Bulletin Daily Paper 06-24-14

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Serving Central Oregon since190375

TUESDAY June 24,2014

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AT HOME• D1

bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD

BEND

GOlf —Michelle Wie served as a fitting cap to two history-making U.S.Opens. C1

(and a worse one for the car's owner)

Year of the auto recall

— We're on track to trample the previous record, set10 years ago.C6

Solar StormS — Onthe

Cost of water

facili up 2M

lookout in Boulder, Colo.A6 By Hillary Borrud The Bulletin

School nurses — cuts

The price tag for Bend to build a drinking water filtration plant has increased by $2 million, after consultants produced a more comprehensive estimate of

causing someconcern. A4

construction costs.

The increase brings the total estimated construction cost to $32.2 million, Bend

infrastructureplanning director Tom Hickmann

Garden tOur — Checkout

said Monday. In addition, the cityhad already spent at least $5 million on the design for the plant as of fall

a backyard Bendoasis that started 26 years ago.D1

2013.

Lessons fromTVapoca-

Bend and other cities faced a federal deadline in 2012 to treat surface water for the microorganism cryptosporidium, but Bend received an extension until

IypSOS —Bewareof dogs ... and rats ... shoot, watch out for pretty much everything.D6

In national news — The

October 2014. The city re-

Supreme Court largely sides with an EPA effort to regulate power plant emissions.A2

centlybroke ground onthe plantbut will not finish itby the deadline, and a state official said Monday that the

Oregon Health Authority

And a Web exclusive-

has not decided how to pro-

The humble potato is caught up in a heated political fight. benffbnlletin.cnm/extrns

ceed with enforcing federal law.

The original construction cost estimate was $30 Courtesy Prineville Police Department

EDITOR'5CHOICE

Where recovery Is rare, but comfort isn't By Gina Kolata New York Times News Service

NEW BRITAIN, CONN.

— Propped up in a hospital bed, a 75-year-old man with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, or Lou Gehrig's disease, must make an agonizing decision. Should he keep struggling until the illness inevitably kills him, dependent on a ventilator, unable to walk or eat or move? Or should he choose

aday and atim etohave the ventilator disconnected and die?

The man, who asked not to be identified to protect

his privacy, was a patient at the Hospital for Special Care here, one of 400 longterm acute care hospitals

A1930 Ford Model A was stolen Sunday in Prineville and ended up fenders-deep in the Crooked River 9 miles south of Prineville.

tals: Critically ill patients,

sometimes unresponsive or in comas, may live here for months, even years, sustained by respirators and feeding tubes. Some, especially those recovering from accidents, eventually

By Dylan J. Darling eThe Bulletin

SeeWater/A4

Crook County man's plan to take his restored Model A to church to show the congregation backfired Sunday when police allege a transient stole the vintage automobile and crashed it into the Crooked River. "It's my understanding that the vehicle was in very good condition before it was stolen," Capt. Michael Boyd of the Prineville Police Department wrote in an email. The 79-year-old owner of the car, whom police declined to identify, left

Halpin, a 34-year-old

the 1930 Model A near the

transported by air ambulance

not showing up for a court appearance in Klamath County. He was booked into

to St. Charles

the Crook County jail but

Bend for injuries sustained according to OSP. After being released from the

later released because the jail was full, according to a deputy. A tow truck pulled the carfrom the water,accord-

hospital, he was arrested

ing to OSP. Photos of the

on suspicion of unauthorized use of a motor vehicle, driving under the influence of intoxicants, first-degree criminal mischief and fail-

stolen Model A provided by Prineville Police and the

transient, was

Church of Christ on East Third Street in Prineville while he went to lunch, Boyd said. It was stolen between 1

p.m. and 2 p.m. Sunday. At 3:10 p.m. the Oregon

State Police received word that a Ford Model A had rolled into the Crooked River

9 miles south of Prineville on state Highway 27, near Southeast Riverview Road,

in the tumble into the river,

according to OSP. Witnesses reported seeing a man swim ure to perform the duties to shore from the car. of a driver involved in an The man, Erik Blake accident.

Halpin was also cited on

Although not familiar

a misdemeanor warrant for

with the particular car stolen in Prineville Sun-

Oregon State Police show

damage to the car, including

day, a road-worthy Model and $15,000, said Wayne "Speedy" Morgan, president of the High Desert A's, a

Bend-based Model A club. He said he hadn't heard many stories of the cars be-

ing stolen. "It's rare because they are not your everyday car," he said. He said it would be hard for a Model A to blend in

roof and water damage. Boyd said the car is likely

with modern-day traffic. — Reporter: 541-617-7812, ddarling@bendbulletin.com

totaled.

ill with heart problems.

She promptly left her job to care for her, a task that has consumed Murphy ever since. "For me, it was a

no-brainer," said Murphy, who lives in Syracuse, N.Y.. "When I was growing up, Murphy, 54, set aside her

Wikipedia sliding itsway into academia By Larry Gordon

itics professor at Pomona Col-

sourcesfortheirentry on a 1978

teacher," said Schug, 19. "It

Los Angeles Times

lege assigned the class to write detailed entries for Wikipedia

U.S. Supreme Court decision allowing corporate donations for ballot initiative campaigns. Then came the really scary step: All their work was posted publidy on Wikipedia for reading and editingby apotentially immense audience.

makes us feel more obligatedto do a good job and present the facts in an unbiased way." Oncethebane ofteachers, Wikipedia and entry-writing exercises arebecomingmore common on college campuses

"It felt more real that other

drop mutual suspicions and seekto cooperate. SeeWikipedia/A4

LOS ANGELES — All

through high school, Ani

insteadofterm papers. 'Iitrns out it was alotharder

Wikipedia. Herteachers talked about the popular online encydopedia"as if it wasn't serious or trustworthy" and suggested

than the students anticipat-

it only be used as a tip sheet.

strict protocols. Schug and her

Imagine her surprise this spring when her American pol-

classmates woundup citing218 people willbe readingus bescholarlylegal andnewspaper sides just our group and the

sits on the edge of a decaying industrial town.

Tracy Murphy was managing a nonprofit agency five years ago when her mother became seriously

careeraspirations, drained

here for the rest of their lives.

know they exist. This one

By Dionne Searcey New York Times News Service

she sacrif iced forme. "

Schug was told to steer clear of

tucked out of sight, and even many doctors do not

Womenquit jobs in peak years, and a shift is felt

A costs between $12,000

a smashed front end, torn

will leave. Others will be These facilities often are

consultants had designed

90 percent of the project, the estimate rose to at least $35 million.

in the United States. These

are no ordinary hospi-

million, but by the time

ed. Their projects had to be

researched, composed and coded to match Wikipedia's

as academia and the online site

her savings account and eventually sold her gold jewelry to help make ends meet while shuttling her

mother, who is 85, to doctors' appointments and

running errands. "I always felt like I can find another job eventu-

ally — but I only have one mother," she said. Murphy is part of a small but economically significant group that is bucking a powerful decades-long movement of women of all ages into the labor market. SeeWork/A5

"People don't want to

think about us," said Dr. Paul Scalise, chief of medicine at the Hospital for

TODAY'S WEATHER

Special Care. "I don't want

Partly cloudy

to think about us, either." SeeAcute /A5

Page B6

High 76, Low47

The Bulletin

INDEX At Home Business Calendar

D1-6 Classified E -f 6 Dear Abby 06 Obituaries C5-6 Comics/Pu zzles E3-4 Horoscope 06 S oI B2 Crosswords E 4 L o cal/State B1-6 TV/Movies

B5 C1-4 D6

AnIndependent Newspaper

Vol. 112, No. 175,

30 pages, 5 sections

Q We use recIrcled newsprint

': IIIIIIIIIIIIII o

8 8 267 02329


A2

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, JUNE 24, 2014

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imi s , e s OWei' Bll

By Adam Liptak

percent of those emissions."

New York Times News Service

The

Scalia said the agency was to continue to require carbon freeto do so as long as the pollution limits in permits for

Supreme Court on Monday

the largest pollution sources,"

WASHINGTON handed

-

other permitting authorities

sources in question "would P r esident B a r ack need permits based on their

Obama's Environmental Protection Agency a victory in its effortsto regulate greenhouse

emissions of more conventional pollutants." That part of the decision,

gas emissions from stationary which effectively sustained sources like power plants, even regulation of nearly all the as it criticized what it called the sources the agency had sought agency's overreaching. to regulate, was decided by "EPA is getting almost ev- a 7-2 vote. Chief Justice John e rything it

w a nted i n t h i s

Roberts and Justices Anthony

case," Justice Antonin Scalia Kennedy, Ruth Bader Ginssaid in summarizing the deci- burg, Stephen Breyer, Sonia sion from the bench. "It sought Sotomayor and Elena Kagan to regulate sources it said were joined that part of the decision. responsiblefor 86 percent of The agency expressed satisall the greenhouse gases emit- faction with the ruling. "The Supreme Court's deted from stati onary sources

the agency said in a statement. Another part of the decision rejected, in harsh terms, the

agency's primary rationale for the regulations. The agency had contended it would inter-

pret the Clean Air Act to require regulation of far fewer stationary sources of pollution

than the law seemed to require. "An agency has no power to cratic policy goals by rewriting unambiguous statutory terms," Scalia wrote. Roberts,

Kennedy and justices Clarence Thomas and Samuel Ali-

cision is a win for our efforts

Dtscaiesrv

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

MEGABUCKS

The numbers drawnMonday nightare:

g32gae geg9 gaa gae The estimated jackpot is now $4.2 million.

Ukraine agreedMonday to respect acease-fire declared by the Ukrainian president, raising hopes for anend to months of fighting that have killed hundreds andravaged the country's industrial heartland.Theannouncementcame astheRussianand U.S.presidents traded demandsover the conflict. Russian President Vladimir Putin urged direct talks between thegovernment and the rebels. President Barack Obama warned Putin that Moscow will face additional costs if it does not help easethe crisis.

EXCOmmuniCatiOn — Kate Kelly, the founder of a prominent Mormonwomen'sgroup,hasbeenexcommunicated,accordingto her organization, Ordain Women.Kelly, an international human rights lawyer, formed the group, which pushes for gender equality in the faith, with the ultimate goal of allowing women in the layclergy. Kelly has repeatedly insisted that she hasnot spoken out against church leaders or church doctrine. Theexcommunication wasannounced by Ordain Women onMondayafternoon.

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Ukrainian CeaSe-fire — Pro-Russianinsurgents in eastern

VA repOrt — In another damning report on the Department of Veterans Affairs, the U.S.Office of Special Counsel on Mondayassailed the VA for what investigators said was its unwillingness to acknowledge the "severity of systemic problems" that haveput patients at risk. The special counsel, Carolyn Lerner, reported in a letter to President Barack Obama that investigators found a "troubling pattern of deficient patient care," andexpressed concern about what she termed the department's unwillingness to acknowledge the impact of its problems onpatient safety.

KERRY DELIVERSDIRE WARNING TO IRAQIS

Si sil.AvL

Siffiell Weepelle — Syria finished handing over to Western powers Monday the1,300 tons of chemical weapons it acknowledged possessing, completing a dealreached last fall under threat of U.S. airstrikes. Themost dangerous material will be transferred to anAmerican ship, which will move into international waters andusespecialized equipment to destroy the chemicals over thenext two months. Questions persist over whether Syrian President BasharAssad is hiding undeclared poison gases orattacking rebels with chlorine — atoxic industrial gas that is not specifically classified as achemical weapon. But politicians andactivists hailed Monday's milestone as avictory for international diplomacy.

'tailor' legislation to bureau-

to joined that part of the deciings, EPA will be able to regu- to reduce carbon pollution be- sion, which was decided by a latesources responsible for83 cause it allows EPA, states and 5-4vote. nationwide. Under our hold-

Egyptian jOurnaliStS —An Egyptian court on Monday convicted three Al-Jazeera journalists and sentenced them to sevenyears in prison on terrorism-related charges after a trial dismissed by rights groups as apolitically motivated sham. Theverdict brought a landslide of international condemnation and calls for the newly elected president to intervene. Theunprecedented trial of journalists on terror charges was tied up in the government's fierce crackdown on Islamists and the Muslim Brotherhood since the ouster lastyear of Islamist President MohammedMorsi by el-Sissi, then the army chief. Prosecutors had accused the three —Australian Peter Greste, Canadian-Egypt ianMohamed Fahmy and EgyptianBaherMohammed — of promoting or belonging to the Brotherhood and of falsifying their coverage of protests by Morsi's supporters.

Brendan Smialowski/The Associated Press

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry makeshis way to board a planeheaded to Iraq on Monday atJordan's QueenAlia International Airport. Warning of the "existential threat" posed by Sunni militants, Kerry said Monday that the U.S. is prepared to take military action even if Baghdad delays political reforms, noting that the risks of letting the insurgency run rampant threaten dangers beyond Iraq's borders. But he stressed military action would not be insupport of the present Shiite-led government of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki. Kerry, on afew hours' visit to Baghdad, urged

Iraq's leaders to quickly set aside divisions as theonly means of stopping the vicious Sunni insurgency and said Iraq's future depended onchoices Iraq's leaders makeinthenextdaysandweeks. It was a dire warning to leaders of Iraq's bitterly divided Shiite, Sunni andKurdish communities that came at a timewhenthe Middle Eastern nation was facing its worst crisis since the withdrawal of U.S. forces in late 2011after eight years in Iraq. The Sunni fighters havevirtually erased Iraq's western border with Syria andalso taken territory on the frontier with Jordan.

Bridge inquiry — Investigations into theadministration of New Jersey Gov.Chris Christie andthe Port Authority of NewYork andNew Jersey havezeroed in onpossible securities law violations stemming from a $1.8 billion road repair agreement in 2011,according to people briefed onthe matter. While the inquiries were prompted bythe politically motivated laneclosings at theGeorgeWashington Bridge last year, theseinvestigations center on another crossing: the Pulaski Skyway, the crumbling elevated roadwayconnecting Newark andJersey City. Theinquiries into securities law violations focus on aperiod of 2010 and2011 whenChristie's administration pressedthe Port Authority to pay for extensive repairs to theSkyway andrelated road projects. — From wire reports

— The Associated Press

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gal director of the American WASHINGTON — A feder- Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), al court on Monday released a which along with The New previouslysecretgovernment York Times had filed Freedom memo outlining the legal jus- of Information Act lawsuits to tification for the 2011 killing compel the government to reof Anwar al-Awlaki, a U.S. lease the July 2010 document. "The release of this memo citizen and accused al-Qaida operative, in a drone strike in will allow the public to betYemen. ter understand the scope and The document was released implications of the authority under order of the U.S. Court the government is claiming," of Appeals for the 2nd Circuit Jaffer said. in New York and provides the I mportant sections of the most detailed explanation to Justice Department's l egal date for the legal reasoning analysis were stripped from behind al-Awlaki's killing. Its the version of the document disclosurealso represents a released to the public. Among significant capitulation by the the deleted portions were Obama administration, which paragraphs that presumably fought for years to keep the explained why t h e J u stice memo — as well as many oth- Department's Office of Legal er aspects of its targeted-kill- Counsel determined that killing program — secret from ing Awlaki in a drone strike the public. would not violate the Fourth "We do not believe that Amendment, which guaranal-Aulaqi's U.S. citizenship tees due process to U.S. citiimposes constitutional limita- zens accused of crimes. tions that would preclude the Still, the m emo provides contemplated lethal a ction" previously unknown details by the U.S. military or CIA, about the reasoning behind the memo concluded, clearing one of the most controversial the way for a drone strike that counterterrorism operations would trigger intense legal carried out by the U.S. governand political debate. ment since the Sept. 11, 2001, Civil liberties groups wel- attacks. comed the disclosure of the 41Awlaki's relationship with page memo. al-Qaida "brings him within "The release of this memo the scope" of the 2001 congresrepresents an overdue but sional authorization of the use nonetheless crucial step to- of military force, according to wards transparency," said the document.

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TUESDAY, JUNE 24, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

A3

TART TODAY

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

It's Tuesday, June24, the175th day of 2014. Thereare190 days left in the year.

HAPPENINGS IRS —Former Internal Revenue Service counsel Jennifer O'Connor is called to testify to the HouseOversightand Government Reform Committee about the disappearanceof IRS emails. MiSSiSSiPPi —Voters will decide between incumbent Thad Cochran andchallenger Chris McDaniel in a runoff election in the Republican primary for one of the state's U.S. Senate seats.Ag

HISTORY Highlight:In1964, AT&T

inaugurated commercial "Picturephone" service between NewYork, Chicago and Washington, D.C., asLadyBird Johnson, wife of the president, called Dr. Elizabeth Woodof Bell Laboratories in NewYork. (Requiring the use of video booths, with a 3-minute call from Washington to NewYork costing $16, and a$27 charge for a 3-minute call between New York andChicago, Picturephone nevercaught on.) In1314, the forces of Scotland's Robert the Brucedefeated the English in the Battle of Bannockburn. In1509, Henry Vlll was crowned king of England; his wife, Catherine of Aragon, was crowned queenconsort. In1793, the first republican constitution in Francewas adopted. In1880, "0 Canada," the future Canadian national anthem, was first performed in QuebecCity. In1908, Grover Cleveland, who served asboth the 22nd and 24th presidents of the United States, died in Princeton, N.J., at age71. In1939, the Southeast Asian country Siam changed its name to Thailand. (It went back to being Siam in1945, then becameThailandonceagain in1949.) In1940, France signed an armistice with Italy during World War II. In1948, Communist forces cut off all land andwater routes between WestGermanyand West Berlin, prompting the western allies to organize the

DISCOVERY

sun en in om re-emer es .',",,„ The floods andstorms thatbatteredBritain earlier thisyearradically changedthewayarchaeologists interpret the landscape, providing an ancient laboratory to study how humans coped with catastrophic climate change in the past. By Katrin Bennhold

— From wire reports

n e w , i n e x pensive,

easy-to-use cholera vaccine that is stockpiled for emergencies worked very well during a cholera outbreak

BORTH, Wales — There is a

poem children in Wales learn about the sunken kingdom of Cantre'r Gwaelod, swallowed

in Africa, Doctors Without Borders reported recently.

by the sea and drowned for-

ever after. On a quiet night, legend has it, one can hear the kingdom's church bells ringing. When the sea swallowed

Two doses of the oral vaccine called Shanchol, in-

part of Britain's western coast-

cholera, which causes diar-

line this year and then spat it out again, leaving homes and

rhea and dehydration so severe that it can kill, a study published in The New England Journal of Medicine last month found. The study was done by Epicentre, the r esearch

vented in Vietnam and pro-

duced in India, provided 86 percent protection against

livelihoods destroyed but also

a dense forestof prehistoric tree stumps more exposed than ever, it was as if one had

caught a faint glimpse of that Welsh Atlantis.

arm of D octors Without Borders, and the Health

The submerged forestof Borth is not new. First flood-

Ministry of Guinea, during

ed some 5,000 years ago by

a 2012 outbreak t h ere. More than 316,000 doses

rising sea levels after the last

ice age, it has been there as long as locals remember, coming and going with the tides and occasionally disappearLuke Wolagiewicz/ New York Times News Service ing under the sand for years Prehistoric tree stumps on a beach in Borth, Wales, from a forest first flooded about 5,000 years ago, on end. But the floods and after the last ice age. storms that battered Britain

this year radically changed the way archaeologists inter- He told Ashton: "They're just pretthe landscape: A quarter- like the human footprints in

est child a little less than 37

mile-long saltwater channel cutting through the trees, re-

Mysteriousspecies

Borth." Footprints of humans and

vealed by erosion for the first

animals in Borth had been time, provided a trove of clues dated to about 6,000 years to where human life may have ago. The site in Happisburgh been concentrated and where was 900,000 years old, a time its traces may yet be found. when mammoths and hippos "We used to think of this as

just as an impenetrable forest — actually this was a complex

human environment," said Martin Bates, a geoarchaeologist at the University of Wales Trinity St. David, who over-

sees the excavation work in Borth on a beach he played on as a toddler. "The floods have opened our eyes as to what's really out there."

S canning the a rmy o f ghostly spikes protruding

The recent torrential rains,

Actress Michele Lee is72. Actor Peter Weller is 67.Actor lain Glen (TV: "Gameof Thrones"; "Downton Abbey") is 53. Actress-producer Mindy Kaling is 35. Actress Minka Kelly is 34.

A

New York Times News Service

from thesand here one recent

BIRTHDAYS

for cholera By Donald G. McNeil Jr.

In1968,"Resurrection City," a shantytown constructed as part of the Poor People's March onWashington,D.C., was closed down byauthorIn1975, 113 peoplewere killed when anEastern Airlines Boeing 727 crashedwhile attempting to land during a thunderstorm at NewYork's John F. KennedyInternational Airport. In1983,the space shuttle Challenger — carrying America's first woman in space,Sally Ride — coasted to asafe landing at Edwards Air ForceBase in California. In1993, David Gelernter, a Yale University computer scientist, was seriously injured by a mail bomb sent from the Unabomber, Theodore Kaczynski. Ten years age:Federal investigators questioned President George W.Bushfor more than an hour in connection with the news leak of CIAoperative Valerie Plame's identity. Five years age:South Carolina Gov. Mark Sanford admitted he had secretly flown to Argentina to visit a womanwith whom he was having anaffair, and said he would resign ashead of the Republican Governors Association. One year age:Opening statements took place in the Sanford, Florida, trial of George Zimmerman, accused of murdering 17-year-old Trayvon Martin. (Zimmermanwas acquitted.)

Oral VaCane New York Times News Service

Berlin Airlift.

ities.

BREAKTHROUGH

morning, Bates said it was as if nature were making a point: linked by a growing number of climatologists to human-in-

duced climatechange, have provided an ancient laboratory to study how h umans

coped with catastrophic climate change in the past.

inches.

couple of years of flooding and storms and ponder the future. The submerged forest in Borth, little known outside

early human species. Fossil

a small radius here, has once again become part of local

skeletons in Atapuerca, Spain,

lore. Its haunting shapes are

Little is known about this

from around the same time suggest that they walked upright and looked much like modern humans, although their brains were smaller. If they had language, it was

featured in poetry slams and in storytelling evenings, and still roamed in these parts. No modern-day performances of human bones or prints that Cantre'r Gwaelod have been old had ever been found in staged on the beach, said MorBritain. gan and his wife, Enid. Could this be possible'? primitive. Living at the tail end Have they ever heard the A frantic race against time of an interglacial era, as win- bells'? began. Every day, the shape ters were growing colder, they Enid Morgan smiled. "I of the prints would blur a little m ay have had functional body knew someone who did." more as the coming tide erod- hair. So far, there is no evied the contours of heels, toes dence that they used clothes, and arches. A team led by Dr. shelter, fire or tools more comSarah Duffy from the Univer- plex than simple stone flakes. sity of York arrived to apply Standing on the ridge above a technique called multi-im- Cardigan Bay in Borth, Bates 716 SW 11fII St. age photogrammetry, taking d escribed w ha t t h e ar e a Redmond . 541.923.4732 about 150 digital photographs would have looked like at the of the surface area contain- height of the last ice age some ing the prints and feeding it 20,000 years ago: more than into a program that created half a mile of ice overhead and a three-dimensional mod- dry land stretching across to-

were given out, and about 75 percent of the residents

of choleraaffected areas got two doses, which is good coverage for an outbreak already underway. Two vaccines have been stockpiled by the World Health Organization since

2013. But the older vaccine, Dukoral, made by a subsidiary of Johnson & Johnson, was invented mostly for the wealthy travel market.

Shanchol, which costs less than $2, comes in a vial smaller than an energy shot.

Freepipeinstallation estimates

%ILSONSaf Redmond

el. By the time another team

day's North Sea. The sea level was 400 feet lower than it is

had come to do some laser scanning, it was too late: The today. "You could have w alked prints were barely visible. P anicked, scientists l i f t -

541-548-2066

Adjustablg

from Denmark to Yorkshire

ed from the site a 130-pound in those days," he said. block of sediment with one About 10,000 years ago, lithic collections at the British faint print on top, to have it an- temperatureswarmed sharpMuseum, has been organizing alyzed at the National Ocean- ly, by eight to 10 degrees Fahr"fossil road shows" in which ography Center. It is the only enheit. By that time, the Euhe invites civilians to bring remaining physical evidence ropeanicesheetshad melted, in an y p o t ential a r chaeo- of the footprints: Before the but the much thicker North logical finds and have them month was out, all traces of American sheets took much identified. (One man recently them had vanished. It was a longer. While the climate had showed up with a 6-inch-long powerful reminder of both the warmed to today's levels, alhippo tusk and a well-pre- resilience and the fragility of lowing mixed oak woodland served ax, both found locally human life. to grow and humans to reand both more than half a milcolonize Britain, the sea level lion years old.) remained some 130feetlower Having those extra eyes on "I thought, bloody for another 3,000 years. the ground can make all the hell, we are dealing When it did rise, it would differencein coastal areas, have been traumatic for the Ashton said, for what the sea with something quite population, wiping out whatNicholas Ashton, the curator of Paleolithic and Meso-

reveals, it tends to reclaim al-

most as soon. He learned this lesson firsthand. In May 2013, shortly after the first set of storms, Ashton commissioned Bates, an old

university friend, to work on Britain's east coast in Norfolk. The beach near Happisburgh (pronounced hays-boro), a longstanding archaeological

extraordinary here."

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— Nicholas Ashton, The displaced humans of the British Museum time, Bates said, were prehistoric refugees from climate

change. "What had been preserved

"Even in the reduced life

for nearly 1 million years was taken back by the sea in

span of the day, the coastline would have advanced dra-

the space of 10 days," Ashton

matically," said Bates, who is convinced that stories like

sard. Initially skeptical, he said

Cantre'r Gwaelod originated in this period.

ly humans, wanted a geophys- real when Duffy's computical survey to map any chan- er images landed in his in-

western European seaboard:

nels or rivers that might lie

There are Cornish and Breton

box sometime last June. "I

beneath about 30 feet of sedi- thought, bloody hell, we are ment. Some of these channels, dealing with something quite he reckoned, might contain extraordinary here," he said. evidence of early humans beThe footprints, the oldest cause sources of freshwater known outside Africa, probwould have been natural gath- ably belonged to a family ering spots. group of Homo antecessor, a cousin of Homo erectus that

Similar tales abound on the

versions, and variations of the theme exist in Jersey and the Orkney Islands. The ultimate

legend, of course, is Atlantis, which Plato placed somewhere in the North Atlantic.

"It was a traumatic geological event, and people

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It was on their second visit, on May 10, that Bates noticed some indentions on the oth-

Homo heidelbergensis from

sense of it," said Gerald Morgan, a retired head teacher

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Africa settled in Britain about

500,000 years ago, he said. and local historian in nearby Using foot-length-to-stature Aberystwyth. laminated silts recently laid ratios, scientists estimate that The same thing is happenbare on the beach. The humps the male was perhaps 5 feet ing again today, as Britons and bumps looked familiar. 9 inches tall, and the small- survey the damage of the past

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TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, JUNE 24, 2014

Wikipedia Continued fromA1 In at least 150 courses at col-

leges in the U.S. and Canada, including UC Berkeley, UC San Francisco's medical s chool,

"Even the best research papers get buried in a drawer somewhere. These make a real contribution to the public discourse." — Amanda Hollis-Brusky, professor, on the written Wikipedia entries she assigns

Boston College and Carnegie Mellon University, students importing laws and the elec- the entry on strokes, medical pand Wikipedia entries this toral reform group FairVote. student Andrew Callen expeyear. The student groups presented riencedWikipedia's argumenThe result, supporters say, their research to the class and tative nature. A W i k i pedia has been better-researched ar- displayed their Wikipedia pag- medical editor, apparently a ticles about, for example, the es on a large screen in a Hahn physician, challenged some of causes ofparalyzing strokes Hall classroom. The Supreme Callen's technical terminology. and the history of the Ameri- Court case entry showed that it Callen saidhis language was can West. And, they say, stu- had attracted about 2,000 view- more precisebut conceded afdents are b ecoming better ers in a month. ter some back and forth that the prepared for a future of digital Even with complaints of distinction was not important information. mistakes and incompleteness, for lay readers. "Even the best research pa- Wikipedia has a p owerful "I didn't take offense at it," he pers get buried in a drawer reach. Often the first site sug- said."In away I appreciated it." somewhere," said A m a n da gested by Google searches, were assigned to create or ex-

Hollis-Brusky, th e

P o mona it has about 4.5 million En-

Opponents skeptical

politics professor who assigned glish-language entries and Some skepticism remains. the Wikipedia projects. "These 496 million visitors a month Doug Hesse, vice presimake a real contribution to the worldwide. dent of the National Council public discourse." Wikipedia "has essentially of Teachers of English, said When t h e no t - for-profit become too large to ignore," Wikipedia's und e rstandWikipedia was started in 2001, said Berkeley's Kevin Gorman, able insistence on neutrality the idea was that anti-estab- a former student who is the na- doesn't allow students to make lishment volunteers — in fact, tion's first 'Wikipedian in Res- reasoned arguments and analanyone who could access the idence" at an undergraduate ysis in term papers. Internet — would write and edit institution. And its reliance on pub"It is c ertainly a n i n i tial lished sources eliminates stuits mainly anonymous entries. An unbiased truth was sup- source ofinformation for a dents' independent interviews, posed to emerge if enough con- huge number of people," he experiments and research, tributors took part. By contrast, said. "For many people, it may said Hesse, who heads the traditional encyclopedias hired be their primary source of University of Denver's writing expert authors. information." program. Gorman guides students At Carnegie Mellon i n Reputationrepair who are composing Wiki en- Pittsburgh, professor of huBut even as its populari- t ries as assignments in U C man-computer i n t eraction ty soared among the public, Berkeley's American Cultures Robert Kraut ha s assigned Wikipedia earned a reputation program — requiring ciasses classes to compose Wikipeamong academics as ama- that deal with ethnic and eco- dia chapters in psychology. teurish, peppered with errors nomic diversity. Students have benefited, he and too open to nasty online Gorman said it is important said, but he doesn't think such spats over content. Wikipedia to expand the ranks of Wikipe- assignments wil l b e come has tried to repair all that with dia authors and editors beyond commonplace. bettersafeguards and a wider its early base of "basically techCompared to regular term range of topics. no, libertarian, white dudes." papers, Wiki entries require a As part of that effort, WikiFurther symbolizing peace lot more faculty time to ensure pedia has established a San with academia, professional they are ready for online viewFrancisco educational arm scholarly organizations in so- ing. Some colleges may be put that helps colleges tailor class ciology, psychological science off by the public editing, which assignments to the site's tech- and communications in recent Kraut said led to some of his nical demands. It trains "Wiki- years have urged members to students' writings getting expedia Ambassadors" like Char write Wikipedia articies and to cised for not following what he Booth, the Claremont Colleges assign students to do so. Other considered to be very complilibrarian who aided the Pomo- efforts include Wikipedia-writ- cated footnoting rules. naciass. ing marathons, such as one In Pomona College's poliWikipedia "gets well-writ- sponsored by CalArts' online tics class, there was no nasty ten articles from (college) stu- magazine, East of Borneo, that flaming on any class projects, dents who are studying the focused on topics about the which counted for 3 5 p e rtopicsand have access to the Southern California art world. cent of the students' grades, best literature on the subject Gorman also works with UC according to Hollis-Brusky. and the expertise of professors San Francisco's medicalschool, (Most Wikipedia authors use who can guide them as well," where professor Amin Azzam pseudonyms, and the Pomona said LiAnna Davis, a spokes- runs a monthlong elective class students were urged to do the woman for the Wiki Education for students to improve Wiki- same to avoid possible privacy pedia's medical information. In violations.) Foundation. Pomona professor Hol- the first such class at an AmerFreshman Lane Miles, who lis-Brusky and Booth taught ican medical school, students worked on the FairVote restudents to meet the require- have started or revised pages search, said it was doubly satments of tight writing, neutral about hepatitis, dementia and isfying to help build the online tone and abundant citations for alcohol withdrawal syndrome, encyclopedia. "We are educattheir projects on such topics as among others, Azzam said. ing ourselves and educating the Federalist Papers, diamond In revising and broadening others," he said.

IN FOCUS:HEALTH AND EDUCATION

Nurses,parentscite school nurse

cutbacks asdangerousfor kids By Renee Schoof

ter. School nurses make it happen." PalMany other parts of the

McClatchy Washington Bureau

W ASHINGTON — ents in Charlotte, N.C., cel-

ebrated this month when their county commissioners

approved a budget that includes $1.8 million to make sure every public school has a full-time nurse. The agreement capped two years of work by a parents advocacy group started by Teri Saurer, the mother of daughters who just finished first and third grades. Saurer got involved with the nurse issue in the Char-

lotte-Mecklenburg Schools because her younger daughter, Hannah, has a history

of seizuresand serious food allergies. But she said nurses made schoolssafer for all

students. Other parent advocates joined the effort be-

cause their children suffered concussions at school. One had a child who experienced a first-time food allergy. "You want to know that if

something happened to your child — they're at school so many hours of the daythat there's going to be some-

body with medical training who can attend to them," Saurer said.

Several hundred parents wrote to the Mecklenburg County commissioners urging them to approve the money for school nurses, Saurer

country don't have nurses in every school. The situation

duty. A retired nurse who was

volunteering at the school that day helped perform CPR on him before medics arrived. A coronersaid Sebastian'sdeath

varies state by state, and of- was due to a heart defect. ten county by county. Advocates for more educaSome places, such as tion funding in Philadelphia P ennsylvania, have h a d are calling for enough money school nurse positions re- to restore nurses, teachers and duced because of budget other school staffers whose cuts. But the bigger problem positions have been cut. has been that tight budgets in Nurses help children manmany places have meant that age chronic conditions such as full-time registered nurse asthma, diabetes and seizures positions aren't being added so they don't miss school. to keep up with population They also treat injuries and growth, or school RNs who counsel students about physiretire are replaced with aides cal and emotional issues. It's difficult to know just how or nurses with less training, said Erin Maughan, direc- many schools have full-time tor ofresearch at the Robert nurses. The nurses associaWood Johnson Foundation, tion's last survey was in 2007, a public health philanthropy, whenit found that45percent of and an executive nurse fel- public schools have a full-time low at the National Associa- school nurse every day, and tion of School Nurses. an additional 30 percent have "Much of the country does nurses who work part time in not have sufficient coverage one or more schools. of school nurses," she said. U.S. school staffing sur"This means t hat s chool veys from the Department of nurses are covering multi- Education show 81,410 fullple schools, so they rely on time and part-time nurses in secretariesand unlicensed all U.S. schools in 2011-12, the personnel, even teachers latest year available. That's and principals, to step in and down from 90,910 in 2007-08. do the daily duties a school

The nation has about 132,000

nurse would do."

public and private schools.

Sometimes that

w o r k s.

But some decisions require the trained assessment that only a school nurse can make, she said. said. A sample letter on her In Philadelphia last year, group's website argued that sixth-grader Lap o rshia nurses should be part of ev- Massey died from asthma ery school's safety plan. complications that started at Members of the group school, where no nurse was attended the county com- on duty. Last month, 7-yearmission meetings wearing old Sebastian Gerena died bright orange T-shirts em- after he collapsed in anothblazoned with the message er Philadelphia school when "Healthy children learn bet- — again — no nurse was on

L ast month, a r e port i n JAMA Pediatrics, a p u b lication of the Journal of the

American Medical Association, said many schools district in recent years have cut

or reduced nursing services in schools.

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Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times

Professor Amanda Hoilis-Brusky teaches an Introduction to American Politics class at Pomona College in Ciaremont, Calif., where students are required to research, compose and post a Wikipedia entry on one of a variety of topics.

I'g"

:fT4

Water

said this was at least partly because some of theconsul-

tober deadline to complete the filtration plant. A federal rule

Continued fromA1 "When we completed 90 percent (of the) design, we

tants reassigned employees allowed municipalities to rewho had been working on the ceive a one-time extension of project while it was on hold, up to two years, so Bend and knew that the cost of the proj- then replaced them with difother cities cannot receive adect was high," Hickmann said. ferent people when the project ditional extensions. "In general, when a system City employees and con- started up again. Meanwhile, sultants made a list of ideas the construction manager doesn't meet a deadline, we to cut costs, but they were and general contractor M.A. put them under some sort of concepts, not engineering de- Mortenson Construction gave compliance schedule," Salis signs. Then, in February 2013, the city a guaranteed maxi- said. The state, which enforces the City Council voted 4-3 to mum price of $30 million to federal drinking water rules, place the project on hold and build the filtration plant, based could enter into a b i lateral re-examine the type of treat- on the earlier estimate. After compliance agreement with ment technology to use. The the consultants fully vetted the city, to lay out how the city City Council voted 4-3 in No- the cost-cutting ideas, they will meet the rule. Or the state vember to end the hold on the determined those would save could issue an administrative project, which meant the city $3 million to $4 million, bring- order for the city to comply. restarted the planned filtra- ing the total construction cost Hickmann said city staff tion plant. closer to $32 million. have not had in-depth conConsultants went back to As for the federal water versations with state officials work on th e project earlier treatment deadline, Kari Salis, about what will happen when this year, but it took several a manager with the Oregon the city fails to meet the Octomonths for them to determine Health Authority's drinking ber compliance deadline, but that the earlier cost-cutting water program, said Monday "they'll see by then we're well ideas would not bring the total that the state has not yet de- under construction." construction price tag down termined how to proceed since — Reporter: 541-617-7829, to $30 million. Hickmann Bend expects to miss the Ochborrud@bendbulletin.com

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TUESDAY, JUNE 24, 2014 • T HE BULLETIN A 5

•Q

Work

ket as jobs in the construction September 2008 and April of and manufacturing indus- this year, 640,000 state and lo-

Continued from A1

tries have been slowto return.

In the y ears since the

last recession began, many women like Murphy, in

the curves ofthe economy

and has been spread more have left the workforce just evenlyacross ages. as they were reaching their Shepherdson, who highpeak earning years. lighted the drop in working The demands on mid- women in a recent report dle-agedwomen to care for for his firm, Pantheon Mactheir parents, particularly roeconomics, said that even during difficult economic in a slow-growing econotimes that force many fam- my "women's participation iliesto share resources, are should not have fallen at all, not the only reason for the especially among the womshift. Some economists also en in their prime earning attribute t h e u n e xpected years." phenomenon to extensive A Pew Research Center budget cuts by state and survey conducted in October local governments, which 2013 reported that 27 percent employ women in large num- of the women surveyed had bers and were hit h arder quit their job to care for a during this recession than in child or family member. previous downturns. Sarita Gupta, co-director of Caring Across GeneraBadnews all around tions, an advocacy group their late 40s and early 50s,

Photos by Rick Gershon / New York Times News Service

Dr. Paul Scalise, the chief of staff at the Hospital for Special Care, comforts a patient, Joy Franklin, in the hospital's Close Observation Unit in May. As the population ages, doctors have learned better ways to keep intensive care patients alive.

Acute Continued from A1 But more experts and policymakers are likely to have to start thinking about them

soon. The cost of long-term acute care is substantial, about

$26 billion a year in the United States, and by one estimate the

c

number of patients in these fa-

cilities has more than tripled in the past decade to 380,000. There are two reasons, said Dr. Judith Nelson, a critical

care specialist at Mount Sinai Hospital in New York.

The population is aging, increasing the chances of a catastrophic illness like blood

Patient Murray Zack shares a laugh with Tammy Bohmer at the Hospital for Special Care in New Britain, Conn. By one estimate, the number of patients in long-term acute care facilities has more than tripled in the past decade to 380,000.

sepsis or acute respiratory distress syndrome that eventually may land patients in a hospital

quality measures areborrowed like this one. And doctors are from ICUs. Whether they apply getting better at keeping people in long-term acute care hospi-

assess their mental functioning. But, they found, almost no

one they called could respond to the telephone. care.The resultis an increase The Hospital for Special Cox and his colleagues have in the number of highly depen- Care is unusualbecause 70per- found that about half the padent patients who survive the cent of its patients are on Med- tients who enter these facilities alive when they are in intensive

tals is unknown."

intensive care unit but must

icaid. Yet just 30 percent were

are dead within a year, and

remain on a respirator. They cannot go home or to a rehabilitation facility. Many are too sick even for a nursing home. Long-termacutecareis"where you go when you survive but

on Medicaid when they were

most of the rest are in custodial care. Just 10 to 15 percent re-

you don't recover," Nelson said.

Splashes of cheer And yet this Connecticut hospital is not a place of un-

relieved misery. The campus is leafy and green, and the windows are wide and filled with sunlight. Paintings by residents and local artists decorate the walls. On nice days

patients can visit a landscaped garden along a path of paving

admitted, Votto said. Even with

government support, many turn to an independent life. families are financially devasAt the Hospital for Special tated when a relative lands in Care, 100 patients, including

The road to along-term acute hoses. The couple who recentcare hospital often starts in an ly were married, Chris Plum, ICU somewhere else when a 38, and Margaret Lavigne, 43, doctor suggests placing a tube share a room crowded with in a patient's throat so he or she medical equipment, attended at can be hooked up to a ventila- all hours by determined aides. tor. "Once that happens, your They kiss each other good future is not bright, unless you night before being lifted into are quite young," Nelson said. separate hospital beds. "Everybody wants 'the Deciding to have a tracheotomy should be a difficult deci- One,'" Lavigne said. "I did not sion for family members, she expect to find him here, of all added. But, she said, "people places." misunderstand — they think it is a sign of hope." Few doctors Tough choices discuss the likely consequences Other patients face tougher

muscular dystrophy, both in w heelchairs, married in

the

courtyardoutsi de. The bride was given away by her weeping father. "It's remarkable," said Dr. John Votto, the hospital's chief executive. "You are on a venti-

lator, you can't move, you can't walk, you can't breathe. You

and I would say, 'Oh my God, you must have this terrible quality of life.' But they really don't. Honestly, many are quite happy." Often they arrive here be-

cause ordinaryhospit als do not want to keep them. Reimbursement is tied to diagnosis and treatment, but most of

these patients no longer need a diagnosis; they need treatment and care. Most start out

beingcoveredby Medicare,but when that benefit runs out-

at 150 days — long-term-care hospitals either discharge the patients or Medicaid takes over.

Medicare, concerned about the high price of long-term acute care hospitals, is trying to trim reimbursements. Nearly half of the $7.3 billion cut from its budget by the Affordable Care Act came from reductions in payments to these facilities.

Medicare officials argue that perhaps these patients could stay in regular hospitals or nursing homes instead and say it's unclear whether care is better in long-term acute care

woman in her 40s.

In Birmingham, Ala., for example, most of the nearly 300 teachers laid off in recent years were women who had been with the district 15 to 20

years, according to the local teachers union. In T renton,

N.J., many of the roughly 200 school district workers laid off since 2009, union officials

said, were female support staff members who lost their

jobs when cafeterias, paraprofessional services and school security teams were privatized.

In

C h icago, K atherine

White was laid off i n

decline was about 2 percent

and anxiety are common

— and many of those in their 20s dropped out to return to

among women who care for an older relative. school orleft the workforce The decline in public emtemporarily to focus on car- ployment also appears to ing for young children. have played a major role in M en, t oo , h a v e b e e n the exodus of middle-aged pushed out of the labor mar- working women. Between

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not the disturb their respirator

or the alternatives. "It could be that physicians

c hoices. The man with A L S

nosis and therefore don't want to share it, or it could be that

He knows that the little musde movement he has left will go.

knows he will never eat again, are not confident in their prog- that he will never walk again. physicians do share it and fam- But it is not easy to pick a day ilies don't want to hear it," said and decide that is the day you Dr. Shannon Carson, a critical willdie. care specialist at the UniverScalise visits the patient, sity of North Carolina School who signs and mouths the of Medicine, who has studied words that he does not want what families expect when to live like this any longer. But a relative enters a long-term Scalise wants to be certain the acute care hospital. man is sure. He asks a psycholBut the likeliest reason for ogist, a psychiatrist and anoththe disconnect, he said, is that er doctor to talk independently families are initially dealing to the patient about what he with ICU physicians who are wants to do. focused simply on keeping the Scalise, the nurse and the repatient alive: "They are discuss- spiratory therapist are haunted ing how the patient is doing to- by that first difficult conversaday, not how they will be doing tion. "He does not want to live in six months," he said. here, and he does not want to The result is predictable, ex- die," Scalise said. "There is no perts say. training that deals with any of s "People are not prepared," "There is one inNelson said. The man w aits a w e ek, tervention after another. Venti- speaking with the other doclator, feeding tube, permanent tors, thinking about how hard feeding tube, permanent intra- it would be to leave his family, venous access. 'Should we treat including four children, two this infection?'" of whom were still in college. The initial optimism soon Then he asks the hospital staff

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rives atthelong-termacute care

"better" means for these patients, and that makes it diffi-

hospital. Some patients and their families eventually must

On Wednesday, Feb. 27, at 8 p.m., the man's nurses began giving him intravenous medicalions to deeply sedate him. The next morning, they turned

LOAN QFFlcE s

cult to assess how well these confront an extraordinarily diffacilities are operating. ficult question: When is it time "We don't know how to mea-

sure quality," said Dr. Jeremy

to stop the interventions?

In one of their studies, NelKahn, associateprofessor of son and her colleagues telecritical care, medicine and phoned people six months after health policy in the University they entered long-term acute of Pittsburgh School of Med- care hospitals, intending to give icine. "The current Medicare them a brief set of questions to

2 0 11

from her job teaching writing and history to fifth- and " It's a d i saster for t h e for home care workers and sixth-graders. Initially, her life women concerned," said Ian patients, said the difficulties was a whirl of activity as she fine-tuned her resume and apShepherdson, an indepen- can stack up. dent economist, "but it's also plied for numerous full-time bad news for the economy 'Huge personal sacrifice' teaching positions. "Women are falling out of "I tell you, I really thought because they are not contributing to growth and their the workforce to be primary I had the job in a lot of cases, skills are eroding through caregivers to aging parents," and it didn't happen," White, extended inactivity." she said, "but as women go 56, said. As the economy strug- out of the workforce it means In 2012 she accepted a temgles to get back on track, they sacrifice their own fi- porary teaching position for the labor participation rate nancial security." one semester. When that job AARP's Public Policy Inremains feeble for almost ended, she started firing off reeveryone. Still, the losses af- stitute estimates that women sumes again. "No nibbles in over a year," fecting this group of women 50 and over who leave the — who normally would be workforce permanently to she said. in the prime of their careers care for a parent lose nearShe picked up a few tutoring — stand out from the crowd ly $325,000 in wages and jobs to help pay her bills, but and highlight the challenges benefits. a few weeks ago White aban"It saves a lot of money but doned her search. She signed facing middle-aged workers who, for whatever reason, there's a huge personal sac- up for computer technology find themselves out of a job. rifice," said Jeannie Brown, classes in hopes of finding a Since the start of the reces- 49, of Belgrade, Mont., who job in a new field. "A lot of teachers, we say sion, the number of working left herjob as an accounting women 45 to 54 has dropped clerk for county government we're too young to retire and more than 3.5 percent. There in 2009 tocare for her dis- too old to be competitive with are now about 1 m i l l ion abled granddaughter and her the market out there," she said. "We're between a rock and a fewer women of that age in mother, who had a stroke. the labor force than at their The toll that caregiving hard place, and you have to peak at the end of 2009. For takes is more than financial. know how to navigate through younger women, the rate of Researchers say depression it and reinvent yourself."

from their jobs, living in hotels are hookups in most of the to be near a parent, child or hallways. spouse. Some deplete their life But while many of these pasavings. "It's a tragedy, a real tients may occupy a frightening tragedy," said Dr. Christopher middle ground between death Cox, a critical care specialist and the lives they once knew, at Duke University School of some do find happiness. The Medicine. "A heartbreaking children, some abandoned by situation." their parents, gurgle happily in the hands of volunteers careful

Path to acute care

to make lives for themselves. Recently two p a tients with

where a typical employee is a

babies and children, are on venThe facility may be several tilators. Seventy-five of them, hours from a family's home, so Scalise said, "are on ventilarelatives end up staying away tors forever." That's why there

hookups. Dedicated doctors and staff require nearly constant care, some of whom are managing

were in education, an industry

one of these hospitals.

stones and lined with respirator tend cheerfully to patients who

cal government workers lost

But the rate of decline among their jobs, according to Labor adult men has largely tracked Department data. Almost half

off his ventilator. The man's

family was gathered at his bedside. Death followed in about 20 minutes.

"It was very hard to lose him," his wife said. "I think it took a lot of courage."

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A6

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, JUNE 24, 2014

TODAY'S READ: THE SUN AND CATASTROPHE

LOOKING AHEAD ELECTION

Racia o itics su ace in Mississi i GOP runo By Emily Wagster Pettus

nominee will be a heavy fa- teers to precincts today, but vorite in November, and sev- he would not say where. JACKSON, Miss. — Race eral prominent black DemoAsked if the Justice Deis roiling the Republican Sen- crats are supporting the in- partment is w atching this ate runoff in Mississippi, a cumbent as far preferable to year's runoff, Justice Destate with a long history of di- his primary challenger. partment sp o keswoman vided politics where the GOP At a Tea Party Express ral- D ena Iverson said i n a n is mostly white and the Dem- ly Sunday in Biloxi, McDan- email: "The department is ocratic Party is mostly black. iel, a state senator, never men- aware of concerns about votNational tea party groups tioned race. But he received er intimidation and is monisay they are working to "en- loud applause when he said: toring the situation." Voters sure afree and fair election" "Why is a 42-year incumbent who experience problems by sending several dozen ob- pandering to liberal Demo- are encouraged to r e port servers to precincts to watch crats to get re-elected?" them, she said. who votes during today's A man in the crowd shoutMississippi voters do not GOP contest, concerned ed: "Reparations!" McDaniel register by party, and state about six-term Sen. Thad Co- did not respond. law says the only people prochran'sefforts to persuade h ibited from voting in t h e Mississippi Democrats to Legal preparations Republican runoff today are cast ballots. Challenger Chris Tea Party Patriots Citizens those who voted in the DemMcDaniel and the tea party Fund and two other inde- ocratic primary June 3. portraycross-partyvoting as pendent groups that are supBut there's potential for dangerous and even illegal, porting McDaniel, Freedom- confusion as the tea party though state law allows it. Works and Senate Conser- groups cite another Missis"Thad Cochran and his es- vatives Fund, say they have sippi law that says a voter tablishment handlers are out hired a former Justice De- can participate in a party trolling, begging for Demo- partment attorney, J. Chris- primary only if he intends cratsto cross over and vote in tian Adams, "to ensure a free to support that party's nomthe Republican runoff," Tea and fair election in Mississip- inee in the general election. Party Patriots Citizens Fund pi on June 24." A federal appeals court ruled The Associated Press

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NASA Solar Dynamics Observatory

A magnetic filament bursts out from the sun sparked by a medium-sized flare in 2012. In March 1989,

the Hydro-Quebec powersystem inCanada collapsed during a geomagnetic disturbance, leaving 6

c hairwoman J e nn y B e t h Adams was the Justice DeMartin said in announcing partment attorney who han-

million people without electricity in a blackout that lasted more than nine hours. Montreal's subway

that her group and two oth-

system was paralyzed in morning rush hour.

ers have hired an attorney to

n e oc ies,searc in t esun orsi nso trou e

r e adily

acknowledges he's seeking support from black and white voters. "I think it's important for

everybody to participate," he said. "Voting rights has been an issue of great importance in Mississippi. People have r eally contributed a lot

By Stephanie Stoughton Bloomberg News

"Mama always told me not to look into the sights of the sun. Oh, but Mama, that's where the fun is."

forceable. The ruling came dled a 2007 case in which Ike in a case in which DemoBrown, a black elections offi- crats sought to block Repubcial, was found to have violat- licans from crossing over in ed the rights of white voters primaries. in majority-black Noxubee A M cDaniel supporter County. It was the first time filed a lawsuit Monday in the Justice Department had McDaniel's home county citused the 1965 Voting Rights ing that law, but it was not Act to allege racial discrimiclear if a judge would considnation against whites. er the suit before polls open "Election integrity is es- today. sential, and Mississippi has Mississippi's attorney gena long, documented and trag- eral, a Democrat, and secreic history of lawlessness in tary of state, a Republican, elections," Adams said. "The issued a joint statement Monoutcome of the runoff should day saying: "A person lawbe determined by who gets fully in the polling place may the most votes, not by who challenge a voter based on manipulates the system the party loyalty only if the voter best." openly declares he does not FreedomWorks spokes- intend to support the nomiman Adam B r andon said nees of the party whose priMonday that the groups will mary the voter is participatsend several dozen volun- ing in."

watch today's primary. While Cochran r arely mentions race, he

of

energy and effort to making sure the political process is open to everyone." Cochran's campaign staff believes he would get a boost if Mississippi voters who tra-

No one understands that Bruce Springsteen song more than William Murtagh. In a small government office near the foothills of the Rocky Moun-

in 2008 that the law is unen-

ditionally go for Democrats — black voters and union members — participate in the

GOP runoff. The Republican

tains, Murtagh and other federal employees monitor the sun 24 hours a day, waiting for it to erupt and fling a cloud of superheated, supercharged gas toward Earth. The Space Weather Prediction Center in Boulder, Colo.,

sends alerts to power grids, airlines, oil drillers and even pigeon trainers on the risks of geomagnetic storms that can disrupt communications, electric power, and, yes, perhaps thebirds' sense of direction. The center also may provide the first clue to the worst-case

scenariodescribed in academic and government reports: widespread power outages, food shortages and trillions of dollars in economic damages. The reinsurance industry is

increasingly sounding alarms, calling space weather a potential hazard in today's wired

world. While the U.S. government has takensteps to prepare for

a mega-storm from space, the center is often able to provide

only an estimated 30-minute warning of geomagnetic disruptions. The government spends less than $10 million on the facility, which must fight annually for funding within the National Oceanic and Atmo-

spheric Administration. The little office relies on data from ag-

ing satellites it doesn't control and that need to be replaced. What the public and Wash-

ington may have forgotten is the long history of geomagnetic storms. "It is in the human

nature to assess the threat based on your own lifespan," said Murtagh, a scientist who

some U.S. lawmakers were around the world experienced pushing to eliminate the cen- outages. ter's funding and shift the work The storm was about four elsewhere. times largerthanthe2003 disturA 2008 report published by bance,said Jefftey Love,an adthe National Academy of Sci- viserfor geomagnetic research ences drew more attention to at the U.S. Geological Survey. It's hard to say when anthe risks. It cited Kappenman's work, which said a s evere other big one will arrive. If a storm could zap hundreds of Carrington-level storm were to the U.S. grid's high-voltage strike again, zapping the North t ransformers, leaving m o r e

jf; &:

American electric grid, it could

than 130 million people in the be a disaster. dark for months or longer, with It might damage transformeconomic costs possibly reach- ers across the grid, leaving as ing several trillion dollars. many as 40 million people in "The National Academy re- the U.S. without power for 16 port changed everything," said days to two years, according Bob Rutledge, who's in charge to a report last year by Lloyd's of the space center'sforecastof- of London, the world's oldest fice. "There's a lot of disagree- insurance market. Long-term ment on this, but it put this on outages risk disrupting finanthe radar." cial markets and triggering Today, the space-weather of- "major and widespread social fice has about 40,000 subscrib- unrest," with estimated ecoers worldwide for its emailed nomic costs as high as $2.6 trilalerts, including watches giv- lion, Lloyd's said. ing a day or more of advance The apocalyptic scenarios notice of possible events and have their skeptics. roughly 30-minute warnings Frank Koza, executive difor imminent storms. rectorof infrastructure planAlerts go to grids, airlines, ning for regional grid operator satellite firms, governments PJM Interconnection, said he and companies using satel- doesn't think t r ansformers lite-based, high-precision GPS would simultaneously fail in services for mining, land sur- large numbers and lead to the veys and deep-sea drilling, long-term outages described by Murtagh said. Kappenman. "I'm struggling with that seSome pigeon trainers monitor forecasts for geomagnetic vere event John has proposed," storms, suspecting the distur- said Koza. PJM operates a good bances play a role in "smash" chunk of the U.S. power grid in races,when birds return later a 13-state network in the Mid-

':AT BROKEN TOP CLU.B" N THE SUNRISE PAT,IO THURSDAY, JULY 17

BILL KEALE '.-: $10 PER PERSON-

THURSDAY, AUGUST 7™

AARON M EYER .

+ 3 PIECE BAND $22 PER PERSON

is the center's program coordi- than expected or don't come west and Mid- Atlantic. nator and has a background in back at all. Federal regulators have forecasting. On very r a r e o c casions forcedpower companies to de"they'll completely disappear velop standards to protect the I n March 1989, the H y dro-Quebec power system in off the face of the Earth," said grid, though serious improveCanada collapsed during a geo- Frank McLaughlin, co-own- ments will only come with magnetic disturbance, leaving er of H a nson, Massachu- "wailing and gnashing of teeth 6 million people without elec- setts-based McLaughlin Lofts, on both sides," Kappenman tricity in a blackout that lasted which breeds racing pigeons. SBld. more than nine hours. Montre- "And nobody would really He said the government has al's subway system was para- know what happened." been slow to replace older satlyzed in morning rush hour. Geomagnetic storms are typ- ellites providing space-weathThe storm may have come ically associated with coronal er data and t o b o lster the close to "toppling power sys- mass ejections, or violent blasts small office, which Kappentems from the New England of hot, magnetized gas from the man calls underfunded and and Mid-Atlantic regions of the sun. When those douds slam under-appreciated. The office has a staff of fewU.S. to the Midwest," John Kap- into the Earth's magnetic field penman, a space weather con- — the fastest in less than a day er than 40 employees and a sultant, wrote in a 2010 report — they may result in geomag- number of unfilled positions. for the federally funded Oak netic storms. Its budget for the current fiscal Ridge National Laboratory. He The mother of modern geo- year is an estimated $9.6 milhas added the Pacific North- magnetic storms is known as lion, according to figures from west to that list. the Carrington Event. In AuNOAA, part of the Commerce T he Halloween Storm i n

gust and September of 1859,

"They've accomplished a lot with little resources," Kappen-

suffered ablackout. At the time,

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Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B5 Weather, B6

© www.bendbulletin.com/local

THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, JUNE 24, 2014

BRIEFING Dog board seeks volunteers Residents of Deschutes County with experience handling dogs and/or livestock are encouraged to apply for open positions on the Deschutes County Animal Control Board of Supervisors. Board members attend hearings and help determine the disposition of dogs involved in chasing, wounding or killing livestock. The term of service is two years and volunteers are compensated for mileage only. To learn more or to pick up an application,

DESCHUTES

BRIEFING

o un a 0 By Tyler Leeds The Bulletin

Deschutes County commissioners on Monday adopted a $306 million budget for fiscal year 2015, with Commissioner Tony DeBone acting as the

board's lone dissenter in a 2-1 vote. Amid the depths of the

economic downturn between 2007 and 2012, annual revenue

u e

S

into the county dropped by 22 percent, and services were cut as a result. County Adminis-

cent increase over the current

trator Tom Anderson charac-

better financial times than

budget. "Even though we are in

terized the budget approved we have seen in past years Monday as the second in a row and revenue is up across the aimed at restoring services to board, the board andbudget where they were before the re- committee did not add a lot cession began. With continued of services," Anderson said. "This is more of a project of progress in new construction and risingproperty values, the restoration." new budget reflectsa 6perDeBone saw the improving

HAPPENED TO ... •

economy as an opportunity for the county to lower taxes while still providing the same services. "We could have done everything proposed in this budget with $1 million less," he said, noting that his suggestion was minor and amounted to "a piz-

za ayear" in terms of savings per property owner. SeeBudget/B5

Following up onCentral Oregon's most interesting stories, even if they've been out of the headlines for a while. Email ideas to news@bendbulletin.com. Q»To follow the series, visit bendbnnetin.com/npdntes

visit the Deschutes

County Board of Commissioners Office at 1300 N.W. Wall St.,

Suite 200, in Bend or call 541-388-6570. — Bulletin staff report

Well shot! Reader photos

• We want to see your photos for the next special theme ofWell shot! — "psyched about summer" — to run in the Outdoors section. Submit your best work at bendbnlletin.com/ snmmer2014and we'll pick the best for publication. • Email other good photos of the great outdoors to renderpbotosO bendbnlletin.com and tell us a bit about where and when you took them. We'll choose the best for publication. Submissionrequirements:

THE SHIRE

Hobbit-themedsubdivision mostly bare • Development plans areuncertain for Bendproperty now ownedby a Hood River firm

Call n reporter Bend .......................541-617-7829 Redmond..............541-548-2186 Sisters ...................541-548-2186 La Pine ..................541-383-0367 Sunriver ................541-383-0367 Deschutes.............541-617-7820 Crook....................541-383-0367 Jefferson..............541-383-0367 State projects......541-410-9207 D.c....................... 202-662-7456 Business ..............541-383-0360 Education.............541-633-2160 Health...................541-383-0304 Public lands..........541-617-7812 Public safety.........541-383-0376

Among dozens of Bend real estate developments that collapsed with the

2008 housing crash, perhaps none typified the market's dizzyMaP ing highs and On B6 depressing lows like a 31-lot subdivision in southeast Bend, at the intersection of Ring

What by now was supposed tobe a small community ofhomes dubbed"The

Include as much detail as

Shire," with architecture

possible — when and where you took it, and any special technique used — aswell as your name, hometown and phone number. Photos must be high resolution (at least e inches wide and 300 dpi) and cannot be altered.

inspiredby the Lord of the Rings trilogy, is mostlybare land today. And while a Hood River

equity firm has owned

— Bulletin staff report

The Bulletin

The Bulletin

Lane.

Shevlin Park Road between the roundabouts at Northwest Crossing Drive and Mt. Washington Drive will be closed through Thursday for waterline work between the hours of 6:30 a.m. and 5p.m. Traffic will be detoured along Mt. Washington Drive and Northwest Crossing Drive. There will be some night work, with a closure scheduled for midnight today through 5 p.m. Wednesday. Crews will also do chip seal repair work north of the Shevlin Park Road roundabout with one lane closure at a time and flaggers on site to direct traffic. The road will be reopened by Friday.

Have a story idea or submission? Contact us!

By Elon Glucklich

Bearer Court and Shire

Shevlin ParkRoad closure begins

Andy Tutlis/The Bulletin

Houses in different styles dot the Forest Creek subdivision in Bend on Monday. During the real estate boom, developer Ron Meyers envisioned e subdivision filled with Hobbit-themed homes, like the one on the left, but that vision faded with the collapse of the housing market.

much of the property since 2009,development there has been sparse. Six homes dot the subdivision. Only

two of them feature the

complete with small, circular Hobbit doors, that original developer Ron Meyers had envisioned for the 6acreproperty.

cottage-style architecture,

He lost the property to

foreclosure in 2008with

just two homes built, before the Hood River firm, Castle Partners, L.P., bought it a

Submissions • Letters andopinions: Email: letters@bendbulletin.com Mail:My Mickel's Worth or In MyView P.o. Box6020 Bend, OR 97708 Details on theEdltonals page inside. Contact.541 383 0358

year later. SeeShire/B6

PUBLIC OFFICIALS

WHAT'S HAPPENING WITH ... STATE NEWS

CRIMINAL CASES

Salem

Eugene Grants Pass

• Eugene:Hunters are being askedfor their opinions on lead ammunition,B3 • Grants Pass:Oregon is now using drones to aid in the fight against wildfires,B3 • Salem:Legalization advocate Paul Stanford is dropping his bidto geta pot initiative on the ballot, B3

News of Record, B2

Corrections In a story headlined "A summer journey for 53 goslings," which appeared Sunday,June 22, on page B1,the year in which 65 geesewere relocated to the Summer Lake State Wildlife Area was reported incorrectly. The geesewere relocated to the wildlife area in 2012. In a story headlined "Man accused of removing tree near his property faces charges," which appearedSaturday, June 21, onPage B1, Erick Ward's name was misspelled. The Bulletin regrets the errors.

COMGRESS

7

: :'Wirkkala pleadednot guilty in June to one Luke Wirkknln ::'count of murder after he allegedly shot and :::killed his houseguest, 31-year-old David ,::Ryder, Feb. 4,2013, in Bend. Thecase went to trial on June4. Joshua ,:Jokinen is charged with onecount of murJokinen : :'der after he allegedly beatCarolyn Burdick ::'to death with a shovel onAug. 31, 2013.

U.S. Senate A jury found Wirkkala guilty Wirkkala is expected to be ofmurderon June16after sentenced onJuly14. about seven hours of deliberation. Jokinen pleadednot guilty on Nov. 12, 2013.

: :'The former Madras High sports coach is ::Osborne : wasrearrested ::'charged with14 counts of second-degree .:::in December onadditional : :'sex abusefor analleged sexual relationship charges, which havesince ::'with a now-17-year-old girl. He pleadednot been dropped, andis in Jefguilty on Dec. 17. ferson County jail. In February, Osbornewas indicted on aseparate case involving 11 counts of sec,:'ond-degree sexabusein Washington County. Richard .::'The co-owner of Acrovision Sports Center, Gustafsonhas pleadednot 'aBendgymnasticsacademy,ischarged ::'guilty to all crimes and is out Gnstnfson : ,::'with 10 counts of first-degree sexabuse, : 'of the Deschutes County jail , :122 counts of second-degreeencouraging after posting bail. 'childsexabuseand possessionofcocaine : . Michael Osborne

Jokinen's trial is scheduled for July 8. A status check is scheduled for July1. No trial date has yet been set.

: :'Gustafson is scheduled to go : to trial on Oct. 28 for the sex :::abuse allegations, and aNov. ,::'18 trial is scheduled for the : :'122 counts of encouraging ::'child sex abuseand coke possession.

OTHER STORIES : Perry shot and killed ShaneMunoz in June The Deschutes County Dis: 2012 after Perry allegedly returned hometo trict Attorney's Office asked .:find Munoz in his house. the Bend Police Department in April 2013 to re-examine the events surrounding the case. According to anemail, the DA's office considers the case "open indefinitely." Pivoyne . :Castro-Luna, 42, was reported missing . :Bend Police onMarch16 Castro- : March 9 and DeHorta-Frias, 40, was idenlocated Castro-Luna's body Luna : tified as a person of interest in her disapoff U.S. Highway 20near HambyRoad.Shediedfrom Honorio : pearance. ,::blunt force trauma. De HortnFrias Kevin Perry

No charges havebeenfiled or arrests made.

De Horta-Frias has not been located. Investigators believe he left the Bendarea headed south.

• Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-Ore. 107 Russell Senate Office Building Washington, D.C. 205 l0 Phone:202-224-3753 Web: http:I/merkjey. senate.gov Bend office: 131 N.W. Hawthorne Ave., Suite 208 Bend, OR97701 Phone: 541-318-1298 • Sen. RonWyden, D-Ore. 223 Dirksen Senate Office Building Washington, D.C. 20510 Phone: 202-224-5244 Web: http:I/wyden. senate.gov Bend office: 131 N.W. Hawthorne Ave., Suite 107 Bend, OR97701 Phone: 541-330-9142

U.S. Houseof Representatives • Rep. GregWalden, R-HoodRiver 2182 Rayburn House Office Building Washington, D.C. 20515 Phone: 202-225-6730 Web: http:I/wajden. house.gov Bend office: 1051 N.W. BondSt., Suite 400 Bend, OR97701 Phone: 541-389-4408 Fax: 541-389-4452

STATE OF OREGON • Gov. JohnKitzhsber, D 160 State Capitol, 900 Court St. Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-378-4582 Fax:503-378-6872 Web: http://governor. oregon.gov • Secretary ofState Kate Brown, 0 136 State Capitol Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1616 Fax: 503-986-1616 Email: oregon.sos© state.or.us SeeOfficials /B6


B2

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, JUNE 24, 2014

E VENT TODAY CAR SHOW:Featuring more than 100 sports cars on display; free; 10:30 a.m.-2:30 p.m.; Fort Rock Park, East CascadeDrive, Sunriver; 541-923-9766. REDMOND FARMERS'MARKET: 3-6 p.m.; Centennial Park, Seventh Street and EvergreenAvenue; RedmondFarmersMarket1©hotmail. com or 541-550-0973. OPEN AIRMARKET:With live music by the Moon Mountain Ramblers; 4-7 p.m.; Brookswood Meadow Plaza,19530Amber Meadow Drive, Bend; www. brookswoodmeadowplaza.com, openairmarket©brookswoodplaza. com or 541-323-3370. BEND BICYCLEFILM FESTIVAL: Showcase of local short films featuring local cycling culture; $10 in advance, $15 at thedoor; 7 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St.; www.towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700. OREGON ENCYCLOPEDIAHISTORY NIGHT:Eric Iseman, interpretive ranger at Smith Rock State Park, will discuss "Tribal Rock Art of the Oregon Country"; free; 7 p.m., doors open at 6 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School,700N.W .Bond St., Bend; www.mcmenamins.com or 541-382-5174. SCIENCE!:The Seattle acoustic rock band performs; 7-9 p.m.; GoodLife

ENDA R

Email events at least 10 days before publication date to communityli feibendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at tvtvMf.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.

Brewing Co., 70S.W.Century Drive, Bend; www.goodlifebrewing.com or 541-728-0749.

WEDNESDAY BEND FARMERSMARKET:3-7 p.m.; Brooks Alley, between Northwest Franklin Avenueand Northwest Brooks Street; www. bendfarmersmarket.com. PICKIN'AND PADDLIN':Featuring Americana band the Blackberry Bushes from Seattle with Quincy Streetand Franchot Tone;$5, free for children12and younger; 5 p.m.; Tumalo CreekKayak &Canoe, 805 S.W. Industrial Way, Suite 6, Bend; www.tumalocreek.com or 541-317-9407. MUSIC ONTHEGREEN:Summer concert series with entertainment by Out of the Blue; free; 6-7:30 p.m.; Sam Johnson Park, Southwest15th St. and Southwest Evergreen Ave., Redmond; www.

redmondsummerconcerts.com or

541-923-5191. THE LIBRARYBOOKCLUB: Read and discuss "Tell TheWolves I'm Home" by Carol Rifka Brunt; 6:30 p.m.; Sisters Public Library,110 N. Cedar St.; www.deschuteslibrary.org/ sisters, reneeb©deschuteslibrary.org or 541-312-1055. "THE METROPOLITANOPERA: LARONDINE"ENCORE: Puccini's

Joe Kline/The Bulletin file photo

"Communicating Doors," a time-traveling comic thriller, continues Thursday atthe Greenwood Playhouse inBend. opera based on mid-19th century Paris; $12.50; 7 p.m.; RegalOld Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, 680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend;www. fathomevents.com/event/metsummer-rigoletto or 541-312-2901. FULL DRAWFILM TOUR: Lineup of short films on bowhunting and the outdoors; $14 adults, $11 for children 12 and under; 7 p.m., doors openat 6 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W.Wall St., Bend; www.towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700. ED 8 THEREDREDS:The Portland band performs; $5; 9 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70S.W.Century Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com

or 541-323-1881.

THURSDAY LEFTOVERSALMON: TheBoulder, Colo., jamgrass band performs, with Bill Payne of Little Feat; $24; 6 p.m., doors open at 5 p.m.; Century Center, 70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; www. theoutsi degames.com. "COMMUNICATINGDOORS": A time-traveling comic thriller by Alan Ayckbourn about a woman who stumbles into a murder plot; $19, $15 seniors, $12 students; 7:30 p.m.; Greenwood Playhouse,

148 N.W. GreenwoodAve., Bend; www.cascadestheatrical.org or 541-389-0803. "SWEENEYTODD:THE DEMON BARBEROFFLEETSTREET": Stephen Sondheim andHugh Wheeler's humorous musical about a murderous barber and culinary crime; $22 for adults, $19 for students/ seniors;7:30 p.m .;2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E.Lafayette Ave., Bend; www.2ndstreettheater. com, 2ndstreettheater©gmail.com or 541-312-9626. CRUTCHES: The Seattle punk band performs, with Frustration, Locals EFA andHog's Breath; free; 8 p.m.; Third Street Pub, 314S.E. Third St., Bend; 541-306-3017. JOSEPH EID: TheCalif. band performs; $5; 8 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70S.W.Century Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881. MISTA CHIEF:Reggae,with The Rising Buffalo Tribe andAbstract Rude; $3, ladies free;10 p.m.; The Astro Lounge, 939 N.W.Bond St., Bend; www.astroloungebend.com or 541-388-0116.

COUNTRYQUILT SHOW:Featuring

aquilt showanda raffle; $2; noon-6 p.m.; Crooked River Elementary School, 640-641 N.E.Third St., Prineville; www.crookcounty.k12. or.us or 541-416-2636. NORTHWEST CROSSING HULLABALOO: A street festival with food, bicycle racing, live music by the Indigo Girls and more; free; 3 p.m.; NorthWest Crossing, Mt. Washington and Northwest Crossing

drives, Bend;www.nwxevents.com or 541-382-1662. SISTERSFARMERSMARKET: 3-6 p.m.; Barclay Park, West Cascade AvenueandAsh Street; sistersfarmersmarket@gmail.com. FOURTH FRIDAYSTROLL: Local downtown businesses areopenwith special sales, music, art, food and beverages; free; 4-7 p.m.; downtown Sisters; erin©sisterscountry.com or 541-549-0251. SPLASH, PEDALANDDASH: Ages12 and younger, quarter mile bike and run; $25; 4 p.m.; Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic & Recreation Center, 57250 Overlook Road; 541-408-7747. FURBALLLUAU:Featuring food and drink, belly dancers, silent auction and raffle, with live music by Bill Keale, to benefit the BendSpayand Neuter Project; $44 plus fees in advance, $300 for table for eight; 5:30 p.m.; Century Center, 70 S.W.Century Drive, Bend; www.bendfurball.com.

FRIDAY PATIOANDBAKESALE: 9a.m.-5 p.m.; Holy RedeemerCatholic Church, 16137 Burgess Road, LaPine;www. holyrdmr.org or 541-536-3571.

1VEwsOF REcoRD criminal mischief was reported at 7:08p.m. June12, in the 61400 block of Brosterhous Road. The Bulletin will update items in the Unlawful entry —A vehicle was Police Log whensuch arequest reported entered at11:20 a.m. June is received. Anynewinformation, 13, in the 2700 block of Northeast such as the dismissal of charges or acquittal, must be verifiable. For more Faith Drive. Unlawful entry —A vehicle was information, call 541-633-2117. reported entered at12:55 p.m. June 17, in the 2700 block of Northeast BEND POLICE Yellow Ribbon Drive. Theft —A theft was reported at10:19 DEPARTMENT a.m. June19, in the1000 block of Criminal mischief —Anact of Northwest Columbia Street. criminal mischief was reported at 8:41 Theft —A theft was reported at p.m. June 6, in thearea of Northwest noon June19, in the 2500 block of Hill Street and Northwest Kearney Northeast U.S. Highway 20. Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at 5:49 Theft —A theft was reported at 9:13 p.m. June19, in the 61500 block of a.m. June11, in the 700 block of South U.S. Highway 97. Northeast Providence Drive. DUII —Ramon Flores Briones III, 44, Criminal mischief —Anact of was arrested on suspicion of driving

POLICE LOG

under the influence of intoxicants at11:54 p.m. June19, in the area of Northwest Bond Street and Northwest GreenwoodAvenue. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 11:58 p.m. June19, in the1100 block of Northwest Kingston Avenue. DUII —Kyle JamesGiamanco, 22, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 2:51 a.m. June 20, in the 600 block of Southeast Third Street.

Theft —Atheft was reported at 7:25 a.m. June 20, in the 1300 block of Northeast Thompson Drive. Theft —Atheft was reported at1:58 p.m. June 20, in the area of Northeast Christina Lane andNortheast Lynda Lane. Theft —Atheft was reported at 2:49 p.m. June 20, in the1000 block of Northeast Purcell Boulevard. Theft —A theft was reported at 11:56 a.m. June 20, in the area of Northeast Savannah Drive and

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TUESDAY, JUNE 24, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

B3

RKGON MARIJUANA

Wildlife offici a l s gaugi n g hunters' Advocate abandons opinions onleadammunition

push for

The Associated Press

initiative

wildlife officials are surveying hunters in the state to gauge

The Associated Press SALEM — Marijuana legal-

recovery of the condor from

to put a pair of recreational pot

near extinction.

lection of signatures because it lacked the "wherewithal" to

qualify for the November baiiot by the July 3 deadline. The campaign had gathered around 50,000 signatures, Stan-

hunters are telling us."

lead bullets, the Eugene RegThere's no drive in Oregon ister-Guard reports, but since to bar lead ammunition, but 1991 there has been a federal the question has been con- ban on lead in the shells that tentious in the United States waterfowl hunters used in for years. Lead ammunition shotguns. is blamed for poisoning birds In years since the ban, steel that scavenge animals killed and other variants of shot

sell bullets without lead but

withit. "We want to make sure that

land area. "When they've done blood

shells have come onto the market.

required for its proposed consti-

if questions are being asked, Lead ammunition is genthat we as an agency have a erally cheaper than the altergood feel of what the hunting natives, and it's often more community thinks so that we effective.

tutional amendment and 87,000

can respond with what our

ford said, well shy of the 116,000

for a proposed statute. A group of petitioners for Stanford's campaign went on strike earlier this month, citing delays in paychecks and other issues. Supporters of a n a l ternative pot legalization measure

backed announced early last week that the measure already gathered well more than the

87,000 signatures it needed.

"Outside of

Rainier OffiCer ShOt —Oregonauthorities say a mansought after a Rainier police officer waswounded during a traffic stop has been found dead.TheDaily Newsof Longview,Wash., reports that Columbia County Sheriff Jeff Dickerson saysdeputies heard asingle gunshot shortly after they found thesuspect's car abandonedMonday afternoon. A SWATteam locatedtheman'sbody.Thenewspapersays the body had asingle, apparently self-inflicted gunshot wound. Oregon State Police Lt. GreggHastings saysRainier Officer RussGeorgewas shot in the handearlier Monday by adriver he stopped on U.S.Highway 30 in response todriving complaints. Thespokesmansays George drove himself to ahospital in nearby Longview, then wastakento a Portland hospital. George's injury is not considered life-threatening.

ColumdiaRiverHighwayexpected to reopentoday-

— Ron Anglin, wildlife division administrator

will be banned in California, which acted to f urther the

campatgn stopped pa1d col-

thinks so that we can respond with what our

their opinions about l e ad ammunition. By 2019, lead ammunition

has all but snuffed out his effort

Stanford announced Friday on his Internet show that his

being asked, that we as an agency have a good feel of what the hunting community

nia often drifts north, Oregon

ization advocate Paul Stanford

legalization measures before Oregon voters.

"We want to make sure that if questions are

EUGENE — On the theory

that what happens in Califor-

AROUND THE STATE

discontinued the line more

than a decade ago, he said. Anglin said several instances of lead poisoning among Oregonbirdsofprey have been documented, in Eastern Oregon and the Porttests on them, they found high

levels oflead," he said."But we don't know what the source of those levels was."

t h e t o xicity,

In Eugene, Executive Dihunters are telling us," said lead would be the ideal ballis- rector Louise Shimmel of the Ron Anglin, wildlife division tic material — it's cheap, it's Cascades Raptor Center said administrator. everywhere and it's easy to her organization sees one or The surveywillbe mailedto form," said Ralph Nauman, two instances of lead poisonarandom sample of 4,200Ore- president of Environ-Metal in ing each year. "It's the scavengers — the gon hunters — the state has an Sweet Home. estimated 250,000. The wildThe company makes a no- eagles, the soaring hawks like life department plans a similar lead, nontoxic brand of shot red-tails, the vultures and rasurvey later of nonhunters in shells made of copper, nickel vens — that are going to go for Oregon, Anglin said. and 1I'on. gut piles of things that were Oregon doesn't regulate The company has tried to shot," she said.

The OregonTransportation Department says it expects to reopena section of the Historic Columbia River Highwaytoday, nearly three weeks after the area was closed by a rockslide at Troutdale. Spokesman DonHamilton said Mondaythat about 4,400 cubic yards of debris have beenremoved. OnJune 5, about1,000 cubic yards of rocks and other debris fell from a rockface about100 yards west of the Stark Street Bridge. Cranesbrought down additional loose debris that threatened the roadway.

Suit: OregonBluespiling uptoo muchcash —Alawsuit filed against Oregon nonprofit health insurer RegenceBlueCross BlueShield alleges it is acting like afor-profit company by stockpiling excess money to support large salaries rather than health care for policyholders. The lawsuit filed late last week in MultnomahCounty Circuit Court asks ajudge to rule that Regence is not fulfilling the public-purpose clause of its own bylaws, and is failing to use its excess earnings for the benefit of its members.

Women's rightsmeasurequalifies for ballot —Aproposed equal-rights amendmentfor women hasqualified for Oregon's November ballot. Thesecretary of state's office said Mondaythe petitioners have turned in morethan118,000 valid signatures, about 2,000 more than needed toqualify a constitutional amendment. Themeasure was proposed byLeanne Littrell DiLorenzo of Portland, whofoundeda group called VoteERA.DiLorenzo andher husband, lawyerandlobbyist John DiLorenzo, contributed most of the$472,000 spent on the signature-gathering effort. Themeasure would amendthe state constitution to prohibit state andlocal governments from discriminating on the basis of gender.

— From wire reports

Oregon's newesttool for fighting wildfires: radio-controlled helicopters By Jeff Bamard

or shouldn't use unmanned world conditions on last sum-

The Associated Press

aircraft," said Bob Roth, an aviation management specialist with the U.S. Forest Service

GRANTS PASS — When a

fire filled the Cascade Range's rugged canyons in southwest-

mer's Rim Fire, which burned

400 square miles on the outskirts of Yosemite National

equipped with video, infrared s cameras and a GPS locator to KEEPOgE get a better look in tight smoky <ONGilp)N places before incident commanders send in fire crews. "You are always looking for improved visibility of your Jeff Barnard I The Associated Press fire," said department fire pre- Tyson Shultz of the Oregon Department of Forestry poses last week with a radio-controlled helicopvention specialist Brian Bal- ter at the department's compound onthe outskirts of Grants Pass. The department is equipping the lou. "It just cuts down on the aircraft with video snd infrared cameras and s GPS locator. It plans to use the helicopter this summer

who is leading an evaluation Park. of the future use of unmanned The fire was moving fast on aircraft systems bythe agency. four different fronts, so that The panel's conclusions may infraredaerialmaps produced be ready next year. "The val- the night before by manned ue-added or benefit it is provid- aircraft were out ofdate,said ing to a fire is really the imag- Mike Wilkins, a district rangery. The same camera could er on the Nantahala National be put on a manned aircraft Forest in North Carolina and just the same as you put it on a i ncident commander on a n manned aircraft," Roth said. interagency team called in to A manned aircraft just can't fight the Rim fire. fly in zero-visibility conditions The drone was ableto fl y like a drone can, said Marty high overhead for long hours Rogers, director of the Uni- at a stretch and quickly turn versity of A laska Fairbanks its high resolution video and Center for Unmanned Aircraft infraredcameras on a remote Systems Integration. He took location where it would take a team to fly the center's Scan hours to send in people on the Eagledrone totheFunny River ground. fire on the Kenai Peninsula last

unknowns."

month.

ern Oregon with smoke in 2011,

firefighters started thinking an unmanned aircraft might help

1

them get a look beneath the

cover that a conventional scout plane could not. The state's Department of

Forestry will get the chance this summer to use a small

IQR E stI'IREDANG ER ~@AlElyg>

remote-controlled h e l icopter

as another set of eyes on wildfires.

Covered by a federal grant, the off-the-shelf Century model G30 cost about $1,800. The cost will total about $5,000 once it is outfitted it with video and infrared cameras, and GPS, said 7yson Shultz, a de-

copter is too small to take the

place of manned aircraft that produce infrared maps, and

its own aircraft.

al Institute of Standards and

Firefighting agencies in

Technology has been using

Washingtonand Montana have

drones to gather data to feed

And if you buy used, drones are cheaper, though operational costs may be higher with the numbers of people currentlyneeded to operate them, he added. "I tell people if the job is dull, dirty or dangerous, it probably is good for un-

notgone much beyond looking into wildfire behavior computat the issue. Cal Fire took ad- er models. partment stewardship forester very specific niche in the con- vantage of a drone operated by The U.S. Forest Service, the assembling the craft and get- stant demand for more and the California National Guard nation's biggest wildfire-fight- manned aircraft," he said. ting qualified to flyit. better information on a wild- on last summer's massive Rim ing agency,has been actively The Forest Service and Cal It is only cleared by the fire by providing easy access Fire outside Yosemite, but has evaluating NASA drones on Fire both got a good look at Federal Aviation Administra- to an overhead view of places no plans to get its own. wildfires since 2007, but is just what a drone can do in real tion to fly 400 feet above the manned aircraft cannot go, Alaska used one on a fire taking a slow and cautious apground, and the current gas Ballou said. this year that the University of proach, carefully considering tanks only allow it to be in the With p r ivacy c oncerns A laskaFairbanks fl ies as part a range of issues, includingpriair for 30 minutes, though that dampening the enthusiasm of the FAA's evaluation of how vacy, costs and ownership. "A lot of people are jumping can beextended withmore. over drones, Oregon is ahead to integrate unmanned aircraft At just 5 feet long, the heli- of the curve in actually buying into U.S. airspace. The Nation- to condusions that we should drop water and fire retardant. The hope is that it will fill a

Snowbrush Drive. a.m. June16, in the 6700 block of Hill Road. Theft — A theft was reported at 6:33 Theft —Atheft was reported at 1 0:53 a.m. June 22, in the 300 block of Criminal mischief —Anact of a.m. June 21, in the600block of Southeast Roosevelt Street. criminal mischief was reported at Southeast Airpark Drive. 8 p.m. June16, in the 600 blockof Theft — A theft was reported at 7:11 Theit —Atheft was reported at 11:12 Northwest Cherry Lane. p.m. June 11, in the 900 bl o ck of a.m. June 21, in the2900 block of Southwest Yates Drive. Theft —A theft was reported at 4:21 Northeast RedOakDrive. a.m. June 17, inthe 300 block of Hood Burglary —A burglary was reported Theit —Atheft was reported at 11:15 at 3:19 p.m. June13, in the 2000 block Avenue. a.m. June 21, in the63000 block of of Northeast LinneaDrive. Burglary —A burglary was reported Desert SageStreet. at12:44 a.m. June19, in the 6400 Theft —A theft was reported at 1:49 Theit —Atheft was reported at 2:03 blockofSouthwestShad Road. p.m. June 21, in the600 block of p.m. June 21, in thearea ofNortheast Northeast Bellevue Drive. DUII —Marvin Thomas Edwards, 41, Red OakDrive andNortheast Tuscan was arrested on suspicion of driving Way. the influence of intoxicants at PRIMEVILLE POLICE under Theit —A theft was reported at 7:47 5:21 a.m. June19, in the12200 block p.m. June 18, in the63400 block of DEPARTMENT of Southeast Grizzly Road. U.S. Highway97. Burglary —A burglary was reported DUII —Black Murray, 32, was DUII —Rachel DawnGingerich, 22, at 1:46 p.m. June19, in the 400block arrested on suspicion of driving under of Sixth Street. was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at12 the influence of intoxicants at 2:14 Vehicle crash — Anaccident was a.m. June 20, in thearea of Lakeview a.m. June 21, in thearea of Northeast reported at12:36 p.m. June20, in the Third Street. and River Woodsdrives. area of Jordan Road. DUII —Susan DaleMiller-Langer,68, Griminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 7:45 was arrested on suspicion of driving a.m. June 21, in thearea of Southeast OREGOM STATE under the influence of intoxicants at12:53a.m. June 20, in thearea of Sixth Street. POLICE Northeast 18th Streetand Sockeye Theft —A theft was reported at 6:48 Place. p.m. June 21, in thearea of Northeast Vehicle crash — Anaccident was 10th Street. reported at11:48 a.m. June20, in Theit —Atheft was reported at 3:54 p.m.June20,inthe62900 blockof the area of U.S.Highway f 26near North U.S. Highway97. milepost18. JEFFERSON DUII —Matthew Bjorkman Gross, 21, —Edward JoeTenaJr.,32, was COUNTY SHERIFF'S DUII arrested on suspicion of driving under was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants OFFICE the influence of intoxicants at 1:25 at 1:46a.m. June21, in the area of a.m. June 21, in thearea of ReedRoad Northeast Fourth Street andNortheast Burglary —A burglary was reported and Third Street. RevereAvenue. at12:46a.m. June16, in the 2500 DUII —Scott Edward Miller, 27, block of Southwest BearDrive. Theit —A theft was reported at 4:48 was arrested on suspicion of driving p.m. June 21, in the60900 block of Theft —A theft was reported at 9:25 under the influence of intoxicants at

From previous page

2:33 a.m. June21, in the area of U.S. Highway 97 nearmilepost 130. DUII —Jean-Luc Djukanovich, 19, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 2:48 a.m. June21, in the area of Third Street and Wilson Avenue. DUII —Christopher Glade Krewson, 33, was arrested onsuspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at12:23 p.m. June21, in the area of U.S.Highway 20. Vehicle crash —Anaccident was reported at 6:04 p.m. June21, in the area of U.S. Highway 26andNortheast Long Hollow Road. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at 7:53 p.m. June21, in the area of U.S.Highway126 near milepost14. DUII —Katie Elizabeth Hall, 20, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 9:18 p.m. June 21, in thearea of Southwest U.S. Highway126and Southeast Jackson Street. Vehicle crash —Anaccident was reported at 12:16a.m. June22, in the area of U.S. Highway 97near milepost 109. DUII —Miranda Sandra Yadira Martinez, 40, wasarrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at f:36 a.m. June 22, in the area ofU.S. Highway 97 andSouthwestSalmon Avenue. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at3:10 p.m. June22, inthe area of Southeast U.S. Highway27 and Southeast Riverview Road.

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B4

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, JUNE 24, 2014

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eschutes County commissioners are likely to approve new restrictions on land outside fire districts and the protection of the Oregon Department of Forestry when they meet Wednesday. Given the warmer days and already-dry woods, the proposed changes make sense. The restrictions would limi t Whil ethe restrictions put some smoking to inside vehicles on im- l i m its on what people can do in proved roads and ban campfires much of the county'sgreat outexcept in designated areas (stoves doors, they'll be in place for the with liquefied or b ottled fuels b est of all possible reasons: to rewould be allowed). They would d u ce the chance that the recent prohibit the use of fireworks, ex- Two Bulls Fire won't be the first ploding targets and tracer bullets, of a string of similar events this and blasting would be forbidden. summer. There are other restrictions ProThat fire was relatively early Posed as wellthat may have an m the yem and cost more thm $6 imPac't Pn f~ e r s and others in ~lhontofight. Itdrewcrews f,om fire departments in the Willamette Some of the proposed restric- V a lley and elsewhere around the tions mirror those in place on the state, men and women who helped Deschutes and Ochoco national protectthe homes endangered by forests and the Crooked River ¹ the blaze west of Bend. tional Grasslands and on state DeWorse, it wasn't the first fire partmentof Forestrylands. There, of the season. Already this year, Industrial Fire precautions Levei nearly 8,000 acres of state-Proa lsp knpwn as partiai Hpptpwl tectedland across Oregon have As is true in the county certain burned ™ ore than 160 fires, acwork on state and national forest cordlngtothefore~O dePa~ ent. the summer tourism season and grasslands is limited to the With freshly underway, the risk of more time between 8 p.m. and 1 p.m. to reduce the posslblhty pf startmg m c ldentsonlylncreases fire during the hottest part of the Ore g o nians c a nnot p r event day. In addition, visitors to nation- l i ghtning-caused fires. They can al lands in the area must follow the l essen the chances of man-caused closed fire season requirements f i res, however, by learning about laid out on the Deschutes National an d obeying the rules aimed at Forest website. helping them do just that.

~b

M Nickel's Worth What independence?

er before, so we are mostly left with meaningless words in our evolving

property value

er by the government of that era.

in its support of the proposed west-

interests of the residents we serve.

Now we have government agencies side location. Because The Bulletin's We may not always agree and that with technological powers unimag- own property is so close to that loca- is OK. By working together, we can inable in 1776 with, as William Polk

tion, it might help the readers eval-

wrote in a recent essay, "A growing uate The Bulletin's position by pubcapacity that could be used by any lishing an independent appraisal of

Compensate ranchers for killed livestock T a realeconomic loss because of government support for reintroducing apredator that regards a rancher's assets as dinner. Wolf + cattle = wolf killed cattle, as State Rep. Bob Jenson, R-Pendleton, has said. It's not like spending a bit more on prevention is going to stop wolves from taking livestock. It's not like the loss of a calf or a lamb The state should continue to doesn't matter. compensate ranchers. So Predator Defense is arguing The state has spent a total of that somehow there is something $292,620 on the wolf program wrong with the approach that since it began about three years when government doesa taking, ago. Most of t h e m oney h as the government should try to mitgone to preventionprogramsigate the damage. We don't see $178,150. Only $71,653 went to how it makes a difference that it's compensating ranchers for live- a wild animal doing the taking. stock attacked, killed or l i kely Wolves are a danger to the livemissing because of a wolf. lihood ofranchers. As more pups Why shouldn't ranchers be are born, that danger is going to compensated? increase. Ranchers aren't the ones doing The reasonable policy is the anything wrong. They are try- one Oregon has: prevention and ing to make a living. They suffer compensation.

to keep the character of our commu-

nities thriving for future generaWith anotherIndependence Day Orwellian world. tions. How we do that is up to us as approaching, citizens will supposBut don't worry. Have a happy residents. We shape that destiny. edly celebrate the Declaration of In- holiday. Enjoy your barbecues, the Stewardship of our natural redependence, one of the great docu- parades, the fireworks and the In- sources and managing growth are ments along with the Magna Carta, dependenceDay sales.That' s really often recurring themes. By being the United States Constitution, the what July Fourth is all about. Isn't it'? involved in our communities, we are United Nations Charter and DeclaBill Bodden able to ensure Deschutes County is ration of Human Rights, and the GeRedmond a great place to live. neva Conventions in humankind's So whether you live in a city's limslow progression toward a civilized The Bulletin's its or out in the country, don't sit on society. the sidelines. Let local electedleaders The declaration was essentially like myself know what you think. a protest against abuses of powThe Bulletin has been very strong Our job is to represent the diverse

future government, left, right or cen-

he focus of the state of Oregon's wolf program has been preventing attacks on livestock. But a national conservation group, Predator Defense, wants Oregon to spend all of the money of its wolf program on prevention. Ranchers would no longer be compensated for lost livestock. That's wrong.

P5 4blgtp444AK/QA~ A I e4H

find positive solutions for our future,

ensuring livability for the long term. Jodie Barram

the effect putting the campus there

ter, to subvert freedom completely." would have on The Bulletin's propAs Sen. Frank Church rightly said, erty value. "Once the line is crossed, there is no return."

Pat Melton Bend

Despite contemporary Paul Reveres in the form of persecuted whistleblowers warning us of the

Livability in Deschutes County

misuse of those powers, the major-

ity of people seem to neither know nor care while contemporary "loyalists" vilify the messengers who warn of another "long train of abuses and usurpations." Since the beginning of this new century, our government's policies have crushed the spirit of the Mag-

What does livability mean to you'?

Bend

Survey residents on OSU-Cascades A great "In My View" letter from Jim Bruce in Sunday's edition ex-

pressing the concerns and motivations of the majority of Bend residents. My compliments also to The

Is it living close to things like your Bulletin for publishing it. I would love to see a survey or poll job, family and activities? Is it clean

na Carta, the Declaration of Inde-

air and water and a low crime rate'?

conductedby a reliable source to take

Maybe it's having space, away from the hustle and bustle of a city to enjoy a more rural lifestyle. We are blessed in Deschutes Countyto have choice when it comes to the setting

the pulse of the general public's view on the viability of the OSU-Cascades expansion and, more importantly,

their view on the proposed site location. Since the taxpayers are footing

pendence, the United States Consti- we live in. For those of us that grew the bill, it seems only reasonable that tution, the United Nations Charter up here, we have seen changes both theybe given avoice. and Declaration of Human Rights, good and bad over the years. A comKen Boyer and the Geneva Conventions as nev- mon thread we all share is the desire Bend

Letters policy

In My Viewpolicy How to submit

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

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

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

Reject canal piping in residential neighborhoods By Jeff Perreault generatehydropower revenue. Utilentral Oregon Irrigation District ities like Pacific Power are forced to is proposing to destroy a reach buy this power at significantly above of the historic Pilot Butte Canal wholesale rates. COID would use the in a northeast Bend residential neigh- revenue to benefit its 4,000 customers borhood to expand its Juniper Ridge while the other 160,000 of us pick up hydropower facility. the tab. COID has described the project as All property in the project area is somethingthat will adversely impact a privately owned. It was purchased at few homeowners but benefit the com- a premium to adjacent properties bemunity at large. If that were true, then cause of the canal. Property owners the Deschutes County Planning Com- have paid, and continue to pay, highmission wouldn't have voted unani- er taxes on this land. COID's project mously against COID's effort. would destroy not only the canal, but Proponents of the piping want you much of the private property owners' to believe that this is a conservation value. COID is proposing to do this

C

IN MY VIEW (Nprth Unit Irrigation District) for irrigation in Crook and Jefferson coun-

ties. A corresponding amount may be left in the Crooked River, but that's of no benefit to the Middle Deschutes. If

this is Deschutes River water being "saved," then why isn't it being left in the Deschutes'? Proponents argue that there'll be an

increase in safety if the canal is piped. There are more accidents involving the Deschutes River in atypical month

than there have been in the last 40

COIDhas described the

project as something that will adversely impact a few homeowners but benefit the community at large. If that were true, then the

Deschutes County Planning Commission wouldn't have voted unanimously against COID's effort.

in Deschutes County. The entire proj-

ect area is governed by the Bend Area General Plan. Current code doesn't al-

low hydropower facilities within Bend residential neighborhoods, or as an outright use in the adjacent county res-

idential neighborhood. Hydropower facility proposals have to indude public meetings and involvement. And this is exactly what COID is at-

tempting to avoid. It's asking the county to change the rules so it can move forward without public involvement.

The rule change, if passed, would be so extreme that even the Deschutes

County commissioners wouldn't have these same proponents argue that we on threesides by a razor-wire topped a future seat at the table. Proponents argue that the project pipethe river to make for a "safer" cyclone fence. However, children can COID maintains 450 miles of canals as lining that would achieve identical will "save" about 8 cubic feet per sec- community? simply walk around the fence on the in Central Oregon. Current code alconservation at 10 percent of the cost. ond of Deschutes River water. What In fact, hydropower facilities pres- fourth side, and any falls into the fore- lows them to pipe to its heart's content COID isn't interested in cost savings they won't tell you is that only 1.6 cfs ent significant safety concerns. A view bay would likely be fatal. on 440 of those 450miles. COID should because100 percentofthe funds are will actually be left in the Deschutes. of the current intake during the six The section of the Pilot Butte Canal limitits controversialprojects tothat98 from outside sources, the majority be- The other 6.4 cfs will still be taken months the canal isn't running shocks that COID is attempting to destroy to percent of its system and leave residening our taxpayer dollars. from the river, put through COID's hy- most folks. The forebay has sheer, 30- expand its hydropower facilities in- tial neighborhoods the quiet and safe More to the point, COID rejected dropower facility to generate revenue foot rock walls dropping precipitously dudes private properties within the environments we all love and cherish. alternatives that won't enable it to and then handed off to another district to arocky fl oor.The area is bounded city of Bend and adjacent properties — Jeff Perreault lives in Bend. effort. It's not. The community has offered to discuss alternatives, such

without consent or compensation.

years of the Pilot Butte Canal. Would


TUESDAY, JUNE 24, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

B5

NORTHWEST NEWS

BITUARIES

Mount Rainier hiker

died of hypothermia

DEATH NOTICES Ronald "Ronnie" L. Wright, of La Pine

By Phuong Le

three-day search efforts on

The Associated Press

Saturday when they discov-

Aug. 4, 1957- June19,2014 Arrangements: Baird Memorial Chapel of La Pine is honored to serve the family. 541-536-5104 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A Celebration of Life will be held at Ronnie's mother's home located at 51380 Preble Way in La Pine on Wednesday, June 25, 2014 from 6:00-9:OOPM.

7 0-year- ered Sykes. old hiker who died of hypoKindra Ramos, with the SEATTLE — A

thermia in rugged terrain in

Carol Joy Tieben, of Bend Jan. 18, 1940 - June 21, 2014 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home of Bend is honored to serve the family. 541-382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: At Carol's request, no services will be held. Contributionsmay be made to:

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

Corey Lee Davis,of Prineville Aug. 23, 1959 - June 21, 2014 Arrangements: Juniper Ridge Funeral Home, 541-362-5606

James Ruben Rainwater

in

Redmond OR and attended Redmond High, class of 1990. H e li v e d most of his Jim Rainwater a dult I ; f e i n Seattle, W A , a n d re cently moved to Charlottesville, VA. He is survived by his wife o f 19 y e ars, A u n drea, o f Charlottesville, V A ; hi s parents, Joe and Margaret Rainwater of Redmond; his brother, Dwayne of Guinea, West Africa; his sisters, Bobbi M cD on a l d of P rineville, OR a n d K a t h y Eller of Redmond, OR. He was also loved by n u mero us family m e m bers a n d friends. Services are pending.

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. Theymaybe submitted by phone, mail, email or fax. TheBulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information on anyof these services or about the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825.

Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and by 4:30 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication. Obituaries must be receivedby5p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the second day after submission, by1 p.m. Fridayfor Sunday publication, and by 9a.m. MondayforTuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; pleasecall for details. Phone: 541-617-7825

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Mail:Obituaries P.O. Box6020 Bend, OR97708

Mira Slovak, aColdWardefector who found famethrough the air By Steve Chawkins

lived withhim for 28 years. Slo-

Los Angeles Times

vak was a pilot for Continental,

W hen the pilot w it h t h e retiring in 1986. jet-black hair and movie-star smile asked if anyone would From defection care to come up and see the to competition cockpit, he wasn't surprised Born Oct. 25, 1929, in Cifer, Czechoslovakia,Miroslav Jan

to do with any of it," said Kim Brown, who has hiked with

tive director of Visit Rainier, an organization thatpromotes

tourism at the mountain, said Sykes was researching a story that she likely would have submitted to the website.

helm of so-called unlimited

Sykes. "She was very careful, very cautious," Brown said of Sykes, who was prominent in the Northwesthikingcommu-

hydroplanes — the fastest rac-

nity for her trail reviews and

Within a

d ecade, Slovak,

whose only previous boating experience involved paddling, won three national titles at the

ing boats on the water. He also had most of his teeth knocked

gers readily agreed.

James Ruben Rainwater, born March 26, 1972 died J une 20 , 2 0 14. J i m w a s killed in a commercial truck accident near Richmond, VA. He grew

up

Los Angeles Times file photo/MCT

Mira Slovak, a Czechoslovakian Cold War defector who made a name for himself through his aerial stunts, died June16 at 84.

that a couple of his 25 passen-

Mar. 26, 1972- Jsn. 20, 2014

nonprofit Washington Trails Association, said she won't over the weekend was expe- guess what happened to rienced, prepared and knew Sykes but said hiking comes the mountain well after hav- with some inherent risks. "As they go outdoors, the ing written dozens of stories about treks through the area. best thing you could do is to She did not have other in- have your 10 essentials, be juries and her death was an comfortable with your suraccident, the Pierce County roundings, and go as far as medical examiner's office you're comfortable," Ramos said Monday. Karen Sykes sald. had heart disease, accordShe recommended proper ing to an autopsy, but her trip planning and preparadaughter and others said she tion, including reading trip was healthy and fit and often reports and knowing weather hiked twice a week. conditions. "Karen knew these things While not certain about the and I'm sure did them. She circumstances around her death, those who knew Sykes really had her bases covered, said earlier that they believed and unfortunately accidents her death was something that happen sometimes," Ramos could happen to anyone no said. She added that Sykes matterhow experienced. would want people to know "The mountainsare big. that there are some risks but There's a lot going on. She "she wouldn't want to scare was extremely experienced people from hiking." but experience has nothing Mary Kay Nelson, execuMount Rainier National Park

Slovak was the son of a grain out, his face sliced open and his After all, this was the mo- merchant. During the Nazi oc- kidneys badly injured. When ment that Mira Slovak and his cupation in World War II, his he bailed out of the Tahoe Miss two co-conspirators had been family hid two Jewish fami- because its engine exploded anticipating for two years. Slo- lies in their farmhouse base- at 195 mph, he broke his back vak, the youngest captain inthe ment, according to David Wil- and dislocated his hip. "I got state-run Czechoslovakian Air- liams, who is writing a Slovak to know lots of nurses by their lines, hated communism and so biography. first name," he said. did his friends. When he was 17, Meanwhile, he relaxed with That's why they FEATURFP Slovak became a a little flying. He won a chamconcocte thetr .des airman. He pionship at the first Reno NaOBITUARy Czech perate plan to hijack rose quickly, espe- tional Air Races in 1964, flew his DC-3, overpowercially after a Soviet under the occasional bridge, ing its small crew and evading purge of the Czech military and sometimes did aerobatics Russian MiGs so they could fly in the late 1940s. By the time displays over speedboat races to freedom in the West. he was 21, he was a captain when hewasn'tcompeting. Slovak landed at an Ameri-

can military base in West Germany, immediately making

assigned to the state airline. He also was an ardent, if se-

tion was onlythe beginning. Immigrating to the U.S. with

cret, anti-communist. "I saw friends disappear, property gone, a place full of betrayal and informers," he told Sports Illustrated in 1960. "I thought

two shirts and little English be-

if I stayed I would be shot or in

headlines as a Cold War hero. But his dramatic 1953 defec-

By 1968, he had a hangar at the Santa Paula airport, where

he sold imported airplanes for many years. When he picked up his single-seat, 860-pound Fournier RF4 motor gilder in

Germany, he named it the Spir-

he became a crop-duster, a

it of Santa Paula.

daredevil aerobatic pilot and a national champion speedboat racer, roaring across waters

from coast to coast at nearly 200mph. In 1968, he flew a tiny mo-

night of a full moon — March 23, 1953. After smuggling guns on board and locking his co-pilot, navigator and flight engineer in a baggage compartment, he quieted frenzied

hiking western Washington. "It's just something that hap-

always eager to find new places to go, hidden hikes that

pens out in the mountains.

weren't well-traveled."

Everybody who goes in the mountains knows this can

Nelson said Sykes' disappearance was particularly happen. It doesn't mean that shocking because she was so you shouldn't go out, you need experienced. "It tells us that no matter

to be aware of it."

Sykes was reported missing late Wednesday when she failed to meet up with her boyfriend as planned during a day hike on the east side of

how prepared we are, accidents happens and things can happen. We need to take outdoor recreat ion seriously. There's a certain amount

of risk every day we get up, Park officials suspended whatever we do," she said.

the mountain.

The Spirit

yond "coffee and cherry pie," prison. I don't know." Slovak chose to defect on the

She said Sykes had written about more than 100 hikes in photographs and her book on the Rainier area, and "was

With its tiny engine, the Spirit got him — in numerous hops — across the Atlantic. Over the Arctic he admitted to some

fleeting anxiety: "I was just hoping that the putt-putt Volkswagen ahead of me was never going to stop turning, and the little airplane never stop flying, because it would be a very long, lonely swim back to Green-

tor glider with a 36-horse- passengers with abone-rattling power Volkswagen engine dive of more than 1,000 feet. from Germany to California, F1ying low to avoid detection crash-landing and nearly kill- by Russian fighter planes, he inghimself just 19 feet fromthe knew he was over West Gerrunway at his final destination many when he saw neon lights. land," he wrote in a journal. "Everyone was trying to sell," in Santa Paula. All was well, until the Spirit The next year, he made the he told an interviewer. "It was a approached Santa Paula. As same trip in reverse, without free country." some 2,000 people gathered the near-death experience. In Frankfurt and then in at the airfield for a celebratory Slovak, who joked that he Washington, D.C., U.S. intelli- barbecue, Slovak was on his was "born chicken, absolute gence officials grilled Slovak final approach when he was chicken" but loved to fling his for months, said Williams, ex- caught in a vicious downdraft hands over his head while ecutive director of the Hydro- and crashed into a ditch. "I fell out of the sky like lying an open-cockpitplane planeand Raceboat Museum in f upside-down 50 feet off the Kent, Wash. In return for his co- somebody shot me down," he ground, died June 16 of stom- operation, the CIA introduced wrote. "That's the last thing I ach cancer at his Fallbrook, him to Bill Boeing Jr., a son remember." Calif., home. He was 84. of the aircraft magnate, who He broke his back and most Before his illness was dimade Slovak his personal pilot. of his ribs. He was in a coma for agnosed late last year, Slovak Boeing, owner o f a a week. His recovery took nine was planning one more big 2 ,000-horsepower hyd r o - months, plenty of time to do antrip: a flight from California to plane called the Miss Wahoo, other solo run back to Europe the Czech Republicin a vintage thought Slovak would be an for the 1969 Paris Air Show. Bucker Jungmann biplane. uninhibited boat racer. Slovak's two m a rriages "He'd mapped out the route "I want a bachelor in my ended in divorce. He and Bonand was quite serious about it," boat," Boeing told a reporter, di lived in Montecito, Calif., said his longtime friend Ingrid "not a driver with a distraught before moving to F1orida and Bondi, a former Continental wife on shore and a bunch of then, sevenyears ago, to northAirlines flight attendant who kids waving Daddy goodbye." ern San Diego County.

Budget

the 2015 budget, the county

received an award from the

Continued from B1 T hat p i zza

w o rt h o f

G overnment F i nance O f f i cers Association of the Unit-

savings — about $10 to ed States and Canada for its $15 — would have come preparation of t h e c u r rent through a minor reduction budget. The county also rein the permanent tax rate, ceived an award for excela change that would have lence in financial reporting. only been felt in the counJeff White, the organizaty's general fund balance tion's Oregon representative without affecting any ser- and chief financial officer vices or staffmembers, for Marion County, praised DeBone said. the county's financial team, A nderson s a i d th e noting how rigorous the orgrowth in this year's bud- ganization's standards are in get allowed the county to terms of evaluating transpartake on projects it "did not ency and accuracy, and addhave the luxury to propose ing Deschutes County "clearly in past budgets." Among made the grade." the projects singled out — Reporter: 541-633-2160, by Anderson are an extleeds@bendbulletin.com pansion of the county jail, funded through a full faith and credit bond approved last year, and work on the intersection of the Powell

Butte and Neff roads. Right before adopting

1

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DEATHS ELSEWHERE socially prominent women of Died Sunday in Las Vegas. the 1960s — notably Jacqueline Fouad Ajami, 68:An academGustave Tassell, 88: A fash- Kennedy, who famously wore ic, author and broadcast com- ion designer whose elegantly one while riding an elephant. mentator on Middle East affaits urbane creations were favored Died June 9 in Los Angeles. who helpedrally support forthe by some of the most glamorous, — From wire reports U.S. invasion of Iraq in 2003partly by personally advising top poli~ rs. D ied Sunday. Steve Rossi, 82:One half of the prolific comedy duo Allen 8 Rossi, whichbecame a favorDeaths of note from around the world:

ite of "The Ed Sullivan Show"

Weekly Arts 8r Entertainment Every Friday In ImloazmE TheBulletin

and other TV variety shows.

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B6

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, JUNE 24, 2014

W EAT H E R Forecasts andgraphics provided byAccuWeaUier,Inc. ©2014

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TODAY

I

TONIGHT

HIGH

LOW

76'

~

47'

ALMANAC

-

70'

~

43'

FRIDAY 7$

EAST:Expect TEMPERATURE intervals of clouds and Yesterday Normal Record sunshine todaywith a 64/66 82 74 95' i n 1926 thundershower around 54' 43' 28'in 1920 in parts of the area.

Partly sunny with a couple of t-showers

Yesterday Today Wednesday Juneau Kansas City Lansing Lns Vegns Lexington Lincoln Litiie Rock Lcs Angeles Louisville Madison, Wl Memphis Miami

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

OklahomaCity

Omaha Orlando Palm Springs Pucrin Philadelphia Phoenix

Pittsburgh Portland, ME

Providence Raleigh

Rapid City Renn Richmond Rochester, NY

Sacramento St. Louis Salt Lake City san Antonio snn Diego Snn Francisco San Jose

UV INDEX TODAY

santa re

Savannah Seattle Sioux Falls Spokane Springfield, Ma Tampa Tucson Tulsa W ashingt on,OC

POLLEN COUNT

NATIONAL WEATHER

WATER REPORT

SKI REPORT In inches as of 5 p.m.yesterday

Ski resort Mt. Bachelor Mt. HoodMeadows Timberline Lodge

New snow Base 0

61- 1 30

0

96-1 1 0

0

65-6 5

Source: anTheencw.ccm

7sleo

Wichita

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Amsterdam Athens

68/50/0.00 67/50/I 8 7 xx x xxt Boston 91/66/0.00 92/74/s ' <<< y • sslso • Mll u ne' /64 Auckland 61/48/0.05 62/54/pc Baghdad 104/78/0.00 110/81/s mrngt X n eoity Che uw York ng Bangkok 91/79/0.00 88/77/r Hnff phg Snn Fr ncinco 74/6 Q Omaha seijing 90n1/0.00 89/70/c ss/ss Beirut 81n3/0.00 82/69/s • Dnn Berlin 67/51/0.00 67/54/I 83/5 Lnn V nn 87C/Se Bogota 64/50/0.12 65/48/pc 87/88 IosI Budapest 82/54/0.00 78/57/t louln Buenos Ai r es 64/55/0.14 61/45/c Al uq Lon An len 92/84 Cnbc Snn Lucns 90/76/0.29 e4ngtpc dunn4uth n fve4 Wff/7/ Cairo eono/o.ao 93/70/s \ Anchorng • Phne Ix twwwa Calgary 72/46/0.00 75/52/pc n Rcc es/5 n 10 Cnncun eon4/o.oo 89/79/pc uir 4 at Pnn t + W W W X Xu.% Dublin 68/50/0.00 67/53/c 8 xxxxunu 8 Edinburgh 68/53/0.00 63/50/sh xwv'cxxx Geneva 77/59/0.13 74/52/t Hnrnre 71/44/0.00 73/43/s orlunnn 9 Hong Kong 91/80/0.56 90/82/t Honolulu 90f76 Chihuahua c Istanbul 81/64/0.00 80/65/s 'e'e' 94/SS Miami Jerusalem 81/61/0.00 82/63/s Iuon ny Sann.- IZ . ssn2 wx' Johannesburg 63/39/0.00 65/38/s 4 Limn 74/66/0.00 71/61/pc Lisbon 70/59/0.21 73/61/I today's noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day. Shown are London 77/58/0.00 74/53/pc T-storms Rain Showers Snow F l urries Ice Warm Front Sta t ionary Front Madrid Cold Front 88/59/0.00 79/61/I Manila 88/79/0.36 88/78/t '

,

Shire

1

Hi/Lu/Prec. Hi/Lu/W HiRu/W 61/50/0.51 63/52/sh 58/47/sh 81/67/Tr 87/66/pc 86/67/I 78/61/0.25 81/63/c 77/56/pc 104/78/0.00 103/81/s 102/83/s 91/69/0.32 85/68/I 84/65/I 82/66/0.00 88/63/pc 85/63/I 90/73/0.38 87n1/pc 89/72/t 77/64/0.00 79/63/pc 80/63/pc 93/72/0.21 86/71/t 87/69/I 83/66/0.03 83/59/pc 79/61/pc een2/0.17 85n2/pc 90/73/t 91/75/0.49 eonsn eOnr/pc 74/54/0.85 77/58/pc 71/57/pc 83/66/0.00 80/57/I 73/59/pc etnafr'r 86/68/I 87/67/pc 90/71/1.65 90n6/pc 89/74/t 81/65/0.00 81/69/pc 82/68/t 82/64/0.00 83/69/pc 83/70/t etno/o.oo 83n2/s 89/74/t 85/66/3.03 89na/pc 86/71/t 81/66/0.00 85/63/pc 84/63/I 93/73/0.65 93f/3/t

toens/o.oo105n7/s 83/68/0.57 85/64/pc 83/63/0.00 85/70/pc 107/78/0.00 105/80/s 85/63/0.00 85/68/I 74/50/0.00 74/60/s 76/54/0.00 80/63/s 85/65/0.00 90ft1/pc 76/55/0.01 76/55/pc 92/55/0.00 89/58/s 84/63/0.00 89/71/s 86/54/0.00 85/67/I 92/56/0.00 91/57/s 90/73/0.07 87/69/pc 88/60/0.00 92/64/s 96/77/0.28 90f/5/t 72/65/0.00 73/64/pc 71/56/0.00 69/56/pc 78/53/0.00 77/57/s 89/56/Tr 89/55/pc senw6.54 90n3/t 77/56/0.00 70/55/c 80/60/0.02 81/56/pc 85/56/0.00 74/54/pc 78/68/1.20 85/65/pc 89/80/0.05 89n5/t 103/75/0.00 102/74/s 83/68/0.26 88fta/pc 85/68/0.00 88n3/pc 85/66/0.63 86/67/pc 92/51/0.00 85/53/pc 105/78/0.00 1OSne/s

109/88/0.00 111/86/s 72/61/0.36 71/55/I Montreal 79/59/0.00 74/65/I Moscow 59/46/0.13 60/46/sh Nairobi 72/59/0.03 77/56/c Nassau 91/79/0.02 90/77/s New Delhi 104/85/0.00 102n9/t Osaka 84/67/0.02 80/64/t Oslo 64/48/0.01 70/47/sh Ottawa 79/52/0.00 76/59/I Paris 75/59/0.00 78/55/u Riu de Janeiro 81/64/0.00 81/69/s Rome 82/64/0.00 82/70/s Santiago 61/39/0.00 61/40/pc Snu Paulo 75/59/0.00 78/62/u Snppcrc 71/58/0.00 76/58/pc Seoul 75/68/0.36 81/65/I Shanghai 77/69/0.00 83/70/pc Singapore 91/82/0.00 89n8/t Stockholm 54/39/0.61 63/45/sh Sydney 67/43/0.00 63/45/s Taipei 91/81/0.93 89/78/t Tel Aviv 82/68/0.00 83na/u Tokyo 81/70/0.08 77/68/t Toronto 77/61/0.02 81/60/I Vancouver 72/57/0.03 66/54/c Vienna 79/55/0.00 73/55/I Warsaw 66/50/0.00 65/47/pc

97nrts

63/55/r 111/81/s

9Onttr 86nt/I

e4noto 63/48/c 65/48/c 71/58/I 59/44/c 93/72/s 95/71/s 67/49/I

eone/pc 65/54/sh 62/52/c 75/48/I 73/42/s 91/83/r

S4nsts

82/63/s 65/43/s 69/60/pc 74/58/pc 69/51/pc 84/62/pc

eene/t

105/77/s 86/66/I

ssna/I

106/80/s 80/62/t 74/62/t 80/67/I 91/69/I 77/60/I 88/59/s 91/70/t 75/60/I 88/56/s 89/69/pc 91/67/s

ean4/t

73/65/pc 67/54/s 76/58/s 90/56/s 93/74/t 73/54/pc 78/62/pc 78/54/pc 86/67/I

eons/pc 102/74/s 87/72/t 89/70/t 84/69/I

83/56/pc 105/80/s

h

Mecca Mexico City

66/54/pc

94nstt

109/85/s 68/55/t 76/59/c 60/41/s 78/58/c 89/77/s 102/80/t 83/65/I 71/48/pc 7S/SS/c 70/51/pc 83/70/s 81/66/pc 59/36/c 79/62/pc 79/61/s 84/67/c 78/73/sh 89/78/t 63/38/pc 65/44/s

eans/I

85/69/s 79/69/I 77/60/pc 70/54/pc 71/55/I 68/51/pc

Stay Connected to Life with

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Continued from B1 The Shire has a less conspicuous name today: Forest

Yesterday Today Wednesday

City

ani

Partial sunshine

h

Umatilla 87/59 city RiVer Rufus • ermiston Abilene lington 87/60 Portland Akron Meac am Losti ne • W co 8 /SO dle'NN 72/4 78 / 5'O'Enterprlse Albany he Dall 8 6 • 76/49 Albuquerque andy • Anchorage • 81/62 JosePh Atlanta • He PPner Grande • Gove nt • upi Condon /52 79 62 Atlantic City Union Austin 66/ Baltimore • pray Graniten • 1/56 Billings 'BakerC 73/4e Birmingham

Hood

48 contiguousstates) National high: 117 at Death Valley,CA National low: 28 at Boca Reservoir, CA Precipitation: 6.34" at Savannah,GA

fb

TRAVEL WEATHER

Hi/Ln/Prec. HiRu/W Hi/Le/W 88/66/0.03 87/71/pc sen2/pc 87/62/0.00 84/67/I 79/60/I 75/ 84/54/0.00 84/68/pc 82/65/t PRECIPITATION 92/65/0.00 92/64/pc 93/65/s Tdlamo • 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.00" CENTRAL: A mix of 66/50/0.11 66/51/sh 68/54/sh 67/53 Mc innvill 0.53"in 1914 clouds andsunshine 87n2/0.26 84/68/t 87/69/c Record h 76/64/0.00 76/68/s 78natt Month to date (normal) Tra ce (0.58 ) across the regionto- Lincoln h h 89n4/Tr eon2n een2/I Year to date (normal ) 4.03 (5.60 ) day with comfortable 65/54 Sale 82/61/0.00 85/71/pc 86/68/I Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 29 . 9 9" conditions. 76/ 75/54/Tr 79/57/pc 82/61/t Newpo 88n1/0.22 86/70/t ssn1/pc SUN ANDMOON 7/55 64/53 77/46 Bismarck 79/51/0.00 70/51/pc 73/57/pc 0 a m p S e r a n R e d WEST:Clouds and 7 7 /S 1 Today Wed. n 0 r9 8 I 8 uU Boise 89/57/0.00 88/60/I 87/60/pc Yach 76/49 • John Sunrise 5:23 a.m. 5: 2 3 a.m. sunshine will be found 63/54 79/57 Boston 81/64/s 80/65/I • Prineville oay 8/48 tario Bridgeport, CT 77/59/0.00 Sunset 8:52 p.m. 8: 5 2 p.m. over the regiontoday 77/60/0.00 79/67/pc 78/68/t 79/51 • Pa lina 77/52 9 62 Buffalo Moonrise 3 :38 a.m. 4:22 a.m. with a shower around Floren e • Eugene 85/60/0.00 82/66/t 74/60/sh 'Se d B rothers 7649 Valen 65/54 Burlington, VT 84/52/0.00 79/68/I 77/61/I Moonset 6:3 2 p.m. 7:2 6 p.m. at the coast. Su iVern 76/47 • 47 88/60 Caribou, ME 79/46/0.00 77/59/I 75/56/c Nyssa u 7 5 / 7 • La ptne Ham ton MOONPHASES C e Charleston, SC 87n4/1 .25 89/74/t esns/I untura 89/ 6 1 Grove Oakridge New F i r s t Full Last Charlotte 88n3/0.00 85/70/t 87/69/I • Burns J85/50 OREGON EXTREMES 79/54 /52 Chattanooga 91/70/0.18 85/68/I 86/67/c • Fort Rock Riley 80/49 YESTERDAY Cresce t • 77/47 Cheyenne 72/45/0.17 74/53/I 81/54/pc 79/50 73/45 Chicago 81/66/0.05 85/63/pc 79/59/pc High: 92' n Ros eburg • C h ristmas alley Cincinnati 90/67/0.32 84/68/I 84/65/I Jun 27 J ul 5 Ju l 1 2 Ju l 18 at Hermiston Jordan V Hey Beaver Silver 78/48 Frenchglen 82/ea Cleveland 87/63/0.11 84/67/I 77/60/I Low: 36' 82/51 Marsh Lake 82/51 THE PLANETS ColoradoSprings 74/50/0.03 78/53/t 82/56/pc '73/44 at Meacham Po 0 78/48 Gra • Burns Jun tion Columbia, Ma 83/67/0.62 85/65/pc 86/67/I T he Planets R i se Set • Paisley 66/ Columbia, SC 94n4/o.oo 88/73/t 94n2/I • 84/54 Mercury 5:16 a.m. 7: 5 8 p.m. Chiloquin 79/49 Columbus,6A 92/69/2.20 87natt 90/71/c '76l48 Goid ach • 53 MedfO d Rome Venus 3:32 a.m. 6: 1 4 p.m. 0 ' Columbus,OH 91na/Tr 86/69/I 84/64/I 63/ n86/60 87/54 Mars 2:16 p.m. 1 : 3 2 a.m. Klamath Concord, NH 81/46/0.00 82/62/s 79/63/I • Ashl nd 'Falls Jupiter 7:09 a.m. 1 0:16 p.m. • Lakeview McDermi Corpus Christi 94/81/Tr 92/77/t 92/77/t Sro ings 83/5 77/47 Saturn 4:54 p.m. 3: 0 3 a.m. 65/5 79/48 84/54 Dallas 88/68/0.62 eanstpc sen4/I Dayton 90/68/0.00 83/67/I 82/64/t Uranus 1:30 a.m. 2: 2 1 p.m. Denver 82/48/Tr 83/57/I 89/59/pc Yesterday Today Wednesday Yesterday Today Wednesday Yesterday Today Wednesday aes Moines 84/66/0.00 85/65/pc 84/65/I city H i/Ln/Prec. Hi/Ln/W Hi/Ln/W C i ty Hi/Ln/Prec. Hi/Lu/W Hi/Ln/W city Hi/Ln/Prec. Hi/Ln/W Hi/Lu/W Detroit 80/63/0.01 82/66/t 79/60/pc 64/52/0.00 66/54/c 64/53/c Ln Grande 85/ 48/0.00 79/52/t 7 8/53/pc Portland 81/5 8/0.0075/60/c 74/56/c 10 a.m. Noon 2 p.m. 4 p.m. Astcrin Duluth 82/52/Tr 65/47/I 61/47/pc Baker City 83/38/0.00 77/46/t 78/49/pc L n Pine 80/42/0.00 74/46/pc 69/45/t Prineville 82/ 4 8/0.0079/51/pc 69/48/t El Paso 99n3/0.00 99/78/pc tatne/s 5 NI~ S ~ S~ N 5 Brcckings 69/51/0.00 65/52/pc 62/51/c M e dfcrd 89/5 7 /0.00 86/60/pc 80/56/pc Redmond 85/ 46/0.0079/50/pc 74/44/t Fairbanks 73/52/0.00 72/50/sh 76/57/I The highertheAccuW engter.txrmIV Index number, sums 87/41/0.00 80/49/pc 78/49/pc N e wport 6 3/46 /0.00 64/53/c 62/50/c Roueburg 83/ 5 7/0.0082/60/pc 74/55/c Fargo 80/59/0.00 70/55/I 72/57/pc the greatertheneedfor eyenndskin protecgcn.0-2 Low, Eugene 82/52/0.00 78/56/pc 74/52/c N o rth Bend 6 6 / 55/0.00 66/56/pc 63/53/c Salem 81/55/0.00 76/58/pc 73/54/ c Flagstaff 81/42/0.00 81/45/s 81/46/s 35 Moderate; 6-7 High;8-10 VeryHigh; 11+ Exlreme. Klnmnth Falls 85/45/0.00 77/47/s 75/47/t On t ario 90/57/0.00 90/62/pc 88/61/pc Sisters 81/44/0.00 77/50/pc 74/46/I Grand Rapids 78/66/0.47 80/63/c 78/58/pc Lnkeview 88/50/0.00 79/48/s 78/45/pc Pendleton 91/50/0.00 82/56/pc80/57/pc The Onlles 8 9 / 58/0.00 81/62/pc 80/60/pc Green sny 80/62/0.12 77/57/I 73/55/pc Greensboro 84/68/0.00 ssna/I 87/69/I Weather(W):s-sunny,pc-pnrtlycloudy, c-clcudy, sh-shcwers,t-thunderstcrms,r-rnin, sf-sncwflurries, sn-sncwi-ice,Tr-trace,Yesterday data nscf 5 p.m. yesterday Harrisburg 82/61/0.00 85/69/pc 85/67/I G rasses T r ee s Wee d s Hnrffcrd, CT 85/53/0.00 82/65/s 83/67/I ~g hi g h M d t hh t Helena 78/46/0.00 83/53/pc 80/53/I Source: OregonAllergyAssccintes 541-683-1577 Honolulu 87/72/0.00 eans/pc ssn4/s ~ f os ~2 08 ~sos ~dos ~50s ~eos ~709 ~aos ~90s ~toos ~ffos ~ fos ~os ~ o s Houston 89n9/0.54 91/73/t een4/t Huntsville 91n1/0.00 85/69/I 87/67/pc cnlgn NATIONAL Indianapolis 88/69/0.74 81/66/I 84/64/pc As of 7 n.m.yesterday 75/52 • I nlpeg un d er any Jackson, MS 91/73/0.00 91/70/t seno/I Reservoir Ac r e feet Ca pacity EXTREMES 6 h: 8 9 Jacksonville 88/70/0.02 ean2/I 93/73/pc (for the C rane Prairie 443 4 4 80% YESTERDAY Pnrun 'Qulklnu

65'yo Wickiup 129616 Crescent Lake 7 5 5 93 87% Ochoco Reservoir 29873 68% Prinevige 132512 89% River flow St a tion Cu. ft.lsec. Deschutes R.below Crane Prairie 420 Deschutes R.below Wickiup 860 Deschutes R.below Bend 101 Deschutes R. atBenhamFalls 1910 Little Deschutes near LaPine 103 Crescent Ck. belowCrescent Lake 57 Crooked R.above Prineville Res. 4 Crooked R.below Prineville Res. 184 Crooked R.nearTerrebonne 85 Ochoco Ck.below OchocoRes. 0

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THURSDAY

W EDN E SDAY

PREMIUM HEARING AIDS

P

at Factory Direct, Retail Outlet Prices

Creek. But it's uncertain if

any new development is in the pipeline there. A local real estate agent with Bend Premier Real Estate Who liStS the SubdiVision'S available lots didn't i m m e-

diately return a call seeking comment.

Two local building companieshave come and gone from the project since Castle Part-

Auoer L ."'

ners took over.

Brad Miller Construction of Bendbuilt two homes between 2010 and 2012. Then, Schum-

d".' J

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acher Construction built a pair of properties.

Model Clearance Rebate:

$399 Per Set

But the company has been

out of the development plan since finishing its second home last summer, Schumacher Project Manager Dan

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being built there," Pena said. Meyers first proposed The

O'*

$400 REBATE!

Shire in 2005, at the height of

Bend's real estate boom. No

O799 doe oh time of purchase.

plan seemed too lavish at a

Rebate processed 30ddxysafter invoicing. Offers valid through June30, 207 4 orwhile supplies last.

time when median home prices in the city edged toward /df $400,000. One of the two Hobbit-style Andy Tullis/The Bulletin houses sold for $650,000 in late This Hobbit-style house Is one of only two such homes remaining 2007, according to Deschutes

In what Is now the Forest Creek subdivision.

County property records. But the project never caught onthe magic partially obscured Pena said the project still by a mobile-home park just has potential, though Schumbeyond an irrigation canal acher is no longer involved. yards away from the property. He said the Castle Advisers Castle Partners bought group seems to be holding on the entire subdivision for to the other lots as a long-term $750,000. Th e $6 5 0,000 investment. home sold again in 2012, for A ttempts to r e ach t h e $227,000. Hood River g roup w ere The collapse of The Shire unsuccessful. garnered national h e ad- "We would have loved to lines, including a 2009 article build mOre," pena Said. nWe irt The AtlantiC, titled "The loved that area." Shire: When Dreams Become — Reporter: 541-617-7820, Delusions."

efxlucklich@bendbufletin.com

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Forest Creek dger Rd.

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America Hears HEARING AIDS Helplny People Hear Better

5 41-213-22 9 4

OFFICIALS Continuedffom Bf • Treasurer TedWheeler, D 159 Oregon StateCapitol 900 Court St. N.E Salem, OR97301 Phone:503-378-4329 Email: oregon.treasurer@state. OI'.US

Web: www.ost.state.or.us • Attorney General Ellen Rosenblum, D 1162 Court St. N.E Salem, OR97301 Phone:503-378-4400 Fax:503-378-4017 Web: www.doj.state.or.us

• LaborCommissionerBradAvakian 800 N.E Oregon St., Suite1045 Portland, OR97232 Phone: 971-673-0761 Fax:971-673-0762 Email: boli.mail@state.or.us Web: www.oregon.gov/boli

Monday through Friday 9800 am to 6:00 pm Saturday by appointment 547 NE Bellevue Drive Suite ¹10 5 B e nd, Oregon

xouugu4,

+a fuo+

www.americahears.com


IN THE BACK BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NEWS W Scoreboard, C2 C o l lege World Series, C2 Sports in brief, C2 MLB, C3 Wimbledon, C2 W o rld Cup, C4 THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, JU

O www.bendbulletin.com/sports

'I' I'

'

r

r BASEBALL

twOMEN'S GOLF

Wie'swina oon orU.S.ame

Elks take down HardourCats

By Karen Crouse

VICTORIA, British

New York Times News Service

Columbia — Billy King scored on adouble steal in the eighth inning for the winning run in the Bend Elks' 4-3 West Coast Leaguewin over the Victoria HarbourCats on Monday. King singled and advanced to third on a Grant Newton single when the Elks (7-10) went for the double steal to take a 4-2 lead. Kevin Sheets allowed a runbut struck out Devin Carter with two runners on to preserve the leadand then struckout the side in the ninth for his second save of the season. Newton hit a two-run double in the sixth to give the Elks a3-1 lead. Newton went 3 for 3 to improve his batting average from.167 to.242. Elks starter J.T.Kaul (1-1) allowed six hits and two runs while striking out three in six innings for the win.

Michelle Wie won the U.S.

Women's Open on Sunday.

PINEHURST, N.C. — The histor y - m a king men's and women's U.S. Ope n s, held back-to-back at Pine-

the only player in the field to have competed in multiple professional men's events. Ten years after missing the cut by a single stroke at the PGA Tour stop

"Same green speed, same preparation of bunkers and everything else," he added. Wie's two-stroke victory over

Stacy Lewis in her 38th major start underscored her resilience and con-

hurs t No. 2, could not have produced in Honolulu, Wie tamed a course that a more fitting finale. After Martin played, "very similar for the men and tinued the U.S. resurgence in womKaymer w on the men's title, the last the women," according to the USGA's en's golf. woman standing was Michelle Wie, executive director, Mike Davis. SeeWie/C4

Press

BEND ELKS WEEKLY

— Bulletin staffreport

Seattle's Alex Jackson takes batting practice with the team Monday. The Mariners top draft

pick signed a contract Monday.

Mariners sign top pick Jackson SEATTLE — Alex

Jackson was understandably nervous being thrust into a batting practice group that included Robinson Cano. At some point in the future, the Seattle Mar-

iners hope Jacksonand Cano are residing in the same lineup. "You go up there with a little bit of nerves but

Photos by Joe Kline /The Bulletin

Bend Elks coach Marty Hunter watches a recent game against Victoria at Vince Genna Stadium in Bend.

at the same time all the

players are having fun helping you out, so it was great," Jackson

• Former Bend High coach Marty Hunter returns to his old stomping groundsascoach of the Elks

sald.

The Mariners signed Jackson on Monday, locking up the No. 6 overall pick in this month's draft with plenty of time for him to get experience this summer. The18-year-old Jackson was regarded as the best high school position player available in the draft. Jackson could have decided not to sign and stayed with his college commitment to play at Oregon. But Seattle general managerJack Zduriencik said Jackson wanted to play immediately. Hencethe quick negotiations and quick assignment to rookie ball. — The Associated Press

By Grant Lucas •The Bulletin

"For me, it's something different. And this is

fun. I love being on the field. I love baseball. l'm passionate about it. This is a good break from the recruiting grind, honestly."

week or so ago, Marty Hunter drove into the parking lot at Bend High

— Bend Elks coach Marty Hunter

School, curious to see how much has

changed at his old stomping grounds.

"But it's OK," says Hunter, now the head coach at NCAA Division III George Fox Univer-

Not much, the former Lava Bears baseball coach observed, settling into the comfort of that

sity in Newberg. "That's how you grow. "For me, it creates patience,"

nostalgic setting. But now, 20 years after stepping away from Bend High, Hunter finds himself a bit out of his comfort zone, handling the reins of a summer collegiate team for the first time — guiding the Bend Elks.

Marty Hunter talks to infielders at the mound during a recent game against Victoria.

he continues. "I've never done this before. And it's not that I

don't think I'm capable. It's just I haven't learned certain things

yet. You don't know until you get thrown in the fire."

Inside • Elks stats leaders,C4 • A look at what's to come for the Elks in the week ahead, C4

Hunter served on the Bend

High baseball coaching staff for seven years — including

guiding the Lava Bears to Intermountain Conference titles in 1991 and 1992. Hunter, who was also an assistant for the

short-season Class A Bend Bucks in 1990, departed Bend

for Canby High after the '94 season. He joined theGeorge Fox coaching staff as an assistant in 2003, became the Bruins' head coach in 2008 and shared the Northwest Conference

coach of the year award the following year.

the final four as head coach,

SeeHunter /C4

CORRECTION The Community Sports Scoreboard that appeared in Monday's Bulletin on pageB6 misidentified the winning team in the "Over the line" listings. Cheerleaders Grill (Karl Johannsen, Al Larson, Mark Hamby), with a record of 3-0, placed first in the competition.

The error was the result of incorrect information provided to TheBulletin.

NBA DRAFT

Curse ot thebig mancasts argeshadow, but it's hard to sayno By Tim Reynolds The Associated Press

MIAMI — Greg Oden has had years to think about the plight of his knees,

big man bad luck, an epidemic that has been sweeping the league for years. The latest victim seems to be Joel

and he still has no good answers. Portland's top overall pick in the

Embiid, a 7-footer expected to be the No. 1 pick in Thursday's draft before

2007 NBA draft is a poster child for

a recentlysuffered stress fracture

in his right foot almost certainly

robbed the former Kansas star of that chance. "My body did what it wanted," Oden said. "It didn't do what I wanted." SeeNBA Draft/C3

NBAdraft When:4:30 p.m. Thursday TV:ESPN

Where are theBlazers?:Portland traded its first-round pick to Charlotte and its second-round pick to Denver in2011.


C2

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, JUNE 24, 2014

ON THE AIR

CORKBOARD

TODAY SOCCER World Cup, Italyvs. Uruguay World Cup, Costa Ricavs. England World Cup, Japanvs. Colombia World Cup, Greecevs. Ivory Coast

Time TV/Radio 8:30 a.m. ESPN 12:30 p.m. ESPN 12:30p.m. ESPN2

TENNIS

Wimbledon, early round Wimbledon, early round

11 a.m. ESPN2 4 a.m. E S PN

GOLF

PGA Professional National Championship

12:30 p.m. Golf

BASEBALL

College World Series, championship, Game 2: Vanderbilt vs. Virginia MLB,L.A.DodgersatKansasCity MLB, Boston at Seattle

5 p.m. 5 p.m. 7 p.m.

E S PN MLB Roo t

WEDNESDAY SOCCER World Cup, Nigeria vs. Argentina World Cup, Bosniaand Herzegovjna vs. Iran World Cup, Ecuador vs. France World Cup, Honduras vs. Switzerland

8:30 a.m. ESPN 8:30 a.m. ESPN2 12:30 p.m. ESPN 12:30p.m. ESPN2

TENNIS

Wimbledon, early round Wimbledon, early round

11 a.m. ESPN2 4 a.m. E S PN

GOLF

PGA Professional National Championship EuropeanTour, BMWInternational Open

1 1 a.m. Go l f 1:30 a.m. Golf

BASEBALL

MLB, St. Louis at Colorado College World Series, championship, Game 3:Vanderbilt vs. Virginia MLB, Detroit at Texas

MLB, Boston at Seattle

noon 5 p.m. 5 p.m. 7 p.m.

MLB E S PN E SPN2 Roo t

Listings are themostaccurate available. TheBulletin is not responsible for latechangesmadeby 7Vor radio stations.

SPORTS IN BRIEF BASKETBALL OregOn PlayerSSuSPended aSStudentS —TheUniversity of Oregon says three former basketball players havebeensuspended as students for a minimum of four years, and up to10 years, as a result of rape allegations involving a freshmanstudent. University spokeswomanJulieBrownconfirmedthesuspensionsMonday. Damyean Dotson, Dominic Artis and BrandonAustin were dismissed from the team last month after a student filed a police report alleging she was sexually assaulted by the players. Prosecutors decided there wasn't enough evidence to criminally charge the players, who said the sexual contact was consensual. John Clune, theattorney for the alleged victim, said the suspensions aredependent on how long the woman remains at the school. Hesaid it would have beenhard for her to continue if the players remained oncampus.

SOurCe: DunCan Will return to SPurS —Tim Duncanis exercising the option on his contract for 2014-15and will return to play for the SanAntonio Spurs next season, asource told The Associated Press. Duncan turned 38 inApril and vvonhis fifth championship with the Spurs earlier this month. Duncanwill make $10.3 million next season as part of a contract designed to allow the Spurs to surround him with top-flight talent.

HOCKEY HOSek, Modano,ForSderg, BlakeheadedfOrHallDominik Hasek, MikeModano, Peter Forsberg andRobBlakeare headed into the HockeyHall of Fame.Thefour players were among sjx selected Mondayfor induction in November. Thelate Pat Burns will be enshrined as a coach in the builder category along with referee Bill McCreary. Forsberg andBlake, who both vvonStanley Cupswith Colorado, are in theTriple Gold Club, aselect group of hockey players who have won aCup,Olympicandworldchampionshipgold medals. Eric Lindros, vvhoscored 372 career goals andhad865 points, is among eligible players who havenot beenpicked for the hall.

SOCCER TimberS PurChaSeAdl'S COntraCt —ThePortland Timbers have exercised the team's option to purchase thecontract of Nigerian forward FanendoAdi from his Danish club, FCCopenhagen. The Timbers signed Adi to amultiyear contract as adesignated player. Adi has four goals and two assists in sjx appearanceswith the Timbers this season. Hecameto Portland on loan from the Danish first-division club in May.The23-year-old striker had tvvo goals in each of his first tvvo starts this season, making him the first Timbers player with a pair of braces in asingle season. — From wire reports

COLLEGE WORLD SERIES

Vandy takesGame1 By Eric Olson The Associated Press

of the CWS. It was the highest-scoring

starter Nathan Kirby's sudden

CWS game at TD Ameritrade

loss of control to score nine Park, which opened in 2011, runs in the third inning,then and the most runs allowed by held off the Cavaliers to win Virginia since an 11-6 loss to 9-8 in Game 1 of the College Mississippi State in super reWorld Series finals Monday gionals last year. night. Jared Miller (7-2) got the The Commodores (50-20) win for two innings of relief can win their f irst nation- of Walker Buehler. Kirby (9-3) al championship in a men's took the loss after his shortest sport with a win tonight. outing of the season. Tyler Campbell continued The Cavaliers got back his improbable breakout for into the game on Brandon the Commodores, doubling Downes' two-run single in the twice in the third. His second third, and Nate Irving's doudouble came off reliever Whit bie and Daniel Pinero's base Mayberrywiththebases load- hit in the fifth pulled the Cavs ed to put Vanderbilt up 9-2.

to 9-7.

But Virginia (52-15) chipped Of Kirby's last 50 pitches, 31 away, scoring three runs in were balls. He walked five in the third, two in the fifth artd the third inning after having another in the eighth to make never walked more thanthree it a one-run game. in a game in his 18 previous A dam R avenelle c a me

BASKETBALL

IN THE BLEACHERS

Wimbledon

WNBA

Monday At TheAll EnglandLawnTennis & Croquet Club, London Purse: S42.5million (GrandSlam) Surface:Grass-Outdoor Singles Men Firsl Round TomasBerdych(6), CzechRepublic, def. Victor Hanescu,Romania, 6-7(5), 6-1,6-4,6-3. MarinkoMatosevic,Australia, def.FernandoVerdasco(16), Spain, 6-4, 4-6,6-4, 6-2. Gilles Simon,France,def. Konstantin Kravchuk, Russia,6-2, 7-6(4), 7-5. BlazRola,Slovenia,def. PabloAndujar, Spain,6-3,

WOMEN'SNATIONALBASKETBALLASSOCIATION All TimesPDT

In the Bleachers O 2014 Steve Moore. Dist. by Universal Uclick www.gocomics.com/inthebleachers

Atlanta Connecticut Indiana Chicago Washington NewYork Phoenix Minnesota SanAntonio Tulsa Seattle Los Angeles

6-1, 6-4.

Sergiy Stakhovsky,Ukraine,def. CarlosBerlocq,

Argentina,6-3, 6-3,6-3.

ErnestsGulbis(12),Latvia,def.JurgenZopp, Estonia,7-6(7), 7-5,7-6(10). Mikhail Youzhny(17), Russia,def. JamesWard, Britain,6-2,6-2, 6-1. JimmyWang,Taiwan,def.Alejandro Gonzalez, Colombia,6-3, 6-3, 6-2. AndyMurray(3), Britain, def.DavidGoffin, Belgium,6-1,6-4, 7-5. EdouardRoger-Vasselin, France,def. FilippoVolandri, Italy,7-6(1), 6-2,6-4. JeremyChardy,France, def. Daniel Cox,Britain, 6-2, 7-6(3),6-7(6), 6-3. BernardTom ic, Australia, def. EvgenyDonskoy, Russia,6-4, 6-3,6-2. KevinAnderson(20), SouthAfrica, def. AljazBedene,Slovenia,6-3,7-5, 6-2. LeonardoMayer,Argentina, def.AndreasSeppi (25),Italy,6-3,2-6,4-6,7-6(5),6-4. MarcosBaghdatis, Cyprus,def.Dustin Brown,Germany, 6-4,7-5, 2-6, 7-6(4). GrigorDimitrov(11), Bulgaria,def. RyanHarrison, UnitedStates, 7-6(1), 6-3,6-2. RobinHaase, Netherlands, def. VasekPospisil (31), Canada, 7-6(6),4-6, 7-5,6-3. DavidFerrer(7), Spain,def. PabloCarreno Busta, Spain,6-0, 6-7(3), 6-1,6-1. RobertoBautista Agut(27), Spain,def. SteveJohnson, United States,6-3, 6-7(3), 6-4, 7-5. Tim Puetz,Germ any, def. Teymuraz Gabashvili, Russia,2-6, 6-4,6-2, 6-2. Radek Stepanek,CzechRepublic,def.PabloCuevas, Urugua y,6-2,6-4, 6-4. Luke Savile, Australia, def. Dominic Thiem, Austria,7-5,6-4, 3-6,6-4. AndreasHaider-Maurer, Austria, def. KyleEdmund, Britain,6-3,7-6(4), 6-2. NovakDjokovic (1), Serbia,def. AndreyGolubev, Kazakhstan,6-0,6-1,6-4. MarinCilic (26),Croatia,def. Paul-Henri Mathieu, France, 6-4,6-7(2), 6-2,6-1. JanHernych,CzechRepublic,def.TobiasKamke, Germany, 6-3,6-7(5), 6-3,5-7,6-4. AlexandrDolgopolov(21), Ukraine,def. Samuel Groth,Australia,7-5,7-6(2), 7-6 (5). AndreyKuznetsov, Russia, def. DanielEvans,Britain, 6-1,7-5,3-6,7-6 (5). FabioFognini(16),ltaly, def.AlexKuznetsov,United States,2-6,1-6,6-4,6-1,9-7. BenjaminBecker, Germany, def. DonaldYoung, UnitedStates,6-4, 6-3,6-4. Jo-WilfriedTsonga(14), France,leadsJurgenMelzer, Austria,6-1, 3-6,3-6, 6-2,5-4, susp., rain. SamQuerrey, UnitedStates, leadsBradley Klahn, United States,6-7(5), 6-4,6-1,6-5, susp.,rain. Women First Round YaninaWickmayer, Belgium, def.SamStosur(17), Australia,6-3,6-4. PengShuai, China,def.JohannaKonta, Britain,

EaslernConference W L Pct GB 9 7 6 6

4 6 6 7

5

9

4 10

.6 9 2 .5 3 6 2 .5 0 0 2 4 .4 6 2 3

357 41/2

. 266 5'/x

WeslernConference W L Pct GB 9 11 7 5 6 4

4

3 6 7 9 6

.7 5 0 . 7 33 -IP/x .5 3 6 2 4 .4 1 7 4 40 0 4 ' /r .3 3 3 5

Today'sGames Washingtonat SanAntonio, 9:30a.m. Seattle atLosAngeles,12:30 p.m.

Wednesday'sGames ChicagoatConnecticut,4 p.m. TulsaatIndiana,4p.m.

r

xlt

MO TOR SPORTS NASCAR

"You're way off course. This is Idaho. Shouldn't you be using acompass or GPS or something?'

WCL

SOCCER

WESTCOASTLEAGUE All Times PDT

World Cup

East Division W L W enatchee AppleSox 10 6 YakimaValey Pippins 6 6 WallaWallaSweets 6 9 KelownaFalcons 6 9 South Division W L MedfordRogues 10 4 CorvallisKnights 9 7 BendElks 7 10 KlamathFallsGems 5 11 Wesl Division W L KitsapBlueJackets 6 4 Bellingham Bels 9 5 CowlitzBlackBears 7 9 VictoriaHarbourcats 5 6

All Times PDT Pct GB .625 .500 2 400 3'/2 400 31/2

Pct GB

.714 .563 2 .412 4'/z .313 6

Pct GB .667 .643 .436 3 365 31/2

Monday'sGames KlamathFalls9, Medford 6,10 innings Kitsap12,Cowlilz5

Wenatchee 5, Corvallis 4 Bend 4, Victoria3 Today'sGames 6-4,3-6, 6-4. MedfordatKlamath Falls, 6:35p.m. MariaKirilenko,Russia,def. SloaneStephens(16), YakimaValey atKelowna,6:35p.m. Kitsapat Cowlilz, 6:35p.m. UnitedStates,6-2, 7-6(6). EkaterinaMakarova(22), Russia,def. KimikoDate- Corvallis atWenatchee,7:05p.m. BendatVictoria, 7:11p.m. Krumm,Japan, 3-6, 6-4,7-5. Wednesday'sGames Elena Vesnina (32), Russia, def. Patricia Mayr-Achleitner, Austria,6-0, 6-4. Kitsapat Cowlitz, 6;35p.m. Ana Konjuh,Croatia,def. MarinaErakovic, New YakimaValey atKelowna,6:35p.m. Zealand,6-3,4-6,6-0. KlamathFallsat Medford, 6:35p.m. PolonaHercog, Slovenia, def. PaulaDrmaechea, Corvallis atWenatchee,7:05p.m. Argentina,6-4, 6-4. BendatVictoria, 7:11p.m. BarboraZahlavovaStrycova, Czech Republic, def. Alla Kudryavtseva, Russia, 6-2,6-2. Sunday'sSummary Misaki Doi, Japan,def. Elina Svitolina, Ukraine, 6-4,6-1. Victoria Azarenka(6), Belarus, def. MirjanaLu- Elks 4, HarbourCats 3 cic-BaroniCroati , a,6-3,7-5. Bend ggg 102 010 — 4 9 1 Yvonne Meusburger, Austria,def. VaniaKing, UnitVictoria ggg 002 010 — 3 9 0 ed States,7-5, 6-3. Kaul, Wi l c ox (7) and ets (6); Nelson,TorLaurenDavis, UnitedStates, def.Alisa Kleybanova, res-Costa(7)andPeabodyShe (9). W—Kaul, 1-1. LRussia,6-1, 6-2. Bojan aJovanovski,Serbia,def.JohannaLarsson, Nelson,0-3.Sv—Sheets(2). 2B—Newton(2), DeGoti (2). HR —Clark(1). Sweden, 7-6(2),6-0. LucieSafarova(23),CzechRepublic, def.Julia Goerges,Germany,7-6 (3), 7-6(3). GOLF Kurumi Nara,Japan, def. Anna-LenaFriedsam, Germany,6-4,6-4. Professional Li Na(2),China,def. PaulaKania, Poland,7-5,6-2. VenusWiliams(30), UnitedStates, def. Maria-TeWORLDGOLFRANKING resaTorro-Flor,Spain, 6-4,4-6, 6-2. Mona Barthel, Germany,def. RominaDprandi, ThroughSunday Switzerland, 7-5,6-0. 1, AdamScott, Australia,9.09.2, HenrikStenson, NaomiBroady,Britain, def.TimeaBabos, Hungary, Sweden, 7.69.3,BubbaWatson,UnitedStates,7.24. 2-6,7-6(7), 6-0. 4, Matt Kuchar,UnitedStates, 7.01. 5, TigerWoods, FlaviaPenneta(12),Italy,def.Jana Cepelova,Slo- UnitedStates,6.69.6, JasonDay,Australia, 6.77.7, vakia, 6-2,6-3. RoryMcffroy,Northern Ireland,6.60. 6, Sergio Garcia, JarmilaGajdosova,Australia, def. StefanieVoegele, Spain,6.46.9, JordanSpieth, UnitedStates, 5.68. 10, Switzerland, 6-3,7-6(6). JustinRose,England,5.62. TerezaSmitkova, CzechRepublic, def.HsiehSu11, MartinKaymer, Germany,5.51. 12,JimFuryk, wei, Taiwan,6-3,6-3. UnitedStates,5.43. 13,Phil Mickelson,UnitedStates, Alison Van Uytvanck, Belgium, def. Monica 5.32. 14, HidekiMatsuyama,Japan, 5.15. 15,Zach Nicul escu,Romania,6-4,6-3. Johnson,UnitedStates, 4.95. 16, DustinJohnson, PetraKvitova(6), CzechRepublic, def. AndreaHla- UnitedStates,4.93. 17,JimmyWalker, UnitedStates, vackova,Czech Republic,6-3r 6-0. 4.32.16,SteveStricker, UnitedStates,4.26.19, Jason CaseyDellacqua,Australia, def.AnettKontaveit, Dufner,UnitedStates,419. 20,LukeDonald, England, Estonia,3-6,7-6(4), 6-3. 4.12. CoCoVandeweghe, United States, def. Garbine 21, VictorDubuisson,France,4.07. 22, Graeme Muguruza (27)r Spain,6-3,3-6, 7-5. McDowellNorthern , Ireland, 4.04. 23, Charl SchwartDominika Cibulkova(10), Slovakia,def.Aleksandra zel, SouthAfrica, 3.97. 24, KeeganBradley, United Wozniak,Canada,6-1, 6-2. States,3.94.25,lanPoulter, England, 3.91. 26,ThomCarolineWozniacki(16), Denm ark, leadsShahar as Bjorn, Denm ark, 3.91. 27,RickieFowler, United Peer,Israel,6-3,2-0(30-30),susp.,rain. States,3.79.28,MiguelAngelJimenez, Spain, 3.73. SaraErrani(14),Italy, vs.CarolineGarcia, France, 29, PatrickReed, UnitedStates, 3.64. 30,WebbSimp6-2,6-7(3),susp.,rain. son, UnitedStates,3.53. TsvetanaPironkova,Bulgaria, leadsVaryaraLep31,Lee Westwood, England, 3.47. 32,Brandt chenko,UnitedStates, 7-6(6), 0-2, susp., rain. Snedeker,UnitedStates,3.43. 33,JamieDonaldson, AgnieszkaRadwanska (4)r Poland,leadsAndreea Wales,3.36. 34,Bill Haas, UnitedStates, 3.25. 35, Mitu, Rom ania,4-2, suspvrain. GrahamDeLaet,Canada,3.23.36,KevinStreelman, MichelleLarcherdeBrito, Portugal, leadsSvetlana UnitedStates,3.13.37,StephenGagacher, Scotland, Kuznetsova (26), Russia,2-1(15-30), susp.,rain. 3.13. 36, KevinNa,United States,3.07. 39, Jonas Blixt, Sweden,2.92. 40,RyanMoore, UnitedStates, 2.92. BASEBALL 41, ThongchaiJaidee, Thialand,2.66. 42,Hunter Mahan,UnitedStates, 2.76.43, Chris Kirk, United College States,2.76.44,Harris English, UnitedStates, 2.75. 45, Francesco Molinari, Italy, 2.74.46,Joost LuitCOLLEGEWORLD SERIES At Omaha,Neb. en, Netherlands,2.73. 47, Louis Dosthuizen,South All TimesPDT Africa, 2.71.46, MattEvery, UnitedStates,2.67. 49, GaryWoodland,UnitedStates, 2.64. 50,MattJones, (Best-of-3; x-if necessary) Australia,2.61. Monday; Vanderbilt 9,Virginia 6 51, Mikkolonen,Finland,2.56.52,BrendonTodd, Today:Virginia (52-15)vs.Vanderbilt (50-20), 5p.m. UnitedStates,2.51. 53,JohnSenden,Australia, 2.50. x-Wednesday:Virginia vs.Vanderbilt, 5 p.m. 54, BillyHorschel,UnitedStates, 2.46.

FIRSTROUND GROUP A W L T x-Brazil 2 0 1 x-Mexico 2 0 1 Croatia 1 2 0 Cameroon 0 3 0 GROUP 8 W L T x-Netherlands 3 0 0 x-Chile 2 1 0 Spain 1 2 0 Australia 0 3 0 GROUP C W L T x-Colombia 2 0 0 IvoryCoast 1 1 0 Japan 0 1 1 Greece 0 1 1

GRoup o

W L T 2 0 0 1 1 0 1 1 0 0 2 0 GROUP E W L T 2 0 0 1 1 0 1 1 0 0 2 0 GROUP F W L T 2 0 0 1 0 1 0 1 1

x-Costa Rica Italy Uruguay England France Ecuador Switzerland

Honduras

x-Argentina Nigeria Iran Bosnia-Herze govina 0 2 0 GROUP G W L T Germany 1 0 1 UnitedStates 1 0 1 Ghana 0 1 1 Portugal 0 1 1 GROUP H W L T x Belgium 2 0 0 Algeria 1 1 0 Russia 0 1 1 SouthKorea 0 1 1 x-Advancedtoknockoutrounds

DEALS GF GA Pfs 7 4 6 1

2 1 6 9

7 7 3 0

GF GA Pts 10 3 9 5 3 6 4 7 3 3 9 0 GF GA Pts 5 1 6 3 3 3 1 2 1 0 3 1 GF GA Pts 4 1 6 2 2 3 3 4 3 2

4

0

GF GA Pts 6 2 6 3 4 1

3 6 5

3 3 0

GF GA Pts 3 1 0 1

1 0 1 3

6 4 1 0

GF GA Pts 6 4 3 2

2 3 4 6

4 4 1 1

GF GA Pts 3 1 6 5 4 3 1 2 1 3 5 1

Today'sGames Spain 3, Australia 0 Netherlands 2, Chile 0 Brazil 4,Cameroon1 Mexico 3,Croatia1 Today'sGames Costa Ricavs.England,9a.m. Italy vs.Uruguay,9a.m. Greece vs. IvoryCoast,1 p.m. Japan vs.Colombia,1p.m. Wednesday'sGames Argentinavs.Nigeria,9a.m. Bosnia-Herze govinavs. Iran,9a.m. Swrtzerland vs. Honduras,1 p.m. Ecuadorvs.France1 p.m.

NWSL NATIONALWOMEN'S SOCCER LEAGUE AllTimesPDT Seattle

FC Kansas City Chicago Portland Washington WesternNewYork Houston Sky Blue FC Boston

W L 11 0 6 4 6 6 6 4 6 7 5 7 4 6 2 6 3 9

LEADERS Points 1, Jeff Gordon,560.2, JimmieJohnson, 560. 3, DaleEarnhardtJr.,555.4, MattKenseth, 515. 5, Brad Keselowski,512.6, Carl Edwards,509.7,Joey Logano, 463.6,RyanNewman,473.9, Kevin Harvick, 472. 10, KyleLarson,470. 11, KyleBusch,465. 12,PaulMenard, 459. 13, DennyHamlin, 453.14,Clint Bowe yr, 452. 15, Greg Biffle, 444.16,KaseyKahne, 429. 17,TonyStewart, 427.16,AustinDilon,427.19,JamieMcMurray,425. 20, BrianVickers,424. 21, MarcosAmbrose,407.22, AricAlmirola, 400. 23,AJAllmendinger,391.24,CaseyMears,373.25, Martin TruexJr., 360.26, Kurt Busch,347. 27, Ricky Stenhouse Jr., 320. 26,Danica Patrick, 299.29,Justin Affgaier260.30 MichaelAnnett 249. 31, DavidGiffiland,232. 32, ColeWhitt, 226.33, ReedSorenson, 199. 34, David Ragan, 196.35, Alex Bowman,166..

T Pts GF 2 35 29 3 2 7 24 2 2 0 16 2 2 0 16 1 1 9 22 2 1 7 23 1 1 3 16 6 1 2 14 1 1 0 16

GA 10 17 15 16 30 16 23 24 27

Saturday'sGames

Portland 6, Washington 1 FC Kansas City 1,Chicago0

Sunday'sGames

Sky Blue FC1, Boston1, tie Seattle 2,Western NewYork1

Wednesday'sGame

Sky BlueFCat Portland, 7p.m.

Friday's Game Bostonat WesternNewYork,4;30 p.m. Saturday, June2S Portland at FCKansasCity,5 pm. Washingtonat Houston, 6p.m. Sky Blue FCat Seattle, 6p.m.

Transactions BASEBALL

AmericanLeague BALTIMORE DRIDLES— AssignedRHPEdgmerEscalona outright toNorfolk(IL). Agreedtotermswith LHP RandyWolf onaminor leaguecontract. Sent3BMichael Almanzarto Frederick(Carolina)forarehabassignment. DETROIT TIGERS— Transferred RHPLukePutkonento the60-dayDL. Selected thecontract of LHP Pat MccoyfromToledo(IL). SEATTLE MARINERS— SignedDFAlexJackson. TORONT OBLUEJAYS— Recalled OFAnthony GoseandDFKevin Pilar fromBuffalo (IL). PlacedINF Brett Lawrieonthe15-day DL. Dptioned CErik Kratz to Buffalo. National League ARIZONA DIAMDNDBACKS—AssignedSSArgenis Diazoutright to Reno(PCL). CHICAGOCUBS— DptionedLHPTsuyoshiWada to lowa (PCL). COLOR ADO ROCKIES — Optioned RHPWilton Lopezto ColoradoSprings (PCL). Recalled RH PRob Scahill fromColoradoSprings. Selectedthecontract of C Jackson Wiliams fromColoradoSprings. Placed CMichaelMcKenryonthebereavement list PHILADE LPHIAPHILLIES— Dptioned RHPEthan Martin toLehighValley (IL). PITTSBU RGHPIRATES—Sent 2BNeil Walker to Bradenton(FSL)for arehabassignment. ST.LOUISCARDINALS— PlacedLHPJaimeGarcia andRHPMichaelWachaonthe15-day DL;Garcia retroactiveto June21andWachatoJune16. SANDIEG OPADRES —Selected the contract of RHPDdrisamerDespaignefromElPaso(PCL). WASHING TON NATIONALS — Sent DF Bryce HarperandCWilsonRamostoPotomac(Carolina) for rehabassignments. BASKETB ALL National Basketball Association DENVE RNUGGETS—AnnouncedFDarrell Arthur and GNate Robinsonexercisedtheir contractoptions for the2014-15season. FOOTBALL

National Football League CHICAGOBEARS— SignedTEJeronMastrudand SAdrianWilsonto one-yearcontracts. CLEVELANDBRDWNS — NamedCharles Bailey, Bobby DePaul, MikeHagen, RonHil andJames Kirklandsenior personnelassociatesandScott Aligo player personnelassociate. Promo ted SamDeLuca andHarrisonRitcherto playerpersonnelassociate and ColtonChappleto BLESTOscout. NEW ENGLANDPATRIOTS— SignedDLDominiqueEasleyandDLChris Martin. HOCKEY National HockeyLeague MONTREAL CANADIENS— SignedDAndreiMarkov to athree-yearcontract. PHILADELP HIA FLYERS — Acquired F R.J.Umbergeranda2015fourth-round draft pickfromColumbusfor LWScott Hartnell. PHOENIXCOYOTES— Announced theywillbe knownastheArizonaCoyotes,effective June27. VANCO UVERCANUCKS—NamedWillie Desjardins coach. SOCCER Major LeagueSoccer PORTLANDTIMBERS— Exercisedthepurchase optio nonFFanendoAdifrom FC Copenhagenand signedhimto a multiyear contractas a designated player. COLLEGE CINCINN ATI — Signedmen's basketball coach Mick Cronin to a seven-yearcontract throughthe 2020-21season.

FISH COUNT Upstream daily movement of adult chinook,jack chinook,steelheadandwild steelheadat selected ColumbiaRiverdamslast updatedonSunday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wsllhd Bonneville 3,559 6 3 0 49 1 166 The Daffes 2,354 22 2 1 5 6 75 John Day 2,562 2 6 6 101 46 McNary 2,063 2 6 6 70 26 Upstreamyear-to-date movement of adult chinook, jackchinook, steelheadandwild steelhead at selectedColumbiaRiver damslast updatedon Sunday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd Bonneville 277,692 35,974 10,665 3,047

T he Daffes 209,292 27,373 2,407 7 0 7 John Day 160,910 24,091 4,417 1,606

McNary 154,336 20,079 1,793 562

on irt the ninth to get the last threeouts for his second save

bilt capitalized on Virginia

OMAHA, Neb. — Vander-

TENNIS

8:30 a.m. ESPN2

career starts.

WIMBLEDON

American Vandeweghe upsetsNo.27 Muguruza By Samuel Petrequin

Vandeweghe, who had lost in the first round over the past

The Associated Press

h e r f i r st

three years, defeated Garbine

threeappearances atWi mbledon, CoCo Vandeweghe lost

LONDON — I n

Muguruza 6-3, 3-6, 7-5 and won an eighth consecutive

every time. In her fourth try,

match on a surface she used

she needed 13 match points to finally get a victory at the All England Club. The 22-year-old American continued her strong recent play on grass by reaching the second round Monday, with a prestigious victory over the Spanish player who upset Ser-

to loathe after claiming her

ena Williams at the French

Open.

first WTA title last week in the Netherlands. There, she spent

week. "The toughest part for

without a fight but cracked on her serve in the final game, week before. I knew she would hitting consecutive double come out even more fired up faults on the last two points. "There was too many (match because of the recent memory of her loss." points) too count," said VanThe 20-year-oid Muguruza, deweghe, a Californian who me was that I played her the

the No. 27 seed at Wimbledon,

improved to a career-best 51st

made an impression in Paris more than 11 hours on court where she beat Williams in and arrived at W i m bledon straight sets before reaching worn out but with her confithe quarterfinals. But she was dence boosted. too erratic against her Ameri-

in rankings released Monday.

"It was a tough match and

can opponent and converted

it was crazy at the end," said just two of her seven break Vandeweghe, who had al- chances. ready beaten Muguruza last Muguruza did not bow out

"After having all those chances and then losing it to come back,

bounce back, and hold, I don't think, before in my past match-

es, mentally I would have been able to come back. Because to be honest, coming in here I was a little bit mentally fried."


TUESDAY, JUNE 24, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

C3

OR LEAGUE BASEBALL eatandings

POWER OFF THE PINE

All TimesPDT AMERICANLEAGUE

East Division

W L 43 35 40 35 39 36 35 42 31 47

Toronto Baltimore NewYork Boston Tampa Bay

Central Division Detroit Kansas City Cleveland Minnesota Chicago

Oakland Los Angeles Seattle Texas Houston

W L 40 32 40 36 37 39 36 38 35 42

Pct GB .551 .533 1r/r .520 2r/r 455 71/2

.397 12

Pct GB .556 .526 2 .487 5 .486 5

Pct GB .618 .554 5

41 36 35 40 33 44

.532 6r/r .467 11r/r .429 14r/r

Marlins 4, Phillies 0

DENVER — Lance Lynnallowed three hits in eight innings and Matt Adams hadtwo homers and a career-high six RBls to leadSt. Louis. Lynn struck out sevenand walked nonebefore being taken out for the ninth. It's the first time Colorado has beenheld scoreless at Coors Field since last July.

PHILADELPHIA — CaseyMcGehee hit a two-run doubleandNa-

Colorado ab r hbi ab r hbi Mcrpnt3b 2 2 0 0 Blckmnrf 4 0 1 0 Hollidylf 5 1 2 1 Dickrsnlf 4 0 2 0 MAdms1b 5 2 3 6 Tlwlzkss 4 0 0 0 Craigrf 4 0 0 0 Mornea1b 3 0 0 0 YMolinc 4 0 0 0 Rosarioc 3 0 0 0 Jaycf 3 1 0 0 Stubbscf 3 0 0 0 JhPerltss 3 0 1 1 Culersn3b 3 0 0 0 M.Ellis2b 3 1 0 0 LeMahi2b 3 0 0 0 L ynnp 2 1 0 0 Chacinp 1 0 0 0 Choatep 0 0 0 0 Rutledgph 1 0 0 0 Mottep 0 0 0 0 FMorlsp 0 0 0 0 RWhelrph 1 0 0 0 B elislep 0 0 0 0 Totals 31 8 6 8 Totals 3 0 0 3 0 S t. Louis 083 1 1 8 300 — 8 Colorado GB B GBB 000 — B DP — Colorado1. LOB —St. Louis 4, Colorado3. 28 — Holliday (19), Jh.Peralta(20). HR —Ma.Adams St. Louis

455 71/2

West Division W L 47 29 41 33

Cardinals 8, Rockies 0

than Eovaldi pitched six-hit ball into

the seventh inning to leadMiami. Eovaldi went 6'/5 innings andgot 12 of his19 outs on flyballs. The right-hander hadn't won sinceMay 26 and gaveup11 runs in his previous two starts. Phillies starter Roberto Hernandez allowed two runs and three hits, striking out six in six innings. Hernandezlined asingle to right in the third inning for his first career hit after going 0 for 40.

Philadelphia ab r hbi ab r hbi Mrsnckcf 5 0 0 0 Rollinsss 4 0 1 0 Monday'sGames D ietrch2b 5 1 2 1 Ruizc 4000 Baltimore 6, ChicagoWhite Sox4 Stantonrf 2 1 1 0 utley2b 4 0 0 0 Toronto8, N.YY . ankees3 McGeh3b 5 0 2 2 Howard1b 4 0 1 0 Pittsburgh8,TampaBay 1 S ltlmchc 2 0 0 0 Byrdrf 4000 Kansas City5, LA.Dodgers3 Ozunalf 4 0 0 0 Asche3b 3 0 3 0 Seattle12,Boston3 GJones1b 2 0 0 0 DBrwnlf 2 0 0 0 Tuesday'sGames JeBakrph-1b 1 1 0 0 Reverecf 2 0 0 0 ChicagoWhiteSox(Quintana3-7) at Baltimore(Mi. Lucasss 3 1 1 0 Mayrryph-cf 1 0 0 0 Gonzalez4-4), 4:05p.m. Eovaldip 3 0 0 0 RHrndzp 2 0 1 0 N.Y.Yankees(Phelps 3-4) at Toronto (Buehrle 10-4), MDunnp 0 0 0 0 Hollndsp 0 0 0 0 4:07 p.m. 2(8). S —Lynn. ARamsp 0 0 0 0 DeFrtsp 0 0 0 0 Oakland (Kazmir 9-2) at N.Y.Mets (Colon 7-5), 4:10 Patrick Semansky/The Associated Press IP H R E R BBSO Greggp 0 0 0 0 CHrndzph 0 0 0 0 St. Louis p.m. Baltimore's Chris Davis watches his pinch-hit, game-winning, three-run home run in the ninth inning Pittsburgh(Locke0-1) at Tamp a Bay (Archer 4-4), 8 3 0 0 0 7 RJhnsnph 1 0 1 1 Bastrdp 0 0 0 0 LynnW,8-5 4:10 p.m. against the Chicago White Sox on Monday. Davis was yanked from the starting lineup after a recent slump. Choate 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 H atchrp 0 0 0 0 Gilesp 0 0 0 0 3 00 6 0 Motte 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 Totals 33 4 7 4 Totals Detroit(smyly3-6)at Texas(Lewis 5-4), 5:05p.m. Miami 200 000 802 — 4 Atlanta(Harang5-6) at Houston (Feldman 3-4), 5:10 Colorado 0 0 0 0 0 0 800 — 0 ChacinL,1-6 6 4 5 5 3 4 P hiladelphia p.m. E—utley (5), Bastardo (1). DP—Miami3, PhilaL.A.Dodgers(Kershaw7-2) atKansasCity(Duffy4-6), Interieague American League F.Morales 2 1 3 3 2 2 Mariners12, Red Sox 3 delphia 2. LOB — M iami 9, Philadelphia 5. 2B—Mc5:10 p.m. Belisle 1 1 0 0 0 0 HBP —byFMorales (M.carpenter), byChacin (M.EI- Gehee2 (19), Asche(10). SB—Stanton (7),Je.Baker Cleveland(Masterson4-5) at Arizona(Miley 3-6), Royals 5, Dodgers (1). CS —Rollins(5). S—Lucas. 3 Orioles 6, WhiteSox4 6:40 p.m. SEATTLE —Felix Hernandez lis). WP —Chacin. IP H R E R BBSD T—2:41.A—37,078 (50,480). Minnesota(Gibson 6-5)atL.A.Angels(C.Wilson7-6), threw seven strong innings to win Miami 7:05 p.m. KANSAS CITY, Mo.— Jeremy BALTIMORE — Chris Davis hit a EovaldiW,5-3 6 1-3 6 0 0 1 2 the first time since June 2,LoBoston(Pea vy1-5) atSeattle(E.Ramirez1-4),7:10 p.m. Guthrie pitched into the eighth pinch-hit, three-run homer in the for Nationals 3, Brewers 0 M.DunnH,12 1 - 3 0 0 0 0 0 Wednesday'sGames gan Morrison hit two long homers, A .Ramos H ,12 13 0 0 0 0 1 PittsburghatTampaBay,9:10a.m. inning, Jarrod Dyson drove in two ninth inning to lift Baltimore. Davis and Seattle used asix-run fourth Gregg H, 2 1 0 0 0 1 0 MILWAUKEE — Gi o Gonzal e z comChicago WhiteSoxat Baltimore, 4:05p.m. runs off Zack Greinkeand Kansas was excluded from the starting Hatcher 1 0 0 0 0 0 N.Y.YankeesatToronto, 4:07p.m. to rout Boston. Seattle blew the bined with three relievers to hol d Philadelphia City ended afour-game losing lineup after batting just.130 in his game open in the fourth, capped Oakland atN.Y. Mets,4;10p.m. R.Hernandez L,3-6 6 3 2 2 3 6 Milwaukee's potent lineup tothree Detroit atTexas,5:05 p.m. streak. Guthrie allowed two runs previous 14 starts. Davis started 11-3 1 0 0 0 1 Hollands AtlantaatHouston, 5:10p.m. by Endy Chavez' s bases-loaded hits, and Adam LaRoche hi t a three2-3 1 0 0 1 0 De Fratus and seven hits while winning his the game in thedugout with a.216 triple. LA. Dodgers atKansasCity,5:10p.m. 1-3 2 2 0 0 1 run homer to leadWashington. Bastardo ClevelandatArizona,6:40 p.m. third straight start. batting averageand 78strikeouts. 2-3 0 0 0 0 2 Giles Minnesota at LA.Angels, 7:05 p.m. HBP—byR.Hernandez(Stanton), byDeFratus(StanBoslon Seatlle Washington Milwaukee Boston at Seattle,7:10 p.m. Los Angeles KansasCity Chicago Baltimore ton).WP —R.Hernandez. ab r hbi ab r hbi ab r hbi ab r hbi ab r hbi ab r hbi ab r hbi ab r hbi Holtrf 4 0 0 0 Enchvzrf 4 0 2 3 Spancf 4 0 0 0 RWeks2b 3 0 0 0 T—3:14. A—32,161(43,651). NATIONALLEAGUE DGordn2b 4 0 1 0 L.cainrf 4 0 2 1 Eatoncf 5 1 1 0 Markksrf 4 0 0 0 Bogarts3b 4 0 0 0 Gillespiph-If 0 0 0 0 Rendon3b 3 1 0 0 Braunrf 4 0 1 0 East Division HRmrzdh 4 0 1 2 Hosmer1b 4 0 0 0 GBckh2b 3 0 1 0 Pearce1b 4 2 1 0 Pedroia2b 4 1 2 0 J.Jonescf 5 1 1 0 Werthrf 4 1 3 0 Lucroyc 3 0 1 0 W L Pct GB Puigrf 4 0 0 0 BButlerdh 4 0 1 0 JAreudh 4 1 2 3 A.Jonescf 4 2 2 2 All-Star Voting JHerrr2b 0 0 0 0 Cano2b 5 2 2 1 LaRoch1b 3 1 2 3 CGomzcf 4 0 0 0 Washington 40 35 .533 AdGnzl1b 4 1 2 1 AGordnlf 4 0 0 0 V iciedolf 3 1 1 0 N.cruzlf 5 0 2 0 D.Ortizdh 4 1 2 1 Seager3b 5 3 3 2 ThroughSunday Zmrmnlf 3 0 0 0 ArRmr3b 3 0 0 0 Atlanta 38 37 .507 2 Kemplf 4 0 1 0 S.Perezc 4 2 2 1 DeAzalf 0 0 0 0 DYongdh 4 0 3 0 Napoli1b 3 1 2 1 Morrsn1b 4 3 4 4 Dsmndss 4 0 20 KDavislf 4 0 0 0 Miami 38 38 .500 2r/r Ethier cf 4 0 0 0 Infante 2b 4 0 1 0 AIRmrzss 3 0 1 0 C.Davisph 1 1 1 3 JGomslf 0 0 0 0 Zuninoc 4 0 1 0 Espinos2b 4 0 0 0 MrRynl1b 2 0 0 0 A MERICAN LEAGUE NewYork 35 41 ,461 5r/r A.Ellisc 4 0 1 0 Mostks3b 4 0 0 0 Konerk1b 4 0 0 0 JHardyss 4 0 1 0 N avalf-1b 4 0 1 0 Ackleylf 3 1 0 1 Loatonc 4 0 0 0 Segurass 3 0 1 0 CATCHER —1,Mat Wieters, Orioles,1,852,770. Philadelphia 34 41 .453 6 Gigaspi3b 4 0 1 1 Machd3b 4 0 1 0 Roias3b-ss 3 1 1 0 AEscorss 3 2 2 1 Przynsc 3 0 0 1 Romerpr-rf 0 0 0 0 GGnzlzp 2 0 0 0Garzap 1 0 0 0 2, DerekNorris, A's, 1,486,850.3, Brian Mccann, Central Division Triunflss 2 0 0 0 JDysoncf 3 1 3 2 Sierrarf 4 0 0 0 Schoop2b 4 0 1 0 Drewss 4 0 0 0 BMigerss 3 1 0 0 Dobbsph 1 0 0 0 EHerrrph 1 0 0 0 Yankees,1,344,076.4, Kurt Suzuki, Twins,812,865. W L Pct GB JuTrnrph-3b 1 1 1 0 Flowrsc 4 1 1 0 CJosphc 3 1 3 1 BrdlvJrcf 3 0 0 0 Blmqstdh 4 1 1 0 B arrett p 0 0 0 0 Fiers p 0 0 0 0 5, A.J.Pierzynski,RedSox,810,050 Milwaukee 47 31 .603 Totals 3 4 3 8 3 Totals 3 45 115 Totals 3 4 4 8 4 Totals 3 76 156 Totals 3 3 3 7 3 Totals 3 7121411 Storenp 0 0 0 0 Grzlnyp 0 0 0 0 FIRST BASE —1, Miguel Cabrera,Tigers, St. Louis 42 35 545 41/2 L os Angeles 0 0 0 0 0 0 821 — 3 Chicago 801 802 1BB — 4 Boslon 1BB 1BB 081 — 3 Hairstnph 1 0 0 0 2,645,000r2, JoseAbreu, WhiteSox,1,420,294. 3, Cincinnati 38 37 507 7I/2 Kansas — 6 Ci t y 0 2 0 0 1 2 Bgx B altimore 200 8 0 0 813 — 6 Seatlle 818 618 4gx — 12 Clipprdp 0 0 0 0 Chris DavisOri , oles,1,087,112.4, Albert Puiols, AnPittsburgh 38 38 .500 8 DP— LosAngeles1,Kansas City1.LOB— Los One outwhenwinning runscored. E—B.Miler (10). DP—Boston 1. LOB—Boston Totals 33 3 7 3 Totals 2 8 0 3 0 gels,1,040,316.5, MarkTeixeira, Yankees, 718,367 31 43 .419 14 Chicago A ngeles 4, Ka n sa s C i t y 5. 2B — H .R am irez (2 1), S. P e DP — C hicago 2, Bal t i m ore 1. LOB — C hic ago 6, 5, Seattl e 6. 28 — N apol i (11), J.Jones (6), Can o (17 ), Washington 083 GBB 000 — 3 SECOND BASE— 1,RobinsonCano, Mariners, West Division rez (17).38—A.Escobar (2). HR —Ad.Gonzalez(13), Baltimore10. 28—G.Beckham(14), J.Abreu(16), Seager(18), Zunino(13). 3B—En.chavez(1). HRMilwaukee OBB OBB 000 — B 2,077,055.2, lanKinsler, Tigers,1,338,272.3, Dustin W L Pct GB S.Perez(9). SB—Infante(2), J.Dyson2(12). Viciedo (18), AI.R a m i r ez (11), Gi l a spi e (18), D. Y oun g Napoli (9), Morri s on 2 (4). SF — Pie rz yn sk i . D P — W a shington 1, Mi l w aukee 1. LO B — W as hPedroia,RedSox,1,264,329r 4, JoseAltuve, Astros, SanFrancisco 45 31 .692 IP H R E R BBSD 5), C.Joseph(4). HR IP H R E R BBSD ington 6,Milwaukee6. 2B—Braun(15). HR —J.Abreu (22), A.Jones(14), —LaRo- 932,9778.5, BrianDozier, Twins, 841,980 Los Angeles 42 36 .538 4 Los Angel e s .Davi (13), s C. J o s eph (2). S — C .Jos eph. Boslon che(9). SB —D es m ond(6), Ma rRe ynol d s(5), Se gura SHORTSTOP —1, Derek Jeter, Yankees, 34 42 .447 11 Colorado GreinkeL,9-4 52 - 3 11 5 5 0 4 IP H R E R BBSD LackeyL,8-5 32 - 3 7 7 7 2 3 (14). — S Garza. 2,353,336.2, Alexei Ramirez, White Sox, 1,933,117. SanDiego 33 44 .429 12r/r J.Wright 2 1-3 6 5 5 0 3 11-3 0 0 0 0 0 Chicago Capuano IP H R E R BBSD 3, J.J. Hardy,Orioles, 1,259,268.4, JoseReyes, Blue Arizona 32 47 .405 14r/r C.Perez 2 1 0 0 3 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 Sale 6 11 2 2 1 3 Breslow Washington Jays,871,633.5,JedLowrie, A's,629,686 Kansas Ci t y Guerra H,1 1 1 0 0 0 2 Seatlle G .Gonz a e l z W, 4 4 6 3 0 0 4 5 THIRDBASE— 1, Josh Donaldson,A's, Monday'sGames W,9-2 7 6 2 2 0 6 BarrettH,4 Guthri eW,5-6 72-3 7 2 2 0 5 PutnamH,9 1 1 1 1 0 1 F.Hernandez 1 0 0 0 0 2 2,436,771. 2,AdrianBeltre, Rangers, 1,346,957. 3, Miami 4,Philadelphia0 Leone 1 0 0 0 0 2 StorenH,10 W .Davi s H,14 1 3 0 0 0 0 0 B elisario L,3-4 BS , 4 -111-3 2 3 3 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 MannyMachado,Orioles,1,182,098. 3, EvanLongoria, Pittsburgh8,TampaBay 1 Wilhelmsen 1 1 1 1 0 1 G.HollandS,22-23 1 1 1 1 0 2 Baltimore ClippardS,1-3 1 0 0 0 0 3 Rays,1,118,453.5,BrettLawrie, BlueJays,758,043 Cincinnati 6,ChicagoCubs1 pitchedto 4batters inthe7th. W P — G r eink e. W.chen 52-3 6 3 3 2 3 Capuano Milwaukee DESIGNA TEDHITTER—1, NelsonCruz, Orioles, Kansas City5, LA.Dodgers3 lhelmsen (J.Gomes). WP— Lackey, Garza T—2:46. A—21,615(37,903). R.Webb 11-3 2 1 1 0 0 HBP— by Wi L,4-5 7 5 3 3 2 7 2,457,349.2,David Ortiz, Re dSox,1,652,470. 3,Victor Washington 3, Milwaukee0 2, F.Hernandez. BrachW,1-0 2 0 0 0 1 0 Capuano Fiers 1 1 0 0 1 0 Martinez,Tigers,1,418,509.4,Edwin Encarnacion,Blue St. Louis8,Colorado0 T—2:57. A—26,860(47,476). HBP — b y B el i s ari o (A.Jones), by Sal e (Markaki s ). Gorzel a nny 1 1 0 0 0 1 Jays,1,276,851. 5, Bran don Moss,A's, 796,159 SanDiego6,SanFrancisco0 WP — Guerra. WP—G.G onzalez. OUTFIELD —1, Jose Bautista, Blue Javs, Today'sGam es Pirates 8, Rays1 T—3:11.A—31,102 (41,900). T — 3: 0 8. A — 17,9 31 (45 , 9 71). 3,665,208.2, MikeTrout, Angels, 3,286,511.3, Melky Miami(Heaney0-1)at Philadelphia(D.Buchanan3-3), National League Cabrera,BlueJays, 1,674,232. 4, Yoenis Cespedes, 4:05 p.m. ST. PETERSBURG,Fla. — PittsA's, 1,511,838.5, AdamJones, Orioles, 1,490,000.6, Blue Jays 8, Yankees3 Padres 6, Giants 0 Oakland (Kazmir 9-2) at N.Y.Mets (Colon 7-5), 4:10 burgh's Pedro Alvarezhit a threeMichaelBrantley,Indians, 1,284,901.7, JacobyEllsReds 6, Ctibs1 p.m. bury, Yankes, e 1,264,746.8, NickMarkakis, Orioles, Pittsburgh(Locke0-1) at Tamp a Bay (Archer 4-4), run homer to back the pitching TORONTO — Adam Lind hit a SAN FRANCISCO — Cuban defec1,170,304. 9, Carlos Beltran, Yankees,1,081,686. 4:10 p.m. CHICAGO — Devi n Mesoraco hit of Edi nson Vol quez. Andr e w Mc10, Torii Hunter, Tigers, 989,715.11, CocoCrisp,A's, three-run homerun in his return to tor Odrisamer Despaigne pitched Cincinnati(Bailey 7-3)at Chicago Cubs (Arrieta 3-1), 12,AlexRios, Rang ers, 742,780.13, Brett 5:05 p.m. Cutchen went 3 for 5, drove intwo the starting lineup, rookie Marcus a grand slam with two outs in Cin- seven innings in his major league 748,013. Gardner,Yankees, 737,736.14, Shin-SooChoo, RangAtlanta(Harang5-6) at Houston (Feldman 3-4), 5:10 runs and stole two bases cinnati's five-run ninth. for the Stroman won for the first time in debut to lead SanDiego. ers,699,751.15,JoshHamilton,Angels, 696,991 p.m. L.A.Dodgers(Kershaw7-2) atKansasCity (Duffy4-6), Pirates in a homecoming of sorts three starts andToronto handed Cincinnati Chicago NATIONAL LEAGUE 5:10 p.m. San Diego San Francisco ab r hbi ab r hbi for the 2013 NLMVP,who grew up the New York its third straight loss. CATCHER —1. Yadier Molina, Cardinals, Washington (Zimmermann 5-4) at Milwaukee(Galarab r hbi ab r hbi BHml t ncf 5 2 2 1 Coghlnlf 4 0 0 0 2,600,853. 2,JonathanLucroy, Brewers, 1,911,745. in nearby Fort Meadeand hadnevdo 5-4),5:10p.m. Venalcf-rf e 4 1 1 0 Blancocf 4 0 1 0 Frazier3b 5 1 3 1 Ruggincf 4 0 0 0 3, BusterPosey,Giants, 1,709,685.4, EvanGattis, New York Toronto E carerss 4 2 2 1 Pencerf 4 0 1 0 St. Louis (S.Miler 7-6) atColorado(J.DeLa Rosa er played before atTropicanaField. Votto 1b 3 1 0 0 Rizzo 1b 4 1 2 1 Braves,1,055,119.5, Devin Mesoraco,Reds,679,745 ab r h bi ab r hbi S .Smithrf-lf 4 1 2 1 Poseyc 3 0 0 0 6-6), 5:40 p.m. Mesorcc 1 1 1 4 Scastross 4 0 1 0 FIRSTBASE— 1, Paul Goldschmidt, D-backs, Gardnrlf 2 0 0 0 Reyesss 4 1 0 1 Cleveland(Masterson4-5) at Arizona(Miley 3-6), Pittsburgh Q uentinlf 3 0 0 0 Petitp 0000 Brucerf 5 0 1 0 Valuen3b 4 0 0 0 Tampa Bay Cervellic 0 1 0 0 Mecarrlf 5 2 2 1 6:40 p.m. Maybincf 0 00 0 B.Hicksph 1 0 0 0 1,962,386. 2,AdrianGonzalez, Dodgers, 1,239,509. Ludwcklf 4 0 0 0 Castilloc 4 0 1 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi 3, Freddi eFreeman,Braves, 1,112,465.4, MarkReynB eltrandh 4 1 1 0 Pillarlf 0 0 0 0 Schmkr2b 4 0 0 0 Sweenyrf 2 0 0 0 SanDiego(Hahn2-1) at SanFrancisco(Hudson7-3), Grandlc 4 1 1 1 Sandovl3b 3 0 0 0 Polancrf 4 1 1 0 DJnngscf 4 1 1 0 olds, Brewers,1,067,419.5, Matt Adams,Cardinals, E gsurycf 3 0 0 0 Linddh 4 2 2 4 Cozartss 4 0 0 0 Barney2b 3 0 1 0 7:15 p.m. Medica1b 4 0 1 2 Morse1b 3 0 1 0 SMartelf 3 2 1 0 Zobrist2b 3 0 0 0 ASorinrf 1 0 0 0 Encrnc1b 4 1 3 0 Wednesday'sGames Simonp 2 0 0 0Smrdzip 2 0 0 0 A marst3b 4 0 0 0 Colvinlf 3 0 0 0 1,021,846 AMcctcf 5 2 32 Longori3b 4 0 0 0 Teixeir1b 3 1 1 1 CIRsmscf 4 0 0 0 SECONDBASE— 1r ChaseUtley, Philies, PittsburghatTampaBay,9:10a.m. Petersn2b 4 0 0 0 Bcrwfrss 3 0 1 0 Broxtnp 0 0 0 0 Schlittrp 0 0 0 0 I.Davi s 1b 2 0 0 1 Loney1b 4 0 2 1 2,090,110.2, NeilWalker,Pirates,1,328,959. 3, Dee Solarte3b 1 0 1 1 DNavrrc 4 0 2 2 Washingtonat Milwaukee,11:10a.m. Despgnp 2 0 0 0 Panik2b 3 0 0 0 Heiseyph 1 1 1 0 Schrhltph 1 0 0 0 G Snchzph-1b2 0 0 0 Guyerlf 4 0 1 0 G ordon, Dodgers,1,129,759.4, RickieWeeks, BrewMccnnc-1b 4 0 0 0 JFrncs3b 3 1 1 0 St. LouisatColorado, 12:10p.m. Goeertph 1 1 1 0 M.cainp 2 0 0 0 O ndrskp 0 0 0 0 Stropp 0 0 0 0 RMartnc 5 0 1 1 Joycedh 3 0 0 0 ers, 849,316.5,BrandonPhilips, Reds,798,784 KJhnsn3b-If 4 0 1 1 StTgsn3b 1 0 0 0 SanDiegoatSanFrancisco, 12:45p.m. Qcknsh p 0 0 0 0 J.Lopez p 0 0 0 0 HRndnp 0 0 0 0 JHrrsn2b 4 2 1 0 YEscorss 2 0 1 0 THIRD BASE — 1, AramisRamrez, i Brewe rs, BRorts2b 4 0 0 0 Kawsk2b 4 1 1 0 Cincinnatiat ChicagoCubs,4:05 p.m. Stauffrp 0 0 0 0 JGutrrzp 0 0 0 0 Russellp 0 0 0 0 P Alvrz3b 3 1 1 3 Kiermrrf 3 0 1 0 I Suzukirf-cf 3 0 1 0 Goserf 3 0 2 0 Totals 3 4 6 8 6 Totals 3 21 5 1 HSnchzph-c 1 0 0 0 1,279,902. 2, Dayid Wright, Mets, 1,260,895. 3, Miami atPhiladelphia,4:05 p.m. Sniderdh 4 0 1 1 Hanignc 3 0 0 0 P ablo Sando v al , Gi a nts, 1,194, 6 07. 4, Matt Carpe nRyan ss 3 0 1 0 Oakland atN.Y. Mets,4:10 p.m. Cincinnati 1B B BBB GBB — 6 Totals 3 4 6 8 5 Totals 3 00 4 0 Mercerss 4 0 1 0 Totals 32 3 6 3 Totals 3 6 8 138 AtlantaatHouston, 5:10p.m. Chicago BBB BB1 GBB — 1 San Diego O B B3BB 030 — 6 ter, Cardinals,1,049,472.5, NolanArenado, Rockies, Totals 3 6 8 108 Totals 3 0 1 6 1 1,019,161 N ew York 800 1 0 0 BB2 — 3 LA. Dodgers atKansasCity,5:10p.m. E—Rizzo (5). LOB—Cincinnati 8, Chicago 5. San Francisco DBB DBB 000 — B P ittsburgh 204 0 0 0 811 — 8 Toronto SHORTSTOP — 1, Troy Tulowitzki, Rockies, 160 100 Bgx — 8 E—Pence (4), B.crawford(11). DP—SanDiego1, 28 — B.Hamilton (13), Bruce(12), S.castro(23), BarClevelandatArizona,6:40 p.m. T ampa Bay 1 0 0 0 0 0 800 — 1 3,287,460. 3,JeanSegura, Brewers, 1,272,273.2, DP — NewYork1, Toronto1. LOB —NewYork4, ney (7). 38—Fraz S an F r a n c i s c o 2 . L OB — S a n D i e g o 2 , Sa n F r a n c i s c o i e r (1)r HR —M e s oraco (13), Ri z zo E—Cobb (2). DP—Pittsburgh 3, TampaBay 1. Toronto 9. 28 —Ke.Johnson (9), Me.cabrera(19), (16).SB— 3. 2B —S.Smith (17), Grandal(7), Medica (5), Blanco BrandonCrawford, Giants, 1,089,457.4, JhonyPerFrazier(8), Heisey(6). CS—B.Hamilton(9). LOB —Pittsburgh7, TampaBay4.28—S.Marte(14). D.Navarro(9). HR History alta, ewers,851,613. 5, HanleyRamirez, Dodgers, —Teixeira(13), Lind(4).SB—Gose IP H R E R BBSO (4), Pence(16). HR — PA lvare z (1 2). SB — P ola nco ( 2), S. M arte (18), IP H R E R BBSO 821,934 (4) Cincinnati THIS DATE IN BASEBALL A.Mccutchen 2 (12). OUTFIELD —1, Yasiel Puig, Dodgers,2,468,376. IP H R E R BBSO Simon 7 5 1 1 1 5 San Diego IP H R E R BBSD New York BroxtonW,3-0 1 0 0 0 0 1 DespaigneW,1-0 7 4 0 0 0 1 2, AndrewMccutchen, Pirates,2,461,722. 3, Carlos June 24 Pittsburgh WhitleyL,3-1 31- 3 11 8 8 3 2 Ondrusek 1 0 0 0 0 1 Quackenbush 1 0 0 0 0 0 Gomez,Brewers,2,409,860. 4,Giancarlo Stanton,Mar1936 — RookieJoeDiMaggio hit twohomers in olquezW,5-6 8 5 1 1 2 1 Huff 32-3 1 0 0 2 3 Chicago Stauffer 1 0 0 0 0 1 lins, 2,130,519.5, RyanBraun, Brewers, 1,974,845. 6, the fifthinningandaddedtwodoubles intheNewYork V J.Gomez 1 1 0 0 0 1 Kegey CharlieBlackmon,Rockies,1,608,755. 7,Angel Pagan, 1 1 0 0 0 3 Samardzi i a 6 4 1 1 2 7 San Franci s co Yankees'18-4victoryovertheSt.Louis Browns. Bay MichaelMorse, Giants,1,260419. Toronto Schlitter 1 0 0 0 0 1 M.cain L,1-6 71 - 3 7 6 6 1 7 Giants,1,261,458.8, 1962 — Jack Reed, a substitute ouffielder, hit a Tampa CobbL,2-6 5 6 6 6 3 2 StromanW,4-2 8 3 1 1 1 7 Strop 1 0 0 0 2 2 J.Lopez 0 1 0 0 0 0 9, Justinupton,Braves,1,203,302. 10,Hunter Pence, homer offPhil Reganin the22ndinning to givethe C.Ramos 21-3 0 0 0 0 4 Jenkins Giants,1,146,060.11, KhrisDavis, Brewers,1,052,946. 2-3 3 2 2 1 0 H.RondonL,1-2 2- 3 4 5 5 1 0 J.Gutierrez 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 NewYorkYankeesa9-7 win overthe Detroit Tigersin Yates 12-3 4 2 2 1 3 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 Petit Loup 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Russell 1 0 0 0 0 0 12, MattHogiday,Cardinals,1,014,863.13,Allen Craig, agamethatlasted7 hours, 22minutes. It wastheonly HBP —byCobb(S.Marte), byYates(S.Marte). HBP —bySamardzia (Mesoraco,Mesoraco). Cardinals, 788,636.14, MichaelCuddyer, Rockies, WP — Whitley, Huf. J.Lopez pitchedto1 batter inthe8th. homerReedhit inthemajors. T—3:22. A—13,175(31,042). T—3:21. A—27,747(41,072). 713,648.15,BryceHarper, Nationals,680930 T—2:45.A—31,554 (49,282). T—2:34.A—41,360 (41,915).

NBA Draft Continued from C1 Oden and Embiid are hardly

"Whenwas the last time there was a great big? Find the 7-foot centers, the prototype center. I haven't

big-man draftblunders: He was picked one spot after Sam Bowie

seen one of those guys out there for a long time."

and Jordan wound up taking

alone.

— Miami Heat president Pat Riley

For every huge success story like the ones from Shaquille O'Ne-

questions, mostly regarding a with NoeL "I feel for him," Noel told reportand Hakeem Olajuwon, there have balky back that affected him tobeen the cautionary tales of Sam ward the end of his final college ers in Kentucky after Embiid's inBowie, Pervis Ellison, Michael season with Kansas. Now he has jury was announced. "He's had all Olowokandi, Kwame Brown and undergone foot surgery and could that pressure and all that expectaOden. be out for up to six months, likely tion. He's just got to stay positive Big men are big risks — and of- ending his rookie season before it and keep working on himself ... ten, big problems. starts. do what he can do, because everyal, David Robinson, Tim Duncan

NBA teams remain undeterred.

That is good news for Embiidafter all, despite Oden's litany of problems,he is currentl y on an NBA roster.

Still, Embiid might lose some big money Thursday. If he was the No. 1 pick, he

would have been guaranteed about $14.4 million for his first three years in the NBA. If he slides

to just No. 10, his rookie-deal salary for thosefirstthreeyearswould be about $8.1 million less. "Joel will be unable to participate in any additional workouts and will not attend the draft in

New York," agent Arn Tellem said. Embiid already had some health

That does not m ake Embiid

thing else is out of his controL"

unique. There is no shortage of big His situation could turn out to be men who have buckled under the similar to what former Kentucky weight of big expectations. star Nerlens Noel faced this past Ellison was the No. 1 pick in season. Noel was recovering from 1989, got injured as a rookie and a torn knee ligament, an injury basically had only one great seathat ended his college career and son as a pro. Kent Benson, the No. quite probably cost him a chance 1 pick in 1977, averaged 9.1 points to be the No. 1 pick. Despite the in- per game in his career. Hasheem jury, he was drafted No. 6 by New Thabeet was the No. 2 pick in Orleans and traded to the Philadel- 2009; he has averaged 2.2 points phia 76ers. per game since. Olowokandi was And with Philadelphia currently an enormous bust at No. 1, slogholding seven picks in this draft, ging through an injury-plagued it is easy to wonder if the 76ers career and never averaging more would consider grabbing Embiid than 12.3 points in a season. and giving him a year to recover And Michael Jordan will forever in the same manner that they did be tied to perhaps the two biggest

Miami

went at No. 2 to Portland in 1984, Brown first overall in 2001. For as much as Bowie's career was

derailed by injuries — and for as much as he was a punch line for years — he still scored 1,529 more NBA points than Brown did, de-

spite playing 96 fewer games. "When was the last time there

was a greatbig?e Miami Heat president Pat Riley said last week. "An-

thony Davis is a power forward. He's quite a talent. So there's a few guys that have made it, but find the

7-foot centers, the prototype center. I haven't seen one of those guys out there for a long time." Riley had Oden on the Heat

squad this past season. Oden's career has been plagued by injuries. And the guy taken immediately after him in the 2007 draft, Kevin

Durant, is now the NBA's reigning MVP.

But Riley cannot bring himself to say he is giving up on Oden. After all, big men are not found just anywhere. Such is the lure. "You just don't want to walk

away," Riley said, "from that kind of a talent."

The Associated Press file photo

Greg Oden, who had just had surgery on his right knee, walks with crutches with former Portland

Trail Blazers general manager Kevin Pritchard before the start his introductory news conference in 2007.


C4 T H E BULLETIN • TUESDAY, JUNE 24, 2014

Wie

scene as Kaymer walked to- The same is true for Wie, who ward the last green with an no longer watches videotape of Continued from C1 eight-stroke lead and the ap- her swing. "Growing up, I was kind of a Led by Wie and Lewis, who plause of the large crowd ringhave two victories apiece, ing in his ears. control freak," she said. "I just "I thought to myself, 'I want wanted to control everything; Americans have captured nine of 15 women's events this to be here on Sunday, I want have the perfect swing, have to feel this exact thing,' " Wie the perfect putting stroke. And year, including both majors. Three of the five multiple said. "It's a dream come true if something wasn't perfect, winners are Americans (Wie, that it actually happened. I feel then I would start to freak out." Lewis and Jessica Korda), and extremelylucky." What caused her to change? Lewis is ranked No. 1. From

Wie is friends with Fowl-

She said: "I started to look at

the depths of their dispiriting er, who tied for second, and loss to the Europeans in the Keegan Bradley, who tied for Solheim Cup in August, the fourth. They gave her their Americans have prodded one yardage books, filled with deanother to new heights. tailed notes, after they were "We were angry after Sol- through, which Wie said was heim Cup," Wie said. "We were immensely helpful. But she angry with how we played. It owed her victory at least as definitely motivated us." much to something she had in On the Sunday of the men's common with Kaymer. tournament, Wie walked inAfter trying to perfect his side the ropes with the final swing, Kaymer this year has pairing of Kaymer and Rick- made an effort to focus less on ie Fowler. She soaked up the technique and more on feel.

gled so much, the fact that I kind of went through a hard period of my life, the fact that this trophy is right next to me,

WORLD IP

it means so much more to me

than it ever would have when I was 15," Wie said. The women have staged stir-

ring duels, with Lexi Thompson holding off Wie in the first major and Wie holding off Lewis in the second. Kar-

other people's swings. There's rie Webb, a Hall of Famer, has so many different swings that win golf tournaments. There's

won twice, and 17-year-old

phenom Lydia Ko has won once. Inbee Park, the reigning strokes. You can't be perfect all player of the year, and Lewis the time. I just decided to let it have takenturns at No. 1. "I've got Michelle Wie chasgo, just to have fun and just try to get better every day." ing, you've got Lexi, you've got Her improvement has been Inbee playing well and Lydia; striking. After winning twice there's a lot of people chasing in her first 161 starts on the me," Lewis said, adding: "It's LPGA Tour, Wie has two victo- great. Michelle Wie pushes ries inher past seven. me to get better. I think I push "I think the fact that I strug- some people to getbetter too." so many different putting

Martin Mejla I The Associated Press

United States midfielder Michael Bradley (4) reacts after his shot on an open goal wss blocked by Portugal's Ricardo Costa during Sunday's 2-2 draw.

a 's wron wi

ra e ?

• The United States'keyplayer in the midfield hasstruggled in both games By Michael Lewis

able to make a good enough play to keep it for us or get

Newsday

SAO PAULO — This was

a fouL At that point, the ball

supposed to b e M i chael turns over and it's up to us to Bradley's World Cup. deal with the situation. "I put my heart and soul The 26-year-old was going to be the engine to spear- into every game, every time head the Americans' quest I step on the field. There are to reach the round of 16 and certainly no regrets in my perhaps beyond. He still can book." accomplish that, but a fter United States coach Jurtwo matches, Brazil hasbeen gen Klinsmann would not anything but his cup of tea. criticize his star midfielder, "Very cruel game some- at least not publicly. "Michael is undoubtedly times," Bradley said after Sunday's 2-2 draw with Por- one of our key players and tugal in Manaus. I think he showed that toIn the United States' 2-1 win over Ghana on June 16,

night," Klinsmann said after

the game. "He has an engine that is unbelievable. He's coveringup forotherplayers set for himself and the great all over the place. His vision expectations from fans and and his passing is just outmedia. He did not control the standing. It's not going to be ball as much as expected. a perfect game all the time. Bradley's game improved I'm not expecting perfect considerably Sunday, but games from anybody." It's funny how a World like it or not, he will be remembered for a pair of plays Cup can work out. Bradley that changed the course of can bury the past two games the match. He failed to score with a scintillating perforon a point-blank attempt in mance against Germany in the 55th minute, when Ricar- Recife on Thursday, espedo Costa blocked his shot on cially if the Americans adthe goal line. With the U.S. vance to the knockout round. "I'm absolutely sure that clinging to a 2-1 advantage in the final minute of stop- Michael will grow big-time page time, Silvestre Varela into this tournament," Klinsstripped Bradley of the ball mann said. "There's no betBradley played well below the high standards he has

Joe Kline/The Bulletin

Bend Elks coach Marty Hunter cheers on one of his players during a recent game against Victoria st Vince Genna Stadium in Bend.

Hunter Continued from C1 "We're ecstatic to have somebody of Marty's stature to lead the team," says Elks owner and general manager Jim Richards. "A guy that has had head coaching experience at a Division III program, a guy that has ties to Vince Genna

Stadium and Bend, it was just a great fit." Hunterhad never "done the summer thing" before, not with collegiate players anyway. He had been approached by summer league teams in the past, but because Hunter was out recruiting or at-

tending camps, the timing was just never right. But after meeting with Richards about

the Elks' vacancy, and after consulting with administrators and assistant coaches at George Fox, Hunter was ready to

break into the West Coast League. "For me, i t' s s omething different,"

ELKS STATS Bajtjttg g

a b r h 2 b hrrbibb jt avg sjg obp ops

Peeveyhouse7 23 3 8 2 0 0 5 3 . 3 4jj .435 .483 .918 Brooks j 5 49 8 j 6 3 1 5 4 4 .327 .449 .389 .838 Frost j j 28 3 9 2 0 3 8 8 . 321 .393 .472 .865 Wjjdtjng 9 2 4 4 7 1 1 4 4 10 .292 .458 .393 .85j Cttshjng 6 j 4 2 4 0 0 0 1 4 . 286 .286 .375 .66j Lopez 1 6 50 6 14 1 0 1 5 5 .280 .300 .400 .700 Close 1 5 5 4 6 14 2 1 4 3 7 .2 59 .352 .333 .685 King 8 28 1 7 0 0 2 1 6 . 2 50 .250 .276 .526 Allen 4 13 3 3 0 1 t 1 4 . 231 .462 .286 .748

Rosen 6 j3 1 Carroll 7 j8 3 Erjandson 6 9 2 Roque u 2 81 Osuna j 5 4 5 3 Newton 9 3 0 2 Kelly 6 j6 1 Brunson 5 j 2 1 Whjtaker 5 j 3 0

3 4 2 6 8 5 2 1 1

1 2 0 1 2 1 0 1 0

0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

2 0 0 4 6 4 0 0 1

5 0 0 4 8 5 0 1 0

3 6 6 9 5 2 2 5 4

.231 .308 .444 .752 . 222 .333 .263 .596 .222 .222 .222 .444 . 214 .250 .333 .583 .178 .222 .315 .537 . 167 .200 .366 .566 . 125 .125 .125 .250 . 083 .167 .154 .32j . 077 .077 .077 .154

Fjnjer 6 17 2 1 0 0 0 5 4 . 059 .059 .273 .332 jjj ackwejj 2 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 .000 .000 .000 .000 j.arimer 7 1 5 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 . 000 .000 .063 .063

Ferguson 5 8 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 .000 .000 .11j .11j Totals 1 6 511 5211519 4 37 60107.225.286.331 .617 38: None.HBP(21): Lopez, Newton 5, Close3, CtishIng,Broos, Roque,Peeveyhotise, Ferguson,Carroll, Larjmer,Osttrta t SB-SjjA (1824): Close5-5,Osuna4-5,Roque202,Frost2-3,Brooks,King,Erjandson, Newton j-j, Lopezj-3, Rosen0-1. E(2ij): Brooks 5, Cushjng3, Osuna,Larjmer,Roque2, Finfer, Lopez,Allen, Kely, Frost,Erjandsonj.

Hunter says. "And this is fun. I love being pitching g w j j p h r e rbb so era baa whip 4 0 0 9 . 03 0 0 0 1 0 0.00 .103 0.33 on the field. I love baseball. I'm passion- Sheets Allen t 0 0 0. 1 0 0 0 0 0 0. 00 .000 0.00 ate about it. This is a good break from

the recruiting grind, honestly. And I'll still be recruiting. I'm still going to be on the phone. That's still going to happen. I'm just not going to physically be at the places." Hunter is somewhat out of his element with the Elks, though the task of mesh-

ing a collection of collegiate players who hail from near and far to create one cohesive team is nothing new to him. With the

Elks, however, rather than following one team system, Hunter has multiple con-

cepts to balance. Summer league players typically come from different schools and have different

View High. Powell played at Mountain View while Hunter was at Bend High, some 15 years before the two clashed

as college coaches while Powell was at Whitman College in Walla Walla, Wash. "He'll ask me, 'In the past, what did you

guys do?' and stuff like that," says Powell, who was the Elks' head coach in 2003 and 2007. "There's that comfort level of guys that have been around that he's not afraid

to ask, 'Hey, how's this going to work?' and those kinds of things." The wealth of baseball experience shared by the Elks' coaching staffwhich also includes former big league pitcher Alan Embree and Oregon State undergraduate assistant Aaron Mathews, both returnees from the 2013 Elks — com-

bined with the eclectic mix of players has

The Elks took two of three from Bellingham over the weekendand havewon three of their last five to improve to 6-10 overall. Bend wraps up its nine-game road trip with a pair of gamestonight and Wednesday atVictoria, which has dropped four straight to fall into last place in theWest Division. Alex Rogers highlights the pitching staff for the HarbourCats, who took two of three from the Elks earlier this season. Through Sunday, Rogers owns a1.64 ERAand has limited batters to just a.167 average. Bend returns homefor a series against Walla Walla Friday through Sunday. TheSweets havedropped their last two gamesbut through15 games, Andrew Mendenhall is tied for second in the WCL with 21 hits for a.344 batting

average. Starting Monday, Bend faces Kelowna for a three-gamehomeseries. TheFal cons,whohavelostsevenof their last10 and are tied with Walla

Bauer 1 0 1 0 . 03 4 4 1 0 0. 00 1.000 0.00 Walla at the cellar of the East Division, Prajt 3 1 0 6. 1 2 1 j 2 6 1. 4 2 .100 0.67 Gttzzon 4 2 j 1 3 .2 8 3 3 8 2 1 j sr .186 1.23 are paced byScotland Church's.389 Cohen 6 0 0 8 . 0 7 2 2 2 1 1 2.25 .219 1.13 batting averagewith four doubles and McGtiff 4 1 1 1 9.0 10 8 5 5 2 1 z36 .152 0.79 seven RBls. Kelly 3 0 0 3. 0 1 1 1 4 3 3. 00 .111 1.67 jjennet 4 0 2 1 4 .217 9 5 7 9 3 . 06 .340 t71 Bjackwejj 3 0 0 4 2 3 2 2 1 2 3. 85 .176 1.00 Hamann 2 0 j 9 . 0 10 6 4 0 1 4 . 00 .263 j.jj Carter 1 1 0 4 . 02 2 2 1 2 4. 50 .143 0.75 Gomez 3 0 0 3 . 12 3 2 2 3 5. 40 .200 1.33 we're doing," he says. "The kids and I Martinez 1 0 1 5 . 0 7 4 3 2 2 5 . 40 .318 1.80 were laughing the other day. I said, 'Hey, Mack 5 0 0 8 . 08 9 5 6 5 5. 62 .242 1.75 Wilcox 4 0 0 4 . 2 6 3 3 1 3 5 . 78 .300 1.75 if we're just shooting paper in a wasteFrost 1 0 0 1. 1 2 1 j 2 0 6. 7 5 .333 4.00 basket, I'll compete against you.' It's a Schnejder 2 1 j 1 0.0 16 9 8 5 8 7 .20 .364 2.10 lifestyle." Ajbrecht 5 0 0 5 . 18 7 6 4 1 110.12.333 Z40 "He's got an extra fire to him that a lot Kattj 1 0 1 4.0 7 5 5 2 j 11 . 25.368 z25 Thompson 1 0 1 3.2 6 8 5 6 2 jZ 2 7.333 4.00 of coaches don't bring to summer ball," Totals 16 6 10 13712887 67 61 121 4.40 .240 1.38 GS (16): McGuff 4, Bennej 3, Schnjeder, Gttzzon2, Martinez, Kattj, says Powell.

Thompson, Hamann, Carterj. S (4): Cohen3, Sheetsj.

coaches with different ways of teaching the game. That presents a challenge to a summer league coach. allowed Hunter to ask questions, and to "I'm used to doing what I do (at George continue learning as a coach. "It's always about getting better," HuntFox) and here's how we do it," says Hunter. "And there's not much compromise. You er says. "I think I'm going to be a bethave your individual differences, but sys- ter coach by the time I'm done with this temwise, it's one system. Here (with the thing. I will have learned things I didn't Bend Elks), we're even meshing coaches." knowbefore. I'm picking stuff up from the Fortunately for Hunter, he is quite fa- other (coaches) and from the kids. 'What miliar with this season's Elks coaching do you guys do at your school when you staff, which includes Trey Watt, Hunter's do this'? How do you guys run this?' I may assistant at George Fox, and Casey Pow- find some things I really like that I didn't ell, the head coach at Bend's Mountain

Elks ondeck

know before."

Powell concedes that, during his years as Elks head coach, he may have been guilty of not cultivating a high level of passion within the summer club. But of Hunter, Powell notes: "He's got

Another ratings recordfor U.S.game The World Cup ismoving into elite territory as asports property on U.S.television, as ratings for Sunday's gamebetween the United States andPortugal werethe highest for any soccer game and reachedmoreviewers than events like theNBA Finals or theWorld Series. Sunday's game,which ended in a 2-2 tie after Portugal scored alate goal, attracted18.2 million viewers on ESPN. The previous record, for the 1999 Women's World Cup final, which waswon bythe U.S.,was17.9 million viewers. That gamewas ona broadcast network — ABCrather than cabletelevision. While not near the totals scored bytheNFL,evenformanyregular-seasongames,theU.S.audience for the World Cupgameon Sunday easily eclipsed this year's NBAFinals, which averaged 15.5 million viewers, as well as the 2013World Series, which averaged 14.9 million viewers. The NHLplayoffs are not evenremotely as popular as the World Cup, havingaveraged only 5 million viewers this season. — New YorkTimesNews Service

Mexico beatsCroatia to reach knockout rounds The Associated Press

sure." Hunter has been away from Central Or-

RECIFE, Brazil — Mexico surged into the World

egonfor20 years.Buthisreturn to Bend

Cup's knockout stage for a

is not surreal or strange in any way. After

sixth straight time with an emphatic 3-1 win over Cro-

all, he has participated in the Elks' summer camps for years, allowing him to re-

glucas@bendbulletirt.com.

ter stage to do it than in the

scoring sequence that led to next game against Germany. his equalizing goal seconds Every game you play now is later. getting bigger, so that's when "The ball popped up, and I you want to see those things was able to make a few quick coming through." steps and get there," Bradley So it still can be Michael told reporters. "It was tight Bradley's World Cup, as long and unfortunately, I wasn't as he gets his act together.

zero problem jumping on guys ... I mean none. He's got that fire that most of these guys are probably used to, and that's the way it is. He's got some passion, that's for

"We've had some great coaches," Rich- turn to Central Oregon each summer. ards says. "Prior to Marty, we had five This summer, Hunter, along with his Elks coaches that have gone on from the wife, Kim, is living with his eldest son's Elks to become head coaches at the col- godfather — former fellow Bend High legiate level. Not only are we developing assistant and current Lava Bears head players,we're developing coaches. In coach Bret Bailey. The two were classMarty's case, he's obviously already been mates at Gresham High, played baseball the head coaching guy out at (George) together at Linfield College and were Fox, so we're not developing him. He's de- groomsmen in each other's weddings. veloping us.... He's just the perfect fit for If anything, Hunter says of his return to summer college baseball." Bend, "It's more like you haven't left." "Bend's a great place," Hunter says. Those who remember Hunter as a young coach at Bend High recall a fiery "That's another reason why I'm doing the field boss with little tolerance for any- summer thing.... It made it easier to come thing short of 100 percent effort from his here because of all those things. If it was players and a short fuse with umpires. He somewhere else, I don't know if I would admits that, still today, he is "just one of have done it." those people." — Reporter: 541-383-0307, "I'm competitive. I don't care what

at midfield and started the

ROUNDUP Also on Monday: Brazil 4, Cameroon 1: BRASILIA, Brazil — Ney-

mar, all of 22 years of age, atia on Monday. lived up to the expectations Rafael Marquez, Andres of the World Cup host nation Guardado an d

C h i chari- with two goals. Fred and Fer-

to Hernandez scored in a 10-minute span in the second half, dooming a

nandinho added second-half goals for Brazil, which will

t alented Croatia

round. Netherlands 2, Chile 0:

s id e t o

elimination from the group

face Chile i n

t h e s econd

stage. Mexico will face the

SAO PAULO — Leroy Fer

Netherlands in the second round.

scored a minute after coming on as a substitute to help

The Croatians had to win

the Netherlands seal the top

to advance and held the spot in Group B with its third bulk of possession, but had consecutive win. trouble seriously threatenSpain 3, Australia 0: Daing goalkeeper Guillermo vid Villa, Fernando Torres Ochoa, who kept out all ef- and Juan Mata scored for forts in the group stage un- the defending champions til an 87th-minute consola- in a match between two altion goal from Ivan Perisic. ready-eliminated teams.



© www.bendbulletin.com/business

THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, JUNE 24, 2014

BRIEFING UmpquaBank to close dranches Roseburg-based Umpqua Bankannounced Mondaythe closure of 27 branches stemming from its April purchase of Sterling Savings Bank, formerly basedin Spokane, Wash. The closures areexpected to begin in September, according to an Umpqua newsrelease, although individual locations were not identified. The company hasother branches under review for possible closure in 2015, the news release stated. Umpqua Bankpicked up four Sterling Savings Bank offices in Deschutes County in the merger, according to Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. records, giving Umpqua nineoffices in the county. However, not all the offices are bank branches, according to the records. Combining the two banks gaveUmpqua more than 350 branches, which it calls stores, in California, Idaho, northern Nevada,Oregon and Washington, according to the news release.

CENTRALOREGON

EXECUTIVE FILE What:Communication Partners Inc. What it does:CreatedBenefitElect, an automated health insurance benefit enrollment program; also creates informational campaigns to helpemployees understand the scope of their company benefits Number nfemployees:24total: 11 in Bend, seven inSanDiego and six in India Pictured:Doug Lonergan, president Where:132Crowell Way, Suite 200, Bend Phone:541-323-1600 Online:www.commpart.com

0 S

• But unemployment rates remainstagnant By Joseph Ditzler The Bulletin

More people found jobs last month in Central

Oregon, but the region's unemployment rates barely budged, according to a report released Monday by the Oregon Employment Department.

"It's definitely a tough one for people to wrap their heads around," said Regional Joe Kline/Ttte Bulletin

• Where do you • see the company in five years? I A •• Truthfully, think we will

V

— Bulletin staff report

By Joseph Ditzler• The Bulletin

DEEDS

Talk to Doug Lonergan about his business background Deschutss County • Davie and Ana Wright to ARAS Properties LLC, Sun Meadow No. 3, Lot 92, $233,000 • Lloyd 0. and Marie L. Phelps to Davie andAna Wright, Plat of Goldenrain Second Addition, Lot 11, Block 2, $199,000 • Thomas C. andTherese M. Allender to David E. Ewing, Braeburn, Phase1, Lot 65, $312,400 • Robin L. Bennett to Jason J. and Florence R. Hagen, Deschutes River Recreation Homesites, Lot 30, Block 31, $200,000 •Thomas J.Molloyand Jill G. Paulus to Catherine L. and Kirk R. Irwin, Indian Ford Meadows, Lot17, Block 6, $265,000 • Pahlisch Homes Inc. to Mark Miller and Tran Quach-Miller, Rivers Edge Village, Phase14, Lot 4, $389,950 • Judith G. Brown and Sharon K. Robertson, trustees of the Saratoga Family Trust, to Robert K. and Cheryl A. Zachary, Partition Plat1990-32, Parcel 1, $598,000 • Alan A. Miller to Leroy V. Hileman Jr. and Nicole M. Hileman, Ponderosa Pines, Second Addition, Lot 31, Block 4, $364,000 • Kenneth E. Sumerlin to Todd W. Gover,Canyon Point Estates, Phase 5, Lot 107, $198,000 • Timothy J. and Camille S. Connelly to Patricia A. Nippert, trustee of the Patricia A. Nippert Revocable Trust, Stonegate PUD,Phase1, Lot 8, $269,900 • John W. and Denise A. Hines to Adam C.and Catherine T. Felt, Kings Forest, Third Addition, Lot 53, Block 4, $540,000 • Stacey Stonesifer to Haram In andScott Cross, Kiwa Meadows, Lot 30, Block 2, $210,500 • Barbara J. Drinkwater to Betty R. Newcome, Homestead, Fourth Phase, Lot 3, Block13, $216,000 • Deutsche Bank National Trust Company to Mark and Tamara McKie, Parkway Acres, Lot1, Block 4, $176,000 • Hayden Homes LLC to Taj, Mirta and Karolyn Smith, Emily Estates, Lot 37, $240,000 • Greg Welch Construction Inc. to Marnel E. King and Patricia K. Lynch, trustees of the 2011 KingLynch Trust, NorthWest Crossing, Phase17,Lot 787, $650,000 • Caldera Springs Real Estate LLC toHayes Construction Company and Visionary Homes, Caldera Springs, Phase 2, Lot 253, $152,000 • Boxstar LLC to Perrault

and almost immediately you'll hear the unconventional. "I knew a guy that I had met

at an ice cream stand in Nassau,

"We build the system that

the Bahamas," he said. That encounter inspired him to quit his

allowsemployees on a year-round basis to enroll in and manage their employee benefits."

job as head of sales with a multimillion-dollar packaging firm in Chicago and move to California. "I sold everything I owned but my airplane and my clothes and moved to San Diego," he said. In the mid-l970s, he started Communication Partners Inc.

— Doug Lonergnn, Communication Partners Inc. president

by hiring writers to boil down inch-thick contracts detailing company benefits into eight-page summaries for their employees.

"It was an easy choice," Lonergan said. Among its hundreds of clients are CST Brands Inc., which

Communication Partners still

operates Valero gas stations

does that, but it's grown into an information technology company, specializing in enrolling

and convenience stores; Integris Health, Oklahoma's largest

employees or clients online into their companies' health insur-

ance plans.

health care system; and USI, a

leading insurance brokerage firm based in New York, according to Lonergan.

State corporation records list

"We build the system that al-

Lonergan as president. His business card, however, lists him as "chief peddler."

lows employees on a year-round basis to enroll in and manage their employee benefits," he said. "And what it does is, it synchro-

"I put that on there because it

be much larger. The world as we know it now really sells insurancethrough brokers. And, I think, everybody, starting with the brokers, realizes it will be technology that sells insurance. People are going to buy insurancethrough these public and private exchanges, which is why there's a mad dash to bein the space that I'm already in. • Would Com• munication Partners have considered taking on a job like Cover Oregon? I'll caveat it

A •• not knowing the extent of the work, but I would say that if we were given enough money and enough time that, yes, that's right in our wheelhouse. But it would have

taken significant development and a fair amount of time. I cannot imagine where all the money went.

Economist Damon Runberg,

"especially after a month when we saw hiring so strong." Overall, 1,203 more people were employed in May than the previous month in

Crook, Deschutes and Jefferson counties, according to department data. The

labor force grew by 572 in the same period. As a re-

sult, the seasonally adjusted employment rates in each county remained relatively

unchanged.

"It's definitely a tough

one for people to wrap their heads around, especially after a month when we saw hiring so strong." — Damon Runberg, regional economist

77,648,a gain of 420 from

April. The seasonally adjusted unemployment rate for

May was 8.3 percent, down from 8.4 percenttheprevious month, according to the Em-

ployment Department. The rate in Crook County dropped 0.2 percent in May, to 10.6percent; in Jefferson County it remained at 9.6 percent. Government and

tourism accounted for most new hires in those counties, according to department

figures. Seasonal industries in Deschutes County — con-

struction, retail, leisure and hospitality — experienced

graphic artists create enrollment

transactions, but it tells the in-

Tourism and retail are "pretty much back tonormal," Run-

campaigns for their clients. The Bend office works with Bene-

surance company who is eligible

berg said.

for the benefits. And it generates

fitElect, the program the compa-

all of the billing records to the insurance companies for those eligible benefits." Communication Partners already occupies a place in the

Construction gained about 140 new hires in May in De-

manage their health care and

insurancebenefits,Lonergan said. He said thousands of people around the country have used

that program to manage their insurance benefits. "We're a national compa-

ny," he said. "Our business is everywhere." Lonergan moved to Bend for

many of the same reasons cited by other businesspeople: a good airport nearby, a collection of IT

healthcare economy coveted by

other firms, Lonergan said. He said he's looking to further capi-

ing, the department reported.

schutes County, but is still below its peak employment in March 2007. The same holds

for hiring for financial activities. Any activity associated with the housing industry

is still in recovery, Runberg sard.

meet demandforitsservices.

He predicted a change in the unemployment rate beyond the small gains of winter and spring. "At some point, we're going to see this

edge of an explosion," he said. "Our system really manages at the corporate level every aspect

of a company's health care and dental, vision and other plans."

people already here and great surroundings.

Leasing LLC, Partition Plat1992-31, Parcel1, $189,000 • Gregg Horner and Leslie Horner to Randy D.and Laurie K. Scorby, Eagle Ridge, Lot 9, Block 2, $275,000 • Henry S. Belden V and Julie A. Belden to Christine A. Roelke, Sunglo West, Lot1 and 2, Block 2, $296,000 • William H. and Teresa A. McLain to Bruce H. and Eileen Drake, Shevli nCommons PUD, Phases1,2and 3, Lot13,

stronger-than-expected hir-

talize the company and grow it to "Honestly, we are on the front

$235,000 • Marylou Paxson to Polly J. and Brent L. Boothe, Davis Addition, Lot12, Block 3, $233,900 • Darrell C. Wallace to Mark A. and Cynthia A. Hiatt, CascadeView Estates, Phase 3, Lot 8, $246,000 • Thomas E. andLaurie M. Groves to ShaunP. and Lucy A. Roland, Bonne HomeAddition to Bend, Lots 9and10, Block 20, $333,850.54 • Federal National Mortgage Association

— Reporter: 541-617-7815, jditzler@bendbuffetin.com

to Jared and Crystal Vogt, Indian Ford Ranch Homes, Plat No.1, Lot8, Block 3, $201,100 • Jean P. Olson, trustee of the Jean P.Olson Revocable Trust, to Daniel C. Smith and Sandra K. Harper, trustees of the Harper Smith Revocable Family Trust, View West, Lot4, 372,500 • Whiskey Tango Investments LLC to Joel Pearce, Canal Crossings, Lot 18, $227,000 • Federal National

Mortgage Association to Verl and Cheryl Steppe, Canyon Park, Lot15, Block 3, $194,900 • Shawn and Magadalyn N. Hasse to Susan L. Nakshekarian, Deschutes River Woods, Lot 8, Block 1, $284,000 • Federal National Mortgage Association to Karin Morris, Partition Plat 2007-46, Parcel 1, $192,500 • James H. and Lora W. Dakin to Michael W.and Darlene M. Smallwood, River Meadows Second

It's becoming the year of the recall: Automakers have recalled more than 28 million vehicles in the United States this year — more than1 in10 vehicles on the road — putting the industry on track to trample the 2004 record of 30.8 million. On Monday,Japanese automakers Hondaand Nissan recalled close to 3 million vehicles worldwide to repair an air bag problem. Coupled with a recent Toyota recall to fix a similar problem, it means that in just the past month Japan's three largest automakers havecalled back more than 5million vehicles worldwide to fix faulty air bags. It's unclear how manyof those vehicles are in the United States.

Existing home sales on the rise WASHINGTON-

Sales of previously built homes jumped in May from the previous month, the highest monthly rise since August 2011, suggesting that the spring selling season won't be abust despite a slow start. The National Association of Realtors reported Monday that sales rose 4.9 percentto a seasonally adjusted rate of 4.89 million in May,thesecond monthly gain arow. Moderating homeprices, a better job marketand a larger supply of homes are helping lure buyers to the market, along with a "temporary" decline in mortgage rates, the group said.

In Deschutes County, the labor force grew in May to

nizes all of the data between

ny created that provides a onestop online site for employees to

Auto industryon recordrecall pace

— From wire reports

gets such a fun reaction," he said. The company grew to 24 employees and still has a branch in San Diego, where writers and

their payroll system and all of their insurance companies, so it is really not just for employee

BRIEFING

turn a corner," he said, "sooner rather than later." — Reporter: 541-617-7815, jdftzler@bendbulletin.com

Addition, Lot 25, $335,000 • Robert M. Thompson to Pinnacle Construction 8 Development LLC, Awbrey Butte Homesites, Phase 26, Lot19, Block 24, $207,202 • Harold D. and Kristina L. Palmer to Tristan L. and Shawn L. Hartfield, Christie Acres, Lot 3, Block 2, $550,000 • Monica L. Garris and Thomas A. Garris Jr. to Steven J. and Julie A. Evanson, Deer Pointe Village, Phase1, Lot8,

Block1, $233,000 • Paul R. and Jonnie S. Haynes to Harry N. and Kathleen E.Reiche, Greens at Redmond, Phase 38, Lot 248, $200,000 • Margaret A. Huddle, trustee of the Suchy Family Revocable Living Trust, to Doug andCarol Suchy, Township 17, Range 12, Section 23, $200,000 • Pahlisch Homes Inc to Becky E. andWilliam C. Thomas, McCall Landing, Phase1, Lot 74, $210,000

BEST OF THE BIZ CALENDAR TODAY • Professional Enrichment SeriesJump into Video: Learn about the role of video in W eb and socialmediaand then shoot and produce your own. Register online; $25 Bend Chamber of Commerce members, $30 nonmembers; 11:30 a.m.; Bend Golf and Country Club, 61045 Country Club Drive; 541-382-3221 or www.bendchamber.org. • Women tl Money, Are You Ready for Change?: Financial workshop; call to reserve a seat; free; 6 p.m.; Mid Oregon Credit Union, 1386 N.E. Cushing Drive, Bend; 54 I-382-1795. WEDNESDAY • Business After Hours: Register online; free; 5 p.m. Jones 8 Roth CPAs and Business Advisors, 300 S.W.Columbia St., Ste 201, Bend; 541-382-3221 or www. bendchamber.org. THURSDAY No Sacred Cows:Howa Beloved BrandStayed True to its Purpose While Rethinking Everything Else:AdBite by the Advertising Federation of Central Oregon presents a discussion on Kombucha Mama's change to humm kombucha. Register online; $25 students and AdFed Members; $45 nonmembers; 11:30 a.m.-1 p.m.; St. Charles Bend, 2500 N.E. Neff Road; 541-385-1992 or https:I/events.r20. constantcontact.com/ register/eventReg? Ilr= wjiggocab&oeidk= a07e9eg5ecf 6a8ab646. • Sundance Meadows industry preview: Montevista Homes invites real estate industry professionals to preview Sundance Meadows, a new neighborhood in southeast Bend; free; 3:30 p.m. to 6 p.m. Sundance Meadows model home, 21146 Kayla Court, Bend; lukep© mtvistahomes.com. • For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday'sBulletin or visit bendbullotin.com/bizcal


IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Food, Recipes, D2-3 Home, Garden, D4-5 Martha Stewart, D5 THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, JUNE 24, 2014

O www.bendbulletin.com/athome

GARDEN

• gl

Bendbac ard oasis manyyears in the making By Sophie Wilkins The Bulletin

Shelby Smith's garden in a quiet southeast Bend neighborhood is more than meets

She loves what her compost does for her garden. "I can't make enough of it," she said. In 2004 she added a water

feature and an irrigation systhe eye. Smith moved into her tem to her backyard. Smith said"When you gethome you little house 26 years ago and started designing a dog-friend- think, 'Oh my gosh I'm going ly garden. Although her front to have to go out there and garden is beautiful, the garden drag hoses around.'" She said out back is a hidden gem. that putting in her irrigation system was "one of the better

Space for the dogs

Smith said she bought her house because of the backyard that came with it. She had a

dog and wanted more space for her to roam. Although she

no longer has dogs, Smith still reminisces about their favorite places to nap. From the front, you'd never know her yard is a third of an acre and houses a gazebo, a couple of small ponds, a greenhouse and raised beds. The first thing she did was put in a fence for her dog and for privacy. "Cheatgrass,

moves I made." The water feature is a pool of water that flows into anoth-

er smaller pond below. "I love the pond because it brings in a lot of birds," Smith said. "You can't see the pond up above from the house, but you can

see the water flinging," she said of birds playing or bathing in the water. SeeHideaway/D4

weeds and rocks were all that

existed in the backyard," said Smith. She cleared the cheatgrass out first for her dog, and then kept working on removing the rock and creating a suitable place to garden, but

rock and juniper roots presented too many problems. Smith says that the only

way to garden in her yard is in raised beds. She composted the grass and the weeds, bought more soil, built up raised beds and eventually was able to get results. Smith

has three compost bins in the back of her yard that she

Joe Kiine i The Bulletin

This arch covered incoral honBy Alison Highberger

eysuckle is the entryway from Shelby Smith's vegetable garden

For The Bulletin

bought red wiggler worms for. into her mainbackyardgarden. hen no

one feels like cooking,

HOME

and eat-

ing out is too much (time, money or calories), many of us buy

Fourth of Julydecor you can makeyourself By Linda Turner Grfepentrog

a store-bought rotisserie

chicken on the way home from work, add a salad or side dish and call it good.

It's a quick meal for not much money. The price

life can make them with just a

for a whole rotisserie

For The Bulletin

little crafting assistance. This Independence Day, decA trip to the craft store or

orate with a little do-it-yourself

a dollar store will yield the

chicken in Central Oregon ranges from $4.98 to $9.99.

effort and showcase the red, white and blue in style. These simplerockets,pendants,garlands and pinwheels are easy enoughthatthekidsinyour

necessary components for well under $10, and you can

al Chicken Council (www.

bedeck the windows, doors,

nationalchickencouncil.

yard or table in spirit. SeeIndependence decor/D5

com), more than 600 mil-

According to the Nation-

lion rotisserie chickens are sold at grocery stores in the United States each year, with another 200 million purchased at food ser-

Correction

vice outlets such as Boston Market. Chicken roasted on a

In a story headlined "Quinoa's close-up," which appeared onPage01 on Tuesday, May27,2014, someinformation about the nutrition contained in quinoawas incorrect. According to www.caloriecount.about. com, one cup of cookedquinoa contains13 mg of sodium, 318 mgof potassium, 29.4 g of carbohydrates and5.2 g of fiber. The Bulletin regrets the error.

spit over low, dry heat is tender and moist, basted in its juices. It's good just the

way it is, of course, but rotisserie chicken can be the

starting point for a variety of easy and interesting meals, too.

TODAY'S RECIPES

We challenged three Bend chefs to come up

Rotisserie chickendishns: Rapida Chicken Tamale Pies, Ratatouille Poulet, AsparagusChicken a laCreme, BBQChicken Sandwich, Chicken8 Yakisoba Noodles,ChickenalaKing,D2

with a simple family dinner for four using a rotisserie chicken. (See recipes, Page D2.)

Dilled Shrimp,MangonndCucumber Salad: A simple dish for warm-weather days,D3

Jake Williams from Brother Jon's Public House gave us a version

of his restaurant's popular BBQ chicken sandwich.

Double StrawberryCheesecake:A slightly different take on the usual dessert treatment: combined,D3

-- ~

S S +~

'I

Jim Brumfield, kitchen

e

manager at Jake's Diner ("Home of the largest portions in Central Oregon"),

came upwith aChicken a la King that he likes to make at home, and TR FROM TOP: The kitchen manager and chef at Jake's Diner in Bend uses rotisserie chicken to create this tasty Chicken a la King dish. • Transform rotisserie chicken into a tasty BBQ Chicken Sandwich, like this one created by staff at Brother Jon's Public House in Bend. • TR McCrystal of Jen's Garden in Sisters transforms rotisserie chicken into this tasty weeknight dinner of Chicken 8 Yakisoba Noodles.

Recipe Finder:A Baltimore tradition: potato and fish "coddies," D2

McCrystal, chef/owner of Jen's Garden restaurant in Sisters, shared a recipe

for Chicken & Yakisoba Noodles he makes for his

daughters. See Chicken /D2


D2 THE BULLETIN• TUESDAY, JUNE 24, 2014

FOOD

Next week: Salads for summer crowds

is an otatoes: ra itiona co ies are Lire atimore By Julie Rothmnn

RECIPE FINDER

The Baltimore Sun

Jane Geier from Ellicott City, Md., said that she dined

several years ago at Mama's on the Half Shell in Canton, Md., and enjoyed the old-fashioned Baltimore-style coddies that were served there. She was looking for the recipe so she could make them at home for her family. Baltimore coddies, not to be

confused with codfish cakes, are hand-formed, slightly

Looking for a hard-tofind recipe or cananswer a request? Write to Julie Rothman, Recipe Finder, TheBaltimore Sun, 501 N. Calvert St., Balti-

more, MD 21278, or email baltsunrecipefinder@ gmail.com. Namesmust accompany recipes for them to be published.

flattened potato cakes f l a-

vored with salt cod and other seasonings and then deepfried. They are traditionally served at room temperature, sandwiched between saltine crackers with a dollop of yellow mustard. Sometimes referred to asthe poor man's

at their stall inside the market for 5 cents each.

Word spread before long,

er to debone. when she's ready, she tosses "I keep packs of deboned ro- them all into a crockpot. "Depending on the mix of Continued from 01 tisserie chicken in the fteezer so W e also talked to M i I haveit allthetime," shetoldus. vegetables that I have collected, chelle An n An d erson, Anderson makes homemade the addition of fresh carrots, winner of the 47th Annual broth after she picks off all the onions and celery may be in National Chicken Cooking meat. She puts the bones and order. Pour in enough water to Contest and author of "The leftover skin in a large, lidded cover, tossin a bay leafortwo Rotisserie Chicken Cook- plastic container and stores it and a sprinkling of pepperbook: Home-Made Meals in her freezer. She adds in any corns, turn the heat on to high with Store-Bought Conve- leftover pieces of vegetables and walk away. Eight hours nience" (Cumberland House and herbs for a few days, and later, a flavorful broth is born. Publishing Inc., 2008). Her book has dozens of Ratatouille Poulet recipes for appetizers, soups, salads, entrees, sandwiches Makes 4-6 servings. and casseroles using rotisserie chicken, and she urged 3 TBS olive oil 2 (14.5 oz) cans diced tomatoes us to share her husband's fa- 2 C frozen diced onion seasoned with basil and vorite from the book: Rapida 1 eggplant, cubed oregano Chicken Tamale Pies. 2 zucchini, sliced 3 C coarsely shredded "It's super easy; you're 3 tsp minced garlic rotisserie chicken really just assembling. The

Anderson said the aver-

opened a small manufacturing plant and were the first

into two or three meals per chicken for a family of four. Anderson recommends usingyour fingers topullthe

As local historian Gilbert Sandler recounts in his book,

While not nearly as prevalent today, traditional cod-

coddies all over Baltimore.

tisserie Chicken Cookbook."

If your family likes chicken, and you like to cook, we know you'll enjoy these creative ways to enjoy one of America's favorite convenience foods. — Reporter: ahighberger@mac. com

1 C loosely packed basil, chopped Kosher salt to taste

Ground black pepper to taste 1 C shredded mozzarella cheese ~/4 C grated Parmesan cheese

Preheat the oven to 350. Spray a 2-quart casserole dish with cooking spray. Pour the oil in a large saucepan over medium heat; stir in the onions, eggplant and zucchini. Cook, stirring frequently, for 4 to 6 minutes, or until softened. Stir in the garlic and cook1 minute more. down so you can handle it," Stir in the tomatoes, chickenand basil; bring to a boil. Checkthe seasoning, adding salt and pepper asneeded. Anderson told us in a phone Pour the chicken mixture into the prepared casserole dish; sprinkle with mozzarella and Parmesan cheese. interview from her home in Bake for15 to 20 minutes or until the cheese is lightly golden. Cook's notes:Serve in bowls with crusty French bread to sop up all the delicious juice. Eagle, Idaho.

white meat and two cups of dark meat. That translates

the early 1970s, Cohen's Coddie trucks were delivering the

ersand freeze foryourfavorite recipes," she writes in "The Ro-

en off the bone. The secret is letting the chicken cool

tremely popular — so much so that the Cohen family

the product. From the 1920s to

and pour into freezer contain-

recipes is getting the chick-

and the coddies became ex-

to mass-produce and market

After it's cooled, simply strain

hardest part of most of the

age supermarket chicken yields about four cups of

crab cake, this uniquely Baltimore food could be found at neighborhood soda fountains and delis all over town beginning in early 1920s. "Glimpses of Jewish Baltimore," "The coddie's origins are vague, but the way the descendants of the Louis Cohen

Chicken

— '7heRot isserieChicken Cookbook,"by MichelleAnnAnderson,CumberiandHousePubl ishing,2008

meat off the bones while it's

still slightly warm. If you refrigerate it first, it'll be hard-

Thinkstock

Asparagus Chicken a la Creme

dies can still be found in Bal-

Rapida Chicken Tamale Pies

timore at occasional church fundraisersand places li ke

Makes 2-4 servings. 2 TBS butter 2 C coarsely shredded rotisserie chicken

2 tsp fresh thyme leaves

1 tsp baking soda

'/2 tsp ground nutmeg Kosher salt to taste

1 pint heavy cream

Ground white pepper to taste

1~/2 Ibs asparagus spears, washed and trimmed Additional thyme for garnish

Makes 4 servings.

grandfather Louis Cohen's wife, Fannie Jacobson Cohen,

t he Suburban H o use a n d Miller's Deli i n P i k esville, Md., and even atMama's on the Half Shell, where Geier

who created the coddie as we know it." Sandler further

found them on the appetizer menu for $5.50.

Melt the butter in a largeskillet over medium heat. Addthe chicken to theskillet; heat until warmed through. Reduce the heat tolow. Pourthe heavycream into the skillet, and simmer gently for 5 minutes, stirring frequently, until ~/4 C loosely packed cilantro, the saucehasthickened. Seasonwith thyme, nutmeg, salt, pepper.Keepwarm over lowheat until ready to serve. chopped Bring 2 inches of water to a boil in a large skillet. Season with ~/~ teaspoon of kosher salt. Add the baking soda 1 (2.25-oz) can slicedolives, to the water. Carefully add the asparagus; cook until the water returns to a boil. Removeimmediately, drain, and reserve 4slices for garnish arrange on aserving platter. 1 C prepared salsa Pour the Chicken a laCreme over the asparagus. Sprinkle with thyme andserve hot. Cook's note:This is especially delicious served with a loaf of French bread. 2 C shredded cheddar

family tell the story, it was

explains that according to Louis Cohen's granddaughter, Elaine Cohen Alpert, her grandparents were just barely earning a living from the small stall they ran in the old Belair Market, where they sold sandwiches, cookies and

Request Susan Zeiger from Balt imore an d D o nn a M a r sh f rom H a nover, M d. , b o t h

wrote recently, hoping someone would have the original recipe for the Harley Burg-

candy. They were searching ers, which were sold at Harfor a new product, something ley's fast-food carryouts in no one else would have, to at-

tract new customers and set them apart. Not long after, the Balti-

the '60s and '70s in the Baltimore area. "They were the

best subs, ground beef simmering in a red tomato sauce

more coddie was born. The

with lots of onions," Marsh

Cohens sold the first coddies

sard.

Baltimore Coddies Makes16 to 20 coddies. /~ Ib salt cod or1 TBS cod paste 1 to1/4 Ibs potatoes 2 TBS milk

'/~ C crushed crackers 2 eggs

/2 tsp black pepper

Vegetable oil for frying Saltine crackers Yellow mustard

If you are using salt cod, soak the fish for 24 hours in a bowl of water. Change the water every 6 to 8 hours. Cover the fish with water in a pan and simmer for10 to15 minutes. Drain and breakwith afork; cool. Peel, dice and boil potatoes until cooked. Drain, mash with 2 tablespoons milk, and cool. In a large bowl, combine salt cod (or cod paste), potatoes, crackers, eggs and black pepper and make into thin, palm-sized balls. Flatten slightly and cook in a pan filled with ~/4inch of vegetable oil. Brown cakes on each side and drain. Replace diminished oil between batches. To serve, place each coddie on a saltine cracker, top with yellow mustard and placeanother saltine on the top. Serve warm or at room temperature.

1 C dicedrotisserie chicken 1 C frozen Southwest-style corn (with onions and bell

peppers)

cheese,divided 8 (~/4-inch) slices from a1-Ib

— '7heRotisseri eChicken Cookbook byMichelleAnnAnderson,CumberlandHousePubl ishing,2008

tube of preparedpolentn

BBQ Chicken Sandwich

4TBS sour cream

Preheat the oven to 350 degrees. Spray the insides of four 1-cup capacity ramekins or au gratin disheswith cooking spray; setaside. Mix together the chicken, corn mix, cilantro, olives, salsa, and1~/~cups of cheese in a medium bowl. Place1 slice of polenta onthe bottom of each ramekin. Evenly divide the tamale filling among each of the ramekins, packing gently. Top with a slice of polenta and someof theremaining cheese. Bakein apreheated oven for 20 minutes or until bubbling and the cheese is lightly golden. Rest for 15minutes. Place a dollop of sour cream and a slice of olive on top of each tamale pie. Servehot. Cook's noteL Kickuptheheat by using hot salsa. Serve with Spanish style rice and refried beans foracompletefiesta.

Makes 4 servings. "This BBQ chicken sandwich is almost identical to the one weserve here at the restaurant," said Chef Jake Williams at Brother Jon's Public House. He told us that servers at Brother Jon's always steer newcomers to their Buffalo Mac andCheeseand Jack Sparrow Sandwich since they arethe two top sellers. 1 rotisserie chicken, pulled apart 4 potato or white buns

4 oz butter (1 stick) 1 white onion, diced

3/4 C whiskey" 3 C ketchup

8 slices cheddar cheese 1 jalapeno pepper, diced (including seeds)

3 cloves garlic, chopped Salt and freshly ground pepper

4TBS molasses 2 TBS honey

to taste

In a small saucepan, melt butter on low heat while you dice up the onion and jalapeno (be sure to include all the seeds of the jalapeno). Cookthe onions, jalapeno and garlic in the butter until the onions are soft and translucent. Once the onions havesoftened and the jalapeno andgarlic begin to brown and stick to the pan, slowly add the whiskey and stir until the edges of the panare clean. Add the ketchup, molasses and honey and simmer on medium heat while you cook the rest of the meal. The saucecan bemixed smooth or served chunky. While the sauce cooks down, pull the meat from the bones of the chicken andadd it to the barbecue sauce. Oncethe chicken is in the sauce, slice the bunsandbake them in the oven, openfaced, with a slice of cheddar on each half. Whenthe cheese has melted to the buns, pull the buns from the oven, top with the barbecuechicken andserve. *Whiskeynote:A nice bourbon like Bulleit or Knob Creekwill add a rich smokiness, whereas ablend like Maker's Mark, CrownRoyal orPendleton will impart a bit more "zip" on thetongue, bringing out the spice of thejalapenos. — From ChefJake Williams, Brother Jon's Public House, 1227N.W.GalvestonAve., Bend, 541-306-332t, www. brothej ronspublichouse.com

Chicken 4 Yakisoba Noodles

— 'Vhe Rotisseri eChicken Makes 4 servings. "I do this meal all the time with my kids. It's quick and has the added benefit that it cleans out the fridge! Cookbook,"b y MichelleAnn Anderson, CumbertandHouse Everybody likes rotisserie chicken. Youcan't go wrong with it. You can make asandwich the next day out of the Publishing, 2008 breast, or get as elaborate asyou want with it," says TRMcCrystal of Jen's Garden. Jen's Garden is afine dining

— Recipe originallyappearedin TheBaltimore Sun onMay22, 2002

restaurant in Sisters. In the summer, it features special wine dinners every Wednesday night from mid-July through the first week of September for $80 per person. 1 C rotisserie chicken meat 2~/2 C chicken broth

4 C Yakisoba noodles (buy in

ktorefhanjust a pafio.........

i t 'syour

5-Ib bag at Cash & Carry, separate into 4 C portions,

OUfdooP PooN! Ni ,1' . •

'

'- CI'

II

1l

I!

freeze in quart bags) 2 TBS vegetable oil 1 onion, julienned

1 C any leftover veggiesin

1 TBS soy sauce orBragg's

the fridge that you like: tomato, kale, spinach, celery,

liquid aminos 1 tsp Thai fish sauce

mushrooms, cooked or raw broccoli, asparagus, Brussels sprouts, etc.

Red pepper flakes to taste

2 TBS ketchup 1 TBS sweet Thai chili sauce

Fresh cilantro for garnish Spice mixture of ginger, garlic,

sesame seeds (available at Costco), for garnish

1 garlic clove, chopped In a large pan, saute onion in vegetable oil until softened, addanyleftover vegetables you'd like to use, along with the chopped garlic. Add the rotisserie chicken meat, chicken stock, ketchup, Thai chili sauce, soy sauce, fish sauce and red pepper flakes, if using. Bring the soup to a boil, and then add in the Yakisoba noodles. Add more stock to barely cover the noodles. Bring back to aboil, and it's ready to serve. Portion the noodles into four bowls, divide the veggies into the bowls, then ladle broth over the top. Garnish with cilantro. — FromTR McCrystal,cheflownerJen'sGarden,403E .HoodAve.,Sisters,541-549-2699,ev wintimatecottagecuisine.com

Chicken a la King Makes 8 servings. Jim Brumfield told us hemakesthis classic dish at home because his whole family likes it. Brumfield has been working at Jake's Diner for10 years as kitchen manager and chef. Jake's Diner is famous for large portions of comfort food. "Chicken fried steak hasalways been a staple of ours for breakfast, and then there's the Stacker: hash browns and scrambled eggs with bell pepper and cheese,covered with hollandaise," said Lyle Hicks, who owns Jake's along with his wife, Judy. '/2 Ib mushrooms, sliced

~/2 Cgreen pepper, diced ENoy Patio World's lasting quality vs. disposable stuff destined for a landfill

Put/o kVof/d

222 SE Reed Narket Road 541-388-0022 PatioWorldBend.com Mon-Sat 9:30-5:30 Sun 10-5

~/2 C butter (1 stick) ~/2 C flour 1 tsp salt

~/4 tsp white pepper

2 C heavy cream 2 C chicken broth 2~/2 C rotisserie chicken, pulled

Toast points (toasted bread, cut

in half diagonally), or white rice for serving

1 jar (4 oz) pimentos, chopped

In a large skillet, saute mushrooms andgreen pepper in butter over medium heat until tender, not browned. Blend in flour and white pepperandcook, stirring, until bubbly. Remove from heat, stir in chicken broth. Return to heat, bring to aboil, stirring constantly. Reduceheat to low, add chicken, creamand pimentos and stir. Serve over toast points or white rice. — From Jim Brumfield kitchen managerandchef at Jake sDiner 2210N E Highway 20, Bend 541 382 01f8, www. jakesdinerbend.com


TUESDAY, JUNE 24, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

F OO D

D3

Give greensa chance:Textures, tastes add interest By Judy Hevrdejs Chicago Tribune

You're all over the kale

trend, baking loads of leaves into crisp chips, sauteing bagfuls with olive oil and garlic. It's time to break the hold kale has over your kitchen.

With s ummer's l eafy greens piling up at farmers markets, in your garden and at the supermarket, go ahead and givekale'sbotanical cousins a place at your table. Pick

one, any one: beet greens, collards, chard,escarole,mustard greens. They all saute up beautifully, but their potential goes waybeyond that. They can add color and tex-

ture to, say, a garlicky white bean soup. Young, tender greens can work in salads. One friend mentioned wrapping lightly blanched chard leaves around a savory mix of bulgur wheat, crumbled feta,

Andrew Scrivani /New York Times News Service

A strawberry cheesecake tart with the usual distinct layers of red and white pureed into pink, creating a dessert that's less about contrast snd more about integration.

diced tomatoes and season-

ings, then baking them. And after we picked up a handful

s raw el' c eeseca e: re an w iean in a over By Mellssa Clark

of mustardgreens at a farmers market, we stirred them

into a mushroom-shallot saute to wilt, then added a splash

of applecider vinegar before serving with pork chops. How you prepare leafy greens depends on personal taste, of course. Maybe your mom cooked collards with ham hocks. Or tossed escarole with pears

Double Strawberry Cheesecake

New York Times News Service

and hazelnuts as Deborah

Makes10 to12 servings. cake: white and creamy cake Time: 1i/~ hours, plus at least 8 hours' chilling on the bottom, bright red ber-

Madisonsuggestsinherbook, "Vegetable Literacy" (Ten Speed Press, $40). Or perhaps, as a friend of Madison's does, you've tucked mustard greens cooked with ginger, garlic, tamari, sesame and chili oils into round wonton wrappers for dumplings. With a little coaching from Laura Russell, you should be

Picture a strawberry cheese-

ries on top. Maybe the berries

FOR THE CRUST: are fresh and ripe and leak a 8 TBS unsalted butter (1 stick), little of their tart juice onto the at room temperature

/4 tsp kosher salt '/4 tsp ground cinnamon

dense cake below. More likely, 2 TBS packed dark brownsugar the berries are sealed in shiny, 2 TBS honey syrupy goop. Either way, you 1 C all-purpose flour

FOR THE FILLING: /2 C dry red wine

get a separation of strawberries and cream, with the two

playing off each other in juicy-

/s C sugar

1 C (8 oz) fresh goat cheese, broken into small pieces, at

/4 C whole-wheat flour 1 TBS unsweetened cocoa

powder

room temperature 1 Ib fresh strawberries, hulled

1 envelope (2/4 tsp) powdered gelatin

and coarsely chopped, plus several pretty whole or sliced

1 Ib cream cheese, cut into small

strawberries for serving

pieces, at roomtemperature

able to improvise with a pile of

leafygreens.

creamy succession.

It's a perfectly delightful traPrepare the crust:In the bowl of an electric mixer or a food processor, cream together butter and brown dition (or at least the fresh-ber- sugar until smooth, about 1 minute. Beat ln honey. ry kind is), but it's not the only In a separate bowl, whisk together flours, cocoa, salt and cinnamon. With mixer running on low speed or uswayto go. ing the pulse button on the food processor, add dry ingredients to butter mixture in two batches. Scrape dough And in this version, I go onto a sheet of plastic wrap. Flatten into a disk andchill for at least 2 hours or overnight. elsewhere. Instead of k eepPlace dough round between two sheets of parchment or wax paper. Working quickly, roll out dough to a ing distinct layers of red and thickness of /s inch. If dough becomes sticky, chill in refrigerator until firm. Transfer dough to an 8- or 9-inch white, I puree them into pink. sprlngform pan. Press into bottom of panandYsup the sides (don't worry lf the sides aren't even). Prick bottom It becomes a dessert that's less with a fork. Refrigerate 20 minutes. about contrast and more about Heat oven to 325 degrees. Place pan on abaking sheet and transfer it to oven; bake until crust is golden and integration. And it also reach- dry to touch, about 25 minutes. Cool completely on awire rack. es that peak strawberry-seaMeanwhile, prepare the filling:Put red wine in a small saucepan and sprinkle gelatin on top. Let rest for 5 son goal of packing as much minutes, until absorbed. Put panover lowheat and stir until gelatin dissolves. Don't allow gelatin to boil. Let cool. berry as possible into each lusIn a food processor or electric mixer, combine creamcheese, sugarand goat cheese; blenduntil smooth. Stop cious bite. once or twice to scrapedown sides of bowl. Addchopped berries and gelatin mixture and blend until incorporatTo keep the berry flavor as ed (berries will break down to apuree, which is fine). Scrape mixture into cooled crust. Cover loosely with plastic fresh and bright as possible, I wrap and refrigerate until set, at least 6 hours or overnight. Topwith sliced or whole strawberries before serving. optfora cheesecake setwith gelatin rather than baked with eggs. It does need sever- cheese to small children who packaged cookies mixed with al hours in the fridge, but the may object, they probably melted butter. Here, I go one upside is that you can make it won't notice. My small child better by making the crust out didn't. days ahead. of homemade graham cracker Along with the usual cream But she does take in the love- cookie dough baked in the pan cheese, I add some mild, fresh ly pink hue, which I intensify until crisp. You can also use goat cheese to the batter. It's by using red wine to soften the the same dough recipe to bake a trick I learned from pastry gelatin. The wine also adds an- graham crackers if you've chef Claudia Fleming when other layer of flavor, although ever had the itch to make your we worked on a cookbook to- you can skip it and use water own. gether. The goat cheese tamps (or orange juice) if you have Or skip the crust entirely. down the sweetness and adds scarlet, intense-tasting berries. Then you'll have a no-bake an earthy bite that goes nicely Another facet of the usual recipe that manages to be both with berries of all kinds. And cheesecake recipe is a graham sophisticated and very pretty if you don't mention the goat cracker crust made from the inpink. •

Her focus is the family Bras-

sicaceae, whose members indude cabbage, kale, collards and Brussels sprouts. It is the

subject ofherrecentlyreleased book, "Brassica: Cooking the World's Healthiest Vegeta-

bles" (Ten Speed Press, $23). "You need only ttuee things to make any brassica taste

delicious — olive oil, garlic and salt," she writes, before offering recipes incorporating dozens of flavors designed to balance thecharacterofm any leafygreens. She suggests thinking about a green's flavor pro-

Greens to consider Here's a trio of leafy greens to getyou started. MUSTARDGREENS Thesemay come incolors ranging from greento purple. Theyare popular in the South, throughout Asia andAfrica. They're more pungent thankale and collards, writes Deborah Madison in herbook, "Vegetable Literacy." • Use:Young greens are good in saladsand sandwiches. Consider Russell's suggestions for using more mature greens: Shreddedcrosswise then wilted in apan with caramelized Vidalia onions or used inan egg-and-potato Spanish tortilla (think frittata). CHARD This leafy green(aka Swiss chard) mayboast green, yellow, red orwhite stems depending onthe type. • Use:With lentils (soup) and potatoes (addedto a mash). Stemscan be diced andcookedwith greensusedinasoup. Red stemsandveinscanbleed like beets. Madisonmixes chard with ricotta andsaffron into tiny savory cakes for an appetizer.

ESCAROLE

You'll find that escarole looks like lettuce, a looseleafed head with thicker

outer leavesand paleinner leaves. Unless, of course, you find babyleaves,curly at the edgeandtender, piled loosely in abasket at a farmers market or on young plants in your garden. • Use:Darker leaveswork in bean soupsandwith sausages. Madison turns escarole andpotatoes into a hash. For asalad, she tosses the innerescarole leaves with radicchio, red mustard leaves,golden beets, avocadoand pine nuts. file from mild (i.e. mizuna) to stronger (collard greens, kale) to peppery (arugula, watercress) and on through pungent, such as many mustard green varieties.

Shrimp andmangosalad for summer By Stephanle Witt Sedgwick Special to The Washington Post

Simple salads dominate my

flavorful and super easy to put together.

difficult to cut and have an almost bitter taste. I cut each shrimp into quar-

You can serve this as an appetizer at dinner, but I like it

ters by first slicing down the one pairs shrimp and mango best as lunch. back — as though I'm butterwith crunchy cucumber and Make sure the mango is flying the shrimp — before chopped fresh dill. It's light, ripe. Under-ripe mangoes are cutting each side in half. warm-weather menus. This

Ilelfelili. As EmployeeOwned Company

FREE EYENT! DATE:Tuesday,June24, 2014

Dilled Shrimp, Mango and Cucumber Salad Makes 4 to 5servings (makes 3cups). Make ahead:This salad is best served within a day. 6 oz (31- to 40-count) cooked

8 ozseedless cucumber,cutln

2 TBS apple cider vinegar

shrimp, develned and cut

half lengthwise, then thinly sliced /4 C finely diced red onion 3 TBS chopped fresh dill 1 TBS extra-virgin olive oil

Kosher salt

into quarters (see above) Flesh of 1 Ig or 2 smmangoes, cut into /4-lnch-thick, s/4-lnch-

long strips Combine the shrimp, mango, cucumber, onion, dill, oll and vinegar in a mixing bowl. Season lightly with salt and pepper, and toss gently to incorporate. Refrigerate until ready to serve. Nutrition informationper serving (based en 5):90 calories, 8 g protein, 7 g carbohydrates, 3 g fat, 1 g saturated fat, 65 mg cholesterol, 125 mg sodium, 0 g dietary fiber, 5 g sugar

Freshly ground black pepper

WHERE:DenfeldMiller Paint 2121 NEDivision,

TIME: 5:30 pm Reception 6-7 pm ComeAlive with Color! (olor (onsulfafions fofollow

Bend, OR 97701 RSVP:Call Normaor Sueaf 541-598-3928 or email: Colorshow2@milerpainf.com

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Stacy Zarin Goldberg IFor The Washington Post

s •


D4

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, JUNE 24, 2014

HOME ck

AR D EN

Next week: A dream house that uses every inch

+ ie t - ~ e'< ve ~j~j et +-j-+--

ll ~

t'.<-" '= = jt

• e

,

!'

A variety of vegetation surrounds a water feature in Shelby Smith's backyard in southeast Bend.

A gazebo sits near hostas in Smith's backyard.

Hideaway Continued from 01 She's growing water lettuce,

+~ +,++ v+-

s

water hyacinth and water lily in the lower pond. Surround-

O See additional photos on The Bulletin's website: bendbulletin.cum/ntbnmeteur

ing her gazebo and ponds are two maple trees, begonias, jack frost brunnera (which grows a tiny blue flower),

she starts a good majority ofher plants asseeds.She startssome flowers, like begonias, from seed and alsobuysplants. "I get too impatient waiting

dusty white "snow in sum-

for them," Smith said.

mer," fuzzy lamb's ear, wild ginger and geraniums.

Keeping her potted plants in the greenhouse through the

One of the things that Smith

winter seems to work for her.

kept in her backyard was a sedum that volunteers nearly ev-

Hops grow next to the greenhouse. After experimenting

erywhere. A little shrub called

Photos by Joe Kline/The Bulletin

crispa with white flowers does Lemon lime and June hostas surround a water feature in Smith's well in the shade. Catmint and backyard garden. candy tuft, or iberis, grow near the small upper pond. A yellow and orange col- triangular yard, she has nu- the flower won't blossom until umbine variety called Tequila merous volunteers, including the fall. Smith says they're like Sunrise sits at the top of the johnny-jump ups and lady's a translucent orchid purple pond. Smith says that "yel- mantle. Smith claims that she color. "When the sun hits it, it's lows and oranges are not my plants things that don't seem like turning on a light bulb," favorite colors in the garden ... to do well and then they pop she said. but I love apricot (colors)." She up in her garden in another loNear the Christmas roses a orders a lot of plants by mail cation the next year. pink flamingo clematis winds because she says she can't Everything in this partic- up a trellis. Smith says it's infind them locally, but she does ular area is a volunteer; cam- appropriately named due to try to stick to plants that she panula, bellflower and sedum. the fact that it never reaches knows will grow well in Cen- Planted among the volunteers it's expected hot pink hue; it's tral Oregon. are hellebore or C h ristmas more of a light purple. In a shadier garden off to rose and geranium. Leaves of Smith has a small greenthe left, farther back in her the autumn crocus are out, but house on her property where

with other vines, Smith found

thathops were the onlyvine she could get to survive year-round in a pot outside. E ven farther toward t h e

back of her property is another garden full of the following hosta varieties: Bresingham blue, gold standard yellow, lemon lime and a June hosta,

which is dark on the edges. A burning heart plant that is like its cousin, bleed-

ing heart, but much smaller and with a more fernlike leaf,

sits among creeping phlox, impatiens, mother of thyme, catmint and verigated ivy that is

i n terwoven through

everything. A peculiar plant named bloodroot has giant leaves and A path breaks up the vegetation in Smith's backyard. a little delicate white flower that blooms in the spring, but

HunterQouglas

if you cut the root it bleeds red. A beautiful, dark, flowering plant called helleborus black, which looks slightly ominous, •

sits next to a sweet woodruff plant that you can make wine with.

A silvery grey ghost fern,

a leafy artemisia named Ori-

ental Limelight and a darker Sambuca lace elderberry are some of the m ore peculiar

r

plants. One of the most exotic is a small, beautiful Japanese v ariegated willow t hat

sits

at the top of the garden, with

r

leaves that look as if they're speckled with w h it e p aint. Miniature houses andgnomesdecorate the ground under a tree.

A portion of the flowers in Smith's garden were gifts. Now that they're seeding, boronia seeds, tufts of bunny she's excited to finally pass tail grass, dwarf sunflowers them on to other people. called cherry rose, baby's breath and flowering tobacco.

Beds forbouquets

Smith put raised beds in

• e •

I •

-

'

t •

e •

e

8 •

The arbor over the entrance

to her back garden is covered

the back corner of her garden, with a coral honeysuckle vine. near her compost bins, so that It doesn't have any fragrance she could grow veggies. because she didn't want to "This year I decided to not walk through something that do a lot of veggies and do a would constantly be covered cutting garden instead," said in bees. Smith. The smaller garden in front She still has tomato plants, of her house has nearly as garlic chives, lemon cucum- many flowers and plants, from bers and blueberry bushes, lilies, petunias, snapdragons, which produce f r uit t h at's peonies, pink and purple rosmostly eaten by birds and es and allium, to multiple vasquirrels. rieties of clematis, barberry, Started in this garden are more phlox and Russian sage.

A slightly passed flowering almond, ornamental plum and

Chianti-colored lily b l oom next to veronica, ginger snaps and lamb's ear. Lily of the valley are tucked in and around the back portion of this garden, already past their prime and no longer smelling as heavenly as they once did. "(Gardening) has more to do with just plain hard work than it does any kind of green thumb or anything.... And if it's hard work to you and you're not enjoying it, then it probably isn't something that's your thing."

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CCB 157822 Smith's front yard includes many flowers, tall shrubs and stone paths.

— Reporter: 541-383-0651, swilkins@bendbulletin.com


TUESDAY, JUNE 24, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

D5

ASK MARTHA

IndependenCe deCOr, ContinuedfromD1 Paper pinwheels Whether you put them on a pencil with an eraser or attach them to clothespins, these spinning delights make a colorful accent for the yard or table. Makethem larger or smaller as desired.

What you'll need (for each): Scrapbook paper or cardstock Pencil (with an eraser) or dowel with a separate pencil eraser on oneend Straight pin Scissors for cutting paper Ruler

I'

Make the pinwheel: 1. Draw a 5-inch square onthe back of the paper and lightly draw a diagonal line from corner to corner in eachdirection. 2. Cut on the diagonal lines, stoppingi/z inch from the center on each cut. 3. Bend the right corner of each resulting triangular section to the center andoverlap the points slightly. 4. Poke the pin through the center to hold the points in place. Push the pin into the pencil eraser to secure, leaving /. to /z inch betweenthe eraser and the pin head toallow for spinning. If necessary, trim the sharp pin end even with the eraser to avoid injury.

Richard Perry/New YorkTimes News Service

The taste of summer. (Don't forget the mustard.)

Rockets Perfect for a centerpiece, these rockets are ready to fire up a great holiday.

Usin extra er s,seectin ot o s ort e ri an more

What you'll need (for each):

Empty toilet paper or paper towel cardboard tube Holographic scrapbooking paper, three colors Assorted metallic star trim or ribbons Paint and paintbrush (optional) Dowel Glue Scissors Ruler

- MARTHA STEWART

Make the rocket: 1. Cut the tubes to thedesired length and cover with scrapbooking paper. Trim theexcess paperand glue the seamoverlap in place. 2. To makethe top, cut a 6-inch diameter half circle from asecond color of paper. Slightly overlap the straight edgesand glue in placeto form a cone. 3. Glue the cone tooneend of the covered tube, matching the joining to the seam inthe tube paper. 4. Cut 6- to 8-inch lengths of assorted star trim and/or ribbons andglue inside the rocket tube lower edge. 5. If desired, paint the dowel. Cut thedowel to the desired length and glue inside the rocket tube.

• My herb plants are • producing an abundance of blossoms at the

moment. How can I put them to use'?

C/I'®, i '

A • vinegar with various herb blossoms, such as el• Infuse distilled white

derflower, chive and Thai

Star garland Make this starry garland one of two ways —either with a sewing machine to join the stars together, or using glue to mount them on a thread.

What you'll need: Precut cardstock stars (2 inches) or red, white and bluecardstock and a star punch (seenote) Glue (for the no-sew version) Heavy thread in desired length, plus 24 inches (for the no-sew version) Sewing machine andthread (for the sewn version) Note on star punch: Thefeatured project used aFiskars XL 2-inch Star Lever Punch.

Make the garland: 1. If punching your own stars, cut an equal number of each from the three colors of cardstock. 2. For the no-sewversion, glue the stars to the heavythread, alternating colors. Spacethe stars about 2 inches apart, or vary spacing for interest. 3. For the sewnversion, begin sewing with thread onlyand stitch12 inches. Insert a star and continue sewing across the star andoff of it and allow approximately 2 inches of spacebefore inserting the next star. Continue in this manner, alternating star colors until the desired length is reached, then continue stitching off the last star for12 inches.

Pendants Begin with a plastic tablecloth or two from the dollar store andcut pendants for a festive banner. Make it as long as you need toaddspirit to wherever it will hang.

What you'll need (for a 48-inch long hanner): Patriotic plastic tablecloth or two 4 yards grosgrain ribbon, /4-inch wide Ruler Scissors Glue stick

basil, to make vinaigrettes and sauces. First, fill a glass container halfway with washed, cut blossoms, then pour white vinegar to the top. Cover and store in

a cool, dark place for three days. Strain through a finemesh sieve, discard the

blossoms and pour the vinegar back into the bottle. It will have taken on the del-

icate taste of the herb, plus Suzanne Dechillo / New York Times News Service a blush color. Garnish with Put chicken wire around harmful plants like azaleas to keep pets leftover herbs if you plan to from chewing on them. serve immediately, but be sure toremove them before

storing in a cool, dark place a satisfying snap. $15 for 18, • M ushrooms: Pick a n y for up to a month. nathansfamous.com. mushrooms in your yard and toss them right away — many

Shopping for hot dogs

• It's grilling season.

Q

Keepingpetssafeinyour yard

recommend some oftheir favorite hot dogs?

safe ones. For example, toxHow do I keep my pets ic Gyromitra esculenta looks • safe from b a ckyard similar to edible morels. poisons? • Compost: Alt hough com• Summer is the perfect post benefits your garden, the

A ing are always on the look-

the backyard, but before you let your pet loose, check for

side can make pets sick. Keep compost and lawn-care prod-

out for the tastiest varieties.

hazards. First, get to know the

ucts covered and out of your

• C an t h e Mar t h a Stewart Living test kitchen • The food editors at • Martha Stewart Liv-

Q•

• time for pets to play in

Here are a few oftheirtop names of the plants in your pet's reach. picks: yard to determine if they are • Brooklyn Hot D og's safe, says Tina Wismer, med- Making perfect berry Classic Beef Dog: These ical director at the A SPCA muffins dense dogs are 100 percent Animal Poison Control Cen• When I make muffins, beef and have a long, skin- ter. If your pet ingests some• how can I prevent berny shape. $38 for 18, dean- thing poisonous, you should ries from sinking to the botdeluca.com. inform your vet immediately. tom of the batter? • Pearl Beef Frankfurt Other common toxins include • S imply c oat t h em i n Sliders: You'll only need compost, mushrooms, insecti• a teaspoon's worth of one kind of bun for your cides, snail and slug bait, and flour,reserved from the reccookout with these hearty cocoa-bean mulch. For a com- ipe, before mixing them into hot dog patties. $8.25 for prehensive list, visit aspca.org. the batter. 12, pearlmeat.com. • Plants: Puppies have a ten— Questions of generalinterest • Nathan's Original Rec- dency to chew on everything can be emailed to mslletters@ ipe with Natural Casings: they find. Place chicken wire marthastewart.com. For more The casings on these tradi- around harmful plants such as information on this column, visit tional New York dogs have azaleas to keep your pet away. www.marthasteM/art.com.

A

1. From the plastic tablecloth(s), cut triangles with an 8-inch base and10 inches tall. If the tablecloth has avariety of patterning, cut from several design areas.Cut12 pendants. Cut off the base corners at anangle, /4 inch in from the edges. 2. Fold under the triangle basei/z inch and glue in placeoverthe ribbon, spacing the pendants approximately 2 inchesapart. Leave 12 inches of ribbon free ateachendfor attaching. — Reporter: gwizdesigns®aoLcom Photos by Joe Kline/The Bulletin

who are trained in tree plant-

acidity or a l kalinity. Fer-

A merican Society of

ing and care. The following are signs

tilizer or s oil a m endments

sulting Arborists (ASCA). You can typically confirm a

that a tree should be exam-

er tree environment. S ometimes, n o

• Bark that forms bumps

or is split, cracked or peeling and value to your prop• Dead branches near the erty, but they don't live top of the tree forever. Sources of damage • Fungus growing around or death include age, storm the trunk, mushrooms formdamage, drought or other ing around roots or twigs extreme weather, and envi- growing from the trunk ronmental issues. • Leaves appearing later Top-rated tree e x perts than usual tell our team that trees, like • Leaves falling off earlier other living creatures, need than normal good nutrition, a healthy en• D iscolored l e a v es o r rees add beauty, shade

T

including, for some, pruning in late fall or w i nter when insects are dormant and sap

isn't running. If you're worried that one of your trees might be on its

last limb, consider consulting an experienced, reputable tree doctor.

"Arborist" is actually the properterm forprofessionals

may make the soil a healthi-

c o ntains a

p articular balance of

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al defects that could cause the tree to topple in a high

pensation insurance. Ask for

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references, check them and wind. get all important details in If you're thinking of hir- writing. ing a n ar b o r i st , c o n tact Costs for arborist services w ell-reviewed local t r e e vary widely. Some initial service companies and ask c onsultations ma y b e o f if they have an arborist on feredfree;other times, comstaff. panies charge a fee, such leaves without veins or with Consider the individual's as $75, for an inspection. odd nodules level of e d ucation, certifiIf a tree must be removed, A n a r b o r ist m a y c o n - cation and experience, as the cost is often based on duct a variety of tests to well as the company's on- height and accessibility. Andetermine the best course line reputation w it h o t h er gie's List members reported of action, including a soil consumers. paying from $400 to several analysis. Organizations that pro- thousand dollars to have a For proper growth, trees vide professional accredita- tree removed. need soil t h a t

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D6

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, JUNE 24, 2014

ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT

o ewi e out? i s romt e TV SPOTLIGHT By Neil Genzlinger New Yorh Times News Service

vaut

guns. ''What are they for?" another

United States have been nuked. But thepoint is, 'The Last Ship"

asks. "Rats," he replies. "The noise

crew should make sure that

You know the feeling. You emerge from a nap in your

helps to keep them off."

wine cellar or from a month in

aboard "The Last Ship" bring along? Rodents. They look like

a submarine to find that during your absence, civilization has been destroyed, and only you, and perhaps a few other people, are left alive. You're panicky. Grief-stricken. Bummed.

Full of impotent rage. Perhaps even a little gleeful. Y ou're familiar w it h

this

pileup of emotions, because even though you have never lived through the end of the

world, you've seen it often enough on television. Now you're seeing it again. On Sunday night, TNT presented the premiere of "The Last Ship," a series from Michael Bay and others about a Navy destroyer crew that realizes that most

global extinction really is underway. Going all end-of-days

Guess what the scientists

when the problem turns out

merely to be a global case of sniffles wouldbe embarrassing.

mice, but still: Uh-oh.

That first "Jericho" episode

offered another lesson in the The show: "Jericho" importance of being sure. The The lesson: Be sure sheriff and a deputy go out in The destruction of the world searchofa schoolbusthathas is a discombobulating event, not returned from a field trip. and in its immediate aftermath, And they do find a crashed bus. Thinkstcck you're going to need to make But they don't make sure it's Whether from nnuclear apocalypse, n virus or some other cause, sure you don't take anything a school bus before boarding. the lesson from TV is clear: When most of the life on earth ends, for granted. The first thing 'Ibrns out it's a prison bus, and the survivors still have n whole lot to worry about. not to take for granted is that the inmates on it are now free world destruction has indeed and armed. Uh-oh. o c~ . culprit is either a virus or a nu- Ship" should take note, because That is something the mayor The show: "The Twilight Zone" dearwar. Sokudosto'The Last early in the premiere, as the de- of Jericho, Kann is quicktopoint The lesson: Always have aspare Train." (Titles still available to stroyer is departing on its mis- out inthe firstepisode of amuchA spare what? A spare of future scriptwriters, by the way: sion, ittakes some sort of search loved but short-lived series that whatever it is that is most im'The Last Minivan" and "The dog aboard. "He's a mean oper- CBS introduced in September portant to you or makes your Last Pedicab.") This six-episode ator," his handler tells a sailor. 2006. On an otherwise ordinary life worth living. Because once

of the world's population has British series from 1999 killed died while the vessel has been us off with an asteroid. "The Last Train" was also on under radio silence during a four-month research mission the cutting edge when it came in the Arctic. to accounting for the existence Let's hope they have a sub- of survi vors.The lucky few are stantial t e l evision a r c hive passengers in a rail car that is onboard, because they can buried in a tunnel by the blast. learn a lot about how to deal One of them happens to be carwith this situation from past rying a canister of something series.Here are lessons that that cryogenically freezes evfour post-apocalyptic shows of eryone in the car. yore offer those on "The Last Upon waking, the groggy Ship" as they start their jour- travelers don't realize that deney into the new, largely emp- cades have passed. When they ty world: hear barking, some think rescue dogs are on the way and The show: "The Last Train" rush toward them. Turns out they're not rescue dogs; they're The lesson: Beware ofdogs Television tends not to be just hungrydogs. very creative when it brings an A rather gruesome scene folend to the world; generally, the lows. The people on "The Last

Uh-oh.

dayinthe Midwest, tesidents see the world is destroyed, the ser-

a mushroom doud in the disThe show: "Survivors" tance and begin to panic, since The lesson: Beware of rats the president and Congress This British series ran for have lately been whining about three seasonsbeginningin 1975 a rise in "global violence." But and was created by Terry Na- Mayor Johnston Green (Gerald tion, whose long list of writing McRaney) cautions everyone credits includes "Doctor Who" not to get carried away. and "The Avengers." Britain "Now, look," he says about quiddy degenerates into prein- 12 minutes into the pilot, "this dustrial ugliness when a virus could have been a test, could kills most of humanity. (This have been an accident. There's virus appears to recur every 33 military bases near Denver. years; the series was remade in One explosion does not make 2008.) an attack." In a Season 2 episode, a few Of course, the mayor should survivors venture into London, where the stench is so dreadful

that they mask it by smoking cigaret tes.As they prepare to exit their car, one pulls out some

A man named Henry Be-

mis, played by Burgess Meredith, learns this the hard way in "Time Enough at Last," a

fondly remembered episode of "The Twilight Zone" from 1959. He's a bookish bank derk who

spends his breaks reading in the vault. That's where he is when a nudear attack occurs.

not aproblem. But he apparent-

apparent that cities all over the ly doesn't. Uh-oh.

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

because ofher addiction, she has

We have been dating for some time

been out of your life for longer than two

now. We have a wonderful connection and have our dates on Skype.

years. It may be that

The problem is, we have never met

each other for fear of her rubbing off on me, and she wasn't home half the time anyway A year ear

DEP,R

ABBY

lier she went to re-

what you're really mourning is the relationship you MIGHT have had. You say you have friends. If

in person. Every time we plan on meeting, he shuts up for a time, isn't reach-

hab, and I remember talking with her about how she was clean for good and then ... you listen to them talk, you may It's just so lonely! All my friends find that they, too, sometimes feel have sisters and brothers and I alone even if they have siblings. don't, and I'm bored all the time.

My parents work a lot, so I'm home alone at least three times a week,

and although I've got friends and sports, I'm just really alone. It's awkward going out to dinner or goingon vacation because my parents just want to sit and relax, and I want to go out and do things,

but it's embarrassing going everywhere with your parents. I miss having her around. — Alone in Ohio

able, then suddenly reappears and makes excuses, asking me to forgive him and plan another meeting. Should I still believe this will happenanytimesoon? Many teenagers have told me this. — Left Hanging inNairobi Because you're bored when you're Dear Left Hanging:I'm sorry to not with your friends or partici- be the bearer of bad tidings, but pating in sports, consider finding something smells fishy here. "Cata hobby that will fill your time fishy." From where I sit, it appears when your parents are working, your wonderful connection may be or do some volunteering if they only your connection to the Interagree. net. A person who doesthisrepeatYou might also consider adopt- edly may not be who he has repreing a pet from a shelter to keep you sented himself to be. Do not count company. Ofcourse,pets require on him for ANYthing. feeding, training, affection and — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com exercise, but in return they offer

HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORTUES-

YOURHOROSCOPE

DAY, JUNE 24, 2014:Thisyear you keepmany ofyourthoughts and ideas to yourself. Sometimes testing them out on a dear friend draws positive results, so keep that in mind. If you are single, be careful and get to know each potential sweetie well; you might be attracting emotionally unavailable people. If you are attached, the two Stnrsshowthe kind of you benefit from of dny you'll have weekends away together, old-fash++++ posltlve ioned dates and moments. GEMINI is a little too flaky for you.

By Jacqueline Bigar

CANCER (June21-July 22) ** * * You have a lot to consider. At this moment in time, you might be keeping your opinions to yourself. You know what you need to do. The question is whether you will follow through. Be careful about people you meet today and in the next few weeks. Tonight: Opt for a quiet day.

LEO (July23-Aug.22) ** * *

Handle a hassle before it

becomesamajorproblem.Someone

involved could be very controlling and difficult. It is important to know what you ARIES (March21-April 19) want from this situation. A meeting could ** * * * D on't be too busy to stop and resolve the problem. Tonight: A lot of have a chat with a friend you rarely see. last-minute invitations. You might be taken aback by what this VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) person shares with you. Continue to express your bottom line and what does not ** * * You might want to address a problem much differently. You'll have cerfeel right. Others will listen. Tonight: Let tain demands that must be met, like havthe fun begin. ing a discussion with a close friend. You TAURUS (April 20-May20) are extremely creative, and you'll come ** * Be careful with any form of indulup with an amazing solution. Others still gence. This type of behavior might be fine might not like your idea. Tonight: Up late. sometimes; however, it is important to choose the occasions carefully. Someone LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) ** * * A situation on the personal front close to you will share a special bit of could hold you back from achieving a information. Tonight: A caring gesture certain goal. Investigate the alternatives might mean everything to someone. involved with this matter and see if a GEMINI (May 21-June 28) quicker solution can be implemented. ** * * You exude a compassionate You must detach in order to find the right attitude that attracts quite a few people. answer. Tonight: Watch a movie. Be cautious, as someone around you might not have the best intentions. Read SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.21) ** * * Your ability to read between between the lines, even if you think you know this person well. Tonight: Act as if the lines will be more important than the world is your oyster. you recognize. You might discover that

or P.o. Box 69440, LosAngeles, CA90069

what a friend leaves out could be more important than what he or she says. One-on-one relating allows the quickest progress. Tonight: Speak with a friend directly.

I

I I

Regal Old Mill Stadium16 8 IMAX, 680 S.W.Powerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • 22 JUMP STREET (R) 11:20 a.m., 1:10, 2:30, 3:50, 5:05, 7:20, 7:55, 10:05 • ALONEYET NOTALONE (PG-13)Noon,3,5:30,8:30 • BLENDED(PG-13) 11:10 a.m., 7:30 • CHEF (R)6:10, 9:05 • CLOUDYWITH A CHANCE OF MEATBALLS 2 (PG)10 a.m. • EDGEOFTOMORROW (PG-13)1:05,3:55,6:35,9:20 • EDGE OF TOMORROWIMAX3-D (PG-13)7:10, 10 • THE FAULTIN OURSTARS (PG-13) 11:05 a.m., 1:55, 4:50, 7:45 • GODZILLA(PG-13) 12:55, 3:45, 6:50, 9:55 • HOW TOTRAINYOURDRAGON2(PG) 11 a.m., 12:40, 1:30, 3:20, 4:05, 6, 6:45, 9:1 5, 9:50 • HOW TOTRAIN YOUR DRAGON 23-0 (PG)1215,245, 5:45, 8: I5 • HOW TOTRAINYOURDRAGON2IMAX 3-0 (PG) 1 I:25 a.m., 2:10, 4:40 • JERSEYBOYS(R) 12:30, 3:35, 6:40, 9:45 • MALEFICENT (PG) 11:30 a.m., 2,4:30, 7, 9:30 • MALEFICENT3-0(PG) l2:50,3:25 • A MILLIONWAYSTODIEIN THEWEST(R) I:40, 4:35, 7:35, 10:20 • NEIGHBORS (R) 2:20, 5, 10:15 • THE PIRATES!BANDOFMISFITS (PG) 10a.m. • X-MEN: DAYS OFFUTUREPAST(PG-13) 1:20, 4:20, 7:50 • Accessibility devices areavailable forsomemovies. t

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SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec. 21) ** * * You might want to listen to a well-meaning friend. This person is not overcritical, and he or she looks at you with understanding. A discussion about a loved one will be well received, so schedule a time to have adiscussion with that loved one. Tonight: The only answer

is "yes." CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.19)

** * * Sometimes people pull away fromyou when you become too controlling or difficult. You might wonder what the best way to handle a situation like this is. It wouldn't be a bad idea for you to takeastepbackand observe more. Tonight: Put in extra effort with whatever you do.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 28-Feb.18) ** * * * You have a great sense of adventure, and it will come out when dealing with a loved one. Once the fun begins, it could be close to impossible to stop. You might need to let go of a comment that hurt your feelings, as it was not intentional. Tonight: Be both naughty and nice.

PISCES (Feb.19-Mnrch20) ** * A situation involving your personal life will make you smile. You could be delighting in the whimsical nature of a child or loved one. A friend might seem to need more control than in the recent past. Avoid getting sucked into any power plays. Tonight: Happiest at home. © King Features Syndicate

— Events in Mississippi in the summer of1964, when student volunteers took part in efforts to end white supremacy in the state, are recalled in Stanley Nelson's new documentary. The creation of Freedom Schools and the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party were among the results. However, there also were tragic outcomes to the activitiesincluding the murders of three civil-rights workers, burnings

of churches, andbombings of

9 p.m. on LIFE, "Abby's Studio Rescue" —Hotels, restaurants and bars on the brink of closing can get rehabbed and rescued, so why not dance studios? This new seven-episode series features renowned dance coach Abby Lee Miller of "Dance Moms" fame going on the road to turn dance studios in distress into profitable enterprises, using a mix of tough love

from a consumer help line wheneveryone is dead.

work series; it soon becomes

my parents didn't want us around

mer: American Experience"

replacement part or a response

plosion does not generally make a post-apocalyptic net-

unconditional love and companionship. If it would be all right with your parents, it might be a solution for you. Dear Abby: I met a guy online.

8 p.m. on 7, "Freedom Sum-

homes andcommunity centers.

He's briefly excited because now he'll be able to read all day, every day. Then he breaks his glasses. If he'd had a spare pair,

Dear Abby:My 19-year-old sister Dear Alone: Please accept my died two years ago from an over- sympathy for the loss of your sisdose. I'm 13. We were very close ter. You are still grieving, which when we were little, but during the is why you say you feel alone. four years before she passed away, However, if you think about it,

8 p.m. on 6, "NCIS" —Supposedly protective vests that don't do the intended job set off alarms for Gibbs (Mark Harmon) and company in "Bulletproof." The items were part of a shipment intended for U.S. Marines, sending the NCIS team on a search for the source. The probe eventually leads Tony and Ellie (Michael Weatherly, Emily Wickersham) to a gun show. David McCallum, Rocky Carroll and Sean Murray also star.

vice economy is going to be shot. Try getting a repairman, a

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TV TOOAY

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Redmond Cinemas,1535S.W.OdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777 • EDGE OF TOMORROW(PG-13) 1:45, 4:15, 6:45, 9:15 • HOW TOTRAIN YOUR DRAGON 2(PG)1:30,4,6:30,9 • MALEFICENT(PG) 2:15, 4:30, 6:45, 9 • A MILLIONWAYSTODIEIN THEWEST(R) 2,4:30, 7, 9:30

and no-nonsenseadvice. 10 p.m. on FX, "Tyrant" —Dr. Bassam "Barry" al-Fayeed is a pediatrician living the good life in California with Molly, his wife of19 years, and two children. But when a family wedding brings him back to his home nation of Abbudin, he soon finds himself drawn back into the family business. And that family rules that small Middle Eastern country with an iron fist. Adam Rayner ("Hawthorne") and Jennifer Finnigan ("Better With You") star in this

new dramaseries from Ang Lee ("Life of Pi"). 10:01 p.m. on 6, "Person of Interest" —The remaining members of the POI team try to protecta dying man as they struggle to keep their enemies at bay. This is easier said than done since Reese (Jim Caviezel) has left them; in fact, his absence couldhave catastrophic consequences in "Aletheia." Michael Emerson also stars. O Zap2it

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I


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

Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbuiletin.com THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, JUNE 24, 2014 •

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Ads starting as low as $10/week rivate aft onl

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Call for prices

Prices starting at $17.08 erda

Run it until it sells for $99 oru t012months

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contact us: Place an ad: 541-385-5809

Fax an ad: 541-322-7253

: Business hours:

Place an ad with the help of a Bulletin Classified representative between the

Includeyour name, phone number and address

. Monday - Friday

businesshours of8 a.m. and 5 p.m.

Subscriber services: 541-385-5800

: 7:30 a.m. -5 p.m.

. .Classified telephone hours:

Subscribe or manage your subscription

: Monday- Friday 7:30 a.m. -5 p.m.

24-hour message line: 541-383-2371 Place, cancel or extend an ad

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On the web at: www.bendbulletin.com

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Pets & Supplies

Pets 8 Supplies

Fuel & Wood

Hay, Grain & Feed

POODLE,pups, toy. older pup to adopt. Schnoodle pups also.

Guns, Hunting & Fishing

Illledical Equipment

Dachshund AKC mini pup $100 down.541-508-4558

Bicycles & Accessories

Power adjust hospital bed, good cond. $150. 541-420-3277

Log truck loads of green lodgepole firewood, delivered.

1st Qualilty mixed grass hay, no rain, barn stored, $250/ton. Call 541-549-3831 Patterson Ranch, Sisters

Employment Opportunities

go tobendweenies.com

Taurus .38 Spec, 2" bbl, Bisley wood grips, 50 rds ammo, 2 holsters, $295.

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263

Tools

Call 541-815-4177 Log truck loads of Juniper firewood logs. $900 local. 541-419-5174.

CAUTION: Ads published in "Employment O p portunltles" include employee and independent positions. Ads for p o sitions that require a fee or upfront investment must be stated. With any independentjob opportunity, please i nvestigate tho r oughly. Use extra caution when applying for jobs online and never provide personal information to any source you may not have researched and deemed to be reputable. Use extreme c aution when r e s ponding to A N Y online employment ad from out-of-state. We suggest you call the State of Oregon Consumer Hotline

Looking for your Top Pin Archery RANS Wave recumnext employee? Pro Shop Woodworking shop b ent bike. Ol d e r Place a Bulletin Want to Buy or Rent WeNovv Have equipment: Sh opmodel, easy to ride. Dachshund mini chocosmith with upgraded help wanted ad Bowtech! 269 Well maintained. InCASH for wood dress- late dapple male, $375, table saw; Band saw; Gardening Supplies today and Archery Lessons for cludes Cateye Velo 7 avail 6/21. Pics avail. ers and wood diLathe; Jointer; Disk, all ages. reach over odometer/speedom541-41 6-2530 & Equipment nettes. 541-420-5640 Sander and working 1611 South 1st St., 60,000 readers eter, new chain rings, tools; Shopsmith 12" Redmond, each week. new tires with extra Wanted: $Cash paid for Donate deposit bottles/ planer with s t and, 541-316-1784 Your classtfted ad tube, new seat cushFor newspaper vintage costume jew- cans to local all vol., Sears 12" wood lathe ion and 2 water bottle delivery, call the will also elry. Top dollar paid for non-profit rescue, for SHIH-TZU PUP born holders. Adjustable Wanted: Collector seeks with Copy Crafter and Circulation Dept. at appear on Gold/Silver.l buy by the feral cat spay/neuter. 4-23. Female, $500 working tools. Tormek seat and back. Askhigh quality fishing items 541-385-5800 bendbulletin.com Estate, Honest Artist Cans for Cats trailer 541-589-1124 Super grinder 2000 Call & upscale bamboo fly To place an ad, call Elizabeth,541-633-7006 at Jakes Dlner, Hwy blossomhut@gmail.com inq $375. which currently with many a t tach541-504-5224 rods. Call 541-678-5753, 541-385-5809 20 E & Bend Petco receives over ments and i n strucor 503-351-2746 205 near Applebee's, do- Silky Terrier, female, or email 1.5 million page tions. Porter Cable classified@bendbulledn.ccm born 4/24/1 4. 2lbs nate M-F a t S m ith 245 Items for Free 255 4"x8" belt/disc bench views every b o r n Golf Equipment Sign, 1515 NE 2nd; or $ 250; m al e month at no sander. Central Ma- The Bulletin Computers 9/1 6/1 3, 6lbs, $150 CRAFT, Tumalo. Lv. Free Bachelor Buttons, extra cost. chinery 4"x6" belt/disc msg. for pick up large Jeff 70 7 - 350-1981 CHECKYOUR AD you dlg, bench sander; Sears Bulletin T HE B ULLETIN r e amts, 541-389-8420. Christmas Valley. 541-548-2879 H onda 3 8 " rid i n g Classifieds quires computer ad- 8~/4" slide compound www.craftcats.org mower, bagger, $450. Vari Kennel, medium vertisers with multiple miter saw. AMT 4600 Get Results! 208 ad schedules or those scroll saw ; B e n ch 541-480-1353 English Bulldog 2 yrs sized, like new, $35. Call 541-385-5809 Pets & Supplies 541-382-3076 selling multiple sys- grinder; Router table old, red & white, good or place your ad 270 tems/ software, to dis- with Sears r o uter; with children, must be on-line at STUD SERVICELost & Found Makita router; Ryobi only dog i n h ome. close the name of the bendbulletin.com on the first day it runs business or the term t able w i t h Se a r s at 1-503-378-4320 The Bulletin recomYorkie Silky 8 Ibs, $500. 541-382-9334. to make sure it is cor- "dealer" in their ads. router; Makita router; Found backpack -style mends extra caution For Equal Opportu$350. 541-416-1615 rect. "Spellcheck" and nity Laws c ontact when purc has- English Springer Spaniel 341 blower, 6/16, call to Private party advertisRyobi t ri m r o uter; human errors do ocing products or serOregon Bureau of puppies. AKC, field Yorkies, small females, identify, 541-382-2682 Horses & Equipmen Router bits; Bench ers are defined as playful, shots & cur. If this happens to those who sell one vise; various clamps. Labor & I n dustry, vices from out of the champion blood lines, cute, docks, parents on site. your ad, please conFound engraved wedarea. Sending cash, Civil Rights Division, liver & white, avail. 7/1. $550. 541-536-3108 or 541-549-9383 computer. tact us ASAP so that ding ring at City Park 971-6730764. checks, or credit in$800/ea. Beaver Creek text to 541-915-5754. corrections and any in John Day, OR. ID • ., • S, f ormation may be 260 Kennels. 541-523-7951 265 The Bulletin adjustments can be to claim, subjected to fraud. armnjamOq.com Misc. Items 210 made to your ad. Building Materials 541-233-8961 For more i nforma541-385-5809 541-385-5809 tion about an adver- French Bulldog pups, Furniture & Appliances Buying Diamonds Found on Thursday, The Bulletin Classified Bend Habitat tiser, you may call beautiful cream, avail. 2001 Silverado /Gotd for Cash 6/5, Black bicycle, now $2000, Pet qualRESTORE Add your web address the O regon State 3-horse trailer 5th A1 Washers&Dryers For sale 1 gas golf cart Saxon's Fine Jewelers Building Supply Resale near dow n town ity. 541-382-9334 to your ad and readAttorney General's wheel, 29'x8', deluxe choice of two. For in541-389-6655 Bend. Call to iden$150 ea. Full warwww.enchantabull.com Quality at LOW ers onThe Bulletin's Office C o n sumer showman/semi living formation call ranty. Free Del. Also tify, 541-383-2505. PRICES web site, www.bendProtection hotline at Help needed by local BUYING quarters,lots of ex541-576-2477 wanted, used W/D's 1-877-877-9392. 740 NE 1st bulletin.com, will be Lionel/American Flyer Just bought a new boat? tras. Beautiful condi541-280-7355 nonprofit rescue! Just 541-312-6709 able to click through 246 trains, accessories. Sell your old one in the tion. $21,900. OBO took in 57 cats/kittens 541-408-2191. Open to the public. classifieds! Ask about our automatically to your The Bulletin 541-420-3277 Guns, Hunting serving central oregonsince scs from one place. Need G ENERATE Super Seller rates! website. SOM E BUYING & SE LLING 6 foster homes for & Fishing EXCITEMENT in your Sisters Habitat ReStore 541-385-5809 All gold jewelry, silver kittens or cats w/kitAdmin. asst. - full time 7-mo.-old pups, lots of tens, for 2 to 6 wks, neighborhood! Plan a Building Supply Resale LOST diamond a nd pays CASH!! and gold coins, bars, needed for busy maQuality items. snow white w/black we provide food, litter, garage sale and don't Bendforlocal rounds, wedding sets, gold ring, S u nday all firearms & sonry/landscape suphighlights, great fam- vet care, etc.; you forget to advertise in LOW PRICES! class rings, sterling silJune 15 in Bend. Reammo. 541-526-0617 ply co. Office knowl150 N. Fir. ily dogs, parents on provide a safe 8 lov- classified! ver, coin collect, vinREDUCED! ward. 541-699-9291. edge, AR/AP and exp. 541-549-1621 site. 3 ©$150 each. ing temporary home. 541-385-5809. CASH!! tage watches, dental 3-Horse Trailer, 22' long, with Business Works 541-447-1323 For Guns, Ammo & gold. Bill Fl e ming, Open to the public. Lost ladies Seiko watch, 7' wide, 2 rear axles, good and Keystroke. www.craftcats.org, Apply Reloading Supplies 541-382-9419. stainless steel w/18kt Twin E rgo-motion Logan Coach Inc. in person at 63265 Adopt a rescue cat or 541-8'I 5-7278. 541-408-6900. 266 gold accents, Redmond cond. $4200 obo. 305-794-0190 LG A/C w/remote, $250. Jamison Rd., Bend kitten! Altered, vacci- Kittens 1/2 Siamese fems, 500 automatic bed area, 6/17. 951-454-2561 Heating & Stoves GE Window A/C, $85. nated, ID chip, tested, 2 tortoiseshell, $10 ea; with memory foam 345 CAREGIVERF ilter Q u een D e mattress, like new, more! CRAFT, 65480 black free. 541-977-7019 NOTICE TO Adult Foster Home only used for a short fender Air c l eaner Livestock & Equipment 78th St, Bend, 1-5 PM ADVERTISER needs employeeto help t ime. $ 75 0 o b o . $50. Hoover Wind Sat/Sun. 389 8420, Lab Pups AKC, black 8 REMEMBER: If you DO YOU HAVE T unnel bagl e ss Since September 29, Local couple wants to with residents & pets. www.craftcats.org. yellow, Master Hunter 541-383-7603 have lost an animal, SOMETHING TO Call 541-382-9334 buy young (3-mos to 2 vacuum, $100. 1991, advertising for sired, performance pedidon't forget to check SELL Bichon Frise AKC pups, ree, OFA cert hips & elHoover Wind Tunnel used woodstoves has years old) mini donkey, The Humane Society FOR $500 OR Caregiver vet checked, hand raised, ows, 541-771-2330 lenny. 541-388-6849 with canister, $75. All been limited to modThe Bulletin Bend LESS? Prineville Senior care $500+. 503-856-6107 www.klnnamanretrlevers.com recommends extra like new c ondition. els which have been 541-382-3537 Reg. mini donkeys for h ome looking f o r Non-commercial certified by the O r541-548-8895 I ca son s e n p r Redmond advertisers may sale, $ 2 0 0 up, Caregiver; f u l l-time egon Department of chasing products or, 541-923-0882 541-548-5216 LifeSmart quartz infrared Environmental Qualplace an ad /dayshift. Pass services from out of I heater, never used, heats Madras with our criminal background ity (DEQ) and the fedthe area. Sending f 541-475-6889 "QUICK CASH up to 1000 sq ft, $45. eral check. 541-447-5773. E n v ironmental cash, checks, or Call 541-382-3076 Prineville SPECIALe Protection A g e ncy 541-447-7178 Delivery driver. CDL i credit i n f ormation 1 week3lines 12 (EPA) as having met may be subjected to oi' or Craft Cats required, forklift exp. smoke emission stani FRAUD. For more 541-389-8420. heavy lifting, masonry s e eks 2 N ~ dards. A cer t ified information about an f and landscape knowlAd must w oodstove may b e 275 advertiser, you may i edge a plus. Apply in include price of PATIO SET identified by its certifif call t h e Or e g on f Auction Sales person at 63265 s~ le ite of $50D cation label, which is 286 288 Glass table with 6 ' State Atto r ney ' or less, or multiple Jamison Rd., Bend. chairs and cushions, permanently attached Sales Northeast Bend Sales Southeast Bend i General's O f fi ce items whosetotal umbrella & stand, to the stove. The Bul- * Estate Auction * Consumer Protec- • does not exceed $200. letin will not know- Sun. June 29, 10:00 The Bulletin Multi-Family Garage Sale tion h o t line a t i serv~ng cenrral oregonsince 1903 $500. ingly accept advertisa.m. at Wilbur Auc** FREE ** Connestoga Hills, 5 mi E i 1-877-877-9392. Call 951454-2561 ing for the sale of tion north of RoseRickard Rd. 6/27-28, The Bulletin Circulation department is looking Garage Sale Kit on Classifieds at (/n Redmond) uncertified burg. Collections of: 9-4. ATV, boat, tr- f TheBulletin > Call for a District Representative to join our Single Place an ad in The Fri-Sat, 541-385-5809 woodstoves. Serv~ng Central Oregon since i903 Cookie jars 200+, safe, furn, piano, pel. team. This is a full time, 40 hour per week Bulletin for your ga- Irs, www.bendbulletin.com Swamp cooler, heavy Tonka trucks, Smokey Copy stove, heater, collectibles, position. Overall focus is the representation, rage sale and re- tools, clothes, much more! the Bear 500+, washduty, like new, 3ft. x 267 sales and presentation of The Bulletin newspaceive a Garage Sale 212 boards, Santas, Fish Cat 8' pontoon boat, 3 ft., p o rtable o r Fuel & Wood Kit FREE! records, also primitive per. These apply to news rack locations, hotels, Antiques & 292 $250. Caddis float tube, s tationary. $3 7 5 . events and news dealer outlets. Daily items. antique furniture, special $50. Both excellent! Collectibles 541-382-6773 Sales Other Areas responsibilities include driving a company veKIT INCLUDES: lots more. Worth the 541-280-0570 • 4 Garage Sale Signs WHEN BUYING hicle to service a defined district, ensuring drive! More info bed, used only • $2.000ff Coupon To Antiques wanted: tools, Glock27.40 cal,3 m ags, Twin MOVING SALE: newspaper locations are serviced and supplied, FIREWOOD... twice, like new, $100. Larry Hill, furniture, marbles,early 2 extenders, 50 r d s Room size window air Use Toward Your Gilchrist. Good clean managing newspaper counts for the district, 541-430-2689 pics O To avoid fraud, B/W photography, Next Ad furniture, electronics, ammo, DeSantis holster, conditioner, used 2 mos, www.wilburauction.com building relationships with our current news • 10 Tips For "Garage The Bulletin beer cans, jewelry. two 50" plasma TVs, $495. 541-306-0166 dealer locations and growing those locations $125. Smaller doggie recommends payNo buyers premium Sale Success!" 541-389-1578 s urround sou n d , with new outlets. Position requires total ownerdoor, $70. 541-848-7165 ment for Firewood Private party wants to household, clothing, The Bulletin reserves buy WWII 1911 pistol, ship of and accountability of all single copy eleonly upon delivery Wantedpaying cash fishing, sporting, ments within that district. Work schedule will be PICK UP YOUR the right to publish all S&W Victory, M1 car- for Hi-fi audio & stuand inspection. camping, knives, EnThursdaythrough Monday with Tuesday and GARAGE SALE KIT at ads from The Bulletin bine. 541-389-9836 • A cord is 128 cu. ft. dio equip. Mclntosh, Wednesday off. Requires good communication g lander king b e d , newspaper onto The 1777 SW Chandler 4' x 4' x 8' Ashley fur n iture, Bulletin Internet web- Ruger Super Blackhawk JBL, Marantz, Dy- • Receipts should skills, a strong attention to detail, the ability to lift Ave., Bend, OR 97702 washer/dryer, tons of 44 cal magnum, exc cond, naco, Heathkit, San45 pounds, flexibility of motion and the ability to site. include name, sui, Carver, NAD, etc. all good and $625. 541-385-6163 multi task. Essential: Positive attitude, strong The Bulletin items phone, price and servins csneai oregonsince eos Call 541-261-1808 clean, many n e w. The Bulletin service/team orientation, sales and problem Salt water fishing gear, kind of wood servine ceneaf (hegcm since 19es 2008 32 ' C a rdinal solving skills. Send inquiries and resume to: misc., assortment of WHEN YOU SEE THIS purchased. Boxers AKC & V alley t ravel t r ailer w i t h circulation©bendbulletin.com • Firewood ads rods, Hippo Ranger Bulldogs CKC puppies. tipouts. 140528 Ko215 308 full of j igs, MUST include $700-800. 541-325-3376 kanee Ln, left before • C oins & Stamps Applications are available at the front desk. 541-771-0665 & cost per Farm Equipment bridge north of GilMorePixatBendbjletin.com species Drop off your resume in person at cord to better serve christ onto Creel In., Private collector buying Sig-Sauer P232SL, .380, On a classified ad 1777 SW Chandler, Bend, OR 97702; & Machinery our customers. Friday 6/27, 8 - 1pm. right o n K o kanee, postagestamp albums & inbox, $600; Beretta 21A go to No phone inquiries please. Huge Cul-de-sac sale, follow signs. Pre-employment drug testing required. collections, world-wide .22LR, mags, holster, www.bendbulletin.com Fuel tank, 300-gal dieThe Bulletin R anch Village C t . June 13-30, 9 a.m.-? and U.S. 573-286-4343 $295; Rem. 37 Target .22, to view additional sel w/stand, filter, hose, EOE/Drug Free Workplace senane central cuegossinceIae 541-480-1996 Unertl 10x. 541-389-1392 Must be insurable to drive company vehicle. (North of Cooley Rd.). (local, cell phone). photos of the item. $500. 541-480-1353 202

8 up. 541-280-1537

www.rightwayranch.wor dpress.com

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E2 TUESDAY, JUNE 24, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 860

541-385-5809 or go to www.bendbulletin.com

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AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES

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Friday. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate.. . . . . . . . . . 1 1 :00 am Fri.

• . 3:00pm Fri. • • 5:00 pm Fri • Place aphoto in yourprivate party ad foronly$15.00per week.

PRIVATE PARTY RATES Starting at 3 lines

*UNDER '500in total merchandise

OVER'500 in total merchandise

7 days.................................................. $10.00 14 days................................................ $16.00

Garage Sale Special

4 days.................................................. $18.50 7 days.................................................. $24.00 14 days .................................................$33.50 28 days .................................................$61.50

4 lines for 4 days ................................. $20.00

lcall for commercial line ad rates)

*llllust state prices in ad

A Payment Drop Box is available at CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN (*) REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin The Bulletin bendbulletimcom reserves the right to reject any ad at any time. is located at: 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, Oregon 97702 PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Classified ads running 7 or moredays will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday. 476

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Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

Independent Positions

MENTAL HEALTH

CDL Driver

Mental Wellness National wholesale disCenters, Inc. tributor of w aterworks

Sales

Earn over

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caution when purchasing products or I services from out of a

$1,000 a week!

products in Redmond is is in an evaluation stage seeking motivated and of opening a compreWelcome toYOUR hard working part time/ hensive outpatient / l the area. Sending NEIGHBORHOOD c ash, checks, o r seasonal indwidual with a community-based PUBLICATIONS. ood attitude. C andi- m ental health/ s u b- l credit i n f ormation We are establishing ate must have good stance abuse treatment l may be subjected to a branch in communication skills, be program in Bend, Or- FRAUD. Central Oregon. professional, punctual, a egon. We are seeking For more informa- I tion about an adver• We are looking for self starter, and work as an Executive Director to responsible and a team player. Primary oversee the daily op- l tiser, you may call job duties are driving and erations of the facility. the Oregon State ambitious individuals to all warehouse functions. They must hold an ac- l Attorney General's sell subscriptions to Secondary duties i n- tive masters-level liOffice C o n sumer a The Bulletin at volve counter sales, an- cense in the State of established sales Protection hotline at l swering phones, and O regon such a s a I 1-877-877-9392. locations. various other d uties. L CSW or L PC, a n d Class A CDL is required. have clinical supervi- LThe Bulletin Control what you earn Ability to operate a fork- sion/ executive experiby working a lift, climb a ladder, ma- ence. We prefer somedesignated local n ipulate t o ol s an d o ne wh o h o ld s a territory and essentially e quipment, lift u p t o certification in addiction Looking for your next build your own employee? 100lbs, and type a mini- counseling along with business! Place a Bulletin help mum of 20 words per LCSW/ LPC, but it wanted ad today and minute is a must. We are the To learn more about reach over 60,000 looking to fill this position is not mandatory. The this new very quickly so please position will be salary, readers each week. DOE. In addition MWC employment email your resume to Your classified ad offers a f u l l b e nefit aaron.bondi@fer uson.com will also appear on opportunity if you are interested. The package. Furthermore, bendbulletin.com please call us at Company is an equal op- the person hired will rewhich currently 458-206-0905 portunity employer as ceive growth incentives receives over 1.5 or email us at well as a government in addition to their salmillion page views paparman09@hotmail.com contractor that s h a llary. If you are interevery month at abide by the require- ested please email reno extra cost. Your Neighborhood ments o f 41 CFR sume to Bulletin Classifieds Publications 60-300.5(a), which pro- e ettin ill@mwcid.com Get Results! hibits dis c rimination ax to 08-528-2945 or Call 385-5809 against qualified profor questions call Find exactly what or place tected Veterans and the 208-542-1026 and ask to you are looking for in the your ad on-line at requirements of 41 CFR speak with Eric. bendbulletin.com CLASSIFIEDS 60-741.5(A), which prohibits dis c rimination BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS against qualified indi- Search the area's most viduals on the basis of comprehensive listing of disability. classified advertising... real estate to automotive, merchandise to sporting goods. Bulletin Classifieds DRIVERS appear every day in the Summer jobs are still available! print or on line. Class A and Class Call 541-385-5809 Several Central Oregon Bl-Mart stores B CDL Drivers www.bendbulletin.com are hiring for FULL TIME summer needed. seasonal positions. Must be able to The Bulletin sen rts central oregon since sta work hard, pass lf you're looking for a fun, fast-paced U/A and backResort Housekeeper way to earn some money this summer ground check. wanted for small co. stop in these area Bi-Mart stores for No experience Exp'd only; $10/hrto an application: necessary. start. Send work history to resofthk@gmail.com

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Call Bill, 541-383-3362 for more info.

People Lookfor Information About Products and Services EveryDaythrough The Bvlletin Classiffeds

Call for Specials! Limited numbers avail. 1, 2 and 3 bdrms. W/D hookups, patios or decks. MOVNTAIN GLEN, 541-383-9313 Professionally managed by Norris & Stevens, Inc.

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servrngrentrar oregon since $03

Call54l38&5809topromote yourservice• Advertise for 28daysstorting airlfgfftfr rfrrrtffrrdatr t rrrfarrftffr s sr atfttri

Adult Care

your next ernployee is reading The Bulletin The Bulletin delivers your "HELPWANTED"ad to 70,000 print readers and20,000 online visitors a day. The Bulletin, local, hassle-free, worry-free advertising.

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F OR O N L Y S 2 1 . 4 3 A D A Y ! ~ And get $31 in ad upgrades for FREE!

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BASED ONA 2" AD SPACE

The Bulletin offers both print adanddaily online accessfor our employmentneedshereat COCC. This reachesa large audience at agreat price. Data provesemployment seekers look to TheBulletin for available opportunities. In 2013 recruitment stats showed 51% of the online applications had identified The Bulletin as theIr source of advertisement notification." Christa Gunnell, HumanResourcesCentral OregonCommunity College

The Bulletin

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5 41 -38 5 - 5 8 0 9

NOTICE

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Bend 351 NE 2nd Slsters - 445 W. Hwy 20 Prineville - 2091 NE 3rd Madras - 1575 S. Hwy 97

Classlfleds

llllotorcycles & Accessories

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MX

DRIVER

H o mes for Sale

0 All real estate advertised here in is subCl ject to th e Federal F air Housing A c t , which makes it illegal to advertise any prefTriumph Da ytona 528 850 erence, limitation or 2004, 15K m i l es, Loans & Mortgages discrimination based Snowmobiles perfect bike, needs on race, color, relinothing. Vin WARNING ion, sex, handicap, Arctic Cat 580 1994, ¹201536. The Bulletin recom648 amilial status or naEXT, in good $4995 mends you use cautional origin, or intencondition, $1000. Houses for Dream Car tion when you protion to make any such Located in La Pine. Rent General Auto Sales vide personal preferences, l i mita- Call 541-408-6149. 1801Division, Bend information to compations or discrimination. PUBLISHER'S DreamcarsBend.com nies offering loans or We will not knowingly 860 NOTICE 541-678-0240 credit, especially accept any advertis- Motorcycles & Accessories All real estate adverDlr 3665 those asking for ading for real estate tising in this newspa- which is in violation of vance loan fees or is subject to the Vespa GTS 250 2007, companies from out of per law. All persons 2006 H-D Ultra F air H ousing A c t this red, just over 4k mi., state. If you have are hereby informed Classic. Twin Cam which makes it illegal exc. cond. $ 3100. concerns or questhat all dwellings ad- 88 w/ Stage One "any to a d vertise 541-419-3147 tions, we suggest you are available Kit. Screaming limitation vertised consult your attorney preference, on an equal opportu- Eagle exhaust. 28k or disc r imination or call CONSUMER nity basis. The Bulle- miles. Lots of exbased on race, color, tin HOTLINE, Classified tras. Excellent. religion, sex, handi1-877-877-9392. $12,999 OBO. cap, familial status, 746 541-280-8074. BANK TURNED YOU marital status or naDOWN? Private party tional origin, or an in- Northwest Bend Homes will loan on real es- tention to make any Victory TC 2 0 0 2, tate equity. Credit, no such pre f erence, Exceptional NW location, skyline 40K mi., runs great, problem, good equity limitation or discrimiviews and privacy. s tage 1 kit, n e w is all you need. Call nation." Familial staCustom craftsman tires rear brakes & Oregon Land Mort- tus includes children Tour Home borders more. Health forces gage 541-388-4200. under the age of 18 Quail Park by Awbrey s ale. $4,50 0 . living with parents or LOCAL MONEY:Webuy legal Golf. Interior up541-771-0665 FXSTD Harley cus t odians, secured trust deeds & pregnant women, grades, Courtesy to Davidson 2001,twin and note,some hard money people securing cusRealtors. $575,000. cam 88, fuel injected, 665 loans. Call Pat Kellev 2772 NW Rainbow Vance & Hines short tody of children under 541-382-3099 ext.13. ATVs Ridge Dr shot exhaust, Stage I 18. This newspaper 541-848-0040 with Vance & Hines will not knowingly acA rcticCat AT V 70 0 fuel management cept any advertising 2008 t w o-rider vesystem, custom parts, for real estate which is K(xiMlh h icle, EFI LE . L o w extra seat. in violation of the law. • Redmond Homes hours, high p e rfor$10,500OBO. O ur r e aders a r e mance. Nice wheels, Call Today hereby informed that winch, extra equip., 541-516-8684 all dwellings adver- 1036 SW Rimrock $5000. Moving causes tised in this newspa- Way Redmond New sale. 541-447-3342. Harley Davidson 2003 per are available on construction to be Built, 1800 Single 870 an equal opportunity Anniversary Road King, basis. To complain of Story, 3 bdrms., 2 Stage 1, pearl white, ex- Boats & Accessories 630 d iscrimination cal l baths, 2 car garage cellent condition, lots of Rooms for Rent & e xtra s . HUD t o l l-free a t with RV parking and chrome 1-800-877-0246. The Canyon View. Call $13,999. 541-279-0846 Furn. room i n q u iet toll free t e lephone Kevin 541-948-8700 home no drugs, alco- number for the hear- $259,000. hol, smoking. $450 ing i m p aired is 1st/1st. 541-408-0846 1-800-927-9275. 12' Aluminum boat Looking for your next 632 with trailer, 3hp motor, emp/oyee? Apt./Multiplex General Call a Pro good cond, $1200.. Place a Bulletin help 503-307-8570 Whether you need a wanted ad today and Harley Davidson CHECK yOUR AD reach over 60,000 2011 Classic Limfencefixed,hedges readers each week. ited, Loaded! 9500 trimmed or a house Your classified ad miles, custom paint built you'll find will also appear on "Broken Glass" by 12' aluminum fishbendbulletin.com Nicholas Del Drago, professional help in ing boat, t r ailer, which currently renew condition, motor, fish finder, on the first day it runs The Bulletin's "Call a ceives over heated handgrips, accessories, $1200. to make sure it is cor- Service Professional" 1.5 million page auto cruise control. 541-389-7234 rect. "Spellcheck" and views every month $32k in bike, Directory human errors do ocat no extra cost. only $20,000or best 541-385-5809 cur. If this happens to Bulletin Classifieds 14' Mirrocraft w/9.9 offer. 541-318-6049 your ad, please conGet Results! Evinrude, trader, xtras. tact us ASAP so that Call 385-5809 or $1100. 541-788-2056. 658 corrections and any place your ad on-line HDFatBo 1996 Houses for Rent adjustments can be at 15' tri-hull fiberglas made to your ad. Redmond bendbulletin.com fishing boat, 1971 541-385-5809 walk-thru, fish finder, The Bulletin Classified D esirable s g l le v e l full top cover, 45 hp 762 3br/2ba, lots of u pEvinrude, tr a i ler, USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! grades, pets neg. No Homes with Acreage spare tire, access., smoking $1200 mo good cond. $1200 Completely Door-to-door selling with 415-596-2006 Custom built contemobo. 541-408-3811 Rebuilt/Customized porary raised ranch fast results! It's the easiest 2012/2013 Award for sale by owner. way in the world to sell. 16.2' 1987 Barron MaWinner 2706 sq . f t. 3-4 rine, i/o, top cover, Showroom Condition Bsdl laMR bdrms, 2y a b a ths, The Bulletin Classified Many Extras $4,500 obo spacious kitchen and IRF ©KI19 541-419-5731 541-385-5809 Low Miles. dining room, wet bar, granite and h eated $15,000 Small clean studio close 541-548-4807 stone, new c arpet, to library, $550 mo., p rivate study, o a k $525 dep. All util pd. cabinets, newer heat No smoking/no pets. pump, fir e places, Get your 541-330-9789 Pozzi wood windows. business 18'Maxum skiboat,2000, on 4.6 h i ghly s eGeneral inboard motor, great cluded, heavily The Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our Saturcond, well maintained, w ooded acres b e - e ROW I N Q day night shift and other shifts as needed. We $8995 obo. 541-350-7755 t ween Bend & T u currently have openings all nights of the week. malo, 3-car garage, Ads published in the Everyone must work Saturday night. Shifts with an ad in irrig.system and wa"Boats" classification start between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and ter feature. $589,900 The Bulletin's include: Speed, fishend between2:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m. Allpo541-410-2098 or Sring, drift, canoe, "Call A Service sitions we are hiring for, work Saturday nights. siewert©bendbroadhouse and sail boats. Starting pay is $9.10 per hour, and we pay a Professional" band.com For all other types of minimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shifts Directory watercraft, please go are short (11:30 - 1:30). The work consists of to Class 875. loading inserting machines or stitcher, stackManufactured/ 541-385-5809 ing product onto pallets, bundling, cleanup Mobile Homes and other tasks. For qualifying employees we offer benefits i ncluding life i n surance, Serving Central Oregonsince 1903 short-term & long-term disability, 401(k), paid FACTORY SPECIAL 675 New Home, 3 bdrm, vacation and sick time. Drug test is required $46,500 finished HD Sportster, 2001 exc prior to employment. Watercraft on your site. cond, 1 owner, maint'd, J and M Homes new t i res, c u stom Please submit a completed application atten541-548-5511 chrome, leather saddle tion Kevin Eldred. Applications are available bags, 32,400 mi, $4200. at The Bulletin front desk (1777 S.W. ChanTO $30,000! Tom, 541-382-6501 dler Blvd.), or an electronic application may be Reduced 2006 Super G o od obtained upon request by contacting Kevin Cents 1296 sq.ft. 3 Piaggio/Vespa 3-wheel Eldred via email (keldred©bendbulletin.com). bdrms, 2 full baths, MP3 scooter 2009 16' Old Town Canoe, No phone calls please. Only completed appliwalk in c losets, all with only 400 miles. spruce, cedar & canvas, cations will be considered for this position. No appl., plus freezer. Not a scratch! Like Lake model, 1 owner, resumes will be accepted. Drug test is reVery clean, must be brand new! $5900. verv qood cond, w/extras. quired prior to employment. EOE. moved 541-382-6650 520-360-9300, owner $1000. 541-388-3386

Monday • • • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri • Tuesday.••• • • • .Noon Mon. Wednesday •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Tues. Thursday • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Wed.

Saturday • • • Sunday. • • • •

AptiMultiplex NE Bend •

O0

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Ut4 Ut4Ttl. SOL.'D"

COACHNIAN 008 F~tander tso 2 2' Class C M31

coach pristine -Egicient VtQ wlth Banks has Fofd 4 s'lide, powef p g 1 AC, tlat +V tttotorcy Y ur atttor ductedturnacel 16' awning.

screen Msl neversigogII ookedin. 0 P I II Abargainat I 541-000-000

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11 +

Includes: 2" in length, with border, full Some restrictions cppl>

54'I 3S5 5SO9

yovr ad will also appear in:

• The Bulletin • Central Oregon Marketplace

• The CentralOregonNickel Ads • bendjfuIefin.fom

*Privatepartymerchandiseonly

LsndscspingNard Care Landscaping/Yard Care

Professional Caregiver NOTICE: Oregon Land- Aeration/Dethatching with 26+ yrs exp will pro- scape Contractors Law 1-time or Weekly Services vide private care in your (ORS 671) requires all Ask about FREEadded home. Disabled/elderly/ businesses that ad- svcs w/seasonal contract! hospice.541-279-9492 veftise t o pe r form Bonded & Insured. Landscape Construc- COLLINS Lawn Maint. tion which includes: Ca/l 541-480-9714 Building/Contracting p lanting, deck s , arbors, NOTICE: Oregon state fences, law requires anyone water-features, and inAllen Reinsch Yard who con t racts for stallation, repair of irrigation systems to be Maintenance& Mowing construction work to (& many other things!) l icensed w it h th e be licensed with the Construction Contrac- Landscape Contrac- Call 541-536-1294or 541-815-5313 tors Board (CCB). An tors Board. This 4-digit active license number is to be inmeans the contractor cluded in all adveris bonded & insured. tisements which indiLandscaping Verify the contractor's cate the business has MMaverick weedeating,yd CCB l i c ense at a bond,insurance and owing, www.hirealicensedworkers c ompensa- detail, chain saw work, tion for their employ- bobcat excv., etc! LCB contractor.com or call 503-378-4621. ees. For your protec- ¹8671 541-923-4324 The Bulletin recom- tion call 503-378-5909 mends checking with or use our website: the CCB prior to con- www.lcb.state.or.us to tracting with anyone. check license status Painting/Wall Covering Some other t rades before contracting with also re q uire addi- the business. Persons ALL AMERICAN lan d scape tional licenses and doing PAINTING maintenance do not certifications. Interior and Exterior require an L CB Family-owned cense. Residential & Commercial Debris Removal 40 yrs exp.• Sr. Discounts 5-year warranties JUNK BE GONE Summer Special! I Haul Away FREE Call 541-337-6149 For Salvage. Also CCB ¹193960 Cleanups 8 Cleanouts Mel, 541-389-8107

Handyman

Zdoed Qua//eI

ltfVar4 gPP8 /arr, I DO THAT! Home/Rental repairs Full Service Small jobs to remodels Landscape Management Honest, guaranteed 541-390-1 466 work. CCB¹151573 Experienced Dennis 541-317-9768 Commercial & Residential

WESTERN PAINTING CO. Richard Hayman,

a semi-retired painting contractor of 45 years. S mall Jobs Welcome. Interior & Exterior. c c b¹5184. 541-388-6910



E4

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, JUN 24, 2014

DAILY BRI DG E C LU B

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

NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD will $bprtz

Tuesday,June24,2014

Winning technique By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency At th e A C B L' s S p ring N o r th American C hampionships, Josef Piekarek of Germany was one of many competitors from outside the continent. In an early match in the Vanderbilt Teams, North-South had a complex auction to slam: Some of South's bids were artificial relays, asking for information. Declaring at six spades, Piekarek took the ace of clubs and could have succeeded by ruffing two clubs in dummy and dropping the doubleton jack of trumps. Instead, he found a better approach.

ACROSS 1 Walked into the

clubs, and partner jumps to f our spades. What do you say? ANSWER: A sound minimum for p artnersuch as K876, K8 7,A J6 5, K 4 will give you a play for 13 tricks, so you must try to reach a small slam. Cue-bid five hearts to show the ace. Trust partner to make a good final decision. North dealer Both sides vulnerable

DAILY QUESTION

once

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DIAMOND RUFFS Piekarek took the ace of diamonds, ruffed a diamond, led a heart to dummy and ruffeda diamond. He led a heart todummy and returned a fourth diamond. East ruffed with the jack,but Piekarek overruffed. Declarer could then draw trumps. He won three trumps in dummy, three diamond ruffs, two diamonds, three hearts and a club. In the replay, North-South stopped at four spades. P iekarek's team didn't wi n t h e Vanderbilt, but later in the week he was a victor i n t h e O pen Swiss Tcams.

32 "MMMBop" band 63 "A Death in the Family" novelist 35 Beef cuts shallow end of a named for a New 64 1933 Physics pool York restaurateur Nobelist Schredinger 6 Univ. V.I.P. 41 Napped noisily 65 Avec'5 opposite 10Meat stamp 42The "A" of N.A. or S.A.: Abbr. 66 Cap'n'5 underling 14Make giggle 67 "Parks and 43 Inits. in a military 1SCassino cash,

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By Bruce Venzke and Gsil Grabowski (c)2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

06/24/14


THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY JUNE 24 2014 E5

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

HOMES, GARDEXS & FOOD INCENTRAL OREGOX r

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r

g

• Great recipes sure to impress ' Savvy Home & Garden tips to keep your house in tip-top shape

HI

875

880

880

880

881

882

882

Watercraft

Motorhomes

Motorhomes

Motorhomes

Travel Trailers

Fifth Wheels

Fifth Wheels

Serving Central Oregon since 1903

880

Motorhomes w~

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

Providence2005 Fully loaded, 35,000 miles, 350 Cat, Very clean, non-smoker, 3 slides, side-by-side refrigerator with ice maker, Washer/Dryer, Flat screen TV's, In motion satellite. $95,000 541-460-2019

Alfa See Ya 2006 36' Excellent condition, 1 owner, 350 Cat diesel, 51,000 miles, 4-dr frig, icemaker, gas stove, oven, washer/dryer, non-smoker, 3 shdes, generator, invertor, leather interior, satellite, 7'4 e ceiling.

Clean!$74,500. 541-233-6520

Allegro 28' Class A 2008 Ford V10 gas, 50K miles, 2 slides, satellite, 2 TVs, Onan gen, rear & side cameras, hydraulic levelers, 300w solar panel with inverter. Oriqinal owner. $55,500. 541-420-4303

Roadmaster Stowmaster 5000 tow bar & accessories, $200. Roadmaster Even Brake s ystem, $500. Both used, but in Fieetwood Discovery good cond. Cash only. 40' 2003, diesel, w/all 541-389-9292 options - 3 slide outs, satellite, 2 TV's, W/D, RV etc., 32,000 m iles. Wintered in h eated CONSIGNMENTS WANTED shop. $82,000 O.B.O. We Do The Work ... 541-447-8664 You Keep The Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! Free Advertising. BIG COUNTRY RV FLEETWOOD Bend: 541-330-2495 PACE ARROW, 1999 Redmond: Updated interior, 36', 2 541-548-5254 shdes, 42,600 miles, V10 as, 5000 watt generator, hydraulic levelers, auto steps, back-up camera, washer/dryer, central vac, ice m aker, l o aded, excellent condition. $27,500 541-620-2135 (SeeCraigsiist if4470374489) TIFFINALLEGRO BUS 2010 - FULLY LOADED 40QXP Need to get an Powerglide Chassis / ad in ASAP'? 425HP Cummings Engine / Allison 6 You can place it Spd Automatic Trans online at: / Less than 40K miles www.bendbulletin.com / Offered at $199K. Too many options to list here! For more 541 -385-5809 information go to e~eesn new ~elle robus.com or email trainwater157O

email.com

or call858-527-8627

gj c< Allegro 32' 2007, like new, only 12,600 miles. Jayco Grevhawk Chev 8.1L with Allison 60 26SS 2005 transmission, dual ex6K miles, 1 slide, haust. Loaded! Auto-lev- sleeps full bath in eling system, 5kw gen, rear, no4, bdrm, outside power mirrors w/defrost, shower & BBQ, 2 slide-outs with awcamera, awnings, rear c a mera, back-up ning, solar panel, trailer hitch, driyer door brand new tires, new w/power window, cruise, engine battery, protecexhaust brake, central tive sealants in/out, vac, satellite sys. Asking lots more! Exc. cond, $67,500. 503-781-8812 $38,000 541415-2737

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

Komfort Pacific Ridge Perfect Condition! Like NEW 27ft deluxe NW design, 15' Super Slide, priv bdrm, power jack, electric awning, solar panel, 6-volt, led lights, always stored inside. A MUST see! $26,000 obo! Call

881

Travel Trailers

Keystone Cougar 31' 2 004 2 sl i des, 2 bdrms, sleeps 7 with r ear bunks, tub & shower combo, elect. tongue jack, s olar pkg. all the bells & whistles, and lots of storage, immaculate cond., always garaged. Great for family v a c ations or part-time home. $16,400 obo

g

RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED

We Do The Work ... You Keep The Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! Free Advertising. BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond: 541-548-5254

Guardian rock shield, $200; Roadmaster 5000 tow bar, $450; OR $900 for ALL. Call 541-548-1422

$23,995.

541-383-3503

KOUNTRY AIRE 1994 37.5' motorhome, with awning, and one slide-out, Only 47k miles and good condition. $25,000. 541-548-0318

(photoabove is of a similar model & not the actual vehicle)

& Service

OPEN ROAD 36' 2005 - $25,500

1/3interestin

Ask for Theo,

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

Columbia 400,

916

$150,000

Trucks & Heavy Equipment

(located O Bend) 541-286-3333

1/3 interest in wellequipped IFR Beech Bonanza A36, new 10-550/ prop, located KBDN. $65,000. 541-419-9510 www.N4972M.com

Peterbilt 359 p otable water truck, 1 990, 3200 gal. tank, 5hp e p ump, 4 - 3 hoses, camiocks, $ 25,000. 541-820-3724 925

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

Call Dick, 541-480-1687.

307-221-2422,

( in La Pine )

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

approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! Free Advertising. BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond: 541-546-5254 885

ISI

• - Il

T-Hangar for rent at Bend airport. Call 541-382-8998.

Financing available.

541-419-0566

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

Canopies & Campers

Utility Trailers

1/5th interest in 1973

i

Cessna 150 LLC

150hp conversion, low time on air frame and engine, hangared in Bend. Excellent performance& affordable flying! $6,000. 541-410-6007

Big Tex

Utility Trailer 5'x8', drop ramp. Perfect for hauling your dirt bikes, motorcycle, quads, etc!

$995 Obo.

541-379-3530 931

Automotive Parts, Service & Accessories

172 Cessna Share IFR equipped, new Cooper studded tires, avionics, Garmin 750 2 25/45/R17, M&S . touchscreen, center $250. 541-318-7202 stack, 180hp. 932 Exceptionally clean 8 economical! Antique & $13,500. Classic Autos Hangared in KBDN Call 541-728-0773 n' a'4

Holiday Rambler Alumascape 28' 2003, 1-owner. Self-contained, 13' slide, 80W solar panel, walkaround queen+ sofa/bed, loads of storage throughout. Excellent cond., licensed 2015. Must see!$15,700. 541-389-9214

Arctic Fox camper

Model 860, 2003 • Full slide-out • Fits long bed truck • Great condition

$8,900

(camper only) 541-419-7001.

1974 Bellanca 1730A 2160 TT, 440 SMO, 160 mph, excellent condition, always hangared, 1 owner for 35 years. $60K.

Chevy C-20 Pickup 1969,was a special order, has all the extras, and is all original. Seeto believe! $14,000 orbest offer. 541-923-6049

Where can you find a helping hand? Call The Bulletin At In Madras, From contractors to 541-385-5809 call 541-475-6302 Ford T-Bird, 1966, 390 Place Your Ad Or E-Mail yard care, it's all here engine, power everyAt: www.bendbulletin.com thing, new paint, 54K in The Bulletin's orig. miles, runs great, Eagle Cap 850, 2005 "Call A Service Kit Companion 1994, with exc. cond.in/out. $7500 slideout, AC, micro, Professional" Directory good cond. 26' with frig, heater, queen bed, obo. 541-480-3179 one slide, $4500 obo. wet bath, exlnt cond, 541-369-5788 $16,900. 541-388-3477 Looking for your leave message. next employee? 1976 Cessna 150M Laredo 30' 2009 LEAR CANOPY 2003 Just oyer 3000hrs, 600 Place a Bulletin help since out of frame KeystoneLaredo 31' wanted ad today and lgn blue, fits Ford F-350 hrs major, Horton Stol Kit. Rtf 20 06 w ith 1 2' reach over 60,000 s hort b o x , $5 0 0 . Avionics: Apollo 65 GPS Plymouth B a rracuda slide-out. Sleeps 6, 'igii „~ readers each week. 541-410-4354. & additional radio (4 frequeen walk-around Your classified ad 1966, original car! 300 can be monibed w/storage underwill also appear on hp, 360 V8, centerNorthland 1997 990 Polar, quencies tored at once). Tranneath. Tub & shower. bendbulletin.com camper very clean, s/c sponder w/mode C, JPI lines, 541-593-2597 2 swivel rockers. TV. which currently reoverall length is 35' $4000. 541-617-0932 Fuel Flow Monitor, digiAir cond. Gas stove & ceives over 1.5 milhas 2 slides, Arctic tal density, temp & amp refrigerator/freezer. Pontiac lion page views evpackage, A/C,table monitor. Nice paint & upMicrowave. Awning. SNUG TOP ery month at no & chairs, satellite, Firebird 1998 holstery w/memory foam Outside sho w er. Pickup canopy for extra cost. Bulletin Arctic pkg., power AlcoholFunny Car seat bottoms. Oil filter & Slide through storF250 short bed, Classifieds Get Reawning, in excellent Current certification, block htr. 1 owner past a ge, E as y Li f t . white in color, condition! More pix sults! Call 385-5609 race-ready. 14 yrs; always hangared, $29,000 new; like new, or place your ad at bendbulletin.com no damage history. $25,000 obo. Asking$18,600 on-line at $675. $25,500 N9475U.$26,000. 541-447-4805 541-416-9686 541-388-1929 bendbulletin.com 541-419-3301 541-480-4375

a -e I

~

Ready to makememories! Top-selling Winnebago 31J, original owners, nonsmokers, garaged, only 18,800 miles, auto-leveling jacks, (2) slides, upgraded queen bed, bunk beds, micro, (3) TVs, sleeps 10! Lots of storage, maintained, very clean!Only $67,995! Extended warranty and/or financing avail to qualified buyers! 541-388-7179

options $35,000 obo.

541-260-4293

itgr,

2013 R-Vision 23RBS Trail-LiteSport by Monaco - Expedition pkg, Sport Value pkg, convenience pkg, elec. awning, spare tire, LED TV/ent. system, outside shower, elec. tongue jack, black flush sys, beautiful interior, huge galley, great storage, 1/2-ton towable, al(oys, queen bed. Like new,asking $22,000 Gordon, 541-382-5797

Aircraft, Parts

541-420-3250

Pam 541-788-6767 or Bill 541-480-7930

'

908

Arctic insulation, all

Sell for $3500. OR For Hire Call for quote

541-480-9876

TOW EQUIPMENT Brake Buddy, $500;

exc. cond., 3 slides, king bed, Irg LR,

For Sale

with living r o om slide, 48,000 miles, in good condition. Has newer Michelin tires, awning, blinds, carpet, new coach battery and HD TV.$31,000 Call Dick at 541-408-2387

3000 sq. ft. Hangar Bend Airport west side. 60' wide by 50' deep with 55' wide by 16' high bi-fold door, 14'x14' door rear side. Upgraded with painted floor, windows, sky lights, 240V/50 amp outlets. $195,000. (520) 360-9300, Owner

MONTANA 3565 2008,

5th Wheel Transport, 1990 Low miles, EFI 460, 4-spd auto, 10-ply tires, low miles, almost new condition,

Komfort Ridgecrest 23', 2008, queen bed, sleeps 6, micro & AC, Arctic Fox 29 2003, full awning, living room slider, yule covered storage, slideWinnebago Aspect tables, outside out, exc. cond inside & 2009- 32', 3 slideshower, 4 closets, outside 2016 tags, outs, Leather intefiberglass frame, as $14,500. 541-678-1449 rior, Power s eat, $11,500. La Pine or 541-410-8849 locks, win d ows, new, call 541-914-3360 Aluminum wheels. CHECKYOUR AD 17e Flat Screen, Surround s o u nd, camera, Queen bed, Foam mattress, Awning, Generator, Inverter, Auto Jacks, on the first day it runs Like NEW! Trail-Lite Air leveling, Moon to make sure it ise corroof, no smoking or 2011 Crossover, 21-ft. n p ets. L i k e ne w , A/C, awning, AM/FM CD, rect. Spellcheck and custom queen bed, cus- human errors do oc$74,900 tom drawer pullouts. Dry cur. If this happens to 541-480-6900 axle wgt 2,566; dry unyour ad, please conloaded wgt 2,847. Equatact us ASAP so that Flex suspension, extecorrections and any rior shower, indoor tub/ adjustments can be Winnebago shower combo, stabilizer made to your ad. Sightseer jacks, 2 batteries, plus 541-385-5809 30' 2004 MORE!$12,995. The Bulletin Classified Call 541-280-9516 for info, or to see - in Bend.

HOLIDAY RAMBLER VACATIONER 2003

8.1L V8 Gas, 340 hp, workhorse, Allison 1000 5 speed trans., 39K, NEW T/RES, 2 slides, Onan 5.5w gen., ABS brakes, steel cage cockCheck out the pit, washer/dryer, fireclassifieds online lace, mw/conv. oven, www.bendbuttetin.com ree standing dinette, Updated daily was $121,060 new; now, $35,900. 541-536-1008

Beaver Marquis, 1993 40-ft, Brunswick floor plan. Many extras, well maintained, fire suppression behind refrig, Stow Master 5000 tow bar,

Aircraft, Parts & Service

00

Winnebago Adventurer 2005 35t/g', gas, less than 20,000 miles, excellent condition, 2 slide-outs, work horse chassis, Banks power brake system, sleeps 5, with al l o p tions, $62,000 / negotiable. Call 5 4 1-306-6711or email a i kistu@bendcable.com

908

:.~9$ g

i

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

ee

tercraft" include: Kayaks, rafts and motorIzed personal watercrafts. For "boats" please see Class 670.

The Bulletin

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ds published in eWa-

541-365-5809

~

~

A dd color photos and sell youl stuff fa s t . In Print and Online With The BL!Iletin'S CICISSifiedS. A dd color photos for pets, real e s t a te , a ut o 8

more! I I

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GOLDENRETRIEVERPUPPIES,we Q U AINT CABIN ON 10 ACRES! FORD F150 XL 2005. Thistruck

are three adorable, loving puppies Modern amenities antj all the quiet can haul jt all! Extra Cab, 4X4, antj looking for a caring home. Please youwijjneed. Roomtogrowjnyour a t ough V8 engine will get the job own little paradise! Call now. call right away. $500 done on the ranch. *SpeCjal priVate party rateS apply to

BSSl 1C S

merchandise and automotive categories.

www.bendbulletin.com

To place your photo ad, visit us online atwwnv.bendbulleti n. com

or call with questions, 5 41 -38 5 - 5 8

09


E6 TUESDAY JUNE 24 2014 • THE BULLETIN

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 932

933

933

935

Antique & Classic Autos

Pickups

Pickups

Sport Utility Vehicles

935

935

Sport Utility Vehicles Sport Utility Vehicles

Ford F-350 4x4, GMC Envoy SLE their successors in ONLY THE i nterest; th e w o r d WHEN BEST WILL DO! "trustee" includes any successor trustee and the word "beneficiary" Chevy 3/4 ton 1982, built BMW X3 2 0 07, 99K made, executed and includes any succesFord Bronco ii miles, premium pack350 with 450 HP and delivered by Joseph sor in interest of the 2006 XLT 4-door 2005 4.2L6cyl., $1000 tires. $3000 age, heated lumbar 4x4, 1989L. Stone, Jr., in said beneficiary named in Crew Cab obo. 541-633-8951 supported seats, pan- Automatic, power 4WD, auto., 141k county an d s t a te, the trust deed. NOBuick Skylark 1972 oramic m oo n roof, miles, 20 MPG to-wit: Lot Seventy- TICE TO RESIDEN- 17K orig. miles. Please steering, stereo 6.0L Turbo diesel, full Bluetooth, ski bag, XeHwy,Vin¹303927 TENA N T S. see hemmings.com for One (71), Block Zero TIAL upgrade, set-up to power, a u t omatic, non headlights, tan & BARGAIN CORRAL! PONDEROSA DATED: March 24, (0), details. $18,900. 6-disc CD, cruise, fog tow, runs good. black leather interior, $8,977 PINES, City of LaP- 2014. Trustee Name: 541-323-1898 lights, running boards, $1700. n ew front & re a r ine, Deschutes Matthew L. M o hill. tow pkg, bedliner, grill brakes I 76K miles, 541-633-6662 ROBBERSON S i g nature: 933 County, Oregon, (Tax Trustee guard, folding rear one owner, all records, co ~ mazaa Lot No. Matthew L . M o h ill, Pickups seat. Tan cloth intevery clean, $16,900. Successor T rustee. Dodge Ram 2500 Look at: 221006B001700, Acrior, metallic tan exte541-388-4360 541.312.3988 2008 Diesel, count No. 141692), as Trustee T e lephone Bendhomes.com rior. 91,400 miles. DLR¹0205 (541) recorded January 21, Number: exc. towing vehicle, Price reduced fo Just too many for Complete Listings of 280-9462. 2004 a t d o c ument 2WD, 55,000 $20,500 Area Real Estate for Sale collectibles? number 2004-03105, 541-350-6925 miles. New batterNissan Murano SL Deschutes C o unty ies, rear air bags, 2011 Sell them in Records, also known The Bulletin recoml Roll-n-lock bed as 52356 Ponderosa mends extra caution ~ The Bulletin Classifieds cover, spray-in p u r chasing I 2005 Diesel 4X4 Way, LaPine, Oregon. when liner. 5th wheel Chev Crewcab duMatthew L. Mohill was f products or services I nternational Fla t hitch available, too. ally, Allison tranny, 541-385-5809 named su c cessor from out of the area. Bed Pickup 1963, 1 $19,000. tow pkg., brake conFord Explorer 4x4 2001 trustee by a p point-f S ending c ash , ton dually, 4 s pd. 541-604-1285 troller, cloth split 2-dr Sport, V6, heater/AC checks, or credit inI ment recorded March trans., great MPG, Chevrolet Tahoe front bench seat, works great, tags good black w/ leather seat 19, 2014 as docu- formation may be I could be exc. wood 2009 LT1 only 66k miles. 3/16, leather, good tires, trim, 3.4L V6, 27,709 m ent N o . 201 4 - [ subject to FRAUD. Ford 3/4 ton F250 1993 hauler, runs great, Very good condition, everything works. Leav- miles. vin¹362484 0 08064. B ot h th e For more informaPower Stroke diesel, new brakes, $1950. ing town, need to sell! 26,977 Original owner, b eneficiary and t h e f tion about an adverturbocharged, S-spd, 541-419-5480. $4000 obo. $34,000 trustee have elected tiser, you may call good runner & work ROBBERSON 541-815-9939 or best offer. to sell the said real I the Oregon State I truck. $4500 obo. I I II c 0 I N ~ IM ROR 541-408-7828 property to satisfy the Attorney General's f Call 541-389-5353 Office C o nsumer obligations secured by 541-312-3986 or 541-647-8176 5.3L V8, 4WD, auto, dlr ¹0205 said trust deed and to f Protection hotline at 69k miles, 20 MPG Chevy ColoradoLS foreclose said deed 1-877-877-9392. Hwy, Vin¹103597 2004 Extended Cab by advertisement and 29,997 940 sale; the default for Serving Central Oregon since 1903 Toyota Tacoma which the foreclosure Vans ROBBERSON y JEEP WRANGLER TRDautomatic is made is grantor's LINcoLII ~ I M RDR 2009 hard top 2011 double cab failure to pay when 18,000 miles. autoFord F150 LIGHTNING 4WD with matching due t h e fo l lowing FIND YOUR FUTURE 541-312-3986 matic, AC, tilt 8 1993, 500 miles on retopper. All the exsums owing on said HOME INTHE BULLETIN dlr ¹0205 cruise, power winbuilt engine. Clean intetras, no dents, like 3.5L 5 cyls, RWD, o bligations, whi c h dows, power steerrior & new tires. $7000, manual, 56k miles, new. New tires, sums are now past Your future is just apage ing, power locks, alOBO. 541-647-8723 vin¹200940 45,000 miles. due, owing and delin- away. Whetheryou're looking loy wheels and $27,000 Chrysler Town & $11,977 quent: 1. Failure to for a hat or aplace to hangit, running boards, 907-378-9994 Country LXI 1997, make payments due The Bulletin Classified is Ford F250 Lariat garaged. ROBBERSON your best source. July 2013 and therebeautiful inside 8 2008 Crew cab $23,900. ~ nsa oa out, one owner, nonafter in the sum of Every daythousandsof 935 541-419-5980 smoker,. Ioaded with $700.00 per month; buyers andsellers ofgoods Chevrolet Trailblazer 541-312-3988 Sport Utility Vehicles options! 197,892 mi. together with interest and services dobusinessin 2008 4x4 DLR¹0205 at the rate of 13.5% these pages.They know Service rec o rds Automatic, 6-cylinder, Jeep Wrangler available. $4 , 9 50. per annum to March you can't beat TheBulletin VolvoS6075 2013 tilt wheel, power winUnlimited Sahara 2014 of $ 2 ,942.32; Classified Sectionfor Call Mike, (541) 815dows, power brakes, 6.4L V8, Diesel, 8176 after 3:30 p.m. together with late fees selection andconvenience air conditioning, keyPl(l ' since July 2013 of - every item isjust a phone 4WD, automatic, less entry, 69K miles. 65k mi. Vin¹A32746 $100 each; for a total ll(if call away. Excellent condition; 975 $33,977 of $10,272.13. 2. Failtires have 90% tread. Automobiles u re t o m a k e r e a l The Classified Section is Chevy Ext. Cab 1991 $11,995. ROBBERSON p roperty ta x p a y - easy to use.Everyitem AWD, less than 11k Call 541-598-5111 with camper s hell, 2012 3.6L V6, 4WD, is categorizedandevery ments for the years l lllCOLN~ I IIB DK I mi., auto, 6 spd. good cond., $1500 Ford Mustang GT automatic, 28k miles, 2010-11 in the sum of cartegory is indexed onthe vin ¹202364 2006 OBO. 541-447-5504. 20 MPG Hwy section's frontpage. 541-312-3986 $1,222.22, plus interI f $30,977 est. 3. Failure to make Whether youarelooking for Chevy Silverado 1996, DLR¹0205 $32,977 real property tax pay- a home orneeda service, 2 WD 2500, all p wr ROBBERSON ROBBERSON ments for the years your future is inthepagesof options, 82K orig. mi., LlllcoLN ~ III R K R l lllCOLN~ II IBD KI 2011-12 in the sum of TURN THE PAGE stored winters, all serThe Bulletin Classified. Chev Trailblazer LS 2004, $1,291.21 plus intervicing com p leted, For More Ads 541-312-3986 AWD, 6 cyl, remote entry, 541.312.3986 est. 4. Failure to make $3400 cash only. La 4.6L V8, manual, 4k DLR ¹0205 clean title, 12/15 tags, The Bulletin The Bulletin DLR¹0205 real property tax payServingCentral Oregonsince 19IB Pine, 541-508-0042. mi., 23 mpg hwy, $5995. 541-610-6150 ments for the years RWD, Vin¹225922 2012-13 in the sum of $19,998 $1,084.21 plus interest. 5. Failure to make ROBBERSON real property tax payLlllcoLN ~ II IR W R ments for the years 2013-14 in the sum of 541-312-3986 dlr ¹0205 $997.19 plus interest. By reason of said default the beneficiary Buick LeSabre, 1995, has declared the enwith 102K miles, autotire unpaid balance of matic, air, power wina ll o bligations s e dows, doors & seats. cured by said trust Excellent cond, well deed together with the maintained, all records interest thereon, imavailable. Must see to mediately due, owing appreciate! $3000 or best and payable, s aid offer. 541-475-0537 sums being the following, to-wit: $32,692.48 together w ith interest at t he rate of 13.5% per annum from June 8, 2013; together with Buick LeSabres! delinquent p roperty 2002 w/cloth seats, taxes of $ 4,564.91; $4750; 1995 w/leather together with monthly seats, $3750. Auto, late fees of $100 each loaded. 130k mi. and month. A Notice of clean! 541-419-5060 Default and Election to Sell and to foreclose was duly rec orded March 1 9 , 2014, as d ocument No. 20 1 4 -008065, Deschutes C o u nty Official Records, reference thereto hereby Corvette 1979 being exp r essly L82- 4speed. made. WHEREFORE, 85,000 miles NOTICE HEREBY IS Garaged since new. GIVEN that the unI've owned it 25 dersigned trustee will years. Never damon the 4th day of Auaged or abused. ff ~ ~ l -f — r — t gust, 2014 at the hour $12,900. of 10:00 o'clock, am, I F I t t I I I' I Dave, 541-350-4077 r J F • I I I •~ ll I l J as established by 1 ~' C • I I I • Section 187.110, OrI egon Revised StatFord Focus SES utes, at the law office of Matthew L. Mohill, 65 NW Greeley Avenue, in the City of Bend, County of Deschutes, State of Oregon, sell at public 2011 2 .0L 4 cyls, auction to the highest FWD, automatic, bidder for cash the interest in the said 52k miles, 34 MPG described real prop$12,977 erty which the grantor had or had power to ROBBERSON~ convey at the time of o. ~ mama the execution by him of the said trust deed, 541-312-3986 together with any inDLR ¹0205 terest w h ic h the grantor or his successors in interest acTake care of quired after the exyour investments ecution of said trust deed, to satisfy the with the help from foregoing obligations The Bulletin's thereby secured and the costs and ex"Call A Service penses of sale, inProfessional" Directory cluding a reasonable charge by the trustee. Notice is thither given that a n y per s on named i n S e c tion 86.760 of Oregon Revised Statutes ha the right to have the foreclosure p roceeding 258 Ford Thunderbird d ismissed and t h e 2004 trust deed reinstated Convertible by payment of the enwith hard & soft top, tire amount due (other silver with black I gonsay8t' than such portion of interior, REpg pC Deal! o s hard drive, s aid p rincipal a s all original, A to . InCludeS . at fOr a would not then he due very low mileage, go get a >ap > d tTtotutot. Grea m had no default ocin premium condition. curred) together with mouse, keyboard an $19,900. 702-249-2567 costs, trustee's and student. attorney's fees at any (car is in Bend) time prior to five days before the date set for said sale. In construing this notice and whenever the context hereof so r equires, the masculine gender includes the feminine infiniti l30 2001 and the neuter, the great condition/ singular includes the well maintained, p lural, t h e wor d "grantor" includes any bBrtfIbug 127k miles. successor in interest $5,900.00 obo. to the grantor as well 541-420-3277 Get3 lines,4daysfor 518.50

975

Auto m obiles

LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE - R e ference is made to that c ertain t rust d e e d

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Mazda RX-8 40th Anniversary Edition 2008 Gray Mica Paint, Red 8 Black Leather Intenor, Bose Sound, Sunroof, 4-Door, 6-Speed Auto. Trans. w/Paddle Shifters. Original Owners. 34,000 Miles. $17,000. 541-588-6670

Garage Sales Garage Sales Garage Sales Find them in The Bulletin

Classifieds

541-385-5809 Mercedes Benz e320, 1999 wagon, white 120k mi., incl. studded tires, exc. cond., $4500. 541-318-4502.

Good classified adstell the essential facts in an interesting Manner. Write from the readers view -not the seller's. Convert the facts into benefits. Show the reader howthe item will help them insomeway. This advertising tip brought to youby

The Bulletin ServlngCentral Oregon since19N

N issan Pathfinder LE 2012 blck 19k mi.

541-598-3750

www.aaaoregonautosource.com

Porsche 911 Carrera 993 cou e

1996, 73k miles, Tiptronic auto. transmission. Silver, blue leather interior, moon/sunroof, new quality tires and battery, car and seat covers, many extras. Recently fully serviced, garaged, looks and runs like new. Excellent condition $29,700 541-322-9647 Porsche 911 Turbo

2003 6 speed, X50 added power pkg., 530 HP! Under 10k miles, Arctic silver, gray leather interior, new quality t ires, and battery, Bose p remium sou n d stereo, moon/sunroof, car and seat covers. Many extras. Garaged, p e r fect condition, $59,700. 541-322-9647

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

Subaru Outback 2012 3.6R Limited, 6 cyl, auto. trans., AWD, leather heated seats, AWD, power moon r oof, a n d mor e ! 25,600 miles. Below KB I $27, 5 00 541-344-5325 annie2657Oyahoo.com

VOLVO XC90 2007 AWD, 6-cyl 3.2L, power everything, grey on grey, leather heated lumbar seats, 3rd row seat, moonroof, new tires, always garaged, all maintenance up to date, excellent cond. A STEALAT $13,900. 541-223-2218

"

.

'

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VW Jeffa GLf 2012

Bluetooth Pi, pw, rnanual trans Vin¹108574 $18,977 RQBBKRSON 541-312-3988 DLR ¹0205

as any other person

owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by said trust deed, and

T o place an ad call 38 5 - 5 8 0 9

Lincoln Town Car, 1995, Thank you St. Jude 8 loaded, great s hape. S a cred H e ar t of $ 4200.541-322-9897 Jesu s . j . d .


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$3455 Hwy. $7 N. 541-388-2100 PAGE 4 I TUESDAY, JUN 24,2014 IFOOD 4 LESS - BEND

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