense drive and unfiltered personality. More than once she has told her UFC bosses,

"If the guys can't do it, give it to me." Dana White, UFC's presi-

Floyd Mayweather Jr., who has fought 13 consecutive times in his hometown of Las Vegas, including his last ll at the MGM Grand.

dent, marvels at how Rousey Rousey resides in Venice, has risen to every occasion. California, and aii but two of " We definitely steer her i n her fights have been staged some directions, but the last in Southern California or Las thing you need to do is sit Vega s. around and have too many But Rousey embraced the meetings about b r anding idea of traveling to Brazil, inRonda Rousey," he said. "Not forming Fertitta and W h ite only is her physical talent that she had fought in Rio dominant, her p ersonality de Janeiro once before in an makes her a home rtzn in ev-

amateur j ud o

c o mpetition.

ery way, shape and form." (Before launching her UFC Before setting Saturday' s career, Rousey was a 2008 fight on challenger Correia's Olympic bronze medalist in home turf i n B r azil, White women's judo.) "This one, taking it purand UFC Chairman Lorenzo Fertitta huddled in Southern posefully without the homeCalifornia with Rousey. court advantage, I want the Rousey (11-0) was coming fans to know I'm the most off a 14-second arm-bar sub- active champion out there,"

Rousey said. The champion apparently does not lack for fans in

said were three more "mas-

sive" sponsorship deals. "She schedules everything around what's going on with the UFC, keeps us in the loop on everything," White said. "Fighting is her No. 1 priority, but she's building a life after Correia from fans who have fighting. If there's a bit of a watched countrymen Ander- conflict, we don't mind beson Silva, Jose Aldo, Renan cause she's amazing for us. "We can take Ronda to any Barao and Vitor Beifort become UFC champions. arena and sell it out." "For us, it's a good thing beRousey seems oblivious to cause it helps grow the sport," what all the fuss is about. "I' ve Fertitta said. "She's the iconic been doing this for so long. face ofthe sport." This is my life," she explained. White said Rousey's will- "When I was 12 years old, we ingness to venture to her chal- were at a judo training camp lenger's territory i l l ustrates and had to pull ourselves why he ranks her as "the across a mat — 30 laps back greatest athlete I have ever and forth pulling ourselves worked with in every sense of with our arms and stomach. the word." Burned all the skin off our elHe added: "I love the way she bows, bleeding at the knees, pushed this herself: 'Not only someone threw up. "I' ve been doing that kind am I going to take this fight against this girl I don't like, I'm of gnarly stuff for so long that going to beat her in her own I feei pampered and spoiled backyard.' I love the way she now that I'm a professional pushes and challenges herself." athlete. What White calls duAnd, while training, Rous- rability, I call being well taken ey has landed what White care of."


THURSDAY, JULY 30, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

C3

OR LEAGUE BASEBALL cata ndings

RIGHT AT HOME

All TimesPDT AMERICANLEAGUE

East Division W L 57 43 51 49

NewYork Baltimore Toronto Tampa Bay Boston

51 51 51 52 44 58

Central Division W L 61 39

Kansas City Minnesota

52 48 49 50 49 52 46 54

Chicago Detroit

Cleveland

West Division W L

Houston LosAngeles Texas Seattle Oakland

57 45 55 45 48 52 46 56 45 57

Pct GB .570 .510 6 .500 7 .495 7'/r .431 14 Pct GB .610 .520 9

.495 11'/r .485 12'/r .460 15

Pct GB .559

NATIONALLEAGUE East Division W L Washington 53 46 NewYork 52 49 Atlanta 46 55 Miami 42 59 Philadelphia 38 64

Central Division W L

64 37 59 41 53 47 45 54 44 58

St. Louis Pittsburgh Chicago Cincinnati Milwaukee

West Division

Los Angeles SanFrancisco Arizona SanDiego Colorado

W 57 56 49 48 43

L 45 45 51 53 56

Pct GB

.535 .515 2 .455 8 .416 12 .373 16'/r

Pct GB .634 590 4'/2 .530 I gr/r

.455 18 ,431 20'/r Pct GB .559 554

I/2

.490 7 .475 8'/r 434 12r/r

Wednesday'sGames

Pittsburgh10,Minnesota4 Chicago Cubs3, Colorado2 Arizona 8,Seatle 2 SanFrancisco5, Milwaukee0 Baltimore 2, Atlanta0 Toronto8, Philadelphia2 SanDiego7, N.Y. Mets 3 Washington 7, Miami2 Cincinnati 1,St. Louis0 L.A. Dodgers10, Oakland7

Today'sGames San Diego (Cashner 4-10) at N.Y.Mets(Niese5-9), 9:10 a.m. Washington(Scherzer10-8) at Miami(Haren7-6), 9:10 a.m. Atlanta(S.Miler 5-7)at Philadelphia(Harang4-11), 4:05 p.m. Pittsburgh (Burnett 8-4)at Cincinnati (Holmberg0-0), 4:10 p.m. Colorado(Rusin3-4) at St. Louis(C.Martinez11-4), 4:15 p.m. ChicagoCubs(Arrieta 11-6)at Milwaukee(Nelson 8-9), 5:10 p.m. Friday's Games Atlantaat Philadelphia,4:05p.m. PittsburghatCincinnati, 4:10p.m. San Diego atMiami, 4:10p.m. Washingtonat N.Y. Mets, 4:10p.m. SanFranciscoatTexas,5:05 p.m. Arizonaat Houston, 5:10p.m. ChicagoCubsat Milwaukee,5:10p.m. Coloradoat St.Louis, 5:15p.m. L.A. Angelat s L.A.Dodgers, 7:10p.m.

History This date inbaseball July 30 1870 —Monmouth Park,inLongBranch,N.J., openedwith afive dayracemeet. 1917 —TyCobbBobbyVeachandDssieVitt, eachwent5-for-5 in Detroit's 16-4winoverWashington. 1933 —Dizzy Deanstruckout 17CubsastheSt. LouisCardinalsbeatChicago8-2. 1947 — TheNewYorkGiantsbeat Ewell Blackweff and theCincinnati Reds5-4 in 10 innings, ending Blackwell's16-gamewinningstreak. 1969 — Wilie Mccoveyhadfourhits in fouratbats inhismajor leaguedebut,with theSanFrancisco Giants.Hishits includedtwotriples in a7-2win over the PhiladelphiaPhilies. 1968 —Washingtonshortstop RonHansenpuled off anunassistedtriple play,buttheClevelandIndians stiff won thegame10-1. 1973 —JimBibbyoftheTexasRangerspitched a 6-0 no-hitteragainsttheOaklandA's. 1980 — HoustonAstros pitcher J.R. Richard had astrokeduringaworkout attheAstrodomeand underwent surgery to removea bloodclot behindhis right collarbone. 1982 —TheAtlanta BravesreturnedChief NocA-Homa andhis teepee to left field afterlosing 19of 21 games andblowing a fgi/r-gamelead.Theteepee was removed for moreseats. Theteamrecoveredto regainfirst place. 1990 — GeorgeSteinbrennerwasforcedto resign as generalpartneroftheNewYorkYankeesbybaseball commissioner FayVincent. 2003 —ChicagoWhite SoxshortstopJoseValentin hit three homerunsbythe fifth inning ina15-4win overKansasCity. It wasthesecondthree-homergame of his career,andthe third timehehashomered from both sidesoftheplate. 2006 — Jonny Gomeshad the first three-homer game in TampaBayfranchisehistory in a7-3victory overKansasCity. 2006 — New York Mets centerfielder Carlos Beltran tied amajor leaguerecord with his third grand slamthis month in a 9-6 victory overAtlanta. Beltranbecamethe ninth player in major leaguehistory to hit three grandslamsin a calendarmonth. 2008 —KellyShoppachof Clevelandtied amajor leaguerecordwith five extra-basehits, including a game-tyinghomerintheninth, but Detroit beattheIndians14-12in13 innings. Shoppachhadtwo homers and three doubles. 2011 — TheNewYorkYankeesbrokeloosefor12 runs inthefirst inningof thenightcapof aday-night doubleheader, settingafranchise record enroute to a 17-3 routofBaltimore. 2012 — KendrysMoraleshomeredfrom both sides of the plateduring anine-run sixth inning, cappingtheburst with agrandslamthat sent theLos Angeles Angels rompingpasttheTexasRangers15-8. Moralesbecamethethird switch-hitter in major league history tohomerasalefly andrighty inthesameinning. CarlosBaergadid it for Clevelandin 1993and MarkBeghornof theChicagoCubsduplicatedthefeat in 2002. Today'sbirthday:JesseHahn, 26.

Reds1, Cardinals 0

ST. PETERSBURG,Fla. — Justin Verlander outlasted Chris Archer for his first win this season and Detroit avoided a three-game sweep by beating TampaBay.

BOSTON—Adam Eaton opened the game with a homerun, Jose Quintana pitched 6/s solid innings and the Chicago White Soxbeat Boston for their seventh straight win. Eaton and Melky Cabrera both had three hits, including RBI singles. Alexei Ramirez hit a solo homer for the White Sox, who buil ta6-0 lead and chased Boston starter Rick Porcello in the third inning.

Detroit

r~k ! /'

Darren Catahrese / The Canadian Press

Toronto's Troy Tulowitzki hits a two-run home run during the third inning of Wednesday's game against Philadelphia in Toronto. Tulowitzki, who was recently traded to Toronto from Colorado, went 3-for-5 with a home run and two doubles to lead the Blue Jays to an 8-2 victory over the Phillies.

Interlea ue

Diamondhacks 8, Mariners 2 SEATTLE —Welington Castillo homered twice off Seattle aceFelix Hernandez, including a two-run shot in the first inning, and Arizona won its fifth straight beating the Mariners. Arizona completed its first sweep of Seattle and fifth this season thanks to Castillo's two homers. Castillo hit a two-run shot off Hernandez (12-6) as part of Arizona's four-run first inning, then added a solo homerun leading off the fourth inning. Hebecamejust the sixth player to homer twice in the same gameoff Hernandez.

TampaBay

ab r hbi ab r hbi K insler2b 4 0 0 0 Jasolf 3000 J lglesisss 4 1 1 0 Guyerlf 1 0 0 0 Cespds If 4 1 1 0 SouzJr rf 4 0 1 0 VMrtnz dh 4 0 0 0 Longori 3b 3 0 0 0 JMrtnz rf 3 0 1 1 Loney 1b 3 0 1 0 Cstllns 3b 3 0 1 1 TBckh pr-2b 1 0 0 0 Romine3b 1 0 0 0 Forsyth2b-1b 3 0 1 0 Avila1b 3 0 0 0 Acarerss 3 1 1 1 JMccnc 3 0 0 0 Casalidh 3 0 0 0 Gosecf 3 0 0 0 Kiermrcf 3 0 0 0 Rivera c 2 0 0 0 JButlerph 1 0 0 0 BWilsnc 0 0 0 0 Totals 3 2 2 4 2 Totals 3 01 4 1 Detroit 000 000 200 — 2 T ampa Bay 0 0 0 0 1 0 000 — 1 E—A.cabrera(3). LDB —Detroit 4, Tampa Bay 3.

ftk(

.550 1 .480 8 .451 11 .441 12

Wednesday'sGames Detroit 2,TampaBay1 Cleveland12, Kansas City1 Pittsburgh10,Minnesota4 Arizona 8,Seatle 2 Baltimore 2, Atlanta0 Toronto8, Philadelphia2 Chicago WhiteSox9, Boston2 Texas5, N.Y.Yankees2 Houston 6, L.A.Angels 3 LA. Dodgers 10,Oakland7 Today'sGames Detroit (Simon 9-6) at Baltimore(Mi.Gonzalez 9-6), 4:05 p.m. KansasCity (D.Duffy4-4) at Toronto(Estrada7-6), 4:07 p.m. ChicagoWhite Sox(Sale 9-5) at Boston(S.Wright 3-4), 4:10 p.m. N.Y. Yank ees (Pineda9-7) at Texas(Gaffardo 7-9), 5;05 p.m. L.A. Angel(S s hoemaker 5-7) at Houston(Kazmir 6-5), 5:10 p.m. Seattle(Happ4-5) at Minnesota(P.Hughes9-6),5;10 p.m. Cleveland(Carrasco10-8) at Oakland (Bassitt 0-3), 7;05 p.m. Friday's Games Detroit atBaltimore,4:05p.m. KansasCityatToronto, 4:07p.m. TampaBayatBoston,4:10p.m. SanFranciscoatTexas,5:05 p.m. Arizona at Houston,5:10 p.m. N.Y. YankeesatChicagoWhiteSox,5:10p.m. Seattle at Minnesota,5:10p.m. ClevelandatOakland, 6:35p.m. L.A. Angelat s L.A.Dodgers, 7:10p.m.

Tigers 2, Rays1

Dodgers 10, Athletics 7

Rangers 5, Yankees2

LOS ANGELES — Pinch-hitter Kike Hernandezdelivered the go-ahead, two-run double during theDodgers' five-run seventh inning, and Los Angeles rallied to beatOakland.

ARLINGTON, Texas— Colby Lewis went six innings for his 11th victory and Texassnappeda three-game losing streak with a win over the ALEast-leading New York Yankees. Adrian Beltre had two hits and scored twice for the Rangers, who won for only the second time in their past 14 home games.

Los Angeles ab r hbi ab r hbi Burnscf 4 1 1 0 JRollnsss 5 1 2 0 I.Davis1b 2 1 0 0 HKndrc2b 4 2 2 2 Pheglyph-c 2 1 1 0 AGnzlz1b 3 1 1 1 R eddckrf 5 1 3 0 Grandlc 4 1 1 1 V ogtc-1b 4 0 0 0 Ethierlf 3 1 2 1 Lawrie3b 5 3 4 4 Howellp 0 0 0 0 S ogard2b 5 0 1 2 Baezp 0 0 0 0 Semien ss 5 0 1 0 KHrndz ph 1 1 1 2 F uldlf 3 0 2 1 JoPerltp 0 0 0 0 Chavez p 1 0 0 0 Jansen p 0 0 0 0 S mlnsk ph 1 0 0 0 Puig rf 4 1 2 3 Abad p 0 0 0 0 Pedrsn cf 4 0 0 0 BButlerph 1 0 0 0 Guerrr3b 3 0 0 0 FRdrgz p 0 0 0 0 Callasp 3b 1 1 1 0 Pomrnzp 0 0 0 0 Bolsngrp 2 0 0 0 Oterop 0 0 0 0 Nicasiop 0 0 0 0 OFlhrtp 0 0 0 0 VnSlyklf 1 1 0 0 Totals 3 8 7 137 Totals 3 5 101210 Oakland 0 00 110 401 — 7 Los Angeles 10 0 200 52x— 10 E—H.Kendrick(4). DP—LosAngeles2. LDB—OakOakland

St. Louis ab r hbi ab r hbi Phil lips2b 4 0 0 0 Wong2b 4 0 0 0 Votto1b 3 0 0 0 Mcrpnt3b 2 0 1 0 Frazier3b 4 0 0 0 Hoffidylf 1 0 0 0 Bruce rf 4 1 1 1 Rynlds1b 3 0 0 0 Byrdlf 3 0 0 0 JhPerltss 3 0 0 0 Suarezss 3 0 0 0 Heywrdrf 3 0 1 0 B.Penac 2 0 0 0 Molinac 4 0 0 0 HR—A.cabrera(6). CS—SouzaJr. (6). DeSclfnp 2 0 0 0 Grichkcf 3 0 1 0 IP H R E R BBSO Schmkrph 1 0 0 0 Pisctty1b-If 3 0 1 0 Hooverp 0 0 0 0 Lackeyp 1 0 0 0 Detroit VerlanderW,1-3 8 4 1 1 0 10 Achpmp 0 0 0 0 Bouriosph 1 0 0 0 SoriaS,23-26 1 0 0 0 0 2 BHmltncf 3 0 1 0 Siegristp 0 0 0 0 Totals 2 9 1 2 1 Totals 2 80 4 0 TampaBay 010 0 0 0 000 — 1 ArcherL,9-8 7 3 2 0 0 11 C incinnati St. Louis 0 00 000 000 — 0 Geltz 1 0 0 0 0 0 DP — Cincinnati 2. LOB—Cincinnati 3, St. Louis Boxberger 1 1 0 0 1 1 6. 28 — M.carpenter (24). HR —Bruce (17). SB—B. HBP —bySoria(Longoria). Hamilton(47). S—Lackey. T—2:39.A—28,057 (31,042). IP H R E R BBSO Cincinnati National League D eScl afaniW,6-7 7 3 0 0 3 3 HooverH,9 1 1 0 0 0 1 Giants 5, Brewers 0 A.chapman S,21-22 1 0 0 0 0 2 St. Louis LackeyL,9-6 8 2 1 1 1 8 SAN FRANCISCO — Hunter Siegrist 1 0 0 0 1 0 Pence doubled in Matt Duffy to HBP —byDeSclafani(Jh.Peralta). T — 2: 1 8. A — 42,334 (45 , 3 99). break a scoreless tie in the sev-

enth inning and SanFrancisco held on to beat Milwaukee. Pence also made two sparkling defensive plays in the outfield for the Giants.

Cincinnati

Nationals 7, Marlins 2 MIAMI — Bryce Harper blasted two home runs into the upper deck and drove in four runs for Washington in a win over Miami. Michael Taylor also homeredand drove in two for Washington.

Milwaukee San Francisco ab r hbi ab r hbi G Parralf 4 0 2 0 Aokilf 4010 Lucroyc 4 0 2 0 GBlanccf 2 0 0 1 Braunrf 4 0 0 0 MDuffy3b 4 1 1 0 Miami L ind1b 3 0 0 0 Pencerf 4 1 2 1 Washington ab r hbi ab r hbi C Gomzcf 4 0 0 0 Belt1b 3 1 1 0 Rendon2b 4 0 1 0 DGordn2b 4 0 0 0 New York Texas Gennett2b 3 0 0 0 Bcrwfrss 3 0 0 1 YEscor3b 5 1 1 0 Prado3b 4 0 1 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi KDavisph 1 0 0 0 HSnchzc 4 1 1 0 Werthlf 4 1 1 0 Yelichcf-If 4 0 0 0 Effsurycf 4 0 1 1 DShldscf 3 0 1 1 Segurass 3 0 1 0 Adrianz2b 3 1 1 2 H arperrf 4 3 3 4 Bour1b 1 1 0 0 Gardnrlf 3 0 0 0 LMartncf 1 0 0 0 H Perez3b 3 0 0 0 Peavyp 1 0 1 0 A Rdrgzdh 4 0 1 0 Odor2b 4 0 0 0 Fiersp 1 0 0 0 Paganph 1 0 0 0 Zmrmn1b 4 0 0 0 Realmtc 4 0 0 0 D smndss 4 1 1 1 Dietrchlf 2 1 0 0 BMccnc 4 0 1 0 Fielderdh 3 1 1 0 WSmithp 0 0 0 0 Strcklnp 0 0 0 0 Beltranrf 4 1 1 1 Beltre3b 4 2 2 0 Broxtnp 0 0 0 0Maxwff ph 0 0 0 0 MTaylrcf 3 1 1 2 SDysonp 0 0 0 0 Headly3b 4 0 1 0 Morlnd1b 3 1 1 0 4 0 1 0 Rienzop 0 0 0 0 SPetrsnph 1 0 1 0 R orno p 0 0 0 0 Loatonc G Jones1b 4 0 0 0 JHmltnlf 4 1 2 2 Fisterp 2 0 0 0 McGehph 1 0 1 0 K nebelp 0 0 0 0 Lopezp 0 0 0 0 Gregrsss 3 1 1 0 Andrusss 4 0 0 0 TMooreph 1 0 0 0 ISuzukirf 4 0 2 1 Arizona Seattle Totals 31 0 6 0 Totals 2 9 5 8 5 D rew2b 3 0 2 0 Choo rf 4 0 3 1 ab r hbi ab r hbi M ilwaukee 0 0 0 0 0 0 000 — 0 Janssnp 0 0 0 0 Hchvrrss 4 0 1 1 Chirins c 3 0 1 0 Storenp 0 0 0 0 Koehlerp 2 0 0 0 Inciartrf 5 2 2 0 AJcksncf 4 1 1 0 San Francisco 000 000 Bgx — 5 Totals 3 3 2 8 2 Totals 3 35 1 1 4 E—Lucroy (7). DP—Milwaukee 1, San Francisco Ugglaph 0 0 0 0 Gillespicf 1 0 0 0 Pollockcf 5 2 3 1 Seager3b 3 1 0 0 N ew York 020 0 0 0 0 00 — 2 1.LOB— Milwaukee6,SanFrancisco5.28— Pence Roarkp 0 0 0 0 Gldsch1b 5 1 2 2 N.cruzrf 3 0 1 0 Texas 030 010 10x — 5 D Perltlf 5 0 1 2 Gutirrzlf 4 0 1 1 H.Sache nz (3). SB—Lucroy (1), G.Blanco(6). Totals 35 7 9 7 Totals 3 1 2 5 2 E — H e adl e y (17), Gregori us(10), DeShields (3). (11), Wcastllc 3 2 2 3 Trumodh-1b 4 0 0 0 CS — Pence (1). S—Fiers. SF—G.Blanco, B.craw- W ashington 0 0 0 2 3 0 020 — 7 D P — N e w Y ork 1, T exa s 2. LO B — N ew Y or k 5, T e xa s Miami 0 10 100 000 — 2 land 9, Los An ge l e s 5. 28 — R e d d ic k (16), La w ri e 2 (1 8), JaLam3b 5 0 1 0 BMiller2b 4 0 2 1 ford. B.Mccann(11), Chirinos(15). HR—Beltran J.Rog ins (15),A.Gonzalez(27), Ethier(10), K.Hernandez 9. 28 — Tomasdh 4 1 2 0 Morrsn1b 3 0 0 0 IP H R E R BBSO E—Koehler (3), Realmuto (3). DP—Miami 1. LOB —Washington 4, Miami 6. 28—Rendon (6), (8). 38 —J.Rollins (2). HR —Lawrie(9), Puig(7). SB(8). CS —Headley (2). S—Chirinos. D wings2b 4 0 1 0 Nunop 0 0 0 0 Milwaukee IP H R E R BBSO Fiers L,5-9 McGehee (10), I.Suzuki (1). 3B—Desmond(2). HRReddick2(5), Lawrie (5),H.Kendrick (5).S—Chavez. Pnngtnss 4 0 1 0 Rodneyp 0 0 0 0 New York H arper 2 (29), M.Taylor (9). SF—M.Taylor. IP H R E R BBSO Ackleyph 1 0 1 0 W.Smith TanakaL,7-4 6 9 4 4 3 3 Broxton IP H R E R BBSO Oakland Sucrec 3 0 1 0 1-3 0 1 0 1 1 Knebel Washington Chavez 5 5 3 3 2 5 Shreve S.Smithph 1 0 0 0 Gotham 1 2-3 2 0 0 0 4 Fister W,4-6 6 4 2 2 1 4 Abed 1 0 0 0 0 1 San Francisco CTaylrss 4 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 Fe.RodriguezH,4 2-3 0 2 2 2 1 Texas Totals 4 0 8 158 Totals 3 4 2 7 2 Peavy 6 4 0 0 0 3 JanssenH,7 7 2 2 0 5 StricklandW,1-1 1 1 0 0 0 0 2 PomeranzL,4-4 BS,1-2 0 3 3 3 0 0 LewisW,11-4 6 Arizona 400 100 21 0 — 8 0 0 0 1 0 Storen 1 1 0 0 1 1 Otero 1 2 1 1 0 1 Kela H,9 1 0 0 0 0 1 Rorno Seattle 000 100 01 0 — 2 1 2 0 0 0 1 Roark O'Flaherty Miami 13 2 1 1 0 1 ScheppersH,12 1 1 0 0 0 0 Lopez E—Seager (12).DP—Seattle 2. LOB—Arizona 7, 1 0 0 0 0 1 S h.Tol l e son S, 1 8-19 1 0 0 0 0 2 K oehler L,8-7 6 6 5 5 1 4 Los Angel e s Seattle 7. 28 —Pollock(22), Tomas (17), A.Jackson Fiers pitched to 2battersin the7th. —byLewis(Gardner). S.Dyson 2 3 2 2 0 3 5 8 2 2 3 3 HBP WP — S tri c kl a nd. (12), Gutierrez (3), Ackley(8), Sucre(1). 38—D. Bolsinger Rienzo 1 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 1 1 1 2 T—3:09. A—31,658(48,114). Peralta (8).HR —Wcastilo 2(10). CS—Dwings(3). NicasioH,B T—3:02.A—42,352 (41,915). HBP — by F is ter (Di e tri c h, Bour). 3 3 2 0 1 IP H R E R BBSO HowellBS,2-3 1 - 3 T — 2: 3 9. A — 1 9,51 3 (37,44 2). 2 -3 1 0 0 0 0 Baez W,3-2 Arizona White Soxg, RedSox2 Padres 7, Nets 3 0 0 0 0 0 CorbinW,2-3 6 3 1 1 2 6 Jo.PeraltaH,3 1 1 1 1 1 0 1 Reed 2 3 1 1 0 3 Jansen Leaders BOSTON —Adam Eaton opened Coffmenter 1 1 0 0 0 1 Nicasiopitchedto1 batter inthe7th. NEW YORK —Justi n Upton AMERICAN LEAGUE Pomeranz pitchedto 3battersin the7th. Seattle the game with a home run, Jose homered anddrove in three runs BATTING —Micabrera, Detroit, .350; Kipnis, FHernandez L,12-6 62-3 12 7 7 1 7 T—3:24.A—51,788 (56,000). Quintana pitched 6/s solid innings land,.333;Fielder,Texas,.333;Hosmer,Kansas and Yonder Alonso also connected Cleve Nuno 11-3 3 1 1 0 2 City,.315;Trout,LosAngeles,.315; Jlglesias, Detroit, Rodney 1 0 0 0 0 1 Pirates 10, Twins 4 and the ChicagoWhite Soxbeat as San Diego beat the New York Lcain,KansasCity, .313. HBP —byRodney(W.castilo). Boston for its seventh straight win. Mets despite three long balls from .313; RUNS —Trout, LosAngeles, 75; Dozier, MinnesoT—2:59. A—32,502(47,574). Eaton andMelky Cabrera both had Lucas Duda. MINNEAPOLIS—Andrew Mcta,73;Gardner,NewYork,72; Donaldson,Toronto,70; Kipnis,Cleveland,66; JMartinez, Detroit, 65;Bautista, Cutchen hit a homerun andturned three hits, including RBIsingles. Drioles 2, Braves 0 Toronto,63;Lcain, KansasCity,63. New york an RBI single into aracearound the Alexei Ramirez hit a solo homerfor San Diego RBI — Donaldson, Toronto, 68; KMorales, Kansas ab r hbi ab r hbi 68;Bautista,Toronto,67; CDavis, Baltimore,65; BALTIMORE — Chris Tillman took bases while Minnesotamadetwo the White Sox, whobuilt a 6-0 lead V enalecf-rf 5 2 2 1 Grndrsrf 2 0 0 0 City, Teixeira,NewYork, 65;Puiols, LosAngeles, 64;Trout, a three-hitter into the ninth inning, errors in a five-run sixth inning. and chasedBoston starter Rick Solarte3b 5 2 4 1 DnMrp3b 4 0 0 0 Los Angeles,64. Kemprf 3 0 1 1 Roblesp 0 0 0 0 HITS—Kipnis, Cleveland, 131; Fielder, Texas, Jonathan SchoopandJ.J. Hardy Porcello in the third inning. Qcknsh p 0 0 0 0 KJhnsn 2b 3 0 0 0 Pittsburgh Minnesota 126; Ncruz,Seatle, 118;Altuve, Houston, 116; Hoshomered andBaltimore beat Wallacph 1 0 0 0 Duda1b 3 3 3 3 ab r hbi ab r hbi mer, KansasCity, 116;Bogaerts, Boston,115;CesChicago Boston A lmontlf 0 0 0 0 Confortlf 4 0 0 0 skidding Atlanta for a three-game GPolnc rf 2 0 0 0 Dozier 2b 4 1 1 0 pedes,Detroit,115. ab r hbi ab r hbi Uptonlf 4 1 2 3 Niwnhscf 3 0 0 0 D eckerrf 2 1 0 0 Hickscf 5 1 3 1 DOUBLE S—Kipnis, Cleveland,31; Brantley, Eatoncf 6 2 3 2 B.Holt2b 4 0 2 0 sweep. Tillman (8-7j was lifted Thayerp 0 0 0 0 WFlorsss 3 0 1 0 SMartelf 4 1 1 1 Mauer1b 5 1 1 0 Cleveland,29;Cespedes, Detroit, 28;Dozier,MinneSaladi n 3b 4 1 1 0 Bogartsss 4 1 1 0 Mateop 0 0 0 0 Teiadaph 1 0 0 0 after giving up atwo-out double to Mcctchcf 4 2 2 3 Sanodh 4 0 2 2 Mecarrlf 6 2 3 1 HRmrzlf 4 0 0 0 sota,28;KMorales, KansasCity,26;Betts, Boston, 25; Alonso1b 5 1 2 1 Reckerc 3 0 0 0 ArRmr3b 5 0 2 0 ERosarrf 4 1 1 0 Donaldson,Toronto, 25. Cameron Maybin in the ninth. A breu1b 4 0 1 1 Drtizdh 3 0 0 0 Gyorko2b 4 0 2 0 B.colonp 0 0 0 0 Flormnpr-ss 0 1 0 0 Nunez3b 4 0 1 1 TRIPLES —Kiermaier, TampaBay,10; Eaton, ChiLaRochdh 4 0 1 1 Napoli1b 3 1 2 2 Amarstss 5 0 0 0 ATorrsp 1 0 0 0 cago, 8;RDavis, Detroit, 7; Gattis, Houston,7; Bets, Kangss-3b 5 1 3 1 EdEscrss-If 4 0 1 0 AvGarcrf 5 1 1 0 Rcastllrf 4 0 1 0 Atlanta Baltimore Hedges c 4 1 2 0 Lagars ph 1 0 0 0 Boston ,6;DeAza,Boston,6;DeShields,Texas,6; NWalkr2b 5 1 2 0 KSuzukc 4 0 1 0 AIRmrzss 5 2 2 1 Sandovl3b 1 0 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi T.Ross p 1 0 0 0 Parnell p 0 0 0 0 Kipnis,Cleveland,6. PAlvrzdh 4 1 1 2 SRonsnlf 3 0 1 0 CSnchz2b 5 1 3 1 Rutledg3b 2 0 0 0 Markksdh 4 0 1 0 MMchd3b 4 0 2 0 UptnJr cf 1 0 0 0 Glmrtn p 0 0 0 0 HOME RUNS —Trout, LosAngeles, 31; Puiols, Ceryellic 4 1 2 0 JPolncph-ss 1 0 0 0 Flowrsc 5 0 2 1 Hanignc 4 0 1 0 Maybincf 4 0 1 0 Paredsdh 4 0 1 0 Campff ph-3b 1 0 1 0 Los Angeles,30;JMartinez,Detroit, 27; Ncruz,SeIshikaw1b 4 1 0 0 BrdlyJrcf 3 0 0 0 FFrmn1b 4 0 0 0 AJonescf 4 0 0 0 Totals 3 8 7 157 Totals 2 9 3 5 3 attle, 26;CDavis, Baltimore, 24;Donaldson, Toronto, Totals 39 10137 Totals 3 8 4 124 Totals 44 9 178 Totals 3 2 2 7 2 AdGarclf 3 0 0 0 C.Davisrf 3 0 0 0 S an Diego 222 0 0 1 000 — 7 24; ARodriguez,NewYork, 24;Teixeira, NewYork,24. Pittsburgh 0 1 0 0 2 6 002 — 10 Chicago 2 31 000 210 — 9 N ew york Przynsc 3 0 1 0 Wietersc 3 0 1 0 010 0 0 1 001 — 3 STOLENBASES—Altuve, Houston, 28; Burns, M innesota 0 1 2 0 0 0 001 — 4 Boston 0 00 100 100 — 2 ASmnsss 3 0 1 0 JHardyss 3 1 1 1 — San Diego2, NewYork1. LOB—SanDiego Oakla nd,20;Lcain,KansasCity,18;JDyson,Kansas E—Bastardo(1), S.Marte(2), E.Santana(1), Nunez E—Eaton (5), Ogando(2), B.Holt (7). DP—Chica- 10,DP JPetrsn2b 3 0 0 0 Reimldlf 2 0 0 0 NewYork 4. 28—Solarte 2 (21), Alonso(11). City, 17;DeShields,Texas, 16;Reyes, Toronto, 16; (2), E.Rosario(5). DP—Minnesota 1. LDB —Pitts- go 1.LOB —Chicago12, Boston 6. 28—Me.cabrera HR — EPerezrf 3 0 0 0 Flahrty1b 3 0 0 0 U pt o n (1 7), Al o nso (4), Duda 3 (18). SB — V e nGardner,NewYork,15; Pilar, Toronto,15. burgh 8,Minnesota9. 28—Ar Ramirez(19), N.Walker (22), AI.Ram irez(19), C.Sanchez2 (13), Napoli (16), Dcastr3b 3 0 0 0 Parmel1b 0 0 0 0 ble (7),Kemp(9), Amarista (4). CS—Granderson(3). PITCHING —McHugh, Houston, 12-5; Keuchel, (24), P A lvarez (15), Cerveli (11),Dozier(28), Sano(6), R.castigo(2), Hanigan(5). HR—Eaton(9), AI.Ramirez a Schoop2b 2 1 1 1 S — TR os s 2. S F — upton . Houston,12-5;FHernandez,Seatle, 12-6;Gray,OakS .Robi n son (4). 38 — E .R o sa ri o (5). HR — M c cu tc hen 5), Napoli (12). SB —Saladino (1). CS—Saladino Totals 30 0 4 0 Totals 2 8 2 6 2 IP H R E R BBSO land,11-4;Lewis,Texas,11-4; Buehrle,Toronto,11-5; 2). Atlanta 0 00 000 000 — 0 (14),Kang(7). SB—S.Marte(20). SF—S.Marte. San Diego 5 tied at10. IP H R E R BBSO IP H R E R BBSO TRossW7-8 Baltimore 001 1 0 0 Ogx — 2 5 2 1 1 4 5 ERA —Gray,Oakland, 2.16;Kazmir, Houston,2.24; Chicago E—Schoop(1). DP—Baltimore2. LDB—Atlanta Pittsburgh Q uackenbush 2 1 1 1 0 4 Kazmir,Houston,2.24;Keuchel, Houston, 2.32; SanLiriano W, 7 -6 52 3 10 3 2 0 4 QuintanaW,6-9 6 1-3 6 2 2 1 3 Thayer 3, Baltimore 4.28—Maybin(12), Wieters (8). HR —J. 1 1 0 0 0 1 tiago, LosAngeles, 2.43; Price, Detroit, 2.53;Archer, 2-3 0 0 0 2 2 Putnam Bastard o 12-3 1 0 0 0 2 Hardy(7), Schoop(7). CS—Paredes(3). Mateo 1 1 1 1 0 1 Tampa Bay,2.54. H,17 2- 3 0 0 0 0 1 D.Webb 1 0 0 0 2 2 New york IP H R E R BBSO J.Hughes STRIKEOUT S—Archer, Tampa Bay, 173; Kluber, Caminero 1 0 0 0 0 0 Boston Atlanta B .colon L,9-10 2 1-3 10 6 6 0 1 Clevel and,172; Sale,Chicago, 170;Price, Detroit, 1 2 1 1 0 2 PorcegoL,5-11 2 10 6 5 1 2 A.Torres FoltynewiczL,3-3 6 6 2 2 2 8 D.Guerra 22-3 0 0 0 3 2 138; Carrasco,Cleveland,133; Keuchel, Houston, Breslow 3 0 0 0 1 3 Aardsm a 2 0 0 0 0 1 Minnesota Parnell 1 2 1 1 0 0 132; Salazar,Cleveland,132. E.SantanaL,2-1 5 2-3 8 8 6 4 3 Layne 2 3 2 2 1 2 Baltimore 2 2 0 0 0 5 Gilmartin Boyer 1 2 0 0 1 0 Dgando 1 2 1 1 0 1 Till manW,8-7 82-3 4 0 0 0 2 1 1 0 0 0 3 O' Rourke NATIONAL LEAGUE 2-3 0 0 0 0 2 uehara 1 2 0 0 0 2 Robics BrittonS,26-27 1 - 3 0 0 0 0 0 HBP —byMateo(Nieuwenhuis). BATTING —Goldschmidt, Arizona,.347; DGordon, Graham 12-3 3 2 2 0 0 Porcegopitchedto 3battersin the3rd. T—2:15. A—29,328(45,971). T — 3: 1 2. A — 2 4,80 4 (4 1, 9 22). Miami, .337;Harper,Washington, .335;GP arra, MilWP —D.Guerra, E.Santana,Graham. HBP—byPorcello (LaRoche). waukee,.326;Posey, San Francisco, .325; LeMahieu, T—3:29.A—37,273 (39,021). T—3:42. A—37,104(37,673). C olorado, .320; YE sco b ar, W as hingt o n, .31 8. Blue Jays 8, Phillies 2 Cube 3, Rockies 2 RUNS —Harper, Washington, 68; Goldschmidt, American League lndians12, Royals1 Arizona,67;Pollock, Arizona,67; Fowler,Chicago, TORONTO — Troy Tulowitzki CHICAGO — Jon Lester struck 64; Blackmon,Colorado,61; Frazier, Cincinnati, 61; Astros 6, Angels 3 homered andhadthree hits in his Milwaukee,57;AGonzalez,LosAngeles,57. CLEVELAND— Corey Kluber took out14, one shy of his career high Braun, RBI — Arenado, Colorado, 77;Goldschmidt, AriBlue Jays debut asToronto beat a shutout into the ninth, rookie and the most for a Cubs pi t cher in zona,77;Harper,Washington, 68;Frazier, Cincinnati, — Lance McCullers Philadelphia. The five-time All-Star HOUSTON 67; Posey,SanFrancisco, 67; Stanton, Miami, 67; Francisco Lindor hit a three-run more than adecade, leading ChiMccutchen,Pittsburgh, 64. went 3-for-5 with two doubles and pitched sevensolid innings and homer and had acareer-high four cago over Colorado. HITS — Goldschmidt, Arizona,124; DGordon, MiPreston Tucker and Jon Si n gleton three RBls. Hescored three times. RBls, and the Indians avoided a ami,124;Pollock,Arizona,117;LeMahieu, Colorado, both homered to leadHouston. Colorado Chicago 115; Panik,SanFrancisco, 113;Markakis, Atlanta, winless homestand with a victory ab r hbi ab r hbi Philadelphia Toronto 111; Posey, SanFrancisco,111. Los Angeles Houston over KansasCity. B lckmncf 4 1 1 0 Fowlercf 2 2 1 1 ab r hbi ab r hbi DOUBLES —Frazier, Cincinnati, 30; AGonzalez, ab r hbi ab r hbi Reyesss 3 0 1 0 Schwrrlf 2 0 1 0 Revere cf 4 1 1 0 Tlwtzk ss 5 3 3 3 LosAngeles,27;Belt,San Francisco,26;Arenado, Arenad3b 3 0 0 1 HRndnp 0 0 0 0 Galvi sss 4 0 1 0 Dnldsn3b 5 0 2 0 DeJesscf 4 0 0 0 Altuve2b 4 0 1 1 Colorado,25; Mccutchen,Pittsburgh, 25;Rizzo,ChiKansasCity Cleveland CGnzlzrf 3 1 1 1 Bryant3b 4 0 0 0 Franco 3b 3 0 1 0 Bautist dh 5 1 2 1 C alhonrf 4 0 0 0 Tuckerlf 3 1 1 1 cago,25;5tiedat 24. ab r hbi ab r hbi Howard dh 4 0 1 1 Colaell 1b 4 0 1 1 Puiols1b 4 1 1 1 Correass 4 0 1 0 LeMahi2b 4 0 0 0 Rizzo1b 4 1 1 2 TRIPLES —DPeralta, Arizona,8;Grichuk, St.LouAEscorss 4 0 0 0 Kipnis2b 5 2 3 1 Francrlf 4 0 2 0 Smoak 1b 0 0 0 0 DvMrplf 4 1 1 0 Gattisdh 4 1 1 0 Stubbslf 3 0 0 0 Coghlnrf 3 0 0 0 Mostks3b 4 0 1 0 Lindorss 5 1 2 4 is, 6; Revere,Philadelphia, 6; Blackmon,Colorado,5; DBrwnrf 4 1 0 0 RuMrtnc 4 0 1 1 Aybarss 4 1 2 0 Valuen3b 4 2 2 0 Paulsn1b 3 0 1 0 ARussllss 3 0 2 0 DGordon,Miami,5; GParra, Milwaukee,5; Realmuto, KMorlsdh 3 1 0 0 Brantlydh 4 2 2 1 Ruizc 4 0 0 0 Valencilf 4 0 2 0 Crondh 4 0 1 0 CIRsmsrf 2 0 0 1 Hundlyc 3 0 1 0 D.Rossc 3 0 1 0 Miami,5. Hosmer1b 4 0 2 0 CSantn1b 3 1 1 0 R uf1b 4 0 0 0 Carrerrf 3 1 2 0 Giffaspi 3b 4 0 1 1 Conger c 3 1 1 1 E Butlrp 1 0 0 0 Lesterp 0 0 0 0 HOMERUNS —Harper, Wa shington, 29; Frazier, R ios rf 4 0 0 1 Moss rf 5 1 1 2 A Blanc2b 3 0 1 0 Pillarcf 3 1 1 1 Giavtll2b 4 0 1 1 Singltn1b 3 1 2 2 BBarnsph 1 0 0 0 Denorfilf 0 0 0 0 Cincinnati,27;Stanton,Miami, 27; Arenado, Colorado, Infante2b 3 0 2 0 YGomsc 4 1 2 3 Goins2b 3 2 2 1 C.Perezc 4 0 2 0 Mrsnckcf 4 0 2 0 Laffeyp 0 0 0 0 JHerrr2b 3 0 0 0 Cuthertpr-2b1 0 0 0 urshela3b 5 1 2 1 25; Goldsch midt, Arizona,22; AGonzalez, LosAngeles, Totals 3 4 2 7 1 Totals 3 68 168 Totals 3 6 3 9 3 Totals 3 16 1 1 6 O rlandlf 3 0 0 0 Bourncf 5 2 4 0 McKnrph 1 0 0 0 21; CaG onzalez,Colorado,21; Pederson, LosAngeles,21. P hiladelphia 0 0 0 0 0 0 110 — 2 L os Angeles 01 0 0 0 0 002 — 3 B uterac 3 0 0 0 THoltlf 5 1 1 0 Kahnlep 0 0 0 0 STOLENBASE S—BH amilton, Cincinnati, 47; Toronto 002 023 10x — 8 Houston 000 021 12x — 6 Totals 2 9 2 5 2 Totals 2 43 6 3 DGordon,Miami,33;Blackmon, Colorado, 27; Revere, JDysoncf 3 0 0 0 E—DeFratus (2), Galvis(12), Ru.Martin (3), DP — LosAngeles1. LOB—LosAngeles6, Hous- Totals 3 2 1 5 1 Totals 4 1121812 C olorado 000 1 0 0 100 — 2 Philadelphia24; , Pollock,Arizona,23; SMarte, Pittston 6. 28 —Aybar(18), Cron(9)r C.Perez(5),Valbue- Kansas 102 000 Ogx — 3 Valencia (1). DP —Philadelphia 2, Toronto 1. Ciiy 00 0 0 00 001 — 1 Chicago burgh,20;Goldschmidt, Arizona,17; Maybin, Atlanta, LOB—Philadelphia 6, Toronto 8. 2B—Francoeur na (11),Marisnick(11). 38—Gillaspie (2). HR—Pu- Cleveland DP — Colorado1, Chicago1. LDB —Colorado 3, 17; GPolanco,Pittsburgh,17; Upton,SanDiego,17. 110 0 0 6 0 4x — 12 5. HR —Ca.Gonzalez(21), Fowler (10), Rizzo (12), Tulowitzki 2 (2), Ru.Martin (19),Goins (9). iols (30), Tucker(10),Singleton(1). SB—C.Perez(1). E—Moustakas(9). LOB —Kansas City 5, Cleve- Chicago PITCHING —Gcole, Pittsburgh,14-4; Wacha, St. HR — Tulowitzki (1). S —Carrera. SF—Colabeffo, CS — Marisnick (5). SF—Col.Rasmus, Conger. land 11. 28 —Hosmer 2 (21), Kipnis(31), C.Santa- (17). SB —Blackmon2 (27), Reyes (1), Hundley(4). Louis, 11-4;CMa rtinez, St. Louis, 11-4; Bumgarner, IP H R E R BBSO C S — R e ye s (1), F o w l e r (6), Co ghl a n (2). S — Le ster 3. Pillar. na (19),Bourn(11). HR—Lindor (5), Brantley(8), San Francisco,11-5; Heston,SanFrancisco, 11-5; SF — Arenado. IP H R E R BBSO Los Angeles YGomes (5), urshela(3). SF—Lindor. Arrieta, Chicago,11-6; deGrom,NewYork, 10-6; Philadelphia RichardsL,10-8 6 1-3 7 4 4 2 3 IP H R E R BBSO IP H R E R BBSO Scherzer, Washington, 10-8. 2-3 1 0 0 0 1 KansasCity ERA—Greinke,LosAngeles, 1.37; deGrom,New J.WilliamsL,3-8 42-3 10 4 4 0 1 Gott Colorado 21-3 6 4 4 1 2 De Fratus J.Alvarez 1 3 2 2 GuthrieL,7-7 51 - 3 10 87 1 3 E.ButlerL,3-7 5 5 3 3 3 4 York, 2.05;Gcole,Pittsburgh,2.24;SMiler, Atlanta, Neris 1 0 0 0 0 1 Houston F.Morales 12-3 2 0 0 1 3 Laffey 2 1 0 0 1 1 2.27;Scherzer,Washington, Toronto M ccuff ersW5-3 7 5 1 1 0 5 Hochevar 1 6 4 4 0 1 Kahnle 1 0 0 0 1 1 DickeyW,5-10 8 7 2 0 1 4 NeshekH,23 1 0 0 0 0 1 Cleveland Chicago Schullz 1 0 0 0 0 1 Gregerson 1 4 2 2 0 1 KluberW,6-11 9 5 1 1 1 6 LesterW,6-8 8 5 2 2 1 14 WP — Dickey2. WP — Richards,Mccullers. HBP —byGuthrie (YGomes,Kipnis, Brantley). H.RondonS,13-16 1 0 0 0 1 2 T—2:37. A—27,060(49,282). T—2:50.A—31,272 (41,574). T—2:55. A—19,767(36,856). T—2:37.A—38,874 (40,929).

I)


C4

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JULY 30, 2015

Olympics Continued from C1 "The Olympics," Gossett said, "is

not worth the costs for those local that one poll, conducted in the fall,

Competitors take part in the 5,000-meter race at Elk Lake last summer.

Swim Continued from C1 Bruce said swimmers should expect water temperatures to be just below 70 degrees.

If yougo

suits or in conventional swimsuits, although competitors will be scored sep-

Day-of registration will be available at the event site. Anyone 18or older is allowed to enter, although swimmers who arenot registered with US Masters Swimming must pay anextra $21 "one-event" registration fee. Day-of registrants pay $55for one race, andeachadditional race is $5. Parking is available at Six-Lakes Trailhead andLittle Fawn Campground, both of which are located offofCascadeLakesHighway,and a shuttle will transport swimmers and spectators to the racesite.

arately based on the type of suit they

SCHEDULE

"In all the 20 swims that have come

before, 12 to 14 have been in that 68 to 69 (degrees) range, and that's where we' re going to be this year too," Bruce said. "Those cold nights have been good for sleeping, but not for keeping Elk Lake warm."

It is up to swimmers to decide whether they want to compete in wet

wear. Bruce said all swimmers are asked if they are truly ready to complete their

swim before they leave the beach, but series organizers have taken several other measures to make sure every ath-

lete returns to the beach safely. Spotters in kayaks and on paddleboards will be posit ioned on the course ready to assist swimmers if they run into trouble during the race, while powerboats will transport any distressed competitors back to shore, where a team of paramedics will be posted. Bruce said the safety plan has been approved by both the U.S. Masters Swimming national coordinator and the U.S. Forest

Service. "By the time you go through all that, you know you have a pretty solid plan," Bruce said. "We' ve been fortunate that we' ve never had a serious, life-threatening incident, so we' ve been up to the task." — Reporter: 541-383-0305, vjacobsen@bendbulletin.corn

Berry

Friday 4:30 p.m. to 5:30 p.m.:Registration/check-in for 3,000-meter race 6 p.m.:Start of 3,000-meter race Saturday 7:45 a.m. to 8:45 a.m.:Reg-

istration/check-in for 500- and 1,500-meter races 9:30 a.m.:Start of 500-meter race 10:15 a.m. to11 a.m.:Check-in for 1,500-meter race 11:45 a.m.:Start of 1,500-meter

race Sunday 715 a.m. to 8:15 a.m.:Check-in for 5,000- and 1,000-meter race 8:45 a.m.:Start of 5,000-meter race 10 a.m. to11 a.m.:Check-in for the 1,000-meter race 11:45 a.m.:Start of1,000-meter race Picnic lunch/dinner andawards ceremony will follow the raceseachday.

ter a couple of games. Continued from C1 When things got worse during a game Six merciless rounds of draining, against Oakland, Berry was put through debilitating drugs had rid his body of a series of tests that revealed a mass in Hodgkin lymphoma, but they had also his chest. The diagnosis was Hodgkin stoked the passion that Berry still har- lymphoma, a treatable form of cancer bors for the game. that affects about 9,000 people in the "It's been a roller coaster," he said, "but U.S. each year. I wouldn't change it for the world." His treatment began Dec. 10 at Emory Flanked by his father, James, and his University's Winship Cancer Institute, mother, Carol, Berry spoke publicly for near his home in Atlanta. the first time since he was diagnosed And it was not easy: "It literally feels with cancer last December. He recalled like you' re dying," Berry recalled, "but the terror that gripped him when the you' re not really battling chemo, you' re mass was discovered in his chest, and battling yourself the whole time. It was the dark days that immediately followed. me versus me." The days he did not want to get out

The final round of treatment was May

a question that would have seemed

than the nation. People pointed to

president Stan Kasten, who helped

foreign back in the early 1990s, run Atlanta 1996. "But that inwhen Atlanta celebrated getting volves an awful lot of very big ifs. the 1996 Olympics: Should any city It can be done where it's a positive even want to host the Olympics? for all involved. But there's a lot of "As things currently work, I risk." would say it's a fool's errand," said The primary sticking point in University of Michigan economist Boston, and elsewhere, comes Stefan Szymanski, who i nde- down to the usage of taxpaypendently audited the London 2012 er money. Tresser's rallying cry Olympics. "But I would say if you against the Olympics in Chicago could negotiate with the IOC and became "The Blank Check" you could start a proper dialogue what he believed the city would with them about how to keep the be handing over to the IOC, which costs down and keep this manage- operates with little oversight out of able, then I think it is feasible. The Switzerland and has faced maniinteresting thing about the IOC is, fold corruption scandals over the this is starting to look like a real years.Economists roundly agree crisis for them. Increasingly, fewer that the Olympics are a money-lospeople want to host their event. A ing proposition. "Under very special circumlot of the premier members are deserting the IOC." stances, and if it i s very well planned, I think that there's a -

Not in my backyard

reasonable argument to host the

Public sentiment in Boston may games," Smith College (Massachusetts) economist Andrew Zimbalist but recent polls show Americans said. "But it requires a constellation support the idea of the Olympics of special events and forces and being staged on U.S. soil in theo- characteristics that are generally ry more than the event coming to not present when cities bid." not represent the entire country,

their own city. In June, an Associated Press poll

found 89 percent support among Americans for the idea of the U.S. hosting the games, with 56 percent strongly supporting. Support is nearly as high for hosting the Olympics in the respondents' state,

but support sags a bit when considering hosting "in your local area." Still, 61 percent would support

it. Opinions become more mixed when asked to consider whether or not hosting the Olympics generally has been worth the costs: 56 per-

World class?

Of many major studies done to

find the overall economic impact of the Olympics, only one found that Atlanta made money on the 1996 Summer Games, and even that not-

ed it was mostly short-term gains. And that is without examining opportunity cost: What would have

happened if Atlanta did not host the games and spent public funds elsewhere' ? "One has to keep in mind, this is the Clinton-era '90s," Zimbalist

said. "Generally speaking, Southern cities were growing faster

all this commerce the Olympics brought. The commerce was going to spring up anyway." The Olympics uses the lure of branding cities as "world class," raising their profile around the world by hosting the games. Experts say it may have benefited Barcelona in 1992, but recently

American cities have blanched at the notion. Many residents in Boston chafed, saying that Boston al-

ready is a world-class city. The IOC has attempted to tamp the costs, especially in the wake of

Russia spending $51 billion to essentially build a city from scratch to host the 2014 Winter Olympics

in Sochi. Last year, the IOC introduced Agenda 2020, a series of reforms meant to limit costs.

It also vowed to kick in $1.5 billion in funds for construction and stadiums.

Even after his experience with London, Szymanski believes one

m odel cansucceed for a U.S.city hosting the games. Cities struck by recessioncould reap tangiblebenefits from an influx of construction

movin orwar wit i

in s

By Jon Krawczynski The Associated Press

MANKATO, Minn. — Adrian Peterson burst

through the line of scrimmage and veered toward the sideline as he headed up the field.

who directs the cancer institute's lym-

cordial bump during the team's first training camp practice with players in pads. To Blanton's surprise, Pe-

plete response to treatment." On June 22, a follow-up PET scan

terson lowered his shoulder and delivered a jolt to the

treatment through an IV r ather than

others. Then last week, Berry headed back to Kansas City for another round of

a PICC line (catheter) so that he could keep training. testing to make sure he was in football Between each round of chemo, Ber- condition. "It was a battle, every day, to the point ry would squeeze in 10 to 12 workouts, sometimes struggling just to do five where I had to set goals to get out of bed," pushups. But he never lost sight of an au- he said. "But I had a great support sysdacious goal: to be back with the Chiefs tem, between my mom and dad being in by the time their season opens Sept. 13 the trenches with me, day in and day out, in Houston. making sure I had everything I needed." "Everybody wants you to be strong The Chiefs are cautiously optimistic in this situation," Berry said, "but you that Berry will be ready for the regular can't be strong every day. If you want to season, and such a rapid return would be mad today, be mad. If you want to be not be without precedent: Reid said they sad, be sad. But the thing is, don't stay looked at case studies involving other that way. Get it out of your system and professional athletes, such as Mario Lego back to work." mieux, in deciding how to proceed. Berry, 26,passed abattery oftestsbeThe Hall of Fame hockey player was fore he was cleared to practice late Tues- diagnosed with Hodgkin lymphoma in day, but it remains unclear when he will 1993, went through a similar course of fully participate in practice. Chiefs train- treatment and returned to finish his caer Rick Burkholder said Berry will be reer with the Pittsburgh Penguins. monitored constantly, especially during For now, the Chiefs are happy to have the early portion of camp. Berry back on the field, that familiar No. Veterans report Friday. The first full29 jersey zipping from sideline to sidesquad workout is Saturday. line with every snap of the ball. "One of the things Eric and I talkThere is plenty of work ahead, and ed about was just being honest with Berry may never reach full speed this us about how you' re feeling out here," season. coach Andy Reid said, "and sometimes But on a warm, humid morning in that's hard for a player to do, especially northwest Missouri, as he trotted out with his makeup. He's been great with of the locker room, he had already surthat up to this point and I think that will passed nearly all expectations. "At the beginning, you kind of put continue through." After all, he is in a much better place football aside. Your mind goes to, 'Hey, we' re hoping and praying he can be than he was eight months ago. The three-time Pro Bowl player first healthy and live a good life,'" Reid said. knew something was amiss in Novem- "Anything else is icing on the cake."

kind of thing that's got to stop."

eterson ac in a san Safety Robert Blanton had the Minnesota Vikings running back in his sights and eased off the throttle

Florida, where he trained with teammates Travis Kelce, Justin Houston and

these numbers up.' That was an example of the process. That's the

NFL

13, followed by a month of recovery. "He tolerated chemotherapy extremely well," said Dr. Christopher R. Flowers,

showed Berry was cancer-free. The Chiefs had just finished their mandatory minicamp, so he headed to

"I went to the press and said, 'I

think this is crazy. They just made

and a revamped reputation. "I believe there are many cities The public has also grown weary of a lack of transparency among in the United States and Europe officials who want to bring the that would benefit significantly, Olympics to the city. London 2012 but it's not cities like Boston," Szyspent roughly $15 billion and, after- manski said. "My proposal would ward, claimed benefits of between be that a city like Detroit should $30 billion and $40 billion, num- be awarded the games. It could bers the government culled from a be a huge way of bringing real, report it commissioned from con- long-term legacy benefits, raising sulting firm Grant Thornton. profile and leaving something genThe United Kingdom hired Szy- uine behind. What was the Olymmanski, the Michigan professor, to pics ever going to give to Boston? be an independent referee for the Nothing more than a large finanreport. The process took more than cial bill, really."

of bed. The days he struggled to choke down food, all of it tasteless. The seemingly endless trips to the hospital for each round of treatment. "In the beginning it was hard, it really was," James Berry said. "Those possibilities go through your mind — 'What if he can't play again?' You think of those types of things, but then you kick those to the side. And when you looked at Eric you said, 'This guy is a fighter.'" Such a fighter that he chose to receive

phoma program. "He achieved a com-

t hey suddenly

dumped a collection of fantasy numbers onto us," Szymanski said.

cent say yes but 42 percent say it is

ber, when he felt oddly out of breath af-

set to come in ,

found 70 percent support for bringing the games to Los Angeles. One to Boston's bid, and its failure, is problem the IOC faces, though, is emblematic of shifting perception that public support has dwindled about Olympic Games. For years, in cities as hosting the games becities viewed hosting the Olympics comes moreofareality. "The more we looked," Tom as a badge of prestige and patriotism to be fought over. More recent- Tresser said, "the more alarmed we ly, both in America and in foreign got." democracies, the games have been Tresser co-founded No Games viewed as a problematic financial Chicago, a group that aimed to dedrain, met with hostility by citizens feat Chicago's bid to host the 2016 wary of corruption and misused Summer Olympics. (Chicago ultipublic funds. mately finished an embarrassing "The more theylearn about the fourth in the final vote.) He gave International Olympic Committee advice to No Boston Olympics and process, the less they like it for the watched from afar as poll numbers host candidates," Gossett said. "It cratered in Boston, dropping to 40 works out better for the IOC, not percent by Monday. "I'm sure under the right cirthe public. Democracies are shying away from that financial burden." cumstances, it can be a wonderful The outrage in Boston prompted thing," said Los Angeles Dodgers havingamoment." The widespread local opposition

The Bulletin file photo

three years, starting before the

areas. games and continuing after. "A week before the report was The Los Angeles Times reported

as he went in to "thud" Peterson, looking to deliver a

fourth-year defensive back. Most veterans dread the early days of camp and the first few hits that open the door to six months

filled with jarring blows, aches and pains. Not Peterson. He had not felt the pop of the pads for more than 10 months, an exile brought on by

child abuse allegations against him. With the case settled, his punishment over, his contract situation resolved and fans welcoming him back to the field, Peterson could not help but be a little eager to finally

y$

get back to the business of football.

"I' ve been looking forward to it for a long time," said Peterson, who missed the final 15 games of last season. "It was good to get the first day down. I feel

comfortable. I didn't feel sluggish or weighed down because of the pads. I felt pretty good." Vikings owner Mark Wilf said he was only too happy to see Peterson back on the field with a smile on his face after so much drama surrounding the team and its star player.

Charles Rex rAbogast /The Associated Press

"Obviously he's a unique talent and a good per- Minnesota running backAdrian Peterson participates son," Wilf said. "We' re happy he's here playing for us. in training camp Tuesday in Mankato, Minnesota. We can't wait for the season to get going here."

There were times in the offseason that it appeared as though Peterson could be parting ways with the as some of that stuff goes and we' re looking forward only NFL franchise for which he has played. A per- to him being a big part of our team going forward." ceived lack of support from some in the organization, While Peterson occasionally had doubts about the and the criticism that was heaped upon him by many support he had in the front office, his confidence in fans and media when the allegations first surfaced, had Peterson thinking that it was time to move on.

his teammates never wavered. Throughout the last

10 months, not one Vikings player has gone on the But he was still under contract, and the Vikings record to express any reservations about Peterson, refused to entertain the idea of trading a player they which has allowed him to step right back into a leadbelieve can resume his role as the focal point of the ership role on the team. "I don't think it ever left," Peterson said about his offense, even ashe passesthe 30-year-old milestone that has spelled the beginning of the end for so many status in the locker room. "That's the thing about the running backs before him. family I'm surrounded by. These guys, they' ve been As a show of faith, the Vikings also restructured supporting me. Such an unfortunate situation. "But when it's family and they know you," he said, Peterson's contract to guarantee him $7 million next season in case of injury. It was the last in a series of looking at a throng of media surrounding him, "some efforts by the organization to smooth things over of you guys, I don't know you so I wouldn' t pass judgheading into a season with high expectations. ment based off what I' ve heard or what I' ve seen if I "He's had a long history here with the Vikings and didn't know what type of person you are. That's just the community," Wilf said. "We know what kind of the type of world we live in. These guys, they know person he is. That's all in the rearview mirror as far me. They know what I'm made of."


C5 THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JULY 30, 2015

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

S&P 500 2,108 . 57+15.32

17,751.39+121.12 ~ 4 DOW , .

NASDAQ 5,111. 7 3+22.52

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Today Dollar drag?

2 1 00.

Like many U.S. companies with businesses overseas, Procter 8 Gamble has been hurt this year by the impact of a strong dollar. As a result, the company reported revenue in its fiscal third quarter that fell short of financial analysts' forecasts. Did the trend continue during Procter & Gamble's fiscal fourth quarter? Find out today, when the maker of Tide detergent, Crest toothpaste and other products reports its latest financial results.

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Close: 17,751 .39 Change: 121.12 (0.7%) 17,360

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Vol. (in mil.) 3,914 1,842 Pvs. Volume 4,019 1,961 Advanced 2274 1566 Declined 858 1219 New Highs 66 53 New Lows 80 80

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HIGH LOW CLOSE CHG. 17776.78 17629.20 17751.39 +121.12 DOW Trans. 8432.41 8276.55 8420.87 +142.26 DOW Util. 575.59 569.17 575.20 +1.90 NYSE Comp. 10895.22 10794.00 10883.91 +93.74 NASDAQ 5117.84 5080.04 5111.73 +22.52 S&P 500 2110.60 2094.15 2108.57 +1 5.32 S&P 400 1499.26 1478.80 1497.67 +1 7.84 Wilshire 5000 22208.70 22025.17 22192.39 +164.74 Russell 2000 1232.34 1220.93 1229.60 +5.00

DOW

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%CHG. WK +0.69% V +1.72% +0.33% +0.87% V +0.44% V +0.73% V $.1.21 % V $.0.75% V $.0.41 % V

MO QTR YTD -0.40% -7.87% L L -6.94% L +0.41% L L +7.93% L L +2.41% +3.11% L +2.41% +2.07%

North westStocks @sue)

NAME

StoryStocks Major U.S. stock indexes closed higher on Wednesday for the second day in a row as investors welcomed the Federal Reserve's latest guidance on its interest rate policy. The central bank wrapped a two-day meeting by saying it would keep its benchmark rate unchanged.Butthe Fed also noted thatthe U.S.economy continues to improve, which sets the stage for a rate hike later this year. Most investors anticipate the Fed will raise rates in September or December. The 10 sectors in the Standard & Poor's 500 index notched gains, led by energy stocks. A modest rebound in Chinese stocks also helped push the market higher. YELP

Close:$25.06 V-8.45 or -25.2% The online business review service reported a second-quarter loss and issued a lackluster outlook.

$50 40

Twitter

TWTR

Close:$31.24 V-5.30 or -1 4.5% The social media service reported better-than-expected second-quarter profit, but raised concerns about user growth. $40 35

30

M J J 52-week range $23.66 ~ $86.88

Vole34.5m (7.2x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$1.63 b

M 52-week range $31.96 ~ $55.99

PE: 51.3 VolJ 92.5m (4.3x avg.) Yield:... Mkt. Cap:$20.46 b

CNH Industrial

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

EURO M $ 1 .1000 -.0045

CRUDEOIL $48.79+.81

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16,800:

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SILVER $14.7 3 +.10

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... Close: 2, 1 08.57 Change: 15.32 (0.7%)

NYSE NASD

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Thursday, July 30, 2015

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T-NOTE 4 . 10-YR 2.29%+.04

CNHI Close:$8.72 V-0.42 or -4.6% The construction and agriculture machinery maker reported a steep drop in second-quarter profit, falling short of expectations. $10

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GlaxoSmithKline

GSK Close:$42.62%0.91 or 2.2% The drug developer reported a drop in second-quarter profit, but beat forecasts and expects to return to earnings growth in 2016. $50

Alaska Air Group ALK 40.69 ~ 77.80 74 . 7 8 + . 4 6 +0.6 L L L +25. 1 +6 4 .1 1 282 15 0 . 8 0 -8.4 + 3 . 0 39 9 1 1 1. 3 2 Aviate Corp A VA 30.10 ~ 38.34 32. 3 7 +. 4 3 +1.3 L L L Latest on Linkedln Bank ofAmerica B A C 14 . 8 4 — 0 18.48 18 .16 + . 2 8 +1 .6 L L L +1.5 +16. 6 88894 20 0 . 2 0 Linkedln reports its financial B arrett Business BB S I 1 8 .25 ~ 63.45 42. 0 7 +. 1 5 + 0.4 L L L +53.5 - 15.0 242 d d 0 . 88 results for the second quarter 45 Boeing Co BA 116.32 ~ 158. 8 3 14 4.14 +2.33 +1.6 L L L +10. 9 +1 7 .9 3 211 20 3 . 6 4 today. -.04 -0.8 L V T -0.4 -0.8 43 22 C ascade Baacorp C A C B 4 .14 ~ 5.50 5.17 Wall Street predicts that, M J J M J J Columbia Bokg C O L B 23.90 ~ 33. 50 32.33 +.06+0.2 T T T +1 7.1 +30.4 203 21 0.72a excluding one-time charges, the 52-week range 52-week range Columbia Sport s wear COLM 34.25 ~ 64. 9 2 61.39 +1.29 +2.1 L V L + 37.8 +57.4 106 31 0.60 professional networking service's $7.36~ $9 .72 $41.19 ~ $49.24 Costco Wholesale CO ST 116.81 ~ 1 56.8 5 145.38 + .83 +0.6 L L L +2.6 +28 . 6 1 800 28 1 . 6 0 earnings declined versus the Vole2.8m (2.0x avg.) P E: .. . Volc9.2m (2.2x avg.) PE:1 0 . 2 same quarter last year. Analysts -6.5 1 8 95 Craft Brew Alliance BREW 9.86 o — 17. 8 9 10. 40 + . 1 7 +1.7 L V T -22.0 Mkt. Cap:$11.87 b Yie l d: 2.5% Mkt. Cap:$102.93 b Yi e ld: 5.5% expect that Linkedln's revenue will FLIR Systems -5.3 - 11.1 517 1 9 0 . 44 F LIR 28.32 ~ 34.76 30. 6 1 +. 3 0 +1.0 V T V increase, however. Investors will Hewlett Packard Cytec Industries CYT Gilead Sciences GILD HPQ 29 , 52 o — 41,1 0 30 . 30 + . 03+0.1 V V L -24.5 -13.1 8237 12 0.70f also be listening for an update on Intel Corp INTO 27.62 ~ 37.90 29. 0 1 +. 0 5 +0.2 L V V -20.1 -12.7 25908 12 0.96 Close:$74.19 L15.80 or 27.1% Close:$115.71 L2.64 or 2.3% Linkedln's strategy for integrating Keycorp The biotechnology company reportKEY 11.55 ~ 15.70 14 . 9 6 + . 1 5 +1.0 V V V +7.6 +1 0 . 2 8877 1 4 0 . 30 Belgium's chemical group Solvay is buying the specialty materials and ed better-than-expected secthe online learning and profession- Kroger Co K R 2 4 .29 ~ 39.34 38. 8 0 +. 0 8 +0.2 L L L + 20. 9 +5 5 .9 4 246 21 0 .42f chemicals company for $5.5 billion ond-quarter profit and revenue and al developmentcompany in an expansion move. raised its 2015 sales forecast. Lattice Semi LSCC 4.82 o — 7.79 5.00 +. 1 6 + 3.3 ~ V v -27.4 -31.8 2075 dd Lynda.corn. $80 $130 LA Pacific L PX 12.46 ~ 18.64 14.4 4 +. 0 4 +0 .3 V V V -12.8 + 3 . 7 1 61 8 dd LNKD 70 120 $232.00 MDU Resources MDU 1 8 .08 o — 33. 2 7 1 8 .88 + .49 +2.7 L V V -19.7 -42.3 1038 13 0 . 73 $300 Mentor Graphics MENT 18.25 ~ 27. 38 26.16 +.33+1.3 L V V +1 9.3 +25.2 576 22 0.22 60 110 $178.00 Microsoft Corp MSFT 40.12 ~ 50.0 5 46. 2 9 +. 9 5 +2.1 L L L -0.3 +5 . 9 39778 32 1 . 2 4 250 00 M M J J J J Nike Ioc 0 NKE 75.90 — 0 11 4 .70114.92 +1.45 +1.3 L L L +19. 5 +4 6 .1 3 319 31 1 . 1 2 52-week range 52-week range 200 -3.9 +12.6 1364 2 1 1 . 48 Nordstrom Inc J WN 64.92 ~ 83.16 76. 3 0 +. 0 1 ... V L L $42.77~ $74 .29 $33.96~ $ 123 .37 '15 . . . L L L -14.6 - 0.8 9 8 20 1. 8 6 Nwst Nat Gas NWN 41.81 o — 52.5 7 42 . 6 2 -.02 150 Vole12.0m (17.7x avg.) PE : 43.6 Vole23.0m (2.1x avg.) P E: 1 3 .2 Paccar lac PCAR 55.34 ~ 71.15 65. 6 6 + . 8 6 $.1.3 L L L -3.5 + 2 . 9 2 864 1 6 0.96f Mkt. Cap:$5.3 b Yiel d : 0. 7% Mkt. Cap:$170.05 b Yi e ld: 0.4% est. Operating Planar Syslms PLNR 255 ~ 917 3 90 + 01 + 0 3 T T T - 534 +46 8 1 5 9 1 1 EPS Natural Health Trends NHTC Atmel ATML -4.4 - 2.9 94 6 3 8 1 . 76 Plum Creek P CL 38.70 ~ 45.26 40.8 9 +. 0 2 ... L V L 2Q '14 2 Q ' 15 Close: $34.38%9.66 or 39.1% Close: $8.41 V-0.14 or -1.6% Prec Castparts PCP 186.17 ~ 249. 1 2 19 6.21 -5.16 -2.6 L V V -18.5 - 13.7 2652 1 6 0 . 12 Price-earnings ratio: lost money The direct selling company reported The maker of microcontrollers for Schoitzer Steel SCH N 15.06 ~ 28.4 4 16. 8 5 + . 1 2 +0.7 L V V -25.3 -35.2 306 d d 0 . 75 a boost in second-quarter profit, inmobile touch screens reported based on past 12-month results Sherwin Wms SHW 202.01 ~ 294. 3 5 27 8.80 +4.96 + 1.8 L V L +6.0 +29 . 9 92 8 2 8 2. 6 8 creasedit s dividend and announced worse-than-expected second-quarDividend:none ter profit and revenue. Staocorp Foci SFG 59.80 ~ 114. 2 5 11 3.78 + . 43 +0.4 L L L + 62. 9 +8 7 .5 86 9 2 0 1 . 30f a stock buyback plan. $50 $12 — 0 5 9.31 57.51 + . 37 +0.6 L L L +40. 2 +4 7.4 8 355 2 7 0 . 64 Starbucks Cp SBUX 35.38 Source: FactSet 40 10 UmpquaHoldings UM PQ 14.70 ~ 1 8.9 2 17.87 -.04 -0.2 V V V +5.1 +9.0 15 5 8 1 8 0. 6 0 30 Growing again? US Baocorp U SB 38.10 ~ 46.26 45. 0 1 +. 2 8 +0.6 V L L + 0.1 +7.4 70 0 5 1 4 1 . 02f Washington Fedl WA F D 19.52 ~ 2 4.2 5 23.22 +.02+0.1 v v v +4. 8 +10.8 382 14 0.52 Economists project that the U.S. M J J M J J economy sprang back to life in WellsFargo & Co WF C 4 6.44 — 0 58.77 57 .96 + . 5 6 +1 .0 L L L +5.7 +14. 0 13336 14 1 . 5 0 52-week range 52-week range the April-June quarter. Weyerhaeuser WY 2 9.63 o — 37. 0 4 3 0 .3 0 + . 25 +0.8 L V V -15.6 -3.3 2765 24 1 . 16 $7.61 ~ $44 .76 $6.32~ $ 1D.DD That would be a strong Dividend Footnotes: a -Extra dividends werepaid, but arenot included. b -Annual rate plus stock 6 - Liquidating dividend. 6 -Amount declared or paid inlast 12months. f - Current Vold1.9m (3.4x avg.) PE: 18 . 3 Volc17.0m (2.6x avg.) PE: 7 5 .7 annual rate, whichwasincreased bymost recentdividendannouncement. i —Sum of dividends paidafter stock split, rs regular rate. I —Sumof dividends paidthis year.Most recent turnaround from the first three Mkt. Cap:$432.36 m Yi eld: 0.3% Mkt. Cap:$3.51 b Yie l d : 1.9% dividend wasomitted or deferred. k - Declared or paidthis year, acumulative issue with dividends in arrears. m — Current annualrate, which wasdecreasedbymost recentdividend months of the year, when winter announcement. p — Initial dividend, annual rate not known, yield not shown. r —Declared or paid in preceding 12months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, approximate cash SOURCE: Sungard AP blizzards and a labor dispute that value ss ex-dissieution date. PEFootnotes: q —Stock is a closed-end fund - no P/Eratio shown. cc —P/Eexceeds99. dd - Loss in last 12 months. disrupted shipping at many West InterestRates NET 1YR Coast ports contributed to the TREASURIES TEST PVS CHG WK MO QTR AGO economy shrinking at a 0.2 percent annual rate. The 3-month T-bill . 0 5 .0 4 + 0 .01 L L L .03 Commerce Department delivers its COmpany Gilead Sciences' shares rose Wednesday on the success of its blockbuster 6 -month T-bill . 1 4 .14 ... L L L .06 latest estimate of U.S. economic $potllght hepatitis C medicine Harvoni. The drug helped push the company's profit up 26 percent in its most recent 52-wk T-bill .32 .31 +0 . 0 1 V L L .10 growth today. quarter and Gilead raised its 2015 sales forecast for the second time. Gilead earned $4.49 2-year T-note . 6 9 .67 + 0 .02 V L .54 The yield on the GDP annuagzed percent change, • 34199"$$99 1 billion, or $2.92 per share, for the second quarter. That beat market forecasts of $2.64 per 5-year T-note 1.62 1.59 +0.03 w T L 1.69 * 10-year Treaseasonally adjusted share. Revenue soared 26 percent $8.24 billion, beating expectations of $7.36 billion. Harvoni sury rose to ub$$933,6s 10-year T-note 2.29 2.25 +0.04 V T L 2.46 r69$I7$ $6r$I r 46 Gilead's hepatitis C franchise, which includes Harvoni and Sovaldi, accounted for 59 9 m1464 W 2.29 percent on 30-year T-bond 3.00 2.97 +0.03 V V L 3.23 percent of revenue. Harvoni brought in an astounding $3.61 billion after just 10 months on the

Gilead rises on hep t: succ s SU HS

"

est 2.7

2.2

-2.1

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market, and its predecessor, Sovaldi, drew $1.29 billion. Roughly 2.7 million Americans have hepatitis C and millions more in other countries are infected. The new drugs have slashed treatment time and boosted cure rates.

Gilead SCienCeS (GILD) W

Price-earnings ratio:13

$86 Q1 Q 2

Q3

Q4 .: Q 1

Q2

'14: 15 Source: FactSet AP

e d nesday's close: $115.71 Total return

$123

(Ba sed on past 12-month results)

GILD

1-y r 24.9%

Div. yield: 1.5% *annualized

AP

&md Focus Growth Fund of America is adjusting to the unexpected loss of a senior manager, but Morningstar says the fund continues to benefit from veteran leadership.

Selected MutualFunds

Wednesday. Yields affect rates on mortgages and other consumer loans.

BONDS

NET 1YR TEST PVS CHG WK MOQTR AGO

Barclays LongT-Bdldx 2.83 2.81 +0.02 V V Bond Buyer Muni Idx 4.41 4.40 +0.01 V V 47. 4 Barclays USAggregate 2.38 2.37 +0.01 V V PRIME FED Barcl Di v i dend: $1.72 aysUS HighYield 7.04 7.08 -0.04 L L RATE FUNDS Moodys AAA Corp Idx 4.06 4.04 +0.02 V V Source: FactSet TEST3.25 .13 Barclays CompT-Bdldx 1.96 1.92 +0.04 V V 6 MO AGO3.25 .13 Barclays US Corp 3.39 3.37 +0.02 V L 1 YR AGO3.25 .13

3-yr* 61.2

5-yr*

PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1YR 3YR BYR 1 3 5 Commodities Marhetsummary American Funds AmBalA m 24 . 97 +.11+2.1 +6.1 +12.1+12.2 A A A Most Active CaplncBuA m 59.32 +.26 +1.3 +1.1 +8.6 +9.2 A 8 A The price of CpwldGrlA m 47.38 +.23 +4.1 +2.3 +13.8+10.6 C C C U.S. crude rose NAME VOL (ggs) LAST CHG EurPacGrA m 50.30 +.26 +6.7 +1.0 +11.6 +7.7 8 B C Wednesday BkofAm 888937 18.16 +.28 FnlnvA m 53. 4 3 +.34+4.4 +8.3 +16.8+14.6 C C C after the Twitter 862617 31.24 -5.30 GrthAmA m 45.63 +.19 +6.9 +10.5 +19.1+15.6 0 8 0 government FordM 511934 15.21 +.53 AmericanFundsGrowthFundof America (AGTHX) IncAmerA m 21.27 +.13 +0.1 +1.2 +10.2+10.7 0 C 8 reported a CitizFin n 496686 26.00 -.17 InvCoAmA m 37.44 +.24 +2.5 +5.9 +16.7+14.3 D C D surprise drop in VALUE B L EN D GR OWTH Facebook 459237 96.99 +1.70 NewPerspA m38.92 +.20 +7.3 +7.6 +15.2+12.6 A 8 8 oil inventories Pfizer 434607 35.76 +.41 73WAMutlnvA m 40.87 +.38 +0.7 +5.2 +14.9+15.0 8 D 8 Micron T 401815 19.87 +.12 63 and production. Microsoft 397775 46.29 +.95 Dodge &Cox Income 13.60 -.01 +0.1 +0 .9 + 2.8+4.1 D A 8 Cs In precious AT&T Inc 393063 34.69 +.36 Ds IntlStk 42.95 +.33 +2.0 -6.2 +14.3 +8.6 E A A Petrobras 373097 7.07 + .48 Stock 182.69+1.30 +2.6 + 5.3 +19.9+16.5 8 A A metals trading, 63Fidelity Contra 105. 5 9 +.75+8.8 +13.9 +18.2+16.8 8 C 8 gold fell and Gainers 63 ContraK 105 . 57 +.75+8.9 +14.0 +18.3+17.0 8 C 8 silver rose. CI NAME L AST C H G %C H G LowPriStk d 52.38 +.34 +4.2 + 7 .3 +18.0+15.8 A B 8 Fidelity Spartan 50 0 ldxAdvtg 74.39 +.54 +3.6 +9.2 +17.4+16.2 8 8 A RepubAir 5 .26 +1 . 8 2 +5 2 .9 NatHITr n 3 4.38 + 9 . 6 6 +3 9 . 1 FraakTemp-Franklin Income C m 2. 29 . . . -3.3 -7.6 +6.3 +7.2 Strayer 53.34 $ .11.58 + 2 7 .7 63 IncomeA m 2. 27 . .. -2.6 -7.2 +6.9 +7.9 Cytec s 7 4.19 + 1 5.80 +2 7 .1 FraakTemp-Templeton GIBondAdv 12.10 +.04-0.7 - 2.6 +3.6 +4.5 8 A A BoulvdA un 1 6.50 + 3 . 2 4 +2 4 .4 473 Oakmark Intl I 24.52 -.04 +5.1 -1.2 +16.2 +9.8 8 A A RubiconPrj 1 8.38 + 2 . 9 8 +1 9 .4 MorningstarOwnershipZone™ Oppeoheimer RisDivA m 20 . 38 +.19+2.4 +7.7 +14.5+13.7 C E D DynMatl 1 2.58 + 2 . 0 4 +1 9 .4 RisDivB m 18 . 00 +.17+1.9 +6.9 +13.5+12.8 C E E ShakeShk n 6 2.15 +9 . 5 1 +1 8 . 1 OsFund target represents weighted ImmuCell 1 0.60 + 1 . 5 9 +1 7 .6 RisDivC m 17.87 +.17 +2.0 +6.9 +13.7+12.9 C E E average of stock holdings Foreign Calix 8 .19 +1 . 1 9 +1 7 .0 • Represents 75% of fund's stock holdings SmMidValA m48.81 +.59 +0.4 +4.9 +18.7+13.1 C 0 0 Exchange SmMidValB m40.97 +.49 0 . 0 +4.1 +17.8+12.2 C C E Losers T Rowe Price GrowStk 58.4 8 + .30+12.6 +18.3 +21.0+19.1 A A A The dollar rose CATEGORY: LARGE GROWTH NAME L AST C H G %C H G H ealthSci 83 . 5 9 - .32 +22.9 +42.4 +36.0+34.2 8 8 A versus the yen, Newlncome 9. 4 7 -. 01 +0.2 + 1 .4 + 1.7 +3.3 C C D euro and -4.38 -29.4 BIORNINGSTAR Big 5Sprt 10.51 Yelp 25.06 -8.45 -25.2 RATING~ ***A@ Vanguard 500Adml 194.76+1.44 +3.6 +9.2 +17.4+16.3 8 8 A pound. The ICE -4.00 -23.4 NwSEn pfA 13.10 500lnv 194.74+1.44 +3.5 +9.1 +17.3+16.1 8 8 8 ASSETS$75,159 million U.S. Dollar VascoDta 20.45 -6.10 -23.0 CapOp 54. 90 +.02 +4.1 +13.5 +24.2+18.0 C A A index, which EXPRATIO .67% -.44 -17.3 Imunmd 2.11 Eqlnc 31.12 +.28 +1.0 +4.7 +14.6+15.8 C D A BIIH. INIT.INVEST. $250 compares the IntlStkldxAdm 26.72 +.15 +4.2 -5.8 +9.2 NA E D PERCEN TLOAD 5.75 Foreign Markets StratgcEq 33.61 +.32 +4.4 +9.4 +22.1+19.1 A A A value of the HISTORICALRETURNS TgtRe2020 29.10 t.11 +2.2 +3.6 +10.0 +9.7 A A A dollar to a NAME LAST CHG %CHG TgtRe2035 18.37 +.10 +3.0 +3.9 +12.9+11.8 8 0 8 basket of key Return/Rank Paris 5,01 7.44 +40.12 + . 81 Tgtet2025 16.94 +.07 +2.5 +3.7 +11.0+10.4 A 8 8 currencies, London 6,631.00 +75.72 +1.16 YEAR-TO-DATE +6.9 TotBdAdml 10.74 -.01 +0.2 +1.9 +1.5 +3.2 8 D D edged higher. Frankfurt 11,211.85 +37.94 + . 34 1-YEAR +10.5/D Totlntl 15.98 +.09 +4.1 -5.8 +9.1 +5.7 E D D Hong Kong24,61 9.45 +115.51 + . 47 3-YEAR +19.1/0 TotStlAdm 52.99 +.38 +3.6 +9.1 +17.7+16.4 8 8 A Mexico 44,471.29 +248.32 + . 56 5-YEAR +15.6/D Milan 23,248.90 -79.12 -.34 TotStldx 52.97 +.38 +3.6 +8.9 +17.6+16.3 8 8 A -.13 3and5-yearrets$ssaressnsaiized. Tokyo 20,302.91 -25.98 USGro 32.89 +.20 +10.0 +17.7 +21.1+18.5 A A A Stockholm 1,597.86 + 9.64 + . 6 1 Rank: Fund's letter gradecomparedwith others in Fund Footnotes: t$Fee - covering marketcosts is paid from fund assets. d - Deferredsales charge, or redemption Sydney 5,609.62 +38.60 + . 69 the same group; an Aindicates fund performed in fee. f - front load (salescharges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually amarketing feeandeither a sales or Zurich 9,387.97 +112.25 +1.21 the top 20 percent; an E, in the bottom 20 percent. redemption fee.Source: Morningstar. FAMILY

h58 88

FUELS

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

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

L 3.05 L 4 51 . L 2 2.9 L 5.32 L 4 1.0 L 1 9.3 L 2.94

CLOSE PVS. 48.79 47.98 1.48 1.48 1.60 1.60 2.89 2.82 1.82 1.80

%CH. %YTD +1.69 -8.4 -0.14 -9.0 -0.38 -13.5 -0.1 +2.30 +1.06 +27.0

CLOSE PVS. 1092.70 1096.30 14.73 14.63 984.40 987.80 2.41 2.40 614.60 620.60

%CH. %YTD -0.33 -7.7 +0.70 -5.3 -0.34 -18.6 +0.21 -1 5.2 -0.97 -23.0

AGRICULTURE Cattle (Ib)

CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD 1.45 1.45 -0.09 -12.5 Coffee (Ib) 1.22 1.20 +1.58 -26.7 -7.4 Corn (bu) 3.68 3.75 -1.93 Cotton (Ib) 0.64 0.64 - 0.76 + 6 . 0 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 251.60 256.10 -1.76 -24.0 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.23 1.23 -0.32 -12.4 Soybeans (bu) 9.83 9.75 +0.85 -3.6 Wheat(bu) 4.96 5.11 -2.84 -15.9 1YR.

MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.5617 +.0019 +.12% 1.6946 Canadian Dollar 1.2 9 31 -.0001 -.01% 1.0854 USD per Euro 1.1009 -.0045 -.41% 1.3410 JapaneseYen 123.86 + . 2 4 + .19% 1 02.13 Mexican Peso 16. 2340 -.0611 -.38% 13.0639 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.7788 -.0012 -.03% 3.4305 Norwegian Krone 8 . 1412 -.0399 -.49% 6.2527 South African Rand 12.5252 -.0528 -.42% 10.6040 Swedish Krona 8.6 0 9 0 + .0324 +.38% 6.8554 Swiss Franc .9664 +.0033 +.34% . 9 069 ASIA/PACIFIC Australian Dollar 1.3686 +.0038 +. 28% 1. 0655 Chinese Yuan 6.2086 -.0011 .02% 6.1805 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7515 -.0000 .00% 7.7501 Indian Rupee 63.839 +.028 +.04% 60.140 Singapore Dollar 1.3673 +.0030 +.22% 1.2429 -.81 .07% 1026.89 South KoreanWon 1160.09 Taiwan Dollar 3 1.43 + . 0 1 +.03% 30.00


© www.bendbulletin.corn/business

THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JULY 30, 2015

BRIEFING

ermi s or eveo men are on e rise

I.eadMethodgets $100K investment The Bend-based angel investment group Cascade Angels Fund announced Wednesday that it would invest $100,000 in the local software company LeadMethod, Inc. Julie Harrelson, fund manager for Cascade Angels, said LeadMethod builds software that allows companies in industries like manufacturing that use sales representatives to coordinate with those sales reps moreeffectively. The company relocated from Tacoma, Washington, in the fall of 2013, according to founder andCEOJustin Johnson. The software can be used with existing customer relationship management and marketing automation software or as a stand-alone platform, according to the press release. The $100,000 investmentisCascadeAngels Fund's second of the 2015 funding round. The fund, which covers the entire state of Oregon, announced a$100,000 investment in the Portland-based startup LumenLearning inMay. Harrelson said the 2015 fund raised $725,000, a 58 percent increaseover 2014.

Bend's Structus firm doughtout A Pennsylvania-based subsidiary of a 350-yearold French building products company has acquired aBend firm, Structus Building Technologies Inc., which makes corner applications for drywall. Structus, a 19-yearold company that employs 60 people, already supplies its products in North America to CertainTeedGypsum, of Valley Forge, Pennsylvania, and in Europe to CertainTeed's parent company, Saint-Gobain, according to a CertainTeed newsrelease Wednesday. Theterms of CertainTeed's purchase of Structus were not disclosed. "Structus has ushered in a newtechnological era, revolutionizing the way the building industry designs andconstructs wall systems," CertainTeedPresident Dave Engelhardt was quoted in the release as saying. "And, as a private label partner for the last six years, this purchase is anatural fit for our companyand our future." Structus is located in Bend's northeast corner just off NE 18th Street near Brinson Boulevard. Company founder Tim Smythe in the release said he undertook to sell the business several months ago with assistance from investment banker Zachary Scott & Co., of Seattle. CertainTeedspokesman Mike Lougherysaid Wednesdaythecompany has other properties in Oregon,Washington, California andWyoming, as well as in theEast. He said CertainTeedhasno plans to alter or change the Structus operation or workforce. OnlySmythe will be leaving thecompany, Loughery said. "It's a very close, tight-knit family," he

said. "That's what makes this placeand this organization so special, a tight-knit group ... committed to a product line and riding thewave of the future in terms of growing the business." — Bulletin staff reports

By Joseph Ditzler The Bulletin

Development is surging again in Deschutes County, where the number of planning and building permits rose again in the last fiscal year. The distinctive feature of that new development is the Jake NaoghtoniThe New York Times

Cindy Robbins, the senior vice president of Global Employee Success at Salesforce, is overseeing an effort to review salaries. Salesforce's chief executive started the Women's Surge at his com-

pany to achieve equality for menand women in payand promotion, and bring gender diversity to meetings.

iicon a e 'snew acus: creatin en ere uai

unusual mix of projects coming beforecounty planners for review and possible approval, said Nick Lelack, director of the county Community Development Department.

"The planning division is experiencing the greatest variety of applications in any two-year period on record," he said Wednesday. Among the projects under review: solar farms, rural events like weddings on farm-

ger jobs; we got promoted,"

Kleiner Perkins Caufield &

District to develop the Riley

Mare Benioff, co-founder

Robbins said. "That's when we started to put our heads

Byers, and by former female employees at Facebook and

Ranch Nature Preserve and Rockridge Park on the city

and chief executive ofSales-

together. We wanted to help

Twitter, have kept the issue in

outskirts.

force, was riding high a couple of years ago. His cloud software company had weathered the financial crisis; revenue was up; and the stock was at a record high. But as Benioff pondered his company's evolution, he had

other women as well." Up to that point, the Wom-

the headlines. Other big technology firms

permits issued by Deschutes

cause for concern.

and the two made a stark

men," he said. Silicon Val-

claim: Women were probably being paid less than men at Salesforce.

"I was in meetings with managers and they were all ley's notorious lack of gender diversity, he realized, was a

bins felt there was more tobe done. At one of her regularly scheduled meetings with Be-

nioff, shebrought Seka along,

Benioff didn't believe it. "I didn't know that there

problem at Salesforce, too: "I

was a pay issue until they

was really worried that there was something wrong with the company." Hoping to change the ratio,

came to me and said so," Be-

Benioff started what he called the Women's Surge in 2013.

The goal was to achieve 100 percent equality for men and women in payandpromotion and to make sure that at least a third of all participants at

any meeting were women. His eff ortsreceived aboost when Sheryl Sandberg, chief operatingoffi cerofFacebook, published "Lean In," bringing more discussions about gen-

year 2014-15 to 610 from 467

theypay men more than women, or to release salary data. Yet across the national workforce, and in the technol-

women at Salesforce were be-

is that women bring their

ing paid less than their male counterparts.

lower salaries from job to job,"

PERMITS City of Bend • Rose River LLC,20608 Silas Drive, Bend,$192,398 • Rivers Northwest Enterprises Inc., 1922NW Shevlin Crest Drive,Bend, $206,405 • Pahlisch HomesInc 20932 NEHigh Desert Lane, Bend, $187113 • Pahlisch HomesInc., 20928 NEHigh Desert Lane, Bend, $187113 • Pahlisch HomesInc., 20924 NEHigh Desert Lane, Bend, $187113 • Pahlisch HomesInc., 20920 NEHigh Desert Lane, Bend, $183,217 • Pahlisch HomesInc., 20780 Boulderfield Ave., Bend,$261,370 • Albert M. Deangelis, 2944 NW HorizonDrive, Bend, $451,337 • Long Term Bend Investors LLC, 21397 NE Evelyn Place, Bend, $258,918 • Richard R. Abbott, 63040 Lower MeadowDrive, Bend, $863,795

County increased in fiscal

problem, it is not one of their m aking. "We seenoevidence of a gender pay gap at Google," Roya Soleimani, a Google spokeswoman, said. Verifying such daims is difficult because companies are not

ogy industry in particular, the nioff said. "My reaction was, 'I gender pay gap persists. don't really think this is right. "You can explain away all This isn't how we operate.'" of the little things and say Wanting to see the numbers we have no problems," said himself, Benioff commisLinda Babcock, an economics sioned a review of all 16,000 professor atCarnegieMe llon salaries at Salesforce. "I said University who studies the 'Let's start at the top, one per- gender pay gap. "What you can't explain away are the son at a time,'" he said. As the data came in, ugly, average numbers." age-oldtruths were revealed. Not all of the pay gap is a It turned out that Robbins result ofgenderbias. "Oftentimes what happens and Seka were correct: Many

"In certain positions, der issues to the national stage. As a first step, Benioff people were not being paid asked managers across the at the same level," Benioff company to identify their top acknowledged. executives, who would then Now Salesforce is in the receive additional leadership processofraisingthesalaries training. In divisions where of underpaid women (and a mostly men were nominated, few men), one at a time. "Many men and women Benioff told the managers to come back with a more diwere on par," said Robbins, verse list. who is overseeing the effort to "We startedadding more reviewand increase salaries. "But some salaries for men women proactively," he said. Two of the women to reand women needed to be ceive promotions were Cindy adjusted." Robbins, who became head of Throughout Silicon Valley, human resources, and Leyla the gender pay gap is receivSeka, who took over the Desk. ing renewed scrutiny. Gencorndivision,acustomer serder discrimination lawsuits vice unit. brought by Ellen Pao against "We surged. Wegot bigthe venture capital firm

• Toney Construction Co. LLC, 20483 SE Del Coco Court, Bend,$207,663 • Pahlisch HomesInc., 63147 NEBlack Powder Lane, Bend,$226,003 • Pahlisch HomesInc., 63151 NEBlack Powder Lane, Bend,$226,003 • John R. Baker,2528 NE Cretia Court, Bend,$252,302 • Signature Homebuilders LLC, 61399 SW Sunbrook Drive, Bend,$245,413 • River BendInvestors LLC, 572 SWBluff Drive, Bend, $243,9000 • Hale-Campbell Properties LLC, 61543 SE Lincoln Lane, Bend, $255,847 • Triad HomesInc., 61923 SE JanaleePlace, Bend, $182,746 • Steve Elder, 20250NW Bronze St., Bend,$260,262 • Pahlisch HomesInc., 63131 NEBlack Powder Lane, Bend,$226,003 • Pahlisch HomesInc., 63135 NEBlack Powder Lane, Bend,$226,003

The numberofplanning

say that while there may be a

required to disclose whether

Babcock said. And when it comes time to negotiate a salary, studies show that women are less

missioners upheld the decision on appeal but Central Oregon LandWatch appealedfurther

to LUBA, according to The Bulletin archives and a county update of pending cases July 16. Two other applications involving wedding parks on farmland were received, one

approved and another denied by the county, in the past year. The county is also review-

ing applications to build solar energyprojects,siteswhere solar panels are erected in

large arrays to gather sunlight to turn into electricity. One Bend Airport and applications application, submitted by Cenfrom Bend Park & Recreation tral Electric Cooperative, calls

By David Gelles

promotions for some, but Rob-

farm east of Sisters. The com-

land, airport hangars at the

New York Times News Service

en's Surge had resulted in

Use Board of Appeals. In one case, the department issued a permit to John and Stephanie Shepherd for a private park on which to hold weddings on 1.6 acres of their

for asolarfarm on 2.9 acres on 27th Street. That applica-

tion is under review. A second application, by NorWest Energy 2 LLC and Oregon Solar Land Holdings, would build a solar farm north of U.S. Highway 20 east

the prior year. Lelack said many projects are proposed on property designated exclusively as farmland, for which the state sets its own regulations. Some applications take advantage of recent changes

of Bend. That project is also

in state law, which sets them

up in fiscal 2014-15. The de-

up as test cases.

partment issued 393 permits for new single-family homes

"While these uses are

under review. Lelack said he

expects two more applications shortly. On the residential side, the

number of building permits issued by the county was also

allowed in the exclusive

in that period, 308 the previ-

farm-use zone, we haven' t addressed many of these to

ous fiscal year and 218 the year before that. A hearings

date," Lelack said. "Or, they are fairly new rules the Leg-

officerin March rejected an

islature has adopted over the

last couple of years and haven't been tested." Those cases often give

rise to heightened interest by neighborhood groups or advocacy organizations that

inevitably appeal the land use

application for a subdivision of 50 2-acre lots and 422 acres of open space called Miller Tree Farm on Skyliners Road. The developer appealed tothe county commission, which

is expected to rule in the fall, said Anthony Raguine, county senior planner.

decision to the county commissioners or the state Land

— Reporter: 541-617-7815, jditzler@bendbulletin.corn

Constructionincreasingin unincorporatedareas PLANNING PERMITS

BUILDINGPERMITS FOR SINGLE-FAMILYHOMES

assertive than men. This,

700 permits--------------

7 00 permits------------- - - - - - - -

Benioff said, was part of the

600 --.----.----.------.----.---

600----------------------- 393--

500 --.-

500----------------------------

400 --.

400----------------------------

300-

300-----------------

problem at Salesforce. Salesforce is not alone in trying to address these thorny problems. Facebook says it reviews its compensation data for gender fairness yearly, and makes adjustments when it finds apparent inequity.

200-

610

100-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

200--------100-

And while Salesforce's

leadership is overwhelmingly male, Benioff is promoting women, hiring more diverse candidates and adjusting salaries.

e~'

b~q

ei

eb'

Fiscal years

Fiscal years

Source: Desohutes County Community Development Department Pete Smith i The Bulletin

"Companies have to lean in,

too," he said.

BEST OFTHEBIZ CALENDAR TODAY • Expanding YourMarket to Federal, State & Local Governmentwith GovernmentContract AssistanceProgram:Free workshop to introduce business owners to the basic tools for selling to the government.; 10 a.m.; Central Oregon Community College Redmond CampusTechnology Education Center, 2324 SECollege Loop, Redmond; www.gcap.org or 541-736-1088. • Green Drinks:A casual networking event to discuss 8 corporation business practices with local certified teams, Moementum and Pacific Superfood Snacks; 5 p.m.; Pacific Superfood Snacks, 222 SE Reed Market Road, No. 500, Bend; http: //envirocenter. org/event/july-green-

drinks-b-corps or 541-385-6908. • Home Energy Workshop: Explore how homeowner actions can make significant impacts on energy

usage in ahomeand learn how to create an energy-saving plan in this free workshop; 6 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St., Bend;

www.pacificpower.

net/bewattsmart or 503-813-7291. TUESDAY • Buying OrSellingA Business: A practical guide for entrepreneurs interested in investing in, buying or selling a business;6 p.m.; $69; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NW CollegWay e , Bend or 541-383-7270. • For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday'sBulletin or visitbendbttlletin.corn/bizcal

by overchargingpublicity By Candice Choi The Associated Press

NEW YORK — Whole

Foods is feeling pinched after New York City officials found itwas overcharging customers. The grocery chain known for its organic offerings said Wednesday that sales growth slowed sharply at established locations in the last two weeks

of the quarter ending July 5. That was after New York

City's Department of Consumer Affairs said the chain's stores were overstating the

weightofsome pre-packaged products, like chicken tenders and a vegetable platter. The

company said sales were showing improvement but still weak this month.

"There's no magic bullet for

restoring whatever trust was lost," co-CEO Walter Robb said

during a call with analysts and investors. Robb said that "nobody

gets it 100 percent right" when it comes to weights and measurements in the grocery industry but that Whole Foods

was nevertheless taking steps to prevent overcharging going forward. That indudes training for workers and a pledge to give away products if customers discover they were overcharged. Over time, Robb said, Whole

Foods will get past the setback through its various efforts, including an ongoing push to make prices more affordable. "We' re not sure why Whole Foods was singled out for this attention, and we don't know why the media ran wild with this," co-CEO John Mackey

sard.


IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Fitness, D2 Nutrition, D3 Money, D4 Medicine, D5 THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JULY 30, 2015

O www.bendbulletin.corn/health

Oregon Health Plan opens door to back pain

To fend off dementia, run or dance, bike or step

A pre-packaged Thai salad minus

toppings equals 1t/2cups or half the

recommended daily vegetable serving.

treatment

Photos by Andy Tullis i The Bulletin

By Kathleen McLaughlin

By Melissa Healy

The Bulletin

Los Angeles Times

Hundreds of back pain sufferers will gain access to physical therapy and a host

Scientists testing exper-

of other treatments next

year, under a change to Oregon Health Plan coverage.

As the state's version of

Medicaid, OHP will prioritize physical therapy, chi-

imental drugs to prevent or reverse Alzheimer' s disease have for years endured a drumbeat of inconclusive and disap-

pointing trial results. But dementia

FITNESS researchers

ropractic

meeting in

A bowl of fresh fruit is equivalent to 1t/e

MEDICINE and other comple-

Washington,D.C.,recent-

cups, a recommended serving.

mentary treatments over

painkillers and surgery. The new policy will apply to all types of back conditions, rather than just a narrow set of patients showing signs of nerve damage, as it does now. Many OHP members who suffer back pain have been left with no choice

ly got some unexpectedly good news on the benefits

of a therapy that is readily available, inexpensive to deliver and free of un-

wanted side effects. It's aerobic exercise. And in a head-to-head

with available medica•

tions for Alzheimer's disease, it appears it would

but to take drugs, and the

kick butt.

policy could be contributing to Oregon's high rate of narcotic abuse, according

In older adults with

A dried blueberry oatmeal topping measuringt/4 cup is less than half the federal

to the Health Evidence

Review Commission, which approved the policy change in the spring. "We werehearing really

mild cognitive impair-

//gal~

recommended daily serving of t/ cup dried fruit.

ment — a condition that

frequently precedes an Alzheimer's diagnosis

— one study found that a program of regular intensive aerobic exercise reduced the quantity of

loud and clear ... our cur-

tau protein found in cere-

rentstateofaffairsisreally stupid," said Dr. Ariel

brospinal fluid — a rough measure of its presence in

Smits, medical director for the Health Evidence Re-

the brain. Along with am-

saw a medical provider for back conditions in 2013,

yloid plaques, tau proteins accumulate in the brain to form tangles that gum up thinking and kill off brain cells in those with Alzhei-

and over half of those pa-

mer's disease.

tients received narcotics. PacificSource Comtral Oregon, has at least

Compared with a program of stretching offered to a control group, the aerobic conditioning increased blood flow

51,000 members in the

to regions of the brain

area. PacificSource did not have information on the number of local members

involved in memory and reasoning, and brought about corresponding im-

seeking treatment for

provements in attention,

back conditions, but if the 8 percent rate reported by

planning and organizing

view Commission. About 8 percent of OHP members

munity Solutions, which administers OHP for Cen-

— skills that collectively contribute to "executive function."

HERC were applied locally, it would translate to about 4,000 patients. Dr. Alison Little, medical directorforPacificSource

A second study found that in older adults with cognitive impairment

government programs, expects many more of those

linked to "mini-strokes"

and otherforms ofcere-

patients to get treatment

brovascular disease, a

By Kathleen McLaughlin• The Bulletin

when the new policy takes effect Jan. 1. "I think it will go up a lot because the number of people who qualify under the

Oregon adults are better about eating the daily rec-

were extremely low in

guidelines for treatment is

ommendation of fruits and

pretty narrow, and they' re expanding it dramatically,

vegetables than their peers

so I think it would certainly almost double," Little said.

a new Centers for Disease Control study. That's not saying much, however, because the herbivore-ish are such a small

Mississippi, where just 5.5 percent of adults ate enough vegetables. "It's nice to be able to see the vari- NUTRITION placed Oregon ation, but it's disapsecond, behind pointing how low it is across California.

The new guidelines open the door to acupuncture,

chiropractic, cognitive behavioral therapy, osteopathic manipulation and

physical and occupational therapy. See Back pain /D5

BM to

in other states, according to

tality Weekly Report. Eating produce reduces Eleven percent of Oregon the risk for heart disease, adults ate the recommended stroke and some cancers, 2to3 servings ofvegetables and helps manage body weight, the authors noted. per day, according to the federal study. That The findings demonstrate

Southern states such as

the United States," said La-

to provide a state-by-state

tetia Moore, a CDC epidemiologist and study co-author. The study was published

look at fruit and vegeta-

in the July 10 edition of the

minority in every state. The CDC study is the first

ble intake. The numbers

CDC's Morbidity and Mor-

0 iv e w it i

regimen ofaerobicexercise improved memory,

the need to spur demand

through competitive pricing and better promotion. Improvement may come with

selective attention and the brain's ability to function

efficiently. In a third study, people with mild to moderate

Alzheimer'sdisease who showed up for two to three

tough aerobic conditioning classes per week for 16 weeks experienced

future generations, since

significant improvements in mental speed and at-

Maine, at 14.5 percent of

much of the emphasis so far

tention, as measured by a

adults eating as much as the

has been on putting produce in front of kids. See Produce /D3

standardized test of cogni-

On the fruit front, Oregon came in sixth, tied with

government recommends, which is I t/z to 2 servings.

tive function.

See Alzheimer' s /D2

ita eat recor s stem

By Tars Bannow The Bulletin

Bend Memorial Clinic is

flipping the switch next week to a digital patient health record system. The transition to Epic is 14

months in the making, much of which has MONEY been spent training providers, receptionists and billing staff how to use the new software. Perhaps the most noticeable change: Every exam room will now havea computer attached to the wall by a rotating arm.

Switching electronic health

recordsisam assiveundertaking, and patients should expect their appointments to take a bit

longer than usual while providers adjust to the new system. The biggest lags will likely be seen at BMC's three urgent

care clinics, none of which take appointments. It's going to take longer to check patients in, McLeod said. The appointments themselves will

take longer, too. "We' re just going to ask for their patience while we get

While they' re in appointments used to the new system," she with providers, patients will be said. able to see information entered All patients will need to into their charts. show their health insurance "It's pretty empowering," cards and IDs following the said Christy McLeod, BMC's

switch, McLeod said. Another

chief operating officer.

change that's "likely to be

What will patients notice? • Computers installed in all exam rooms • Longer wait times in Urgentcare for first couple of weeks • Two bills before and after switch • They' ll have to show insurance card and ID • They' ll be able to seelab results, order prescription refills and request appointments via MyChart

quite confusing" for patients is Aug. 7, they could get two difthey' re probably going to get ferent bills instead of one bill," two bills for a period of time. McLeod said. That's because BMC will A change patients are still use its old EHR system, expected to appreciate is the Allscripts, for bills generated ability to access their health before Aug. 6. Bills for any records over the Internet. Epic services after that will come uses a patient portal called from the Epic system. MyChart to access lab results, "If a patient comes on Aug. order prescription refills and 5 and then comes back on request appointments.

Giving patients access to information about their health

Office of the National Coordi-

care was one of the reasons

Technology. The second most popular vendor, Allscripts,

BMC chose Epic as its new vendor. "More and more patients want to be in control of their

own care," she said. "They want to know what's hap-

pening, and they want it to be easy. Epic gives us all of that, which is really great."

Epic a popular choice

nator for Health Information saw fewer than half that

amount, with roughly 49,000 users, the survey found. Among hospitals, Epic was the third most popular EHR vendor below MEDITECH and Cerner, the ONC found.

Providers feelpressureto switch to Epic because while EHRs are not adept at sharing

electronic health care vendor. More than 109,000 nonhos-

information across platforms, it's easier among providers who use the same platform, said Ross Koppel, an adjunct professor ofsociology atthe University of Pennsylvania and a senior fellow in its

pital providers said they use Epic in a March survey by the

Wharton School. See BMC /D4

The decision to switch to

Epic is a very common one among health careproviders. Federal data show Epic is far and away the most popular


D2

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JULY 30, 2015

FITNEss

Even low-levelactivi can make adifference By Fred W.Wright Jr.

to eat meals or lying down to read — increased their long-

Tampa Bay Times

A U n iversity o f F l o r i da term health risk. By contrast, study found that m oderate every 20 minutesspent do-

exercise in increments as shortas 20 minutes can decrease long-term health risk.

ing even low-level activity decreased their l ong-term health risk. "We know that physical

Wash those dishes. Dust that table. Make the bed. Get activity is an important risk up and change the TV chan- factor for cardiovascular nel without using the remote. health," Buford s aid. "But Even the most modest ex- what we really don't know as ercise, the type we do around much about is how low levels our household chores every of activity might influence day, can have a potential health. "What we should be doing health benefit, according to a recent University of Florida is encouraging people to instudy. tegrate low-level activity into This is good news for many daily life," he said. "Walk seniors whose lifestyle is more. Sit less. Park the car more sedentary and for those a little further away. Get up older people who are facing and walk while watching mobility challenges. That' s TV." the conclusion of T h o m as The traditional recommenBuford, assistant professor at dations for exercise intensithe Gainesville university's ty and duration (at least 150 Department of Aging and minutes a week) may not apGeriatric Research. ply to seniors with mobility "We have this general issues, he said. "An older adult with funcidea that moderate exercise is necessary three times a tional limitations may not be week for health benefits," Bu- able to perform moderate to ford said. The study suggests vigorous exercise," said Tony something much less stren- Marsh, co-author of the study uous also can have health and a professor at Wake benefits. Forest University. "But you The study involved 1,170 can go for a walk with your people with an average age of spouse or your kids or your 79 and a sedentary lifestyle. dog. The critical element is Their daily activities were to do something that gets you monitored with an acceler- off the couch and moving." ometer, which translated any Surprisingly, for those sekind of movement, no matter niors who do exercise reguhow slight or how strenuous, larly, a sedentary day after a into "counts" per minute. The workout at a gym is still to be more active the exercise or avoided if possible. "Exercise movement, the higher the doesn't completely offset the counts. The data was applied sitting," Buford said. to a formula to determine Activity just slightly above s long-term sedentary, which could be the p health risk for a cardiovas- l ight housework or s l ow cular event, such as a heart walking, was associated with attack. higher levels of the more benThe study found that eveficial kind of cholesterol, ery 25to 30 minutes aperson HDL, in some people. "It's all about doing somespent in sedentary behavior — watching television, sitting thing," Buford said.

arti cipant'

FITNESS EVENTS

TODAY HEALTHY BACK CLASS: A weekly class that will introduce a self-treatment system to eliminate and prevent chronic pain and erase the signs

of aging; 7:30 a.m.; $30

per month, $9 for drop-in; Hawthorn Healing Arts Center, 39 NW Louisiana Ave., Bend; www.hawthorncenter.corn or 541-330-0334. MONS RUNNING GROUP:All moms welcome with or without strollers; 3 to 4~/~-mile run at 8to 12-minute mile paces; meet at FootZone at 9:15 a.m., rain or shine; FootZone, 842 NW Wall St., Bend; www.footzonebend. corn or 541-317-3568. SUMMER STRENGTH PROGRAM FOR MIDTO LONG DISTANCERUNNERS: Our summer strength program is designed to complement the running volume that runners will be accumulating over the summer before the cross-

country and track seasons;

ing hope that earlier detection and combination t h erapies

Continued from 01 may succeed in preventing, Even among subjects who delaying or even reversing attended less frequently or Alzheimer's disease. At the exercised at l esser intensi- 2015 meeting of the Alzheities, the aerobic condition- mer's Association last week, ing classes drove down rates scientists reported on several of anxiety, irritability and promising ways to predict a depression, difficult neuro- person's likelihood of develpsychiatric symptoms that oping mild cognitive impairare common in t h ose with ment and Alzheimer's disease Alzheimer's disease, and dis- at leastfive years before betressing to both patients and havioral symptoms become their caregivers. evident. "No currently approved In thenear term, such earmedication can rival these ly warning tests could help effects," said L aura B aker, identify potential participants an Alzheimer's researcher at in research studies. But many Wake Forest Baptist Medi- researchers also believe that cal Center in North Carolina earlier detection will improve who reported the impact of the prospects that medicaaerobic conditioning on tau tions, including those that protein.Earlier research by help clear abnormal proteins Baker and her colleagues has from the brain, will work to established that a program of stave off memory loss and moderate- to high-intensity brain atrophy. " Alzheimer's is a v e r y aerobicexercise also drives down the volume of amyloid complex condition that has plaque in the cerebrospinal been extremely hard to adfluid of older adults with mild dress with t h e ' o ne-target, one-treatment' approach that cognitive impairment. The latest findings, Baker has been successful in other added, "strongly suggest a d iseases," said M a ri a C a rpotent lifestyle intervention rillo, chief science officer of such aerobic exercise can the Alzheimer's Association. impact A l zheimer' s-related "Fortunately, we' re beginning changes in the brain." to see some very exciting earIn all the studies, subjects ly results ... of a new treatwere asked to participate in ment approach that targets three tofour sessions of aer- common components of all obic conditioning — ranging the Alzheimer's proteins." from 45 minutes to an hour The results, she added, — a week. The aim was to get may not only help patients participants working at be- with A l z h eimer's d i sease, tween 70 percent and 80 per- but those with other neurodecent of their aerobic capacity. generative diseases, such as The new findings come Parkinson's and Lewy Body against the backdrop of ris- dementia.

bend pilots

-•

TODAY HEALTHYBACKCLASS: A weekly class that will introduce a self-treatment system to eliminate and prevent chronic pain and erase the signs of aging; 7:30 a.m.; $30 Hawthorn Healing Arts Center, 39 NW Louisiana Ave., Bend; www.hawthorncenter.corn or 541-330-0334. AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required, call for appointment; 12:30 p.m.; Bend Blood Donation Center, 815 SW Bond St., Suite 110, Bend; www.redcrossblood.org or

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:. •

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4 p.m. free, donations accepted; Bend Community Healing, 155 SW Century Drive, Suite 113, Bend; www.bendcommunityhealing.corn or 541-322-9642.

SATURDAY FOAM ROLLERCLASS: Learn to help decrease muscle soreness, improve flexibility and even build core strength using a foam roller; 10 a.m.; $15; Bend Pilates, 155 SW Century Drive, Suite 104, Bend; 541-647-0876. SATURDAY SOCIALBALLROOM DANCE:7 p.m.; $5-$7; Black Cat Ballroom, 600 NE Savannah Drive No. 3, Bend; www.blackcat.dance or 541-233-6490.

TUESDAY SUMMER STRENGTH PROGRAM FOR MID-TO LONG-DISTANCE RUNNERS:Our summer strength program is designed to complement the running volume that runners will be accumulating over the summer before the cross-

country and track seasons; 3 p.m.; $100; Therapeutic Associates Bend Physical Therapy, 2200 NE Neff Road, Suite 202, Bend; 541-388-7738. YOUTH TRIATHLON CLINIC SERIES:A series of youth clinics that focus on the different aspects of the triathlon; sign up for one or all six to prepare for the Youth Triathlon on Sunday, Aug. 23; 5 p.m.; $5-$6; Juniper Swim8 Fitness Center, 800 NE Sixth St., Bend; 541-389-7665. ZUMBA DANCECLASSES: Focuses on the smooth and danceoriented Zumba; reduce the stress of jumping and sharp movement and instead focus on the smooth dance motion and dance like patterns; 5:30 p.m.; $7; Black Cat Ballroom, 600 NE Savannah Drive No. 3, Bend; www.blackcat.dance or 541-233-6490. TUESDAY PERFORMANCE RUNNING GROUP:An intervalbased workout to help you get the most out of your running; distance and effort vary according to what works for you; 5:30 p.m.;FootZone,842 NW Wall St., Bend; www.footzonebend.

corn/happenings/weekly-runs or 541-317-3568.

WEDNESDAY NOON TACO RUN:OrderaTaco Stand burrito when you leave and we' ll have it when you return; meet at FootZone a few minutes before noon;FootZone,842 NW Wall St., Bend; www.footzonebend. corn/happenings/weekly-runs or 541-317-3568. BROLATES:A challenging workout focused on improving strength, flexibility and power; 5:30 p.m.; $20; Bend Pilates, 155 SW Century Drive, Suite 104, Bend; 541-647-0876. WEDNESDAYGROUPRUN: Featuring a 3- to 5-mile group run; 6 p.m.; Fleet Feet Sports, 1320 NW GalvestonAve., Bend; fleetfeetbend.corn or 541-389-1 601. HEALTHY FEETWORKSHOP: Learn to prevent common foot injuries with two instructors; 6 p.m.; $24; Bend Pilates, 155 SW Century Drive, Suite 104, Bend; www.bendpilates.net or 541-647-0876. INTRODUCTION TOBALLROOM: Learn the basics to four of the most popular ballroom dances, includes basic dance patterns, posture, partnership connection and movementforeach dance; 6:30 p.m.; $40; Black Cat Ballroom, 600 NE Savannah Drive No. 3, Bend;www.blackcat.dance/classregistration or 541-233-6490. WALTZ: TWINKLEPATTERNS GROUP CLASS:Learn new dance positi ons such as promenade and outside partner positions, registration required; 7:30 p.m.; $40; Black Cat Ballroom, 600 NE Savannah Drive No. 3, Bend; www. blackcat.dance/class-registration/ or 541-233-6490.

800-RED-CROSS. AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required, call for appointment; 1 p.m.; Redmond Grange, 707 SW Kalama Ave., Redmond; www.redcrossblood.org or 800-RED-CROSS. AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required, call for appointment; 1 p.m.; Culver Christian Church, 501 W. Fourth St., Culver; www.redcrossblood. org or 800-RED-CROSS.

815 SW Bond St., Suite 110, Bend; www.redcrossblood.org or 800-RED-CROSS.

FRIDAY

help decreasemusclesoreness,

How to submit Events:Tosubmit anevent, visit bendbulletin.corn/eventsand click "AddEvent" at least 10days before publication. Ongoinglistings must beupdated monthly.

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AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required, call for appointment; 10 a.m.; Sisters Athletic Club, 1001 Desparado Trail, Sisters; www.redcrossblood.org or 800-RED-CROSS.

SATURDAY

MONDAY MEMORIES INTHE MAKING: A fine-arts program specifically designed for people with Alzheimer' s disease and other dementias; no art experience is necessary, screening and registration required; 1 p.m.; $60 for an individual with dementia; Alzheimer's Association Central Oregon Office, 777 NWWall St., Suite 104, Bend; 800-272-3900.

FOAM ROLLERCLASS:Learn to improve flexibility and even build core strength, using a foam roller; 10 a.m.; $15; Bend Pilates, 155 SW Century Drive, Suite 104, Bend; 541-647-0876.

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THURSDAY, JULY 30, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

D3

TION

New evidence shows artificial sweeteners How to loseweight may trump sugar in the health benefits without giving upcalories By Lenny Bernstein

Agriculture.

The Washington Post

Azzam a n d R e h k amp next looked at what would

By Aaron E. Carroll

pie consume nonsweetened

New York Times News Service

d rinks at a ll . Th e next 2 5

In the last few years, I' ve watched a c o ntinuing b at-

percent consume about 200 calories per day from sugar

that the French and Japanese are much thinner than

happen if Americans adopted those alternative diets

tle among my friends about which is worse for you: artifi-

drinks. The top 5 percent of

Americans because their diets are so much better than

AND reduced their calorie

people, though,consume more than 560 calories a day, or

cial sweeteners or sugar. Un-

less you want to forgo all beverages that are sweet, you' re going to run into one of these. Rather than rely on anecdote or myth, we can inform this

more than four 12-ounce cans

of soda. Epidemiologic studies have found that even after con-

trollingfor other factors, a population's intake of added

debate with research.

The available evidence

sugars is associated with the

points to the fact that there appears to be a c o rrelation

development of Type 2 diabetes, with a 1.1 percent increase

between sugar consumption and health problems; none

in prevalencefor each can of

Let's start w it h a r t i ficial sweeteners. These have, for

sugar-sweetened soda consumed on average per day. A study following people for an average of more than 14 years published last year in JAMA

decades, been attacked as

Internal Medicine found that

harmful chemicals. But every-

those in the highest quintile of added sugar consumption had

can be detected with artificial

sweeteners.

thing is a "chemical," and not all of them are bad for us. One

L

more than twice the risk of dy-

ing from cardiovascular disease than those in the lowest

of the oldest artificial sweet-

eners is saccharin. Starting in the 1980s, Congress mandated that any product containing it be accompanied by the following: "Use of this product may be hazardous to your

quintile, even after controlling

for many other factors. The accompanying editorial noted that the increased risk

of death began once a person

health. This product contains

You' ve heard for years

ours. A new mathematical

model assesses why that is and how much thinner Americans could be if they

changed their eating habits. According to the study, conducted by agricultural economists at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, Amer-

intake to the average levels of those countries. Not surprisingly, the gain would be even greater. Under those conditions, the Japanese diet would slice 3.05 points off

the average American BMI. The Finnish diet would cut 2.78, the Greek 2.6 and the French 2.19.

Those big drops in BMI

icans could cut 2.57 points

off their average Body Mass Index score by adopting a Greek (Mediterranean) diet; 2.13 points by eating like Firms; 1.96 by adopting a

would

French diet and 1.48 by eat-

Japanese diet would save the

ing like the Japanese.

average American $617.36

s a v e A me r i cans

health care dollars, the researchers figured. For example, adopting the composition and calorie totals of the

That's a l o t

o f w e i ght. per year. The study listed the average Next, they looked at each BMI in the United States at diet's impact on the environ28.45 in 2009. Finland was ment, converting the carat 26.25, Greece at 25.75 and bon dioxide output of each France at 25.35. All of those one to various equivalents.

qualify as overweight (25 Here there was something to 29.9), though not obese, of a surprise: the U.S. diet which is a BMI of 30 or more. was actually better than the Only the Japanese, at 22.7, had an average BMI in the

French and Finnish diets.

healthy range.

Working Group's 2010 esti-

Using the U.S. Interagency

saccharin, which has been

consumed the equivalent of one 20-ounce Mountain Dew

determined to cause cancer in

in a 2,000-calorie diet, and

The scenarios assume a

mate that the social cost of

laboratory animals."

reached more than a fourfold

daily diet of 3,688 calories, which the researchers acknowledge is probably a lot more than the average person consumes, even in the

carbon dioxide e missions

rat that is frequently infected

increase if people consumed Despite saccharin, an artificial sweetener, being removed from the more than one-third of their carcinogen list in 2000, many people still associate the sweetener diet in added sugars. with an increased risk of cancer. It should come as no surprise that the intake of added sugars is significantly associBased on these newer stud- a rise in tumors in the 1970s ated with body weight. A sysies, saccharin was removed seems impossible. Finally, tematic review and meta-analfrom the carcinogen list in much more comprehensive ysis of randomized controlled 2000. But by that time, opin- studies couldn't find links. trials, published in BMJ 2012, ions were set. It did little to These included a case-control found that sugar intake inm ake anyone feelsafe. study from The Journal of the creased both fatand overall Other artificial sweeteners National Cancer Institute of weight. Another meta-analyhaven't fared any better. As- children and a cohort study sis of randomized controlled

with a bladder parasite that would leave it susceptible to

partame was introduced in the United States around the time

of more than 450,000 adults

trials, published in The Amer-

in Cancer Epidemiology Bio-

ican Journal of Clinical Nu-

bl a d der that saccharin began taking cancer. a beating. The initial studies But "two-generation stud- showed that aspartame didn' t ies," in which rats were fed cause cancer in animals, so it lots of saccharin and their was deemed safer than sacoffspring were, too, found charin. But in 1996, a study

markers and Prevention. But what about sugar? We

trition i n

But what was the basis for this decision? A review arti-

cle published in The Annals of Oncology in 2004 noted that more than 50 studies had

been published looking at saccharin in rats. Twenty of these were "one generation" studies,

meaning that they did not look at the rats' offspring. In only one of those studies did huge amounts of saccharin produce cancer, and it was in a type of

Thinkstock

saccharin-induced

that bladder cancer was significantly more common in prompted many countries to

was published in The Journal of Neuropathology and Experimental Neurology titled "Increasing Brain Tumor Rates: Is

act.

There a Link to Aspartame' ?"

second-generation rats. That

There was a p r o blem, Most people ignored the though. This link has never question mark. Instead, they been confirmed in humans. noted that the paper stated Moreover, it t urns out t h at that (1) brain cancer had besome rats are just more like- come more common from ly togetbladder cancer.Feed 1975 to 1992 and (2) that more them large amounts of vita- people had started consuming min C, and they get bladder aspartame recently. cancer. Studies in humans in There were any number of Britain, D enmark, C a nada problems with this logic. Most and in the United States could of the increase in cancer was find no association between in people 70 years and older, saccharin consumption and who were not the main conbladder cancer once they ac- sumers of aspartame. And counted for cigarette smoking because aspartame was ap(which does cause it). proved in 1981, blaming it for

should acknowledge that when I, and many others, ad-

dress sugar in contexts like these, we are talking about added sugars, not the natu-

2 0 13, found t hat

sugar-sweetened beverages alone cause body weight to go up in adults. In comparison, a meta-analysis of randomized

controlled trials of artificial or low-calorie sweeteners pub-

rally occurring sugars or car- lished last year in the same bohydrates you find in things journal found that their use led like fruit. Those are, for the to lower body weight and less most part, not the problem. overall fat. When I argue these facts Added sugars are.

was $21 per ton, they calculated the greenhouse gas cost of each diet.

If each culture consumed those 3,688 calories, the U.S. of calories per capita pro- diet would cost $8.62 per perduced by the United States son each year. The Greeks each day, according to the are best at $8.14 and the Food and Agriculture Or- Firms worst at $10.88. Under ganization of the United the scenario that takes both Nations. calories and diet composiSo if you ate the same tion into account, the Japanumber ofcalories as you nese are by far the easiest do now, but did it the way on the environment, at $6.10 the French, Japanese, Firms per person per year, and the or Greeks do, why would French the worst, at $9.73. you lose weight'? It's largely Azzam speculated that the becausetheirdietsaremore French and Firms rely more plant-based, said Azzeddine heavily on beef when they Azzam, a professor of ag- do eat meat products, while ricultural economics who Americans are bigger conconductedthe research with sumers of poultry. Chickens Sarah Rehkamp, a gradu- and other poultry are much ate student who now works more energy efficient to raise for the U.S. Department of than cattle, he said. U.S. It's the average number

The Centers for D i sease with my friends, they want to Control and Prevention re- know if I put my money where

ports that children are con-

my mouth is. I do. My wife and

suming between 282 calories I limit our children's consump(for girls) and 362 calories (for tion of soda to around four to boys) of added sugars per day five times a week. When we on average. This means that let them have soda, it's almost

more than 15 percent of their dietary caloric intake is from added sugars. Adults are doing slightly better, but not by much. This consumption isn't dis-

tributed equally, however. For instance, about half of peo-

8 FTIT

always caffeine-free, because we want them to sleep. It' s

also almost always sugar-free. There's a potential, and probably real, harm from consuming added sugars; there are most likely none from artificial sweeteners.

Tss DESCHUTES COUNTY FAIR8t RODEO

BROUGHT s0 YOU BYTHE BEND BREWFEST AND

In Center Circle near the Main Stage • ~IgI]

111 I 111 I 11II •

II » I I I II I• 1111IM III1

• •

i

Produce Continued from 01 Local nutritionist Lori Bri-

zee is not surprised by the CDC's findings. Too many people think the path to better health is

through fad diets like eating gluten-free, Brizee said. "Really, the No. 1 thing people need to be healthier is to eat more fruits and vegetables."

It's a straightforward but challenging task, Brizee said. Vegetables require preparation. People who are pressed for time can find pre-packaged salads and pre-washed vegetables, but those cost more. "It is more expensive to eat a really healthy diet, especially if you' re going to have convenience things in there," Brizee sard.

Low-income people face hurdles in addition to c ost

and availability, Brizee said. She encouragedone clientto eat frozen vegetables, but it turned out that the freezer in

State of theplate Top states in fruit and vegetable consumption, by portion of adults eating recommendedamount VEGETABI.ES California: 13 percent Oregon: 11 percent Vermont: 10.8 percent Alaska: 10.5 percent Nevada: 10.3 percent FRUIT California: 17.7percent New York: 15.5 percent District of Columbia: 15.2 percent Florida: 14.8 percent New Hampshire: 14.8 percent Illinois: 14.6 percent (Oregon, 14.5 percent, ties for sixth among states with Maine, 14.5 percent.)

vegetables. Moore hopes the state-level information will catalyze

ably get enough," Moore said. Legumes like black beans and lentils also count as veg-

local interest in nutrition poli-

etables, Brizee said. That' s

cies and help states track their good news for people trying to progress. eat healthily on a budget. Government efforts to get — Reporter: 541-617-7860 kids eating more produce ttmclaughlin@bendbulletin.corn offers reason to be optimis-

showed a small but significant increase in fruit consumption among children last year, she said. Young children are already the best when it comes to eating fruit with 33 percent

of 1- to 3-year-olds meeting the recommendation and more

than 40 percent exceeding it.

Adults have a long way to go. Those who aren't getting their five a day are 40 percent

to 50 percent short of that goal, Moore said. "We' re not just a grape away from meeting the recommendation." Figuring out how much is enough takes practice. The guidelines say a s e r ving of fruit is 1 cup (or '/2 cup if

her apartment was too small to store much.

National Cancer Institute's an-

Food banks across the nual survey of consumption, country are trying to put more in which people are asked to

bles is 1 cup if raw, /2 cup if cooked. But most people don't tote

produce into their clients' bas-

around measuring

recall, in detail, how much

H

TE

NTY

iBi EO~ FAIRER 8 RO July 29-August 2

tic, Moore said. The National Cancer I nstitute survey

produce a day was already well-established through the

kets. The Oregon Food Bank, they ate over a 24-hour period. which supplies NeighborIm- The CDC translated that data pact in Redmond, wants to to the state level by applying ramp up produce distribution a statistical model to the re50 percent by 2019 to 15 mil- sults of a different survey, the lion pounds a year, spokes- Behavioral Risk Factor Surwoman Myrna Jensen said. veillance System, which asks The fact that most adults people in each state how many aren't eating 5 servings of times a day they eat fruits and

T HE D E

dried). A serving of vegeta-

Arts In Care Gallery

talented local artists will be present

Community Education Series: Understanding the ABCs a Ds of Medicare

with their paintings on canvas

Emily carrick, MBA l Licensed

and paper including images from

Health Insurance Agent and

Italy, France, Cyprus, Britain and Guernsey.Friduy, August 7, 4:30 — 6:30pm, at Partners In Care,

Sales Executive, PacificSource

Featuring Douglas Campbell Smith and Jenny Smith. These

2075 NE Wyatt Court, Bend.

Medicare. A light lunch is provided. RSVP to (541) 382-5882 or lisamhgpartnersbend.org. No cost. Friday, August 21, Noon — 1:00pm, at Partners In Care,

2075 NE Wyatt Court, Bend.

c u ps.

Moore said the easiest strategy

ac

is to try to eat more variety. If you eat an apple a day, she said, add a banana, and you' ve hit

the mark for fruit. With vegetables, shoot for the colors of the rainbow — red, orange and dark green. "If you get more colors in your diet, you' ll prob-

(541) 382-5882 p a rtnersbend.org

Partners In Care

Hospice I Home Health I Hospice House I Transitions I Palliative Care


D4

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JULY 30, 2015

MoNEY Health carespendingto rise overthe next decade

Despite strong sales, fitnesstrackers see a shift towards abandonment By Anick Jesdanun

ginia, credits her Fitbit Flex

The Associated Press

with getting her to exercise regularly. She considered devices that do more, but she' s sticking with the Fitbit for now for its simplicity. It comes down to expecta-

NEW YORK — D e epak Jayasimha's fitness t r acker is now with his father-in-law

in India, where it sits unused. Annabel Kelly foisted hers off

,;

Q

on the kids. Virginia Atkin-

tions. Atkinson, a w r iter in

son took hers off to charge the

Adrian, Michigan, was expecting a cheerleader but found

battery and hasn't picked it up

since February. Although sales of Fitbit

By Noam N. Levey Tribune Washington Bureau

WASHINGTON — The to-

tal amount America spends on health care will rise mod-

estly over the next decade, continuing a trend that began during the recession, according to new projections from government economists. However, national health

bit Flex to gyms people join as part of New Year's resolutions, but drop out of by February or March. Except in her case, she still goes to the gym.

strong, many of their owners lose enthusiasm for them once the novelty of knowing BebetoMatthews /The Associated Press how many steps they' ve taken Fitness trackers burst onto the scene of the fitness world, but many Kelly, a researcher in New wears off. One research firm, owners lose enthusiasm for them once the novelty wears off. Canaan, Connecticut, won two Endeavour Partners, estimates Activite Pops from Withings at that about a third of these a conference.She wore itfor a trackers get abandoned after ways to keep people healthy. potential growth area for Fitbit. day and got frustrated that she six months. A health care in- Fitbit is also profitable, earning Jayasimha, a New Yorker wasn't credited for cross-trainvestment fund, Rock Health, $132 million last year on reve- who walks 3 to 4 miles a day, ing atthe gym. She made her says Fitbit's regulatory filings nue of $745 million. said his Jawbone Up stopped 5- and 7-year-old daughters suggest that only half of Fitbit's The company's market val- giving him information he wear them to make sure they nearly 20 million registered uation of $8.6 billion is high didn't already know. After it were getting exercise. (Unlike users were still active as of the compared with earnings so far, stopped working one day, he Kelly, the kids didn't have a first quarter of 2015. which could point to enormous didn't bother getting it fixed for choice.) "The question for investors is growth potential — or simply months. Even then, he never Withings CE O C e d ric how long the market will con- overvaluation. used it again. His wife used it Hutchings said the company tinue to grow at this rate, and Fitbit now has competition for two weeks before sending tried to design a device that whether Fitbit can execute on from Apple Watch and other it off overseas to her dad, who was primarily a watch, so peogrowing engagement before smartwatches that do w h at has yet to use it. ple will want to wear it regard"I was just carrying through less of its tracking capabilities. ... the number of devices sold fitnesstrackers do and more, per year reaches saturation," such as showing news updates with the motion," Jayasimha Withings is also gradually Malay Gandhi, a managing di- and boarding passes for flights. said. "For someone who is not adding functionality, such as rector at Rock Health, wrote on In a statement, Fitbit said physically active, I think it will swimming though a software ablog. it intends to remain a market be useful. But once you get to a update this week. A bandonment affects a l l leaderthrough new features state where you are happy with Simply selling hardware manufacturers of fitness track- and services to boost user en- the activities you do, it loses its would be a failure, Hutchings ers, which are relatively cheap gagement and revenue. The efficacy." said, if people don't use it. at about $100 and are commoncompany said it keeps users With smartphones, tablets In a statement, Jawbone ly given as gifts. Fitbit gets the motivated by offering ways and game consoles, IDC ana- didn't directly address product spotlight because it started to compete with friends and lyst Ramon Llamas said, you abandonment, but said it sees trading publicly last month family and awarding virtu- can download a new app or "high levels of user engageand has 76 percent of the U.S. al badges for hitting fitness game to give them new life. ment," given that the more That's not to say all of these time one spends with it, the market share by revenue, up milestones. Fitbit added that from 64 percenta year earlier, people who regularly use trackers get abandoned. more data Jawbone has to ofaccording to the NPD Group. their devices make healthier Eric Leverett, 52, a produc- fer personalized coaching and Investors and analysts are choices. tion manager in Birmingham, guidance. Makers of fitness trackers bullish on Fitbit's prospects. The statement didn't address Alabama, got a Fitbit Charge Its stock value has more than Fitbit owners who've stopped as a gift and engages in a are already thinking ahead doubled since the initial public using the device. friendly competition with his with higher-end models at offering. Analyst William PowIf people aren't using their 82-year-old dad on who walks double the price. The Fitbit er at Baird Equity Research trackers, they won't recom- more. Though the initial ex- Surge with GPS tracking and said Fitbit had room to grow mend them t o f r i ends and citement has worn off, he said, message notification costs worldwide, as only a quarter of family or upgrade when a new wearing the Fitbit encourages $250 and Jawbone's Up 4 with its revenue came from outside model comes out, said Dan him to walk the dog more often mobile payments costs $200. the U.S. last year. Power also Ledger, who tracks wearable and shun the golf cart while But A n droid s m artwatches wrote that Fitbits remain pop- devices at Endeavour Partners. playing a round. cost about as much, and Apple ular among employers and in- They also won't pay for premiShari Winston, a high school Watch just a bit more, starting surance companies looking for um subscription packages, a counselor in Falls Church, Vir- at $350.

BMC

patients pay the price in the form of distracted doctors.

Continued from 01 But Koppel and others who research EHRs have warned

that Epic's market dominance could contribute to an "our

way or the highway" attitude that could cause the vendor to be unresponsive to providers'

needs. In Koppel's mind, that's already happening. Epic and other popular EHR vendors offer products that would have been state of the art in

1997, he said. Physicians in Central Oregon have described their frustration with EHRs, and some

said the systems are causing colleagues to retire early. The issue stole the show at

"which, in fact, they couldn' t."

last week. Media outlets reported the physicians spent much of the time complaining about EHRs' lack of ability

American Health

to communicate across plat-

manage their data, takes a

forms, their high cost and how difficult they are to use. Ultimately, Koppel said,

different view. The government deserves

A ngela Rose with

journal Health Affairs. "These trends are in con-

tation of the law. Overall, the new

r eport

does not break out the specific effect of the Affordable

trast to when health spend- Care Act. ing growth remained at near But the authors said some historic low rates" during provisions, such as the expanand afterthe last recession, sion of Medicaid and the creindependent actuaries at the ation of new insurance subsifederal Department of Health dies, tend to push up overall and Human Services notedin health spending, while other the report. provisions, such as cuts in The annual projections, Medicare spending, tend to though necessarily uncertain, slow it. "There is a mix," said provide an important over- John Poisal, a co-author. view of emerging issues in the Other experts believe that nation's large and complex changes in the way medihealth care system. cal care is delivered, many This year's report contains spurred by the health law, are some encouraging news. beginning to have an effect as Though still increasing, well, as insurers and governhealth care spending is rising ment health programs reward far more slowly than it did physician groups and hospibefore the 2008-09 recession, tals that deliver better quality, when annual increases aver- more efficient health care. aged 9 percent through the O ther tre n d s i de n t i'80s, '90s and 2000s. Spend- fied in the report are more ing is projected to grow on worrisome. average 5.8 percent annually Rising costs of specialty over the next decade. drugs, such as new treatments The slowdown in total for hepatitis C, for example, spending growth is happen- threaten to make prescription ing despite the massive ex- drug costs skyrocket. Such pansion in coverage made costs are projected to have possible by the 2010 Afford- risen 12.6 percent in 2014, the able Care Act, which is bring- highest rate in a dozen years. ing millions of previously By 2024, the average uninsured Americans into

American's annual health

health plans. care tab, including insurance The new report projects premiums and out-of-pocket that the uninsured rate will expenses such as co-pays and dedine to just 7.6 percent in

deductibles, is expected to top

2024, down from 14 percent in $4,216, up from $2,618 in 2014, 2013, before the coverage ex- according to the report.

it tends to be a slower day in

health care, whereas Monday is the industry's biggest day. It will also give them the weekend to work out any kinks thatsurface,she said. BMC has scheduled fewer

appointments at the outset of its Epic launch to give providers more time to adjust, Mc-

Leod said. "As things change so rapidly in health care, we' re going

— Reporter: 541-383-0304, tbannou@bendbulletin.corn

++T DESERT

00 s

cv

to continue to make it better

and better and find a lot more things we can do with it," she

said. "This is really the tip of

'Tip of the iceberg'

BMC's reason for choosing

the

I n f orma- Epic is simple: "They' re best

tion Management Association, a professional organi-

in class," McLeod said.

zation that helps providers

searches EHRs for vendors and health care providers, gave Epic its highest ranking

some of the blame for failing

KLAS, a company that re-

for usability, tied with athen-

~

F

f th C g d t f*Ch t

h ~

P

ahealth, on its 2015 survey

THIS WEEKEHD'5 ISSUE S

from 17.4 percent in 2013, said

the report, published in the

why BMC is launching Epic the iceberg for us, and that' s on a Thursday. McLeod said really exciting."

to createuniform standards of nonhospital health care around how E H R s s hould providers. The ranking was " You can't focus on t h e function, she said, but it's also based on EHRs' ability to prepatient if y o u' re focused the users' faults. scribe electronically, compare on clicking away through P hysicians' a t t itudes o n medications and enter inforforms," he said. EHRs vary according to their mation, among others. A number of theories exist generation, she said. Those Epic tends to be more exas to why EHRs spur so many fresh out of medical school pensive than most EHRs on don't know anything but the market. Koppel said his complaints. M any f amiliar w i t h t h e EHRs, so they' re fine with it, employer, the University of subject, Koppel i n cluded, Rose said. Those in the mid- Pennsylvania, is spending maintain that EHR vendors dle of their careers mostly $1 billion to implement Epic. rushedtheirproducts to mar- accept that they have to use Harvard University is spendket before they were perfect- them, she said. ing $1.7 billion to do so, he It's the older physicians sard. ed because of the massive demand from providers who that don't want to adjust, Rose McLeod declined to say were trying to adopt them sard. how much BMC is paying for "I remember arguing with the software. quickly to receive federal incentive payments to do so. doctors who s aid, 'I don' t Some people might wonder "They pumped them out, want to learn an EHR. Just let whatever they had, claiming me practice in peace until I rethat the systems could do all tire,'" she said. kinds of things," Koppel said,

an American Medical Association conference in Atlanta

the 2010 health law.

spending is s till e xpect- "Per-capita spending and ed to outpace economic medical inflation are all at growth, threatening to make historically very modest levmedical care increasingly els," said Andy Slavitt, the unaffordable. Obama administration offiAnd by 2024, health care cialwho oversees the federal is projected to consume 19.6 M edicare and Medicaid propercent of the economy, up grams, as well as implemen-

monotony. She likened her Fit-

and other fitness trackers are

pansion began. The number of elderly Americans is also increasing, as baby boomers age, which tends to i ncrease health spending. Yet Medicare spending is projected to rise relatively slowly, restrained in part by measures to control costs in

f hild

f d M dd a l t„ ,

Come learn the ABC's and D's of IVledicare and the often confusing process of the Medicare system. You' ll find the information you need

to make the right decisions about IVledicare health insurance.

Free classes open to the public: BEND — Thursday, August 6, 4:30 p.m. Bend Senior Center 1600 SE Reed Market Road Sponsored by:

For more information call 541-241-6927

w ww.Nledicare.pacificsource.corn Paa j i C S O u r Ce

s

I

Medicare

fl I !~ M

la tJ OJI

This event is only for educational purposes. Noplan-specific benefits or details will be shared. PacificSourceCommunity Health Plans is anHMO/PPOplan with a Medicare contract. Enrollment in PacificSDUrceMedicare depends on contract renewal.

Y0021 MRK2699CMSAccepted


THURSDAY, JULY 30, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

D5

MEDICINE

er cart trans ants, teen not sowin own By Christin Nance LazeruseChicago Tribune

classmates. He says that they don't understand what it is to

be healthy." Brown's AP English litera-

yan Brown refuses to let his medical

ture and composition teacher

challenges limit the possibilities of his

Melissa Culbertson said he never asked teachers to take it easy on him. "He was, bar none, my top

future. "You have scientists and statistics that say it' s

student in class," Culbertson said. "When he went into the

I•

very rare to get a second transplant, and it is," Brown said. "But it's very rare to be not normal,

hospital, we were reading 'Invisible Man,' by Ralph Ellison, but he was so passionate about the book that he continued to read it and work diligently."

e

and being not normal — whether you' re autistic,

Brown received his heart on

or you have ADHD, or any problem; yeah, its a

May 15 — Culbertson's birthday — which she says was "the best birthday present ever." During his recovery, his feet and legs swelled up during a

al

crutch sometimes. I do push it to the limit — it should also motivate you, uplift you to say, 'I might

«I

as well show everybody else what I can do.'"

er j t

bout of pancreatitis, but in late I

JimKarczewaki/The Chicago Tribune

The 18-year-old Hammond, 54 years old and 40 years old, Indiana, resident has under- who said you know whether gone two heart transplantsI make it or not I' ve lived my most recently in May — but life," Brown said. "Now I have with the help of some dedicat- 90 percent of my heart, and ed teachers and staff at 21st I feel like it took the extra 10 Century Charter School, he percent from my old heart. "And what's going to stop was able to catch up with his schoolwork and is on track to me from being what I want to graduate next year with col- be?" lege credits. "I kind of feel like settling A fighter for GED is a failure, a cop-out," For a kid who was "born Brown said. "If I can do it, I

can do it. Medical restrictions shouldn't be an excuse to drop out and get a GED."

Brown was always an excellent student, according to his teachers, but his journey has helped him mature and crystallize what he wants to do with his life.

"Kids like Ryan are what make the j ob so rewarding," said Charlie Swanson, Brown's anatomy and physics

teacher, who has become a

member of the family. Brownhopestotakeenough dual credit courses this year

to attain an associate degree from Ivy Tech Community College alongside his diploma before heading to Purdue University in West Lafayette to

study biomedical engineering. He wants to develop heart devices, like the Impella Pump that he received not long be-

fore his second transplant. He credits much of his development over the past year to

the support of fellow patients on the heart transplant list at Northwestern Memorial Hos-

pital in Chicago. "Being 18 and I was around men who were 67 years old,

Back pain

Tasha Jetson holds an autographed photo from Michigan State men's basketball coach Tom Izzo while Ryan Brown discusses talking with the coach via phone and offering him player advice.

that they' ve rented for several

cal life, the worst outlook, the the time." worst experiences, but the They all talked about getting Jetson said the new heart thing that stops you from be- a heart by June, and for Brown presented positive physical ing great is yourself," Brown and four o f t h e m en, that changes almost immediately. said. "So what did I do with a came true. But the 67-year-old "When he came out, I jacked-up heart? I played foot- cheerleader of the group — a showed him i n t h e m i r r or ball. Was I supposed to? Heck man named Tom — died not what had happened," Jetson no. long after receiving his heart. "But at 13, you don't really said. "See, he had been born Brown said it was hard to lose blue, but now his lips were red, see the effects of what you' re his friend, but Tom serves as a blue," it's remarkable that he when they had always been a doing.My mom and dad and continual inspiration. "I'm not going to die; I'm gomade it out of the hospital the funny purple color." family see the effects of it." first time. Brown was born But Brown wasn't out of the ing to fight because of Tom." premature with a congenital woods yet. He was admitted More bad news In an effort to keep his spirheartdefect and underdevel- to theemergency room one Last winter, Brown caught its up, Brown's mom wrote an oped lungs, according to his month after the transplant. a stomach virus that triggered impassioned email to teachmother, Tasha Jetson. After his transplant, Brown his second bout of heart failure. ers and administrators at the "They didn't bring him to me decided he wanted to attend Even though he was 17, doctors school, so he could transition in a timely manner, and they school with his cousins at 21st transitioned him to Northwest- to a homebound student in an ern'stransplant floor because told me a technician is looking Century Charter School. effort to keep his spirits up. "21st Century has always he was physically an adult. But at his heart, which formed on Swanson — who Jetson calls the wrong side," Jetson said. felt like a family," Brown said. that meant doctors now direct- her adopted son — lived near "Even though I had those who ly communicated with Brown, the hospital and visited him to He underwent a heart procedure when he was only 3 didn't understand, who turned rather than talking mainly start setting up what Brown days old, but he was eventually to childish games, childish with his mom, which took needed to study and learn rereleased from the hospital and mimics, at the same time, you some getting used to. motely. Teachers provided mawould have regular checkups knew some people had your The wait for a heart was lon- terials and he would even parevery six months. back and would fight with you." ger this time — nearly three ticipate in class via FaceTime. "I' ve never seen more grit A bout with gastroenteritis Jetson said the school has months after he was admitat age 12 sent him to the emer- always monitored Brown's ted — and there were some out of a kid — to be able to stay gency room, eventually trig- health dosely, including call- dark moments for him and his awake and sit in a chair when he's constantly being poked gering congestive heart failure ing an ambulance twice when family. and sending him to Children' s he complained of shortness of Brown found his solace in a and prodded," Swanson said. Memorial Hospital in Chicago breath. support group with six other Swanson said that Brown's "He always had bouts of re- men stuck in the same situa- maturity has always been evion June 9, 2010. Brown was officially placed jection with (the) first heart; tion — waiting for a heart. dent, but being treated like an "The first transplant was on the transplant list on June his biopsies were never clean," adult at Northwestern really 21, 2010, and received his new Jetson said. more of a family thing, and I hastened his development. "What's astounding about heart six days later. But he tried to be like other had (mom) there," Brown said. "I' ll never forget," Jetson kids, including playing mid- "This time, you really were Ryan is he already had an said. "I was at Dollar General dle linebacker on the football by yourself most of the time. adult mindset. It was all a matoff Calumet with two of my team. You hadto come down to get ter of tapping into that," Swan"God gave me a jacked-up to know others who are going son said. "He never once asked boys when I get a phone call. I was at the register, trying to heart to show people that you through the same thing. Oth- for us to make it easier for him. "He doesn't appreciate the grab some snacks, and my can have the worst medical erwise, it was like sitting in a husband says, 'We' ve got a symptoms, the worst medi- jail cell thinking about it all immaturity of some of his

heart.' I dropped everything and started screaming."

practic. He said it's frustrating We' re not opposed to exploring because he knows he can treat

that."

A small group of those pa- certain types of radiating pain. tients develop persistent pain,

The Health Evidence Review

Continued from D1 the symptoms they usually deAlpine Physical Therapy scribe, but in the past he found What works co-owner Rob Hollander sees billing OHP to be difficult. The latest research in many OHP members in the

practice. Most of them are treated for ailments other than back pain, even though spine care accounts for at least half of Alpine's work with non-Medicaid

Whether Herrin begins see-

ing OHP members will depend on the reimbursement rate, but

he hopes he can. "That would be a wonderful thing," he said. The Oregon Health Plan will patients. also allow patients to use yoga, When it comes to back pain, massage and exercise therapy, most OHP members aren't get- but only if community care orting past the evaluation stage, ganizations like PacificSource Hollander said. "The reim- can figure out how to pay for bursement for Medicaid is not those forms of treatment. the best, but there's a populaTraditional insurers can't action that needs access to care cept bills from nonmedical proand needs the care," he said. viders, but CCOs have a pool of "I'm psyched there's going to flexible state funds, which they be an opportunity for those can spend on their members as patients." Redmond chiropractor Da-

they see fit. "If they wanted to

vid Herrin has turned away

exercise trainer, they could do it," Smits said.

many OHP members, who are

give you a coupon to go to an

often referred by a nurse pracPacificSource is open to the titioner working in the build- idea of paying for yoga and the ing where he has his practice, like, Little said. "It would be Redmond Wellness and Chiro- a very unusual arrangement.

NORTH STAR

and the solution for them ap- Commission is eager to discovpears to be exercise therapy, er how the policy change will combined with counseling to impact opioid use; exactly how back pain treatment bolsters deal with stress and depres- that will be tracked is yet to be the state's decision to throw sion, Deyo said. "Stress and determined, Smits said. open the door to alternative depression can lead to or agIn Central Oregon, a task medicine. gravate pain," he said. "And the force of doctors is already Large, randomized trials pain itself can aggravate stress working on reducing overprehave shown that for chron- and depression." scription of narcotics. Little ic back p a in , a cupuncture The Health Evidence Review said PacificSource will keep and c hiropractic t h erapy Commission expects the new contributing data to that effort. are equally helpful, said Dr. policy to be more expensive, — Reporter: 541-617-7860, Richard Deyo, professor of though the cost to the state kmclaughlin@bendbulletin.corn evidence-based medicine at hasn' t yet been calculated. OHP Oregon Health & Science Uni- members will be allowed to see versity. He served on a task one or more providers, in any force that advised the Health combination, up to 30 times a Evidence Review Commission. year for back pain. 30" Range "Different people respond to ¹ACR31 30B4 W The expense of a broader different things," he said. "The range of treatments could be outcomes tend to be very simi- offset by a dedine in narcotics lar, in the short term at least." use, Smits said. Some opioids Most people have back pain are quite expensive. :.: at some point in their lives, OHP expects to pay for few- Microwave Hood ~ zrrwrsorlw Deyo said. "The good news is er surgeries. The new policy You haul ®g 69 that pain is going to get better restricts surgery to spinal steover time, no matter what we nosis, which is a narrowing or jbbend.corn JIr 541- 382-6223 do." pinching of the spinal cord, and JOHNSON BROTHERS

Pkysmimof

die Jazrdusrrir presented at theSaints Gaia on November14,2015

k o~~ yAI UE

This award recognizes anactively practicing physician in Central Oregonwhose work hasbeendefined by compassionate patient care andprofessionalism.

DEADLINE FORNOMINATIONS IS AUG. 10. Download anapplication at stcharlesfoundation.org.

Nominate en outstundingphysici'en precticIngin CentmEOregon.

June, he was finally cleared to go home. The family now faces another challenge as the house

St. Charles Foundation

years is being sold at a Lake County Sheriff's auction on Aug. 7 for unpaid back taxes. "We looked into seeing if we could negotiate a purchase price and see if we could keep the house, but because a broker is handling it, they usually don't come down on price," Jet-

son said. "But whatever happens, life has to go on." Brown is now more cognizant of what he needs to do for

his health going forwardtaking medications, drawing blood to monitor his kidney

levels, walking regularly and resting when he feels tiredbut his dedication to staying

on track academically hasn' t waned. The day after he returned home, Brown started working

from Culbertson's classroom to catch up on his credits.

"Now, he's almost always parked at the computer in my class. He has a level of focus that I wish I had. He' ll sit

thereforfourhours,andIhave to ask him, 'Do you want a

snack'? Are you feeling OK'?'" Brown knows that the odds were stacked against him liv-

ing this long and may continue in his life, but he's confident that he will make his own road.

"They tell me I'm going to die; I assume that I'm going to live," he said. "Statistics say that I won't graduate because I'm black; I'm going to graduate and not only graduate with a diploma but, oh yeah, a two-year associate' s degree. So the real-

ity is life is what you make it."

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of Bend


D6

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JULY 30, 2015

ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT

'Devious Mai s'star raws on e eriences TV TODAY

• More TV listingsinside Sports

TV SPOTLIGHT

gives you a wider perspective and understanding of life.

I used to have a journal, and I

remember — I was on my own and had made this decision

"Devious Maids" 9 p.m. Mondays,Lifetime

Q

to do this for a living — I was

• Explain how the show

By Patricia Sheridan

"Devious Maids" does taking every job that I could. I took my dasses, and I started not play into stereotype.

Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

studying at the Actors Work-

You may know her for her role as Rosie Falta on Life-

shop Studio in New York City. I was sort of like waitressing or

time's "Devious Maids." Dania Ramirez's own life is as inter-

whatever I could do. I did mu-

esting as that of the character

friendships, the relationships, the struggle. It's about, really, the American dream. Rosie is dealing with immigration and having to leave her child behind, which is something I really related to because that is how and Iwas a featured extra.Ire- I felt. I was playing it from my member thinking, "Oh my god, mother's perspective and how he's a director and he's talking hard that must have been for

she plays. Her parents left the

Dominican Republic to move to the United States for a better

life, and she stayed in her home country with her grandmother. Annette Brown / Lifetime They worked to bring her and Dania Ramirez, right, and Roselyn Sanchez star in Lifetime'snDeher siblings to the U.S. legally, vious Maids." and she joined them in New York when she was almost 10. At 16, Ramirez left for college

a better life and future for all of

first thought you wanted to

A • creating these three-dimensional characters. The • I think it is about really

show is about these women, not what they do. It's about the

sic videos, anything I could. I saw everything as a part of my journey. I really didn't know what the business was, so everything felt like a big break to me. laughing) I did "Subway Stories," which was this little miniseries they did on HBO,

to me." It felt like I was a star.

her. I think we have tapped into

and worked her way through us. My grandmother raised me entertain? Montdair State University in along with a bunch of my other I have always been very New Jersey and into an acting cousins who are like my sisters. • outgoing and wanting to career. She had roles in "The entertain, and I didn't grow up Sopranos," "Heroes" and "EnWas it strange for you like watching television or anytourage." Her character on "De• when they left, or were thing when I was younger. So vious Maids" is infused with a you too young to notice? when I would watch telenovela lot of her mother's characteris• I was 6 months old. So at one of my friend's house, I tics and struggles. The mother • there was a point in my would go back and re-enact the of twins, she is married to di- life when I was younger that scene with my sister. I would rector Bev Land. I didn't understand why my write songs with my cousins • What were your parents parents weren't there. They and everybody and put on • doing in the United States were always present by mak- shows for Christmas when the before they sent for you from ing calls and trying to make it whole family would get togeththe Dominican Republic? back once a year. Once they er. I think I have always been • They came to the coun- were established and legal and sort of entertaining. • try just for a better life, had a base they could ask for you know? I grew up in a very us to get passports to come and Did you go through those small town in the Dominican join them here. It is a true immi• lean years where you Republic. We didn't have much, grant story. wondered if you made the right

telling these real human stories I know your children are rather than (just) a Latin story. • really young, but do you That is when stereotypes hapworry about them growing up pen when you are separating a in a privileged environment'? culture and putting them into a

so the families, our parents either came to America or Puerto

pect to life that I don't ever want

A•

Q•

A

Q A

Q•

Rico or Venezuela just to create

you remember how Q •• Do old you were when you

dectston? • It didn't matter to me how

A• hard it got. It did get hard.

Q•

A • We keep it very humble at the house. It's undeniable, of

box. That is something "Devi-

course. You want to give your children better than what you

does your mother Q •• How like the show, because

had and make them feel like they have everything. But I think there is also a lot of value in making them work for things and allowing them to see other places. My grandmother

she lived a lot of what is being portrayed'? • She loves the show! • laughing) You know it is

• They are 16 months old.

ous Maids" does not do.

A

great because I do have a fam-

ily full of women, so they get to just sit back and watch — not

still lives in that small town in the Dominican Republic where

just watch me — but find mo-

I grew up without running wa- ments where they can relate in ter or electricity. There is an as- some kind of way. There is a lot of my mother sometimes in

them not to see. It just makes Rosie. I think for her it is really you a better human being and funny to watch.

Pet sitter helpshersel to possessions

MOVIE TIMESTODAY • There may be an additional fee for 3-O and IMAXmovies • Movie times are subject to change atter press time. t

Dear Abby: A trusted and be-

loved family member who takes care ofmy cats— and therefore has a key to my house — has been stealing things like cleaning supplies, knickknacks, family pictures, etc. Most of them have little

monetary value. But imagine my surprise when I spotted some of my missing seashell collection in her

DFP,R

fish tank!

If you confront her, she will

probably deny it. This is not to im- activity. What you have described ply that you must continue putting as "wrestling" some people call up with it until she takes some- "foreplay." thing with greater sentimental (or Dear Abby:Can you advise me tangible) value. Ask her to return on how to respond to comments your key "because you have made from younger men when I am at other arrangements dinner or out with friends'? I often to care for y o ur get, "Wow, you are really good n cats," or change your looking for an older woman!" locks. Then follow which I find vaguely insulting even through with some- though they may think it's a comone who won't take pliment. I'm in good shape for my advantage of your age (48), but my husband agrees

Naturally, I can' t accuse her of taking things like trust. seashells that anyone can pick up Dear Abby: My wife is a big free on the beach, but I select ones woman (not fat). She's an athlete with distinct markings, which and quite strong. We both enjoy is why I know they are mine. It' s wrestling. We are evenly matched frustrating to run out of toothpaste and do it often. and find that the spare tube I just Many times she' ll pin me down bought is missing. It's not like she with me on my back, shoulders to doesn't have the money to buy her the ground. Other times, I do the own. same to her. The loser takes the She does so much for me and winner out to dinner. We enjoy it my kids. Should I just continue to greatly. ignore it'? Are we crazy? Are we weird? — Seashells by the Seashore

Dear S.B.T.S.:Your family member mayhave a touch ofkleptoma-

or weird, nor are you alone in this

And most of all, are we alone in this activity? — Happy Husband in Florida

it's rude.

I'm at a loss for a snappy comeback and usually so embarrassed that I just turn away and pretend that I didn't hear. Am I overly sen-

sitive? Should I be thanking them'? That doesn't feel right. Any witty responses you think would be good? —Speechlessin San Diego Dear Speechless: A left-handed compliment is one that has two meanings — one of which is not flattering to the recipient. Be-

cause you find it offensive, say, "I may look 'older' to you, but I'm

Dear Happy Husband:As long not so old I consider that to be a perhaps she takes the items because as no one gets hurt, what two con- compliment." she feels entitled to "payment" for senting adults do is their business. — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.corn nia — a compulsion to steal — or the favors she does for you.

I don't think you are either crazy

HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORTHURSDAY, JULY 30, 2015:This yearyouwil work very hard to achieve your goals. Be careful, as you could spend a substantial amount of money attempting to reach them. You also are likely to receive a pay raise or promotion. Still, consider curbing frivolous spending. If you are single, you could meet someonevery exciting in the next few weeks. Btars showths ging People met after of dsy yos'll have that time might be ** * * * D ynamic somewhat petty ** * * p ositive or c ritical. If you ** * Average are attached, make ** So-so special plans to * Difficult enjoy yourselvesas a couple in the next few weeks. Your relationship will benefit from the little gestures that let your sweetie know how much you care. AQUARIUScan be cold at times.

ARIES (March21-April 19) ** * * You might try to avoid a conflict, but it is inevitable. You understand where each party is coming from and what needs to happen, but you could feel powerless in convincing anybody of anything. Put your energy where it counts. Catch up on news. Tonight: Think "weekend."

TAURUS (April 20-May20)

** * * * You might see the big picture, but helping others see the samevision could be quite the challenge. Avoid someonewho istouchy,angryandseems to be seeking a fight. Do you really want that? Be more direct with a loved one.Tonight: Accept all the attention you get.

GEMINI (May21-June20) ** * * You keep hitting the same wall, and can't seem to get around it. You might want to try a different method. You could

or P.o. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA90069

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.21)

YOURHOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar

** * You could be in a situation where you are the only person communicating. Others might have difficulty responding in an authentic manner. You will be on top of

be spending too m uch ofyourenergy on frustration. Be aware of your limits with a child. Tonight: Decide to approach a situation in an entirely different way.

a major change, if youcan remain open.

CANCER (June21-July 22)

** * * You might not understand what all the fuss is about until someone close to you launches into a tirade. You' ll want to advise this person on the best way to proceed. Be smart and initiate a conversation with a respected friend for some feedback. Tonight: Let the party begin.

** * * You have the ability to see a situation in a newway. Howyou handle a personal matter could change greatly once you stop sitting on your anger. Simply relax and try a different approach. You could be surprised by the results. Tonight: Go along with a suggestion.

LEO (July23-Aug.22) ** * You will strive to handle a situation without losing your cool; however, don't be surprised if the anger gets to you. The issue will be whether you direct it to the appropriate situation. How cananything change if you do not address your feelings? Tonight: Choose astressbuster.

VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) ** * * You have a way about you that draws many people toward you, especially earlier in the day. Communicating your feelings might be difficult. Try not to let your affections get involved. Dote on a child or new friend. Tonight: Off to the gym to work through stress.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct.22) ** * * * Your playfulness will emerge and take you in anew direction. Others are likely to want to join you. Avoid letting stress build up. The less said, the better. You might doubt the authenticity of some-

one's feelings, butsaynothing for now. Tonight: Inweekend mode.

Check in with a neighbor sometime today. Tonight: Get some extra R and R.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec. 21)

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.19) ** * * You might want to open up a conversation in the morning, but someone could receive that gesture the wrong way. You will know if this person misread your words and intentions. You might need to m ake amends. Tonight:Accepta dinner invitation.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fsb.18) ** * * * You could be in a situation where you don't know how to complete or work through a problem. Hold off on making a move, and you will see that others feel the same way. Beopen to a discussion, and the outcome will be better than you had imagined. Tonight: All smiles.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March20) ** * * Use the morning to further an important cause. The more supporters you have, the better off you will be. Honor a fast change, and know full well what your limits are. By midday, you might want to pull backsome.Tonight:Getsom ezzz's before your weekend starts. © King Features Syndicate

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Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 &IMAX, 680 SWPowerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • ANT-MAN (PG-I3) 12: I0,215,325, 720, 755, I030 • ANT-MAN 3-D (PG-13) 11:25a.m., 5, 10:40 • ANT-MAN IMAX 3-D (PG-13) 1, 4, 10:25 • INSIDE OUT (PG)11:10 a.m., 2:15,4:45, 7:35, 10:05 • JURASSIC WORLD (PG-13) 11:15 a.m., 7:05 • JURASSIC WORLD 3-D (PG-13) 3:05, 10:05 • MAGIC MIKE XXL (R) 12:30, 3:30, 7, I 0:45 • MINIONS (PG) 11:30 a.m., 2, 4:30, 7:20, 9:50 • MINIONS 3-D (PG) 12:15, 2:45, 6, 9 • MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE — ROGUENATIONIMAX 3-D (PG-13j 7 • MR. HOLMES (PG) 11:45 a.m., 3:15, 6:45, 9:15 • PAPER TOWNS (PG-13) 11a.m., 1:45, 4:45, 7:30, 10:15 • PIXELS (PG-'I3) 12:15, 3:10, 7, 9:45 • PIXELS 3-D (PG-13)12:20, 3:25, 7:20, 10:20 • SOUTHPAW (R) 12:30, 3:45, 7:45, 10:35 • TERMINATOR GENISYS(PG-13) 11:50 a.m., 3:10, 6:55, 10 • TRAINWRECK (R) 12:45, 3:40, 6:55, 10:10 • VACATION (Rj 11:25 a.m., 3, 6:40, 10 • ACCESSIBILITYDEVICESARE AVAILABLE FOR SOME MOVIES.

7 p.m. on TRAV,"TimeTraveling With Brian Unger" —A new episode called "Kentucky Horses 8 Bourbon" finds host Brian Unger virtually traveling back in time to examine two important traditions of the Bluegrass State. He introduces some of his guests to legends in the sport of horse racing even whenthe sport was young, then leads themalong the Bourbon Trail, with a detour from the fabled route to seekthe origin of that uniquely crafted alcoholic

beverage.

7 p.m. onWE, nL.A. Hair" —Imitation may be the sincerest form of flattery, but only up to apoint, as hairstylist Kim Kimble discovers as this unscripted series opens its fourth season. The lines for a commercial battle royale are soon drawn after another celebrity stylist, the owner of his own exclusive salon, decides to expand his upscale brand into Kim's business turf of wigs and weaves. The competition escalates as this new seasonunfolds,andKim's whole staff finds itself swept up into the drama. 8 p.m.onCW, "Beautyandthe Beast" —It's finally wedding day for Cat and Vincent (Kristin Kreuk, Jay Ryan) — presumably — but

ongoing concernsaboutthe experiments turning ordinary people into superhumans could derail the nuptials in the newepisode "Shotgun Wedding." Though Cat's thoughts wander back to the

case, JTandTess (Austin Basis, Nina Lisandrello) try to help Vincent keep her focused ongetting to the moment of saying, "I do." Heather (Nicole Gale Anderson) also worries. 8:31 p.m. on 6, "Momn — Christy (Anna Faris) decides it's time to get out of the waitressing game in "Nudes and aSix Day Cleanse." She makes adefinite bid to pursue a new career. Bonnie andAlvin (Allison Janney, Kevin Pollak) try to live their youth again, and the results aren't necessarily attractive at their present ages. Alan

Rachins ("L.A.Law") gueststars.

Nate Corddry, Matt Jones and Sadie Calvano also star. 10:02 p.m. onUSA, "Graceland" — Mike (Aaron Tveit) hatches a plan that he hopeswill help him learn more about what is in Gusti's (guest star Mahedi Rakib) closely guarded trunk in the newepisode "Buto Ijo." Meanwhile, Briggs (Daniel Sunjata) assists Paige

(SerindaSwan)assheprepares to go under cover with the shipping company of the Armenian mafia. Ct Zap2it

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Tin Pan Theater, 869 NWTin PanAlley, 541-241-2271 • THE CONNECTION(Rj8:30 • TESTAMENT OFYOUTH (PG-13j5:45 • WHEN MARNIEWAS THERE (PG)3:30 I

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Sisters Movie House,720 DesperadoCourt, 541-549-8800 • ANT-MAN (PG-13)4:30, 7:15 • MINIONS (PG) 4, 6:30 • PAPER TOWNS (PG-13j 4:30, 7:15 • TRAIN WRECK (R) 4:15, 7 Madras Cinema 5,1101SWU.S. Highway 97, 541-475-3505 • ANT-MAN (PG-13)1:20, 4:10, 7,9:40 • MINIONS (PG) 12:30, 2:45, 5, 7:10, 9:15 • PAPER TOWNS (PG-13) 1:50, 4:20, 6:50, 9:20, • PIXELS (PG-13) noon, 4:55, 7:30 • PIXELS 3-D (PG-I3) 2:25, 9:50 • TRAINWRECK (R) 1:15, 4, 6:45, 9:30 • VACATION (Rj 12:10, 2:30, 4:50, 7:10, 9:25 •

Pine Theater, 214 N.MainSt., 541-416-1014 • MINIONS (Upstairs — PG) 6:30 • PIXELS (PG-I3) 4, 7 • THE UPSTAIRSSCREENING ROOM HAS LIMITED ACCESSIBILITY.

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

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Redmond Cinemas,1535 SWOdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777 • ANT-MAN (PG-13)2, 4:30, 7,9:30 • MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE — ROGUENATION(PG-13j 8 • PIXELS (PG-I3) 2:15, 4:30, 6:45, 9 • TRAINWRECK (R) 2:30, 5:'I5 • VACATION (Rj 2:30, 4:45, 7, 9:15

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Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.corn THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JULY 30, 2015

To place an ad call 541-385-5809 246

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Buying Diamonds Grass fattened natural /Gold for Cash beef, cut and Ari Center wrapped at $3.50/lb. Caldera is hiring a full Saxon's Fine Jewelers Cost Accountant 541-480-8185 541-389-6655 time Facilities Pro- Microsemi is seeking a Cost Accountant in + Peat Mixes gram Coo r dinator Bend. Maintains standard costs of all invenBUYING + Juniper Ties and a full time Facili- tory. Departmental cost analysis and control to Lionel/American Flyer Beautiful designer + Paver Discounts ties Maintenance Co- forecast. trains, accessories. 202 jNij « sectional + Sand + Gravel 50 BM G A r malite ordinator for the Blue 541-408-2191. Excellent condition Want to Buy or Rent rifle, single shot bolt + Bark Performs closed work order variance analysis Lake Facility. Info at $850 to identify costing issues and initiate correcgun, exc. cond., low BUYING & SE L LING Instantiandscaping.corn I www.calderaarts.org 503-781-5285 Wanted: $Cash paid for md. count. Very accu- All gold jewelry, silver tive actions. 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We are committed to inclusion and website at Butte, no collar. Help! 541-408-6900. 476 knacks 4 upholstered diversity. Adopt a great cat or 541-408-4733 or www.hacsa.org/jobs two! A ltered, vacci- stools. Almost new, For S a le : Ki m b er Employment Humane Society of To apply please visit http: //www.microsemi. nated, ID chip, tested, p aid $900 sell f o r pro-carry 45 auto w/ Central Oregon. Opportunities req u isition more! CRAFT, 65480 $450. 541-953-9256 USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! corn/company/careers/us-jobs extras, $895. Ruger 3082. 78th, Bend, Sat/Sun, Estate Henredon Fur- American .308 w/4x12 Add your web address Door-to-door selling with Beautiful Classical 1-5p.m. 541-389-8420 to your ad and readniture: Dining Room scope, $300. Ruger Persian rug from www.craftcats.org ers on TheBu/Ietln's fast results! It's the easiest Table 8 Chairs $700, M77 .270 w/scope & Original Karastan Home Delivery Advisor ammo, $475. web site, www.bend- way in the world to sell. 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Quantity www.craftcats.org or ing/sports gear, females, protected veterans, individuals with $2500 503-351-2746 c/o Kurt Muller Discount, 541-977-31 81 disabilities, and any other legally protected call 541-389-8420 for Pre-'40s B/W photog503-866-8858 PO Box 6020 pickup or to learn lo- raphy. 541-389-1578 basis. We are committed to inclusion and di247 C.O. ORCHARD Bend, OR 97708-6020 cations of trailers. versity. GRASS, weed free, Sporting Goods Call The Bulletin At or e-mail resume to: China c a binet circa 70 lb. bales, $1 90/ton. Chocolate Lab puppy, 1940 2-piece; bot541-385-5809 kmuller©bendbulletin.corn - Misc. To apply for t his p osition please visit M , A K C . Re a d y tom measures 75"L, No delivery. No phone calls, please. Place Your Ad Or E-Mail http: //www.microsemi.corn/company/careers/ 541-390-0022 0 8/1 0/1 5, $400 . top 71" L, 17" D. Top The Bulletin/s a drug-free workplace. EOE us-jobs and apply to requisition 3148. At: www.bendbulletin.corn 541-932-4666 Pre-employment drug screen required. has s l iding g l a ss Second crop orchard Maltese Cocker m ix doors, bottom has 4 grass hay, 75 lbs., shots, lined d r awers in puppies, lady sized bales, $200 Medical General 541-213-9911 or middle with cabinets in-field. Mixed grass 541-536-5844. on either side. Comes PHYSICAL THERAPIST hay, $175 i n -field. Osprey Double — FULL TIME Prineville. M altese mix, y o u n g with 2 keys to lock Pygmy kayak. Feather 54'I -416-0106 WALLOWA MEMORIAL HOSPITAL adults, neutered, doors, $150. Antique wood Craft rudder. B u ilt * hope chest mortar, conLOCATED IN ENTERPRISE, OR shots. Free to forever museum / * Great Supplemental Income!! Weighs only MIXER Wheat Straw for Sale. crete, etc. 12 cu. ft., approved ho m es. 40" Lx17" Dx17"H his- 2009. 0lbs. I ncludes 2 towable, Also, weaner pigs. w / 1 3HP Current Oregon Physical Therapy License I The Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our Satur- I 541-213-9911 or tory of chest and mu- 6 541-546-6171 seum is i n c h est. custom fit Red Fish Honda gas, hydrau541-536-5844 and CPR Required. Must Possess a Broad I day night shift and other shifts as needed. WeI Some minor scratches seats; cockpit covers; lic dump, used once, Spectrum of Skills Related to Home Health • currently have openings all nights of the week.• Mini-long hair Doxies 10 and needs lock re- rollers and saddles for l ike n ew . 341 I M ER and In/Out Patient Care. Sports Medicine a / Everyone must work Saturday night. Shifts weeks, UTD, shots, placed,$50. crossbars. $ 1 5 00. Henchman 4HSM-4, Horses & Equipment start between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and Plus. Excellent Benefit Package. not a p u ppy m ill, 541-504-5224 541-953-9256 new $5000, s e l l / end between 2:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m. Allpo541-383-8921 2 stalls for rent, grass $3950. • sitions we are hiring for, work Saturday nights.• Equal Opportunity Employer 249 216 P omeranian p u p s , 503-78'I -8812 turnouts, 4 mi. from • Starting pay is $9.25 per hour, and we pay aI Visit our website at wchcd.org or contact Coins & Stamps Art, Jewelry pure bred, sables, RimRock arena. $400 minimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shifts g Linda Childers O 541-426-5313 tri-colored markings, & Furs are short (11:30 - 1:30). The work consists of• Portable G e n erator, mo. 541-389-9844 Private collector buying dewormed, g r e at / loading inserting machines or stitcher, stackGene rac 40 0 0XL, dispositions, ready postagestamp albums & Desperately Seeking $300. 541-420-4259 383 ing product onto pallets, bundling, cleanup and Wafer FabOperator collections, world-wide 7/24. Taking dep. Missing 1940s diaProduce & Food Microsemi is seeking experienced Semicon- / other tasks. and U.S. 573-286-4343 Call a f te r 4pm 265 m ond ring sold a t ductor Operators for multiple shifts. Operate 541-383-8195 (local, cell phone). Bend Pawn approx. Building Materials THOMAS ORCHARDS equipment in the areas of Thin Films, Photoli- IFor qualifying employees we offer benefitsl Sept.13-17, 2014 has Kimberly, Oregon thography using Projection Aligners and Step- / including life insurance, short-term 8 long-term POODLE pups,toy or 240 central diamond and 2 REDMOND Habitat disability, 401(k), paid vacation and sick time. pers and Etching. Set up and run product mini, Chi-poos also U-pick jjl Ready Crafts & Hobbies little side stones, one RESTORE using semiconductor processing and test 541-475-3889 is missing. Sz. 7.5. Picked Building Supply Resale equipment. ~ Please submit a completed application Queensland Heelers H Viking 541-213-1221 Please usqva ma Quality at attention Kevin Eldred. Freestone canning Standard & Mini, $150 Huskylock 905 Serger keep trying! Will pay Perform equipment set ups and calibration LOW PRICES Applications are available at The Bulletin peaches Sunbright 8 up. 541-280-1537 with user's guide and any reasonable price. operations, may perform routine preventive 1242 S. Hwy 97 front desk (1777 S.W. Chandler Blvd.), or $1.85nb. www.rightwayranch.wor manual. $350 obo. maintenance tasks. Work in the clean room 541-548-1406 an electronic application may be obtained Nectannes 75S/lb. dpress.corn 253 541-385-5297 environment with minimal supervision. Read Open to the public. upon request by contacting Kevin Eldred via Santa Rosa plums and understand all process and safety • TV, Stereo & Video Siberian Husky pupemail (keldred © bendbulletin.corn). 95tt/Ib. 241 267 documents. P e r forms inspections using pies, AKC, shots, microscopes. Provide feedback to supervi34" Sony Trin-XBR, grt Bicycles & READY PICKED $1000+. 541-213-9911 Fuel & Wood No phone calls please. sors/production managers with reports of yield pic, not flat screen, $60. or 541-536-5844. Dark sweet Cherries Accessories and equipment i s sues. 541-647-2685 * No resumes will be accepted * $1.85/Ib, All Year Dependable W olf Husky pups,only 3 Firewood: dry BRING CONTAINERS! Microsemi Corp. is an Affirmative Action and left! Reduced to $350. 257 Lodgepole,split, del, Open 7 days a week, Drug test is required prior to employment. 541-977-7019 Equal Opportunity Employer of minorities, EOE. Musical Instruments 1 /$195; 2/$3 6 5 . 8 a.m.to 6 p.m. only females, protected veterans, individuals with Yorkie AKC pups 2M, Multi-cord discounts! 541-934-2870. disabilities, and any other legally protected 2F, adorable, UDT cash, check, Visa, MC Weare at the Bend basis. shots, health guar., pics The Bulletin 541-420-3484, Bend nrvinycen rral oregon sinceraa Farmer'sbfarkef $500/up. 541-777-7743 We are committed to inclusion and diversity Trek Navigator 21 Ponderosa pine fireon Wednesdays and To apply for this position visit http: //www 210 speed, step- thru wood split, $160 or Fridays.Visit us on microsemi.corn/company/careers/us-jobs frame, gear bag, helFurniture & Appliances trade. 541-419-1871 Facebook for updates! mets. Like new $350. 541-388-0811 PRICE REDUCED! Pristine Yamaha 246 console piano with Guns, Hunting bench and sheet & Fishing music.Only $2100 OBO,not incl. ship. 3 piece hardwood wall 541-318-7279 days unit, exc. 27" HDTV 2 Dozen goose decoys, use water or f i eld, by7PM Included. $599 obo. $200. 541-389-7582 ' 541-526-1879

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The Bulletin Serving Central Oregon since19IB

541-385-5809

DIVORCE $155.

C o m plete p r eparation. I n cludes

children, custody, support, property, and bills division. N o court a p pearances. Divorced i n

1- 5 w e eks

possible. 503-772-5295 • www.paralegalalternatives

.corn • legalaltOmsn.corn

MEDICAL B ILLING at h om e Billing and

S P ECIALIST N EEDED! Train

f o r a car e e r w o r k ing w i t h M e d i cal I n surance Claims! N O E X PERIENCE

NEEDED! Online

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HS Diploma/GED and Computer/Internet needed. 1-877-259-3880

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Relocation Sale Every- MOVING 8 E S TATE Huge Two-Family Yard ESTATE SALE t hing must go! CA S ALE! Sat. & S u n . Sale, Sat-Sun, 8-3. House f u ll! Li v ing ** FREE ** king b e d fra m e, 8-4. Oak p e destal, Furniture, dishwasher, microfiber sofa, f o ur room, dining room, of- Garage Sale Kit kitchen table, living dining table w/ butter- microwave, h o useiron 8 glass top side fice, two b edrooms, Place an ad in The room furn. Fri and f ly leaves 8 6 o a k h old i t ems, l a w n tables, Ri e M u noz family room, over full Bulletin for your gaSat 8-1 63245 April chairs, china cabinet mower, yard and garartwork, two fridges, kitchen, PLUS antique rage sale and reAnn Court 72"x40"x19", oak gun den tools, w elder, gallery style pottery 8 c hairs, marble t o p ceive a Garage Sale display cabinet (cap. generator, fis h ing decor, k i tchenware, table, glassware & Kit FREE! 288 of 10), shop storage rods, reels, tackle, K itchenaid, Fra n - china, collectibles, MidSales Southeast Bend cabinets & tools, main much much m o re. ciscan Desert Rose,. C entury Modern & KIT IN CLUDES: line IBCS 20" roto11353 SW Red Cloud Antiques include dish Retro items, shop full • 4 Garaqe Sale Signs 6 1091 Borden D r , • $2.00 Ogff Coupon To tiller, garden t ools, Rd, Powell Butte. sets, glassware 8 of all kinds of power & Bend. Sat. O nly! Use Toward Your books, paintings, guichina, jewelry, cam- hand tools, weed eat9am-2pm, clothes, Ad tar, c a nning j a r s,Sat. 8/1, 9-3. Furniture eos, 1942 Johnson ers, yard machines, •Next 10 Tips For "Garage toys, bike, Barbie sewing counter/cabi- household, k itchen, boat motor, crocks, snow blower, jig saw, dream house, misc. net, Rosebrook wheel m otorcycle fruit jars, linens. Yard drill press, lathe, table Sale Success!" par t s , m achines mo w e r, sander, lots of wood Disney items, t rees, sculpture, 1968 Sea baseball cards, anKing boat, 13'x6" 9.8 Ryobi 10" table saw, working tools, chain shrubs, equip trailers, tiques, lots of misc. PICK UP YOUR Craftsman 10" com- saw, antique boat mo- GARAGE SALE KIT at 72 Chevy p/up, Chou HP Mercury motor, OWWI, 18805 Gross pound miter saw, nice tor, pressure washer, Chou dolls, Bitty Ba- d epth finder, a n d Dr. x-street Vander1777 SW Chandler patio set, yard & gar- older riding mower, fly Ave., Bend, OR 97702 bies & access., books, more. 7136 NW 69th vert and S. Century. Pl. d en items, lots o f fishing poles, lots of t oys, clothing a n d quality misc. Fri-Sat tools, outdoor furniture, The much more. Fri. - Sat. Bulletin 9-5. Sewing Cenrral Oregonsince 19D3 Tool cabinet, Singer Find exactly what 9-4, numbers Fri 8am 1970 Kawasaki motor 61975 SE SkyTreadle cabinet, 3174 NW F a irway b ike, lots o f m i s c ! line View Dr. you are looking for in the and air compressor, SpeHeights Dr, Fri-Sat 9-4, numbers GARAGE SALE Fri., CLASSIFIEDS Huge Sale Fri/Sat, 8-4, cialized bike, collecoff Mt. Washington Fri 8 a.m. Baker Rd. to 7/31, Sat. 8/1, 8-3. Steens Mtn Lp, tor items, books, tea www.atticestatesan- 18882 R i v erwoods kayaks, bikes, tools, 61315 292 downsizing to 1 home, cups, furn i t ure. dappraisals.corn Dr. Pics & info © patio furniture, misc. see Craigs List ad. Fri.-Sat., 8-4. 13867 Sales Other Areas www.atticestatesan541-350-6822 2444 NE Lynda Ln. SW Peninsula, CRR dappraisals.corn 290 2-Family w e c leaned 541-350-6822 Cowgirl Ca$h M ULTI-FAMILY Fri . , Sales Redmond Area out every room, small I buy Western & Sat., Sun., 9-3 (no NOTICE antiques, el- Remember Vintage. Boots, leather, SALE: Fri.-Sat. 8 -4. earlybirds) C lothes, ESTATE SALE 4723 furniture, to remove liptical, teaching supjewelry. 924 Brooks, sp o r ting S W Obsidian, S a t . Misc. decor, house- furniture, your Garage Sale signs plies. etc. worth com541-678-5162. Buying hold, sporting goods, goods, etc. 163 NE 8/1, 9-4, Sun. 8/2, 9-4. ing out in the heat! Fri. (nails, staples, etc.) Wed.- Fri. 11-6 & by apt. c lothes. 61040 S . McCariney Drive. after your Sale event "Super Goodies" Guy Sat. 8-4. 13877 SW Queen Dr., ¹5. Rois over! THANKS! Sale, tools, camping, Peninsula Drive, CRR M ulti-Family sat, F r i . maine Village. From The Bulletin Just bought anewboat? hunting, fishing, much 9-3. Baby bike Big Garage Sale! Fri. and your local utility more! CASH ONLY! Sell youroldoneinthe People Look for Information Sat. trailer, tw o l e ather 7/31 & Sat. 8/1, 8-4. companies. rocking chairs, book Fri. 8 Sat. 8-3, 2102 NW 6155 NW R a inbow ClaSSifiedS!ASkabOut our About Products and & grandma's Quince Ave., T o ols, R d., CRR. Lots o f The Bulletin SuperSellerrates! Services Every Dsythrough shelves, serenacentralOregons/nceala attic. 2945 NE Canoe stereo speakers, useful items, see de541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classifieds Ct., off Boyd Acres Steven King books. tails on craigslist. www.bendbulletin.corn

ESTATE SALE!

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E2 THURSDAY, JULY 30, 2015 • THE BULLETIN Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

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I 1-877-877-9392.

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Need to get an ad in ASAP? You can place it online at: www.bendbulletin.corn

541-385-5809

Employment Opportunities

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476

476

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

Warehouse

Maintenance

caution when pur-

products or l I chasing services from out of s I the area. Sending I c ash, checks, o r I credit i n formation I • may be subjected to I FRAUD. I more informa- l I For tion about an adver- • I tiser, you may call I the Oregon State I Attorney General's I s Office C o n s umer s

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 476

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Diesel Mechanic

Distribution Center Worker

Les Schwab is looking for a Diesel Mechanic to join our Maintenance team! Responsibilities include preventative maintenance and repairs on tractors, trailers, dollies, corporate vehicles and forklifts. Also responsible for major component overhaul and diagnosis. Other duties include repair orders and cleaning and maintaining the shop area. Requirements include a high school diploma or equivalent, valid Class A CDL or the ability to acquire one within 3 months of hire (must meet DOT 3.96 regulations).

We have immediate openings in our Distribution Center. Work includes order filling, receiving and loading product for distribution to our tire centers. These are full-time positions offering competitive pay, excellent benefits, retirement and cash bonus. Various shifts available.

Les Schwab has a reputation of excellent customer service, with over 450 stores and 7,000 employees in the western United States. Pleasego to www.lesschwab.corn to apply.No phone calls please.

Les Schwab has a reputation of excellent customer service, with over 450 stores and 7,000 employees in the western United States. Please go towww.lesschwab.corn to apply. No phone calls please.

TURN THE PAGE For More Ads The Bulletin

Les Schwab is proud to be an equal opportunity employer.

Les Schwabis proud to be an equal opportunity employer.

The Bulletin

Serving Central Oregon since 19IB

Tbe BUIjetin

GRAPHIC DESIGNER

Creative Services In this position the ideal candidate will work with a variety of local clients, sales executives and other WESCOM newspapers. The successful candidate will be responsible for order entry, scheduling, proofing ads, organizing attendant documents, taking photos, ad layout work, filing, and customer interaction in support of their advertising programs

a

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

Circulation Department In this position you will assist our subscribers and delivery carriers with subscription transactions, answering account questions and handling delivery concerns ~TQ USIA • Excellent verbal, written and communication skills • Accurate typing, filing, multi-tasking, and organizational skills • Ability to develop and maintain good customer service and relationships • Must be able to function comfortably in a fast-paced, deadline-oriented office environment. • Pre-employment drug testing is required

Qualificationa:

• Proven design skills and experience • Creative, innovative and willing to work hard • Ability to organize, prioritize and handle multiple projects • Comfortable with daily deadlines • Proficiency using Adobe InDesign, ltustrator and Photoshop-a must • Must successfully pass a drug test

If you have a positive attitude, strong service/team orientation and problem solving skills WE WANT TO TALK TO YOU!

If you are a results-oriented professional possessing strong design skills, are practiced in the fine art of communication and have a passion for creating visual communication solutions for a wide variety of local businesses WE WANT TO TALK TO YOU!

For immediate consideration please send your resume and cover letter to:

kmuller©bendbullet in.corn.

No agencies or telephonecalls please

The BILlIIetin Tbe BUIjetm ROLL TENDER JOURNEYMAN PRESSMAN

Pressroom

This position is full-time 4 days per week, 10 hours per day, from 3:30 p.m. to approximately 2:00 am on a rotating schedule that will allow for every other weekend being 3 days off.

This is an entry-level position with the opportunity to learn a new trade. Position pays $10.00 hour depending on experience

• Move and lift 50 Ibs or more on a continuing basis • Reaching, sitting, pushing, pulling, stooping, kneeling, walking and climbing stairs. • Ability to learn and execute safety practices

• Successfully pass a drug screen

Send yourresume toanelson@bendbulletin.corn Applications are also available at The Bulletin, 1777 Chandler Ave. Bend, OR 97702

If you are a self-motivated, teamoriented individual and have a positive "Can Do" attitude WE WANT TO TALK TO YOU! Send your resume to anelson@bendbuffeti n.corn Applications are also available at The Bulletin, 1777 Chandler Ave. Bend, OR 97702

Western Communications, inc. and their affiliated companies, is proud to be an equal opportunity employer, supporting a drug-free workplace

C all 54 /-385-580 9 to r o m ot e o u r service

LOCAL MONEY:We buy secured trust deeds & Building/Contracting L andscapingiyard Care note, some hard money loans. Call Pat Kellev NOTICE: Oregon state NOTICE: Oregon Land541-382-3099 ext.13. law requires anyone scape Contractors Law who con t racts for (ORS 671) requires all construction work to businesses that adThe Bulletin is your be licensed with the vertise t o p e r form Employment Construction Contrac- Landscape Constructors Board (CCB). An tion which includes: Marketplace active license p lanting, deck s , means the contractor fences, arbors, Call is bonded & insured. water-features, and inVerify the contractor's stallation, repair of irCOB l i c ense at rigation systems to be 5 41-3 8 5 - 5 8 0 9 www.hirealicensedl icensed w it h th e contractor.corn Landscape Contracto advertise. or call 503-378-4621. tors Board. This 4-digit The Bulletin recom- number is to be inwww.bendbulletin.corn mends checking with cluded in all adverthe CCB prior to con- tisements which inditracting with anyone. cate the business has Some other t rades a bond, insurance and also req u ire addi- workers c ompensaServing Central Oregon since 19O3 tional licenses and tion for their employcert ifications. ees. For your protection call 503-378-5909 Handyman or use our website: www.lcb.state. or.us to I DO THAT! check license status Home/Rental repairs before contracting with Small jobs to remodels the business. Persons Honest, guaranteed doing lan d scape maintenance do not work. CCB¹151573 r equire an LC B l i Dennis 541-317-9768 cense. LandscapingNard Care

The Bulletin

No agencies or telephone

No agencies or telephone ca//s please.

Totavalil,

If you are a self-motivated, teamoriented individual and have a positive "Can Do" attitude WE WANT TO TALK TO YOU!

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.

The successful candidate will work full-time 4 days per week, 10 hours per day, from 3:30 p.m. to approximately 2:00 a.m. on a rotating schedule that will allow for 3 days off every other weekend. •

e

Tolauat 1

• 1-2 years web press experience • Move and lift 50 Ibs or more on a continuing basis • Reaching, sitting, pushing, pulling, stooping, kneeling, walking and climbing stairs. • Ability to learn and execute appropriate safety practices • Successfully pass a drug screen

Pressroom

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For consideration please send your resume and cover letter to: dwinikka@bendbuffeti n.corn

Western Communications, inc. and their affiliated companies, is proud to be an equal opportunity employer, supporting a drug-free workplace

m- mtj

Customer Service Representative Ed Staub & Sons Petroleum, Inc. has an immediate opening for a profe s sional, self-motivated t e am Commercial/Investmentl member for our Redmond Oregon Bulk Apt./Nlultiplex General Pro erties for Sale I Plant. Applicant WILL CHECK YOURAD have excellent cusNewer high end build tomer service skills; ing in high traffic loca experience answertion on G reenwood ing phones, customer close to d o wntown accountmaintenance, Bend. AD¹1742 posting p a yments, TEAM Birtola Garmyn reconciling accounts, on the first day it runs High Desert Realty completing inventory, to make sure it is cor541-312-9449 along with other tasks. rect. "Spellcheck" and www. BendOregon This is a full time pohuman errors do ocRealEstate.corn sition with benefits. If cur. If this happens to you are comfortable your ad, please conmulti-tasking and are tact us ASAP so that Open Houses detail oriented, then corrections and any this may be the right adjustments can be opportunity for you. made to your ad. Pay is based on expe541-385-5809 rience. If you are in- The Bulletin Classified terested, please send resume to e mploy646 mentOedstaub.corn, Reduced ta sell! o r you can fax t o Houses for Bend, OR 2245 sq.ft. 877-846-2516, or you Rent General Custom Remodeled can stopby the office home.3Bdrm, 2.5 at 1819 SE First St in PUBLISHER' S Bath, .67 Acres, Large Redmond. NOTICE Deck, Mtn Views, All real estate adverOpen Floor Plan Where can you find a tising in this newspa- $399,000 Motivated helping hand? per is subject to the Sellers! F air H ousing A c t From contractors to Open House which makes it illegal Sunday 12-3 yard care, it's at here to a d vertise "any 598-6382 in The Bulletin's preference, limitation Chip(541) Faver© hotmail.corn or disc r imination "Call A Service based on race, color, Professional" Directory rehgion, sex, handiHomes for Sale cap, familial status, Mechanics marital status or na- 16424 Antelope, Three R OUSH i s hir i n g ! origin, or an inRivers. $12,500..45 Seeking Diesel Tech- tional to make any acre, recreational lot, nicians/Mechanics to tention such pre f erence, deeded river access. support a small fleet limitation or discrimiKyle Hoak, Broker of pro t otype/test nation." Familial sta541-639-7760 trucks. Formal meincludes children Berkshire Hathaway chanical training and tus the age of 18 Home Services minimum 2 y e a rs' under living with parents or Northwest Real Estate general legal cus t odians, automotive/diesel exLook at: women, and perience r e q uired. pregnant Bendhomes.corn people securing cusT his position is l o tody of children under cated in Madras, OR. 18. This newspaper for Complete Listings of Apply online: will not knowingly ac- Area Real Estate for Sale http: //careers.roush.co cept any advertising 16755 Casper, Three m or email resume to for real estate which is Rivers. $30,000. .70 careers©roush.corn. in violation of the law. Acre, vacant lotO ur r e aders a r e close to boat ramp. hereby informed that Darrell Hamel, Broker • Xam 541-480-7563 at dwellings advertised in this newspa- Berkshire Hathaway Home Services per are available on an equal opportunity Northwest Real Estate basis. To complain of 2744 NE Ocker d iscrimination ca l l 3 Bedroom, HUD t o l l-free at $219,000. 2 bath, 1112 sq.ft., 1-800-877-0246. The interior/exterior toll free t e lephone new new stove and 526 number for the hear- paint, arpet, ga s fr e e ing im p aired is c Loans 8 Mortgages standing stove, RV 1-800-927-9275. parking, large fenced WARNING lot 0.1 7 acre. The Bulletin recom667 Kathy Caba, Principal mends you use cauBroker 541-771-1761 Commercial for tion when you proJohn L Scott Realty, vide personal Rent/Lease Bend. information to companies offering loans or 5,500 sq.ft. b u ilding, E xecutive home o n fenced lot in rear, up- Canyon Creek. 7 timcredit, especially those asking for addated building gran- bered acres south of ite counter tops, of- John Day. 3 bedroom, vance loan fees or companies from out of fice, 1 full bathroom, 2 2.5 bath, 2801 sq. ft. half b aths, r e pair bonus room, attached state. If you have arage, landscaped. concerns or quesshop, window treats, 419,000. CALL tions, we suggest you alarm system. $5,500. WARN E R consult your attorney 1 776 S. H wy . 9 7 , D UKE Redmond. DAYVILLE AT or call CONSUMER 541-480-7241 541-987-2363. MLS: HOTLINE, 201304288 1-877-877-9392.

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

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Employment Opportunities

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The BLIjetin

I, your wallet at the same time! I e $~ ~ g ~ ~ fs' Get a roomier "PAD" and pad

ADVERTISING SALES MANAGER The Bulletin is seeking a goal-oriented Advertising Sales Manager to drive print and digital advertising revenue growth. This person will direct a local sales staff and be responsible for the leadership and functional management of at sales strategies, activities, programs, goal setting, employeedevelopment,and resources. The ideal candidate should be able to demonstrate a history of success in implementing innovative ideas and developing the skill level of sales team members. The position reports directly to the Director of Advertising.

Qualifications: • Experience in understanding industry trends, business drivers, competitors, and customer acquisition. • A thorough understanding of digital advertising products and potential. • Highly developed personal selling, sales management and sales leadership skills. • Experience and demonstrated ability to coach, train and motivate staff. • Excellent customer service and conflict resolution skills. • Budgeting, forecasting, and goal setting experience. • Strong communication skills are critical. • Analytical abilities and a strategic mindset. • College degree desirable. • At least 5 years' experience in media management. • Proficiency in information technology, Excel, sales presentations, and webcasting.

Please email your resume and cover letter to: jbrandt@bendbuffetin.corn

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Laglg Qppd /cn, Full Service

~Sell your Stuff! STARTING AT

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Dark Italian soft leather chair, ottoman, and couch set. Excellent condition: no tears, stains. Very comfortable. Was $1600 new,

offering for only $700 541-600-0000

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Item Priced af: • Under $500........... • $500 to $999....... • $1000 to $2499.. • $2500 and over...

Your Tofttl Ad Cost Onl .

........................................$39 ........................................$49 ........................................$59 ........................................$69

Includes: 2" in length, with border full color photo

bold headline, andprice. Some restrictions app/y.

The Bulletin 54]-385-58gg classified@bendbulletin.corn Your ad will also appear in:

• The Bulletin • Central OregOn MarketPlaCe

• The CentralOregonNickel Ads • bendbulletin.tom

'limit 3 itemsperad. Privaieparly merchandiseonly—excludespets 8 liveslcck, aulos, RVs,motorcycles, boats, airplanes,andgarage salemlegcries.

Landscape Management

Fire Protection and Fuels Reduction •Tall Grass •Low Limbs •Brush and Debris

Serving Central Oregon Since 2003 Residental/Commercial

Maintenance

•Sprinkler Repair •Summer Clean up •Fuels Reduction/ Brush Mowing ~Weekly Mowing & Edging •Bark, Rock, Etc.

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TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JUL 30, 2015

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

DAILY BRIDGE CLUBThursday,July30,2015

NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD )ji/jll SIIprtz

Louie's zero result

ACROSS 1 Tinseltown terrier 5 Building blocks 9Chap 14Word with gift or thrift 1SPolo of "Meet the Parents" 16Engross 17Subjects for Andy Warhol 19Optimistic 20 Caps 21 Euchre relative 22 Append 23 Like most typos 25 Sticky stuff 26 Capital of Majores 29 One-named musician with the hit albums "18" and "Hotel" 32 Ken, to Barbie 34 Abbr. followed by a date 37 Cause of inflation?

Tribune Content Agency

spade and he bids two diamonds. What do you say? ANSWER: To pass might be best since partner could have a minimum hand with 1-5-5-2 pattern. But that is only one scenario. Since you have two winners, and he may have as many as 18 p oints, game is still possible. Bid two hearts, returning to what is probably a better trump suit. Give partnerone more chance. South dealer N-S vulnerable NORTH 4 AK 62

973

HEART LEAD "Everybody e ls e t o o k m o r e ," Louie sighed. "Some Souths got a heart opening lead, giving them 12 tricks. I wasn't that lucky. With a club lead, 11 tricks were the limit." Louie was unlucky in a way since West might have returned a cl ub when he took th e ace o f h earts. Actually, Louie could always take 12 tricks. If he cashes two clubs and six diamonds, West can keep five cards and must hold four spades. Then Louie can lead a low heart to the bare ace, setting up his 12th trick. DAILY QUESTION

() 105 3 4 965 2 WEST 49 J973

EAST 491084

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East Pass

You hold: 4M A K 6 2 9 7 3 Opening lead — 4 J 0 10 5 3 A 9 6 5 2 . Your partner opens one heart, you respond one (C) 2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

Seeking a friendly duplicate bridge? Find five gamesweekly at www.bendbridge.org. BIZARRO BIZABIID.D3il

62 End of song titles starting "About"

chess-playing computer

and "I Kissed" 40Go out 63 What the French 41 More than just might call 62-Across show 43 Fraternity letters 64 Percolate 65 Penurious 440ne of the I's of 66valhalla V.I.P. ISIS 67 Head overseas? 45 One of the two capitals of Bolivia DOWN 47 Part of 35-Down: 1 Pet cause? Abbr. 2 Worked on as a 49 Sound of smithy might disapproval 3 Winner on eBay 52 Ame rica no 4 Mea culpa 56 Old concert halls 5 Letter-routing abbr. 57 "That was said in 6 E.U. country all sincerity" where 60 "The Death of Hoegaarden beer is brewed " (1793 David painting) 7 Musical opposite of dimin. 61 Legendary 6 Family nickname guitarist... or a hint to eight 9 Kato portrayer answers in this in "The Green puzzle Hornet" 10 Blistex products ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE 11One taking extra cour'ses? K I S 5 C APO A SS A M I NC A R OAD N I T R O 12 "A thing of beauty is a joy THE P I E RRE T RA M S for ever" poet I N STA T E F E E B L E TBA 0 M A R B R A D L E Y 13 Diminutive suffixes V I R GOB 0 A T E T S 18 Ex-Yankee ST I G A R NET Martinez S 0 R UTH E R N C R O S S 21 Great time BRO NT E O KA Y UR I F U T I L E 24 The "high heel" STD of Italy's "boot" CH I N E S E F L A G TEN 26 Honour bestowed REV OTE R 0 D GE R S by the queen, for AM I 5 H F I V E ST A R S short POD I A DEE R T I E R 27 Eye, informally E BE R T ADD 5 A L P S 29 Pirate's aid

By FRANK STEWART Unlucky Louie had won the club's monthly duplicate championshipalmost. He had taken a fatal zero on the final deal. A s South, L o ui e o p ened o n e diamond and leaped to 3NT over North's one spade. West led the jack of clubs, and Louie won and took the A-K of diamonds. When the queen fell, he went to dummy with the ten and rolled the dice by leading a heart to his king. W est produced the ace and . . . returneda heart,and the defense took three more hearts, holding Louie to nine tricks.

36 Groundbreaking

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Online subscriptions: Today's puzzle and more than 7,000 past puzzles, nytimes.corn/crosswords ($39.95 a year). Readaboutand comment on each puzzle:nytimes.corn/wordplay. Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.corn/studentcrosswords.

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THE BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JULY 30 2015 E5

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 745

Homes for Sale

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All real estate advertised here in is subject to th e Federal F air H ousing A c t , which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, reliion, sex, handicap, Iamilial status or national origin, or intention to make any such preferences, l i mitations or discrimination. We will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of this law. All persons are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised are available on an equal opportunity basis. The Bulletin Classified

„ >~ Victory TC 2 0 0 2, 40K mi., runs great, s tage 1 kit, n e w tires, rear brakes 8 more. Health forces s ale. $4,00 0 . 541-771-0665

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on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. "Spellcheck" and human errors do occur. If this happens to

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Superhawk N7745G Owners' Group LLC Cessna 172/180 hp, full IFR, new avionics, GTN 750, touchscreen center stack, exceptionally clean. Healthy engine reserve fund. Hangared at KBDN. Oneshare available,$10,000 Call 541-815-2144

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GMC Yukon SLT2007 4x4 leather, loaded. ¹ 325813 $24,995 AAA Ore. Auto Source Toyota T a coma corner of West Empire & Hwy 97, Bend. Dlr 2006, reg. c a b, 0225 541-598-3750 4x4, 5 spd stanwww.aaaoregonautodard 4 cyl engine, source.corn. 2 2+ m pg , o n e

s enior own e r , non-smoker, well maintained, nearly new tires, original spare near new, runs ex c e llent. Jeep Grand Chero$14,750. kee Overland 2012, 541-633-9895 4x4 V-6, all options, running boards, front

Husky 16K EZ Roller guard, nav., air and 5th wheel hitch; and 935 heated leather, cusWinnebago 22' 916 5th wheel tailgate fits tom wheels and new Sport Utility Vehicles 2002 - $28,000 '03 dodge or newer, Trucks & tires, only 41K miles, tion use only, MichChevy 360, $500 for both Heavy Equipment $31,995 elin all weather tires heavy duty chassis, or will sell separately! Chevy S-10 1988 4.3L 541-408-7908 cab & roof A/C, w/5000 mi., no acci541-923-2595 V-6, sunroof, many dents, non-smokers, tow hitch w/brake, custom features, su22k mi., more! Workhorse e n gine Get your per clean, always ga261-A, Allison Trans., 541-280-3251 Laredo 31'2006, 750 raged. $3800 obo. business 870 backup camera, new 5th wheel, fully S/C 541-388-0811. Redmond Homes Boats & Accessories refrig. unit, h eated one slide-out. 1977 mirrors, exc. cond., Awning. Like new, F J40 Toyota Winnebago e ROW I N G Say "goodbuy" GMC Truck, 1991, well cared for. SacriLandcruiser hardly used. Looking for your next 12' Valco alum. on Journey 90,000 miles, 3116 trailer 9.9 J o hnson fice! $32,000. obo! with winch, Must sell $20,000 employee? to that unused 36' 2nd owner, with an ad in Cat Eng., 10 s p. 0/B, plus amenities, 541-549-8737 Iv. msg. 2001 $21,000. Place a Bulletin help or refinance. Call 300 Cummins Turbo Fuller Eaton transitem by placing it in exc. shape. $1250. 541-389-7113, The Bulletin's wanted ad today and 541-410-5649 diesel, Allison 5 spd, 541-549-8126 mission, 20' b e d, The Bulletin Classifieds Michelle reach over 60,000 80k miles. D r iver "Call A Service new deck, new rear readers each week. s ide s l ide, g a s Professional" radials, hd hoist 8 Your classified ad stove, oven, 2 flat FIND IT! frame, RV AC, 5 41-385-580 9 Directory will also appear on screen TVs, refer, CONSIGNMENTS radio/cassette, a real BI! Y IT' bendbulletin.corn generator, inverter, WANTED nice truck. $12,500 SELL ITr which currently reAllegro 32' 2007, like King Dome, tow bar. We Do the Work, Call 541-480-4375 ceives over new, only 12,600 miles. Non-smoker, The Bulletin Classifieds no You Keep the Cash! 17' SunCraft, 1.5 million page Chev 8.1L with Allison 60 pets, no c hildren. On-site credit 2 motors. $1,400. transmission, dual exviews every month BULLETINCLASSIFIEDS C lean, an d w e l l approval team, 541-593-7257 haust. Loaded! Auto-lev- maintained, $47,500 at no extra cost. Search the area's most web site presence. Bulletin Classifieds 18' Bayliner 175 Capri, eling system, 5kw gen, 541-390-1472. comprehensive listing of Chevy S10Extended We Take Trade-Ins! Jeep Willys, '46, metal power mirrors w/defrost, Get Results! classified advertising... like new, 135hp I/O, 2 slide-outs with awCab 2002, top, big tires, ps, new Call 385-5809 or real estate to automotive, low time, Bimini top, nings, rear c a mera, BIG COUNTRY RV 4.3L V-6 cyl paint, tow bar, new place your ad on-line merchandise to sporting many extras, KaraBend: 541-330-2495 trailer hitch, driver door VIN ¹204890. $3,888. auges, etcH. reduced at BMW X3 Si 2007, goods. Bulletin Classifieds van trailer with swing w/power window, cruise, Redmond: (exp. 8/5/1 5) DLR ¹366 4,000. 541-233-7272 bendbulletin.corn Low Miles - 68,500 appear every day in the neck, current registra- exhaust brake, central 541-548-5254 mi., AWD, leather print or on line. ~ONE» tions. $8000. vac, satellite sys. ReInterior, su n roof, 541-350-2336 Call 541-385-5809 755 duced price: $64,950. 885 b luetooth, voi c e 503-781-8812 www.bendbulletin.corn Sunriver/Ls Pine Homes command system, Winnebago Minnie Canopies 8 Campers e and too much more Bounder, 1999, 3 4 ', 2005 26' Class C, The BuHetim 5 1839 Fordham D r . &IVlllg CNltfal Ol&gOA SIIICe 19tB to list here. $15,900. one slide, low mile29k miles, queen 541-548-1448 Lance Squire 4000, $239,000. 1804 sq. ft., smolichmotors.corn Please call Dan at age, very clean, lots bed, slide dinette, Jeep Wrangler Rubi1996, 9' 6" extended 931 3 b d rm. A m azing 541-815-6611 of storage, $28,500. con 2 0 04, $17,500 A/C,generator, awcab, bathroom w/ toim aster suite. H i g h Chevy Silverado 2500, Automotive Parts, 541-639-9411 ning, Class 5 hitch, Mileage: 065 , 154 let, queen bed, out2013 13k mi., loaded, Lakes Realty & Prop- 19' Bayliner 1998, I/O, new Michelins, exc. A utomatic, Cru i se side shower. $5,700. Service & Accessories $29,000. 2013 F ox erty Man a gement great shape, call for shape. Stored inControl, Tow Bar, Air Call 541-382-4572 541-536-0117 info. $60500. In Bend Mountain 3 0 ' 5th doors, no smoke. Conditioning, Power Sears X-Cargo Sport 20 wheel 661-644-0384. 1 2 0 0 mi. car top carrier, $150. $33,000. See Door Locks, Alarm $39,000. Need help fixing stuff? 763 craigs 541-312-8402 and much more. Call Call A Service Professional 541-678-5157 Just too many list 541-923-6644 Recreational Homes Gary: 541-280-0558. find the help you need. 932 collectibles? & Property Coronado 27' motorwww.bendbulletin.corn 881 Chevy Tracker 2003, Advertise your car! Antique & home 1992, very nice 2.5L V-6 cyl Add A Picture! Travel Trailers Cabin in the woods on Sell them in cond. Strong running Classic Autos VIN ¹914067. $6,688. Reach thousands of readers! trout stream, private, The Bulletin Classifieds 454 gasoline engine. Call 541-385-5809 (exp. 8/5/15) DLR ¹366 off the grid, 80 mi. Just had tune-up. 35K The Bulletin Classifleds from Bend. 638 ac. mi. $ 7500. C a l l 4 $849K. For d r o ne 541-385-5809 541-815-3827 for deDodge Big Horn video li n k , cal l tails and pictures. Ram 2500, 2005, 6 541-480-7215. speed manual. ExNorthlander 1993 FUN & FISH! tra tires and rims, 17' camper, Polar 771 31' Holiday Rambler 541-548-1448 canopy goes with. 990, good shape, Aluma-light, 2001, 12' CHEVELLE smolichmotors.corn Lots Excellent condition, new fridge, A/C, Nissan Rogue 2014, slide, good condition, MALIBU 1971 well ma i n tained, very c lean i n side. queen bed, bath2.5L 1-4 cyl 57K original miles, $397,000 Build on the runs great. 1 6 0K room, indoor/outV IN¹799777 $10,900. river - Sunriver area. 350 c.i., auto, miles. $2 8 ,500 door shower, lots of Fleetwood D i scovery 541-508-1589 or $22,997 1.57 acre b u ilding stock, all original, 541-620-1212 storage, custom2006 Smokercraft 40' 2003, diesel, w/all 541-280-3799 (exp. 8/5/15) DLR ¹366 site, sweeping big Hi-Fi stereo ized to fit newer Sunchaser 820 options - 3 slide outs, D eschutes Rive r SMOLICH pickups,$4500 obo. $15,000 satellite, 2 TV's, W/D, views, prime location model pontoon boat, 541-419-9859. V OL V O Ford Explorer Sport 75HP Mercury and etc., 34,000 miles. across from Sunriver 541-279-1072 electric trolling moWintered in h eated 2011, 6 cyl. auto., 541-749-2156 Resort, adjacent to 92 4WD, 3rd seat, tor, full canvas and shop. $78,995 obo. smolichvolvo.corn acres of US National many extras. 541-447-8664 $21,995. 541-598-5111 Forest land. Stored inside Tina Roberts, Broker J a F l i h t 2 6 4 B H Ford F350 2004, 4 dr Ford Explorer XLT $19,900 0 0 541-419-9022 Take care of 2011. like new, sleeps crew cab, dually, only 541-350-5425 2012, 4x4, 56K mi. Total Property your investments 9, self contained, 1/2 62,300 miles, diesel, V IN:A41532. $21,988 Resources ton towable $13,900 V8 6.0, carfax availAAA Auto Source with the help from able, great condition corner of West Empire OBO (541 ) 410-9017 3 Be nd Ci ty L o ts, CORVETTE 1979, fPhoto for illustration only) The Bulletin's inside and out, stain& Hwy97 views and u nique, glass top, 31k miles, Load-leveling hitch & Subaru Outback less steel tool box, 541-598-3750 "Call A Service all original, silver & $150,000/ea. Please s way b a r , $1 5 0 . Limits d201, original own e r s, aaaoregonautosource. maroon. $12,500. send email to: Parval(exp. 8/5/201 5) Professional" Directory 541-241-4373 908 obo. $17,900 corn. DLR¹ 0225 uepropertiesOgmail 541-388-9802 Vin ¹219747 71 4-606-2391 local. 22' Catalina Sailboat Aircraft, Parts .corn to receive info. Stock ¹45098A RV Boat/ Motor/ Trailer & Service FIND YOUR FUTURE or $329/mo., 773 $4000. Many extras CONSIGNMENTS R l HOME INTHE BULLETIN $25,979 $2500 down, 84 mo., Excellent Condition WANTED Acreages 4 .49% APR o n a p We Do The Work ... C urrently on L a k e Your future is just apage proved credit. License You Keep The Cash! Simtustis. 5 Acres - Corner Lot away. Whetheryou're looking and title i ncluded in On-site credit cRa payment, plus dealer in(541)604-551 5 Million Dollar View! for a hat or a pl a ce to hang i t , mmr ' Lexington 2006 approval team, DODGE STEALTH stalled options. Ford F-350 XLT 2006, The Bulletin Classified is Sisters School Dist., 283TS class B+ moweb site presence. 1992 RT twin turbo, Crewcab, 150K mi., $325,000. your best source. Suaaau tor coach, full GTS We Take Trade-Ins! 5spd, 49,247 miles. NIMkUOPEEND.OOM 541-389-9751 bed liner, good tires, 1/3interest in pkg, 19,352 miles. 3 Every day thousands of new era Classic 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. exc. shape. $16,500. burner range, half BIG COUNTRY RV Columbia 400, muscle car! one 877-266-3821 775 Please call, buyers andsellers ofgoods time oven, 3 slides Bend: 541-330-2495 Financing available. owner,$9,500. Dlr ¹0354 541-350-8856 or and services dobusinessin Manufactured/ w/awnings, Onan Redmond: these pages.Theyknow 541-647-8483 541-410-3292 $125,000 Mobile Homes 541-548-5254 gen., King Dome satyou can't beat TheBulletin 2 3'10" S R 2 3 0 0, (located @ Bend) ellite system, Ford Classified Sectionfor '95, own with pride, 541-288-3333 The Bulletin List Your Home V10 Triton, auto-levselection andconvenience always compliments, JandlHomes.corn eling system, new To Subscribe call - every item isjust a phone no salt, head never We Have Buyers tires, Falcon tow bar. 541-385-5800 or go to call away. used, due for 5 year Get Top Dollar Non-smoker, mainc ooling main t . , www.ben dbulletin.corn The Classified Section is Financing Available. tained in dry storage. SubaruOutback $9500 firm. Extras. easy to use. Everyitem 541-548-5511 Can email additional Toyota Tacoma 2006, Limited 2014, W eekend only . i s categorized and every pictures.$59,000. 4.0L V-6 cyl 2.5L H-4 cyl 541-678-3249 RVision C r ossover cartegory is indexedon the VIN ¹303724. 541-520-3407 VIN ¹21438'I. $13,388. $28,888. 2013, 19ft, exc. Well 1/5 share in v ery section's frontpage. (exp. 8/5/1 5) DLR ¹366 equipped, $ 11,500. nice 150 HP Cessna (exp. 8/5/1 5) DLR ¹366 Ads published in the 541-604-5387 Whether youare lookingfor 150; 1973 C e s sna "Boats" classification • m~ a home orneeda service, 150 with Lycoming include: Speed, fishyour future is inthepagesof 0-320 150 hp engine ing, drift, canoe, Ford Mustang The Bulletin Classified. c onversion, 400 0 house and sail boats. Hard top 1965, hours. TT a irframe. 6-cylinder, auto trans, For all other types of Approx. 400 hours on power brakes, power The Bulletin watercraft, please go Monaco Monarch 31' 541-548-1448 541-548-1448 Semng Central O regonsince l9t8 0-timed 0-320. Hansteering, garaged, to Class 875. smolichmotors.corn 2006, Ford V 10, smolichmotors.corn gared in nice (electric 541-385-5809 well maintained, 28,900 miles, 850 door) city-owned han- engine runs strong. auto-level, 2 slides, Unique R-Pod 2013 gar at the Bend Air- 74K mi., great condiSnowmobiles queen b ed 8 trailer-tent combo, Servin Central Ore on since19D3 port. One of very few tion.$12,500. f ully l oaded, e x hide-a-bed sofa, 4k C -150's tha t h a s Must see! Bayliner 185 2006 tended service conconvection mi- tract and bike rack. never been a trainer. 541-598-7940 open bow. 2nd owner gen, crowave, 2 TVs, tow $17,000. $4500 wi ll consider — low engine hrs. package. trades for whatever. — fuel injected V6 541-595-3972 or PRICE REDUCTION! Call J i m Fr a z ee, — Radio 8 Tower. 503-780-4487 $59,000. 541-410-6007 Great family boat 541-8154319 4-place enclosed InterPriced to sell. state snowmobile trailer $11,590. Looking for your w/ RockyMountain pkg, 541-548-0345. next employee? $7500. 541-379-3530 Place a Bulletin help Mercedes 450 SL C reek Comp a n y wanted ad today and ODC1220 2 man in1979 Roadster, soft 860 reach over 60,000 8 hard tops, always pontoon boat, Motorcycles 8 Accessories flatable readers each week. seldom used, was garaged, 122k mi., Your classified ad 1974 Bellanca extras, $9, 7 0 0. $ 2000, s elling f o r Pace Arrow V i sion, will also appear on 1730A 2180 TT, 440 541-548-5648 firm. 1997, Ford 460 en$1000 bendbulletin.corn gine w/Banks, solar, SMO, 180 mph 541-981-0230 which currently rewalk-around queen •Excellent condition Igo ceives over 1.5 mil~Always hangared bed, 2 door fridge, milion page views evcro-convection oven, •One owner for ery month at no WiFi, 1 00 k m i l es, 35 years. Harley 2003, Dyna extra cost. Bulletin needs work, (photo $40,000. wide glide, 100th AnClassifieds Get Resimilar to actual ng) In Madras, 8 n iversary mod e l . sults! Call 385-5809 call 541-475-6302 g 13,400 orig. mi., cus- Honda Goldwing 1800 $9,500. 541-388-1999 or place your ad Chevy El Camino 1973, RUN uNT<P tom paint, new bat- 2002 44,507 miles, on-line at RARE! Manual trans. P RV tery, lots of e xtras, $22,500. $23,500 with HANGAR FOR SALE. bendbulletin.corn SOL.D" 4spd, Exc. Cond. CONSIGNMENTS show cond. Health 30x40 end unit T $7500. 541-389-1086 to tr a nsport WANTED TRALL SPOR f orces s ale. W a s trailer hanger in Prineville. trike. 541-389-1135. We Do The Work ... 2013 28' roo 882 $11,000 OBO, now Dry walled, insulated, 933 firm. Mercury Trolling motor You Keep The Cash! and painted. $23,500. tures fsing $8,000 Fifth Wheels Pickups On-site credit 541-633-7856 or $50. Tom, 541.788.5546 approval team, 360-815-6677 541-241-4373 Ch e yenne crow ave,shower queen web site presence. Redmond Hangar Chevy 1 996, 2 50 0 ex !c$ NEW Creek Company We Take Trade-Ins! outside Heated, 55' wide, 75 RVmoto cab, 4WD, ODC1624 3 man inwalk-around, annti- Y ur auto, deep, 18' high. Office, tended pb, a/c, cruise, flatable pontoon boat. BIG COUNTRY RV ower, awning, $ho bath with shower. For ps, $tg 5QQ boat, or o airplane u p grades. N ever used, w a s Bend: 541-330-2495 til' tt sells lease, $2000/month. recent suey bitch. runsun' E xcellent tru c k , ad $ 3000, selling f o r Redmond: 5Z-000-«0 503- 547-5770 12 Bighorn 2012 fifth $4850 OBO - Cash! r up to firm. 541-548-5254 $2000 coNes first'.) wheel, 35', lots of 541-876-5570 H arley Road K i ng 541-981-0230 extras. $5 7,000. Classic 2003, 100th 875 541-388-4905 Anniversary Edition, Call a Pro Watercraft 16,360 mi. $ 12,499 Whether you need a Includes: 2" in length, with border, full Safari 1998 motorBruce 541-647-7078 color photo, bold headline, and price. home 30', low mileds published in "Wa fence fixed, hedges Cameo LX1 2001, Serving Central Oregon since 1903 age, 300 HP Magtercraft" include: Kay 32 ft. 5th wheel, 2 Save money. Learn Some restrictions app/y trimmed or a house num Cat motor with aks, rafts and motor slides, A/C, micro, classified©bendbulletin.corn to fly or build hours built, you' ll find turbo, always inside, Ized personal DVD, CD p l ayer, with your own airYourad will also appear ice white leather intewaterc rafts. Fo professional help in conv. and i n vert. c raft. 1968 A e r o "boats" please se rior, like new, has New batteries, tires Commander, 4 seat, • The Bulletin • The (enfral OregonNickel Ads The Bulletin's "Call a m any extr a s . and shocks. Quad Class 870. 150 HP, low time, • Central Oregon Marketplace • bendbullefin.corn Service Professional" Moto Guzzi B reva 541-385-5809 $50,000. S e rious carrier. Quad avail. full panel. $21,000 1 100 2 0 07 , on l y callers only. Directory $11,900 OBO. obo. Contact Paul at *Privatepartymerchandiseonly 11,600 miles. $5,950. 541-548-8415 541-390-7179 541-447-5184. 541-385-5809 206-679-4745 Serving Central Oregonsince 1903 Yamaha TW200 Two Twin stock with fatty tires 2007 with 1155 miles, 2007 with 1069 miles. $3400 Each 541-588-0068 cell, 541-549-4834 hm

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E6 THURSDAY, JULY 30, 2015 • THE BULLETIN 935

Sport Utility Vehicles

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More PixatBendbuletin.corn On a classified ad Subaru XT Touring Forester 2013, (exp. 8/5/2015) Vin ¹433715 Stock ¹44947A

$26,979 or $339/mo.,

$2800 down, 84 mo., 4 .49% APR o n a p -

proved credit. License and title i ncluded in

payment, plus dealer installed options.

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Buick Le Sabre 2005 CORVETTE COUPE Custom. Very clean, 2003 - 50th inside & out, only has Anniversary 96k miles. If you drive Edition it, you' ll fall in love!! 32 mpg hwy, 22-25 in 6 spd manual transmission, always gatown. $ 4250 o bo Trade c o n sidered. raged, never driven in winter, only 21k Cash/credit/debit miles,$24,000 card. Call or Text Ron 541-815-0365 I 541-419-5060

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Mercedes 380SL 1982 Roadster, black on black, soft & hard top, exc. cond., always garaged. 155K miles, $9,500.

S UBA R U

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

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

Lexus ES350 2010, Excellent Condition 32,000 miles, $20,000 214-549-3627 (in

Buick Lucerne CXL, 2006 clean title, 93k (Photo for illustration only) 541-549-6407 Dodge Dart2013, mi, leather, loaded. VIN ¹15091A $7450, OBO/Trade-in People Lookfor Information $14,997 considered. C al l About Products and Ron, at 541-419-5060 (exp. 8/5/15) DLR ¹366 Services EveryDaythrough SMDLICH

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The Bulletin Class/naris

541-749-2156

smolichvolvo.corn Just bought a new boat? Sell your old one in the classifieds! Ask about our Super Seller rates! 541-385-5809

Nissan Sentra2012, M ini C o oper S (exp. 8/5/2015) Convertible 2013: Vin ¹734544 Like new convertible Stock ¹44681C w/ only 18,600 miles. $11,979 or $199/mo., All options incl. Chili $2500 down, 72 mo., Red paint Uw/ black 4 .49% APR o n a p stripes, 17 wheels, proved credit. License film protection, custitle included in tom f ront d r iving and payment, plus dealer inlights, black leather stalled options. seats. $2 2,500 © s uSUSBRUOSSEHD.OUR a A Ru 541-420-1659 or idahomonteith©aol.corn 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354 Porsche Cayman S 2 008, L i k e new , miles, 14,500 $35,000. 360-510-3153 (Bend) Mustang GT 2007, 27,000 miles, dark grey e x t erior/light grey interior, heated

$2600 down, 64 mo., 4 .49% APR o n a p and title i ncluded in

$2000 down, 84 mo., 4 .49% APR o n a p - Looking for your proved credit. License next employee? and title included in Place a Bulletin help payment plus dealer ln wanted ad today and stalled options.

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Subaru Legacy LL Bean 2006,

(exp. 8/5/1 5) Vin ¹203053 ing, retired, Roush Stock ¹82770 lowering kit, Roush Scion TCcoupe 2007, cold air inductions, $16,977 or $199/mo., (exp. 8/5/15) $2600 down, 84 mo. at love red side winVin ¹198120 4 .49% APR o n a p dows, after market Stock ¹44193B proved credit. License exhaust, sequential title i ncluded in r ear l ights, d u al $10,379 or $149/mo., and payment, plus dealer $2800 down, 60 mo., power seats. 4 .49% APR o n a p - installed options. $19,995. proved credit. License 541-383-5043 S UBA R U . and title included in

Toyota Corolla 2013, 1.8L 1-4 cyl VIN ¹128502 $12,997 (exp. 8/5/15) DLR ¹366

SMDLICH

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payment, plus dealer in2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. stalled options.

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877-266-3821 Dlr¹0354

(Photo for illustration only)

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2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Toyota Avalon 2003, Volvo V60 T5 877-266-3821 150K m i. , si n g le Platinum Wagon Dlr ¹0354 owner, great cond., 2015.5, 2.5L 1-5 cyl new tires and battery, V IN ¹222764 Find exactly what maintenance records, $37,997 leather seats, moon(exp. 8/5/15) DLR ¹366 you are looking for in the roof, full set of snow SMDLICH CLASSIFIEDS tires on rims, $7000. V OL V O 541-548-6181 541-749-2156 smolichvolvo.corn

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Subaru impreza2009, 2.5L H-4 cyl VIN ¹809008 $10,997 (exp. 8/5/1 5) DLR ¹366

SMDLICH

V Q LV Q 541-749-2156

smolichvolvo.corn

go to www.bendbulletin.corn to view additional photos of the item.

$20,358 or $249/mo., $15,979 or $199 mo.,

garage, non-smok-

Cadillac CTS 2010, V 6 I n j ection, 6 Mercedes Benz E Speed A utomatic. Class 2005, Luxury series. Exte975 (exp. 8/5/1 5) rior Black Raven, Automobiles Vin ¹688743 Interior: Light TitaStock ¹82316 nium/ E b o ny $11,979 or $155/mo., Want to impress the 2 2,555 m i les. 4 $2500 down, 72 mo., door. Excellent con4 .49% APR o n a p - relatives? Remodel dition all a r ound. your home with the proved credit. License Has Arizona plates. and title i ncluded in help of a professional This is car is a great Ford Fusion SEL2012, payment, plus dealer infrom The Bulletin's of luxury, com(exp. 8/5/15) stalled options. Acura TL 06, 3.2L V6, mix "Call A Service ort, s t y le , an d Vin ¹117015 a uto, F WD , b l a c k fworkmanship. Stock ¹44382A SIJBARIJ. Professional" Directory color, A/C, 115,971 $15,979 or $199/mo., 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. miles, clean title and $24,000.00 $2400 down, 84 mo., carfax. Call or text Call 541-408-3051 877-266-3821 4 .49% APR o n a p 541-834-8469 Dlr ¹0354 proved credit. License and title included in Find It in Good classified adstell payment, plus dealer inthe essential facts in an Ths Bulletin Classifieds! stalled options. interesting Manner.Writs 541-385-5809 Nissan Altima2.5 from the readers view not 2012, 2.5L 1-4 cyl the seller' s. Convert the 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. VIN ¹508084 $17,998. 877-266-3821 facts into benefits. Show (exp. 8/5/1 5) DLR ¹366 Dlr ¹0354 fyfercedes-Benz the reader howthe item will SLK230 2003, help them in someway. exc. cond., auto, This HUNTER SP E C IAL: convertible retractadvertising tip Jeep Cherokee, 1990, PT Cruiser 2007, 5spd, 4x4, has 9 tires on able hard top. brought to you by 32 mpg hwy, 80K miles, wheels. $2000 obo. 54,250 miles, carfax new tires, $5,250. available.$13,000. The Bulletin 541-548-1448 541-771-4732 541-433-2026 541-389-7571 smolichmotors.corn 541-729-4552

Toyota Corolla2013, (exp. 8/5/15) Vin ¹053527 Stock ¹83072

Subaru impreza 2013, (exp. 8/5/15) Vin ¹027174 Stock ¹83205

541-385-5809

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

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The Bulletin recoml

extra caution I I mends when p u r chasing • i products or servicesi from out of the area. i S ending c ash ,i s checks, or credit in-

I formation may be I i subject toFRAUD.

For more informa-

l tion about an adver-i tiser, you may call I the ' Oregon State I

Garage Sales Find them in The Bulletin Classifieds

reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on ben dbulletin.corn 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.corn

General's s I Attorney I Office C o nsumer i Mile, r un s g r e at!! some body damage, 5 The Bulletin spd stick. Good tires Volvo V70 1998 i 5 I Protection hotline at cyl. Non turbo, High 1-877-877-9392. serving centra/ oregon sincelssi

$1250. 541-480-9327

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Legal Notices

LEGAL NOTICE

City of Bend Request for Proposals Public Safety Behavioral Health The City of Bend re-

quests proposals to

cancel the solicitation if the City finds it is the public interest to do so, 4) to seek clarifications of

any or all proposals, and 5) to select the proposal which appears to be in the best interest of the City.

identify a practitioner t o pro v ide on-going behavioral Heather Herauf health support and Purchasing Analyst education to assist 541-385-6677 employees to acquire a p propriate LEGAL NOTICE s ervices bas e d IN T H E CI R CUIT upon ind i v idual COURT O F T HE needs of the Bend STATE OF OREGON, Police and Fire DeIN AND FOR THE partments. COUNTY OF D E SCHUTES. U.S. Bank The request for proNational Association, as Trustee for Lehposal, plans, specifications, addenda, man XS Trust Mortplanholders list, and gage Pass-Through n otification of r e Certificates, S e r ies sults for this project 2007-7N, Plaintiff, vs. may be v i ewed, STEPHANIE ANN printed or ordered BEARSE, INDIVIDUon line from Central ALLY A ND AS Oregon B u i lders C O-TRUSTEE O F Exchange at T HE R O BERT E . http: //www.plansonB EARSE REVO file.corn by clicking CABLE TRUST U/T/A on "Public Works JANUARY 23, 2006; Projects" and then U NKNOWN SU C on "City of Bend" or CESSOR TRUSTEE in person at 1902 OF THE ROBERT E. NE 4th St., Bend, B EARSE REV O Oregon. CABLE TRUST U/T/A JANUARY 23, 2006; Entities intending to UNKNOWN BENEFIsubmit a proposal C IARIES OF T H E should register with ROBERT E. BEARSE the Central Oregon REVOCABLE TRUST Builders Exchange U/T/A JANUARY 23, as a planholder in 2006; UNK N OWN order to receive adHEIRS OF ROBERT denda. This can be E. BEARSE; WHISdone on-line or by P ERING PINE S contacting Central OWNERS ASSOCIAOregon B u i lders TION; PARTIES IN Exchange at: (541) POSSESSION, De389-0123, Fax (541) fendants. No. 389-1549, or email 15CV0271FC. CIVIL at adminoplansonSUMMONS. TO THE file.corn. Proposers DEFENDANTS: are responsible for Unknown Successor making sure they Trustee of the Robert have all addenda E. Bearse Revocable before s u bmitting Trust u/t/a January proposals. 23, 2006, Unknown B eneficiaries of t h e The deadline for Robert E. Bearse Resubmitting proposvocable Trust u/t/a als is August 1 9, January 23, 2006 and U nknown Heirs o f 2015 at 3:00 PM. Proposals must be Robert E . B e a rse. NOTICE TO DEFENphysically received by the City at the loDANT: READ THESE cation listed below P APERS CAR E by the deadline. No FULLY! A lawsuit has faxed or electronic been started against (email) p roposals you in the above-enshall be accepted. titled Court by U.S. Bank National Association, as Trustee for Sealed proposals shall be d elivered Lehman X S T r u st to: Heather Herauf, Mortgage Purchasing Analyst, Pass-Through CertifiCity Hall, Adminiscates, Series trative Office, 2nd 2007-7N, Pla i ntiff. f loor, 7 1 0 Wal l P laintiff's claim i s Street, Bend, Orstated in the written egon 97701. The Complaint, a copy of outside of the enwhich is on file at the velope or box conDeschutes C o u nty taining the proposCourthouse. You must "appear" in this als shall include the p roposers n a m e case or the other side and be m a rked: will win automatically. To "appear" you must "Public Safety Befile with the court a lehavioral Health". gal paper called a The City of Bend re"motion" or "answer." The "motion" or Banserves the right 1) to swer" must be given reject any or all proposal not in complito the court clerk or ance with public soadministrator w i thin licitation procedures 30 days along with the required filing fee. It and requirements, 2) to reject any or all must be i n p r oper form and have proof proposals in accord ance with O R S o f service o n t h e 279B.100, 3 ) to plaintiff's attorney or,

if the plaintiff does not other persons or have a n a t t orney, u n k nown proof of service on the parties claiming any right, plaintiff. The object of title, lien, or interest t he complaint is t o in the Property deforeclose a deed of in the Comtrust dated March 13, scribed plaint herein, De2007 and recorded as fendants. Case No. Instrument No. PUB2007-15910 given by 15CV0316. LISHED SUMRobert E. Bearse on MONS. TO:The Unproperty c ommonly known Heirs and known as 65295 of EARL 73rd Street, Bend, OR Devisees RUSSELL and 97701 and legally de- E. RUSSELL, scribed as: Lot Eigh- VIVIAN and all teen (18), B l ock deceased; Fourteen (14), FIRST other persons or u n k nown ADDITION TO parties claiming any right, WHISPERING PINES title, lien, or interest ESTATES, Deschutes County, Or- in the Property dein the Comegon. The complaint scribed plaint herein. IN seeks to f o reclose THE NAME OF THE and terminate all inTATE O F OR terest of U n known S E GON: You a re Successor Trustee of hereby required to the Robert E. Bearse appear and answer Revocable Trust u/t/a the Complaint filed January 23, 2 0 06, you in the Unknown Beneficia- against above-entitled ries of the Robert E. Bearse R e v ocable c ause within 3 0 Trust u/t/a January days from the date service of this 2 3, 2006 an d U n - of up o n known Heirs of Rob- S ummons you, if you fail ert E. Bearse and all so toand answer, the other interests in the Plaintiffs will apply property. The "motion" to the Court for the "answer" (or or "reply" ) must be given relief demanded in Comp l aint. to the court clerk or the Plaintiffs are seekadministrator w i t hin ing a judgment 30 days of the date of claring Plaintiffsdeto first publication speci- be the owners in fee fied herein along with simple of the real the required filing fee. property described The date of first publi- above and entitled cation of th e s u m- to poss e ssion mons is July 16, 2015. thereof, free any If you are in the ac- estate, title, of claim, tive military service of lien or interest of the United States, or Defendants or those believe that you may claiming under Debe entitled to protec- fendant, and genertion of t h e S C RA, ally quieting title in please contact our of- Plaintiffs. This fice. I f you do not is pubcontact us, we will re- Summons by Order of port to the court that tlished he Judge of t he we do not believe that above-entitled court you are protected unmade and entered der the SCRA. If you have questions, you on the 8th day of 2015, directshould see an attor- July, ing publication of ney immediately. If this Summons y ou need h elp i n each week foronce four finding an attorney, consecutive weeks you may contact the in The Bend BulleOregon State Bar's a n e wspaper Lawyer Referral Ser- tin, vice on l in e at p ublished and o f www.oregonstate bar. general circulation Deschutes org or by calling (503) in County, O r egon. 684-3763 ( in t h e Date of first publicaPortland metropolitan July 16, 2015. area) or toll-free else- tion: of last publicawhere in Oregon at tDate ion: A u gust 6 , (800) 452-7636. AtNOTICE TO torneys for Plaintiff, 2015. DEFENDANT SHAPIRO & SUTHREAD THESE PAERLAND, LLC, /s/. CAREMary Hannon, PERS FULLY! You m u st M ary H a nnon ¹ "appear" in this case 131074 or the other side will [mhannon@logs.corn] win utomatically. 7632 S W D u r ham To a"appear" R oad, S uite 3 5 0 , must file with you the Tigard, O R 9 7 224, court a legal docu(360)260-2253; Fax Emoment called a (360)260-2285. tion" or "answer." LEGAL NOTICE The "motion" or Banswer" must be given IN THE C I RCUIT to the court clerk or C OURT OF T H E S TATE O F OR administrator within EGON FOR T HE 30 days along with COUNTY OF DESthe required filing CHUTES. C H RIS fee. It must be in WAVRIN and PAM p roper form a n d WAVRIN, Plaintiffs, have proof of serv. Th e U n known vice on the plaintiff's Heirs and Devisees attorney or, if the of EARL E. RUSp laintiff does n o t SELL and VIVIAN have an attorney, RUSSELL, deproof of service on t he plaintiff. If y o u c eased; an d a l l

have questions, you should see an attorney immediately. If you need help in finding an attorney, you may contact the Oregon State Bar's Lawyer Re f e rral S ervice online at http: //www.oregonstatebar.org or by calling (503) 6 84-3763 (i n t h e Portland metropolitan area) or toll-free e lsewhere in O r e gon a t (800) 452-7636. DATED: J uly 1 3 , 201 5 . HURLEY RE, P.C., Alan N . S t ewart, OSB 121451, Of Attorneys for Plaintiffs. LEGAL NOTICE STORAGE AUCTION On July 25, 2015 at 10:00 AM, the entire contents of storage units ¹31 Daniel Brent Norris 5 x 10, ¹48 Cie L ynch 5 x 10, ¹ 2 0 9 Vincent an d K a t ie Herbert 10 x 20, ¹235 Aaron Connell 5 x 5, ¹290 Josh Wills 5 x 10, ¹319 Teddy Boles 5 x 10, ¹388 Stacey Bean 10 x 14, ¹400 Theresa Hart 12 x 28, ¹515 Stephen Fisher 10 x 15, ¹556 10 x 15 Martin Madison, will be sold to the highest bidder to satisfy lien placed on the said units for non-payment of rent. The sale will take place at Alliance Storage, 257 SE 2nd Street, Bend, OR. For more inf o rmation call please 541-389-5500

LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE. Reference is made to that certain trust deed made by Neal Whitson, a

s ingle person, a s

grantor, t o F i d elity National Title Ins Co as trustee, in favor of Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. as beneficiary, dated September 1, 2005, recorded September 12, 2005, in the mortgage records of Deschutes County, Oregon, as D o c ument No. 2005-61163, covering the following described real property situated in said county and state, to wit: LOT EIGHT IN BLOCK SS OF DESC HUTES RIVE R WOODS, DESCHUTES COUNTY, O REGON. P ROPERTY AD D R ESS: 19225 S HOSHONE RD., B e n d , OR 9 7702. There is a default by the grantor or other person owing an obligation or by their successor in interest, th e p e r formance of which is secured by said trust deed, or by their successor in interest, with respect to provisions therein which authorize sale in the event of default of such provision. The default for which foreclosure is made is grantors' failure to pay when due the following sums:

einstated by p a y monthly payments of rment to the benefi$562.16 b e g inning ciary of t h e e n tire A ugust 1 , 2014 ; a mount the n d u e monthly payments of (other than such por$585.07 b e g inning of the principle as March 1, 2015, plus tion not then be due prior accrued l a te would had no default occharges of $107.45; curred) and by curing together with title ex- any o t her d e fault pense, costs, trustee's complained of herein fees and a ttorney's that is capable of befees incurred herein ing cured by tenderby reason of said de- ing the performance fault; any further sums r equired under t h e advanced by the ben- o bligation o r tr u st eficiary for the protec- deed, and in addition tion of the above de- to paying those sums scribed real property or tendering the perand i ts inte r est necessary therein; and prepay- formance cure the default, by ment penalties/premi- to paying all costs and ums, if applicable. By expenses actually inreason of said default, curred in enforcing the the beneficiary has obligation and t rust d eclared al l s u m s deed, together with owing on the obliga- trustee and attorney tion secured by said fees not exceeding trust deed i mmedi- the amounts provided ately due and pay- by O R S 86. 7 78. able, said sums being Without limiting the the following, to wit: trustee's disclaimer $40,238.64 with inter- oi representationsor est thereon at the rate warranties, Oregon of 6.00000 percent law requires the per annum beginning trustee to state in July 1, 2 014; p lus this notice that some prior accrued l a te residential property charges of $107.45; sold at a tr ustee's p lus e s crow a d - sale may have been vances of $ 395.52; used in m a n ufacp lus other fees of turing methamphet$5300' together with amines, the chemititle expense, costs, cal components of trustee's fees and which are known to attorney's fees in- be toxic. Prospeccurred herein by rea- tive purchasers oi son of said default; residential property any further sums ad- should be aware oi vanced by the benefi- this potential danciary for the protec- ger before deciding tion of t h e a b o ve to place a bid for described p r o perty this property st the and i ts inte r est sale. In therein; and prepay- trustee's this notice, ment penalties/premi- construing the singular includes ums, if a p plicable. the plural, the word W HEREFORE, n o "grantor" includes any tice is hereby given successor in interest that the undersigned to the grantor as well trustee will on July 31, as any other person 2015, at the hour of owing an obligation, 10:00 AM, in accord the performance of with the standard of is secured by time established by which trust deed, and ORS 187.110, at De- the the words "trustee" s chutes Coun t y beneficiary" inCourthouse Front En- and their respective trance, 1 16 4 N W clude in interest, Bond Street, Bend, successors any. Robinson Tait, OR 97701, in the City ifP.S., Authorized to of Bend, County of sign on behalf of the Deschutes, State of 710 Second Oregon, sell at public trustee, Suite 710, Seauction to the highest Ave., attle, WA 98104. bidder for cash the interest in th e r e al LEGAL NOTICE property d e scribed TS No. a bove, which t h e OR05000051-15-1 grantor had or h ad APN 118018 TO No power to convey at 8533147 the time of the execu- T RUSTEE'S N O tion by grantor of the T ICE O F SAL E trust deed t ogether Reference is made with a n y in t erest to that certain Trust which the grantor or Deed made by, SUgrantor's successors S AN J BACK in interest acquired STROM as Grantor after the execution of to FIRST AMERIthe trust deed, to sat- C AN T I TL E IN isfy the foregoing ob- SURANCE COMligations thereby sePANY as Trustee, in cured and the costs favor o f M O R Tand expenses of the GAGE ELECsale, including rea- TRONIC R E G ISsonable charges by TRATION the trustee. Notice is SBYSTEMS, I N C. further given that any ( MERS B), as desigperson named in ORS nated nominee for 86.778 has the right, G REEN TREE at any time that is not SERVICING L LC, later than five days B eneficiary of t h e before the date last security instrument, set for the sale, to its successors and have this foreclosure assigns, dated as of proceeding dismissed December 5, 2013 and the trust deed and recorded on

able charge by the Trustee. Notice is further given that any person named in Section 86.753 of Oregon R e v ised S tatutes has t h e right to h ave t he f oreclosure pr o ceeding dismissed and the Trust Deed reinstated by payment to the Beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than s u ch portion of said principal as would not then be due had no default o c curred), t ogether with t h e costs, Trustee's or attorney's fees and curing any o t her default complained of in the Notice of Default by tendering t h e per f ormance required under the obligation or Trust Deed, at any time prior to f i ve days before the date last set fo r s a le. Without limiting the Trustee's disclaimer of r epresentations or warranties, Oregon law requires the Trustee to state in this notice that some re s i dential property sold at a Trustee's sale may have been used in i mmediately d u e manufacturing and payable said methamphetamines, sums being the folthe chemical comlowing, to-wit: The ponents of w hich a re known to b e sum of $269,731.79 together with intertoxic. P r ospective est thereon at the purchasers of resirate of 5 . 12500% dential pro p erty should be aware of per annum from September 1, 2014 this potential danuntil paid; plus all ger before deciding accrued late to place a bid for this property at the charges t h ereon; and all T rustee's Trustee's sale. In fees, f o r eclosure construing this nocosts and any sums tice, the masculine ender includes the a dvanced by t h e Beneficiary pursueminine and the ant to the terms of neuter, the singular said Trust D eed. includes plural, the Wherefore, notice is word "Grantor" inhereby given that, cludes any succesthe un d ersigned sor in interest to the Trustee will on NoGrantor as well as any other persons vember 25, 2015 at the hour of 1 1:00 owing an obligation, the performance of A M, Standard o f Time, a s es t a b- which is secured by lished by S ection said Trust Deed, the 187.110, O r e gon words "Trustee" and Revised Statues, at "Beneficiary" inthe Bond Street encludes their respectrance steps to the tive successors in Deschutes County i nterest, i f any . Courthouse, 1 164 D ated: JULY 2 1 , NW Bond St., Bend, 2015 First AmeriOR 97701 County of can Title Company Deschutes, sell at By: LAURIE P. ESTRADA Authorized public auction to the highest bidder for S ignatory Firs t A merican Titl e cash the interest in the said described Company c/o real property which TRUSTEE CORPS the Grantor had or 17100 Gillette Ave, Irvine, CA 9 2 6 14 had power to convey at the time of 949-252-8300 FOR the execution by SALE I N FORMAhim of the said Trust T ION PLE A S E CALL: In S o urce Deed, together with any interest which Logic at the Grantor or his 702-659-7766 Websuccessors in intersite for T r ustee's Sale I n f ormation: est acquired after t he e xecution o f www.insourcelogic.c said Trust Deed, to om. O r de r No . satisfy the foregoOR15-000051-1, ing obli g ations Pub Dates thereby secured and 07/30/2015, the costs and ex08/06/2015, penses of sale, in08/1 3/2015, 08/20/2015 cluding a r easonDecember 13, 2013 as Instrument No. 2013-050553 of official records in the O ffice of th e R e c order o f Des chutes County, Oregon to-wit: APN: 118018 L O T 3, B LOCK 3 , RI M ROCK V I L LAGE, DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON. Commonly known as: 6 3 262 CHEROKEE LANE, BEND, OR 9 7701 Both th e B e neficiary a n d the Trustee have elected to sell the said real property to satisfy the obligations secured by said Trust Deed and notice has been recorded pursuant to Section 86.735(3) of Oregon R e v ised Statutes. The default for which the foreclosure is made is the Grantor's failure to pay: failed to pay payments which became due Monthly P a yment $2,052.46 Monthly Late Charge $0.00 By this reason of s aid d e fault t h e Beneficiary has declared al l o b ligations secured by s aid Trust D e e d


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